Addressing environmental misperceptions for nature recovery
Shuo Gao, Sophus O. S. E. zu Ermgassen, Joseph W. Bull, E. J. Milner‐Gulland

TL;DR
The paper explores how people misperceive environmental changes, which hinders conservation efforts, and suggests strategies to address these misperceptions for better environmental recovery.
Contribution
The study expands the concept of shifting baseline syndrome to include nature recovery and identifies cognitive mechanisms behind environmental misperceptions.
Findings
Environmental misperceptions are linked to media-based information sources rather than direct interaction with nature.
Personal engagement with nature correlates with more accurate ecological understanding.
Cognitive errors like omission and commission are tied to processes such as attention, memory, and learning.
Abstract
A poorly understood and systemic challenge to global conservation agreements is shifting baseline syndrome (SBS), wherein people misperceive the extent to which nature has changed. This can diminish societal expectations for nature recovery. We broadened the conceptual framing of SBS beyond the more common elements of nature loss to include nature recovery and the cognitive mechanisms underlying misperceptions. To demonstrate the utility of the framework, we surveyed people living in Qunli New Town, Harbin, China. We first conducted in‐depth interviews with a semirandomized sample of 42 people to qualitatively explore the diverse manifestations of environmental misperceptions and the cognitive processes that drive misperceptions in the study area. We then administered an online survey of 1018 people to quantitatively estimate the scale of SBS and identify factors affecting individual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLand Use and Ecosystem Services · Environmental Philosophy and Ethics · Urban Green Space and Health
