UPDATE: A copy of the paper has been provided to me, the language is stunningly bad in this paper. See below.
From the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (whatever that is, no word on whether WUWT or Real Climate was part of the study, since it is paywalled, but apparently, blogs on both sides of the debate matter)
College Park, Md and Annapolis, Md — A new study from researchers at the University of Maryland (UMD) and the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC) demonstrates that the highly contentious debate on climate change is fueled in part by how information flows throughout policy networks.
The UMD and SESYNC researchers found that “echo chambers”–social network structures in which individuals with the same viewpoint share information with each other–play a significant role in climate policy communication. The researchers say that echo chambers may help explain why, despite a well-documented scientific consensus on the causes and drivers of global changes in climate, half of U.S. senators voted earlier this year against an amendment affirming that climate change is human-induced.
A peer-reviewed paper based on the study was published online May 25 in the journal Nature Climate Change.
“Our research shows how the echo chamber can block progress toward a political resolution on climate change. Individuals who get their information from the same sources with the same perspective may be under the impression that theirs is the dominant perspective, regardless of what the science says,” said Dr. Dana R. Fisher, a professor of sociology at UMD and corresponding author who led the research.
In summer 2010, researchers surveyed the most active members of the U.S. climate policy network, including members of Congress and leaders of non-governmental organizations and business and trade unions. Respondents were asked questions about their attitudes toward climate science and climate policy, as well as questions to establish their policy network connections. For example, respondents were asked to identify their sources of expert scientific information about climate change and with whom they collaborate on a regular basis regarding the issue of climate change.
“This time period was particularly interesting for studying climate policy because legislation regulating carbon dioxide emissions had passed through the House of Representatives and was being considered in the Senate. If passed, this bill would have been the first case of federal climate legislation passing through the U.S. Congress,” Fisher said.
The researchers then used an exponential random graph (ERG) model–a complex statistical model for analyzing data about social and other networks–to test for the presence and significance of echo chambers among members of the U.S. climate policy network. In the “echo,” two people who have the same outlook or opinion on a relevant issue share information, reinforcing what each already believes. In the “chamber,” individuals hear information originating from one initial source through multiple channels.
“The model we used gives us a framework for empirically testing the significance of echo chambers,” said Dr. Lorien Jasny, a computational social scientist at SESYNC and lead author of the paper. “We find that the occurrences of echo chambers are indeed statistically significant, meaning our model provides a potential explanation for why climate change denial persists in spite of the consensus reached by the scientific community.”
The researchers say that echo chambers explain why outlier positions–for example, that climate-warming trends over the past century are likely not due to human activities–gain traction in the political sphere. The answer lies in the disproportionate connections among ideologically similar political communicators.
“Information has become a partisan choice, and those choices bias toward sources that reinforce beliefs rather than challenge them, regardless of the source’s legitimacy,” Fisher said.
Jasny and Fisher point out that the debate on climate change is not indicative of inconclusive science. Rather, the debate is illustrative of how echo chambers influence information flows in policy networks.
“Our research underscores how important it is for people on both sides of the climate debate to be careful about where they get their information. If their sources are limited to those that repeat and amplify a single perspective, they can’t be certain about the reliability or objectivity of their information,” Jasny said.
###
This work was supported by National Science Foundation grants no. BCS-0826892, and no. DBI-1052875 awarded to the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC).
The research paper, “An empirical examination of echo chambers in US climate policy networks,” Lorien Jasny, Joseph Waggle, and Dana R. Fisher, was published online May 25 in the journal Nature Climate Change.
Abstract:
Diverse methods have been applied to understand why science continues to be debated within the climate policy domain. A number of studies have presented the notion of the ‘echo chamber’ to model and explain information flows across an array of social settings, finding disproportionate connections among ideologically similar political communicators. This paper builds on these findings to provide a more formal operationalization of the components of echo chambers. We then empirically test their utility using survey data collected from the community of political elites engaged in the contentious issue of climate politics in the United States. Our survey period coincides with the most active and contentious period in the history of US climate policy, when legislation regulating carbon dioxide emissions had passed through the House of Representatives and was being considered in the Senate. We use exponential random graph (ERG) modelling to demonstrate that both the homogeneity of information (the echo) and multi-path information transmission (the chamber) play significant roles in policy communication. We demonstrate that the intersection of these components creates echo chambers in the climate policy network. These results lead to some important conclusions about climate politics, as well as the relationship between science communication and policymaking at the elite level more generally.
The methodology of the survey is described in the Supplemental Information (PDF)
UPDATE: the language is stunningly bad in this paper, as seen from a snippet below. The bias of the author is clearly evident. And, why not name Hansen and Christy?
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Shucks, the only echo on WUWT is when your comment appears to get lost and then shows up after you try again… otherwise there is constructive criticism (usually) of any and all comments and articles. I have learned to keep an open mind by participating here and am stimulated by the diverse perspectives, yes even Brandon Gates’ views.
Again, THANK YOU Anthony, Eric, Bob, Willis and everyone who contributes to this virtual classroom of meteorology and climate science.
Projection at its finest, pot calling kettle black.
What I get is the sound of one hand clapping. With a dollop of distortion.
The “settled science” consensus echo chamber is being overwhelmed by the echo chamber of climate realism. These people are obviously so delusional they can’t see the pathetic irony in their ridiculous and stupid claims.
“Our research shows how the echo chamber can block progress toward a political resolution on climate change. Individuals who get their information from the same sources with the same perspective may be under the impression that theirs is the dominant perspective, regardless of what the science says,”
oh the irony! lol…. you can’t make this stuff up.
Seriously. When I saw the headline, I was thinking that it was going to be critical of the warmistas!
Slightly OT but relevant, the National Post has a guest essay by John Cook defending his 97% garbage, perhaps some of our readers well informed on the topic could show up to comment on his fraud.
Cook
http://business.financialpost.com/fp-comment/claim-that-97-of-scientists-support-climate-alarm-cannot-be-supported
McKitrick
http://business.financialpost.com/fp-comment/manufacturing-climate-consensus-doubts
Sorry got the links reversed.
I really couldn’t care less with respect to my conclusions on climate change what the dominant perspective is because I follow the evidence:
The Modern Warm Period is well established by evidence although its exact extent and duration remains uncertain due to large uncertainties/inaccuracies in the relevant data.
The Greenhouse Effect is well established by evidence and observation.
Increasing atmospheric CO2 concentration resulting in slightly increased Greenhouse Effect is reasonably established by reasonable inferences and computations from our current understanding of the Laws of Nature (physics) and observationally confirmed to a reasonable degree of confidence.
Increasing the Greenhouse Effect resulting in slightly increased temperature is reasonably established by reasonable inferences and computations from our current understanding of the Laws of Nature (physics) and observationally confirmed to a tentative degree of confidence.
Slightly increasing temperature resulting in greatly increased temperature is a conjecture based on “expert” opinion stimulated by a prevailing paradigm, flawed reasoning, and data manipulation with negligible confirming observations or physical evidence such that while it cannot be absolutely ruled out there’s no degree of confidence.
The only reason why the (C)AGW crowd concedes that there is a “debate” is because the climate is not behaving as modeled. If it had, these people would be steamrolling over us all as they did once. Nowadays, they are fighting for their political survival, no more.
Proving 97% Consensus on Climate Change by the ‘Echo Chamber Method’ can be done via the following steps:
First, go to the Cook’s climate change focused blog site.
Second, ask who disagrees with significantly dangerous climate change from burning fossil fuels. Typically, near silence will be enforced by the site personnel.
Third, ask who doubts the evidence of at a consensus presented by the silence in response to the previous question. Typically, near silence will be enforced by the site personnel.
Voila! Proof of consensus on the order of 97% via the Echo Chamber Method.
John
The echo of silence…
“The researchers say that echo chambers may help explain why, despite a well-documented scientific consensus on the causes and drivers of global changes ”
Sounds like they’re living in their own echo chamber if they believe in the consencus!
Surely, if you are researching the behaviour of two sides in a public debate, on a subject about which you know nothing except what you have been told by one side of the debate, you shouldn’t start by assuming that the other side is wrong, continue by finding that they are wrong because they talk to each other, and conclude that people on both sides of the debate should be careful about where they get their information.
Echo chambers cannot make an incorrect theory, correct.
Debating skills and/or name calling cannot change the fact the entire scientific premise of the IPCC is incorrect.
The cult of CAGW is in deep denial concerning both the ‘science’ and the observations (paleo, recent past, and current). The planet is about to significantly cool due to the abrupt change in the solar cycle. Cooling of high latitude regions has started.
There is no CAGW problem to solve. The majority of the warming in the last 30 years was due to solar cycle changes not due to the increase in atmospheric CO2. The planet resists rather amplifies forcing changes by an increase or decrease in cloud cover in the tropics.
The majority of the recent increase in atmospheric CO2 (roughly 2/3) is due to the increase in ocean temperature rather than anthropogenic CO2 emissions. If this assertion is correct atmospheric CO2 levels will fall when the planet cools.
http://www.drroyspencer.com/wp-content/uploads/TMI-SST-MEI-adj-vs-CMIP5-20N-20S-thru-2015.png
http://www.academia.edu/4210419/Can_climate_models_explain_the_recent_stagnation_in_global_warming
http://www.tech-know-group.com/papers/Carbon_dioxide_Humlum_et_al.pdf
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2012/09/davis-and-taylor-wuwt-submission.pdf
So what’s the prognosis?
“Our research shows how the echo chamber can block progress toward a political resolution on climate change…”
Imagine a political resolution to a question in astrophysics, or paleontology, or biology. The statement would be virtually meaningless. The “climate change” issue is ALL politics, NO science.
In their defense, they were examining the blogs and other info sources used by congressmen prior to the vote on cap-and-trade.
As far as I can see from the abstract and Supplemental Information the paper doesn’t tell me just what kind of echo chamber they have found. Have they found both alarmist *and* skeptical echo chambers?
There was one curious thing I noticed, and maybe someone here could check against the paper if they have it.
I looked at the data in the “Present projects” tab in the http://www.drfisher.umd.edu/ data link given in the Supplemental Information, and in the Dataset CSV file the entry for “Office of Senator Jeff Bingaman” shows him (or his office) marked down at the extreme of the Likert scale saying he *strongly disagrees* with both these questions:
Global climate change is currently occurring.
Human activities are an important driver of current global climate change.
I gather Senator Bingaman is known for being quite proactive in urging action on climate so this seems like a mistake. If it is I wonder how that would impact the network study? Since Bingaman seems to quite a central node from what I gather from the references to him in the dataset CSV, if he has been marked as a denier that may skew the result?
I wonder if the “Skeptical” website they looked at was actually http://www.skepticalscience.com. Seem to fit their MO.
Ever see a kid throw a temper tantrum? They come up with all kinds of unreasoned reasons why it’s not fair that they can’t get what they want.
This temper tantrum was peer-reviewed!
I wish I had a dollar for every so called scientist who has proclaimed that “peer review” is the gold standard of science. Any article that has been peer reviewed can’t be questioned, and every article that hasn’t been is to be ignored. (Oh yea, and it must be peer reviewed by one of the select journals.)
The REAL echo chamber is the empty heads at IPCC et al who still cling to the debunked myth that CO2 is driving global warming!
When you are losing the debate, any and all thoughts concerning fair-play go right out the window.
Near as I can tell.
I kinda like the new rules.
Edimburgh University has decided to ‘divest from leading fossil fuel companies’.
[Sorry. I meant to type ‘Edinburgh’ but the error is so apt I shall just leave it.]
Anyway, the story is recorded on the [Glasgow] Herald website at:
http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/education/edinburgh-university-to-divest-from-leading-fossil-fuel-companies.127170137
The Herald is in itself (for letters and comments) the most strictly non-partisan newspaper going.
So long as you follow the rules, you will be OK. [It’s a bit like WUWT.]
Are Jasny and Fisher such idiots that they really built a model to compare science and the politics of policy?
Maybe for their next paper they could compare the theory of gravity with campaign conventions. I am sure there is a definable relationship between the balloons that are dropped, the hats thrown in the air and gravity.
The sad thing is these guys are paid to come up with this stuff.
“If their sources are limited to those that repeat and amplify a single perspective, they can’t be certain about the reliability or objectivity of their information.”
So says the guys who want everyone to climb into their echo chamber and repeat a single perspective of climate alarmism without dissent or skepticism. An echo chamber doesn’t encourage debate. It drowns it out, which is exactly what the authors of this paper would love to see happen.
Sorry it took so long for me to comment; I had to read all of your comments first so I know what to say. Now I’ve forgotten. Man bear pig?
LOL! (First time I’ve said that.)
Heh, my first was several weeks ago. I’m still washing, and wringing, my fingertips. Out, out damned lol!
=============
It appears to me that the “peer reviewed” is the biggest echo box.
That’s ok, now let’s run an echo chamber analysis on the networks for advocates of ACW
It is ‘odd’ how all these pop-psychology papers always look at ,through closed eyes, sceptics but never consider if those who show questioning faith in CAGW may have their own ‘issues ‘
If you did not know better you may suggest that the authors are aware in which direction the funding flows and that those that question any aspect of ‘the cause’ and quickly find themselves of some ‘research and mud throwing ‘
As for sociology., it has never been nor will it ever be a ‘science’ , despite those working in this areas rather desperate attempts to label it such, there is a very good reason why you cannot get a BSc for sociology in any form.
The paper is available here:
http://www.socy.umd.edu/sites/socy.umd.edu/files/pubs/nclimate2666.pdf
The paper considers communications among political actors but essentially ignores the underlying political premises that motivate these actors. The authors’ own premises are expressed without admitting to the possibility of logically consistent alternative viewpoints.
For sociologists, they don’t seem to grasp why these social structures exist in the first place. Which leads to a completely unfounded conclusion: