Friday Funny: The neurobiology of “climate change denial”

Guest essay by John Ridgway

Much work has already been undertaken to establish the cognitive foundation for the irrationality of climate change denial.

Of particular note are the studies undertaken by Lewandowsky, Kahneman, Shapiro and O’Conner, identifying the many cognitive biases that invalidate arguments put forward by those who profess scepticism in the face of the scientific evidence. However, it is not until recently that neuroscientists have turned their attention to the subject of climate change science denial in order to determine whether there are any fundamental neurological indicators that may be used as predictors of such pathological thinking strategies.

Of particular interest is a recent paper1,“The neurobiology of climate change denial”, by Dr Rodriguez Azuela et al, of the Positano Behavioural and Cognitive Research Unit. By revealing significant neural pathologies, the paper promises to throw new light on the puzzling irrationality that appears so intransigent to those who would strive to engage the public’s support for climate change mitigation. In Dr Azuela’s own words:

“We were interested to see how the pattern of neural activity differed between climate change deniers and those who accept the scientific consensus. In particular, we looked for differences whilst they considered the evidence put forward for anthropogenic climate change. For this purpose, subjects who had declared varying degrees of scepticism were confronted with images totemic of climate change evidence and were asked to offer their personal assessment whilst undergoing functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI).”

The fMRI images, which are basically snapshots of the brain in action, revealed notable differences between the deniers and those who accepted the scientific consensus.

Dr Azuela says:

“Whilst there were no deterministic differences between the groups, there were clear statistical variances that suggest a characteristic neuropathology. In the case of the deniers, counter to the normal pattern of activity, significantly activated regions included the left caudate, bilateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) and para-hippocampal gyri. Activations in the putamen and the globus pallidus were significant at p<0.005 (uncorrected), but no activation was found in the nucleus accumbens.”

To the layman, the significance of such variances is obscure. However, to the neuroscientist the coloured patterns on an fMRI are as revealing as any lie detector. As Dr Azuela explains:

“Curiosity levels modulate activation in such memory-related areas, so these results indicate a significantly reduced level of the curiosity one would normally associate with deferred judgment ideation.”

In other words, the deniers were simply unreceptive to the evidence presented and, instead, were activating brain regions associated with memory recall in order to entrench their preconceived ideas. These findings are in keeping with the psychologists’ concept of the availability heuristic, a cognitive bias in which new evidence is too readily rejected in favour of experiences that carry personal, emotional salience.

Such revelations should come as no surprise to those who have made it their business to study the logic employed by climate change deniers. However, other results were perhaps more surprising. Dr Azuela again:

“Of more concern, however, were the modulations of activity found within the orbital frontal cortex, insula, anterior and posterior cingulate, amygdala and anterior superior temporal gyrus, since they demonstrated a statistical alignment with the functional neuroanatomy of psychopathy.”

But before you choose to accuse all climate change deniers of being psychopaths, Dr Azuela has a word of warning:

“It would be quite wrong to label climate change deniers as psychopaths based upon the results of this study. Psychopathy exists as a spectrum of human behaviour; in this instance the fMRI results simply indicate an unusually low paralimbic reaction to a perceived threat.”

In other words, the climate science deniers aren’t nut jobs after all—they just don’t care enough. But I’ll leave the final word to Dr Azuela:

“In reality, studies2 have shown that confirmation bias poses the greatest challenge to cognitive performance. Those that suffer this bias will accept what they read unquestioningly, whilst others remain instinctively suspicious. Doubt should have kicked in at the suggestion that Positano has a Behavioural and Cognitive Research Unit. However, if you still failed to recognize the inauthenticity of this article, perhaps you should now be questioning any faith you might have had in the scientific consensus.”


References:

1 Azuela, R., Ho, M.T., Malaxic, T., Bernstein, F., (2018), “The neurobiology of climate change denial”, Journal of Environmental and Economic Studies, Issue 16[2].

2 Westen, D.; Blagov, P. S.; Harenski, K.; Kilts, C.; Hamann, S., (2006), “Neural bases of motivated reasoning: An fMRI study of emotional constraints on partisan political judgment in the 2004 U.S. presidential election”, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 18 (11).

NOTE: John Ridgway, says this about the essay originally published at CliScep.

It was not my intention to embarrass anyone into accidentally revealing that they were fooled by this article. So, to help prevent a recurrence, may I make it clear that this article is a spoof. I wrote it so that readers may personally experience confirmation bias before being pointed in the direction of a scientific study on that subject (reference 2).

The Azuela paper (reference 1) does not exist. However, in the interests of authenticity, I strove to ensure that the neurological references were sound. For example, curiosity does indeed modulate the activation of memory-related brain centres, as listed. Furthermore, psychopathy is indeed characterised by aberrant activity within the centres listed. The rest was just my wicked deceit.

I apologise for any embarrassment caused, but I think the plausibility of the article, such that it has any, is a testimony to the wealth of nonsense that can be found out there.

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June 8, 2018 11:11 am

Bwahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!

June 8, 2018 11:12 am

Isn’t his name John Ridgway? The guy who wrote about the precautionary principle?

Reply to  Neil Lock
June 8, 2018 11:21 am

Now I’ve read the article, I agree with sunsettommy.

Reply to  Neil Lock
June 8, 2018 12:18 pm

I laughed because it was too absurd for me to be fooled, but wonder how many will fall for it.

Reply to  Sunsettommy
June 8, 2018 12:52 pm

Sadly, I fell for it. When has a high degree of absurdity been any sort of signal of spoofery? Climate alarmists do it all the time, and they don’t include disclaimers. That’s sort of scary.

Felix
Reply to  Robert Kernodle
June 8, 2018 1:34 pm

The Lew, Naomi and Cook Show, et al, has gotten so absurd, that the parody was sadly plausible.

simple-touriste
Reply to  Felix
June 8, 2018 2:51 pm

Naomi: correlation is not causation, but small p-value indicates causation.

Greg
Reply to  Felix
June 9, 2018 12:45 am

As our host noted several years ago, climate “science” and surrounding propaganda is BEYOND PARODY.

jimB
Reply to  Robert Kernodle
June 9, 2018 9:01 am

Well, I was open to the concept but noted that it had no comparison to a believer’s brain while being faced with evidence contrary to agw.

MarkW
Reply to  Sunsettommy
June 8, 2018 1:26 pm

Who will fall for it?
Only those who want to.

Reply to  MarkW
June 8, 2018 2:17 pm

MarkW

One of the benefits of ignorance, is that one skips straight to the comments to understand the article.

Another benefit of ignorance is that I couldn’t fall for it because it looks like every other scientific paper I have ever read, absolute bollox.

oeman50
Reply to  MarkW
June 9, 2018 2:07 pm

I thought it was a legit paper, but I did not believe it because my skeptic brain rejected it….

Robert B
Reply to  Sunsettommy
June 8, 2018 8:35 pm

How quickly we forget
Glaciers, gender, and science: A feminist glaciology framework for global environmental change research
Mark Carey
University of Oregon, USA
carey@uoregon.edu
, M. Jackson1, Alessandro Antonello1, Jaclyn Rushing1
Progress in Human Geography, Volume: 40 issue: 6, page(s): 770-793

Bill Powers
Reply to  Sunsettommy
June 9, 2018 10:22 am

I had him at “…identifying the many cognitive biases that invalidate arguments put forward by those who profess scepticism in the face of the scientific evidence.”
As it means that skeptics (aka “Deniers) adhere to the scientific method and don’t follow the herd.
But your question of how many fall for it, accelerates generationally. With Millennial Public School students acceptance of majority consensus over scientific skepticism in the 80th percentile.

rocketscientist
Reply to  Neil Lock
June 8, 2018 2:01 pm

I’ve been to Positano and I can assure you there is no Behavioral and Cognitive Research Unit.

Robert B
Reply to  rocketscientist
June 8, 2018 8:31 pm
Greg Cavanagh
Reply to  Neil Lock
June 8, 2018 4:46 pm

I believed it was a real study, it is exactly what Lewandowsky believes himself, so if he wrote such a study and published it, it would look like this.

I was confused by the last quoted paragraph after the introduction “In other words”. I read that several times before coming to the conclusion that it was a parody, but I was not 100% sure I interpreted it correctly.

Thanks for clarifying.

Brian R
Reply to  Greg Cavanagh
June 8, 2018 10:55 pm

If Lowenbrau had written the paper he wouldn’t have given the cavit of not calling deniers Psychopaths. He would have called them Psychopaths in the title.

DrSamHerman
Reply to  Brian R
June 12, 2018 5:58 pm

Brian,

I am not even sure he knows what the true psychiatric definition of a psychopath is. It seems to this academic crowd to be a catch-all term for anyone whose input does not match their confirmation bias.

Latitude
June 8, 2018 11:12 am

LOL…….NO……the idiots brains are having to work harder to justify it

Mike M.
Reply to  Latitude
June 8, 2018 11:44 am

This is your brain –

This is your brain going in circles chasing its imaginary tail –

Reply to  Latitude
June 8, 2018 2:19 pm

Latitude

Whoa!

I’m an idiot and I didn’t fall for it.

Nothing wrong with a genuine idiot.

Ticowboy
Reply to  Latitude
June 8, 2018 9:07 pm

Should be labelled ‘Normal Paranoid Brain’

Mike M
Reply to  Ticowboy
June 10, 2018 8:39 am

Paranormoid brain!

Jere Krischel
June 8, 2018 11:13 am

The thing that popped out instantly was that they could have written the exact same study, labeling the left brain as “climate alarmist” and the right brain as “normal” 🙂

The a priori assumption that something is “normal” (regardless of what direction), is an error of imagination.

DrSamHerman
Reply to  Jere Krischel
June 12, 2018 6:05 pm

Use of the term “normal” in psychiatry and psychology (as well as other social sciences) is basic sophistry. It means “anything else we can’t imagine”.

When my residents or fellows or graduate students used the term “normal” in describing their research or clinical endeavors to me, my first question was, “Define normal?” A sort of blank stare, much like the androids in the classic Star Trek episode “I, Mudd” would come over them followed by an insistence that normal was anything lacking a defined pathology.

Diagnosis or reasoning by exclusion is shoddy and unsustainable.

Tom Halla
June 8, 2018 11:14 am

Not quite as heavyhanded a hoax as “The Conceptual Penis as Social Construct”.

Hugs
Reply to  Tom Halla
June 8, 2018 11:53 am

Hermeneutics of the quantum gravity may be used to deconstruct this brilliant work.

My heart stopped for a second when I thought this was a real work, but then again, there’s a fine line between Lew and fake.

MarkW
Reply to  Tom Halla
June 8, 2018 1:27 pm

What about feminist glaciers?

Reply to  MarkW
June 8, 2018 2:06 pm

MarkW

The mind boggles. Suggest anything feminine is frigid, and the entire feminist movement will be down on one in a heartbeat, no, noooooo, not that way!

Actually, that’s not a bad idea. We should encourage the alarmist concept of feminism being a negative and we’ll recruit half the planet in short order.

Or is that just the Dick Dastardly within me?

Rud Istvan
Reply to  Tom Halla
June 8, 2018 1:29 pm

My favorite along those lines was ‘Feminist Glaciology’—except it was intended as a serious paper, not a hoax. The intention sufficed for hoax ridicule. IIRC, WUWT covered it a while back.

Cameron Kuhns
June 8, 2018 11:26 am

They mislabeled the denier brain. It should be labeled Climate Activist Brain.

June 8, 2018 11:26 am

Please let this spoof be a one-time event. I don’t relish being exposed to this level of consternation again.

Rud Istvan
Reply to  Bryce Johnson
June 8, 2018 4:16 pm

BJ, I think the opposite. After sunlight, the best disinfectant is ridicule. No only because ridicule always ends with sunlight coming in.
You dont want to be caught out again, take a gander at my ebook The Arts of Truth. One conceptual chapter, six illustartive category chapters, then a penultimate chapter illustrating the whole thing as a climate chapter ‘proofed’ by Richard Lindzen himself. Cheap on Amazon Kindle, a bit more expensive at iBooks.

Craig W
June 8, 2018 11:31 am

“Climate Deniers” are cool thinkers & level headed.

Mike M.
Reply to  Craig W
June 8, 2018 11:45 am

Or just very bored by now.

Al Montgomery
Reply to  Craig W
June 8, 2018 12:08 pm

THINKERS being the key word!!

June 8, 2018 11:31 am

Thanks for the last note about satire.
I was about to break off and post a comment.
Phrenology did come to mind.
🙂

Edwin
June 8, 2018 11:31 am

The only folks that are nuts in this study are the so called scientists doing with work. If I don’t perceive something as a threat based on my cumulative knowledge, study and experience then why would I react to something somebody else is trying to tell me I must fear. Especially when what I have been told about that something to date has been questionable or false. I can see someone using this as an excuse to send us all off to the re-education farms.

Trevor
Reply to  Anthony Watts
June 8, 2018 8:41 pm

YES ! You mean the BIT at the END
where you spelt his NAME CORRECTLY !??
RIDWAY indeed !!!!!By gee that’s annoying !!

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  Edwin
June 8, 2018 12:09 pm

Perhaps a re-reading of the entire article will answer all your comments.

June 8, 2018 11:38 am

Thanks for the disclaimer, but I do read The Onion sometimes so I already had my BS detector at max.

Mike M.
June 8, 2018 11:42 am

The difference is between a brain of a rational human bored to tears hearing the same idiotic climate lies over and over again versus that of a sheep scared out of its wits that earth might burn up any second now.

Hivemind
Reply to  Mike M.
June 9, 2018 6:43 am

Personally, I think of Chicken Little.

JohnWho
June 8, 2018 11:45 am

While many “deniers” will discover that the article is a spoof, many of the believers, since it confirms their bias, will merrily accept it as truth.

And that, of course, will confirm what we know: the real folks ignoring the science are the ones claiming it is settled.

Felix
Reply to  Anthony Watts
June 8, 2018 11:53 am

Good move. I did happen to put the cursor on the mysterious symbol.

Gilbert K. Arnold
Reply to  Felix
June 8, 2018 7:32 pm

If you click on the main image and enlarge it the text becomes legible

Reply to  Anthony Watts
June 8, 2018 12:50 pm

It will be interesting to see if it pops up on Alarmist blogs being used as some sort of evidence.

Greg Cavanagh
Reply to  Anthony Watts
June 8, 2018 4:54 pm

I was curious about the little symbol on the bottom right because it looked way too cute, but then, it could be a true company logo too, who knows. But I see now a very faint white print in the middle of the image. It’s unreadable, but I’m sure you could demonstrate that it is the original image and that they were being had.

Bob
June 8, 2018 11:49 am

Oh, after showing that my brain doesn’t properly light up, he doesn’t want to insult me.

Climate change deniers? Right out of the box you know this is psuedoscience just on the term.

The only “denial” I have is that these clowns cannot control the climate and, hence, ergo and therefore do not know how to change the climate. So, I suppose I deny their ability.

As for my brain not lighting up is that they put me to sleep.

Reply to  Anthony Watts
June 8, 2018 2:25 pm

Anthony Watts

Evidently not. But neither did I. Skipping directly to comments is a far better indicator of the value of an article on your site, than the article itself.

And that’s a compliment.

J Mac
June 8, 2018 11:55 am

I think, therefor I am….. skeptical!

Reply to  J Mac
June 8, 2018 2:26 pm

J Mac

I’m sceptical, therefore I think.

Cuts out the middle man.

Felix
June 8, 2018 11:59 am

Whose brain would you rather have, Freeman Dyson’s or Michael Mann’s? Ivar Giaever’s or Gavin Schmidt’s? Will Happer’s or James Hansen’s? Michael Crichton’s (when alive) or Naomi Oreskes’? William Gray’s (when alive) or Kevin Trenberth’s? Richard Lindzen’s or Phil Jones’?

Jeffrey
Reply to  Felix
June 8, 2018 12:46 pm
Felix
Reply to  Jeffrey
June 8, 2018 1:32 pm

Eyegore over Algore any day!

Reply to  Felix
June 8, 2018 12:59 pm

Nicely put.

Reply to  Felix
June 8, 2018 2:27 pm

Felix

My own thanks.

It might not be much, but it’s mine.

Felix
Reply to  Felix
June 9, 2018 2:19 pm

Maybe I should have said Judith Curry’s or Naomi Oreskes.

Curry was hounded out of academia for being a scientist, while anti-historian Oreskes was rewarded by elevation to the Harvard faculty for d@nying the scientific method.

J Mac
June 8, 2018 12:05 pm

Right brain, left brain? This ain’t no thinking thing!
(This Ain’t) No Thinking Thing – Trace Adkins
https://youtu.be/cerrfodYTCo

Joel Snider
June 8, 2018 12:05 pm

And again, I have to ask, what behavioral traits, presumptions, predeterminations, and personality disorders have to be in place for one to be a warmist?
I would suggest that one of the first is a lack of self-awareness.

James Clarke
June 8, 2018 12:08 pm

“Of particular note are the studies undertaken by Lewandowsky, …”

That’s when I thought it was a spoof!

eyesonu
Reply to  James Clarke
June 8, 2018 1:29 pm

That’s when I believed it!

DrTorch
June 8, 2018 12:12 pm

It’s telling that such a ridiculous topic would generate this study. The inflammatory language used shows that this is not a science article, but propaganda.

jorgekafkazar
June 8, 2018 12:18 pm

For those unfamiliar with the sprawling metropolis that is Positano, Italy, here’s a link to a photo. Or maybe the photo, itself. Who knows what might happen?

http://www.lubrenseboats.com/images/public/articles/gallery/big/positano-village-amalfi-coast-campania-italy-1800x2880_1407143744.jpg

The Behavioural and Cognitive Research Unit is located above the outstanding white building 7/8 of the way up the slope, in the green area about a centimeter above the building itself.

Wharfplank
June 8, 2018 12:20 pm

It is an interesting time when satire and truth are indistinguishable…

Duncan Smith
June 8, 2018 12:28 pm

This is what believers think den!ers brain’s really look like:
comment image

Reply to  Duncan Smith
June 8, 2018 2:29 pm

Duncan Smith

Heyyyyyyy!

You stole my driving licence photograph!

🙂

June 8, 2018 12:29 pm

Suggestion for improvement for future hoaxes: add at least 10 more footnote citations. Anyone with any experience wouldn’t dare submit a paper to any social science journal with only two references. The footnotes are a signaling mechanism to reviewers that the author is diligent and correctly following the relevant party line.

June 8, 2018 12:30 pm

As soon as I saw that the denier had GREEN in his/her brain, I smelled a rat. Besides, I don’t believe in MRI’s.

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