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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Non Nomen
June 8, 2018 3:59 pm

It must have been peer reviewed. Mentioning Lewandowsky, Cook et al made it so authentic…

Robert of Texas
June 8, 2018 4:03 pm

OMG…ROFL…cannot breath… 8-D

I am happy to suffer from “functional neuroanatomy of psychopathy”, and proud of it! I would say I am curious as to the lack of brain function, but I just learned that I am not supposed to be curious about anything.

My theory on the brain scan – a skeptic can easily spot the BS and does not waste brain cycles while the “normal brain” just spins in circles trying to process it. LOL

This was fun!

DougalE
June 8, 2018 4:05 pm

I was thinking to myself, “Please tell me this is a parody, . . . ” and then he did.

ScienceABC123
June 8, 2018 4:16 pm

I’m sorry the fMRI images were mislabeled. The “Normal Brain” should have been labeled “Warmist/Environmentalist/The World is Going to End Soon Brain” and the “Climate Denier Brain” should have been labeled “Normal Brain.”

On a side note… I didn’t know there were two April 1st this year.

June 8, 2018 4:32 pm

comment image
“The Glowing Brain”.
Didn’t MST3000 do a send off of that?

Reply to  Gunga Din
June 8, 2018 4:44 pm

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

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.”

WHAT!!! You think MST3000 is NONSciENSE!!!!
As Johnny Carson once said, “May the Bluebird of Happiness fly up your nose.”
(Good job!)

Charles Nelson
June 8, 2018 4:45 pm

I’m thinking of that scene from Young Frankenstein (or maybe it’s Frankensteen?) where Marty Feldman picks ‘the wrong brain’!

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  Charles Nelson
June 8, 2018 8:45 pm

“Abby Normal”

Mike M.
Reply to  Charles Nelson
June 12, 2018 3:09 pm

June 8, 2018 5:29 pm

First I was fooled, thinking that this was one of the more brain dead amongst the warmista horde, one who managed to pack an unusually dense assemblage of biased and irrational statements and examples of logical fallacy into a few sentences.
Then I was thinking that these guys who study this stuff have proven to me over many years that they routinely imagine elaborate explanations for what are in reality inscrutable data beyond the ability of any person to accurately assess…like assigning thought processes to maps of blood flow to the brain, or coming to sweeping conclusions about the inner workings of a persons mind based on some answers given on a questionnaire or results of some cognitive test or drill.
I saw this occurring again and again in article after article when I had, for a time, subscribed to Scientific American Mind. Some person looks at how some other people react to something, and decide they can draw accurate conclusions about some detail of the subject’s minds from how they interpret the results.

Then I was thinking that it was a near perfect example of psychological transference in nearly every single word of the article, and it was clear who are the ones with the cognitive biases. And how people that are incredibly cognitively biased writing article assessing such in others is about as perfect an example or irony as one might invent.

At various times I wondered how these geniuses accounted for people that changed their minds?
And finally it all made a tiny bit of sense to me for the first time, and had to read it twice at the end to be sure I was correctly reading that it was revealing to be a hoax.

The explanation tacked onto the end was not needed.

u.k.(us)
June 8, 2018 6:07 pm

The Onion has been on a roll lately, funny stuff.

Rud Istvan
June 8, 2018 6:40 pm

Ok, mods. i have tried twice using different refs to vomment for a clean forum here, apparently objected to WP is only a blocked Harvard link, the Annals of Improbable Research. Taken down twice is twice too much for any blog. So, explain or I reconsider any future posts as many in past here. Not a threat, just a factual promise. Fix or ‘else’

ossqss
June 8, 2018 7:46 pm

comment image

John in Redding
June 8, 2018 7:49 pm

“We were interested to see how the pattern of neural activity differed between climate change deniers and those who accept the scientific consensus.” Once again they view it as who got the most votes- consensus.

“a cognitive bias in which new evidence is too readily rejected in favour of experiences that carry personal, emotional salience.” I don’t know who they used to perform these fMRI studies but I know, for myself, I have read extensively on this issue. There is not too many aspects of it that I have not already read about and know why the information is unconvincing. If it is similar to what I have already reviewed, I would not be engaging in much thinking about what is being witten/said. The science is majorly flawed. More and more top named scientists are finally willing to step out to say as much. This consensus idea is an attempt to shame people and it is not working. The psychology analysis is just another attempt to influence a few who might be easily intimidated.

Geoff Sherrington
June 8, 2018 8:06 pm

Like me, you can become immune to study using MRI if you have a pacemaker to help your heart.
As an aside, the weakness of ‘serious’ papers contrasting the said parties is that the investigators seem to have models of how and why skeptics think, but no idea if those models are accurate or relevant.
I am skeptical of global warming hypotheses because nobody has been able to provide a clear figure for sensitivity to CO2, one that excludes zero as a candiate; also because there is yet no method to separate quantitative natural and anthropogenic contributions to past change.
Should these fundamental doubts, one that have to be cleared before the ideas ever get off the ground, cause me to be labelled as idiotic or uncomprehending or evil or deficient in some way?
I think not. Geoff.

June 8, 2018 8:49 pm

A climate skeptic “War of the Worlds” late April 1st alarum.

It would be funny, if it didn’t exactly mimic the laughable science claims of alarmists.
As it is, it’s grimly sardonic.

Mike of the North
June 8, 2018 9:39 pm

I’ve come to believe these people are so wanting of approval that they just don’t really understand science or care to. They themselves are an example of this crowd mentality of needing to be in the ‘correct’ and ‘accepted’ arena put forth by the media. Sad, but most people are pretty fucking stupid when it comes down to it. A lot of these idiots are my friends too, and I’m growing tired of arguing with them when all they can do is quote Bill Nye or some other moron.

hunter
June 8, 2018 10:20 pm

The devil hates to be mocked.
Mocking, humiliating, satirizing, roll-on-the-floor lol the climate kooks is exactly what is needed.
This is a great start.

Greg
June 9, 2018 12:06 am

in this instance the fMRI results simply indicate an unusually low paralimbic reaction to a perceived threat.”

when they class those who are easily alarmed by such propagandic images as “normal brain” they are clearly testifying to their own biases. The whole alarmist movement is based on creating a fear reaction to push acceptance of their agenda.

Greg
Reply to  Greg
June 9, 2018 12:13 am

OK, just seen the footnote that this was a spoof. Sadly it is very credible because it so clearly follows the kind of crap which gets published in PR literature every day of the year and kind of commentary that flows from it . Cleverly written.

CAGW movement is such a parody of itself it is impossible to parody as our host discoved some years back when he wanted to an April Fool’s article.

Climate “science” is beyond parody.

MarkMcD
June 9, 2018 1:36 am

“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”

I was rejecting it as soon as I read the above – anyone who thinks Lew… is even worth typing the name clearly isn’t tracking right.

Plus I’ve done some reading about actual studies that disagree entirely with the article so I was kinda ready for the end… 😀

e.g.
http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00409/full
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00406/full

As you can gather from the 2 links, ‘conspiracists’ (their term, I prefer ‘contrarians’) are saner than ‘conventionalists’ – and less hostile. 😀

June 9, 2018 2:04 am

Ok, now present to the brainwashed blind believers of the Climastrology Church contrary evidence, see what happens with their brain. 🙂

June 9, 2018 2:06 am

What reasoning do they have when you have an extremely high IQ and still reject climate alarm-ism? Perhaps the ‘normal’ brain to them is a brain that can be easily led with circular logic, an appeal to authority, and an acceptance as fact of statements that are in opposition to reality.

Ian H
June 9, 2018 4:36 am

Spoofing is fine. I’m less happy about the obviously false data you created to make your spoof.

In my experience the foolishness of Lew and Co revolves around the perverse interpretations they place on quite banal and ordinary data. Your spoof would have been a lot more convincing and realistic if the brain scans showed skeptic brains working just fine; yet the paper contrived to perversely interpret this as evidence of deficiency.

GeeJam
Reply to  Ian H
June 9, 2018 3:19 pm

Loosen up Ian H. This article is as clever and funny as Python could ever get. Remember the ‘Judian Peoples Front’.

Ernie76
June 9, 2018 5:28 am

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inqdiNVzQcc

Every time there is a discussion from the leftists about brain function, my mind jumps to “Abby Normal” scene in Young Frankenstein. Is that “normal” or “abby normal”?

Alan D McIntire
June 9, 2018 7:17 am

“..we looked for differences whilst they considered the evidence put forward for anthropogenic climate change’

Would we have gotten ‘mirror image’ results if the evidence provided were DEBUNKING CAGW?

How about evidence presented FOR astrology, FOR UFOs, FOR Atlantis, the lost continent? Would deniers of those ALSO show signs of psychopathy?

Thomas Black
June 9, 2018 7:57 am

The picture of the two brains is a classic, I’m printing it and showing it to my alarmist friends.

tankdemon
June 9, 2018 8:16 am

The biggest problem with the study is that the researchers were totally mistaken as to which reaction was normal and which was the pathology.

Dennis
June 9, 2018 8:22 am

This paper proves that the only Science involved in global warming is Political Science.
They can’t prove global warming so they use propaganda , thought control, outright lies and
Pseudo Science to make the deplorables behave.