TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessing attitudes and cognitive styles of stakeholders in environmental projects involving computer modelling
AU - Boschetti, Fabio
AU - Richert, Claire
AU - WALKER, Iain
AU - Price, Jennifer
AU - Dutra, Leo
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - For modellers, stakeholder acceptance of a model usually hinges on data accuracy, model reliability, and problem uncertainty. For social scientists, model acceptance by stakeholders also depends on model context, type of problem, implications of the model, characteristics of the audience and stakeholders, the charisma and reputation of the modeller, and much else. In this paper, we review some tools from the cognitive and social psychology literature employed to study cognitive styles, worldviews and political ideology. From them, we select items which are relevant to assessing these features in stakeholders of environmental projects involving the use of computer modelling. By adding other items specifically designed to gauge attitudes towards complexity, science and computer modelling itself, we propose a questionnaire a modeller could employ early in a project in order to understand the type of audience the modelling results will have to be communicated to. This can help better design the communication and engagement process. We test the questionnaire with a representative sample of the Australian population and with a stakeholder team involved in the management of a regional fishery. The results point to the importance of considering worldviews and cognitive variables such as open-mindedness and trust in science and modelling
AB - For modellers, stakeholder acceptance of a model usually hinges on data accuracy, model reliability, and problem uncertainty. For social scientists, model acceptance by stakeholders also depends on model context, type of problem, implications of the model, characteristics of the audience and stakeholders, the charisma and reputation of the modeller, and much else. In this paper, we review some tools from the cognitive and social psychology literature employed to study cognitive styles, worldviews and political ideology. From them, we select items which are relevant to assessing these features in stakeholders of environmental projects involving the use of computer modelling. By adding other items specifically designed to gauge attitudes towards complexity, science and computer modelling itself, we propose a questionnaire a modeller could employ early in a project in order to understand the type of audience the modelling results will have to be communicated to. This can help better design the communication and engagement process. We test the questionnaire with a representative sample of the Australian population and with a stakeholder team involved in the management of a regional fishery. The results point to the importance of considering worldviews and cognitive variables such as open-mindedness and trust in science and modelling
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.07.027
DO - 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.07.027
M3 - Article
SN - 0304-3800
VL - 247
SP - 98
EP - 111
JO - Ecological Modelling
JF - Ecological Modelling
ER -