Science literacy or value predisposition? A meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy
Nuclear energy is widely regarded as a controversial technology that polarizes public opinion. Guided by the scientific literacy and cognitive miser models, this study systematically identified and examined the magnitude of the effects of 19 predictors on public perceptions of benefits, risks, and a...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1401152024-03-07T00:31:00Z Science literacy or value predisposition? A meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy Ho, Shirley S. Leong, Alisius Deon Looi, Jiemin Chen, Liang Pang, Natalie Tandoc, Edson C., Jr. Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social sciences::Communication Nuclear Energy Meta-analysis Nuclear energy is widely regarded as a controversial technology that polarizes public opinion. Guided by the scientific literacy and cognitive miser models, this study systematically identified and examined the magnitude of the effects of 19 predictors on public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy. We meta-analysed 34 empirical studies, representing a total sample of 32,938 participants and 129 independent correlations. The findings demonstrated that trust substantially affected public perception of benefits regarding nuclear energy. Sex, education, public perception of benefits regarding nuclear energy, trust, and public deliberation substantially influenced public perception of risks regarding nuclear energy. Moreover, sex, education, public perceptions of benefits, risks and costs regarding nuclear energy, knowledge, and trust substantially affected public acceptance of nuclear energy. Country of sample and time period of data collection moderated public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy. Implications for future research are discussed. NRF (Natl Research Foundation, S’pore) Accepted version 2020-05-26T08:17:55Z 2020-05-26T08:17:55Z 2018 Journal Article Ho, S. S., Leong, A. D., Looi, J., Chen, L., Pang, N., & Tandoc, E. C., Jr. (2019). Science literacy or value predisposition? A meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy. Environmental Communication, 13(4), 457-471. doi:10.1080/17524032.2017.1394891 1752-4032 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140115 10.1080/17524032.2017.1394891 2-s2.0-85040969100 4 13 457 471 en Environmental Communication This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Environmental Communication on 03 Jan 2018, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/17524032.2017.1394891 application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Communication Nuclear Energy Meta-analysis Ho, Shirley S. Leong, Alisius Deon Looi, Jiemin Chen, Liang Pang, Natalie Tandoc, Edson C., Jr. Science literacy or value predisposition? A meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy |
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Nuclear energy is widely regarded as a controversial technology that polarizes public opinion. Guided by the scientific literacy and cognitive miser models, this study systematically identified and examined the magnitude of the effects of 19 predictors on public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy. We meta-analysed 34 empirical studies, representing a total sample of 32,938 participants and 129 independent correlations. The findings demonstrated that trust substantially affected public perception of benefits regarding nuclear energy. Sex, education, public perception of benefits regarding nuclear energy, trust, and public deliberation substantially influenced public perception of risks regarding nuclear energy. Moreover, sex, education, public perceptions of benefits, risks and costs regarding nuclear energy, knowledge, and trust substantially affected public acceptance of nuclear energy. Country of sample and time period of data collection moderated public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy. Implications for future research are discussed. |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Ho, Shirley S. Leong, Alisius Deon Looi, Jiemin Chen, Liang Pang, Natalie Tandoc, Edson C., Jr. |
format |
Article |
author |
Ho, Shirley S. Leong, Alisius Deon Looi, Jiemin Chen, Liang Pang, Natalie Tandoc, Edson C., Jr. |
author_sort |
Ho, Shirley S. |
title |
Science literacy or value predisposition? A meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy |
title_short |
Science literacy or value predisposition? A meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy |
title_full |
Science literacy or value predisposition? A meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy |
title_fullStr |
Science literacy or value predisposition? A meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy |
title_full_unstemmed |
Science literacy or value predisposition? A meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy |
title_sort |
science literacy or value predisposition? a meta-analysis of factors predicting public perceptions of benefits, risks, and acceptance of nuclear energy |
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2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140115 |
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1794549463119822848 |