Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore
Traditionally reliant on fossil fuels, Southeast Asian countries – Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore – plan to introduce cleaner energy (e.g., renewable energy) into their energy mix. To gauge public support, an understanding of their risk and benefit perceptions of energy technologies is necessary...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1623982023-03-05T15:58:46Z Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore Ho, Shirley S. Yu, Peihan Tandoc, Edson C. Chuah, Agnes S. F. Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social sciences::Communication Mental Model Risk Perception Traditionally reliant on fossil fuels, Southeast Asian countries – Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore – plan to introduce cleaner energy (e.g., renewable energy) into their energy mix. To gauge public support, an understanding of their risk and benefit perceptions of energy technologies is necessary. In the absence of technical knowledge, lay people may form these perceptions based on existing mental models – these are individuals' internal representations of the external world that can affect how they perceive various issues. Using the mental models approach, the current study examines and compares the public's and energy experts' mental models in an attempt to understand how risks and benefits of energy technologies are perceived, as well as gaps in the public's understanding and information needs. We conducted online focus group discussions in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore with 78 members of the public and 26 energy experts. The public and energy experts were found to have broadly similar considerations about energy security, economic and environmental impacts, and safety of energy technologies, but they differed in how they thought about them. While energy experts had relied on their topical expertise and existing evidence to form risk and benefit perceptions, the public had relied on other contextual factors to do so, such as their place-identities, religious beliefs, and personal values. Misleading analogies were also found to have played a role. The findings' implications on public policies and communication strategies are discussed. National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version This work is funded by the Singapore National Research Foundation under the Nuclear Safety Research and Education Programme (NSREP). 2022-10-18T01:18:03Z 2022-10-18T01:18:03Z 2022 Journal Article Ho, S. S., Yu, P., Tandoc, E. C. & Chuah, A. S. F. (2022). Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore. Energy Research and Social Science, 88, 102500-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2022.102500 2214-6296 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162398 10.1016/j.erss.2022.102500 2-s2.0-85122734362 88 102500 en Energy Research and Social Science © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Communication Mental Model Risk Perception Ho, Shirley S. Yu, Peihan Tandoc, Edson C. Chuah, Agnes S. F. Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore |
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Traditionally reliant on fossil fuels, Southeast Asian countries – Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore – plan to introduce cleaner energy (e.g., renewable energy) into their energy mix. To gauge public support, an understanding of their risk and benefit perceptions of energy technologies is necessary. In the absence of technical knowledge, lay people may form these perceptions based on existing mental models – these are individuals' internal representations of the external world that can affect how they perceive various issues. Using the mental models approach, the current study examines and compares the public's and energy experts' mental models in an attempt to understand how risks and benefits of energy technologies are perceived, as well as gaps in the public's understanding and information needs. We conducted online focus group discussions in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore with 78 members of the public and 26 energy experts. The public and energy experts were found to have broadly similar considerations about energy security, economic and environmental impacts, and safety of energy technologies, but they differed in how they thought about them. While energy experts had relied on their topical expertise and existing evidence to form risk and benefit perceptions, the public had relied on other contextual factors to do so, such as their place-identities, religious beliefs, and personal values. Misleading analogies were also found to have played a role. The findings' implications on public policies and communication strategies are discussed. |
author2 |
Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information |
author_facet |
Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Ho, Shirley S. Yu, Peihan Tandoc, Edson C. Chuah, Agnes S. F. |
format |
Article |
author |
Ho, Shirley S. Yu, Peihan Tandoc, Edson C. Chuah, Agnes S. F. |
author_sort |
Ho, Shirley S. |
title |
Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore |
title_short |
Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore |
title_full |
Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore |
title_fullStr |
Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore |
title_full_unstemmed |
Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore |
title_sort |
mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: comparing public and expert mental models in indonesia, malaysia, and singapore |
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2022 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162398 |
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1759857093577277440 |