Incivility and Contentiousness Spillover in Public Engagement with Public Health and Climate Science
Incivility and Contentiousness Spillover in Public Engagement with Public Health and Climate Science
Affective polarization and political sorting drive public antagonism around issues at the science-policy nexus. Looking at the COVID-19 period, we study cross-domain spillover of incivility and contentiousness in public engagements with climate change and public health on Twitter and Reddit. We find strong evidence of the signatures of affective polarization surrounding COVID-19 spilling into the climate change domain. Across different social media systems, COVID-19 content is associated with incivility and contentiousness in climate discussions. These patterns of increased antagonism were responsive to pandemic events that made the link between science and public policy more salient. The observed spillover activated along pre-pandemic political cleavages, specifically anti-internationalist populist beliefs, that linked climate policy opposition to vaccine hesitancy. Our findings show how affective polarization in public engagement with science becomes entrenched across science policy domains.
Ted Hsuan Yun Chen、Hasti Narimanzadeh、Arash Badie-Modiri、Iuliia Smirnova
医学现状、医学发展环境科学技术现状
Ted Hsuan Yun Chen,Hasti Narimanzadeh,Arash Badie-Modiri,Iuliia Smirnova.Incivility and Contentiousness Spillover in Public Engagement with Public Health and Climate Science[EB/OL].(2025-07-10)[2025-08-02].https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.05255.点此复制
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