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Disgust Sensitivity and Public Opinion on Nuclear Energy

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  • Anne-Sophie Hacquin, Université Paris Dauphine - PSL (Paris IX), Frankrig
  • Sacha Altay, Université Paris Dauphine - PSL (Paris IX), Frankrig
  • Lene Aarøe
  • Hugo Mercier, Université Paris Dauphine - PSL (Paris IX), Frankrig

An increasing number of experts agree that nuclear power should be part of the solution to fight climate change as it emits little greenhouse gases, has had no negative health consequences during normal operation, and even limited consequences after accidents. However, in many countries the population is much more ambivalent about nuclear power, and tends to exaggerate the negative effects on health and the environment. We suggest that this gap between experts and the public stems in part from nuclear power triggering the behavioral immune system: a set of cognitive adaptations that aim at protecting us against pathogens by making us particularly alert to their existence, and attuned to their risks. In line with this suggestion, we find that (i) participants overestimate the risks of nuclear accidents compared to other types of disasters (Experiment 1), except for disasters that should also trigger the behavioral immune system (Experiment 2); (ii) participants were more interested in reading and sharing a news article about a nuclear accident than about other types of accidents (with the same exception, Experiment 2); (iii) participants were less willing to be in contact with an object that had been in a nuclear power plant than in a car manufacturing plant (Experiment 3); (iv) arguments showing that nuclear power plants should not elicit fears of contamination reduced the negative perception of nuclear energy (Experiment 4). This work suggests a cognitive basis for the popular rejection of nuclear power, and ways to bridge the gap between experts and the public on this topic.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer101749
TidsskriftJournal of Environmental Psychology
Vol/bind80
ISSN0272-4944
DOI
StatusUdgivet - apr. 2022

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