This paper examines whether experience of extreme weather events—such as excessive heat, droughts, flooding, and hurricanes—increases an individual’s level concern about climate change. We bring together micro level geospatial data on extreme weather events from NOAA’s Storm Events Database with public opinion data from multiple years of the Cooperative Congressional Election Study to study this question. We find evidence of a modest, but discernible positive relationship between experiencing extreme weather activity and expressions of concern about climate change. However, the effect only materializes for recent extreme weather activity; activity that occurred over longer periods of time does not affect public opinion. These results are ge...
Over the last few years, climate change has risen to the top of the agenda in many Western democraci...
The risk of extreme weather events is expected to increase as global surface temperature rises in pa...
Have recent extreme weather events in the United States shifted public opinion on climate change? In...
Extreme weather patterns can be linked to the effects of anthropogenic climate change with increasin...
We analyzed the effects of 10,748 weather events on attention to climate change between December 201...
This dataset was used in a study tested the relationships between personal experiences of climate ch...
We analyzed the effects of 10,748 weather events on attention to climate change between December 201...
Policy efforts to address climate change are increasingly focused on adaptation, understood as adjus...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Some extreme weather events may be more likely to affect climate change beliefs than others, in part...
Numerous weather and climate extremes impact human society, the societal infrastructure, and the nat...
Using the framework of Construal Level Theory, we examine if concern about extreme weather—assessed ...
Not AvailableUnderstanding public perception of climate change risk and the factors that influence i...
Over the last 30 years, scientific research has increasingly implicated human activities in contempo...
As climate change intensifies, global publics will experience more unusual weather and extreme weath...
Over the last few years, climate change has risen to the top of the agenda in many Western democraci...
The risk of extreme weather events is expected to increase as global surface temperature rises in pa...
Have recent extreme weather events in the United States shifted public opinion on climate change? In...
Extreme weather patterns can be linked to the effects of anthropogenic climate change with increasin...
We analyzed the effects of 10,748 weather events on attention to climate change between December 201...
This dataset was used in a study tested the relationships between personal experiences of climate ch...
We analyzed the effects of 10,748 weather events on attention to climate change between December 201...
Policy efforts to address climate change are increasingly focused on adaptation, understood as adjus...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Some extreme weather events may be more likely to affect climate change beliefs than others, in part...
Numerous weather and climate extremes impact human society, the societal infrastructure, and the nat...
Using the framework of Construal Level Theory, we examine if concern about extreme weather—assessed ...
Not AvailableUnderstanding public perception of climate change risk and the factors that influence i...
Over the last 30 years, scientific research has increasingly implicated human activities in contempo...
As climate change intensifies, global publics will experience more unusual weather and extreme weath...
Over the last few years, climate change has risen to the top of the agenda in many Western democraci...
The risk of extreme weather events is expected to increase as global surface temperature rises in pa...
Have recent extreme weather events in the United States shifted public opinion on climate change? In...