A network approach to climate change anxiety and its key related features
- PMID: 36030121
- DOI: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2022.102625
A network approach to climate change anxiety and its key related features
Abstract
Research has pointed to startling worldwide rates of people reporting considerable anxiety vis-à-vis climate change. Yet, uncertainties remain regarding how climate anxiety's cognitive-emotional features and daily life functional impairments interact with one another and with climate change experience, pro-environmental behaviors, and general worry. In this study, we apply network analyses to examine the associations among these variables in an international community sample (n = 874). We computed two network models, a graphical Gaussian model to explore network structure, potential communities, and influential nodes, and a directed acyclic graph to examine the probabilistic dependencies among the variables. Both network models pointed to the cognitive-emotional features of climate anxiety as a potential hub bridging general worry, the experience of climate change, pro-environmental behaviors, and the functional impairments associated with climate anxiety. Our findings offer data-driven clues for the field's larger quest to establish the foundations of climate anxiety.
Keywords: Anxiety; Climate change; Climate change anxiety; Eco-anxiety; Network analysis; Worry.
Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict of interest Dr. Heeren is an Associate Editor of the Journal of Anxiety Disorders. He receives financial support through payments for his editorial work on the journal mentioned above and royalties from various book publishers. The authors have no other known conflict of interest to disclose.
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