Abstract

Communicating information about geological and hydrological hazards relies on appropriately worded communications targeted at the needs of the audience. But what are these needs and how does the geoscientist discern them? This paper adopts a psychological "mental models" approach to assess the public perception of the geological subsurface and surveys three communities in the south-west of England about their attitudes and representations of the geological subsurface. The findings reveal important preconceptions and misconceptions regarding the impact of hydrological systems and hazards on the geological subsurface, notably in terms of the persistent conceptualisation of underground rivers and the inferred relations between flooding and human activity. The study demonstrates how such mental models can provide geoscientists with empirical, detailed and generalised data of perceptions surrounding an issue, as well reveal unexpected outliers in perception that they may not have considered relevant, but which nevertheless may locally influence communication. Using this approach, researchers and communicators can develop information messages that more directly engage local concerns and create open engagement pathways based on dialogue, which in turn allow both groups to come together and understand each other more effectively.

DOI

10.5194/hess-2015-542

Publication Date

2016-01-01

Publication Title

Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions

Publisher

Copernicus Publications

ISSN

1812-2116

Embargo Period

2024-11-25

First Page

1

Last Page

29

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