Linguistic agency assignment is an unavoidable yet understudied feature in climate messaging. We propose temporal (moving-time/moving-ego), causal (natural/human), and action (non-agential/human) agency as distinct features targeting three core cognitive demands in climate communication: risk perception, responsibility, and efficacy beliefs. Through a 2 (temporal agency: moving-time vs. moving-ego) × 2 (causal agency: natural vs. human) × 2 (action agency: non-agential vs. human) between-subjects experiment with 1,917 participants, the results showed that moving-time temporal agency amplifies risk perceptions, human causal agency strengthens responsibility, and human action agency increases efficacy. However, inconsistent agency assignments reduce intention and trigger defensive reactions.
Wang et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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