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Supplementary Materials: Accuracy-directed Climate Reasoning: How Self-efficacy, Interest, Confidence and Judgments Relate to Knowledge and Reasoning Outcomes

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PsychArchives2025-09-11 更新2026-04-25 收录
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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/16610
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This study examined how cognitive and motivational factors relate to individuals’ reasoning about climate change and sustainable behaviors. Specifically, we investigated whether self-efficacy, interest, and confidence in performing environmental sustainability tasks are associated with plausibility judgments, climate change knowledge, and motivated reasoning. A sample of 503 U.S. adults completed measures assessing these constructs. Structural equation modeling showed that interest, self-efficacy, and confidence were positively associated with plausibility judgments, which in turn related to higher levels of climate change knowledge and motivated reasoning. Participants demonstrating accuracy-directed reasoning exhibited enhanced self-efficacy, greater interest, higher knowledge, and stronger plausibility judgments compared to those engaging in desired outcome-directed reasoning. These findings suggest that fostering self-efficacy, interest, and critical evaluation skills may enhance epistemic engagement, promote scientifically grounded reasoning, and support the development of sustainability-oriented action and decision-making. unknown unknown
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PsychArchives
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2025-09-11
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