Document Type

Article

Date of Original Version

6-2021

Abstract

Experts in climate communication have long understood that depictions of potential extreme events may overwhelm audiences and be discounted in favour of more salient, near-term concerns. Despite this guidance, many coastal resilience processes rely on conventional visualizations of sea level rise that combine representations of worst-case storm events with high levels of sea level rise due to expert preferences or availability of modelling. To make projections salient and relatable to existing environmental signals, we advocate for separating depictions of the effects of sea level rise from depictions of storm surge and for depicting impacts of sea level rise that are relevant to near-term adaptation decisions such as roads obstructed by astronomical high tides. We test effects on perceptions of salience of sea level scenarios, storm surge risk, and legitimacy of visualizations as a first step toward testing the hypothesis that alternative sea level rise visualizations will be more effective tools for engaging the public in coastal resilience processes.

Publication Title, e.g., Journal

Journal of Digital Landscape Architecture

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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