A network approach to climate change anxiety and its key related features

J Anxiety Disord. 2023 Jan:93:102625. doi: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2022.102625. Epub 2022 Aug 20.

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.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Anxiety* / psychology
  • Climate Change*
  • Humans