4.7 Article

Exploring public attention and sentiment toward carbon neutrality: evidence from Chinese social media Sina Weibo

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1200824

Keywords

carbon neutrality; public attention; public sentiment; social media; social psychology

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This study explores the public's attention and sentiment towards carbon neutrality from the perspective of social psychology, using posts on Sina Weibo as the data source. The results show that men, people living in economically developed regions, and the public in the energy finance market are more concerned about carbon neutrality. Highly credible government or international governmental organizations' information can trigger high public attention and dynamic changes in public attention towards carbon neutrality. Public sentiment towards carbon neutrality is mostly positive, but specific topics can affect public sentiment differently. These research findings contribute to policymakers' better understanding of the public's attention and sentiment towards carbon neutrality, supporting improvements in the quality and impact of policymaking.
IntroductionExploring the public's cognition toward carbon neutrality is conducive to improving the quality and effectiveness of policymaking, and promoting the realization of carbon neutrality goals. This study aims to explore the public's attention and sentiment toward carbon neutrality from the perspective of social psychology. MethodsUsing posts on carbon neutrality from the Chinese social media platform Sina Weibo as the data source, this study uses statistical analysis, the Mann-Kendall method, keyword analysis, the BERT model, and the LDA model to explore public attention and sentiment. ResultsThe results show that: (1) men, people living east of the Hu line (economically developed regions), and the public in the energy finance market are more concerned about carbon neutrality; (2) high public attention and great dynamic changes in public attention toward carbon neutrality could be trigged by highly credible government or international governmental organizations' information; (3) public sentiment toward carbon neutrality is mostly positive; however, specific topics affect public sentiment differently. DiscussionThe research results contribute to policymakers' better understanding of the trend of public attention and sentiment toward carbon neutrality, and support improvements in the quality and impact of policymaking.

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