4.8 Article

Leveraging neuroscience for climate change research

Journal

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41558-023-01857-4

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This paper argues that neuroscience can contribute significantly to the fight against climate change by studying its impact on the human brain, adaptation strategies, decision-making processes, and communication strategies. It provides a framework and roadmap for organizing and prioritizing neuroscience research in this domain. The paper also calls on neuroscientists to join broader scientific efforts in tackling the existential environmental threats Earth is currently facing.
Anthropogenic climate change poses a substantial threat to societal living conditions. Here, we argue that neuroscience can substantially contribute to the fight against climate change and provide a framework and a roadmap to organize and prioritize neuroscience research in this domain. We outline how neuroscience can be used to: (1) investigate the negative impact of climate change on the human brain; (2) identify ways to adapt; (3) understand the neural substrates of decisions with pro-environmental and harmful outcomes; and (4) create neuroscience-based insights into communication and intervention strategies that aim to promote climate action. The paper is also a call to action for neuroscientists to join broader scientific efforts to tackle the existential environmental threats Earth is currently facing. Neuroscience can help combat climate change by studying its impact on the human brain, adaptation strategies, decision-making processes and communication strategies. This Perspective outlines a roadmap towards these targets and calls on neuroscientists to join the fight against this global threat.

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