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In the theoretical model, people who didn’t care about a scarce
resource, or about the actions of others, took as much as they
wanted. “People would conserve more if they coordinated among
themselves and exchanged information,” says Rovenskaya. “If
they learned more about consumer behavior and the amount of
a resource, it would reduce or even prevent free-riding.”
Spreading green innovation
Another benefit of exchanging information is that we learn about
new products and discover new ways of doing things. Innovation
can radically transform our habits. But what causes these behavior
changes to go viral?
Charlie Wilson, a researcher at IIASA and the Tyndall
Centre for Climate Change Research in the UK, is studying the
spread of disruptive innovations through social media, face-
to-face communications, and neighborhood interactions. “If
they’re adopted, they shake up the way mainstream behavior,
practices, or markets function. The classic example is what the
microcomputer did to mainframe computing. I’m interested
in disruptive innovations that can potentially reduce carbon
emissions if they become popular.” Wilson points to things like
sharing a car or zipping along on an electric bike or golf cart as
examples of disruptive innovations.
“I’m interested in measuring the strength of all these different
kinds of influences,” says Wilson. “We plan to study this by
working with early adopters—people who are already using the technology.” During the four-year study, Wilson and his team will
track the social networks of early adopters in Canada, Holland,
Ireland, and the UK.
Kicking the habit
Although old habits can be tough to budge, new research is giving
us the tools to pry them loose. By promoting education, we can
increase awareness about our environmental footprints and alter
behavior for the benefit of society. While giving up something as
ingrained as a frequent flying habit may seem impossible, research
is raising hope that by exchanging information or spreading
innovations, we can turn people off autopilot and onto a more
sustainable course. LZ
Further info
§ Chankrajang T & Muttarak R (2017). Green Returns to Education: Does
Schooling Contribute to Pro-Environmental Behaviours? Evidence from Thailand.
Ecological Economics 131: 434-448. [pure.iiasa.ac.at/13865]
§ Manzoor T, Rovenskaya E, & Muhammad A (2016). Game-theoretic insights
into the role of environmentalism and social-ecological relevance: A cognitive
model of resource consumption. Ecological Modelling 340: 74-85.
[pure.iiasa.ac.at/13808]
§ Lutz W & Muttarak R (2017). Forecasting societies’ adaptive capacities through
demographic metabolism model. Nature Climate Change 7 (3): 177-184.
[pure.iiasa.ac.at/14395]
Raya Muttarak muttarak@iiasa.ac.at
Elena Rovenskaya rovenska@iiasa.ac.at
Charlie Wilson wilsonch@iiasa.ac.at
summer â—Ľ 1
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book options, Volume summer 2017"
options
Volume summer 2017
- Title
- options
- Volume
- summer 2017
- Location
- Laxenburg
- Date
- 2017
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 32
- Categories
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine