Mulder, K. J., Lickiss, M., Black, A., Charlton-Perez, A. J.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8179-6220, McCloy, R.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2333-9640 and Young, J. S.
(2020)
Designing environmental uncertainty information for experts and non‐experts: does data presentation affect users' decisions and interpretations?
Meteorological Applications, 27 (1).
e1821.
ISSN 1350-4827
doi: 10.1002/met.1821
Abstract/Summary
Uncertainty information in natural hazard forecasts is increasingly being explicitly communicated. This study was designed to determine whether different ways of communicating uncertainty graphically affects decisions and interpretations of forecasts and whether expertise was a factor in decisions and interpretations from forecasts explicitly showing uncertainty. In a hypothetical decision-making task regarding ice thickness and shipping, 138 experts and non-experts received ice-thickness forecasts in four different presentations expressing uncertainty: worded probability, spaghetti plot, fan plot, and box plot. These forecasts contained no measures of central tendency. There was no consistent difference in decision or best-guess forecast (deterministic ice thickness forecast based on the forecast representation) between the different forecast representations. However, participants interpreted different amounts of uncertainty across the different forecast representations. Experts made significantly more economically rational decisions than non-experts, interpreted lower best-guess forecasts, and inferred significantly more uncertainty than nonexperts. These results suggest that care be taken in choosing how uncertainty is represented in forecasts, especially between expert and non-expert audiences.
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| Item Type | Article |
| URI | https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/id/eprint/85132 |
| Identification Number/DOI | 10.1002/met.1821 |
| Refereed | Yes |
| Divisions | Life Sciences > School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences > Department of Psychology Arts, Humanities and Social Science > School of Arts and Communication Design > Typography & Graphic Communication Science > School of Mathematical, Physical and Computational Sciences > Department of Meteorology |
| Publisher | Wiley |
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