Abstract

Scientific figures, i.e. visuals such as graphs and diagrams, are an important component of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports that support communication and policy-making. It is therefore imperative that figures are robust representations of the science and are accessible to target audiences. We interviewed IPCC authors (n = 18) to understand the development of figures in the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) Working Group 1 (WG1) Summary for Policy-Makers (SPM). Authors expressed the view that the need to maintain scientific accuracy constrained making figures more accessible, with the consequence that figures retained complexity and often required specialists to explain the figures to others. Using sort tasks with IPCC authors and with a group of non-specialists (undergraduate students; n = 38), we found that IPCC authors generally had good awareness of which figures non-specialists perceived as being most difficult to understand. Further, by evaluating the visual complexity of the AR5 WG1 SPM figures using a computational measure, we found that greater visual complexity (i.e. high quantity of information, use of multiple colours and densely packed visual elements) is associated with greater perceived comprehension difficulty. Developing and integrating computational approaches to assess figures alongside user testing could help inform how to overcome visual complexity while maintaining scientific rigour and so enhance communication of IPCC figures and scientific visuals.

Highlights

  • The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) AR5 has been widely acknowledged as being instrumental in motivating the Paris Agreement, which aims to keep global temperature rise this century well below 2 °C and to pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5 °C (Lynn 2018)

  • Our findings demonstrate that when looking at IPCC Summary for Policy-Makers (SPM) figures, non-specialists associate greater visual complexity with comparatively greater perceived comprehension difficulty

  • While IPCC authors had an awareness of the potential complexity of SPM figures, maintaining scientific rigour, making efficient use of page space and catering to the needs of specialist audiences were identified as constraints in making the figures more accessible

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Summary

Introduction

The IPCC AR5 has been widely acknowledged as being instrumental in motivating the Paris Agreement, which aims to keep global temperature rise this century well below 2 °C and to pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5 °C (Lynn 2018). We aim to provide the science community with a deeper understanding, from the perspective of IPCC authors, of the primary audience that SPM reports and figures (aim to) reach, together with an understating of the constraints that authors faced in the process of their creation Such insights may be useful to inform and contextualise future critiques of IPCC SPM figures. We aim to identify visual characteristics of SPM figures that contribute to visual complexity and comparative comprehension difficulty, and demonstrate the value of evaluating the degree of visual complexity within visuals to inform the communications design of technical climate science visuals We hope these insights will be informative for IPCC author teams working on future SPMs, and for the broader climate change community when developing robust and accessible climate science data visuals

Interview participants
Interview protocol
Interview data analysis
Authors’ views on the communication of IPCC report figures
A need to maintain scientific rigour
A focus on communicating with specialists
An awareness of communication issues
Perceptions of figure ease of comprehension and importance
Sort tasks with IPCC authors
Sort task with undergraduate students
Ease of comprehension
Importance for future climate policy
Figure visual complexity
Visual complexity results
Overcoming challenges to visual communications
Looking ahead
Findings
Compliance with ethical standards
Full Text
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