The effects of communicating uncertainty on public trust in facts and numbers

Author:

van der Bles Anne MartheORCID,van der Linden SanderORCID,Freeman Alexandra L. J.ORCID,Spiegelhalter David J.ORCID

Abstract

Uncertainty is inherent to our knowledge about the state of the world yet often not communicated alongside scientific facts and numbers. In the “posttruth” era where facts are increasingly contested, a common assumption is that communicating uncertainty will reduce public trust. However, a lack of systematic research makes it difficult to evaluate such claims. We conducted five experiments—including one preregistered replication with a national sample and one field experiment on theBBC Newswebsite (totaln= 5,780)—to examine whether communicating epistemic uncertainty about facts across different topics (e.g., global warming, immigration), formats (verbal vs. numeric), and magnitudes (high vs. low) influences public trust. Results show that whereas people do perceive greater uncertainty when it is communicated, we observed only a small decrease in trust in numbers and trustworthiness of the source, and mostly for verbal uncertainty communication. These results could help reassure all communicators of facts and science that they can be more open and transparent about the limits of human knowledge.

Funder

Nuffield Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference53 articles.

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3. Edelman, 2018 Edelman Trust Barometer. https://www.edelman.com/research/2018-edelman-trust-barometer. Accessed 5 March 2020.

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5. Pew Research Center, Beyond distrust: How Americans view their government. https://www.people-press.org/2015/11/23/beyond-distrust-how-americans-view-their-government/. Accessed 5 March 2020.

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