Men deny more than they believe about climate change on Twitter (X)

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Abstract

Climate change and twitter have been in scholarly and academic attention for study of humanbehaviour expressed on the popular social media platform. The sentiment of the tweets has been the subject of previous studies, and the most recent study used Twitter texts to examine seven aspects of climate change: denier/believer stance, sentiment, aggressiveness, temperature, gender, subjects and disasters, and their relationships. Amid the big pictures across these vital variables, we know very little about the extent to which the comparative gendered differences in views exist in the climate denier and believer groups shaping the climate change discussion. Using the large scale global twitter data from the past 13 years, this paper has examined the differences in the views of deniers and believers on climate change in comparison to the people neutral to climate change. Based on the expression on twitter, results of a sound multinomial regression model of this study indicates a globally strong climate denier stance of men.

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APA

Singh, M. K. (2025). Men deny more than they believe about climate change on Twitter (X). PLoS ONE, 20(2 February). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0303007

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