Assessing cognitive and social attitudes toward environmental conservation in coral reef social-ecological systems

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Abstract

This study addresses the latent construct of attitudes toward environmental conservation based on study participant's responses. We measured and evaluated the latent scale based on an 18-item scale instrument, over four experimental strata (N = 945) in the US Virgin Islands and the Caribbean. We estimated the latent scale reliability and validity. We further fitted multiple alternative two-parameter logistic (2PL) and graded response models (GRM) from Item-Response Theory. We finally constructed and fitted equivalent structural and generalized structural equation models (SEM/GSEM) for the attitudinal latent scale. All scale measures (composite, alpha-based, IRT-based, and SEM-based) were consistently and reliably valid measures of the study participants' latent attitudes toward conservation. We found statistically significant differences among participant's attributes relating to socio-demographic, physical, and core environmental characteristics of participants. We assert that the nature of relationship between cognitive attitudes and individual as well as social behavior related to environmental conservation.

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Alexandridis, K. (2018). Assessing cognitive and social attitudes toward environmental conservation in coral reef social-ecological systems. Social Sciences, 7(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci7070109

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