0
Review ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Author comment: Plastic Pulse of the Public: A review of survey-based research on how people use plastic — R0/PR1

2022 Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker

Summary

This author comment reviews survey-based research on how people use, perceive, and understand plastic pollution, synthesizing evidence on public knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors related to plastics across different jurisdictions and demographic groups. The review highlights variation in public engagement and identifies gaps in understanding that limit effective communication and policy interventions around plastic pollution.

Plastics pollute all environmental compartments because of human activities and mismanagement. Public perceptions and knowledge about plastic pollution differ among individuals and across different jurisdictions. Targeted survey-based research tools can help measure consumer awareness about the impacts of mismanaged plastics and help identify trends and solutions to reduce plastic use and plastic pollution. This review primarily focused on survey-based research from presenters at the scientific track session TS-2.15 Plastic Pulse of the Public at the 7th International Marine Debris Conference (www.7imdc.org) and supplemented by contemporary literature. Survey-based research helps provide new insights about public opinions related to the pervasiveness of plastic pollution. This review includes results about consumer use and perceptions of plastic pollution impacts from diverse studies from nine countries including Ghana, Kenya, Bangladesh, Pakistan, United States, Canada, Norway, Germany, and United Kingdom. Overwhelmingly, public perceptions and consumer awareness of the negative impacts of plastic pollution were extremely high, regardless of geographic location. Awareness about the environmental impacts of plastic waste and plastic pollution was highest within younger, white, female, and well-educated demographic groups. However, differences were observed in public attitudes toward willingness to pay for sustainable alternatives, end-of-life plastic uses, unintended consequences, recycling, and mismanagement.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper