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Scientists’ mental models of microplastics: insights into expert perceptions from an exploratory comparison of research methods

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Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Sabine Pahl, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Vaibhav Budhiraja, Leonie Fian, Ellise Suffill, Leonie Fian, Leonie Fian, Marcos Felipe-Rodriguez, Marcos Felipe-Rodriguez, Marcos Felipe-Rodriguez, Maja Grünzner, Maja Grünzner, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Ann Bostrom, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Gisela Böhm, Gisela Böhm, Gisela Böhm, Gisela Böhm, Simona Mondellini Vaibhav Budhiraja, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Karlijn L. van den Broek, Sabine Pahl, Simona Mondellini Leonie Fian, Maja Grünzner, Maja Grünzner, Maja Grünzner, Rouven Doran, Maja Grünzner, Maja Grünzner, Maja Grünzner, Leonie Fian, Sabine Pahl, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Giorgia Carratta, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Simona Mondellini Simona Mondellini Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Gisela Böhm, Gisela Böhm, Rouven Doran, Rouven Doran, Rouven Doran, Rouven Doran, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Maja Grünzner, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Marcos Felipe-Rodriguez, Aybüke Özdamar, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Leonie Fian, Leonie Fian, S. Edward Stevens, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Amna Abdeljaoued, Amna Abdeljaoued, Vaibhav Budhiraja, Giorgia Carratta, Simona Mondellini Sabine Pahl, Aybüke Özdamar, Sabine Pahl, Ellise Suffill, Sabine Pahl, Rouven Doran, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Sabine Pahl, Simona Mondellini

Summary

Researchers interviewed and surveyed microplastics scientists to understand how experts mentally map the sources, pathways, and health risks of plastic particle pollution in freshwater systems. Experts consistently pointed to household plastic consumption as a primary driver but acknowledged major gaps in understanding dose-response relationships — how much exposure causes how much harm — highlighting where science communication and risk management need to improve.

Abstract Microplastics have been studied extensively, yet considerable uncertainty remains about the risks they pose. One way to characterize the state of knowledge about a hazard and the risks it poses is to examine how scientists specializing in that hazard understand and think about it. In two complementary studies our interdisciplinary team examined how microplastics scientists understand and think about the hazards of microplastics accumulation in freshwater systems, and what risks they may pose. Each study used a different approach. Study 1 studied the causal beliefs—that is, the “mental models”—scientists applied in decision contexts. It relied on a mixture of open- and closed-ended questions, and tasks during which microplastics scientists ( N = 15) were asked to think aloud. This approach revealed scientists’ causal thinking about where microplastics come from and about the health and environmental consequences of microplastics. Specifically, in Study 1 microplastics scientists emphasized household consumption as a primary source of microplastics, while acknowledging multiple direct and indirect sources and exposure pathways, and often dwelling on the uncertainties about human health consequences. Study 2 applied the M-Tool, which is a different approach to studying mental models. In Study 2 microplastics scientists ( N = 38) used the M-Tool to draw causal connections between core ideas about microplastics. Top concepts selected in this exercise included waste mismanagement, textiles, plastic degradation, individual littering, and water quality. Across both studies there were commonalities in how scientists understood the sources and exposure pathways for microplastics. Scientists emphasized household consumption of plastics as a direct and indirect source of microplastics, but there were gaps in how they talked about dose–response functions. Together the two studies portray how scientists from diverse disciplines understand the potential risks of microplastics accumulation in freshwater ecosystems. Findings suggest that microplastics risk communication and management strategies can be improved by providing a broader perspective on sources of microplastics beyond household consumption, by sharing information about diverse approaches to managing risks of microplastics, and by addressing uncertainties as well as gaps between knowledge and concerns about human health effects. The novel comparative research approach explored here demonstrates the complementarities of the methods employed, which we hope will be useful for those interested in understanding the social and decision dimensions of microplastics and other environmental problems.

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