About this Research Topic
1) At the macro-scale, social neuroscience, psychology and cognitive neuroscience have been studying decision-making processes, including strategies and biases that may guide and alter these abilities at population or individual levels, as well as a the effectiveness and mechanisms of interventions that may facilitate (or hamper) behavioral change.
2) At the meso-scale, brain imaging, neurophysiology and animal research have extensively described brain circuits governing behavioral responses to uncertainty, fear, and other emotional or cognitive features that are engaged while facing climate crisis and its consequence.
3) At the micro-scale, cellular and molecular biology identified multiple chemical messengers and cellular pathways which permanently modified the above cited brain circuits.
Thus, as a community, neuroscience research has its role to play to better understand our reactions and inaction towards the climate crisis. By reinterpreting the central premises governing human behavior, from social interactions at the population level to individual brain mechanisms, we propose in this topic to gather original work, reviews and opinions based on neuroscientific approaches to unravel brain and behavioral responses to the climate crisis and to possibly offer new avenues to tackle insufficient human action regarding climate change.
Keywords: neuroscience, climate change, social neuroscience, brain circuits, behavioral neuroscience, climate crisis
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.