fellow

Viktoria Cologna

2024-2025
Discipline(s)
Earth, environmental and climate sciences; Psychology, psychiatry and psychoanalysis; Sociology
Theme(s)
Behavior & Cognition; Environment, Sustainability & Biodiversity; Information & media
Fellowship dates
Biography

Viktoria Cologna is an environmental social scientist with an emphasis on environmental psychology. Her research focuses on the determinants of individual and collective action on climate change, trust in science, and the role of science in society and policymaking.

Viktoria received her PhD from ETH Zurich in 2021 with a dissertation on the role of trust in climate change mitigation. Before joining the Collegium, she was a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University (US), the Leibniz University Hannover (DE), ETH Zurich (CH), and the University of Zurich (CH).

Research Project
Seeing is Believing How Extreme Weather Event Experience and Media Attention Relate to Climate Policy Support

Climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, leaving large shares of the global population at risk and resulting in high economic costs. These events are highly visible and increasingly directly experienced by the public, which has the potential to reduce the psychological distance of climate change. Extreme weather events are not always directly experienced, and media coverage of these events has the potential to create mediated experience. Thus, the influence of extreme weather events experience on policy support may be affected by media coverage of these events. The main research question underlying this interdisciplinary project is: To what extent does experience of extreme weather events and media attention to the impact of climate change on extreme weather events influence public support for climate policies? This innovative project will strongly benefit from both the collaboration with Mike S. Schäfer and his group in climate change communication research at the University of Zurich and the Climate and Weather Risks Group at ETH Zurich.

Research Interests:

climate communication; public opinion; climate policy; extreme weather events; media studies; political science; environmental psychology; psychological distance; risk perception; science communication.