SkS will be quite active at next week's AGU 2012 Fall Meeting in San Francisco, presenting several posters, giving an invited talk and chairing an oral session (and also convening the now annual SkS shindig). Here is some of the activity, so if you're attending the meeting, please look us up!
Andy Skuce will be presenting a poster based on an SkS blog post Changing Climates, Changing Minds: The Great Stink of London from 8.30am. Click on the poster below for a high-rez version.
I'll be convening what looks to be a fascinating afternoon oral session on social media, featuring talks from a number of prominent bloggers:
I'll be presenting a poster showing how scientists and communicators can make use of online community, using many examples of how SkS has made an impact in communicating the realities of climate change.
Mark Richardson will be presenting his work using field experiments to test the physics of snow and radiation. This physics can be used to improve measurements of how much snow there is from space to detect climate changes and help forecast water supplies and the chance of flooding when the snow melts. Click on the poster to see a high-rez version.
I'll be giving an invited talk on how educators can address misinformation in the classroom as a way of teaching climate science in a compelling, engaging manner.
Both Dana Nuccitelli and I will be presenting posters in a Thursday afternoon poster session on misinformation. Dana will be presenting the results of The Consensus Project, an analysis of the peer-reviewed literature that the SkS team has been working on since, well, last year's AGU Fall Meeting! I haven't uploaded the poster, as it's premature releasing the results online just yet.
I'll be presenting the results of research I've been conducting into the biasing influence of worldview on climate change attitudes. Here are all the posters in our session:
It looks to be a typically crammed week of fascinating posters and talks and we're very much looking forward to meeting many scientists and communicators. So please do drop by to our talks and poster sessions to say hi!
Posted by John Cook on Friday, 30 November, 2012
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