Having the right facts doesn’t always mean having the right answer: survey
OTTAWA — A survey probing how facts form beliefs suggests that even when given accurate information, many people will still answer questions incorrectly.
The Digital Democracy Project told poll participants that Canada is not on track to meet its climate-change commitments, which is true. But even when armed with that fact, barely half of those surveyed correctly answered a question on the subject.
The project, led by the Public Policy Forum and the Max Bell School of Public Policy at McGill University, is exploring how people’s ideas are shaped by the information they consume, with researchers hoping in turn to see how that influences their votes this fall.
The study has already found that people are more likely to be uninformed about policy than misinformed about it, so for the second round of their research, the project dove into one policy area where that’s often the case: the environment.