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Main Authors: Wyse, Sarah K., Foxall, Eric, Tyson, Rebecca C.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.05538
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author Wyse, Sarah K.
Foxall, Eric
Tyson, Rebecca C.
author_facet Wyse, Sarah K.
Foxall, Eric
Tyson, Rebecca C.
contents It is well-established that human activity is driving extreme weather patterns, and that these extreme events influence human behaviour. However, few models allow for human behaviours and the climate to dynamically interact. The models presented in this paper expand on previous work and serve as an initial framework to extend current models by using a dynamic social-climate feedback loop. First, we introduce a social model to determine the conditions under which a committed minority can overturn a pre-established social convention. Second, we modify an existing climate model to include climatic variability. Lastly, we formulate a social-climate feedback model to study the interplay between human behaviour and the climate. Our results demonstrate that the social-climate feedback loop may be important in accurately predicting future temperatures, in contrast to the standard approach where human behaviour is a priori. Additionally, we find that a committed minority plays a vital role in shifting public opinion towards climate action and that the time at which the social convention of climate inaction is overturned has a large impact on future temperatures.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_05538
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Tipping to Climate Action: Qualitative Insights from a Social-Climate Model with a Committed Minority
Wyse, Sarah K.
Foxall, Eric
Tyson, Rebecca C.
Physics and Society
It is well-established that human activity is driving extreme weather patterns, and that these extreme events influence human behaviour. However, few models allow for human behaviours and the climate to dynamically interact. The models presented in this paper expand on previous work and serve as an initial framework to extend current models by using a dynamic social-climate feedback loop. First, we introduce a social model to determine the conditions under which a committed minority can overturn a pre-established social convention. Second, we modify an existing climate model to include climatic variability. Lastly, we formulate a social-climate feedback model to study the interplay between human behaviour and the climate. Our results demonstrate that the social-climate feedback loop may be important in accurately predicting future temperatures, in contrast to the standard approach where human behaviour is a priori. Additionally, we find that a committed minority plays a vital role in shifting public opinion towards climate action and that the time at which the social convention of climate inaction is overturned has a large impact on future temperatures.
title Tipping to Climate Action: Qualitative Insights from a Social-Climate Model with a Committed Minority
topic Physics and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.05538