107 collective transilience in the face of climate change generally seemed interested to seek additional information about the SensHagen initiative (62.8% of respondents wanted more information). However, respondents on average showed somewhat low intentions to engage in both community-based and individual adaptation behaviours (i.e., identical mean scores slightly below the scale midpoint). On average, respondents did not intend to support the SensHagen initiative by motivating others to join or participate in related activities. This may be due to their unfamiliarity with the initiative before taking our survey, which may have made them hesitant to immediately intend to act to support it. Collective Transilience and Community-Based Adaptation We used the custom function corstars in R (Bertolt, 2008) to examine bivariate correlations between collective transilience and community-based adaptation intentions (Hypothesis 1). Table 4.2 shows that collective and individual transilience were both positively associated with all community-based adaptation intentions, and with individual adaptation intentions, with a medium to large effect (i.e., correlation between .20 and .40; Lovakov & Agadullina, 2021). Note that these significant positive correlations uphold (except for information seeking), when controlling for collective efficacy (see Supplementary Material). Individual transilience showed a similar correlations pattern. Stronger individual transilience was related to stronger collective transilience, yet these constructs did not overlap (i.e., the correlation was below .85; Kenny, 2016). Thus, although collective and individual transilience are related, they reflect different constructs. 4
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