Sure, the Globe is Warming. Let's Not Talk About It.

Ocean County, New Jersey after Sandy. Fewer than half of the residents in the county believe climate change comes from human activity.

Ever wonder what your neighbors think of climate change? Do they believe it's human-driven? Do they think it personally affects them?

Now you can get a better understanding of the opinions people in your area hold about global warming.

The Yale Project on Climate Change Communication made an updated map of American opinions of climate change.

The maps are interactive. Residents can drill down on several variables, then get information about opinions in their county, congressional district, or municipal area.

For example, more Manhattanites (68 percent) believe global warming is caused by mostly human activity than do Brooklynites (57 percent.)

According to the updated maps, just about all Americans in the survey believe in global warming more than they talk about it.

Fewer than half of Manhattan residents reported talking about global warming at least occasionally, and only 35 percent of Brooklyn residents reported doing so.

In Ocean County, New Jersey, some parts of which experienced significant damage and flooding from Superstorm Sandy, just 48 percent of residents believe global warming was caused by mostly human activity, the lowest percentage of any county in the state.

Research published in Nature Climate Change in June 2015 suggested that higher sea levels and greenhouse gas emissions likely contributed to Sandy's ferocity.