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How norms work : self-identification, attitude, and self-efficacy mediate the relation between descriptive social norms and vegetable intake

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2014

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Verkooijen, Kirsten T.
de Ridder, Denise T. D.
de Wit, John B. F.
de Vet, Emely

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Applied Psychology : Health and Well-Being. Wiley. 2014, 6(2), pp. 230-250. ISSN 1758-0846. eISSN 1758-0854. Available under: doi: 10.1111/aphw.12026

Zusammenfassung

The current studies aim to show that descriptive social norms influence vegetable intake and to investigate three potentially underlying processes (self-identification, attitude, and self-efficacy).The current studies aim to show that descriptive social norms influence vegetable intake and to investigate three potentially underlying processes (self-identification, attitude, and self-efficacy). Methods: In two studies, descriptive social norms regarding vegetable intake were manipulated (majority vs. minority norm). Study 1 investigated both the relation between baseline vegetable intake and self-identification, attitude, and self-efficacy, as well as the effect of the norm manipulation on vegetable intake over a one-week period. Study 2 investigated potential mediation of the effect of the manipulation on vegetable intake intentions through self-identification, attitude, and self-efficacy. Results: Study 1 showed that the proposed mediators were related to a baseline measure of vegetable intake. Moreover, in participants identifying strongly with the norm referent group, majority norms led to higher vegetable consumption than minority norms. Study 2 showed that the direct effect of the social norm manipulation on vegetable intake intentions was partly mediated by self-identification, attitude, and self-efficacy. Conclusions: These studies shed first light on processes underlying the effect of descriptive social norms on health behavior. A norm describing the behavior of a salient social group leads people to identify more with, have more positive attitudes toward, and feel more self-efficacious regarding that behavior.

Zusammenfassung in einer weiteren Sprache

Fachgebiet (DDC)
150 Psychologie

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descriptive norms, eating behavior, self-categorisation theory, social norms, vegetable intake

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ISO 690STOK, F. Marijn, Kirsten T. VERKOOIJEN, Denise T. D. DE RIDDER, John B. F. DE WIT, Emely DE VET, 2014. How norms work : self-identification, attitude, and self-efficacy mediate the relation between descriptive social norms and vegetable intake. In: Applied Psychology : Health and Well-Being. Wiley. 2014, 6(2), pp. 230-250. ISSN 1758-0846. eISSN 1758-0854. Available under: doi: 10.1111/aphw.12026
BibTex
@article{Stok2014norms-54239,
  year={2014},
  doi={10.1111/aphw.12026},
  title={How norms work : self-identification, attitude, and self-efficacy mediate the relation between descriptive social norms and vegetable intake},
  number={2},
  volume={6},
  issn={1758-0846},
  journal={Applied Psychology : Health and Well-Being},
  pages={230--250},
  author={Stok, F. Marijn and Verkooijen, Kirsten T. and de Ridder, Denise T. D. and de Wit, John B. F. and de Vet, Emely}
}
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