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How negative descriptive norms for healthy eating undermine the effects of positive injunctive norms
69
Citations
57
References
2014
Year
NutritionDescriptive NormBehavioral Decision MakingPublic Health NutritionHealth PsychologySocial SciencesPsychologyAttitude TheoryFood ChoiceHealth CommunicationPublic HealthNegative Descriptive NormsAppetite ControlBehavioral SciencesExtended TheoryHealth PromotionGroup Norm SalienceApplied Social PsychologyPositive Injunctive NormsHealth BehaviorBehavioral InsightNegative Descriptive Norm
Abstract Healthy eating intentions were assessed as a function of theory of planned behavior variables and manipulated group norm salience. Participants ( n = 119) were exposed (or not) to a positive injunctive norm that their fellow students approve of eating healthily, and (or not) to a negative descriptive norm that their fellow students do not eat healthily. A significant interaction emerged. When a negative descriptive norm was made salient, participants exposed to a positive injunctive norm reported significantly lower intentions to eat healthily. When no descriptive norm was given, exposure to a positive injunctive norm had no effect. The results suggest the weakness of manipulated injunctive norm salience in the health domain, and the importance of investigating the interactive effects of referent group norms.
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