Attitudes and behavior in social space: Public good interventions based on shared representations and environmental influences

被引:46
|
作者
Liu, JH [1 ]
Sibley, CG [1 ]
机构
[1] Victoria Univ Wellington, Sch Psychol, Wellington, New Zealand
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.jenvp.2003.12.003
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
A sub-theory of social space was developed that predicts that attitude-behavior correlations will be reduced in public places when there are either (1) shared representations and behavioral uniformity associated with a group's interaction and social identification with that place, or (2) direct cues from the physical environment that make certain behaviors less likely to be under perceived behavior control. This distinction is critical for knowing when attitudinal or structural interventions are more likely to change different types of behavior in different spaces. The theory was applied to the problem of littering in the central quadrangle (quad) of a university. Study 1 found that attitude-behavior correlations were significantly lower on-Quad compared to off-Quad (for noncigarette littering). Attitude salience manipulations failed to change littering behavior, and there were no differences in social representations of the quad space or attitude-behavior correlations between regular and casual users. Self-monitoring was found to moderate attitude behavior-correlations off-Quad but not on-Quad. In Study 2, a structural intervention (adding ashtrays and litter bins) reduced cigarette littering by 64%, without changing attitudes towards littering. Consistent with the two-stage process model of littering behavior, pro-environmental attitudes predicted active, but not passive, littering. Results supported an environmental perspective in which the structure of the physical environment, rather than group-based social representations and attitudes, moderated the way in which littering behavior was performed. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:373 / 384
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Pro-environmental attitudes and behavior: Revealing perceived social desirability
    Felonneau, Marie-Line
    Becker, Maja
    [J]. REVUE INTERNATIONALE DE PSYCHOLOGIE SOCIALE-INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 21 (04): : 25 - 53
  • [32] Encouraging social diffusion of pro-environmental behavior through online workshop-based interventions
    Champine, Veronica M.
    Jones, Megan S.
    Niemiec, Rebecca M.
    [J]. CONSERVATION SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, 2023, 5 (10)
  • [33] Chronic pain in families: a cross-sectional study of shared social, behavioural, and environmental influences
    Campbell, Paul
    Jordan, Kelvin P.
    Smith, Blair H.
    Dunn, Kate M.
    [J]. PAIN, 2018, 159 (01) : 41 - 47
  • [34] Social Behavior in Public Space: An Analysis of Behavioral Adaptations to CCTV
    Lorraine Mazerolle
    David Hurley
    Mitchell Chamlin
    [J]. Security Journal, 2002, 15 (3) : 59 - 75
  • [35] Research on evolution of public environmental protection behavior based on data crawler and dynamic social network
    Zheng J.
    Cheng Y.
    Ma G.
    Shao C.
    [J]. Xitong Gongcheng Lilun yu Shijian/System Engineering Theory and Practice, 2020, 40 (01): : 219 - 229
  • [36] Social representations of climate change and pro-environmental behavior intentions in Taiwan
    Chen, Mei-Fang
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL SOCIOLOGY, 2019, 34 (03) : 327 - 346
  • [37] Good patriotism, social consideration, environmental problem cognition, and pro-environmental attitudes and behaviors: a cross-sectional study of Chinese attitudes
    Hamada, Tomomi
    Shimizu, Makoto
    Ebihara, Tsuyoshi
    [J]. SN APPLIED SCIENCES, 2021, 3 (03)
  • [38] Good patriotism, social consideration, environmental problem cognition, and pro-environmental attitudes and behaviors: a cross-sectional study of Chinese attitudes
    Tomomi Hamada
    Makoto Shimizu
    Tsuyoshi Ebihara
    [J]. SN Applied Sciences, 2021, 3
  • [39] Guiding hand hygiene interventions among future healthcare workers: implications of knowledge, attitudes, and social influences
    Qasmi, Shamsul Arfin
    Shah, Sayed Mustafa Mahmood
    IftikharWakil, Hafiz Yahya
    Pirzada, Sarmad
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INFECTION CONTROL, 2018, 46 (09) : 1026 - 1031
  • [40] Irrational attitudes and social stress in outpatient behavior therapy: Changes, prognostic and mediating influences
    Klages, U
    [J]. PSYCHOTHERAPIE PSYCHOSOMATIK MEDIZINISCHE PSYCHOLOGIE, 2002, 52 (12) : 500 - 510