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The model of norm-regulated responsibility for proenvironmental behavior in the context of littering prevention

Pengya Ai, Sonny Rosenthal

2024Scientific Reports17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Previous research suggests that descriptive norms positively influence proenvironmental behavior, including littering prevention. However, in some behavioral contexts, a weak descriptive norm may increase individuals' feelings of responsibility by signaling a need for action. We examined this effect in the context of litter prevention by conducting structural equation modeling of survey data from 1400 Singapore residents. The results showed that descriptive norms negatively predicted ascription of responsibility and were negatively related to littering prevention behavior via ascription of responsibility and personal norms. It also showed that strong injunctive norms can reduce the inhibitory effect of descriptive norms on ascription of responsibility. These findings were consistent with several hypotheses constituting the model of norm-regulated responsibility, a novel explanatory framework offering new insights and a more nuanced and comprehensive understanding of social norms' influence on proenvironmental behavior.

Topics & Concepts

AscriptionSocial norms approachStructural equation modelingNorm (philosophy)Descriptive statisticsPsychologyTheory of planned behaviorSocial psychologyFeelingContext (archaeology)Social responsibilityMoral responsibilityControl (management)Political sciencePublic relationsEpistemologyMathematicsComputer scienceBiologyStatisticsPaleontologyLawPerceptionNeuroscienceArtificial intelligencePhilosophyEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityBehavioral Health and InterventionsEnergy and Environment Impacts
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