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Stimulating Sustainable Food Choices Using Virtual Reality: Taking an Environmental vs Health Communication Perspective on Enhancing Response Efficacy Beliefs

Marijn H. C. Meijers, Eline Suzanne Smit, Kelly K. de Wildt, Sonja-Greetta Karvonen, Demi van der Plas, Laura Nynke van der Laan

2021Environmental Communication85 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Personal response efficacy beliefs are vital in instigating, maintaining, and catalyzing environmental behavior change. In this experimental study (N = 249), we investigated whether such efficacy beliefs could be stimulated using Virtual Reality. In a VR-supermarket, participants would see interactive pop-ups displaying impact messages when they picked up products, these are messages that display the (environmental or health) impact of a product. Our results show that these impact messages are effective in stimulating personal response efficacy beliefs and subsequently pro-environmental food choices. The heightened personal response efficacy beliefs positively affected maintaining and catalyzing behavior change (i.e. positive spill-over) up to two weeks after the VR-experience. The effectiveness of the impact messages did not depend on appeal type (health vs environmental appeal) or modality (text + visual vs text only) of the message. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

Perspective (graphical)AppealPsychologyFood choiceVirtual realitySelf-efficacySocial psychologyProduct (mathematics)AdvertisingMedicineComputer scienceBusinessHuman–computer interactionPolitical scienceArtificial intelligenceMathematicsPathologyGeometryLawEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityBehavioral Health and InterventionsAnimal and Plant Science Education
Stimulating Sustainable Food Choices Using Virtual Reality: Taking an Environmental vs Health Communication Perspective on Enhancing Response Efficacy Beliefs | Litcius