Normative Social Influence is Underdetected

First Published May 9, 2008 Research Article Find in PubMed

Authors

University of Arkansas, [email protected]
by this author
,
California State University, San Marcos
by this author
,
Arizona State University
by this author
,
University of Chicago
by this author
,
University of Minnesota
by this author
First Published Online: May 9, 2008

The present research investigated the persuasive impact and detectability of normative social influence. The first study surveyed 810 Californians about energy conservation and found that descriptive normative beliefs were more predictive of behavior than were other relevant beliefs, even though respondents rated such norms as least important in their conservation decisions. Study 2, a field experiment, showed that normative social influence produced the greatest change in behavior compared to information highlighting other reasons to conserve, even though respondents rated the normative information as least motivating. Results show that normative messages can be a powerful lever of persuasion but that their influence is underdetected.

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