Authors
Gert Cornelissen, Mario Pandelaere, Luk Warlop, Siegfried Dewitte
Publication date
2008/3/1
Journal
International Journal of Research in Marketing
Volume
25
Issue
1
Pages
46-55
Publisher
North-Holland
Description
People frequently fail to see themselves as environmentally conscious consumers; one reason for this is that they are oftentimes prone to dismissing their more common ecological behaviors (e.g., avoid littering) as non-diagnostic for that particular self-image. The cueing of commonly performed ecological behaviors as environmentally friendly (what we call positive cueing) renders both cued and non-cued common ecological behaviors more diagnostic for the inference of pro-environmental attitudes (Study 1). As a result, positive cueing increases the likelihood that people will see themselves as consumers who are concerned with the degree to which their behavior is environmentally responsible (Study 2). The cueing of common ecological behaviors leads participants to choose environmentally friendly products with greater frequency, and even to use scrap paper more efficiently (Study 3). We discuss the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
G Cornelissen, M Pandelaere, L Warlop, S Dewitte - International Journal of Research in Marketing, 2008