Abstract

Many campaigns targeting pro-environmental behavior combine multiple approaches without properly understanding how these different approaches interact. Here we study the effect of such combinations. We apply construal level theory to classify different intervention approaches, which can either be at a high construal level (abstract and distant) or at a low construal level (concrete and proximal). In a field experiment we recruited 197 students living in one-person apartments in an all-inclusive student housing facility. We objectively measured their individual electricity and warm water use, and measured psychological variables through surveys. We expected that the (commonly considered superior) combination between a high and a low construal level approach would be least effective. Participants were randomly assigned to a 2(Construal Level: low vs. high) × 2(Social Distance: low vs. high) plus control condition mixed-model design targeting a reduction in warm water use. Our findings suggest that a congruent combination at a high construal level (i.e., the high construal level condition combined with the high social distance condition) has the largest effect on warm water use and that spillover to electricity use is most likely to occur when a high construal level is used (i.e., high social distance). Moreover, especially participants who valued nature and the environment less were most strongly influenced by the combination of two high construal level approaches. In sum, our study suggests that when designing interventions one should consider the construal level and when targeting pro-environmental behavior high construal levels appear most appropriate.

Highlights

  • Environmental campaigns frequently appeal to several motivations at the same time in an attempt to achieve maximum impact on behavior

  • When the two manipulations were at the same construal level, we believe that the manipulations enforce one another, whereas behavior in the incongruent combinations are solely driven by the low construal level component

  • Our results indicate that participants who scored lower on biospheric values were mostly influenced by the aligned high construal level manipulations

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental campaigns frequently appeal to several motivations at the same time in an attempt to achieve maximum impact on behavior. For example, use slogans such as “Save Money, Save Energy, Save the Environment” [1], which is expected to be effective based on the premise that some people value the environment, whereas others value the financial benefits of saving energy [2]. Investigating construal level combinations that reduce energy use innovaties/sociale-innovatie/projecten/ projectsamenvattingen-stem) in collaboration with The Student Hotel and Bectro Installatietechniek and a grant from the National Science Foundation: Division of Social and Economic Sciences (NSF; 0951516; https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/ showAward?AWD_ID=0951516). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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