Consumers' Willingness to Consume Insect-Based Protein Depends on Descriptive Social Norms

Eating of insects has been discussed as a more sustainable source of animal protein, but consumer research about uptake behavior of Western consumers is still scarce. Based on previous psychological research highlighting the role of social norms, the present research shows that even subtle cues abou...

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Main Authors: Sebastian Berger, Annika M. Wyss
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsufs.2020.00144/full
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spelling doaj-6513071acb0a4fed93e3f5febdf75baa2020-11-25T03:28:24ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems2571-581X2020-09-01410.3389/fsufs.2020.00144565888Consumers' Willingness to Consume Insect-Based Protein Depends on Descriptive Social NormsSebastian Berger0Annika M. Wyss1Department of Organization and Human Resources, University of Bern, Bern, SwitzerlandDepartment of Social Neuroscience and Social Psychology, University of Bern, Bern, SwitzerlandEating of insects has been discussed as a more sustainable source of animal protein, but consumer research about uptake behavior of Western consumers is still scarce. Based on previous psychological research highlighting the role of social norms, the present research shows that even subtle cues about descriptive social norms affect Westerners' willingness to eat unprocessed insects. In a series of four studies, we demonstrate that adherence to descriptive social norms underlies eating intention and behavior. Study 1 shows that individual beliefs about the descriptive social norm correlates with the willingness to eat an unprocessed insect, an effect which is replicated in an experiment showing the causal direction from norm beliefs to eating behavior (Study 2). Study 3 establishes that even in the absence of concrete information about social norms, consumers construe norms based on other options. Manipulating the perceived eating-contingent financial rewards for other people from the same population, un-incentivized participants are more readily willing to eat when they believe that others receive a higher incentive, an effect that is mediated by beliefs about the eating frequency of these participants. Study 4, finally, shows that manipulating beliefs about the norms provides the causal explanation as the effect of the incentive disappears when norm information is explicitly given. Taken together, the studies show that descriptive social norms partially underlie Westerns willingness (or reluctance) to consume insects and that behavioral change initiative could focus on the importance of using norms to increase reliance on non-standard sources of animal protein.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsufs.2020.00144/fullentomophagysocial normsconsumer psychologysustainabilitybehavioral economics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sebastian Berger
Annika M. Wyss
spellingShingle Sebastian Berger
Annika M. Wyss
Consumers' Willingness to Consume Insect-Based Protein Depends on Descriptive Social Norms
Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
entomophagy
social norms
consumer psychology
sustainability
behavioral economics
author_facet Sebastian Berger
Annika M. Wyss
author_sort Sebastian Berger
title Consumers' Willingness to Consume Insect-Based Protein Depends on Descriptive Social Norms
title_short Consumers' Willingness to Consume Insect-Based Protein Depends on Descriptive Social Norms
title_full Consumers' Willingness to Consume Insect-Based Protein Depends on Descriptive Social Norms
title_fullStr Consumers' Willingness to Consume Insect-Based Protein Depends on Descriptive Social Norms
title_full_unstemmed Consumers' Willingness to Consume Insect-Based Protein Depends on Descriptive Social Norms
title_sort consumers' willingness to consume insect-based protein depends on descriptive social norms
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
issn 2571-581X
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Eating of insects has been discussed as a more sustainable source of animal protein, but consumer research about uptake behavior of Western consumers is still scarce. Based on previous psychological research highlighting the role of social norms, the present research shows that even subtle cues about descriptive social norms affect Westerners' willingness to eat unprocessed insects. In a series of four studies, we demonstrate that adherence to descriptive social norms underlies eating intention and behavior. Study 1 shows that individual beliefs about the descriptive social norm correlates with the willingness to eat an unprocessed insect, an effect which is replicated in an experiment showing the causal direction from norm beliefs to eating behavior (Study 2). Study 3 establishes that even in the absence of concrete information about social norms, consumers construe norms based on other options. Manipulating the perceived eating-contingent financial rewards for other people from the same population, un-incentivized participants are more readily willing to eat when they believe that others receive a higher incentive, an effect that is mediated by beliefs about the eating frequency of these participants. Study 4, finally, shows that manipulating beliefs about the norms provides the causal explanation as the effect of the incentive disappears when norm information is explicitly given. Taken together, the studies show that descriptive social norms partially underlie Westerns willingness (or reluctance) to consume insects and that behavioral change initiative could focus on the importance of using norms to increase reliance on non-standard sources of animal protein.
topic entomophagy
social norms
consumer psychology
sustainability
behavioral economics
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsufs.2020.00144/full
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