Sussman Abigail B, Sharma Eesha, Alter Adam L
Booth School of Business, University of Chicago.
Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College.
J Exp Psychol Appl. 2015 Jun;21(2):130-9. doi: 10.1037/xap0000047. Epub 2015 Apr 20.
Many articles have examined the psychological drivers of charitable giving, but little is known about how people mentally budget for charitable gifts. The present research aims to address this gap by investigating how perceptions of donations as exceptional (uncommon and infrequent) rather than ordinary (common and frequent) expenses might affect budgeting for and giving to charity. We provide the first demonstration that exceptional framing of an identical item can directly influence mental budgeting processes, and yield societal benefits. In 5 lab and field experiments, exceptional framing increased charitable behavior, and diminished the extent to which people considered the effect of the donation on their budgets. The current work extends our understanding of mental accounting and budgeting for charitable gifts, and demonstrates practical techniques that enable fundraisers to enhance the perceived exceptionality of donations.
许多文章探讨了慈善捐赠的心理驱动因素,但对于人们如何在心理上为慈善礼物进行预算却知之甚少。本研究旨在通过调查将捐赠视为特殊(不常见且不频繁)而非普通(常见且频繁)支出的认知如何影响慈善预算和捐赠,来填补这一空白。我们首次证明,对同一物品的特殊框架设定可以直接影响心理预算过程,并产生社会效益。在5项实验室和实地实验中,特殊框架设定增加了慈善行为,并减少了人们考虑捐赠对其预算影响的程度。当前的研究扩展了我们对慈善礼物心理账户和预算的理解,并展示了一些实用技巧,使筹款人能够提高捐赠的感知特殊性。