University of Edinburgh, UK.
University of Queensland, Australia.
Appetite. 2016 Oct 1;105:344-55. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2016.06.005. Epub 2016 Jun 6.
Three studies were conducted to examine the effect of group identification and normative content of social identities on healthy eating intentions and behaviour. In Study 1 (N = 87) Australian participants were shown images that portrayed a norm of healthy vs. unhealthy behaviour among Australians. Participants' choices from an online restaurant menu were used to calculate energy content as the dependent variable. In Study 2 (N = 117), female participants were assigned to a healthy or unhealthy norm condition. The dependent variable was the amount of food eaten in a taste test. Social group identification was measured in both studies. In Study 3 (N = 117), both American identification and healthiness norm were experimentally manipulated, and participants' choices from an online restaurant menu constituted the dependent variable. In all three studies, the healthiness norm presented interacted with participants' group identification to predict eating behaviour. Contrary to what would be predicted under the traditional normative social influence account, higher identifiers chose higher energy food from an online menu and ate more food in a taste test when presented with information about their in-group members behaving healthily. The exact psychological mechanism responsible for these results remains unclear, but the pattern of means can be interpreted as evidence of vicarious licensing, whereby participants feel less motivated to make healthy food choices after being presented with content suggesting that other in-group members are engaging in healthy behaviour. These results suggest a more complex interplay between group membership and norms than has previously been proposed.
三项研究旨在考察群体认同和社会认同的规范内容对健康饮食意向和行为的影响。在研究 1(N=87)中,澳大利亚参与者观看了描绘澳大利亚人健康与不健康行为规范的图像。参与者从在线餐厅菜单中的选择被用来计算能量含量作为因变量。在研究 2(N=117)中,女性参与者被分配到健康或不健康的规范条件。依赖变量是味觉测试中吃的食物量。在这两项研究中都测量了社会群体认同。在研究 3(N=117)中,同时操纵了美国认同和健康规范,参与者从在线餐厅菜单中的选择构成了因变量。在所有三项研究中,呈现的健康规范与参与者的群体认同相互作用,预测了饮食行为。与传统的规范性社会影响理论所预测的情况相反,当参与者看到有关其群体成员健康行为的信息时,他们会从在线菜单中选择更高能量的食物,并且在味觉测试中吃得更多。导致这些结果的确切心理机制尚不清楚,但这些均值模式可以解释为替代许可的证据,即参与者在看到暗示其他群体成员参与健康行为的内容后,对选择健康食品的动机降低。这些结果表明,群体成员和规范之间的相互作用比以前提出的更为复杂。