Literature DB >> 30356217

Credibility-enhancing displays promote the provision of non-normative public goods.

Gordon T Kraft-Todd1, Bryan Bollinger2, Kenneth Gillingham3, Stefan Lamp4, David G Rand5.   

Abstract

Promoting the adoption of public goods that are not yet widely accepted is particularly challenging. This is because most tools for increasing cooperation-such as reputation concerns1 and information about social norms2-are typically effective only for behaviours that are commonly practiced, or at least generally agreed upon as being desirable. Here we examine how advocates can successfully promote non-normative (that is, rare or unpopular) public goods. We do so by applying the cultural evolutionary theory of credibility-enhancing displays3, which argues that beliefs are spread more effectively by actions than by words alone-because actions provide information about the actor's true beliefs. Based on this logic, people who themselves engage in a given behaviour will be more effective advocates for that behaviour than people who merely extol its virtues-specifically because engaging in a behaviour credibly signals a belief in its value. As predicted, a field study of a programme that promotes residential solar panel installation in 58 towns in the United States-comprising 1.4 million residents in total-found that community organizers who themselves installed through the programme recruited 62.8% more residents to install solar panels than community organizers who did not. This effect was replicated in three pre-registered randomized survey experiments (total n = 1,805). These experiments also support the theoretical prediction that this effect is specifically driven by subjects' beliefs about what the community organizer believes about solar panels (that is, second-order beliefs), and demonstrate generalizability to four other highly non-normative behaviours. Our findings shed light on how to spread non-normative prosocial behaviours, offer an empirical demonstration of credibility-enhancing displays and have substantial implications for practitioners and policy-makers.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30356217     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0647-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  6 in total

1.  Field experimental evidence shows that self-interest attracts more sunlight.

Authors:  Bryan Bollinger; Kenneth T Gillingham; Marten Ovaere
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-08-10       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Psychological Science in the Wake of COVID-19: Social, Methodological, and Metascientific Considerations.

Authors:  Daniel L Rosenfeld; Emily Balcetis; Brock Bastian; Elliot T Berkman; Jennifer K Bosson; Tiffany N Brannon; Anthony L Burrow; C Daryl Cameron; Serena Chen; Jonathan E Cook; Christian Crandall; Shai Davidai; Kristof Dhont; Paul W Eastwick; Sarah E Gaither; Steven W Gangestad; Thomas Gilovich; Kurt Gray; Elizabeth L Haines; Martie G Haselton; Nick Haslam; Gordon Hodson; Michael A Hogg; Matthew J Hornsey; Yuen J Huo; Samantha Joel; Frank J Kachanoff; Gordon Kraft-Todd; Mark R Leary; Alison Ledgerwood; Randy T Lee; Steve Loughnan; Cara C MacInnis; Traci Mann; Damian R Murray; Carolyn Parkinson; Efrén O Pérez; Tom Pyszczynski; Kaylin Ratner; Hank Rothgerber; James D Rounds; Mark Schaller; Roxane Cohen Silver; Barbara A Spellman; Nina Strohminger; Janet K Swim; Felix Thoemmes; Betul Urganci; Joseph A Vandello; Sarah Volz; Vivian Zayas; A Janet Tomiyama
Journal:  Perspect Psychol Sci       Date:  2021-10-01

3.  Determinants of emissions pathways in the coupled climate-social system.

Authors:  Frances C Moore; Katherine Lacasse; Katharine J Mach; Yoon Ah Shin; Louis J Gross; Brian Beckage
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2022-02-16       Impact factor: 69.504

4.  Explaining costly religious practices: credibility enhancing displays and signaling theories.

Authors:  Carl Brusse; Toby Handfield; Kevin J S Zollman
Journal:  Synthese       Date:  2022-06-02       Impact factor: 1.595

5.  Predictors of well-being and productivity among software professionals during the COVID-19 pandemic - a longitudinal study.

Authors:  Daniel Russo; Paul H P Hanel; Seraphina Altnickel; Niels van Berkel
Journal:  Empir Softw Eng       Date:  2021-04-28       Impact factor: 2.522

Review 6.  The persistence of high energy burdens: A bibliometric analysis of vulnerability, poverty, and exclusion in the United States.

Authors:  Marilyn A Brown; Anmol Soni; Ameet D Doshi; Charlotte King
Journal:  Energy Res Soc Sci       Date:  2020-09-14
  6 in total

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