Consumers’ avoidance of information on red meat risks: information exposure effects on attitudes and perceived knowledge
Consumers’ avoidance of information on red meat risks: information exposure effects on attitudes and perceived knowledge
In accordance with cognitive dissonance theory, individuals generally avoid information that is not consistent with their cognitions, to avoid psychological discomfort associated with tensions arising from contradictory beliefs. Information avoidance may thus make risk communication less successful. To address this, we presented information on red meat risks to red meat consumers. To explore information exposure effects, attitudes toward red meat and perceived knowledge of red meat risks were measured before, immediately after, and two weeks after exposure. We expected information avoidance of red meat risks to be: positively related to (1) study discontentment; and (2) positive attitudes toward red meat; and negatively related to (3) information seeking on red meat risks; and (4) systematic and heuristic processing of information. In addition, following exposure to the risk information, we expected that (5) individuals who scored high in avoidance of red meat risks information to change their attitudes and perceived risk knowledge less than individuals who scored low in avoidance. Results were in line with the first three expectations. Support for the fourth was partial insofar as this was only confirmed regarding systematic processing. The final prediction was not confirmed; individuals who scored high in avoidance decreased the positivity of their attitudes and increased their perceived knowledge in a similar fashion to those who scored low in avoidance. These changes stood over the two-week follow-up period. Results are discussed in accordance with cognitive dissonance theory, with the possible use of suppression strategies, and with the corresponding implications for risk communication practice.
information avoidance, cognitive dissonance, risk communication, red meat, risk perception
1-17
Gaspar, Rui
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Luis, Silvia
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Seibt, Beate
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Lima, Maria Luisa
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Marcu, Afrodita
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Rutsaert, Pieter
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Fletcher, Dave
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Verbeke, Wim
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Barnett, Julie
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Gaspar, Rui
961797d4-2de9-4a4c-9ecb-b501871f6eb6
Luis, Silvia
e659f823-a38f-44a6-b861-4e7793b18b12
Seibt, Beate
77ff4397-28c2-424d-b0f4-fe363c39ae98
Lima, Maria Luisa
155d3d51-71f4-4e6d-96ee-28af54a5c78b
Marcu, Afrodita
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Rutsaert, Pieter
42d30761-4def-493c-a794-29e12889e9f0
Fletcher, Dave
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Verbeke, Wim
231bb739-16ef-4e75-aeab-917d2696f0b7
Barnett, Julie
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Gaspar, Rui, Luis, Silvia, Seibt, Beate, Lima, Maria Luisa, Marcu, Afrodita, Rutsaert, Pieter, Fletcher, Dave, Verbeke, Wim and Barnett, Julie
(2015)
Consumers’ avoidance of information on red meat risks: information exposure effects on attitudes and perceived knowledge.
Journal of Risk Research, .
(doi:10.1080/13669877.2014.1003318).
Abstract
In accordance with cognitive dissonance theory, individuals generally avoid information that is not consistent with their cognitions, to avoid psychological discomfort associated with tensions arising from contradictory beliefs. Information avoidance may thus make risk communication less successful. To address this, we presented information on red meat risks to red meat consumers. To explore information exposure effects, attitudes toward red meat and perceived knowledge of red meat risks were measured before, immediately after, and two weeks after exposure. We expected information avoidance of red meat risks to be: positively related to (1) study discontentment; and (2) positive attitudes toward red meat; and negatively related to (3) information seeking on red meat risks; and (4) systematic and heuristic processing of information. In addition, following exposure to the risk information, we expected that (5) individuals who scored high in avoidance of red meat risks information to change their attitudes and perceived risk knowledge less than individuals who scored low in avoidance. Results were in line with the first three expectations. Support for the fourth was partial insofar as this was only confirmed regarding systematic processing. The final prediction was not confirmed; individuals who scored high in avoidance decreased the positivity of their attitudes and increased their perceived knowledge in a similar fashion to those who scored low in avoidance. These changes stood over the two-week follow-up period. Results are discussed in accordance with cognitive dissonance theory, with the possible use of suppression strategies, and with the corresponding implications for risk communication practice.
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Gaspar et al 2015_Consumer avoidance of info on red meat risks_J of Risk Research.pdf
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 November 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 February 2015
Keywords:
information avoidance, cognitive dissonance, risk communication, red meat, risk perception
Organisations:
Psychology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 375007
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/375007
ISSN: 1366-9877
PURE UUID: 29abe370-68b8-4cd0-b6f5-c78acad16968
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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2015 10:44
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 19:18
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Author:
Rui Gaspar
Author:
Silvia Luis
Author:
Beate Seibt
Author:
Maria Luisa Lima
Author:
Afrodita Marcu
Author:
Pieter Rutsaert
Author:
Dave Fletcher
Author:
Wim Verbeke
Author:
Julie Barnett
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