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Changing Norms to Change Behavior

Changing Norms to Change Behavior

By
Dale T. Miller, D.A. Prentice
Annual Review of Psychology. August
7, 2015, Vol. 67, Issue 6, Pages 16-32

Providing people with information about the behavior and attitudes of their peers is a strategy commonly employed by those seeking to reduce behavior deemed harmful either to individuals (e.g., high alcohol consumption) or the collective (e.g., high energy consumption). We review norm-based interventions, detailing the logic behind them and the various forms they can take. We give special attention to interventions designed to decrease college students’ drinking and increase environment-friendly behaviors. We identify the conditions under which norm information has the highest likelihood of changing the targeted behavior and discuss why this is the case.