New Publication: Uncovering the relevance of reasons for behavior: The attitude-behavior gap revisited
Available free of charge at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2025.102762
Kaiser, F. G. & Brüggemann, M. (2025). Uncovering the relevance of reasons for behavior: The attitude-behavior gap revisited. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 107, 102762.
Abstract:
To use a particular reason to explain behavior, the reason (e.g., to protect the environment) must be present when people engage in the action (e.g., riding a bike) and absent when people do not (e.g., not riding a bike). This thinking resonates in the statistical benchmark that behavioral scientists typically apply when assessing a reason's behavioral relevance. In contrast to what the notorious attitude-behavior gap insinuates, explaining small amounts of variance in a behavior does not inevitably challenge the behavioral relevance of reasons. The problem arises because different people have different reasons for engaging in a behavior and even for not engaging in it. By reanalyzing two previously collected data sets, we corroborate the environmental-protection reason's sensitivity for actions and specificity for inactions. Additionally, we confirm that both effects become even more convincing when person-specific rather than behavior-specific benchmarks for the presence and absence of a reason are employed.
Highlights:
- Many reasons can account for any specific decision to act or not to act.
- Alternative reasons usually weaken the behavioral relevance of any specific reason.
- A reason's behavioral relevance is not necessarily shown by its explained variance.
- Action must correspond with the presence of a reason and inaction with its absence.
- Environmental protection is a vital reason for specific action-inaction decisions.