Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, volume 379, issue 1897

Language matters: how normative expressions shape norm perception and affect norm compliance

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-01-22
scimago Q1
SJR2.035
CiteScore11.8
Impact factor5.4
ISSN09628436, 14712970
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Abstract

Previous studies have used various normative expressions such as ‘should’, ‘appropriate’ and ‘approved’ interchangeably to communicate injunctions and social norms. However, little is known about whether people's interpretations of normative language differ and whether behavioural responses might vary across them. In two studies (total n = 2903), we find that compliance is sensitive to the types of normative expressions and how they are used. Specifically, people are more likely to comply when the message is framed as an injunction rather than as what most people consider good behaviour (social norm framing). Behaviour is influenced by the type of normative expression when the norm is weak (donation to charities), not so when the norm is strong (reciprocity). Content analysis of free responses reveals individual differences in the interpretation of social norm messages, and heterogeneous motives for compliance. Messages in the social norm framing condition are perceived to be vague and uninformative, undermining their effectiveness. These results suggest that careful choice of normative expressions is in order when using messages to elicit compliance, especially when the underlying norms are weak.

This article is part of the theme issue ‘Social norm change: drivers and consequences’.

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