Untangling the dairy paradox: How vegetarians experience and navigate the cognitive dissonance aroused by their dairy consumption

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Appetite Pub Date : 2024-09-26 DOI:10.1016/j.appet.2024.107692
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Abstract

Most people eat meat, yet report valuing the environment, animal life, and their health, which contradicts this dietary behaviour. The psychological discomfort aroused by this value-behaviour inconsistency, and the strategies meat eaters use to resolve this unpleasant state, is termed the ‘meat paradox’. Vegetarians eschew meat consumption, but the negative implications of dairy are comparable to meat. We investigated the ‘dairy paradox’ in a sample of vegetarians (N = 378) using an experimental design. Specifically, we tested whether vegetarians experienced cognitive dissonance after reading about the environmental, animal welfare, and health impacts of dairy consumption when compared to a control group not exposed to this information. Then, we examined to what extent perceiving dairy consumption as Natural, Necessary, Normal, Nice, or Neglectable, and denial of cows' mental states (Experience or Agency) predicted reduced cognitive dissonance. Vegetarians in the dissonance-induction condition reported experiencing significantly greater dissonance, though they more strongly rejected the justification strategies. Instead, they reported greater intentions to reduce their dairy consumption than vegetarians in the control condition. Rather than replicating findings from the meat paradox literature, these results suggest that vegetarians respond to uncomfortable feelings about their value-behaviour conflict with a greater intention to abandon the incongruent behaviour, rather than endorsing the cognitions that justify it. This research provides evidence that vegetarians experience a dairy paradox. Given the success of our study in shifting participants away from behavioural justification and toward behavioural change intentions, our findings can help guide the design of interventions seeking to reduce dairy consumption.
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解开乳制品悖论:素食者如何体验和驾驭乳制品消费引起的认知偏差》(Untangling the Dairy Paradox: How Vegetarian Experience and Navigate the Cognitive Dissonance Aroused by Their Dairy Consumption)。
大多数人都吃肉,但他们对环境、动物生命和自身健康的重视却与这种饮食行为相矛盾。这种价值与行为的不一致所引起的心理不适,以及肉食者用来解决这种不愉快状态的策略,被称为 "肉食悖论"。素食者摒弃肉类消费,但乳制品的负面影响却与肉类不相上下。我们采用实验设计对素食者样本(378 人)中的 "乳制品悖论 "进行了调查。具体来说,我们测试了素食者在阅读了有关乳制品消费对环境、动物福利和健康影响的信息后,与没有接触过这些信息的对照组相比,是否会产生认知失调。然后,我们研究了认为乳制品消费是自然的、必要的、正常的、好的或可忽略的,以及否认奶牛的精神状态(经验或代理)在多大程度上能预测认知失调的减少。在不和谐诱导条件下,素食者虽然更强烈地拒绝接受辩解策略,但却报告说他们经历了明显更多的不和谐。相反,与对照组相比,他们更愿意减少乳制品的消费。这些结果并没有重复肉类悖论文献中的研究结果,而是表明素食者在对其价值-行为冲突的不舒适感做出反应时,会更有意识地放弃不协调的行为,而不是赞同为其辩护的认知。这项研究提供了证据,证明素食者经历了奶制品悖论。鉴于我们的研究成功地使参与者从行为辩解转向行为改变意向,我们的发现有助于指导旨在减少乳制品消费的干预措施的设计。
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来源期刊
Appetite
Appetite 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
566
审稿时长
13.4 weeks
期刊介绍: Appetite is an international research journal specializing in cultural, social, psychological, sensory and physiological influences on the selection and intake of foods and drinks. It covers normal and disordered eating and drinking and welcomes studies of both human and non-human animal behaviour toward food. Appetite publishes research reports, reviews and commentaries. Thematic special issues appear regularly. From time to time the journal carries abstracts from professional meetings. Submissions to Appetite are expected to be based primarily on observations directly related to the selection and intake of foods and drinks; papers that are primarily focused on topics such as nutrition or obesity will not be considered unless they specifically make a novel scientific contribution to the understanding of appetite in line with the journal's aims and scope.
期刊最新文献
Editorial Board A novel appetite loss in older adults with and without cognitive impairment (ALOC) screening scale. Beyond the family's cooking frequency: The Influence of Cooking Techniques on Vegetable and Fruit Consumption among the U.S. population. Sizzling steaks and manly molds: Exploring the meanings of meat and masculinities in young men's lives. The role of child nutrition counselling, gender dynamics, and intra-household feeding decision-making on child dietary diversity in semi-arid northern Ghana
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