Judgment and Decision Making (Nov 2019)

Descriptive norms for me, injunctive norms for you: Using norms to explain the risk gap

  • Xi Zou,
  • Krishna Savani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1930297500005362
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14
pp. 644 – 648

Abstract

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People are more likely to rely on descriptive norms (i.e., what their peers are doing) when deciding whether to take a risk themselves than when deciding whether to recommend others to take a risk. We proposed and found that people also attend to normative information when making risk recommendations to others, but in this case they attend to a different type of normative information — injunctive norms (i.e., whether their peers approve of this behavior). Descriptive norm plays a bigger role in influencing people’s own decisions, whereas injunctive norm plays a bigger role in influencing people’s recommendations to others. This research demonstrates the importance of differentiating descriptive versus injunctive norms in risky decision-making and provides further evidence that perceived norms significantly influence risky decision-making.

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