All Stories

  1. Spillover in Sustainable Consumer Behavior: A Matter of Commitment
  2. Uncovering the relevance of reasons for behavior: The attitude-behavior gap revisited
  3. Explaining Behavior With Mental Attributes
  4. Wealth as an obstacle and a support for environmental protection
  5. A general explanation for environmental policy support: An example using carbon taxation approval in Germany
  6. Supporting and expressing support for environmental policies
  7. Environmental Attitudes in 28 European Countries Derived From Atheoretically Compiled Opinions and Self-Reports of Behavior
  8. Opinion polls as measures of commitment to goals: Environmental attitude in Germany from 1996 to 2018
  9. The supportive role of environmental attitude for learning about environmental issues
  10. Fachgruppe Sozialpsychologie. Task Force “Qualitätssicherung sozialpsychologischer Forschung” der Fachgruppe Sozialpsychologie. Das Zusammenspiel von Theorie und Methodik
  11. Climate change mitigation within the Campbell paradigm: doing the right thing for a reason and against all odds
  12. Offsetting behavioral costs with personal attitudes: A slightly more complex view of the attitude-behavior relation
  13. Offsetting behavioral costs with personal attitude: Identifying the psychological essence of an environmental attitude measure
  14. Increasing People’s Acceptance of Anthropogenic Climate Change with Scientific Facts: Is Mechanistic Information More Effective for Environmentalists?
  15. Positive spillover: The result of attitude change
  16. The Campbell Paradigm as a Behavior-Predictive Reinterpretation of the Classical Tripartite Model of Attitudes
  17. The development of children’s environmental attitude and behavior
  18. How to make nonhumanoid mobile robots more likable: Employing kinesic courtesy cues to promote appreciation
  19. The role of environmental attitude in the efficacy of smart-meter-based feedback interventions
  20. Conformity Within the Campbell Paradigm
  21. The economy of E-waste collection at the individual level: A practice oriented approach of categorizing determinants of E-waste collection into behavioral costs and motivation
  22. Kommentare zu Meiser, T. et al. (2018). Positionspapier zur Rolle der Psychologischen Methodenlehre in Forschung und Lehre
  23. Applying the Campbell Paradigm to sustainable travel behavior: Compensatory effects of environmental attitude and the transportation environment
  24. Childhood Origins of Young Adult Environmental Behavior
  25. How do we know we are measuring environmental attitude? Specific objectivity as the formal validation criterion for measures of latent attributes
  26. Striving for mental vigor through restorative activities: Application of the Campbell Paradigm to construct the Attitude toward mental vigor scale
  27. Capturing the Environmental Impact of Individual Lifestyles: Evidence of the Criterion Validity of the General Ecological Behavior Scale
  28. Self-Determined, Enduring, Ecologically Sustainable Ways of Life: Attitude as a Measure of Individuals’ Intrinsic Motivation
  29. Understanding the foot-in-the-door effect as a pseudo-effect from the perspective of the Campbell paradigm
  30. Understanding the Acceptance of Nature-Preservation-Related Restrictions as the Result of the Compensatory Effects of Environmental Attitude and Behavioral Costs
  31. Evaluating Environmental Knowledge Dimension Convergence to Assess Educational Programme Effectiveness
  32. Prosocial Propensity Bias in Experimental Research on Helping Behavior: The Proposition of a Discomforting Hypothesis
  33. Die Ökonomie des Konsumverzichts: Weniger kann mehr sein
  34. Ecological behavior across the lifespan: Why environmentalism increases as people grow older
  35. The Campbell Paradigm as a Conceptual Alternative to the Expectation of Hypocrisy in Contemporary Attitude Research
  36. Appreciation of nature and appreciation of environmental protection: How stable are these attitudes and which comes first?
  37. Attitudes and Defaults Save Lives and Protect the Environment Jointly and Compensatorily: Understanding the Behavioral Efficacy of Nudges and Other Structural Interventions
  38. Exploitative vs. appreciative use of nature – Two interpretations of utilization and their relevance for environmental education
  39. Using Cutting-Edge Psychology to Advance Environmental Conservation
  40. The Critical Challenge of Climate Change for Psychology
  41. Health performance of individuals within the Campbell paradigm
  42. A Competence Model for Environmental Education
  43. Individual differences in the rubber-hand illusion: Predicting self-reports of people's personal experiences
  44. Promoting Pro-Environmental Behavior
  45. Need for recovery in offices: Behavior-based assessment
  46. La búsqueda de los posibles orígenes de una actitud favorable hacia la naturaleza
  47. The search for potential origins of a favorable attitude toward nature
  48. Environmental Protection and Nature as Distinct Attitudinal Objects
  49. Environmentalism as a trait: Gauging people's prosocial personality in terms of environmental engagement
  50. One for All?
  51. Environmental Attitude as a Mediator of the Relationship between Psychological Restoration in Nature and Self-Reported Ecological Behavior
  52. Reviving Campbell’s Paradigm for Attitude Research
  53. Temporal pessimism and spatial optimism in environmental assessments: An 18-nation study
  54. The Attitude-Behavior Relationship: A Test of Three Models of the Moderating Role of Behavioral Difficulty1
  55. Extending Planned Environmentalism
  56. Evidence for a Data-Based Environmental Policy: Induction of a Behavior-Based Decision Support System
  57. Psychological restoration in nature as a source of motivation for ecological behaviour
  58. Behavior-based environmental attitude: Development of an instrument for adolescents
  59. The Theory of Planned Behavior Without Compatibility? Beyond Method Bias and Past Trivial Associations
  60. Technology's Four Roles in Understanding Individuals' Conservation of Natural Resources
  61. Privacy Needs in Office Environments
  62. A moral extension of the theory of planned behavior: Norms and anticipated feelings of regret in conservationism
  63. The Moderating Role of the Attitude-Subjective Norms Conflict on the Link Between Moral Norms and Intention
  64. Persuasive Appliances: Goal Priming and Behavioral Response to Product-Integrated Energy Feedback
  65. Editorial Statement
  66. The Motivational and Instantaneous Behavior Effects of Contexts: Steps Toward a Theory of Goal-Directed Behavior1
  67. Contrasting the Theory of Planned Behavior With the Value-Belief-Norm Model in Explaining Conservation Behavior1
  68. Environmental knowledge and conservation behavior: exploring prevalence and structure in a representative sample
  69. Goal-directed conservation behavior: the specific composition of a general performance
  70. Or: pro-environmental behavior
  71. Contextual Conditions of Ecological Consumerism
  72. Ecological Behavior's Dependency on Different Forms of Knowledge
  73. Two challenges to a moral extension of the theory of planned behavior: moral norms and just world beliefs in conservationism
  74. Ecological behavior and its environmental consequences: a life cycle assessment of a self-report measure
  75. The Proposition of a General Version of the Theory of Planned Behavior: Predicting Ecological Behavior1
  76. Entwicklung eines Messinstrumentes zur Erfassung von Umweltwissen auf der Basis des MRCML-Modells
  77. Public acceptance of restrictions imposed on recreational activities in the peri-urban Nature Reserve Sihlwald, Switzerland
  78. Disclosing Situational Constraints to Ecological Behavior: A Confirmatory Application of the Mixed Rasch Model* * The original data upon which this paper is based are available at www.hhpub.com/journals/ejpa
  79. Psychological Restoration in Nature as a Positive Motivation for Ecological Behavior
  80. Restorative Experience and Self-Regulation in Favorite Places
  81. demonstrates the accuracy of self-reports of pro-environmental behavior
  82. Assessing People's General Ecological Behavior: A Cross-Cultural Measure1
  83. Assessing General Ecological Behavior
  84. RESPONSIBILITY AS A PREDICTOR OF ECOLOGICAL BEHAVIOUR
  85. Ecological Behavior, Environmental Attitude, and Feelings of Responsibility for the Environment
  86. ENVIRONMENTAL ATTITUDE AND ECOLOGICAL BEHAVIOUR
  87. A Role for Ecological Restoration Work in University Environmental Education
  88. A General Measure of Ecological Behavior1
  89. Dwelling: Speaking of an unnoticed universal language
  90. From Social Representations to Environmental Concern: The Influence of Face-to-Face Versus Mediated Communication
  91. Place attachment and mobility during leisure time
  92. Quartiere kultivieren Quartierbilder : Quartierbilder kultivieren Quartiere
  93. Ecological behavior: Assessment, prediction, and change across contexts
  94. People's Ecological Behavior: One or Several Dimensions?
  95. General Ecological Behavior Scale
  96. General Ecological Behavior Scale--Extended Version
  97. Testing the Environmental Attitude-Ecological Behavior Relation Cross-Culturally
  98. Attitudes and Norms Regarding Organ Donation Questionnaire
  99. Behavior-based Environmental Attitude Questionnaire
  100. Need-for-Privacy Scale
  101. Need-for-Socializing Scale
  102. Disposition to Connect with Nature Measure
  103. Environmentalism Versus Honesty--Humility: How to Measure People's Moral Personality
  104. Psychological Restoration in Natural Environments is Associated with Ecological Behavior
  105. behavior-based Need for Recovery scale
  106. General Ecological Behavior Scale--Expanded Version