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Transcript
PSYCHOLOGICAL REACTANCE THEORY
Jessica J. Tomasello
Conservation Behavior
October 14, 2008
BACKGROUND: REACTANCE THEORY
Brehm & Brehm (1966):
A Theory of Psychological Reactance
 Brehm & Brehm (1981):
Psychological Reactance: A Theory of Freedom and Control
 Department of Psychology, University of Kansas
 Laboratory-based social psychological research

PURPOSE
Outlines a set of motivational consequences that can be
expected to occur whenever freedoms are threatened or
lost
 Specifies:

What freedoms are
 How they can be threatened
 How the resulting psychological state (reactance) is manifested

(Brehm & Brehm, 1981)
GENERAL TENETS OF REACTANCE
Freedoms are specific, discrete; behavioral and attitudinal
 It is important for an individual to maintain his or her choice
alternatives to maximize rewards of behavior
 Reduction of choice alternatives results in a motivational
state to reinstate lost alternatives or engage in behavior
which was threatened
reassertion of freedom
increased interest in
threatened behaviors or
attitudes
decreased attraction to
forced behaviors
 Threats can be either social or interpersonal

WHAT IS REACTANCE?

Threat to or loss of freedoms motivates person to restore
freedom

Reactance = intense motivational state
Manifested through behavior or action to restore freedom
 Person is often emotional, irrational, and single-minded

EXAMPLES OF REACTANCE??????
VARIABLES

Freedoms:
Free behaviors which are realistically possible
 Person must have physical and psychological abilities to engage in
behavior
 Must know that he or she can do the behavior (knowledge)


Restriction/threat to freedom
Must be perceived as an “unfair” restriction
 Something is denied and this is simply unfair!


Reactance
PROCESS OF REACTANCE

Perception of unfair restriction toward actions/behaviors

Reactance is activated

Take action to reduce/remove reactance
(Butterfield-Booth, 1996)
STUDIES
Mazis & Settle, 1972: laundry detergent in Dade, County,
Florida
 Reich & Robertson, 1979: anti-littering campaigns
 Propst & Kurtzz, 1989: framework for leisure behavior
 Fogarty, 1997: health care industry & patient
noncompliance
 Schwartz (1970): blood marrow donors

ASSUMPTIONS
A person, at any given time, has a set of “free behaviors”
which he or she could engage in now or in the future
 Person has knowledge of these “free behaviors”
 Reactance is aroused to the extent that a person believes he
or she has control over potential outcome
 The greater the importance of threatened freedoms, the
greater the reactance aroused
 The amount of reactance is direct function of number of
freedoms threatened
 Freedoms can be threatened by implication--magnitude of
reactance is greater when implied threats occur

(Brehm & Brehm, 1981)
ADVANTAGES/DISADVANTAGES

Advantages:
•
•

Applicable to any situation in which there is expectation of freedom
and threat arises
Provides recommendations for ways to reduce reactance in behavior
change campaigns
Disadvantages:
•
•
Assumes people have an expectation of freedom
Can be difficult to measure reactance, freedom
Others???
IMPLICATIONS



Individuals are often motivated to resist or act counter to social
influence (e.g. mass persuasion)
Important to examine possibilities of repercussions of prohibitive
laws
Behavior change: reactance can reduce durability and reliability
(DeYoung, 2000)
What implications does this theory have for conservation
behavior?