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The Effects of User Identity and Sanctions in Online Communication on Real-World Behavior
ISBN
978-1-61839-472-9
Type
conference paper
Date Issued
2011-12-04
Author(s)
Baeriswyl, Michael
Staake, Thorsten
Loock, Claire-Michelle
Editor(s)
Galletta, Dennis F.
Liang, Ting-Peng
Abstract
This paper describes a field study to investigate whether and to what extent individuals conserve more electricity if they have the opportunity to signal their behavior to others in the online community. Moreover, the study intends to reveal how positive social sanctions (e.g., publicly rewarding people who reduce their energy consumption) and negative social sanctions (e.g., publicly warning people who increase their consumption) cause individuals to alter both their energy demand and their time dedicated to the online community. We discuss related work on identity disclosure in online communities, on promoting sustainable behavior with information systems, and on economic theory explaining the effects of prosocial motives on behavior. The study will be conducted as field experiment using an energy efficiency portal developed by us and operated by an Austrian utility company that currently facilitates 9,899 active users out of which 1,400 will be randomly selected as study participants.
Language
English
Keywords
Online communities
environmental sustainability
identity disclosure
empirical research/study
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Book title
Proceedings of the International Conference on Information Systems, ICIS 2011
Publisher
Association of Information Systems
Publisher place
AIS Electronic Library (AISeL)
Volume
Paper 12
Start page
11
Event Title
32nd International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS 2011)
Event Location
Shanghai
Event Date
04.-07.12.2011
Subject(s)
Eprints ID
224993