Anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior
The use of anthropomorphic animal messengers (AAMs) is a popular practice in the field of conservation communication. Research has shown that the use of AAMs can promote conservation intention among audiences. However, there is little study on what variables enable an AAM to be effective. Drawing up...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1796622024-09-04T07:56:36Z Anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior Shiu, Pedro Pui Kar - Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Mandai Wildlife Group Sonny Ben Rosenthal sonnyrosenthal@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Environmental communication Conservation communication Anthropomorphism Animal-human similarity The use of anthropomorphic animal messengers (AAMs) is a popular practice in the field of conservation communication. Research has shown that the use of AAMs can promote conservation intention among audiences. However, there is little study on what variables enable an AAM to be effective. Drawing upon construal level theory, this study examines the effects of visual and language anthropomorphic cues on donation behavior, conservation intention, and perceived animal-human similarity. This study also examines whether perceived animal-human similarity and conservation intention mediate the effects of anthropomorphic cues on donation behavior. This study evaluates if phylogenetic closeness moderates the effect of anthropomorphic cues on perceived animal-human similarity. Hypothesis testing involved an online between-subjects experiment (N = 352) that manipulated the presence of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness in a series of short conservation videos. Data analysis involved a series of simple linear regressions, analysis of covariance, and mediation analysis. The study that found that anthropomorphic cues had no effect on donation behavior, conservation intention, and perceived animal-human similarity. Anthropomorphic cues also had no indirect effects on donation behavior through perceived animal-human similarity and conservation intention. Finally, phylogenetic closeness had no moderating effect on anthropomorphic cue’s influence on perceived animal-human similarity. Master's degree 2024-08-14T08:04:22Z 2024-08-14T08:04:22Z 2024 Thesis-Master by Research Shiu, P. P. K. (2024). Anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179662 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179662 10.32657/10356/179662 en MWG221101 (from Mandai Wildlife Group Research Panel) This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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Social Sciences Environmental communication Conservation communication Anthropomorphism Animal-human similarity Shiu, Pedro Pui Kar Anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior |
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The use of anthropomorphic animal messengers (AAMs) is a popular practice in the field of conservation communication. Research has shown that the use of AAMs can promote conservation intention among audiences. However, there is little study on what variables enable an AAM to be effective. Drawing upon construal level theory, this study examines the effects of visual and language anthropomorphic cues on donation behavior, conservation intention, and perceived animal-human similarity. This study also examines whether perceived animal-human similarity and conservation intention mediate the effects of anthropomorphic cues on donation behavior. This study evaluates if phylogenetic closeness moderates the effect of anthropomorphic cues on perceived animal-human similarity. Hypothesis testing involved an online between-subjects experiment (N = 352) that manipulated the presence of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness in a series of short conservation videos. Data analysis involved a series of simple linear regressions, analysis of covariance, and mediation analysis. The study that found that anthropomorphic cues had no effect on donation behavior, conservation intention, and perceived animal-human similarity. Anthropomorphic cues also had no indirect effects on donation behavior through perceived animal-human similarity and conservation intention. Finally, phylogenetic closeness had no moderating effect on anthropomorphic cue’s influence on perceived animal-human similarity. |
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Thesis-Master by Research |
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Shiu, Pedro Pui Kar |
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Shiu, Pedro Pui Kar |
title |
Anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior |
title_short |
Anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior |
title_full |
Anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior |
title_fullStr |
Anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior |
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Anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior |
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anthropomorphism for wildlife: the effects of anthropomorphic cues and phylogenetic closeness on perceived animal-human similarity, conservation intention, and donation behavior |
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Nanyang Technological University |
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2024 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179662 |
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