Research Article

Effects of repeated immersive virtual reality exposure on attitudes and intentions to avoid single-use plastics: moderating role of environmental concern

Authors

  • Ibrahim, S. Higher Institute of Finance and Taxation of Sousse, University of Sousse, Tunisia
  • Nouri, I. Faculty of Economic Sciences and Management of Sousse, University of Sousse, Tunisia
  • Bouzaabia, R. Institute of Higher Business Studies of Sousse, University of Sousse, Tunisia. ERMA Laboratory

Abstract

The aim of this study was to examine whether repeated exposure to an immersive virtual reality experience—as opposed to a single exposure—could reinforce individuals' attitudes and intentions to avoid single-use plastics, incorporating environmental concern as a moderating variable. A laboratory experiment was conducted with 107 students. Participants were exposed to an immersive virtual reality video (vs. non-immersive), and their attitudes and intentions were measured at two distinct points in time: before and after exposure. The study's findings reveal that repeated exposure to immersive virtual reality has a significant effect on participants' attitudes and intentions to avoid single-use plastics, greater than that of a single exposure. Furthermore, it appears that environmental concern positively moderates the relationship between attitude and intention: the more concerned individuals are about the environment, the greater the impact of their attitude on their intention to avoid single-use plastics.

Article information

Journal

Journal of Environmental and Agricultural Studies

Volume (Issue)

6 (4)

Pages

37-45

Published

2025-12-15

How to Cite

Ibrahim, S., Nouri, I., & Bouzaabia, R. (2025). Effects of repeated immersive virtual reality exposure on attitudes and intentions to avoid single-use plastics: moderating role of environmental concern. Journal of Environmental and Agricultural Studies, 6(4), 37-45. https://doi.org/10.32996/jeas.2025.6.4.5

Downloads

Views

14

Downloads

5

Keywords:

Virtual reality, attitude, intention to avoid single-use plastic, environmental concern