Trait Compassion, Human and Non-Human Animal Self-Similarity, Meat Avoidance Intent Data

Published: 17 August 2021| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/xjcf662svc.1
Contributor:
Attila Pohlmann

Description

"The data provided with this article is related to “Lowering Barriers to Plant-based Diets: The Effect of Human and Non-Human Animal Self-Similarity on Meat Avoidance Intent and Sensory Food Satisfaction.” [1]⁠ The connection between compassion and adherence to plant-based diets is intuitive. The first dataset is a sample of 372 participants in the United States that was collected online. Trait compassion, measured using the Santa Clara Brief Compassion Scale [2]⁠, is positively associated with intent to avoid dietary meat consumption. The second set of data, collected online from 131 participants in the United States, provides evidence for the underlying psychological process: the relationship between trait compassion and meat avoidance intent is serially mediated by perceived similarity to other human animals and non-human animals. Similarity scores were measured inversely as perceived distance using heat-map type questionnaire items based on inclusion-of-other-in-the-self (IOS, [3]⁠) and relational closeness scales [4]⁠. Demographic information, physical characteristics, and measurement of athletic identity are provided [5]⁠. These data can be used in psychology research on food studies specifically and to glean more insight on human’s connection with other animals in general [6], [7]⁠. The supplementary data on participants’ physical characteristics such as BMI, combined with measurement of athletic identity can inform sports and nutrition science. Survey print-outs, two datasets including scale items, and scripts for analysis are provided." from Pohlmann, Attila "Intransigent Compassion: Human and Non-Human Animal Self-Similarity and Meat Avoidance Intent Dataset." Data in Brief (forthcoming).

Files

Steps to reproduce

SPSS scripts to reproduce the analyses are provided. A general description can be found in the associated Data in Brief article.

Institutions

  • Universidad San Francisco de Quito

Categories

Animal, Consumption, Meat, Behavioral Psychology, Diet, Human, Self-Concept, Vegetarianism, Morality, Characterization of Food, Personality Trait

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