Augmented Reality in Museums: Boosting Pro-Environmental Behavior with Immersive Experiences

July 16, 2025
Augmented Reality in Museums: Boosting Pro-Environmental Behavior with Immersive Experiences
  • A recent study explores how Augmented Reality (AR) technology influences museum visitors' pro-environmental behavior, using the normative activation theory (NAT) as a framework.

  • The research highlights that NAT links awareness of consequences, personal responsibility, and personal norms to behavioral intentions, emphasizing their role in promoting sustainable actions within museum settings.

  • The research addresses a gap in existing literature, which has mainly focused on AR/VR design and visitor experience, but has overlooked how these technologies influence personal norms related to environmental behavior.

  • The proposed causal chains suggest that immersive experiences influence attitudes, awareness of consequences affects perceived responsibility, and both factors together shape personal norms and behavioral intentions.

  • It hypothesizes that higher levels of AR presence and immersive experiences can positively shape visitors' attitudes towards environmental behavior, ultimately encouraging them to act more sustainably.

  • This study aims to validate these relationships through data collected from an AR project at the Marine Animal Museum in Guangdong, China, and introduces a new model combining NAT with the stimulus-organism-response (SOR) theory.

  • AR and Virtual Reality (VR) are transforming museum experiences by improving educational engagement and offering innovative ways to explore cultural heritage, such as virtual restorations.

Summary based on 1 source


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