International Journal of Management Science and Information Technology (IJMSIT)
Vol. 6 No. 1 (2026): January - June 2026

Bridging the Intention–Behavior Gap in Organic Food Consumption: An Integrative Systematic Review of Emotion, Green Altruism, and Psychological Distance

Ari Apriani (Universitas Mercu Buana)
Setyo Riyanto (Universitas Mercu Buana)
Rina Astini (Universitas Mercu Buana)
Mas Wahyu Wibowo (Universitas Mercu Buana)



Article Info

Publish Date
26 Mar 2026

Abstract

Organic food consumption has grown alongside increasing consumer concern for health, environmental sustainability, and ethical responsibility. Yet favorable attitudes do not consistently translate into actual purchasing behavior, indicating that the intention–behavior gap in this domain cannot be explained by rational evaluations alone. This study conducts a systematic literature review to develop an integrative psychological explanation of how emotion, green altruism, and psychological distance shape organic food consumption. Following PRISMA 2020, the review analyzed 35 peer-reviewed articles indexed in Scopus, Web of Science, and ScienceDirect and published between 2015 and 2025. The findings show that emotional mechanisms, particularly anticipated pride, guilt, and emotional attachment, commonly strengthen purchase intention by increasing perceived personal relevance, moral meaning, and self-consistency. Green altruism supports organic food consumption by framing it as an environmentally and socially responsible act, although its influence varies across contexts, consumer segments, and product categories. The reviewed evidence further indicates that psychological distance functions mainly as a framing and moderating mechanism that shapes whether emotional and altruistic motives are perceived as immediate, concrete, and behaviorally actionable. Across the reviewed studies, emotional and moral mechanisms more consistently predict intention than repeated purchase behavior, while trust, norms, and message framing help explain empirical inconsistencies. Overall, this review advances an integrative framework for explaining organic food consumption beyond rational choice and provides directions for future research on sustainable consumption behavior.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

IJMSIT

Publisher

Subject

Decision Sciences, Operations Research & Management Economics, Econometrics & Finance

Description

The development of science related to good technology, information, and communication, both theoretically and empirically has proven to have a positive impact on various aspects of people lives. The development of the science of Information and Communication Technology provides many benefits to ...