Sustainable but Disgusting? A Psychological Model of Consumer Reactions to Human-Hair-Derived Textiles
Abstract
1. Introduction
- RQ1. To what extent do perceived naturalness and aesthetic pleasure directly influence consumers’ adoption intention toward human-hair-derived bio-fabricated textile products?
- RQ2. Does environmental concern moderate the relationships between perceived naturalness and adoption intention and between aesthetic pleasure and adoption intention?
- RQ3. Does disgust moderate the relationships between perceived naturalness and adoption intention and between aesthetic pleasure and adoption intention?
2. Literature Review and Hypothesis Development
2.1. Bio-Fabricated Textiles and Consumer Responses
2.2. Perceived Naturalness
2.3. Aesthetic Pleasure
2.4. Environmental Concern as Moderator
2.5. Disgust as Moderator
3. Research Design
3.1. Sampling
3.2. Measurement Tools
3.3. Data Analysis Strategy
4. Findings
4.1. Descriptive Statistics
4.2. Measurement Model Assessment
4.2.1. Reliability and Convergent Validity
4.2.2. Discriminant Validity
4.2.3. Structural Model Assessment
5. Discussion, Conclusions, and Implications
5.1. Key Findings
5.2. Contribution to Theory
5.3. Practical Implications
- →
- Design quality and aesthetic appeal: The significant, robust effect of aesthetic appreciation on adoption intention highlights the centrality of design quality in sustainable innovation. Visually compelling products—particularly those made from unconventional raw materials—can improve overall evaluations and reduce hesitation [24,25]. Designers should prioritize high aesthetic value (e.g., texture, color, form, artisanship), as aesthetic appeal can serve as a psychological buffer against initial aversion. In adjacent sectors, clean color palettes (e.g., white, light blue), minimalist forms, and sterile imagery have been shown to counteract aversion, as in food packaging and medical textiles. Such design languages could be adapted to bio-textiles to visually signal safety and cleanliness.
- →
- Communicating naturalness to green segments: Although perceived naturalness did not show a direct effect on adoption, its interaction with environmental concern indicates that environmentally motivated consumers place greater weight on naturalness perceptions. Communication that foregrounds attributes like “biodegradable,” “derived from natural sources,” or “free from synthetic substances” may be especially persuasive for green consumer segments [21,86].
- →
- Managing disgust: Disgust emerged as a meaningful inhibitory factor, moderating the effects of both perceived naturalness and aesthetic appreciation [15,64]. To mitigate aversion, firms should emphasize product hygiene, visually document clean and safe production processes, and consider reframing terminology—e.g., using “bio-fibre” or “recycled keratin textile” in place of “human hair”—without compromising transparency. Beyond terminology, hygiene certification, sterile packaging cues, and sensory “proof of cleanliness” (e.g., transparent production videos or labeled sterile processing) could be empirically tested as interventions to mitigate disgust while maintaining credibility. Importantly, reframing should be combined with transparent communication—linking terminology shifts to verifiable production practices—to prevent accusations of greenwashing or deception.
- →
- Audience targeting: Individuals demonstrating significant environmental concern and aesthetic sensitivity appear more receptive to these materials. Marketing efforts can be tailored to such segments via sustainable lifestyle communities, fashion platforms, and green entrepreneurship networks.
5.4. Limitations
5.5. Future Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Vignette for Participants
Appendix B
Appendix B.1. Prompt for DALL·E
Appendix B.2. Ethical and Copyright Compliance
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Construct | Item |
---|---|
Perceived Naturalness (PEN) | PEN1. This cardholder looks like a natural product. |
PEN2. From the cardholder’s appearance I can tell how it was made. | |
PEN3. I believe the cardholder is composed only of natural materials. | |
Aesthetic Pleasure (APE) | APE1. The cardholder looks beautiful. |
APE2. The cardholder looks attractive. | |
APE3. I enjoyed looking at the cardholder. | |
APE4. The cardholder is aesthetically pleasing. | |
APE5. I like the cardholder’s appearance. | |
Disgust (DIS) | DIS1. The cardholder looks clean. * |
DIS2. The cardholder looks healthy. * | |
DIS3. The cardholder looks hygienic. * | |
DIS4. The cardholder gives me a germy/dirty feeling. | |
Environmental Concern (ENC) | ENC1. Global warming really worries me. |
ENC2. I prefer eco-friendly products in my daily life. | |
ENC3. I believe my purchasing behaviour affects the environment. | |
Adoption Intention (ADI) | ADI1. I would consider buying this cardholder. |
ADI2. My intention to use this cardholder is high. | |
ADI3. The likelihood that I would obtain this cardholder is high. |
Variable | Category | Frequency | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | Male | 88 | 58.66 |
Female | 62 | 41.33 | |
Age | 18–24 | 25 | 16.6 |
25–30 | 20 | 13.33 | |
31–36 | 33 | 22.00 | |
36+ | 66 | 44.00 | |
Not specified | 5 | 3.33 | |
Education | Up to undergraduate | 37 | 24.66 |
Undergraduate | 60 | 40.00 | |
Graduate and above | 51 | 34.00 | |
Not specified | 2 | 1.33 | |
Monthly income | Below 30,000 | 31 | 20.66 |
Between 30,001 and 60,000 | 44 | 29.33 | |
Between 60,001 and 90,000 | 36 | 24.00 | |
Between 90,001 and 120,000 | 16 | 10.66 | |
Above 120,000 | 18 | 12.00 | |
Not specified | 5 | 3.33 |
Construct | Cronbach’s Alpha | CR | AVE |
---|---|---|---|
Perceived Naturalness | 0.614 | 0.779 | 0.552 |
Aesthetic Pleasure | 0.952 | 0.963 | 0.840 |
Environmental Concern | 0.731 | 0.846 | 0.646 |
Disgust | 0.892 | 0.926 | 0.759 |
Adoption Intention | 0.947 | 0.966 | 0.905 |
PEN | APE | DIS | ENC | ADI | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PEN | 0.743 | ||||
APE | 0.406 | 0.917 | |||
DIS | −0.408 | −0.703 | 0.871 | ||
ENC | 0.197 | 0.217 | −0.154 | 0.804 | |
ADI | 0.369 | 0.819 | −0.713 | 0.288 | 0.951 |
ADI | APE | DIS | ENC | PEN | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ADI | — | 0.862 | 0.775 | 0.336 | 0.428 |
APE | — | 0.761 | 0.255 | 0.489 | |
DIS | — | 0.179 | 0.482 | ||
ENC | — | 0.285 | |||
PEN | — |
Path | β | t-Value | p | Decision |
---|---|---|---|---|
Perceived Naturalness → Adoption Intention (H1) | −0.014 | 0.291 | 0.771 | Not supported |
Aesthetic Pleasure → Adoption Intention (H2) | 0.545 | 8.975 | 0.000 | Supported |
Environmental Concern × Perceived Naturalness → Adoption Intention (H3) | 0.088 | 2.018 | 0.044 |
Supported (full moderation) |
Environmental Concern × Aesthetic Pleasure → Adoption Intention (H4) | 0.040 | 0.734 | 0.463 | Not supported |
Disgust × Perceived Naturalness → Adoption Intention (H5) | 0.144 | 2.761 | 0.006 |
Supported (full moderation) |
Disgust × Aesthetic Pleasure → Adoption (H6) | −0.253 | 4.857 | 0.000 |
Supported (partial moderation) |
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Ercan, S.; Yaprak, B.; Ecevit, M.Z.; Duman, O. Sustainable but Disgusting? A Psychological Model of Consumer Reactions to Human-Hair-Derived Textiles. Sustainability 2025, 17, 7799. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17177799
Ercan S, Yaprak B, Ecevit MZ, Duman O. Sustainable but Disgusting? A Psychological Model of Consumer Reactions to Human-Hair-Derived Textiles. Sustainability. 2025; 17(17):7799. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17177799
Chicago/Turabian StyleErcan, Sertaç, Burak Yaprak, Mehmet Zahid Ecevit, and Orhan Duman. 2025. "Sustainable but Disgusting? A Psychological Model of Consumer Reactions to Human-Hair-Derived Textiles" Sustainability 17, no. 17: 7799. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17177799
APA StyleErcan, S., Yaprak, B., Ecevit, M. Z., & Duman, O. (2025). Sustainable but Disgusting? A Psychological Model of Consumer Reactions to Human-Hair-Derived Textiles. Sustainability, 17(17), 7799. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17177799