---
title: "Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion."
url: "https://conversion.stevebaka.de/claims/consumer-psychology-effect-relevant-to-conversion/"
type: "claim"
language: de-DE
description: "Status: supported. Evidenzgrad: A. Konfidenz: high. Dieser Claim ist verifiziert, weil 17 Supporting-Study-Verknüpfung(en) im Evidence Graph vorhanden sind."
---
# Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion.

> Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion. Der Claim ist verifiziert und kann als Evidence Path in Audits genutzt werden, wenn Kontext und beobachtbares Seitenmerkmal passen. Evidenzgrad A.

## Was sagt dieser Claim aus?

Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion. Der Claim ist verifiziert und kann als Evidence Path in Audits genutzt werden, wenn Kontext und beobachtbares Seitenmerkmal passen.


## Visueller Evidence Graph

- [Social Proof](/konzepte/social-proof/) -- begründet Claim --> [Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion.](/claims/consumer-psychology-effect-relevant-to-conversion/) | Evidenz: Evidenzgrad A
- [Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion.](/claims/consumer-psychology-effect-relevant-to-conversion/) -- wird gestützt durch --> [The Metaverse: A new digital frontier for consumer behavior](/studien/10-1002-jcpy-1356/) | Evidenz: [DOI: 10.1002/jcpy.1356](https://doi.org/10.1002/jcpy.1356)
- [Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion.](/claims/consumer-psychology-effect-relevant-to-conversion/) -- wird gestützt durch --> [Monitoring and implementation of salt reduction initiatives in Africa: A systematic review.](/studien/10-1007-s00038-014-0577-3/) | Evidenz: [DOI: 10.1007/s00038-014-0577-3](https://doi.org/10.1007/s00038-014-0577-3)
- [Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion.](/claims/consumer-psychology-effect-relevant-to-conversion/) -- wird gestützt durch --> [Meta-analysis: integrating accumulated knowledge](/studien/10-1007-s11747-017-0570-5/) | Evidenz: [DOI: 10.1007/s11747-017-0570-5](https://doi.org/10.1007/s11747-017-0570-5)
- [Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion.](/claims/consumer-psychology-effect-relevant-to-conversion/) -- wird gestützt durch --> [The effects of antidepressants on cardiometabolic and other physiological parameters: a systematic review and network meta-analysis.](/studien/10-1016-s0140-6736-25-01293-0/) | Evidenz: [DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(25)01293-0](https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736%2825%2901293-0)


## Wie stark ist die Evidenz?

Status: supported. Evidenzgrad: A. Konfidenz: high. Dieser Claim ist verifiziert, weil 17 Supporting-Study-Verknüpfung(en) im [Evidence Graph](/datasets/concept-relations/) vorhanden sind.


## Welche Konzepte hängen daran?

- [Social Proof](/konzepte/social-proof/)


## Welche Studien stützen oder priorisieren den Claim?

- [The Metaverse: A new digital frontier for consumer behavior](/studien/10-1002-jcpy-1356/): Evidenzgrad C, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1002/jcpy.1356](https://doi.org/10.1002/jcpy.1356). APA: Hadi, R., Melumad, S., & Park, E. S. (2023). The Metaverse: A new digital frontier for consumer behavior. Journal of Consumer Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcpy.1356 Wichtig: Abstract This work offers a multidisciplinary perspective on the Metaverse, focusing on its potential implications for consumer behavior. We begin by proposing a conceptualization of the Metaverse as being uniquely defined by the convergence of five key elements—it is digitally mediated, spatial, immersive, shared, and operates in real‐time. We then discuss how these components might collectively alter our understanding of consumer behavior in three domains: consumer identity, social influence, and ownership. We conclude by outlining an agenda for future research to help broaden our understanding of the Metaversal marketplace and its impact on consumer behavior. This work serves as a starting point to characterize a shift that is unfolding in the marketplace and to consider, through a consumer behavior lens, the numerous changes it may bring.
- [Monitoring and implementation of salt reduction initiatives in Africa: A systematic review.](/studien/10-1007-s00038-014-0577-3/): Evidenzgrad A, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1007/s00038-014-0577-3](https://doi.org/10.1007/s00038-014-0577-3). APA: Tekle, D. Y., Santos, J. A., Trieu, K., Thout, S. R., Ndanuko, R., Charlton, K., Hoek, A. C., Huffman, M. D., Jan, S., & Webster, J. (2020). Monitoring and implementation of salt reduction initiatives in Africa: A systematic review. Journal of clinical hypertension (Greenwich, Conn.). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00038-014-0577-3 Wichtig: This systematic review aims to document salt consumption patterns and the implementation status and potential impact of salt reduction initiatives in Africa, from studies published between January 2009 and November 2019. Studies were sourced using MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Library electronic databases, and gray literature. Of the 887 records retrieved, 38 studies conducted in 18 African countries were included. Twelve studies measured population salt intake, 11 examined salt level in foods, 11 assessed consumer knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors, 1 study evaluated a behavior change intervention, and 3 studies modeled potential health gains and cost savings of salt reduction interventions. The population salt intake studies determined by 24-hour urine collections showed that the mean (SD) salt intake in African adults ranged from 6.8 (2.2) g to 11.3 (5.4) g/d. Salt levels in foods were generally high, and consumer knowledge was fairly high but did not seem to translate into salt lowering behaviors. Modeling studies showed that interventions for reducing dietary sodium would generate large health gains and cost savings for the health system. Despite this evidence, adoption of population salt reduction strategies in Africa has been slow, and dietary consumption of sodium remains high. Only South Africa adopted legislation in 2016 to reduce population salt intake, but success of this intervention has not yet been fully evaluated. Thus, rigorous evaluation of the salt reduction legislation in South Africa and initiation of salt reduction programs in other African countries will be vital to achieving the targeted 30% reduction in salt intake by 2025.
- [Meta-analysis: integrating accumulated knowledge](/studien/10-1007-s11747-017-0570-5/): Evidenzgrad A, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1007/s11747-017-0570-5](https://doi.org/10.1007/s11747-017-0570-5). APA: Grewal, D., Puccinelli, N. M., & Monroe, K. B. (2017). Meta-analysis: integrating accumulated knowledge. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11747-017-0570-5 Wichtig: Diese Studie ist Teil der kuratierten Evidence Base.
- [The effects of antidepressants on cardiometabolic and other physiological parameters: a systematic review and network meta-analysis.](/studien/10-1016-s0140-6736-25-01293-0/): Evidenzgrad A, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(25)01293-0](https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736%2825%2901293-0). APA: Pillinger, T., Arumuham, A., McCutcheon, R. A., D'Ambrosio, E., Basdanis, G., Branco, M., Carr, R., Finelli, V., Furukawa, T. A., Gee, S., Heald, A., Jauhar, S., Ma, Z., Mancini, V., Moulton, C., Salanti, G., Taylor, D. M., Tomlinson, A., Young, A. H., .. Cipriani, A. (2025). The effects of antidepressants on cardiometabolic and other physiological parameters: a systematic review and network meta-analysis. Lancet (London, England). https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736%2825%2901293-0 Wichtig: Antidepressants induce physiological alterations; however, the degree to which these occur in treatment with various antidepressants is unclear. We aimed to compare and rank antidepressants based on physiological side-effects by synthesising data from randomised controlled trials (RCTs). We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, ClinicalTrials.gov, and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) website from database inception to April 21, 2025. We included single-blinded and double-blinded RCTs comparing antidepressants and placebo in acute monotherapy of any psychiatric disorder. We did frequentist random-effects network meta-analyses to investigate treatment-induced changes in weight; total cholesterol; glucose; heart rate; systolic and diastolic blood pressure; corrected QT interval (QTc); sodium; potassium; aspartate transferase (AST); alanine transaminase (ALT); alkaline phosphatase (ALP); bilirubin; urea; and creatinine. We did meta-regressions to examine study-level associations between physiological change and age, sex, and baseline weight. We estimated the correlation between depressive symptom severity change and metabolic parameter change. Of 26 252 citations, 151 studies and 17 FDA reports met inclusion criteria. The overall sample included 58 534 participants, comparing 30 antidepressants with placebo. Median treatment duration was 8 weeks (IQR 6·0-8·5). We observed clinically significant differences between antidepressants in terms of metabolic and haemodynamic effects, including an approximate 4 kg difference in weight-change between agomelatine and maprotiline, over 21 beats-per-minute difference in heart rate change between fluvoxamine and nortriptyline, and over 11 mmHg difference in systolic blood pressure between nortriptyline and doxepin. Paroxetine, duloxetine, desvenlafaxine, and venlafaxine were associated with increases in total cholesterol and, for duloxetine, glucose concentrations, despite all drugs reducing bodyweight. There was strong evidence of duloxetine, desvenlafaxine, and levomilnacipran increasing AST, ALT, and ALP concentrations, although the magnitudes of these alterations were not considered clinically significant. We did not find strong evidence of any antidepressant affecting QTc, or concentrations of sodium, potassium, urea, and creatinine to a clinically significant extent. Higher baseline bodyweight was associated with larger antidepressant-induced increases in systolic blood pressure, ALT, and AST, and higher baseline age was associated with larger antidepressant-induced increases in glucose. We did not observe an association between changes in depressive symptoms and metabolic disturbance. We found strong evidence that antidepressants differ markedly in their physiological effects, particularly for cardiometabolic parameters. Treatment guidelines should be updated to reflect differences in physiological risk, but choice of antidepressant should be made on an individual basis, considering clinical presentation and preferences of patients, carers, and clinicians. National Institute for Health Research, Maudsley Charity, Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council.
- [Interventions to reduce meat consumption by appealing to animal welfare: Meta-analysis and evidence-based recommendations.](/studien/10-1038-s41371-018-0068-8/): Evidenzgrad A, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1038/s41371-018-0068-8](https://doi.org/10.1038/s41371-018-0068-8). APA: Mathur, M. B., Peacock, J., Reichling, D. B., Nadler, J., Bain, P. A., Gardner, C. D., & Robinson, T. N. (2021). Interventions to reduce meat consumption by appealing to animal welfare: Meta-analysis and evidence-based recommendations. Appetite. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41371-018-0068-8 Wichtig: Reducing meat consumption may improve human health, curb environmental damage, and limit the large-scale suffering of animals raised in factory farms. Most attention to reducing consumption has focused on restructuring environments where foods are chosen or on making health or environmental appeals. However, psychological theory suggests that interventions appealing to animal welfare concerns might operate on distinct, potent pathways. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis evaluating the effectiveness of these interventions. We searched eight academic databases and extensively searched grey literature. We meta-analyzed 100 studies assessing interventions designed to reduce meat consumption or purchase by mentioning or portraying farm animals, that measured behavioral or self-reported outcomes related to meat consumption, purchase, or related intentions, and that had a control condition. The interventions consistently reduced meat consumption, purchase, or related intentions at least in the short term with meaningfully large effects (meta-analytic mean risk ratio [RR] = 1.22; 95% CI: [1.13, 1.33]). We estimated that a large majority of population effect sizes (71%; 95% CI: [59%, 80%]) were stronger than RR = 1.1 and that few were in the unintended direction. Via meta-regression, we identified some specific characteristics of studies and interventions that were associated with effect size. Risk-of-bias assessments identified both methodological strengths and limitations of this literature; however, results did not differ meaningfully in sensitivity analyses retaining only studies at the lowest risk of bias. Evidence of publication bias was not apparent. In conclusion, animal welfare interventions preliminarily appear effective in these typically short-term studies of primarily self-reported outcomes. Future research should use direct behavioral outcomes that minimize the potential for social desirability bias and are measured over long-term follow-up.
- [A systematic review and meta-analysis of the effects of Entertainment-Education interventions on persuasive health outcomes.](/studien/10-1038-s41598-025-11012-y/): Evidenzgrad A, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-11012-y](https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-11012-y). APA: Doré, A., Rebitschek, F. G., Morello, K., Stierstädter, E., Thiemann, K. J., & Kubiak, T. (2025). A systematic review and meta-analysis of the effects of Entertainment-Education interventions on persuasive health outcomes. Scientific reports. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-11012-y Wichtig: Entertainment-Education (EE) refers to the integration of entertaining and educational components within popular media, with the objective of positively impacting social and health behaviors. This study aims to synthesize the effects of EE for health communication. In particular, the effects of EE on health knowledge, intentions, attitudes, behavior, and self-efficacy were analyzed. Further, a persuasion index was created based on the primary outcomes. Only controlled or randomized-controlled studies were considered, and after screening, K = 39 of N = 4183 studies were included. Pairwise meta-analyses were conducted to determine the effects of EE on persuasive health outcomes. Additionally, potential effects of the subgroups delivery mode, gender, healthcare, type of control group and type and taxonomy of health behavior on a weighted persuasion index were analyzed. Analyses revealed evidence for significant small to moderate effects on all outcomes, with the largest effect sizes on knowledge and self-efficacy. Subgroups seem to account for a significant amount of heterogeneity, as a significant effect could be observed for all analyzed subgroups except for healthcare and gender. The meta-analysis suggests that EE is suitable for the communication of health messages, particularly when targeting prevention topics. However, it is imperative to exercise caution when interpreting the results, and further research is needed.
- [Predicting the revisit intention of volunteer tourists using the merged model between the theory of planned behavior and norm activation model](/studien/10-1080-10548408-2020-1784364/): Evidenzgrad B, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1080/10548408.2020.1784364](https://doi.org/10.1080/10548408.2020.1784364). APA: Manosuthi, N., Lee, J., & Han, H. (2020). Predicting the revisit intention of volunteer tourists using the merged model between the theory of planned behavior and norm activation model. Journal of Travel & Tourism Marketing. https://doi.org/10.1080/10548408.2020.1784364 Wichtig: Despite the importance of the theory of planned behavior (TPB) and norm activation model (NAM) in explicating revisit intention, predictions based on the merging of these theories remain sparse in the youth volunteer tourism segment. To understand revisit intention formation, a meta-analysis is performed to draw a macro conclusion using prosocial studies as a representative of volunteer tourism in investigating the predictive power of the aforementioned-merged theories. Subsequently, latent growth curve modeling is applied to extend the understanding of tourist type identification to volunteer tourism research. The introduction of NAM into TPB marginally adds value to predictive power.
- [The Fire of Desire: A Multisited Inquiry into Consumer Passion](/studien/10-1086-378613/): Evidenzgrad C, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1086/378613](https://doi.org/10.1086/378613). APA: Belk, R. W., Ger, G., & Askegaard, S. (2003). The Fire of Desire: A Multisited Inquiry into Consumer Passion. Journal of Consumer Research. https://doi.org/10.1086/378613 Wichtig: Desire is the motivating force behind much of contemporary consumption. Yet consumer research has devoted little specific attention to passionate and fanciful consumer desire. This article is grounded in consumers' everyday experiences of longing for and fantasizing about particular goods. Based on journals, interviews, projective data, and inquiries into daily discourses in three cultures (the United States, Turkey, and Denmark), we develop a phenomenological account of desire. We find that desire is regarded as a powerful cyclic emotion that is both discomforting and pleasurable. Desire is an embodied passion involving a quest for otherness, sociality, danger, and inaccessibility. Underlying and driving the pursuit of desire, we find self-seduction, longing, desire for desire, fear of being without desire, hopefulness, and tensions between seduction and morality. We discuss theoretical implications of these processes for consumer research.
- [The Mere Categorization Effect: How the Presence of Categories Increases Choosers' Perceptions of Assortment Variety and Outcome Satisfaction](/studien/10-1086-588698/): Evidenzgrad C, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1086/588698](https://doi.org/10.1086/588698). APA: Mogilner, C., Rudnick, T., & Iyengar, S. S. (2008). The Mere Categorization Effect: How the Presence of Categories Increases Choosers' Perceptions of Assortment Variety and Outcome Satisfaction. Journal of Consumer Research. https://doi.org/10.1086/588698 Wichtig: What is the effect of option categorization on choosers' satisfaction? A combination of field and laboratory experiments reveals that the mere presence of categories, irrespective of their content, positively influences the satisfaction of choosers who are unfamiliar with the choice domain. This “mere categorization effect” is driven by a greater number of categories signaling greater variety among the available options, which allows for a sense of self-determination from choosing. This effect, however, is attenuated for choosers who are familiar with the choice domain, who do not rely on the presence of categories to perceive the variety available.
- [Crowdsourcing Consumer Research](/studien/10-1093-jcr-ucx047/): Evidenzgrad C, Risk of Bias Unclear, [DOI: 10.1093/jcr/ucx047](https://doi.org/10.1093/jcr/ucx047). APA: Goodman, J. K., & Paolacci, G. (2017). Crowdsourcing Consumer Research. Journal of Consumer Research. https://doi.org/10.1093/jcr/ucx047 Wichtig: Crowdsourcing kann hochwertige Daten liefern.


## Wann darf dieser Claim in Audits erscheinen?

Dieser Claim darf in Audit-Reports nur verwendet werden, wenn ein beobachtbares Website-Merkmal, eine passende Regel, eine Funnel-Metrik und ein Evidence Path dokumentiert sind. Ohne diese Bindung bleibt er Review-Kandidat und wird nicht als Empfehlung ausgespielt.


## FAQ

### Was sagt dieser Claim aus?

Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion. Der Claim ist verifiziert und kann als Evidence Path in Audits genutzt werden, wenn Kontext und beobachtbares Seitenmerkmal passen. Evidenzgrad A.

### Welche Evidenz wird genutzt?

Die Seite nutzt Claims, Studien, Use Cases und Quellen aus dem SurrealDB Knowledge Graph der Conversion-Psychologie-Wissensbasis.

### Ist die Ausgabe auf Deutsch verfügbar?

Ja. Alle menschenlesbaren Inhalte und Agent-Ausgaben sind standardmäßig deutsch.

## Quellen

- Baka, S. (2026). Conversion Psychology KB. conversion.stevebaka.de. https://conversion.stevebaka.de/ [Quelle öffnen](https://conversion.stevebaka.de/)

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      "text": "Der untersuchte Consumer Psychology Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim Extraktion. Der Claim ist verifiziert und kann als Evidence Path in Audits genutzt werden, wenn Kontext und beobachtbares Seitenmerkmal passen. Evidenzgrad A. Was sagt dieser Claim aus?. Der untersuchte Consumer Psychology Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim Extraktion. Der Claim ist verifiziert und kann als Evidence Path in Audits genutzt werden, wenn Kontext und beobachtbares Seitenmerkmal passen. Visueller Evidence Graph. Social Proof begründet Claim Der untersuchte Consumer Psychology Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim Extraktion. | Evidenz: Evidenzgrad A Der untersuchte Consumer Psychology Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim Extraktion. wird gestützt durch The Metaverse: A new digital frontier for consumer behavior | Evidenz: DOI: 10.1002/jcpy.1356 Der untersuchte Consumer Psychology Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim Extraktion. wird gestützt durch Monitoring and implementation of salt reduction initiatives in Africa: A systematic review. | Evidenz: DOI: 10.1007/s00038 014 0577 3 Der untersuchte Consumer Psychology Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim Extraktion. wird gestützt durch Meta analysis: integrating accumulated knowledge | Evidenz: DOI: 10.1007/s11747 017 0570 5 Der untersuchte Consumer Psychology Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim Extraktion. wird gestützt durch The effects of antidepressants on cardiometabolic and other physiological parameters: a systematic review and network meta analysis. | Evidenz: DOI: 10.1016/s0140 6736(25)01293 0 Wie stark ist die Evidenz?. Status: supported. Evidenzgrad: A. Konfidenz: high. Dieser Claim ist verifiziert, weil 17 Supporting Study Verknüpfung(en) im Evidence Graph vorhanden sind. Welche Konzepte hängen daran?. Social Proof Welche Studien stützen oder priorisieren den Claim?. The Metaverse: A new digital frontier for consumer behavior: Evidenzgrad C, Risk of Bias Unclear, DOI: 10.1002/jcpy.1356. APA: Hadi, R., Melumad, S., & Park, E. S. (2023). The Metaverse: A new digital frontier for consumer behavior. Journal of Consumer Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcpy.1356 Wichtig: Abstract This work offers a multidisciplinary perspective on the Metaverse, focusing on its potential implications for consumer behavior. We begin by proposing a conceptualization of the Metaverse as being uniquely defined by the convergence of five key elements—it is digitally mediated, spatial, immersive, shared, and operates in real‐time. We then discuss how these components might collectively alter our understanding of consumer behavior in three domains: consumer identity, social influence, and ownership. We conclude by outlining an agenda for future research to help broaden our understanding of the Metaversal marketplace and its impact on consumer behavior. This work serves as a starting point to characterize a shift that is unfolding in the marketplace and to consider, through a consumer behavior lens, the numerous changes it may bring. Monitoring and implementation of salt reduction initiatives in Africa: A systematic review.: Evidenzgrad A, Risk of Bias Unclear, DOI: 10.1007/s00038 014 0577 3. APA: Tekle, D. Y., Santos, J. A., Trieu, K., Thout, S. R., Ndanuko, R., Charlton, K., Hoek, A. C., Huffman, M. D., Jan, S., & Webster, J. (2020). Monitoring and implementation of salt reduction initiatives in Africa: A systematic review. Journal of clinical hypertension (Greenwich, Conn.). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00038 014 0577 3 Wichtig: This systematic review aims to document salt consumption patterns and the implementation status and potential impact of salt reduction initiatives in Africa, from studies published between January 2009 and November 2019. Studies were sourced using MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Library electronic databases, and gray literature. Of the 887 records retrieved, 38 studies conducted in 18 African countries were included. Twelve studies measured population salt intake, 11 examined salt level in foods, 11 assessed consumer knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors, 1 study evaluated a behavior change intervention, and 3 studies modeled potential health gains and cost savings of salt reduction interventions. The population salt intake studies determined by 24 hour urine collections showed that the mean (SD) salt intake in African adults ranged from 6.8 (2.2) g to 11.3 (5.4) g/d. 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          "item": "https://conversion.stevebaka.de/claims/consumer-psychology-effect-relevant-to-conversion/"
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "@type": "FAQPage",
      "@id": "https://conversion.stevebaka.de/claims/consumer-psychology-effect-relevant-to-conversion/#faq",
      "inLanguage": "de-DE",
      "mainEntity": [
        {
          "@type": "Question",
          "name": "Was sagt dieser Claim aus?",
          "acceptedAnswer": {
            "@type": "Answer",
            "text": "Der untersuchte Consumer-Psychology-Effekt ist potenziell relevant für Conversion-Optimierung, benötigt aber noch genauere Claim-Extraktion. Der Claim ist verifiziert und kann als Evidence Path in Audits genutzt werden, wenn Kontext und beobachtbares Seitenmerkmal passen. Evidenzgrad A."
          }
        },
        {
          "@type": "Question",
          "name": "Welche Evidenz wird genutzt?",
          "acceptedAnswer": {
            "@type": "Answer",
            "text": "Die Seite nutzt Claims, Studien, Use Cases und Quellen aus dem SurrealDB Knowledge Graph der Conversion-Psychologie-Wissensbasis."
          }
        },
        {
          "@type": "Question",
          "name": "Ist die Ausgabe auf Deutsch verfügbar?",
          "acceptedAnswer": {
            "@type": "Answer",
            "text": "Ja. Alle menschenlesbaren Inhalte und Agent-Ausgaben sind standardmäßig deutsch."
          }
        }
      ]
    }
  ]
}
```
