You Get What You Pay For? Self-Construal Influences Price-Quality Judgments

被引:161
作者
Lalwani, Ashok K. [1 ]
Shavitt, Sharon [2 ]
机构
[1] Indiana Univ, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA
[2] Univ Illinois, Dept Business Adm, Champaign, IL 61820 USA
关键词
CULTURAL-DIFFERENCES; BRAND-NAME; PRODUCT; DISTINCTION; PERCEPTIONS; INFERENCE; APPEALS; STYLES; GOALS;
D O I
10.1086/670034
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
How does cultural self-construal influence consumers' tendency to use price to judge quality? Seven experiments designed to address this question revealed that people with a more interdependent (vs. independent) cultural self-construal-operationalized by ethnicity, nationality, measured self-construal, or manipulated salient self-construal-have a greater tendency to use price information to judge quality. This difference arises because interdependents tend to be holistic (vs. analytic) thinkers who are more likely to perceive interrelations between the elements of a product. These effects were observed regardless of whether the price-quality relation was assessed with a standard self-report scale or via actual product judgments, and whether thinking style was measured or manipulated. However, cultural differences only emerged in situations that afforded interdependents (vs. independents) a relational processing advantage. These findings shed light on the mechanisms underlying the effects and identify novel boundary conditions for the influence of self-construal and thinking style on consumer judgments.
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页码:255 / 267
页数:13
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