Linking Thought and Behavior: Evidence for Process—Mode of Expression Congruence Effects
Prior research suggests that the influence of marketing cues on consumers’ behavior can occur as a result of either system 1 processes (i.e., associative, intuitive, impulsive processes) or system 2 processes (i.e., rule‐based, analytic, reflective processes). We demonstrate that how people express...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of consumer psychology 2022-01, Vol.32 (1), p.87-96 |
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creator | Nowlan, Luke Borenstein, Benjamin Morgan, Carter Xu, Minzhe Janiszewski, Chris |
description | Prior research suggests that the influence of marketing cues on consumers’ behavior can occur as a result of either system 1 processes (i.e., associative, intuitive, impulsive processes) or system 2 processes (i.e., rule‐based, analytic, reflective processes). We demonstrate that how people express a behavior can influence whether the behavior reflects predominantly system 1 or system 2 processing. Specifically, we propose a process—mode of expression congruence effect, whereby less deliberate behaviors (e.g., physically grabbing something) are relatively more sensitive to system 1 processing, while more deliberate behaviors (e.g., writing down one’s preference) are relatively more sensitive to system 2 processing. Six studies provide support for process—mode of expression congruence, showing that the magnitude and direction in which an environmental cue influences a consumer’s behavior can depend on the deliberateness of the mode of expression. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1002/jcpy.1241 |
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subjects | Dual‐process models Information processing Modes of preference expression |
title | Linking Thought and Behavior: Evidence for Process—Mode of Expression Congruence Effects |
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