Social Comparison Theory and Deception in the Interpersonal Exchange of Consumption Information

Four experiments demonstrate that self‐threatening social comparison information motivates consumers to lie. Factors related to self‐threat, including relevance of the social comparison target (i.e., the importance of the comparison person), comparison discrepancy (i.e., the magnitude of the perform...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of consumer research 2006-06, Vol.33 (1), p.99-108
Hauptverfasser: Argo, Jennifer J., White, Katherine, Dahl, Darren W.
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creator Argo, Jennifer J.
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description Four experiments demonstrate that self‐threatening social comparison information motivates consumers to lie. Factors related to self‐threat, including relevance of the social comparison target (i.e., the importance of the comparison person), comparison discrepancy (i.e., the magnitude of the performance difference), comparison direction (i.e., whether one performs better or worse), nature of the information (i.e., whether the comparison is social or objective), and perceived attainability (i.e., the possibility of achieving the compared performance), influenced consumers’ willingness to engage in deception. Results extend social comparison theory by demonstrating that comparisons that threaten public and private selves have implications for lying behaviors.
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source EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current)
subjects Consumer behavior
Consumer motivation
Consumer research
Consumers
Consumption
Deception
Experiment design
Information relevance
Lying
Motivation
Purchase price
Self evaluation
Social comparison
Social interaction
Studies
Threats
Undergraduate students
title Social Comparison Theory and Deception in the Interpersonal Exchange of Consumption Information
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