
Ying Ding Associate Professor
Marketing
Research direction:
Consumer Psychology and Behavior, Green Consumption, Self-concept Related Product Preferences
Lecture course:
Consumer Behavior (for MBA students)Consumer Behavior (for the International Exchange Students) Cognitive Psychology (for Mater-Doctoral Students)
Abstract:
This research proposes that after an experience of being excluded, consumers may strategically choose products to differentiate themselves from the majority of others as a result of their appraisal of the exclusion situation. Experiments 1 and 2 show that when excluded individuals perceive that the cause of social exclusion is stable (vs. unstable), they exhibit greater preference for distinctive products than do included individuals. Experiment 3 documents that excluded individuals prefer distinctive products when their self-view is enhanced through self-affirmation. Moreover, these effects are driven by a strengthened perception of uniqueness. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.