2011
DOI: 10.1086/660702
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Shall I Tell You Now or Later? Assimilation and Contrast in the Evaluation of Experiential Products

Abstract: This research demonstrates that the effect of product information on the evaluation of an experiential product depends on the order with which such information is presented. In a series of experiments, we find that when information is presented before consuming an experiential product, the information results in an assimilation effect such that consumers evaluate the same experience more positively when the product information is favorable compared to when it is unfavorable. More interestingly, we demonstrate … Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…Here, research has provided both theoretical (Hoch and Loewenstein 1991;Loewenstein 1996;Shiv and Fedorikhin 1999) and empirical evidence as to how consumer choice is influenced by affect (Friedman and Förster 2010;Luce, Payne, and Bettman 1999;Peracchio and Tybout 1996;Wilcox, Roggeveen, and Grewal 2011). In summary, affect has been shown to be instrumental in developing an understanding of how consumers evaluate their options (Shu and Peck 2011).…”
Section: Affective Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Here, research has provided both theoretical (Hoch and Loewenstein 1991;Loewenstein 1996;Shiv and Fedorikhin 1999) and empirical evidence as to how consumer choice is influenced by affect (Friedman and Förster 2010;Luce, Payne, and Bettman 1999;Peracchio and Tybout 1996;Wilcox, Roggeveen, and Grewal 2011). In summary, affect has been shown to be instrumental in developing an understanding of how consumers evaluate their options (Shu and Peck 2011).…”
Section: Affective Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…My measure of affective evaluation of an object is based on the PANAS scale (Watson, Clark, and Tellegen 1988), as was developed by Wilcox et al (2011). Whilst it is important to understand the role of affect, with regards to how it influences both motivation and choice, it is also of importance to investigate to what extent affect translates to behavioral intentions.…”
Section: Affective Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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