2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-9004.2011.00366.x
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Why Do We Like the iPhone? The Role of Evaluative Conditioning in Attitude Formation

Abstract: Evaluative conditioning (EC) is the change in liking due to the paring of an affectively meaningful and a neutral stimulus. Starting with the exemplary question of why we like the iPhone, this article provides an overview of past and present research and gives an outlook to future research on this topic. We outline four different theoretical EC accounts and discuss how each account is consistent with current empirical evidence.

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Cited by 15 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…A major question regarding EC is whether the effect can occur without people's awareness of the CS-US co-occurrence during encoding (De Houwer et al, 2001;Walther et al, 2011). Co-occurrence memory judgement has been the main measure of cooccurrence awareness during the pairing.…”
Section: Co-occurrence Memory In Ec Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A major question regarding EC is whether the effect can occur without people's awareness of the CS-US co-occurrence during encoding (De Houwer et al, 2001;Walther et al, 2011). Co-occurrence memory judgement has been the main measure of cooccurrence awareness during the pairing.…”
Section: Co-occurrence Memory In Ec Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Co-occurrence with affective stimuli is an important factor in attitude formation (Walther, Weil, & Langer, 2011). After perceiving co-occurrence of a neutral stimulus (the conditioned stimulus, CS) with an affective stimulus (the unconditioned stimulus, US), people's evaluation of the CS becomes more similar to their evaluation of the US.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On a theoretical level, knowing if EC effects are resistant to extinction or not informs and constrains models about the processes that underlie EC. Some existing theories predict resistance of EC effects to extinction while others predict extinction effects (see Hofmann et al, 2010, andWalther, Weil, &Langer, 2011, for a discussion).…”
Section: Testing the Judgment-related Account For The Extinction Of Ementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an experimental setting, participants typically prefer CSs paired with positive stimuli over those paired with negative stimuli in the absence of awareness of the pairings (for a review see Jones et al, 2010). EC has proven to be a robust mechanism by which attitudes are formed and changed (Jones et al, 2010;Walther, Weil, & Langer, 2011). Granted, while we recognize that evidence for EC in ecologically valid settings is mixed (e.g., Rozin, Wrzesniewski, & Byrnes, 1998), our aim is not to claim reliable evidence for implicit EC, but to postulate that perhaps EC may be one underlying cause of both the results found here and the Obama effect itself.…”
Section: News Media and Evaluative Conditioningmentioning
confidence: 99%