How Nonconsumption Shapes Desire

Citation
Xianchi Dai, et Fishbach, Ayelet, How Nonconsumption Shapes Desire, Journal of consumer research JCR;Consumer research , 41(4), 2014, pp. 936-952
ISSN journal
00935301
Volume
41
Issue
4
Year of publication
2014
Pages
936 - 952
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
How does nonconsumption shape desire? The proposed model suggests that desire depends on the length of nonconsumption of a good and the presence of salient alternatives, and that desire is at least partially constructed. In the absence of salient alternatives, a longer nonconsumption period results in stronger desire for the unconsumed good. However, in the presence of salient alternatives, individuals infer that they have developed new tastes, and thus a longer nonconsumption period results in a weaker desire for the unconsumed good. Five studies support this model across nonconsumption of various goods: food from home when attending college (study 1); chametz food during the Passover holiday (study 2); social media (i.e., abstaining from Facebook; study 3); and cultural foods (i.e., forgoing Japanese food, study 4; and Thai food, study 5). We discuss implications of our findings for when and how the experience of desire is constructed and situationally determined.