.So Cute I Could Eat It Up.: Priming Effects of Cute Products on Indulgent Consumption

Citation
Y. Nenkov, Gergana et L. Scott, Maura, .So Cute I Could Eat It Up.: Priming Effects of Cute Products on Indulgent Consumption, Journal of consumer research JCR;Consumer research , 41(2), 2014, pp. 326-341
ISSN journal
00935301
Volume
41
Issue
2
Year of publication
2014
Pages
326 - 341
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
This article examines the extent to which consumers engage in more indulgent consumption when they are exposed to whimsically cute products and explores the process by which such products affect indulgence. Prior research on kindchenschema (baby schema) has found that exposure to cute babies or baby animals leads to more careful behavior (see the study by Sherman, Haidt, and Coan), suggesting restraint. The present research uncovers the opposite: consumers become more indulgent in their behavior after exposure to whimsically cute products. Drawing from research on cognitive priming, kindchenschema, anthropomorphization, indulgence, and regulatory focus, this research posits that exposure to whimsically cute products primes mental representations of fun, increasing consumers' focus on approaching self-rewards and making consumers more likely to choose indulgent options. These effects do not emerge for kindchenschema cute stimuli, since they prime mental representations of vulnerability and caretaking. Four empirical studies provide evidence for the proposed effects and their underlying process.