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    Glossary of

    Consumer Behavior Terms

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    Abstract information: Pallid information, lacking concreteness and communication effectiveness.

    Absolute threshold: The lowest level at which a stimulus can be detected 50% of the time.

    Acceptable risk: The level of risk that a consumer will tolerate when purchasing a product or service.

    Acculturation: The difficult task of learning a new culture.

    Achievement motivation: The motivation identified by David McClelland to strive for success and to perform up to one's

    capabilities.

    Acquisition phase: The first of three phases of consumer buying-acquisition, consumption, and disposition. It is associated with

    search and selection of goods and services.

    Actual product performance: A consumer's perception of the level of performance displayed by a product. Actual performance is

    compared to expected performance to determine product satisfaction.

    Actual state: The state of being experienced by a consumer at any particular point in time. When the actual diverges sufficiently from

    the desired state, need recognition is said to occur.

    Adaptation: A process in which an organism has repeated experience with a stimulus and habituates to it.

    Adaptation level: The level of intensity of a stimulus to which a consumer has become accustomed or adapted

    Advertising clutter: Too many ads on TV or radio impeding the ability of consumers to remember the ads.

    Advertising substantiation: The concept, developed by the Federal Trade Commission, that companies must provide evidence for

    the truth of their advertising claims.

    Advertising wear-out: Occurs when consumers are overexposed to an advertisement, resulting in decreased positivity.

    Affect: A class of mental phenomena uniquely characterized by a consciously experienced, subjective feeling state, commonly

    accompanying emotions and moods.

    Affect and CS/D: The concept that the level of consumer satisfaction is influenced by the positive and negative affective responses

    elicited by a product after its purchase and during use.

    Affect intensity: The stable tendency of some people to react more strongly than others to an emotion-producing situation.

    Affect-referral heuristic: A rule of thumb in which a consumer chooses a product based upon an overall recollection of his or her

    emotional response of an alternative.

    African- American subculture: The subculture in the United States composed of dark-skinned people whose ancestry can be traced

    to Africa.

    Asian-American subculture: The fastest-growing ethnic subculture in the United States.

    AIO statements: Used in psychographic inventories to obtain information on consumers' activities, interests, and opinions.

    Altruistic Marketing: A field of study that (1) researches the causes of negligent consumer behavior and (2) applies the findings to

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    develop treatment and/or preventive methods to reduce the maladaptive actions of consumers.

    Alternative evaluation: The formation of benefits and attitudes regarding choice alternatives.

    Anchoring and adjustment: A judgmental heuristic that is used to make an estimate of the level of a stimulus on a scale. The level is

    estimated by starting at some reference point and then adjusting away from it.

    Antecedent states: The temporary physiological and mood states that a consumer brings to a consumption situation.

    Applied behavior analysis: A process in which environmental var iables are manipulated to alter behavior.

    Articulation: A component of consumer knowledge that describes how finely a person can discriminate differencesalong a

    dimension.

    Aspiration group: A group to which an individual would like to belong. If it is impossible for the individual to belong to the group, it

    becomes a symbolic group for the person.

    Assimilation effect: The idea that a communication may be viewed as more congruent with the position of the receiver than it really

    is because it falls within the latitude of acceptance.

    Associationist school: Eighteenth-century learning theorists who investigated such phenomena as the serial-position effect and

    paired-associate learning.

    Atmospherics: The process through which consumer reactions may be influenced by the design of buildings anti spaces, including the

    interior space; the layout of the aisles; the texture of the carpets and walls; the scents, colors, shapes, and sounds experienced by

    customers.

    ATSCI: (attention to social comparison information) a scale that measures the disposition to conform.

    Attention: The allocation of cognitive capacity to an object or task, so that information is consciously processed.

    Attention stage: The stage of information processing in which a person allocates cognitive capacity to a stimulus.

    Attitude: The amount of affect or feeling for or against a stimulus.

    Attitude toward the ad: A consumer's positive and negative feelings held toward a particular advertisement.

    Attitude toward the behavior: A consumer's positive and negative feelings held toward engaging in a particular behavior.

    Attitude-toward-the-object model: A model of consumer choice based upon how consumers combine their beliefs about product

    attributes to form attitudes about various brand alternatives.

    Attribute-benefit belief: A belief about the extent to which an attribute provides a specific benefit.

    Attribute importance: A persons general assessment of the significance of an attribute for products and services of a certain type.

    Attribute-object belief: The belief that an object possesses a particular attribute.

    Attributes: The characteristics or features that an object may or may not have.

    Attribution theory: Identifies the various means through which people determine the causes of action of themselves, others, and

    objects.

    Augmenting principle: A principle from one of the attribution theory models stating that the role of a given cause in producing a

    given effect is discounted if other plausible causes are also present.

    Autonomic decisions: Decisions of lesser importance that either the husband or wife may make independently

    Availability heuristic: The concept that people may assess the probability of an event based on the ease with which the event can be

    brought to mind.

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    Availability-valence hypothesis:. The hypothesis that judgments depend on the favorableness of information available in memory.

    Awareness set: A subset of the total universe of potential brands and products available of which a consumer is aware.

    Baby-boom generation: The large post-World War 11 group of people born between 1946 and 1964

    Baby bust: A period after 1964when fertility rates plunged far below the replacement level, resulting in fewer children being born

    in the United States.

    Back translation: A process involving successive translations of a message back- and forth between languages by differenttranslators. In this way, subtle and not-so-subtle differences in meaning can be located.

    Balance theory: A type of cognitive consistency approach in which people are viewed as maintaining a logical and consistent set of

    interconnected beliefs.

    Basic exchange equation: Profit = Rewards - Costs.

    Behavioral economics: An approach to economics based upon the investigation of the behavior of individual consumers. An example

    is the use of survey research methods to assess the economic confidence of consumers.

    Behavioral influence hierarchy: The proposal that, in some instances, the hierarchy of effects begins with a behavior, followed by

    the formation of beliefs and attitudes.

    Behavioral influence perspective: The view that strong situational or environmental mental forces may propel a consumer to engage

    in buying behavior without having formed either feelings or affect about the object of the purchase.

    Behavioral Influence Techniques: Techniques that cause people to comply to requests by making use of strong norms of behavior.

    Behavioral intentions: The intentions of consumers to behave in a particular way with regard to the acquisition, disposition and use

    of products and services.

    Behavioral intentions model: A consumer choice model that states that behavior results from the formation of specific intentions to

    behave.

    Behavioral learning: A process in which experience with the environment leads to a relatively permanent change in behavior or the

    potential for a change in behavior.

    Behavioral segmentation: A complementary approach to using demographic variables to segment the market by dividing consumers

    into homogeneous groups based on various aspects of their buying behavior.

    Beliefs: The cognitive knowledge people have of the relations among attributes, benefits, and objects.

    Bem sex-role inventory: An inventory for exploring gender roles. It identifies three possible roles- masculine, feminine, and

    psychologically androgynous.

    Benefit segmentation: The division of the market into relatively homogeneous groups of consumers based upon similarities of

    needs.

    Benefits: The outcomes that product or service attributes may provide.

    Binationals: A situation in which product components are made in one country but the product is assembled in another, or in which a

    product is designed in one country but made in another.

    Binational products: Products that are mad in one country and assembles in another country, or designed in one country and

    manufactured in another.

    Bogies: Fear rumors that may spook the marketplace.

    Bookend ads: Advertisements placed in the first and last position of a series of commercials.

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    Boomerang effect: Occurs when a message results in a change of attitude opposite in direction to that intended.

    Brand commitment: The emotional-psychological attachment to a brand within a product class.

    Brand expectations: The expectations that a consumer forms regarding the performance of a brand.

    Brand knowledge: The amount of experience with and information that a person has about particular products or services.

    Consumers possessing greater amounts of knowledge can think about a product across a number of dimensions and make finer

    distinctions among brands.

    Brand loyalty: The biased behavioral response, expressed to a degree to which a customer holds a positive attitude toward a brand,

    has a commitment to it and intends to continue purchasing it in the future.

    Butterfly curve: The curve showing that the preference for a stimulus is at its greatest level at points just higher or lower than the

    adaptation level.

    Buyer's regret: A postacquisition phenomenon in which the preference for a chosen alternative actually falls below that of a rejected

    alternative.

    Buying unit: The individual, family, or group that makes a purchase decision.

    CAD model: A personality scale developed to measure the interpersonal orientation of consumers. CAD stands for compliance,

    aggression, and detachment.

    Central cues: Those ideas and supporting data that bear directly on the quality of the arguments developed in the message.

    Central route to persuasion: In high-involvement information processing, a path to persuasion in which a person diligently

    processes the arguments of the source of information.

    Channels: The media through which information flows.

    Childhood consumer socialization: Processes by which young people acquire skills, knowledge, and attitudes relevant to their

    functioning as consumers in the marketplace.

    Choice: The process in which consumers make a choice between two or more alternative courses of action.

    Choice uncertainty: The degree of uncertainty about which of several brands to select.

    Classic fashion trend: A fashion trend in which particular looks become a classic, such as the blue pin-striped suit.

    Classical conditioning: A type of learning in which a conditioned stimulus is paired with an unconditioned stimulus through

    repetition, the conditioned stimulus will eventually elicit a conditioned response.

    Closure: A principle of perceptual organization that describes the tendency of people to fill in missinginformation to create a holistic

    Cluster analysis: The use of demographic variables to identify where groups of neighborhoods with households of similar consumers

    arc located geographically.

    Clutter: An overabundance of advertisements that decreases communications effectiveness.

    Cognitive complexity: A personality characteristic that describes the degree of structural intricacy of the organizing schemas used by

    different groups of consumers to code and store information in memory.

    Cognitive consistency: The tendency of people to maintain a logical and consistent set of interconnected attitudes.

    Cognitive dissonance: An unpleasant emotional state that is felt when there is a logical inconsistency among cognitive elements.

    Cognitive learning: The process through which people form associations among concepts, learn sequences of concepts, solve

    problems and gain insights.

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    Cognitive responses: The thoughts that consumers may develop in response to messages.

    Cognitive personality theories: Personality theories positing that individual differences result from variations in how people

    process information, think, and learn.

    Commitment: The degree to which an attitude position can be changed. As the level of commitment to an attitude position increases,

    it becomes more difficult to change the attitude.

    Communication: The use of a sign to convey meaning. A sign may be a verbalization, an utterance, a body movement, a written word,

    a picture, an odor, a touch, or even stones on the ground to denote a property boundary.

    Communications model: A model stating that sources encode messages that travel through a channel and are processed by receivers,

    who then provide feedback to the source.

    Comparative appraisal: The consumer's evaluation of his or her own relative standing with respect to an attitude, belief, ability, or

    emotion through observation of the behavior of appropriate reference others.

    Comparative messages: Messages in which the communicator compares the positive and negative aspects of his or her position to

    the positive and negative aspects of a competitor's position.

    Comparison level: The minimum level of positive outcome (profit) that an individual feels he or she deserves from an exchange.

    Comparison level for alternatives: The lowest level of outcomes a person will accept in light of available alternative opportunities.

    Comparison level for outcomes: The minimum level of positive outcomes a person believes he or she deserves from in exchange.

    Compensatory models of choice: A class of choice models in which consumers are viewed as analyzing each alternative in a broad

    evaluative fashion. A choice is said to be compensatory when high ratings on some attributes may compensate for low ratings on other

    attributes.

    Competitive positioning: The positioning of a product relative to key competitors on important attributes.

    Complaint behavior: The overt actions taken by consumers to bring their product or service dissatisfaction to the attention of others.

    Complementary activities: Activities that naturally take place together.

    Complex exchange: An exchange that involves a set of three or more actors enmeshed in a set of mutual relations.

    Compliance: The act of conforming to the wishes of another person or group without necessarily accepting the group's dictates.

    Comprehension: The process of making sense of stimuli so that the message may be understood.

    Comprehension stage: The stage of information processing in which the person organizes and interprets information in order to

    obtain meaning from it.

    Compulsive consumption: Consumption marked by an impulse or urge to engage in behavior that may be harmful to the consumer

    while simultaneously denying its possible negative effects.

    Compulsive purchases: Purchases marked by an impulse or urge to engage in behavior that may be harmful to the consumer whilesimultaneously denying its possible negative effects.

    Compound traits: Predispositions that result from the effects of multiple elemental traits, a persons learning history and the cultural

    environment.

    Concept testing: The pre-testing of the product idea.

    Conditioned response: The response elicited by the conditioned stimulus when classical conditioning occurs.

    Conditioned stimulus: A previously neutral stimulus that, when paired with an unconditioned stimulus, may elicit a conditioned

    response.

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    Conformity: A change in behavior or belief as a result of real or imagined group or individual pressure.

    Conjunctive rule: A type of choice heuristic in which the consumer sets minimum cutoffs on each product attribute. If the product

    rating falls below the minimum cutoff level oil any attribute, the product is rejected from further consideration.

    Conservation behavior: Action Consumers take to conserve resources, including curtailment behaviors, maintenance behaviors, and

    efficiency behaviors.

    Consideration set: The set of alternative brands that the consumer regards as acceptable for further consideration.

    Consumer actions: Those behaviors in which consumers engage in the acquisition, consumption, and disposition of goods, services,

    and ideas.

    Consumer acquisitions: The goods, services, and ideas that consumers obtain in the marketplace.

    Consumer behavior: The study of the decision-making units and the processes involved in acquiring, consuming, and disposing of

    goods, services, experiences, and ideas.

    Consumer behaviors: consist of all the actions taken by consumers related to acquiring, disposing, and using products and services.

    Consumer beliefs: The cognitive knowledge people have of the relations among attributes, benefits, and objects.

    Consumer complaint behavior: A multiple set of actions triggered by perceived dissatisfaction with a purchase episode.

    Consumer decision making: The analysis made in choosing between two or more alternative acquisitions and the processes that take

    place before and after the choice.

    Consumer environment: It is composed of factors existing independently of individual consumers and firms that influence the

    exchange process.

    Consumer ethnocentrism: A scale measuring the tendency of consumers to prefer to purchase U.S.-made products.

    Consumer expectations: A person's prior beliefs about what should happen in a given situation.

    Consumer incentives: The products, services, information, and even other people that are perceived to satisfy a need.

    Consumer information processing: The process in which consumers are exposed to information, attend to it, comprehend it, place it

    in memory, and retrieve it for later use.

    Consumer involvement: The perceived personal importance and/or interest consumers attach to the acquisition, consumption and

    disposition of a good, a service or an idea.

    Consumer knowledge: The amount of experience and information that a person has about particular products or services.

    Consumer marketing: The marketing of a good or service by one consumer to another.

    Consumer performance: An event in which a consumer and a marketer act as performers and/or as audience in a situation in which

    obligations and standards exist.

    Consumer primacy: The concept that the consumer should be at the center of the marketing effort.

    Consumer rights: The rights, identified by John F. Kennedy, of safety, information, redress, and choice. More recently some have

    suggested that the right to health care and the right to a home should be added to the list.

    Consumer ritual: Standardized sequences of actions that are periodically repeated.

    Consumer satisfaction/ dissatisfaction: The general feelings that a consumer develops about a product or service after its purchase

    and use.

    Consumer search behavior: All actions consumers take to identify and obtain information on the means of solving a problem.

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    Consumer self-control: The ability of people to avoid making purchases that involve pleasure in the present, but pain in the future.

    Consumer situations: The temporary environmental and personal factors that form the context within which a consumer activity

    occurs at a particular place and time.

    Consumer well-being: The extent to which an individual's needs and wants are satisfied.

    Consumerism: The movement made up of activities of government, business, independent organizations, and concerned consumers

    that are designed to protect the rights of consumers.

    Consumption amount. The amount of a good that is consumed. For example, how many ounces of a soft drink is consumed.

    Consumption experience: The cognitions and feelings the consumer experiences during the use of a product or service.

    Consumption frequency: The frequency with which a product or service is consumed or used.

    Consumption purpose: The reason for using a product. That is, some products can be used for multiple purposes. Thus, baking soda

    can be used as an antacid, to make bread rise, and to reduce odors.

    Consumption phase: A researcher's analysis of how consumers actually use a product or service and the experiences that the

    consumer obtains from such use.

    Context: The background factors within which consumer behavior occurs.

    Context e ffects: The concept that the background or context in which stimuli are embedded will influence the perception of the

    stimuli. Thus the background programming in which an advertisement is placed may influence the interpretation of the advertisement.

    Contingencies of reinforcement: The temporal relationship between a behavior and its reinforcers or punishers that acts to shape

    consumer behavior.

    Continuous innovations: A modification of an existing product to improve performance, taste, reliability, and so forth. Continuous

    innovations result in few, if any, consumer life-style changes.

    Contracted performance: Both the consumer and marketer have minimal interactions. It occurs with low-involvement goods.

    Country of origin: The country from which a good or service originates.

    Contrast effects: Occur when the attitude statement falls into the latitude of rejection, so that it is perceived as more opposed to the

    receiver's position than perhaps it really is.

    Conventions: Norms that describe how to act in everyday life.

    Corporate social responsibility: The idea that business has an obligation to help society with its problems by offering resources.

    Corrective advertising: Advertising that is mandated by a federal agency to correct consumer impressions that were formed by

    previously misleading advertising.

    Cresive norms: Norms embedded in the culture that include three types: conventions, mores, and customs.

    Cross-cultural analysis: The study of foreign cultures and their values, attitudes, languages, and customs.

    Crowding: Unpleasant feelings that people experience when they perceive that densities are too high and that their control of the

    situation has been reduced acceptable levels.

    Cultural ethnocentricity: The feeling among some consumers that the values, beliefs, and ways of doing things as specified by one's

    own culture are "right," "correct," and generally better than those of other cultures.

    Cultural identification: A feeling of attachment to the society in which a person prefers to live.

    Cultural meanings: Cultural ideas transferred to consumers through material goods and rituals.

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    Cultural rituals: Standardized sequences of actions that are periodically repeated. They have some purpose and generally have a

    beginning, middle, and end. They provide meaning and involve the use of cultural symbols.

    Cultural symbols: Entities that represent the shared ideas and concepts of a culture.

    Cultural values: They represent the shared meanings ideal end-states.

    Culture: A set of socially acquired behavior patterns transmitted symbolically through language and other means to the members of a

    particular society. It is a way of life.

    Culture versus nation: A nation is a state that may contain a culture. A culture is a way of life that may extend far beyond national

    borders.

    Customs: Handed down from generation to generation, customs refers to basic actions such as the ceremonies held and the roles

    played by the sexes.

    Cyclical fashion trend: The adoption of styles that are progressively more extreme in one direction or another. Examples include

    skirt lengths and tie widths.

    Deceptive advertising: An advertisement may be deemed deceptive if it has the "capacity to deceive a measurable segment of the

    public."

    Decision context: Situational or extrinsic factors that dictate the options available to the decision maker.

    Decision-making perspective: Occurs when consumers move through a series of rational steps when making a purchase. These steps

    include problem recognition, search, alternative evaluation, choice, and postacquisition evaluation.

    Decision process: The steps through which consumers move when purchasing a product or service, including problem recognition,

    search, alternative evaluation, choice, and postacquisition evaluation.

    Decreasing marginal utility: The concept that, as a consumer obtains more of something, each additional unit brings less utility or

    satisfaction.

    Defense mechanisms: Psychological logical adjustments made by people to keep themselves from recognizing personality qualities

    or motives that might lower self-esteem or heighten anxiety.

    Delay-payment effect: This effect occurs when customers are encouraged to buy a good or service in the present and are allowed to

    pay for it at a later date.

    Demand curve shift: The shift of the demand curve to the right or left.

    Demand elasticity: The variation in quantity demanded of a good that is caused by changes in the price of that good. For example, an

    elastic demand curve results in small changes in price, causing large changes in quantity demanded.

    Demarketing: Attempts by regulatory agencies and non-profit organizations to reduce the frequency of consumer behaviors that have

    a negative impact on the consumer or society.

    Demographic characteristics: Age, sex, income, religion, marital status, education, etc.

    Demographic variables: Characteristics of various groups of people as assessed by such factors as age, sex, income, religion,

    marital status, nationality, education, family size, occupation, and ethnicity.

    Density: How closely packed consumers are in a particular situational context.

    Depth interviews: Long, probing, one-on-one interviews to identify hidden reasons for purchasing products and services.

    Desired state: The preferred state that a consumer would like to achieve. When differences between the desired state and the actual

    state are sufficiently large, a need state is said to exist.

    Detached nuclear family: Pattern in which children from middle-class families tend to strike out on their own to form families away

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    from their parents.

    Difference threshold: The minimum amount of difference in the intensity of a stimulation that can be detected 50% of the time.

    Diffusion: The process by which innovative ideas, products and services spread through the consumer population.

    Dimensionality: A type of consumer knowledge referring to the number of different ways that aperson can think about something.

    Direct comparative advertisements: Advertisements in which one brand is specifically compared to another.

    Direct influence of attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors: The concept that attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors may be formed directly.

    Discontinuous innovations: Innovations that produce major changes in the life-styles of consumers.

    Discounting principle: The idea from attribution theory that people will examine the environmental pressures that impede or propel a

    particular action. When a person moves with the environmental pressures, little understanding of the person's true motivations can be

    gained; therefore, the information is discounted.

    Discrete exchange: A one-time interaction in which money is paid for a commodity. Discrete exchanges are short, one-time

    purchases that do not involve the creation of a relationship.

    Discretionary expenditures: Expenditures that can be postponed or eliminated.

    Discriminative stimuli: Stimuli that only occur in the presence of a reinforcer.

    Disjunctive rule: A choice heuristic in which an option is judged acceptable if any of its attributes surpass a cutoff level.

    Disposition phase: The phase of postacquisition. in which the consumer determines what to do with an acquisition after it has been

    used.

    Dissociative group: A reference group with whom the person does not wish to be associated.

    Dissonance: An imbalanced state that results when a logical inconsistency exists among cognitive elements.

    Divestment rituals: Rituals performed to erase the meaning associated with the previous owner of a good (e.g., thoroughly cleaning a

    new home prior to moving in).

    Dogmatism: A personality characteristic marked by closed-mindedness and rigidity in the, approach to the social environment.

    Domain-specific values: Beliefs pertaining to more concrete consumption activities- for example that manufacturers should give

    prompt service, guarantee their products, help eliminate environmental pollution and be truthful.

    Door-in-the-face technique: A compliance technique that involves the requester first making a very large request, which is usually

    refused by the target. This request is then followed by a moderate request, which is more often complied with than if no large request

    were made.

    Double jeopardy: Occurs when a less popular brand, as defined by market share, also has less brand loyalty among its customers.

    Drama: An advertising technique of indirect address in which the characters speak to each other rather than to the audience.

    Dramatistic performance: Both the consumer and the marketer know that a show is occurring, and each is alert to the others role.

    Drawing conclusions: A message strategy in which the presenter draws the conclusions of the message for the audience.

    Drive: An affective state in which a person experiences emotions andphysiological arousal.

    Dyadic exchange: An exchange that takes place between two parties.

    Dynamic continuous innovations: Innovations that involve some major change in an existing product and minor changes in the

    behavior of consumers.

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    East Asia: Composed of Japan, Korea, China, and Southeast Asia, the region has over 26% of the world's population and is the

    dominant exporter of automobiles, electronics, and computer chips.

    Eastern Europe: The landmass stretching from the eastern border of Germany to the shores of the Pacific Ocean, composed of

    people as diverse as the European Czechs and the Mongoloid people of far eastern Siberia.

    Economic cycle: The cycle that traces the flow of an economy. It has four phasespeak, recession, trough, and recovery.

    Economic environment: The set of factors involving monetary, natural, and human resources that influence the behavior of

    individuals and groups.

    Economic optimism-pessimism: The reactions of consumers to various economic and personal events that result in the presence or

    absence of feelings of economic confidence.

    Ego: The component of the personality defined in psychoanalytic theory as standing for reason and good sense and as following the

    reality principle.

    Elaboration likelihood model (ELM): A model proposing that the route to persuasion depends on the involvement of the consumer.

    The highly involved consumer engages in greater amounts of information processing than the less involved consumer.

    Elemental Traits: The most basis underlying predispositions of individuals that arise from genetics and early learning history.

    Elimination-by-aspects heuristic: A choice heuristic in which consumers rank attributes in order. Alternatives are eliminated if theydo not possess the first attribute. Those alternatives left are then evaluated on the next attribute, and so forth, until only one alternative

    remains.

    Emotional dissatisfaction: A postacquisition state that occurs when the actual performance is perceived to be lower than the

    expected performance.

    Emotional satisfaction: A postacquisition state that occurs when the actual performance exceeds the expected performance.

    Enacted norms:Norms that are explicitly expressed, sometimes in the form of laws. An example would be on which side of the road

    you drive a car.

    Enacted Performance: Both the consumer and the marketer have significant latitude to place blame for the outcome of the

    transaction.

    Encoding: The process of transferring information from short-term to long-term memory for permanent storage.

    Enculturation: The process of learning one's own culture.

    Enduring involvement: Occurs when consumers show a consistent high level of interest in a product and frequently spend time

    thinking about the product.

    Environmental analysis: The assessment of the forces and institutions external to the firm and of how these may influence the

    marketing effort.

    Environmental influence factors: Those factors outside the individual that affect individual consumers, decision making units and

    marketers.

    Environmental level of analysis: Analysis of those factors outside of the person that influence consumer behavior, such as the effects

    of situations, groups, culture, subcultures, and the regulatory environment.

    Equity: Occurs when the ratio of the outcomes and inputs is perceived by one party to an exchange to equal the ratio of the outcomes

    and inputs of the other party to the exchange.

    Equity theory: Holds that people will analyze the ratio of their outcomes and inputs to the ratio of the outcomes and inputs of the

    partner in an exchange.

    Ethical dilemma: A decision that involves the trade-off of lowering one's personal values in exchange for increased organizational

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    and personal profits.

    Ethical exchange: Occurs when both parties know the full nature of the agreement, neither party intentionally misrepresents or omits

    relevant information, and neither party unduly influences the other through the use of power.

    Ethical exchange characteristics: The things that must occur for an ethical exchange to take place, such as both parties knowing the

    full nature of an agreement before entering into it.

    Ethics: The study of normative judgments concerned with what is morally right and wrong, good and bad.

    Ethics matrix: A matrix that identifies when ethical problems may occur. Such a matrix is based upon exchanges of information

    between consumers and businesses.

    Ethnicity: A group bound together by tie so of cultural homogeneity.

    Ethnocentrism: The universal tendency for people to view their own group as the center of the universe, to interpret other social

    units from the perspective of their own group, and to reject persons who are culturally dissimilar similar.

    Euroconsumers: Consumers in Western Europe who supposedly share common desires for a broad range of goods and services. This

    assumption is incorrect.

    Even-a-penny-will-help technique: A compliance technique in which a person makes a request and then states that any contribution,

    no matter how paltry, would. help.

    Evoked set: Consists of those brands and products recalled from long-term memory that are acceptable for further consideration.

    Exchange: The transfer of something tangible or intangible, actual or symbolic, between two or more social actors.

    Exchange process: A process in which resources are transferred between two parties.

    Exchange rituals: Rituals in which products or services are exchanged among consumers.

    Exit behavior: Refers to the consumer choice to either leave a relationship or to lower consumption levels of the good or service.

    Expectancy confirmation: Results when the performance of a product is perceived to meet a consumer's expectations.

    Expectancy disconfirmation: Results when the performance of a product fails to meet a consumer's expectations.

    Expectancy disconfirmation model: A model of consumer satisfaction/dissatisfaction based upon whether a brand meets or exceeds

    consumer expectations.

    Expectations: A person's prior beliefs about what should happen in a given situation.

    Expected product performance: The level of performance anticipated of a product or service by a consumer.

    Experiential hierarchy: The hierarchy of effects in which affect occurs first, followed by behavior and then belief formation.

    Experiential perspective: In some instances consumers do not make purchases according to a strictly rational decision-making

    process. They buy certain products and cervices in order to have fun, create fantasies or feel desired emotions.

    Exposure: The initial information-processing stage, in which consumers receive information through their senses.

    Exposure stage: A stage in information processing in which consumers receive information through their senses.

    Expressive needs: Desires by consumers to fulfill social and/or aesthetic requirements.

    Expressive role: A role found in many groups, in which a person helps maintain the group and provides emotional support for its

    members.

    Extended family: Consists of the nuclear family plus other relatives, such as parents of the husband and wife.

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    Extended self: The concept that possessions may become 1part of the self-concept and, therefore, extend the self to include

    impersonal entities.

    External attribution: An attribution of the cause of action to some factor outside of an individual, such as attributing the reason for

    an endorsement to the money paid to the endorser.

    External exchange: An exchange between parties that are in separate groups, such as between two families or two firms.

    External roles: Involves communications and involvement with people outside of the family.

    External search: The consumer's soliciting information from outside sources rather than from his or her memory.

    Extinction: A gradual reduction in the frequency of occurrence of an operant behavior that results from a lack of reinforcement of the

    response.

    Fads: Temporary fashion or other trends followed by a group.

    Family decision stages: The steps in the decision process used by a family to purchase products or services.

    Family life cycle: The idea that families may move through a series of stages in a developmental fashion.

    Fashion: A set of behaviors temporarily adopted by a people because they are perceived to be socially appropriate for the time and

    situation.

    Fear appeals: A type of message in which the communication is designed to create some level of fear in the target audience.

    Feelings: The affective responses and emotions that consumers have.

    Fertility rate: The number of children born to the average woman during her lifetime.

    Figure-ground: A principle of perception whereby the figure is the object observed moving against the ground. The ground is the

    context or background within which the figure is observed.

    Focus groups: Small number of consumers (usually 6 to 10), interacting in an open ended fashion with the assistance of a moderator

    to provide information on their beliefs and attitudes about specific topics.

    Foot-in-the-door technique: A compliance technique that operates through the influencer making two request; the first, a small

    request, is followed by a moderately sized second request.

    Forgetting: The inability to recall from memory some desired piece of information. Forgetting occurs when either the retrieval or the

    response generation process breaks down.

    Formal exchange: an explicit written, or verbal contract. This will frequently occur in external exchanges.

    Formal group: A group whose organization and structure are defined in writing.

    Framing: A process in which a person evaluates a stimulus change as occurring from either a loss or a gain position. Framing has

    been found to influence risk-taking behavior.

    Fraudulent symbol: A material good that is stripped of class symbolism when its ownership is diffused across levels of the class

    hierarchy.

    Free riding: An act whereby a consumer obtains product information from sales personnel and then uses the information to make a

    purchase from a low-cost discount store that does not offer personal service.

    Frequency heuristic: The rule of thumb used by consumers in some low-involvement settings, in which the liking for a brand is

    based merely on the number of positive and negative attributes associated with it.

    Functions of attitudes: The concept that attitudes exist for a reason, that is, to help people interact more effectively with the

    environment.

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    Fundamental attribution error: The tendency of people to attribute the cause of a person's actions to that person's disposition and

    personality.

    Gatekeeper: An individual who has the ability to control information to a decision maker.

    Generation X: The post babyboom group born between 1965 and 1980.

    Generation Y: The 72 million children of the baby boomers, the first of whom will reach adulthood in the year 2000. They represent

    28 % of the current population.

    Generic decision-making model: It identifies the stages though which consumers move when making decisions.

    Geodemographics: The use of demographic variables to identify where consumers with similar buying patterns are geographically

    concentrated.

    Geographic segmentation: The segmentation of a market into homogeneous groups of consumers with similar needs and wants based

    on Geography.

    Gestalt psychologists: An influential group of psychologists prominent during the early twentieth century who believed that

    biological and psychological events do not influence behavior in isolation from each other.

    Global attitude measures: A direct measurement of the overall affect and feelings held by a consumer regarding an object.

    Global marketer: A marketer who attempts to develop "one sight, one sound, and one sell" for its products.

    Global values: Enduring beliefs about desired states of existence or modes of behavior.

    Goal-directed action: Behavior directed toward obtaining an incentive object, such as a product or service.

    Goal-directed behavior: Actions directed toward obtaining goods, services, or ideas that will decrease the gap between a desired

    and an actual state.

    Goods: Tangible products.

    Gravitational model: The concept that trading areas act like planets, attracting outside shoppers in proportion to the relative

    populations of the towns in question and to the square of the inverse of the distance between the towns.

    Grooming rituals: An individual's acts to ensure that special, perishable properties resident in clothing, hairstyles, and looks are

    maintained.

    Group: A set of individuals who interact with one another over some period of time and who share some common need or goal.

    Group polarization phenomenon: The tendency of groups to be either more risky or more cautious than individuals when making

    decisions.

    Group shift: The tendency of group decisions to show either more or less risk-taking propensities than the average of the decisions of

    the individuals in the group.

    Habitual purchases: Purchases that occur as a result of a habit.

    Halo effect: The concept that positive or negative feelings about one characteristic will generalize to influence feelings about other,

    possibly unrelated, characteristics.

    Hedonic consumption: The consumption of products and services based primarily on the desire to experience pleasure and

    happiness.

    Hedonism: The desire to gain pleasure through the senses.

    Heuristic models of choice: Models of choice in which consumers take shortcuts in information processing to make decision making

    less complex.

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    Heuristics: Simple rules of thumb people use to make estimates of probabilities and values.

    Hierarchical models of choice: Models of choice in which the consumer is viewed as comparing alternatives on attributes one at a

    time.

    Hierarchies of effects: Various models that explain the order in which beliefs, feelings, and behavior occur.

    High culture: Culture that is exclusive in style, content, and appeal. It frequently harks back to the "old masters" of art, theater, music,

    and literature.

    High-involvement decision making: The decision process that occurs when consumers perceive high personal importance in a

    decision. It is marked by extended decision making and high levels of information processing.

    High-involvement hierarchy: The hierarchy of effects in which, belief formation occurs first, followed by the creation of affect,

    followed by a behavior.

    Higher-order conditioning: Occurs when a conditioned stimulus acts to classically condition another, previously neutral stimulus.

    Hindsight bias: The tendency of people to consistently exaggerate what could have been anticipated through foresight.

    Hispanic subculture: The subculture of the Hispanic population in the United States, in which four groups have been identified--

    Cubans, Puerto Ricans, Mexicans, and other Hispanics.

    Hostselling: The use of a program character to promote a product.

    Household: A group of people living under one roof.

    Humor in messages: A type of message based upon using humor.

    Hypothetical value function: The relationship between the psychological valuation of gains and losses that may result from a course

    of action and the actual valuation of those losses and gains.

    Id: One of the three elements of the personality identified by Freud. The id is based upon the pleasure principle, immediate

    gratification, and moves a person to obtain positive feelings and emotions.

    Idea generation: The first stage of product development.

    Ideal self: How a person would ideally like to perceive himself or herself.

    Identification: The normal process through which children acquire appropriate social roles by consciously and unconsciously

    copying the behavior of significant others.

    Image congruence hypothesis: The hypothesis that a consumer selects products and stores that correspond to his or her self-concept.

    Immigration: To come into a country of which one is not a native for permanent residence.

    Impersonal threats: Threats to behavioral freedom that come from impersonal sources.

    Impulse purchase: Buying action undertaken without a problem previously having been consciously recognized or without a buyingintention formed prior to entering the store.

    Incentives: The products, services, and people that are perceived as satisfying needs.

    Income effect: An economic principle stating that, when prices are lowered, consumers can afford more of a product without giving

    up other alternatives.

    Incremental Effects Theory: Over many presentations of a stimulus, a stimulus representation is gradually into the consumers

    nervous system.

    Index of Consumer Sentiment: An index of consumer economic confidence developed at the University of Michigan Center for

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    Survey Research.

    Indirect comparative advertisement: A comparative ad in which the competing brand's name is never specifically mentioned

    Individual difference variables: They describe how one individual differs from another in distinctive patterns of behavior.

    Individual influence factors: Those psychological processes that affect individuals engaged in acquiring, consuming, and disposing

    of goods, services and experiences.

    Individual level of analysis: An analysis that focuses on identifying the processes that influence a person in the acquisition,consumption, and disposition phases.

    Industrial marketing: The marketing of a product by one firm to another firm.

    Industrial purchase behavior: The process corporations use to purchase goods, services, and ideas.

    Inept set: Consists of the brands and products that are considered unacceptable.

    Inert set: Consists of the brands and products to which consumers are essentially indifferent.

    Influence: The attempt of one person to impact the behaviors, attitudes, or beliefs of another person.

    Informal exchange: Unwritten social contracts are created between parties. Occurring more frequently

    in internal exchanges, social norms and peer pressure replace formal contracts.

    Informal group: A group that has no written organizational structure and is often socially based.

    Information: The content of what is exchanged with the outer world as we adjust to it and make our adjustment felt upon it.

    Information overload: A situation experienced by a consumer, in which more information is received than can be processed in

    short-term memory.

    Information processing: The process through which consumers are exposed to information, attend to it, comprehend it, place it in

    memory, and retrieve it for later use.

    Information salience: The level of activation of a stimulus in memory.

    Informational influence: One method through which a group may influence an individual, in which the group provides highly

    credible information that influences the consumers purchase decision.

    Ingratiation: Self-serving tactics engaged in by one person to make himself or herself more attractive to another.

    Ingratiator's dilemma: The problem that occurs when the ingratiator is caught manipulating the target person, the result being a loss

    rather than a gain of power.

    Inner-directed persons: Within the VALS psychographic inventory, persons who seek intense involvement in whatever they do.

    Innovativeness: The degree to which a consumer adopts new products, services, and ideas prior to others.

    Inputs: In balance theory, the contributions to an exchange made by each of the parties to the exchange.

    Instrumental materialism: Obtaining material goods to perform some activity or achieve some goal.

    Instrumental response: The behaviors (operants) of an organism that have been operantly conditioned.

    Instrumental role: Within a group, the role filled by the person who deals with the problem of getting the group to achieve certain

    goals and complete certain tasks.

    Instrumental values: Behaviors and actions required to achieve various terminal states.

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    Instrumentality of search: An approach for measuring external search by assessing the extent to which a person relies on various

    types of outside information, such as the number of friends with whom a purchase is discussed.

    Integrated group: A category within the VALS psychographic inventory that describes consumers who are mature and balanced and

    who have managed to "put together" the best characteristics of the inner and outer personalities.

    Interaction: Occurs when two or more factors combine to cause a consumer to behave in a different manner than if the two factors

    were not combined.

    Interaction set: Those stores where a consumers allows himself or herself to be exposed to personal selling.

    Internal attribution: An attribution that the cause for an action was internal to the person or thing in question, rather than to some

    external factor.

    Internal exchange: Exchanges that occur between parties within a group.

    Internal roles: Duties inside the family.

    Internal search: The first phase of the search process, in which the consumer attempts to retrieve from long-term memory

    information on products or services that will help to solve a problem.

    Internalization: Occurs when an individual accepts influence because it is intrinsically rewarding.

    Interpersonal processes: The communications that occur between two people at any particular point in time.

    Interpretant: A person's reaction to and meaning derived from a sign.

    Interpretation: A process whereby people draw upon their experience, memory, and expectations to interpret and attach meaning to

    a stimulus.

    Interpretation process: The process in which people draw upon their experience, memory and expectations to attach meaning to a

    stimulus.

    Interpretive research methods: Qualitative methods in which the researcher attempts to identify the meanings of the symbols and

    rituals employed by consumers.

    Intrinsic satisfaction: Satisfaction that results from an internal interest in doing something, rather than from the external benefits of

    doing it.

    Involuntary attention: An innate response that occurs when a consumer is exposed to something surprising, novel, threatening, or

    unexpected.

    Involvement: The level of perceived personal importance or interest evoked by a stimulus (or stimuli) within a specific situation.

    Involvement responses: The level of complexity of information processing and the extent of decision making by a consumer.

    Judgment: Assessments of (1) the likelihood that something will occur or (2) the goodness or badness of something.

    Judgmental heuristics: The simple rules of thumb used by people to make estimates of probabilities and values.

    Just-in-time (JIT) purchasing: A corporate philosophy associated with total quality management in which a company seeks to

    purchase goods and services at the last possible minute prior to when they are required for the production process.

    Just noticeable difference (JD): The minimum amount of difference in the intensity of a stimulus that can be detected 50% of the

    time.

    Knowledge uncertainty: Consumers' uncertainty about the available features, their importance, and their performance for alternative

    brands.

    Laddering: The process of probing to identify the linkages between means (i .e., attributes) and terminal values (i.e., end states).

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    Latitudes of acceptance and rejection: The areas surrounding a person's attitude about an issue. When messages fall within these

    areas, they are assimilated and, in turn, viewed as consistent with the attitude of the person.

    Law of contiguity: States that things that are experienced together become associated.

    Law of demand: States that there is an inverse relationship between the price of theproduct and the quantity demanded of the product.

    Law of small numbers: People have a strong tendency to believe that a sample is a true representation of a population even when the

    sample is extremely small.

    Learning mechanisms: Processes through which a person retains information from the environment.

    Learning through education: Obtaining information from companies in the form of advertising, sales personnel, and the consumer's

    own directed efforts to seek data.

    Learning through experience: The process of gaining knowledge through actual contact with products. Overall, learning through

    experience is a more effective means to gain consumer knowledge.

    Lecture: An advertising technique that occurs when a source speaks to the audience in an attempt to inform and persuade.

    Lexicographic heuristic: A noncompensatory choice model in which the consumer first ranks the attributes and then selects the brand

    rated highest on the highest-ranked attribute. If a tie occurs, the next most important attribute is used.

    Libido: A term in psychoanalytic theory that refers to sexual energy.

    Lifestyle: How people live, how they spend their money, and how they allocate their time. It is concerned with consumers overt

    actions and behavior. (p. 220)

    Life themes: They represent critical values and goals that influence consumers at different stages of their lives.

    Likert scale: An attitude scale that involves asking a consumer to indicate the amount ofhis or her agreement or disagreement with a

    statement.

    Limited capacity: A characteristic ofshort-term memory.

    List of Values (LOV) Scale: Assesses the dominant values of a person. Although not strictly a psychographic inventory, it has beenapplied to the same types of problems as VALS.

    Logical empiricist research methods: Research methods that involve collecting and analyzing quantitative data.

    Long-term memory: The type of memory that has unlimited capacity and that permanently stores information.

    Low-involvement hierarchy: The hierarchy of effects that occurs in low-involvement decision making, in which beliefs are formed

    first, followed by behavior, and finally by attitude formation.

    Lower Americans: A description of social class that refers to the combination of the upper-lower and lower-lower social classes.

    Lower-lower class: The lowest of the social classes. Members are typically out of work (or have the dirtiest jobs) and include bums

    and common criminals.

    Lower-upper class: The next to highest social class, composed of the newer social elite drawn from current professional and

    corporate leadership.

    Macrosegmentation: Identifying groups of companies having similar buying organizations and facing similar buying situations.

    Managerial applications analysis: An analysis in which the consumer behavior concepts are identified that are pertinent to a

    problem and their managerial implications noted.

    Market embeddedness: The term used to describe situations in which the social ties between buyer and seller supplement product

    value to enhance overall exchange utility.

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    Market mavens: Individuals who have information about many kinds of products, places to shop, and other facets of markets. They

    initiate discussion with consumers and respond to requests from consumers for market information.

    Market research: Applied consumer research designed to provide management with information on factors that affect consumers

    acquisition, consumption and disposition of goods, services and ideas.

    Market segmentation: The subdivision of a market into distinct subsets of customers, where any subset may conceivably be selected

    as a target market to be reached with a distinct marketing mix.

    Market testing:placing a product into limited distribution to consumers in order to identify potential problems and test the entiremarketing mix.

    Marketer: The firm, nonprofit organization, government agency, political candidate, or other consumer who wishes to cause an

    exchange to occur.

    Marketing: The human activity directed at satisfying needs and wants through human exchange processes.

    Marketing concept: The view that an industry is a customer-satisfying process, not a goods-purchasing process.

    Marketing environment: The totality of the forces and institutions that are external and potentially relevant to a firm.

    Marketing mix: The elements of product, promotion, distribution and pricing over which marketing managers can implement

    analysis, planning, and control.

    Marketing strategy: A strategy implemented by creating segmentation and positioning objectives for a product that an organization

    or individual wishes to exchange with a consumer.

    Marketing triad: The interaction of a buying unit, the marketer, and the consumer situation at a particular time and place to influence

    an exchange process.

    Match up effect: It states that endorsers are more effective in changing attitudes, beliefs and intentions when the dominant

    characteristics of the product match the dominant features of a source.

    Match-up hypothesis: A hypothesis stating that the dominant characteristics of the product should match the dominant features of a

    source.

    Materialism: The importance a consumer attaches to worldly possessions, where at the highest levels possessions assume a central

    place in life and provide the greatest sources of satisfaction and dissatisfaction.

    Mature consumer: A person 65 years old or older. Mature consumers differ from younger people in information- processing and

    consumption patterns.

    Means-end chain: A model that identifies the linkages between consumer desires for specific product features with increasingly

    abstract concepts, such as benefits desired and values that are important to an individual.

    Medium: The channel through which a message is passed.

    Memory-control processes: Methods of handling information that people use to get information into and out of memory.

    Mere exposure phenomenon: A psychological process in which positive feelings toward and evaluations of a stimulus may be

    formed simply through repeated exposures to the stimulus.

    Mere measurement effect: The finding that merely asking consumers about their purchasing plans in a market research study

    actually influences their purcahse plans.

    Message characteristics: Those aspects of a message that influence consumer reactions, such as the use of humor or fear appeals.

    Message complexity: The complexity of information that a message contains.

    Message construction: The problem of how to physically construct a message. Factors to be considered in message construction are

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    message content and message structure.

    Message content: The strategies that may be used to communicate an idea to an audience. An example of such strategies is a

    decision to develop complex rather than simple messages.

    Message structure: How the source organizes the content of the message, such as where in the message to place the most important

    information.

    Method of loci: A technique to aid the memorization of lists by creating a mental image of a house that has locations in which the

    items of the list may be placed. To recall the list, the person takes a "mental" stroll back through the house picking up the items.

    Microsegmentation: Identifying the characteristics of the decision-making units within each of the various macrosegments.

    Middle Americans: The name given to a combination of the social classes including the middle class, lower-middle class, and

    working class.

    Middle class: Average-income white-collar workers and their blue-collar friends who live on "the better side of town" and try to "do

    the proper things."

    Miller's law: The concept that people can process in short-term memory only seven, plus or minus two, chunks of information at a

    time.

    Model: Someone whose behavior others observe and attempt to emulate.

    Modeling: The process through which someone attempts to emulate the behavior of another.

    Moderating variable: An individual-difference variable that interacts with the consumer situation and/or the type of message being

    communicated.

    Monetary acquisitions: Acquisitions made with currency, personal checks, or credit.

    Money: Currency accepted for use as a medium of exchange.

    Mood states: Temporary variations on how people feel, which can range from happiness to extremely negative feelings.

    Mores: Customs that emphasize the moral aspects of behavior. Frequently, mores apply to forbidden behaviors, such as the showingof skin by women in fundamentalist Moslem countries.

    Mortality rate: The number of people per 1,000 who die per year.

    Motivation: An activated state within a person that leads to goal-directed behavior.

    Motivation researcher: Researchers in the 1950s who employed a psychoanalytic approach to understanding consumers by

    investigating fantasies, dreams, and symbols.

    Multiattribute models: Models that identify how consumers combine their beliefs about product attributes to form attitudes about

    various brand alternatives, corporations or other objects.

    Multiple-store model: A model in which three different types of memory storage systems are identified-sensory memory, short-termmemory, and long-term memory.

    Multistep flow model: A model of personal influence that states that information is transmitted from the mass media to three distinct

    sets of people--gatekeepers, opinion leaders, and followers.

    Myths: Stories that express key values and ideals of a society.

    AICS (orth American Industry Classification System) A database that classifies groups of business firms that produce the same

    type of product.

    eed-driven person: A psychographic person identified in the VALS inventory who is characterized as striving simply to meet basic

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    food and housing needs.

    eed for affiliation: A basic social need identified by McClelland that is similar in nature to Maslow's belongingness need.

    eed for cognition: A scale that measures the extent to which consumers have an intrinsic motivation to engage in problem-solving

    activities.

    eed for power: A basic social need, identified by McClelland. It refers to the desire to obtain and exercise control over others.

    eed for uniqueness: The desires to perceive ourselves as different and original.

    eeds: Result from a discrepancy between an actual and a desired state of being.

    eed recognition: It occurs when a person perceives that there is a discrepancy between an actual and a desired state of being.

    egative reinforcer: Reinforcers that increase the likelihood of a behavior occurring by removing an aversive stimulus.

    egativity bias: The finding that negative information is given more weight than positive information by consumers when they make

    decisions to buy a product or service.

    egligent behavior. The actions and inactions of consumers that may negatively affect the long-term quality of life of individuals and

    society. Examples include drunk driving, product misuse, and failing to use seatbelts.

    oncomparable alternatives: Two or more choice options in different product categories, such as deciding whether to purchase a

    new car or build a new addition to a house.

    oncompensatory models of choice: Models of choice that emphasize that high ratings on some attributes do not necessarily

    compensate for low ratings on other attributes.

    onmonetary acquisitions: Acquisitions made when goods or services are traded, borrowed, made, inherited, found, or stolen.

    onverbal behaviors: Actions, movements, and utterances that people use to communicate in addition to language. These include

    movements ofthe hands, arms, head, and legs, as well as body orientation and the space maintained between people.

    ormative influence: Occurs when norms act to influence individuals behavior.

    orm of reciprocity: A societal norm that states that, ifa person does something for another, the second person should respond with

    appropriate reciprocal action.

    orms: A behavioralrule ofconduct agreed upon by over half of the group in order to establish behavioral consistency within the

    group.

    ostalgia: "A longing for the past, a yearning for yesterday, or a fondness for possessions and activities associated with days of

    yore."

    uclear family: Consists of a husband, wife, and their offspring.

    Object-attribute belief: The belief that an object possesses a specific attribute.

    Object-benefit belief: The belief that an object will provide a specific benefit.

    Objects: The products, people, companies, and things about which people hold beliefs and attitudes.

    Observational learning: A process in which people develop "patterns of behavior" by observing the actions of others. (Also called

    vicarious or social learning

    Occupational demographics: The area that focuses on the jobs Americans hold and on the past and future changes in these jobs.

    One- versus two-sided messages: The issue of whether persuasive messages should present only one side or both sides of an issue.

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    Ongoing search: Involves the search activities that are independent of specific purchase needs or decisions.

    Operant conditioning: A process in which the frequency of occurrence of a behavior is modified by the consequences of the

    behavior.

    Operants: The naturally occurring actions of an organism in the environment.

    Opinion leader: Consumers who influence the purchase decisions of others.

    Opponent-process theory: The psychological process in which a person receives a stimulus that elicits an immediate positive ornegative reaction. This reaction is followed by a second emotional reaction that is opposite in valence to the feeling initially

    experienced.

    Opportunity cost: The concept that, when a person buys a product or engages in one task, he or she simultaneously forgoes buying

    another product or engaging in another task.

    Optimum stimulation level: A person's preferred amount of physiological activation or arousal, which may vary from very low (e.g.

    sleep) to very high (e.g. severe panic)

    Organization: Deals with how people perceive the shapes, forms, figures, and lines in their visual world.

    Organizational buying center: The people in an organization who participate in a buying decision and who share the risks and goals

    of that decision.

    Organizational buying situations: Researchers have identified three fundamental task definitions for organizational buying

    situations-new task, modified rebuy, and straight rebuy.

    Organizational culture: The shared values and beliefs that enable members to understand their roles and the norms of the

    organization.

    Orientation reflex: The physiological response of a person to a novel or unexpected stimulus that involves an increase in arousal

    and the orientation of the person to the stimulus.

    Outcomes: The results of an exchange that a person assesses in relation to the inputs to determine if the exchange was equitable.

    Outer-directed persons: Psychographic persons identified by the VALS inventory who tend to focus on what people think of themand gears their lives to the "visible, tangible, and materialistic."

    Overprivileged: Individuals with high incomes within a particular social class, in contrast to the underprivileged, who have lower

    incomes.

    Pacific Rim: The countries that are situated on the Pacific Ocean.

    Paired-associate learning: The learning of pairs of words or concepts by attempting to associate them with each other.

    Pattern advertising: While an overall promotional theme may be employed worldwide, the implementation of this theme (e.g.,

    deciding whether to translate a slogan directly or to paraphrase it) is done locally. This approach is in example of what the Japanese

    call dochakuka: "think globally, act locally."

    Perceived freedom: A motivational need experienced by people to maintain their behavioral freedom.

    Perceived risk: A consumer's perception of the overall negativity of a course of action based upon an assessment of the possible

    negative outcomes and on the likelihood that those outcomes will occur.

    Perceived Value: The trade-off consumers make between perceived quality and perceived price when evaluating a brand.

    Perception: The process through which individuals are exposed to information, attend to that information and comprehend it.

    Perceptual maps: A map that shows how consumer position various brands relative to each other on a graph whose axes are formed

    by product attributes.

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    Perceptual organization: How people perceive the shapes, forms, figures, and lines in their visual world.

    Peripheral persuasion cues: Include such factors as the attractiveness and expertise of the source, the mere number of arguments

    presented and the positive or negative stimuli that form the context within which the message was presented.

    Peripheral route to persuasion: Persuasion that occurs in low involvement circumstances when little information elaboration is

    provided.

    Personal influence: Refers to the idea that one individual may intentionally or unintentionally influence another in his or her beliefs,

    attitudes, or intentions about something.

    Personal marketing: The marketing of one's own self to others.

    Personal value: The meanings of ideal end states and modes of conduct possessed by an individual.

    Personality: The distinctive patterns of behavior, including thoughts and emotions, that characterize each individual's adaptation to

    the situations of his or her life.

    Persuasion: An explicit attempt to influence beliefs, attitudes and/or behaviors.

    Physical Attractiveness: One of the key source characteristics that influence consumer reactions to communications.

    Physical Surroundings: The concrete physical and spatial aspects of the environment encompassing a consumer activity.

    Phased Strategy: Consumers sequentially use two noncompensatory models, or first use a noncompensatory model and then a

    compensatory approach.

    Piecemeal Report Strategy: The use of the frequency heuristic to influence choice by comparing a brands attributes one at a time to

    different attributes from different brands in order to make the marketers brand seem to be more appealing.

    Pioneering Advantage: It occurs when the first brand to enter a product category achieves a long-term edge over competitors.

    Pipe dream rumors: Represent wishful thinking on the part circulators of rumors.

    Pleasure Principle: a principle that leads to seeking instant gratification of instincts.

    Popular culture: The culture of mass appeal.

    Possession ritual: Involves acts in which a person lays claim to, displays or protects possessions.

    Positioning: Influencing how consumers perceive a brands characteristics relative to those of competitive offerings.

    Positive Reinforecer: An appropriate reward that is given immediately after a behavior occurs to increase the likelihood that the

    behavior will be repeated.

    Postacquisition process: Refers to the consumption, postchoice evaluation, and disposition of goods, services, experiences and

    ideas.

    Preattention: The unconscious process in which consumers automatically scan the features of the environment.

    Premeditated rumors: Individuals with something to gain set out to spread rumors that may help them financially or otherwise.

    Preneed goods: A good or service that is purchase prior to when it is needed, such as insurance.

    Prepurchase search: Involves those information-seeking activities that consumers engage in to facilitate decision making about a

    specific purchase after they have gone through the problem recognition stage.

    Price elasticity: An economic concept that different groups of consumers react divergently to changes in the price of a product or

    service.

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    Price-quality relationship: The greater the price, the less likely a consumer is to buy a particular product.

    Primacy effect: It occurs when material early in the message has the most influence. (versus material at the end of he message).

    Private acceptance: A situation in which a person actually changes his or her beliefs in the direction of the group.

    Priming: A phenomenon in which a small amount of exposure to a stimulus leads to an increased drive to be in the presence of that

    stimulus.

    Proactive Interference: Material learned prior to the new material interferes with the learning of the new material.

    Problem recognition: The discovery of discrepancy between an actual and a desired state of being.

    Product development: The process which consists of developing, testing, naming, and packaging prototypes.

    Product differentiation: The process of manipulating the marketing mix to position a brand so that consumers perceive meaningful

    differences between it and its competitors.

    Product disposition: What consumers do with a product once they have completed their use of it.

    Product expectations: The standard against which the actual performance of the product is assessed.

    Product innovation: A product that has been recently introduced and is perceived by consumers to be new in relation to existingproducts and services.

    Product quality: The customers overall evaluation of the excellence of the performance of a good or service.

    Product use: It involves the actions and experiences that take place in the time period in which a consumer is directly a good or

    service.

    Prospect theory: According to this theory, how people psychologically interpret the goodness or badness of an option does not

    necessarily match "objective" or "actual" measure of its value.

    Proportion-of-purchase method: The most frequently used measure of brand loyalty in empirical research.

    Psychodynamic theory of personality: A theory of Freud that human personality results from a dynamic struggle between innerpsychological drives and social pressures to follow laws, rules and moral codes.

    Psychodynamic theory of arousal: A theory that assumes that unconscious wishes to engage in some behavior can be activated by

    unconsciously presented stimuli.

    Psychological reactance: The negative motivational state that results when a persons behavioral freedom has been threatened.

    Psychographic Analysis: A type of consumer research that describes segments of consumers in terms of how they live, work, and

    play.

    Psychographics: The quantitative investigation of consumers lifestyles, personalities and demographic characteristics.

    Public policy: The development of laws and regulations that impact consumers in the marketplace.

    Punisher: Any stimulus whose presence after a behavior decreases the likelihood that that behavior will occur.

    Quiet Set: Retail stores that consumers enter, but have no intention of purchasing a product from.

    Reactance: The motivational state of someone whose behavioral freedom has been threatened.

    Reality principle: A principle that moves a person to be practical, and to function efficiently in the world.

    Recall task: Information is retrieved by the consumer from long-term memory (unaided recall).

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    Recency effect: It occurs when material at the end of a message has the most influence (versus material at the beginning of the

    message).

    Recognition task: Information is put in front of a consumer, who simply judges whether the information has been previously seen.

    Reference group: A group whose value, norms, attitudes or beliefs are used as a guide for behavior by an individual.

    Reflected Appraisal: A process in which a consumer examines the manner in which others in a reference group interact with him or

    her.

    Regional subcultures: Subcultures based upon a geographical sub-area of a larger culture.

    Regulatory environment: It consists of al the laws and regulations established by federal, state, and local governments to exert

    control over business practices.

    Rehearsal: The silent repetition of information to encode into long-term memory.

    Reinforcer: Anything that occurs after a behavior and changes the likelihood that the behavior will be repeated.

    Relational exchange: A transaction that involves a long-term commitment in which trust and social relations play an important role.

    Relationship marketing: The overt attempt of exchange partners to build a long-term association characterized by purposeful

    cooperation and mutual dependence and the development of social , as well as structural bonds.

    Relationship trust: A willingness to rely on an exchange partner in whom one has confidence.

    Relative income hypothesis: People within the same social class often have different consumption patterns based on their relative

    incomes.

    Reliability: It is evidenced when a scale is internally consistent, and gives similar results when an individual is retested after a

    period of time.

    Repeat purchase behavior: The consumer is merely buying a product repeatedly, without any particular product for it.

    Repetition effects: The impact on consumers of repeating an advertising message a number of times.

    Repositioning: Changing how consumer perceive a brands characteristics relative of those of competitive offerings.

    Representativeness heuristic: A rule of thumb by which people determine the probability that "object A" belongs to "class B" by

    assessing the degree that object A is similar to or stereotypical of class B.

    Response generation: The concept that the recall of a memory results from the person actively constructing a response, rather than

    simply pulling from memory, an accurate representation of the stored information.

    Restricted exchange: The simplest type of exchange, involves two parties interacting in a reciprocal relationship.

    Retrieval: The process in which an individual searches through long-term memory to identify within it the information to be recalled.

    Retrieval cues: Verbal or visual information, originally contained in an advertisement, that is placed on the product or packaging toassist consumers' memories during decision making.

    Retroactive interference: The concept that new material presented after old material has been learned interferes with the recall of

    the old material.

    Risk perception: The likelihood and degree of negativity which consumers perceive that outcomes may possess.

    Rokeach value scale: A scale developed to assess the predominant values of people. It appears to capture values held cross-

    culturally.

    Role: The specific behaviors expected of a person in a position. Thus, when a person takes on a role, normative pressures exert

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    influence on the person to act in a particular way.

    Role conflict: A case in which individuals simultaneously occupy two roles that may entail conflicting demands, such as being both a

    mother and an executive.

    Role overload: A state of conflict that occurs when the sheer volume of behavior demanded by the positions in a person's position set

    exceeds available time and energy.

    Role-related product cluster: The set of products necessary for the playing of a particular role.

    Roles: The specific behaviors expected of a person in a certain position.

    Rumors: Information or stories in general circulation that lack factual certainty.

    Salience e ffects: Occur when stimuli stand out from background information, so that attention is directed toward those stimuli.

    Salient beliefs: Important attribute-object beliefs activated when a person evaluates an attitudinal object.

    Satisficing: The concept that consumers will frequently attempt to make only satisfactory decisions rather than perfect decisions

    because of limitations in time, information-processing ability, or appropriate facts.

    Schedule of reinforcement: A schedule, formed by the frequency and timing of reinforcers, that can dramatically influence the

    pattern of operant responses.

    Schema: An organized set of expectations a person holds about an object.

    Search process: A search for information that may be either extensive or limited, depending upon the involvement level of the

    consumer.

    Secondary reinforcer: A previously neutral stimulus that acquires reinforcing properties through its association with a primary

    reinforcer.

    Segmentation: The division of a marketplace into distinct subsets of consumers having similar needs and wants, each of which can

    be reached with a different marketing mix.

    Segmenting by demand elasticity: The process of segmenting consumers based upon the differential slopes of their demand curves(e.g., on airline flights, vacationers versus business travelers).

    Selective attention: The concept that consumers selectively decide to which stimuli they should attend.

    Selective exposure: The concept that consumers actively choose whether or not to expose themselves to information.

    Self-concept: The totality of the individual's thoughts and feelings having reference to himself or herself as an object.

    Self-fulfilling rumors: Rumors are based on a perception of what could happen in the future if something else were to occur.

    Self-gifts: Gifts that are given by a person to himself or herself.

    Self-perception: The concept that an individual may observe his or her own actions to infer attitudes and beliefs.

    Semantic