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Consumer Behavior

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Consumer Behavior Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Latest on Consumer Behavior

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Consumer Behavior Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Consumer Behavior

The Politics of Zero-Sum Thinking: The Relationship Between Political Ideology and the Belief That Life Is a Zero-Sum Game

Authors
Shai Davidai and M. Ongis
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Science Advances

The tendency to see life as zero-sum exacerbates political conflicts. Six studies (N = 3223) examine the relationship between political ideology and zero-sum thinking: the belief that one party's gains can only be obtained at the expense of another party's losses. We find that both liberals and conservatives view life as zero-sum when it benefits them to do so. Whereas conservatives exhibit zero-sum thinking when the status quo is challenged, liberals do so when the status quo is being upheld.

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The Joint Impact of Revenue-Based Loyalty Program and Promotions on Consumer Purchase Behaviors

Authors
Jia Liu, Asim Ansari, and Leonard Lee
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Working Paper
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Extracting Features of Entertainment Products: A Guided Latent Dirichlet Allocation Approach Informed by the Psychology of Media Consumption

Authors
Olivier Toubia, Garud Iyengar, Renee Bunnell, and Alain Lemaire
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

The authors propose a quantitative approach for describing entertainment products, in a way that allows for improving the predictive performance of consumer choice models for these products. Their approach is based on the media psychology literature, which suggests that people’s consumption of entertainment products is influenced by the psychological themes featured in these products. They classify psychological themes on the basis of the “character strengths” taxonomy from the positive psychology literature (Peterson and Seligman 2004).

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You Don't Blow Your Diet on Twinkies: Choice Processes When Choice Options Conflict with Incidental Goals

Authors
Kelly Goldsmith, Elizabeth Friedman, and Ravi Dhar
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of the Association for Consumer Research

Consumers often have multiple goals that are active simultaneously and make choices to satisfy those goals. However, no work to date has studied how people choose when all available options serve a goal (e.g., a choice-set goal) that conflicts with another goal they hold (e.g., an incidental goal). We demonstrate that in such contexts, consumers are more likely to choose the option that is most instrumental for attaining the choice-set goal, even when that option poses the greatest violation of the incidental goal.

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Affect Regulation and Consumer Behavior

Authors
Charlene Chen and Michel Tuan Pham
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Consumer Psychology Review

This article provides a critical review of what is known about affect regulation in relation to consumption behavior. Based on numerous findings from psychology, communication research, and consumer research, we identify a core set of general principles of affect regulation in consumer behavior. First, we define affect regulation, clarify its relations to the concepts of coping and compensatory consumption, and refine the emerging concept of “displaced coping.” We then review the generic strategies used in the regulation of general negative affective states.

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What's the Catch? Suspicion in Bank Motives and Sluggish Refinancing

Authors
Eric Johnson, Stephan Meier, and Olivier Toubia
Date
January 1, 2019
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Review of Financial Studies

Failing to refinance a mortgage can cost a borrower thousands of dollars. Based on administrative data from a large financial institution, we show that around 50% of borrowers leave thousands of dollars on the table by not refinancing. Survey data indicate that, among all the behavioral factors examined, only suspicion of banks motives is consistently related to the probability of accepting a refinancing offer. Finally, we report the results of three field experiments showing that enticing offers made by banks fail to increase participation and may even deepen suspicion.

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Probabilistic Topic Model for Hybrid Recommender Systems: A Stochastic Variational Bayesian Approach

Authors
Asim Ansari, Yang Li, and Jonathan Zhang
Date
December 1, 2018
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Science

Internet recommender systems are popular in contexts that include heterogeneous consumers and numerous products. In such contexts, product features that adequately describe all the products are often not readily available. Content-based systems therefore rely on user-generated content such as product reviews or textual product tags to make recommendations.

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Apples, Oranges, and Erasers: The Effect of Considering Similar versus Dissimilar Alternatives on Purchase Decisions

Authors
Elizabeth Friedman, Jennifer Savary, and Ravi Dhar
Date
December 1, 2018
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

When deciding whether to buy an item, consumers sometimes think about other ways they could spend their money. Past research has explored how increasing the salience of outside options (i.e., alternatives not immediately available in the choice set) influences purchase decisions, but whether the type of alternative considered systematically affects buying behavior remains an open question. Ten studies find that relative to considering alternatives that are similar to the target, considering dissimilar alternatives leads to a greater decrease in purchase intent for the target.

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Fintech, Regulatory Arbitrage, and the Rise of Shadow Banks

Authors
Greg Buchak, Gregor Matvos, Tomasz Piskorski, and Amit Seru
Date
December 1, 2018
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Shadow bank market share in residential mortgage origination nearly doubled from 2007 to 2015, with particularly dramatic growth among online "fintech" lenders. We study how two forces, regulatory differences and technological advantages, contributed to this growth.

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