Introduction. D.W. Schumann, C.P. Haugtvedt, E.
Davidson, History of Consumer Psychology. Part 1. Consumer
Information Processing. R.W. Wyer, The Role of Knowledge
Accessibility in Cognition and Behavior: Implications for Consumer
Information Processing. A. Kronlund, B. Whittlesea, C. Yoon,
Consumer Memory, Fluency, and Familiarity. W. Hutchinson, E.
Eisenstein, Consumer Learning and Expertise. B. Loken, L. Barsalou,
C. Joiner, Categorization Theory and Research in Consumer
Psychology: Category Representation and Category-Based Inference.
F. Kardes, M.L. Cronley, S. Posavac, P. Herr, Consumer Inference.
J. Peck, T.L. Childers, Effects of Sensory Factors on Consumer
Behavior. D. Roedder John, Stages of Consumer Socialization: The
Development of Consumer Knowledge, Skills, and Values from
Childhood to Adolescence. C. Yoon, C. Cole, Older Consumers and
Information Processing. Part 2. Motivation, Affect, and
Consumer Decisions. A. Isen, Positive Affect and Decision
Processes: Some Recent Theoretical Developments with Practical
Implications. J. Cohen, M. Pham, E. Andrade, The Nature and Role of
Affect in Consumer Behavior. K. Vohs, R. Baumeister, D. Tice,
Self-Regulation: Goals, Consumption, and Choices. H. Baumgartner,
R. Pieters, Goal-Directed Consumer Behavior: Motivation, Volition,
and Affect. C. Janiszewski, Goal-Directed Perception. Part
3. Persuasion, Attitudes, and Social Influence. C.P.
Haugtvedt, J.A. Kasmer, Attitude Change and Persuasion. C. Jones,
R. Fazio, Associative Strength. A. Perkins, M. Forehand, D. Maison,
A. Greenwald, Measuring the Nonconscious:
Implicit Social Cognition and Consumer Behavior. P. Vargas,
Implicit Consumer Cognition. P. Petrova, R. Cialdini, Evoking the
Imagination as a Strategy of Influence. I. Aizen, Consumer
Attitudes and Behavior. M. Campbell, A, Kirmani, The Persuasion
Knowledge Model in Consumer Research. L. Kahle, G. Xie, Social
Values in Consumer Psychology. J.R. Bettman, M.F. Luce, J.W. Payne,
Consumer Decision Making: A Choice Goals Approach. A. Fishbach, R.
Dhar, Dynamics of Goal-Based Choice: Toward an Understanding of How
Goals Commit verses Liberate Choice. C. Hsee, Hedonomics in
Consumer Behavior. M. Wenjing Liu, D. Soman, Behavioral
Pricing.
J.E. Heyman, B. Mellers, Perceptions of Fair Pricing. S. van
Osselaer, Associative Learning and Consumer Decisions. Part
4. Products, Preferences, Places, and People. J. Heogg, J.
Alba, A Role of Aesthetics in Consumer Psychology. S. Broniarczyk,
Product Assortment and Consumer Psychology. C. Allen, S. Fournier,
F. Miller, Brands and Their Meaning Makers. S. Eroglu, K. Machleit,
Theory in Consumer-Environment Research: Diagnosis and Prognosis.
J. Kellaris, Music and Consumers. R. Madrigal, V. Dalakas, Consumer
Psychology of Sport: More Than Just a Game. J. Williams, W.N. Lee,
G. Henderson, Diversity Issues in Consumer Psychology. Part
5. Consumer Well-Being. E. Borgida, A. Kim, E.N. Stark, C.
Miller, Consumers and the Allure of “Safer” Tobacco Products:
Scientific and Policy Issues. M. Goldberg, Assessing the
Relationships between Tobacco Advertising and Promotion and
Adolescent Smoking Behavior: Convergent Evidence. A. Stukas, M.
Synder, E.G. Clary, The Social Marketing of Volunteerism: A
Functional Approach. G. Menon, P. Ragibur, N. Agrawal, Health Risk
Perceptions and Consumer Psychology. J. Burroughs, P. Moreau, D.
Mick, Toward a Psychology of Consumer Creativity. R. Faber, T.
O’Guinn, Compulsive Consumption: Review and Reflection. A.
Duhachek, Summing Up the State of Coping Research: Prospects and
Prescriptions for Consumer Research. Part 6. Advances in
Research Methods. K. Weaver, N. Schwarz, Self Reports in
Consumer Research. S. Shavitt, A.Y. Lee, T.P. Johnson,
Cross-Cultural Consumer Psychology. M. Viswanathan, Measurement
Error in Experimental Design in Consumer Psychology. C.P.
Haugtvedt, K. Liu, K.S. Min, Individual Differences: Tools for
Theory Testing and Understanding in Consumer Psychology Research.
G. Egidi, H. Nusbaum, J. Cacioppo, Neuroeconomics: Foundational
Issues and Relevance to Consumer Research.
Curtis Haugtvedt is Professor at Ohio State University, USA. Paul Herr is Professor at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, USA. Frank Kardes is Professor at University of Cincinatti, USA.
"The Handbook of Consumer Psychology, edited by Haugtvedt, Herr, and Kardes, is a superb collection of chapters on the most important topics in consumer psychology, written by the world's leading experts on these topics. Chapters from Kassarjian and Robertson's (1991) edited Handbook of Consumer Behavior proved to be a mainstay for consumer behavior PhD seminars for a decade. I expect the Handbook of Consumer Psychology to play a similar role for established researchers and graduate students over the next decade." -- John G. Lynch, The Fuqua School of Business, Duke University "This handbook assembles a superb slate of top researchers who expertly explore the field of Consumer Psychology with impressive depth and breadth. From classic perspectives (such as information processing, attitudes, motivation, and behavioral decision research) to up-to-the minute cutting-edge research areas (from well-being to neuroeconomics), this handbook has everything one could ask, and more. This book is truly a must for anyone with an interest in why people consume." - Joseph Priester, Marshall School of Business, University of Southern California
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