Inauthenticity aversion: Moral reactance toward tainted actors, actions, and objects

Ike Silver, George Newman, Deborah A. Small
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引用次数: 28

Abstract

Theories of authenticity usually try to explain what leads consumers to see something as authentic. Here, we address the inverse question instead: What makes a brand, individual, or product seem inauthentic? This shift in focus reveals a distinct psychology that is more than just the absence or inverse of responses to authenticity. Whereas authenticity typically confers meaning and value, invoking inauthenticity typically implies the detection of a moral violation. Specifically, consumers judge an entity to be inauthentic if they perceive a mismatch between what that entity claims to be (e.g., a socially responsible apparel brand, 100% orange juice) and what it really is upon closer scrutiny. Such judgments give rise to a powerful, non-compensatory reactance we term inauthenticity aversion. We segment inauthenticity violations into three principle types: deceptions, ulterior motives, and adulterations. This conceptualization allows us to capture a wide variety of inauthenticity cases and outline psychological commonalities across them. It also helps to explain the powerful outrage consumers display at perceived inauthenticity and illuminates potential hazards in common marketing approaches.

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不真实性厌恶:对有污点的演员、行为和物体的道德抗拒
真实性理论通常试图解释是什么导致消费者认为某些东西是真实的。在这里,我们要解决一个相反的问题:是什么让一个品牌、个人或产品看起来不真实?这种焦点的转变揭示了一种独特的心理,而不仅仅是对真实性的缺乏或相反的反应。虽然真实性通常赋予意义和价值,但援引不真实性通常意味着发现道德违规。具体来说,如果消费者认为一个实体所声称的(例如,一个对社会负责的服装品牌,100%橙汁)与仔细审查后的真实情况不匹配,他们就会判断这个实体是不真实的。这样的判断产生了一种强大的、非补偿性的抗拒,我们称之为不真实性厌恶。我们将违反真实性的行为分为三种主要类型:欺骗、别有用心和掺假。这种概念化使我们能够捕捉到各种各样的不真实案例,并勾勒出它们之间的心理共性。它还有助于解释消费者对感知到的不真实性所表现出的强烈愤怒,并阐明了常见营销方法的潜在危险。
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