Deck 5: Motivation and Emotion: Driving Consumer Behaviour

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Question
In Maslow's hierarchy of needs, safety and security needs are basic needs for survival such as food and drink.
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Question
Human motivations are oriented toward two key groups of behaviour: steady-state and self-improvement.
Question
Homeostasis refers to the fact that the body naturally reacts in a way so as to maintain a constant, normal bloodstream.
Question
Joining an adult colouring club is driven by hedonic motivations.
Question
Secondary motivation involves a desire to experience something personally gratifying.
Question
Esteem needs are needs for personal fulfillment.
Question
An intervening variable is one that changes the nature of a relationship between two other variables.
Question
Utilitarian motivation is a desire to acquire products that can be used to accomplish things.
Question
Motivations are the inner reasons or driving forces behind human actions as consumers are driven to address real needs.
Question
Emotions are reactions to a consumer's appraisal of a situation.
Question
Maslow's hierarchy of needs describes consumers as addressing an infinite set of prioritized needs.
Question
Hal is an Apple computer enthusiast who reads magazines, has an iPad, iPod and an Apple TV at home. When it comes to Apple products, it can be said that Hal is exhibiting situational involvement.
Question
Consumer involvement represents the degree of personal relevance a consumer finds in pursuing value from a given consumption act.
Question
Becoming a member of an adult choir is most likely driven by hedonic motivations.
Question
Shopping involvement represents the personal relevance of shopping activities.
Question
Product involvement means that some product is expensive and presents high potential risk for consumers.
Question
Situational involvement often comes about when consumers are shopping for something with relatively low involvement but a relatively high price.
Question
Consumers with very high involvement in some product category are called market mavens.
Question
Cleaning products and personal hygiene products like toothpaste and soap are best described as low-involvement products.
Question
Self-improvement motivations drive behaviours aimed at changing one's current state to a level that is more ideal.
Question
Equity theory represents a school of thought describing how specific types of thoughts can serve as a basis for specific emotions.
Question
Agency appraisals review responsibility for events and can evoke gratefulness, frustration, or sadness.
Question
Self-report measures of emotion usually require consumers to recall their affect state from a recent experience or to state the affect they are feeling at a given point in time.
Question
Zone refers to the extremely high emotional involvement in which a consumer is engrossed in an activity.
Question
Mood is a transient and general cognitive state.
Question
One advantage of using autonomic measures to assess emotions is that they are less obtrusive because they don't involve physical contraptions.
Question
Personality characteristics can affect the way consumers respond or demonstrate their emotions.
Question
Jamie always cries when she watches a sad movie or reads a sad book. Jamie has high emotional expressiveness.
Question
There is a consensus among researchers that the best way to measure consumer emotions is with autonomic measures.
Question
Emotional reactance means the type of deep personal interest that evokes strongly felt feelings simply from the thoughts or behaviour associated with some object or activity.
Question
Outcomes appraisal focuses on the future and can elicit emotions like hopefulness or anxiety.
Question
With respect to measuring emotion, bipolar is a situation wherein if one feels joy he or she can also experience sadness.
Question
PAD is an acronym that stands for pleasure-arousal-dominance.
Question
Emotions create visceral responses, meaning that certain feeling states are tied to behaviour in a very direct way.
Question
Mood-congruent judgments are evaluations in which the value of a target is influenced in a consistent way by one's mood.
Question
Autonomic measures or emotions are those responses that are automatically recorded based on either automatic visceral reactions or neurological brain activity.
Question
PANAS measures of emotions include physiological responses such as sweating, heart rate, and brain imaging which can document activity in areas of the brain.
Question
Assessment appraisals consider how fair some event is and can evoke emotions like warmth or anger.
Question
In consumer behaviour, consumer mood represents feelings a consumer has about a particular product or activity.
Question
The PAD scale is generally applied to capture the relative amount of positive and negative emotion experienced by a consumer at a given point in time.
Question
Hanging up the phone after being telemarketed is a typical consumer behaviour.
Question
Intense emotions lead to superior information processing and should be stimulated by marketers whenever possible.
Question
Which of the following represents basic survival needs for things such as food and drink?

A) self-actualization
B) physiological
C) safety and security
D) belongingness and love
Question
Guilt, regret, and embarrassment are some of the emotions one can feel when reflecting on their behaviour.
Question
Which theory describes consumers as addressing a finite set of prioritized needs, from physiological, to safety and security, to belongingness and love, to esteem, to self-actualization?

A) Skinner's classical conditioning
B) Maslow's hierarchy of needs
C) operant conditioning
D) utilitarian/hedonic theory of needs
Question
The "emotional effect on memory" refers to relatively superior recall for information presented with mild affective content compared to similar information presented in an effectively neutral way.
Question
Which type of motivation is aimed at changing the current state to a level that is more ideal, not at simply maintaining the current state?

A) primary
B) esteem
C) self-actualization
D) self-improvement
Question
Emotional introspection is a term used to capture one's awareness of the emotions experienced in a situation and the ability to control reactions to these emotions.
Question
Memories of previous, meaningful events in one's life are known as primary memories.
Question
Melanie exercises almost every day. She is motivated by changing her current state of fitness to one that is much higher. Which group of motivation behaviour does this describe?

A) self-improvement
B) homeostasis
C) self-actualization
D) hierarchy of effects
Question
Many people lost their home and everything they owned when a fire destroyed the town of Slave Lake, Alberta. While most were concerned about their homes, they also realized that they didn't have any food or water, which was much more important to them than the loss of their homes. According to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, which need were these consumers most concerned about satisfying?

A) self-actualization
B) esteem
C) physiological
D) basic
Question
Cognitive-based affect are emotions that become stored as part of the meaning for a category.
Question
Nostalgia is characterized by a yearning of the past motivated by the belief that previous times were somehow more pleasant.
Question
Allen hired a tutor because he wanted to improve his grade in his marketing class and increase his chances for getting a bursary. What do these reasons represent in Allen's decision to get a tutor?

A) motivations
B) attitude
C) schema
D) homeostasis
Question
Emotion and cognition are closely related.
Question
Which type of need reflects the need to be recognized as a person of worth?

A) esteem
B) physiological
C) safety and security
D) self-actualization
Question
Many middle-class Canadians live a comfortable lifestyle and can devote time and effort into satisfying their need for personal fulfillment by doing things such as taking language classes, travelling, or volunteering at a local charity. Which need do these examples represent?

A) physiological
B) self-actualization
C) belongingness and love
D) safety and security
Question
Mood-consistent recall means that to the extent a consumer's mood can be controlled, their memories and evaluations can be influenced.
Question
Which of the following are inner reasons or driving forces behind human actions as consumers are driven to address real needs?

A) emotions
B) conditions
C) affects
D) motivations
Question
Which group of human motivations is based on the fact that the body naturally reacts in a way so as to maintain a constant, normal bloodstream?

A) self-improvement
B) steady state
C) homeostasis
D) steady progression
Question
Jim considers himself a wine connoisseur. He reads Wine Spectator, visits wine shops for hours, and loves to talk to the sommelier at fine restaurants. Which term best describes Jim in terms of his interest in wine?

A) product zealot
B) product spokesperson
C) product enthusiast
D) product influencer
Question
Harriet and her daughter have decided to join an axe throwing club just for the fun of it. They like being together and trying things that take them away from their 9-to-5 lifestyles. Which motivation does this illustrate?

A) physiological
B) utilitarian
C) hedonic
D) end-state
Question
The Miller family is building a new house, so they have to get involved in decisions such as plumbing fixtures, flooring, and appliances. They don't really know much about these products and they don't care to know much about them. However, for these purchases they do get involved by visiting showrooms, searching the Internet, and looking at other sources of information. Which type of involvement does this represent?

A) enduring
B) non-emotional
C) product
D) situational
Question
Which perspective proposes that specific types of thoughts can be linked to specific emotions?

A) cognitive appraisal theory
B) theory of reasoned action
C) theory of emotional response
D) equity theory
Question
Which type of variable changes the nature of a relationship between two other variables?

A) dependent
B) interactive
C) moderating
D) intervening
Question
Which term refers to consumers with very high involvement in some product category?

A) product enthusiasts
B) market mavens
C) product endorsers
D) market movers
Question
Which of the following is NOT a type of involvement?

A) product involvement
B) shopping involvement
C) utilitarian involvement
D) situational involvement
Question
What level of involvement do product categories with personal relevance for consumers typically have?

A) high
B) moderate
C) low
D) enduring
Question
Claire has a collection of more than 1,000 snow globes from around the world. For most of her adult life, she has had an interest in this product and finds it personally gratifying when she learns about the product and acquires a new one for her collection. She especially likes to connect on social media like Pinterest and Facebook and attend "globe swaps" where other enthusiasts like herself gather to trade snow globes and share stories. Which type of involvement is Claire demonstrating?

A) enduring
B) permanent
C) long-term
D) situational
Question
Which type of cognitive appraisal focuses on the future and can elicit emotions like hopefulness or anxiety?

A) outcomes
B) equity
C) anticipation
D) agency
Question
Which motivation reflects a desire to acquire products that can be used to accomplish things?

A) utilitarian
B) hedonic
C) functional
D) end-state
Question
As consumers get older, the value they receive from certain consumer behaviours often changes. For example, some older consumers do not have as much fun attending music festivals and concerts as they did when they were younger. In this case, what type of variable is age?

A) constant
B) dependent
C) moderating
D) situational
Question
Large drugstore chains know that most shoppers visiting their stores want to get what they need quickly without spending much time lingering in the store. That's why most of them are stand-alone stores instead of being located in shopping centres. Which type of motivations drive most consumers in these stores?

A) hedonic
B) utilitarian
C) physiological
D) end-state
Question
Which of the following are psychobiological reactions to appraisals?

A) emotions
B) needs
C) motives
D) schemas
Question
Emotions involve both psychological processing and physical responses. Which term is used to describe emotions?

A) psychometric
B) psychoparametric
C) psychobiological
D) psychophysiological
Question
Which of the following represents the personal relevance of shopping activities?

A) shopping involvement
B) shopping endurance
C) product involvement
D) emotional involvement
Question
Which type of motivation involves a drive to experience something personally gratifying?

A) utilitarian
B) end-state
C) physiological
D) hedonic
Question
Which of the following represents the degree of personal relevance a consumer finds in pursuing value from a given consumption act?

A) consumer moderation
B) emotional involvement
C) product enthusiasm
D) consumer involvement
Question
Which of the following is NOT a type of cognitive appraisal?

A) outcomes appraisal
B) equity appraisal
C) anticipation appraisal
D) visceral appraisal
Question
Which type of response means that certain feeling states are tied to behaviour in a very direct way?

A) emotional
B) visceral
C) affective
D) direct
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Deck 5: Motivation and Emotion: Driving Consumer Behaviour
1
In Maslow's hierarchy of needs, safety and security needs are basic needs for survival such as food and drink.
False
2
Human motivations are oriented toward two key groups of behaviour: steady-state and self-improvement.
True
3
Homeostasis refers to the fact that the body naturally reacts in a way so as to maintain a constant, normal bloodstream.
True
4
Joining an adult colouring club is driven by hedonic motivations.
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k this deck
5
Secondary motivation involves a desire to experience something personally gratifying.
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k this deck
6
Esteem needs are needs for personal fulfillment.
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7
An intervening variable is one that changes the nature of a relationship between two other variables.
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8
Utilitarian motivation is a desire to acquire products that can be used to accomplish things.
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9
Motivations are the inner reasons or driving forces behind human actions as consumers are driven to address real needs.
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10
Emotions are reactions to a consumer's appraisal of a situation.
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11
Maslow's hierarchy of needs describes consumers as addressing an infinite set of prioritized needs.
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12
Hal is an Apple computer enthusiast who reads magazines, has an iPad, iPod and an Apple TV at home. When it comes to Apple products, it can be said that Hal is exhibiting situational involvement.
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13
Consumer involvement represents the degree of personal relevance a consumer finds in pursuing value from a given consumption act.
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14
Becoming a member of an adult choir is most likely driven by hedonic motivations.
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15
Shopping involvement represents the personal relevance of shopping activities.
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16
Product involvement means that some product is expensive and presents high potential risk for consumers.
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17
Situational involvement often comes about when consumers are shopping for something with relatively low involvement but a relatively high price.
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18
Consumers with very high involvement in some product category are called market mavens.
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19
Cleaning products and personal hygiene products like toothpaste and soap are best described as low-involvement products.
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20
Self-improvement motivations drive behaviours aimed at changing one's current state to a level that is more ideal.
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k this deck
21
Equity theory represents a school of thought describing how specific types of thoughts can serve as a basis for specific emotions.
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22
Agency appraisals review responsibility for events and can evoke gratefulness, frustration, or sadness.
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23
Self-report measures of emotion usually require consumers to recall their affect state from a recent experience or to state the affect they are feeling at a given point in time.
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24
Zone refers to the extremely high emotional involvement in which a consumer is engrossed in an activity.
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k this deck
25
Mood is a transient and general cognitive state.
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26
One advantage of using autonomic measures to assess emotions is that they are less obtrusive because they don't involve physical contraptions.
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k this deck
27
Personality characteristics can affect the way consumers respond or demonstrate their emotions.
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28
Jamie always cries when she watches a sad movie or reads a sad book. Jamie has high emotional expressiveness.
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k this deck
29
There is a consensus among researchers that the best way to measure consumer emotions is with autonomic measures.
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30
Emotional reactance means the type of deep personal interest that evokes strongly felt feelings simply from the thoughts or behaviour associated with some object or activity.
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k this deck
31
Outcomes appraisal focuses on the future and can elicit emotions like hopefulness or anxiety.
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32
With respect to measuring emotion, bipolar is a situation wherein if one feels joy he or she can also experience sadness.
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k this deck
33
PAD is an acronym that stands for pleasure-arousal-dominance.
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34
Emotions create visceral responses, meaning that certain feeling states are tied to behaviour in a very direct way.
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k this deck
35
Mood-congruent judgments are evaluations in which the value of a target is influenced in a consistent way by one's mood.
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36
Autonomic measures or emotions are those responses that are automatically recorded based on either automatic visceral reactions or neurological brain activity.
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k this deck
37
PANAS measures of emotions include physiological responses such as sweating, heart rate, and brain imaging which can document activity in areas of the brain.
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k this deck
38
Assessment appraisals consider how fair some event is and can evoke emotions like warmth or anger.
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k this deck
39
In consumer behaviour, consumer mood represents feelings a consumer has about a particular product or activity.
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k this deck
40
The PAD scale is generally applied to capture the relative amount of positive and negative emotion experienced by a consumer at a given point in time.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Hanging up the phone after being telemarketed is a typical consumer behaviour.
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Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
42
Intense emotions lead to superior information processing and should be stimulated by marketers whenever possible.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Which of the following represents basic survival needs for things such as food and drink?

A) self-actualization
B) physiological
C) safety and security
D) belongingness and love
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Guilt, regret, and embarrassment are some of the emotions one can feel when reflecting on their behaviour.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Which theory describes consumers as addressing a finite set of prioritized needs, from physiological, to safety and security, to belongingness and love, to esteem, to self-actualization?

A) Skinner's classical conditioning
B) Maslow's hierarchy of needs
C) operant conditioning
D) utilitarian/hedonic theory of needs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The "emotional effect on memory" refers to relatively superior recall for information presented with mild affective content compared to similar information presented in an effectively neutral way.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Which type of motivation is aimed at changing the current state to a level that is more ideal, not at simply maintaining the current state?

A) primary
B) esteem
C) self-actualization
D) self-improvement
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
48
Emotional introspection is a term used to capture one's awareness of the emotions experienced in a situation and the ability to control reactions to these emotions.
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k this deck
49
Memories of previous, meaningful events in one's life are known as primary memories.
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k this deck
50
Melanie exercises almost every day. She is motivated by changing her current state of fitness to one that is much higher. Which group of motivation behaviour does this describe?

A) self-improvement
B) homeostasis
C) self-actualization
D) hierarchy of effects
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Many people lost their home and everything they owned when a fire destroyed the town of Slave Lake, Alberta. While most were concerned about their homes, they also realized that they didn't have any food or water, which was much more important to them than the loss of their homes. According to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, which need were these consumers most concerned about satisfying?

A) self-actualization
B) esteem
C) physiological
D) basic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Cognitive-based affect are emotions that become stored as part of the meaning for a category.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
53
Nostalgia is characterized by a yearning of the past motivated by the belief that previous times were somehow more pleasant.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Allen hired a tutor because he wanted to improve his grade in his marketing class and increase his chances for getting a bursary. What do these reasons represent in Allen's decision to get a tutor?

A) motivations
B) attitude
C) schema
D) homeostasis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Emotion and cognition are closely related.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Which type of need reflects the need to be recognized as a person of worth?

A) esteem
B) physiological
C) safety and security
D) self-actualization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Many middle-class Canadians live a comfortable lifestyle and can devote time and effort into satisfying their need for personal fulfillment by doing things such as taking language classes, travelling, or volunteering at a local charity. Which need do these examples represent?

A) physiological
B) self-actualization
C) belongingness and love
D) safety and security
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
Mood-consistent recall means that to the extent a consumer's mood can be controlled, their memories and evaluations can be influenced.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
Which of the following are inner reasons or driving forces behind human actions as consumers are driven to address real needs?

A) emotions
B) conditions
C) affects
D) motivations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
Which group of human motivations is based on the fact that the body naturally reacts in a way so as to maintain a constant, normal bloodstream?

A) self-improvement
B) steady state
C) homeostasis
D) steady progression
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Jim considers himself a wine connoisseur. He reads Wine Spectator, visits wine shops for hours, and loves to talk to the sommelier at fine restaurants. Which term best describes Jim in terms of his interest in wine?

A) product zealot
B) product spokesperson
C) product enthusiast
D) product influencer
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
Harriet and her daughter have decided to join an axe throwing club just for the fun of it. They like being together and trying things that take them away from their 9-to-5 lifestyles. Which motivation does this illustrate?

A) physiological
B) utilitarian
C) hedonic
D) end-state
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
The Miller family is building a new house, so they have to get involved in decisions such as plumbing fixtures, flooring, and appliances. They don't really know much about these products and they don't care to know much about them. However, for these purchases they do get involved by visiting showrooms, searching the Internet, and looking at other sources of information. Which type of involvement does this represent?

A) enduring
B) non-emotional
C) product
D) situational
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
Which perspective proposes that specific types of thoughts can be linked to specific emotions?

A) cognitive appraisal theory
B) theory of reasoned action
C) theory of emotional response
D) equity theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Which type of variable changes the nature of a relationship between two other variables?

A) dependent
B) interactive
C) moderating
D) intervening
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
Which term refers to consumers with very high involvement in some product category?

A) product enthusiasts
B) market mavens
C) product endorsers
D) market movers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Which of the following is NOT a type of involvement?

A) product involvement
B) shopping involvement
C) utilitarian involvement
D) situational involvement
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Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
What level of involvement do product categories with personal relevance for consumers typically have?

A) high
B) moderate
C) low
D) enduring
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Claire has a collection of more than 1,000 snow globes from around the world. For most of her adult life, she has had an interest in this product and finds it personally gratifying when she learns about the product and acquires a new one for her collection. She especially likes to connect on social media like Pinterest and Facebook and attend "globe swaps" where other enthusiasts like herself gather to trade snow globes and share stories. Which type of involvement is Claire demonstrating?

A) enduring
B) permanent
C) long-term
D) situational
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Which type of cognitive appraisal focuses on the future and can elicit emotions like hopefulness or anxiety?

A) outcomes
B) equity
C) anticipation
D) agency
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Which motivation reflects a desire to acquire products that can be used to accomplish things?

A) utilitarian
B) hedonic
C) functional
D) end-state
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
As consumers get older, the value they receive from certain consumer behaviours often changes. For example, some older consumers do not have as much fun attending music festivals and concerts as they did when they were younger. In this case, what type of variable is age?

A) constant
B) dependent
C) moderating
D) situational
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Large drugstore chains know that most shoppers visiting their stores want to get what they need quickly without spending much time lingering in the store. That's why most of them are stand-alone stores instead of being located in shopping centres. Which type of motivations drive most consumers in these stores?

A) hedonic
B) utilitarian
C) physiological
D) end-state
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
Which of the following are psychobiological reactions to appraisals?

A) emotions
B) needs
C) motives
D) schemas
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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75
Emotions involve both psychological processing and physical responses. Which term is used to describe emotions?

A) psychometric
B) psychoparametric
C) psychobiological
D) psychophysiological
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76
Which of the following represents the personal relevance of shopping activities?

A) shopping involvement
B) shopping endurance
C) product involvement
D) emotional involvement
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77
Which type of motivation involves a drive to experience something personally gratifying?

A) utilitarian
B) end-state
C) physiological
D) hedonic
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78
Which of the following represents the degree of personal relevance a consumer finds in pursuing value from a given consumption act?

A) consumer moderation
B) emotional involvement
C) product enthusiasm
D) consumer involvement
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79
Which of the following is NOT a type of cognitive appraisal?

A) outcomes appraisal
B) equity appraisal
C) anticipation appraisal
D) visceral appraisal
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80
Which type of response means that certain feeling states are tied to behaviour in a very direct way?

A) emotional
B) visceral
C) affective
D) direct
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 131 flashcards in this deck.