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Mental Representation and Perceived Similarity: How Abstract Mindset Aids Choice from Large Assortments

Jing Xu - ; Ravi Dhar - ; Zixi Jiang - ;

A recent meta-analysis has found that an increase in the size of an assortment has no reliable impact on choice difficulty. Building on a fundamental property of cognition, the authors investigate the link between mental representation and the choice overload effect based on the size of the assortment. They propose that the mental representation of a large assortment changes the perceived similarity of the assortment and consequently affects the degree of choice difficulty. Specifically, when choosing from a large assortment, consumers with an abstract representation perceive the options in the assortment as being more similar and accordingly experience less choice difficulty than those with a concrete representation of the assortment. The authors discuss theoretical and practical implications of the findings.


Ketersediaan

Call NumberLocationAvailable
JMR50041PSB lt.dasar - Pascasarjana1
PenerbitUnited States: American Marketing Association 2013
EdisiVol. 50, No. 4, August 2013
SubjekPerceived similarity
choice difficulty
mental representation
Trade-Offs
assortment
ISBN/ISSN222437
KlasifikasiNONE
Deskripsi Fisik12 p.
Info Detail SpesifikJournal of Marketing Research
Other Version/RelatedTidak tersedia versi lain
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  • Mental Representation and Perceived Similarity: How Abstract Mindset Aids Choice from Large Assortments

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