ASSOCIATION FOR CONSUMER RESEARCH

Similar documents
Persuasive Speech. Persuasive Speaking: Reasoning with Your Audience

Nonprofit Advertising: Impact of Celebrity Connection, Involvement and Gender on Source Credibility and Intention to Volunteer Time or Donate Money

The impact of visual exposure to a physically attractive other on self-presentation

Learning Objectives. Learning Objectives 17/03/2016. Chapter 4 Perspectives on Consumer Behavior

CHAPTER 6 CONCEPTUAL DEVELOPMENT

The influence of (in)congruence of communicator expertise and trustworthiness on acceptance of CCS technologies

The Mere Presence of Opposite-Sex Others on Judgments of Sexual and Romantic Desirability: Opposite Effects for Men and Women

43. Can subliminal messages affect behavior? o Subliminal messages have NO effect on behavior - but people perceive that their behavior changed.

Sawtooth Software. The Number of Levels Effect in Conjoint: Where Does It Come From and Can It Be Eliminated? RESEARCH PAPER SERIES

2. Which of the following is not an element of McGuire s chain of cognitive responses model? a. Attention b. Comprehension c. Yielding d.

[In press, Personality and Individual Differences, February 2008] Not all Men are Sexually Coercive:

The Basic Cognition of Jealousy: An Evolutionary Perspective. Jon K. Maner. Florida State University. Todd K. Shackelford. Florida Atlantic University

The Learning Process. Learning is a Process. Behavioral Learning Theories. Chapter 3 Learning and Memory. How many of these do you remind?

The Influence of Hedonic versus Utilitarian Consumption Goals on the Compromise Effect. Abstract

Evolutionary Psychology. by Elizabeth Anderson

Sexual behavior and jealousy: An evolutionary perspective

The disengagement of attentive resources from task-irrelevant cues to sexual and emotional. infidelity

McGraw-Hill/Irwin 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.

Mate Value of Romantic Partners Predicts Men s Partner-Directed Verbal Insults. Emily J. Miner and Todd K. Shackelford. Florida Atlantic University

Non-smokers rights movement begins Per capita cigarette consumption First medical reports linking smoking and cancer.

The Effects of Product Attribute s New Information and Target Compatibility on Consumer Elaboration

ASSOCIATION FOR CONSUMER RESEARCH

Test Bank. Chapter 2. Abrams, Sexuality and Its Disorders SAGE Publishing, 2017

How Does the Gender of Spokesperson Affect the Audience s Perception

It s Not All about Her: Men s Mate Value and Mate Retention. Emily J. Miner. Florida Atlantic University. Valerie G. Starratt

Building a Solid Foundation for Your Study Based on Past Research

Types of Mating Systems

Naturalness of a product is a trustworthiness cue

The Influence of Women s Self-Esteem on Mating Decision Making

JAIME M. CLOUD Ph.D. University of Texas at Austin Individual Differences and Evolutionary Psychology

Running head: EFFECT OF HIGH ATTRACTIVENESS ON PERCEIVED INTELLIGENCE 1

Social Psychology David Myers 11th Edition

33 Multiple choice questions

The Relationship between Objective Sperm Competition Risk and Men s Copulatory Interest is. Moderated by Partner s Time Spent with Other Men

British American Tobacco Snus Marketing Standards

An Investigation of Factors Influencing Causal Attributions in Managerial Decision Making

Evaluating framing e ects

When and how do the characteristics of a message

Intersexual Competition

C/S/E/L :2008. On Analytical Rigor A Study of How Professional Intelligence Analysts Assess Rigor. innovations at the intersection of people,

A Sound Idea: A Theory-Based Synthesis and Explanadum Supporting the Use of Music in Marketing Strategy

FINAL SUMMARY REPORT. The Brand Strategy Group

Postgraduate Diploma in Marketing June 2016 Examination Exploring Consumer Behaviour (ECB)

The Role of Stimulus Specificity on Infidelity Reactions: Seeing is Disturbing

Postgraduate Diploma in Marketing December 2017 Examination Exploring Consumer Behaviour (ECB)

Social Cognition and Social Perception

Participants. 213 undergraduate students made up the total participants (including the reporter): gender. ethnicity. single/dating/married.

Do Clothing Style and Color Affect Our Perceptions of Others?

The Gender Differences in the Effect of Twosidedness E-WOM Presentation Order on Product Attitude

Testing the Persuasiveness of the Oklahoma Academy of Science Statement on Science, Religion, and Teaching Evolution

Consumer Behavior, Ninth Edition. Schiffman & Kanuk

THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT SAN ANTONIO, COLLEGE OF BUSINESS Working Paper SERIES. Brand trait transference:

All discussion of mating strategies and sex differences begins with Darwin s theory of Sexual Selection

Incorporating Experimental Research Designs in Business Communication Research

Adaptation and Optimality Theory

Kahneman, Daniel. Thinking Fast and Slow. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2011.

Slide 3.1. Learning and memory

The relation of approach/avoidance motivation and message framing to the effectiveness of charitable appeals

Perception. Sensation and Perception. Sensory Systems An Overview of the Perception Process

Satiation in name and face recognition

The Devil is in the Details: When Holistic Thinkers React Negatively to Incongruent Information

The Effects of Product Attribute s New Information on Consumer Elaboration and Brand Attitude

Social Psychology Terms and Vocabulary. How one tends to act toward the object of an attitude.

AP Psychology Summer Assignments 2016

Interpreting Instructional Cues in Task Switching Procedures: The Role of Mediator Retrieval

Our main concerns regarding this promotion are: The Marlboro brand name is prominently branded in the Rush trailers;

ENVIRONMENTAL VALUES EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Sciences, 25(supplement 1), Jackson et al. (2010) Use of nutritional supplementation among university recreation users, Recreation Sports

Chapter 3 Learning and Memory

Personality and Consumer Behaviour

Media Effects on Attitudes

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN BOOKSTACKS

Quoting extensively from another source, even if you do it properly, is not appropriate

Jenny Moore. Applied Heuristic for Visual Analysis of Advocacy Images Mom2Mom Breastfeeding Group Image:

JAIME M. CLOUD Ph.D. University of Texas at Austin Individual Differences and Evolutionary Psychology

Creating a Positive Professional Image

White Paper: Emotional Contagion WHITE PAPER: EMOTIONAL CONTAGION. Joshua Freedman. Publication Date: Apr 14, 2007

Introduction to Social Psychology p. 1 Introduction p. 2 What Is Social Psychology? p. 3 A Formal Definition p. 3 Core Concerns of Social Psychology

How should marketing campaigns be structured to enhance consumer learning and memory?

Hungry Men Prefer More Mature Women: A Field Test of the Environmental Security Hypothesis

Are your feelings just another evolutionary adaptation? A discussion of the field of evolutionary psychology

Measuring Source Credibility with Generation Y: An Application to Messages about Smoking and Alcohol Consumption

CONTENT ANALYSIS OF COGNITIVE BIAS: DEVELOPMENT OF A STANDARDIZED MEASURE Heather M. Hartman-Hall David A. F. Haaga

OREGON Food & Beverage Opportunity. Oregon Food & Beverage Leadership Council

UNDERSTANDING GIVING: ACROSS GENERATIONS

The Sharpest Tool in the Toolbox: Visual Legal Rhetoric

Alcohol marketing and problem drinking. The effects of binge drinking and the starting age of consumption

HEALTH TRANS OMEGA-3 OILS BALANCE GOOD FAT PROTEIN OBESITY USAGE HABITS

Style Guide and Brand Standards

Branding for Talent. Our Talent 11/6/2015. Wendy Nemitz. Ingenuity Marketing Group

Authors Knowing something about the authors can illuminate the topic of the paper. Where does Robert Brooks work, and what does he usually research?

Need for Cognition: Does It Influence Professional Judgment?

Chapter 13. Social Psychology

Selection at one locus with many alleles, fertility selection, and sexual selection

Attention to health cues on product packages

Computers in Human Behavior

Discrimination and Generalization in Pattern Categorization: A Case for Elemental Associative Learning

UBC Social Ecological Economic Development Studies (SEEDS) Student Report

GENDER DIFFERENCES IN NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION

Sex Appeal as Persuasion

Transcription:

ASSOCIATION FOR CONSUMER RESEARCH Labovitz School of Business & Economics, University of Minnesota Duluth, 11 E. Superior Street, Suite 210, Duluth, MN 55802 Attractive Versus Popular: Men and Women S Reactions to Male and Female Models in Advertising Even J. Lanseng, Norwegian Business School, BI Norway Maarten L. Majoor, Norwegian Business School, BI Norway Based on insights from evolutionary psychology and information processing research, this study examines differences in men and women s reactions to male and female ad models. It was found that men prefer female models and that women prefer male models coupled with female models. Differences are moderated by product category involvement. [to cite]: Even J. Lanseng and Maarten L. Majoor (2012),"Attractive Versus Popular: Men and Women S Reactions to Male and Female Models in Advertising", in AP - Asia-Pacific Advances in Consumer Research Volume 10, eds., Duluth, MN : Association for Consumer Research, Pages: 308-311. [url]: http://www.acrwebsite.org/volumes/1011201/volumes/ap11/ap-10 [copyright notice]: This work is copyrighted by The Association for Consumer Research. For permission to copy or use this work in whole or in part, please contact the Copyright Clearance Center at http://www.copyright.com/.

ABSTRACT Based on insights from evolutionary psychology and information processing research, this study examines differences in men and women s reactions to male and female ad models. It was found that men prefer female models and that women prefer male models coupled with female models. Differences are moderated by product category involvement. Men and women react differently to male and female models in advertising. One observation is that both men and women react more favorably to advertising featuring models of the opposite sex than to advertising featuring same-sex models. This opposite-sex effect is observed for ad evaluation (Baker and Churchill 1977; Dianoux and Linhart 2009) and product/brand evaluation (Peterson and Kerin 1977; Simpson, Horton, and Brown 1996). This opposite-sex effect if also more pronounced for men than women (Jones, Stanaland, and Gelb 1998). To date, no adequate explanation for how men and women can be expected to react to male and female models in advertising has been presented (see Wolin 2003 and Jones, Stanaland, and Gelb 1998 for reviews). To understand how both men and women react to male and female ad models we propose an account that draws on insights from evolutionary psychology and information processing research. The ad produces a particular context that exposes the viewer to an array of information cues including models, product attributes, logos, and product arguments. Men and women react in predictable ways differently to these cues. Exposure to a model alone can prime mating considerations in men and women (Hill and Buss 2008; Roney 2003), but the particular considerations differ between the sexes (Hill and Buss 2008). Men consider reproduction capacities whereas women consider the capacity for nurturing herself and her offspring. When little information about the potential mate is readily available (such as in an ad), men and women will rely on environmental cues (Hill and Buss 2008). A man will infer mating quality from the female model s physical attractiveness, since attractiveness is diagnostic for the reproduction capacities he seeks. In this context, he will associate a male model with unwanted rivalry. A woman will Even J. Lanseng, Norwegian Business School, BI Norway Maarten L. Majoor, Norwegian Business School, BI Norway infer quality from the male model s popularity since it is diagnostic for the nurturing capacity she seeks. The presence of one or several other female models is a sign of such popularity. This difference between men and women should be strengthened by inherent man-woman differences in information processing. The selectivity model states that men tend to process cues that are salient from the surface whereas women process a richer array of cues (Meyers-Levy and Sterntal 1991). Wood (1966) and Nowaczyk (1982) observed that women responded to nonverbal stimuli by evoking more associative, imagery-laced interpretations, and more elaborate descriptions than did their male counterparts. Attractiveness is readily available from surface cues (i.e. the models mere appearance) and should therefore be utilized by men. In contrast, popularity is not readily available from the ad, but a more complex cue that must be imagined. This would require a processing style consistent with that of a woman. These female-male differences in information processing also have implications for processing of the model relative to the other information cues. Verbal arguments (vs. models) are likely to provide more (vs. less) utility within the elaborate female processing style and models (vs. verbal arguments) are likely to provide more (vs. less) utility within the heuristic male processing style. Moreover, as a model can be a central product argument under high elaboration (Trampe et al. 2010), women are more likely than men to treat it as such. Men that are highly involved in the product category, however, are likely to react more like women as they will elaborate more than men with low involvement. To test these predictions, we examined tradeoffs between a female and a male model, a malefemale pair of models, and product arguments using literature in several ways. A novel explanation for men and women s reaction to models in advertising is examined, another highly relevant ad elements is considered (i.e. male-female pair), and more ad element tradeoffs are allowed for.

STUDY 1 Maui sunscreen lotion, featuring models. As this brand is not available in the participant s marketplace, avoided while realism is maintained. As previous research suggests that gratuitous men, it was important to secure that models were not perceived as gratuitous and that initial attitudes toward the models were not different across the sexes. Moreover, models can also serve as an central product argument cue. Also this necessitates that models are perceived as non-gratuitous and that men and women hold equally favorable attitudes toward male and female models. Eighty students participated in this study. RESULTS To check that models were perceived as non-gratuitous the ads brand-model congruency was measured and compared to a presumed less relevant display (the same models holding a surfboard). As expected, the depiction of the model was perceive as fairly brandcongruent in the sunscreen version (M sun = 3.33) and also more congruent than in the surfboard version (M surf = 4.45; p <.05). in terms of the model s inherent attractiveness. On =.82), the male and the female model were rated equally attractive (M male = 3.48; M female = 3.19, p >. in their rating of the female (t = -0.55, p >.10) and the male (t =.35, p >.10) model. Neither gratuitous sex associations nor inherent differences in model attractiveness should therefore interfere with the results. STUDY 2 Participants. Two hundred and ninety students participated in the study. Sixty students that failed to complete the experiment were not analyzed (n = 230). A 2 (Sex: men vs. women) x 2 (Elaboration: High vs. design was employed. The design also controlled two alternative explanations: involvement as a trait (measure by need for cognition) and perceived product gender identity. various ad elements. Ad elements with respective levels were model gender (male, female, male and female, or no model), number of product arguments (2, 3, or 4), and claim type (hedge, neutral, pledge) Thirty-six different professional looking versions of the ad (4 x 3 x 3) were developed. In an online experiment participants were exposed to these versions in sets of three, and asked to choose the ad they preferred. RESULTS female ad than for the male ad (M =.76 vs. M = -.66, p <. 05), supporting that a model s popularity yields more utility than it s attractiveness. Women also had more utility from the female than from the male model ad (M =.85 vs. M = -.66, p <. 05), which supports that women use the model as a central product cue. Women s trade-off between the male + female ad and the female ad shows an equal utility (M =.76 vs. M =.85, p <. 05). This indicates that either the model serves as a popularity cue or as a central product cue, it provides women with equal utility. As predicted, men have higher utility for the female ad than for the male + female ad (M = 1.59 vs. M =.97, p <. 05), indicating that men get the highest utility from attractiveness and that a male model reminds them about rivalry. Men also had more utility from the female model ad then from the male ad (M = 1.59 vs. M = -1.48, p <. 05), supporting that men do not use the model as a central product cue. Men s trade-off between the female ad, the male + female ad, and the male ad shows that attractivity is important, but reduced with competition (risk), but that a risky attraction has more utility than an central product cue (M = 1.59 vs. M =.97 vs. M = -1.48, p <. 05). marginally so (F(3, 215) = 2.47, =.07). Men s tradeoffs become more like women s as men s utility for the female model ad shifts downward (M = 1.79 vs. = 1.19, p <.05) and their utility for the male + female ad shifts upward (M =.78 vs. M = 1.46, p <.05).

DISCUSSION Consistent with previous research, it is observed that men prefer a female ad model over a male one. A novel observation is that women prefer a male model coupled with a female model over a single male model. This is explained by the evolutionary idea that men use attractiveness as a cue when mating considerations are primed by an opposite sex model, whereas women use popularity as a cue. These men-women differences are reduced with high elaboration, which suggests that highly involved men are more similar to women than less involved men. This interaction is more likely to be caused by men s use of the male model as central product argument cue, than by altered mating considerations. REFERENCES Baker, Michael J. and Gilbert A. Churchill Jr. (1977), The Impact of Physically Attractive Models on Advertising Evaluations, Journal of marketing research, 14 (November), 538-55. Dianoux, Christian and Zdenek Linhart (2009), The Effectiveness of Female Nudity in Advertising in Three European Countries, International Marketing Review, 27 (5), 562-76. Hill, Sarah E. and David M. Buss (2008) The Mere Presence of Opposite-Sex Others on Judgments of Sexual and Romantic Desirability: Opposite Effects for Men and Women, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 35 (5), 635-47. Jones, Marilyn Y., Andrea J. S. Stanaland, and Betsy D. Gelb (1998), Beef cake and Cheesecake: Insights for Advertisers, Journal of Advertising, 27 (2), 33-51. Meyers-Levy, Joan and Brian Sternthal (1991), Gender Differences in the Use of Message Cues and Judgments, Journal of Marketing Research, 28 (1), 84-96. Nowaczyk, Ronald (1982), Sex-Related Differences in the Color Lexicon, Lartguage artd Speech, 25 (July-September), 257-65. Ohanian, Roobina (1990), Construction and Validation of a Scale to Measure Celebrity Endorsers Perceived Expertise, Trustworthiness, and Attractiveness, Journal of Advertising, 19 (3), 39-52. Peterson, Robert A. and Roger A. Kerin (1977), The Female Role in Advertisements: Some Experimental Evidence, Journal of Marketing, 41 (4), 59-63. Roney, James R. (2003) Effects of Visual Exposure to the Opposite Sex: Cognitive Aspects of Mate Attraction in Human Males, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 29 (3), 393-404. Simpson, Penny M., Steve Horton, and Gene Brown (1996), Male Nudity in Advertisements: A and Product Effects, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 24 (3), 257-67. Trampe, Debra, Diederik A. Stapel, Frans W. Siero, and Henriëtte Mulder (2010), Beauty as A Tool: The Effect of Model Attractiveness, Product Relevance, and Elaboration Likelihood on Advertising Effectiveness, Psychology and Marketing, 27 (12), 1101-21. Wolin, Lori D. (2003), Gender Issues in Advertising-An Oversight Synthesis of Research 1970-2002, Journal of Advertising Research, 43 (March), 111-29. Knowledge of Communication Effectiveness of Spontaneous Speech, Word, 22 (April-August- December), 112-37.

FIGURES FIGURE 1 Utility of Different Ad Models by Audience s Sex FIGURE 2 Utility of Different Ad Models by Audience s Sex and Involvement Low Involvement High Involvement