• Title/Summary/Keyword: product judgment

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A Study on in Influence on the Memory-Based Judgement and Purchase Intention upon Temporal Distance and Prior Kowledge in Preannouncing Strategy (시간적 거리와 사전지식에 따른 프리어나운싱 전략이 기억에 근거한 판단과 구매의도에 미치는 효과)

  • Han, Kwang-Seok
    • Management & Information Systems Review
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    • v.33 no.1
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    • pp.99-118
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    • 2014
  • This study is a product launch strategy Preannouncing companies associated with temporal distance( in the near future/ distant future) and prior knowledge level(high knowledge/ low knowledge), the memory - based judgments(Global product judgment/ Discrete product judgment) and the purchase intention appears, the difference between the empirical verification of what was discriminatory. The study, first, Preannouncing main effect of temporal distance on judgments remember the difference between the purchase intention and consistent global product judgment is more discrete product judgment were higher awareness, purchase intention is higher. Second, Preannouncing high level of product knowledge in global product judgment showed that compared to discrete product judgment. In addition, low levels of knowledge than a discrete product judgment that global product judgment and purchase intention shown that a high level of consumer knowledge through systematic information processing and the road leads to higher purchase attitude. Third, Preannouncing according to the temporal distance and level of knowledge about the interaction effect results in the near future in terms of the high level of knowledge consumers global product judgment was higher than the discrete product judgment. On the other hand, a low level of knowledge of conditions in the distant future, consumers are more discrete product judgment recognized global product judgment showed that high.

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Centrality of Visual Product Aesthetics: The Relationships with Innovativeness and Consumer Independent Judgment Making (시각제품에 대한 심미적 성향: 혁신성과 독립적 의사결정과의 관계)

  • Park, Hye-Jung;Jeon, Kyung-Sook
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Clothing and Textiles
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    • v.35 no.10
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    • pp.1139-1149
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    • 2011
  • This study tested the validity of a three-factor model of the centrality of visual product aesthetics developed by Bloch, Brunel, and Arnold (2003) and explored the relationships between the centrality of visual product aesthetics and the relevant constructs. It was hypothesized that the path relationships including innovativeness and consumer independent judgment making are relevant constructs of the centrality of visual product aesthetics. Data were gathered by surveying university students in the Seoul metropolitan area (using convenience sampling) and 322 questionnaires were used in the statistical analysis. Correlation analysis, factor analysis, and regression analysis were conducted to analyze the data. The findings show the validity of the three factors (value, acumen, and response intensity) of the centrality of visual product aesthetics. Tests of the hypothesized path show that innovativeness influences the centrality of visual product aesthetics both directly and indirectly through consumer independent judgment making. Innovativeness positively influenced consumer independent judgment making and the three factors of the centrality of visual product aesthetics, whereas consumer independent judgment negatively influences the response intensity factor of the centrality of visual product aesthetics. The implications of these findings and suggestions for future study are also discussed.

The Asymmetric Effects of Identity Salience on Judgement: The Role of Valence and Attribute Congruence

  • DaHee Han;Claire Heeryung Kim
    • Asia Marketing Journal
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    • v.25 no.2
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    • pp.84-98
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    • 2023
  • A salient identity influences individuals' judgment on products. The current research investigates why identity salience sometimes produces asymmetric effects on an individual's judgment such that a salient identity often influences judgment on identity-congruent products only or identity-incongruent products only. Across two experiments, this research proposes and shows that the valence of identity-incongruent and identity-congruent attributes determines the direction of the asymmetric identity salience effects. Specifically, when an attribute of an identity-incongruent product is positively- (negatively-) valenced, identity salience influences judgment through a decreased (increased) preference for the identity-incongruent (identity-congruent) product.

The Role of Processing Fluency in Product Innovativeness Judgment

  • Cho, Hyejeung
    • Asia Marketing Journal
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    • v.15 no.3
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    • pp.31-52
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    • 2013
  • The metacognitive experience of the ease or difficulty with which new, external information can be processed, referred to as 'processing fluency,' has been shown to influence a wide range of human judgments including truth judgments, familiarity judgments, risk perception, evaluation, and preference (see Alter and Oppenheimer 2009 for a review). The current research explores the possibility of a consumer's product innovativeness judgment based on the difficulty of processing new information. In specific, this study examines if the inferential link between (dis)fluency-(un)familiarity can feed into the perception of innovativeness. This study also explores how a consumer's processing motivation can moderate the consumer's reliance on processing fluency in judgments and how the influence of fluency can vary depending on judgment task orders. In an experiment, participants rated a new product's innovativeness and then indicated their product attitude (or vice versa depending on the judgment task order condition) after reading a product review article that was printed in either an easy-to-read or a difficult-to-read font (for fluency manipulation). The findings show that low need for cognition individuals infer higher product innovativeness when processing product information is difficult rather than easy, consistent with the common assumption that 'new information is more difficult to process than familiar information.' The findings also suggest that once low fluency is attributed to innovativeness, it may no longer lead to a negative response to the product. High need for cognition individuals' judgments on product innovativeness are not affected by fluency. The findings also demonstrate a judgment task order effect on the use of fluency in judgments (e.g., Xu and Schwarz 2005). This study provides the first evidence that an individual's fluency experience can be used as a source of information in product innovativeness judgments especially under low processing motivation conditions. The findings can help marketers better understand the malleability of consumer judgments and perceptions of product characteristics (e.g., product innovativeness) by demonstrating an interesting interplay of processing fluency, processing motivation, and judgment task-related contextual factors.

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A Study on the Consumer Ethnocentrism, Animosity and Product Judgment Effect on Foreign Products Purchase Intention : A Comparative Study between Korean and Japanese Electronic Products in China (소비자의 자민중심주의, 적대감 및 제품평가가 외국제품 구매의도에 미치는 영향에 관한 연구 : 한국과 일본 전자제품 구매에 대한 중국소비자를 중심으로)

  • Jung, Sung-Hoon;Yuan, Wang Li
    • International Commerce and Information Review
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    • v.15 no.1
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    • pp.185-206
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    • 2013
  • Recent studies validate the idea that consumer judgment of products can affect consumer purchase intentions. Consumers judge products based on product quality, after sales satisfaction, and other visible values, but consumers also judge products on country-of-origin image, brand image and such intangible values. In this paper, we will examine consumer ethnocentrism and animosity, which are frequently responsible for country-of-origin prejudices, because the offending (i.e. exporting) nation has engaged in economic, political, or even military activities that the consumer finds difficult to forgive. The results of the study show a positive effect of product judgment on consumer purchase intentions, but consumer ethnocentrism and animosity negatively affect product judgment and consumer purchase intentions of foreign products. In the Chinese market, ethnocentric Chinese consumers have negative perceptions of foreign products with negative intentions to buy them. Chinese consumers have strong animosity for Japanese products, which negatively affect product judgments and purchase intentions to buy; therefore, Japanese corporations should increase cooperation with Chinese corporations. Conversely, for Korean companies, product judgment primarily affects consumers' intentions to buy; consequently, Korean companies should improve their product quality, after-sales satisfaction, brand image and other tangible aspects to improve consumer judgment.

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Research about Improvement Way of Fire Investigation System - Regarding Product Liability Responsibility Law - (화재조사 제도의 개선방안에 관한 연구 - 제조물 책임법과 관련하여 -)

  • Mun, Yong-Soo;Kong, Ha-Sung;Yoon, Myong-O
    • Fire Science and Engineering
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    • v.22 no.5
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    • pp.105-111
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    • 2008
  • Improvement of fire investigation system is required to supplement problem that can happen after product liability law enforcement of our country. This treatise searches special quality of inside and outside of the country fire investigation that was enforced present with theoretical background of manufacture water responsibility law and compared. And is based and grasped objective and hangup in police fire investigation, fire fighting fire investigation, engine fire investigation of private fire judgment. By improvement way accordingly first, proposed fire emotion connection studies and establishment and connoisseurship qualification system establishment etc. in the common people private fire diet, judgment, analysis company's necessity second, fire fighting of fire investigation system, police's member anger third, college.

Motives for Reading Reviews of Apparel Product in Online Stores and Classification of Online Store Shoppers (의류상품 구매후기를 읽는 동기와 인터넷 점포 고객 유형화)

  • Hong, Hee-Sook
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Clothing and Textiles
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.282-296
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    • 2012
  • This study identified the types of motives for reading consumer reviews of apparel products for online stores and classified shoppers into the groups based on motives. Data were collected from eleven Korean women by a focus group interview and from 313 females by an online survey. Respondents were in their 20s' and 30s' with significant experience reading consumer reviews of apparel products for online stores. The seven motives found by interviews were reduced to four types of motives by factor analysis: Right product choice and judgment of product value, risk reduction, saving time and money, and fun/killing time. The motive for the right product choice and judgment of product value was the highest and the motive for fun/killing time was the lowest. Consumers were classified into four groups based on motives: Utilitarian shoppers (25.8%), shopping-task oriented shoppers (36.8%), multiple-motive shoppers (19.7%), and moderate-motive shoppers (17.7%). There were significant differences among age groups and the amount of reading reviews posted on a product and the duration of reading reviews for online stores. In addition, managerial implications were developed.

The Dark Side of Star Marketing: Celebrity Endorsement Contracts Can Lower Consumers' Judgment of Brand Growth When the Firm is Tech-Focused

  • Jang, Hojoon;Lee, Kyoungmi
    • Asia Marketing Journal
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    • v.20 no.3
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    • pp.63-81
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    • 2018
  • This research examines how the announcement of a celebrity endorsement contract with a brand can influence consumers' judgment of its future growth in a market. Using both behavioral experiments and an event study analysis, we find that when the brand is perceived to be technology-focused (versus marketing-focused), the information about the celebrity contract can lead consumers to view the brand's future as less promising. Furthermore, we identify consumers' inferences about the quality of the brand as a psychological factor underlying this effect. This paper provides evidence that star-marketing can sometimes signal management's misjudgment about resource allocation for a brand, which unduly invests in celebrity marketing at the expense of quality improvement for the product.

Deep learning-based product image classification system and its usability evaluation for the O2O shopping mall platform (딥 러닝 기반 쇼핑몰 플랫폼용 상품 이미지 자동 분류 시스템 및 사용성 평가)

  • Sung, Jae-Kyung;Park, Sang-Min;Sin, Sang-Yun;Kim, Yung-Bok;Kim, Yong-Guk
    • The Journal of the Institute of Internet, Broadcasting and Communication
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    • v.17 no.3
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    • pp.227-234
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    • 2017
  • In this paper, we propose a system whereby one can automatically classifies categories based on image data of the products for a shopping mall platform. Many products sold within internet shopping malls are classified their category defined by the same use of product names and products. However, it is difficult to search by category classification when the classification of the product is uncertain and the product classified by the shopping mall seller judgment is different from the purchasing user judgment. We proposes classification and retrieval method by Deep Learning technique solely using product image. The system can categorize products by using their images and its speed and accuracy are quantified using test data. The performance is evaluated with the test data. In addition, its usability is tested with the participants.

A Case-Based New Financial Product Screening System

  • Lee, Hoon-Young
    • Journal of the Korean Operations Research and Management Science Society
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.151-167
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    • 1994
  • Initial screening is one of the most important and difficult processes in new product development. Many new product screening models have been developed in management and marketing. However practical applications of these models have been limited in part due to their complexity and inflexibility, and in part due to their excessive data requirements. Thus simple judgment models have been popular in practice. However, these models suffer from inaccuracy and inconsistency originating form human cognitive limitations. In light of the problem swith traditional screening methods, we propose a new approach for screening based on managers' past experience and intuitive judgments-screening by analogy, and develop a computerized case-based system for screening new financial service concepts. Using the system, managers can predict the potential performance of a new product concept based on the performance of past products that are similar to it in terms of product characteristics, firm's resources, and market conditions. Based on this prediction, managers make a screening decision.

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