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If You Feel Empty, You Spend More Money on Yourself and Less on Giving to Others

Across five studies, we show that the act of emptying (vs. filling) coat pockets, a glass jar etc. triggers self-replenishing behaviors, such as purchasing products, and curbs resource expenditure behaviors, such as donating to charities. The mere act of emptying triggers resource deficit experience...

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Main Authors: Ein-Gar, Danit, Levontin, Liat, Lee, Angela
Format: Conference Proceeding
Language:English
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creator Ein-Gar, Danit
Levontin, Liat
Lee, Angela
description Across five studies, we show that the act of emptying (vs. filling) coat pockets, a glass jar etc. triggers self-replenishing behaviors, such as purchasing products, and curbs resource expenditure behaviors, such as donating to charities. The mere act of emptying triggers resource deficit experiences and activates self-conservation coping strategies.
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identifier ISSN: 0098-9258
ispartof Advances in consumer research, 2013, Vol.41, p.1
issn 0098-9258
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source Business Source Ultimate【Trial: -2024/12/31】【Remote access available】
subjects Consumer behavior
Consumer spending
Coping
Donations
Studies
title If You Feel Empty, You Spend More Money on Yourself and Less on Giving to Others
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