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Prosocial Behavior Reframed: How Consumer Mindsets Shape Dependency-Oriented versus Autonomy-Oriented Helping

Prosocial behaviors can be autonomy-oriented, providing recipients with the means to succeed in future situations but not supplying an immediate solution, or they can be dependency-oriented, providing an immediate solution but not supplying tools for future success. Thus far, consumer research on pr...

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Published in:Journal of the Association for Consumer Research 2020-01, Vol.5 (1), p.95-105
Main Authors: Anisman-Razin, Moran, Levontin, Liat
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Language:English
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description Prosocial behaviors can be autonomy-oriented, providing recipients with the means to succeed in future situations but not supplying an immediate solution, or they can be dependency-oriented, providing an immediate solution but not supplying tools for future success. Thus far, consumer research on prosocial behavior has devoted little attention to this distinction. Distinguishing between autonomy- and dependency-oriented prosocial behaviors is important as we show that not all consumers are equally likely to engage in dependency-oriented prosocial behavior. Specifically, we show that growth mindset consumers, who believe that personality is malleable, are less likely to engage in dependency-oriented prosocial behavior compared with fixed mindset consumers, who believe that personality is relatively stable over time. We further show that this relation is mediated by consumers’ autonomous-help orientation, their beliefs about the efficacy of autonomy-oriented help. We propose that more research about dependency- versus autonomy-oriented prosocial behavior is warranted and discuss future research opportunities.
doi_str_mv 10.1086/706505
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Consumers
title Prosocial Behavior Reframed: How Consumer Mindsets Shape Dependency-Oriented versus Autonomy-Oriented Helping
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