The effects of advertising models for age-restricted products and self-concept discrepancy on advertising outcomes among young adolescents
Author
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Pezzuti, Todd
Author
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Pirouz, Dante
Author
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Pechmann, Cornelia
Admission date
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2015-10-02T15:45:15Z
Available date
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2015-10-02T15:45:15Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Journal of Consumer Psychology 25, 3 (2015) 519–529
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1016/j.jcps.2015.01.009
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/134070
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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Research on discrepancies between the actual self and ideal self has examined self-discrepancies in knowledge, skills and stature but age-based self-discrepancies have only recently received attention and so we studied this phenomenon in young adolescents. In three studies we identified a product-category contextual cue that apparently caused adolescents to respond to an existing age-based self-discrepancy. Specifically we found that when the contextual cue was advertising for an age-restricted product, adolescents conformed to dissimilar young adult advertising models and diverged from similar adolescent models. This indicated that the contextual cue caused them to respond to an age-based self-discrepancy and use a product associated with the ideal self rather than the actual self. Importantly, this response was stronger among adolescents that were more dissatisfied with their age. With advertising for an age-unrestricted product, adolescents conformed to adolescent advertising models and diverged from young adult models. Industry policies for age-restricted products assume that similarity drives influence and therefore mandate that advertising models be young adults rather than adolescents. Our findings suggest this assumption is invalid for age-restricted products.