Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (May 2019)

People of Lower Social Status Are More Sensitive to Hedonic Product Information—Electrophysiological Evidence From an ERP Study

  • Di Chen,
  • Di Chen,
  • Weiguo Qu,
  • Weiguo Qu,
  • Yanhui Xiang,
  • Yanhui Xiang,
  • Jiaxu Zhao,
  • Jiaxu Zhao,
  • Guyu Shen,
  • Guyu Shen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2019.00147
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Consumer psychology research has shown that individuals of different social statuses have distinctive purchase intentions for different products. Individuals of a high social status will simultaneously measure the symbolic status meaning and utilitarian value of a product, but they will not show strong preferences for any attributes. However, individuals of a low social status show strong purchasing tendency for hedonic products that are associated with symbolic status meaning and could satisfy their spiritual needs. This phenomenon may be due to self-threat, which caused by hedonic products. Based on the above, this study compares the cognitive processing differences of hedonic and utilitarian label products between high- and low-social-status groups by recording event related potentials (ERPs). The results showed that under the P2, P3, and LPP components, the low-social-status group elicited smaller deflections in hedonic label stimuli than in utilitarian label stimuli. The high-social-status group did not show a significant difference in these components. These results suggested that individuals with a low social status are more sensitive to hedonic product information, because high-status information contained in the hedonic label induces a sense of threat in them and generates certain negative emotions.

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