Emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior

Purpose - This paper aims to explore how children's developing ability to effectively regulate their emotions influences their consumer behavior. Design/methodology/approach - Working with 80 children and one of their parents, this study used direct observations of child behavior in a task wher...

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Main Author: Lapierre, Matthew Allen
Other Authors: University of Arizona. Department of Communication
Language:en
Published: EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/623035
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/623035
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6230352017-04-07T03:02:49Z Emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior Lapierre, Matthew Allen University of Arizona. Department of Communication Children Cognitive development Consumer behaviour Emotion regulation Affective development Purpose - This paper aims to explore how children's developing ability to effectively regulate their emotions influences their consumer behavior. Design/methodology/approach - Working with 80 children and one of their parents, this study used direct observations of child behavior in a task where they needed to regulate their emotions and a survey of parents about their child's emotional development and consumer behavior. The research used quantitative methods to test whether children's emotion regulation predicted parent reported consumer behavior (e.g. purchase requests, parent-child purchase related conflict) via multiple regression analyses. Findings - After controlling for children's age and linguistic competence, the study found that children's ability to control positively valenced emotions predicted consumer behavior. Specifically, children who had more difficulty suppressing joy/happiness were more likely to ask their parents for consumer goods and were more likely to argue with parents about these purchases. Practical implications - Content analyses of commercials targeting children have shown that many of the persuasive appeals used by advertisers are emotionally charged and often feature marketing characters that children find affectively pleasing. These findings suggest that these types of marketing appeals may overwhelm younger children which can lead to conflict with parents. Consequently, marketers and policy makers may want to re-examine the use of such tactics with younger consumers. Originality/value - While the potential link between children's emotional development and consumer behavior has been suggested in theoretical work, this is the first known study to empirically test this theorized relationship. 2016-06-20 Article Emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior 2016, 17 (2):168 Young Consumers 1747-3616 10.1108/YC-11-2015-00566 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/623035 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/623035 Young Consumers en http://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/10.1108/YC-11-2015-00566 © Emerald Group Publishing Limited EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Children
Cognitive development
Consumer behaviour
Emotion regulation
Affective development
spellingShingle Children
Cognitive development
Consumer behaviour
Emotion regulation
Affective development
Lapierre, Matthew Allen
Emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior
description Purpose - This paper aims to explore how children's developing ability to effectively regulate their emotions influences their consumer behavior. Design/methodology/approach - Working with 80 children and one of their parents, this study used direct observations of child behavior in a task where they needed to regulate their emotions and a survey of parents about their child's emotional development and consumer behavior. The research used quantitative methods to test whether children's emotion regulation predicted parent reported consumer behavior (e.g. purchase requests, parent-child purchase related conflict) via multiple regression analyses. Findings - After controlling for children's age and linguistic competence, the study found that children's ability to control positively valenced emotions predicted consumer behavior. Specifically, children who had more difficulty suppressing joy/happiness were more likely to ask their parents for consumer goods and were more likely to argue with parents about these purchases. Practical implications - Content analyses of commercials targeting children have shown that many of the persuasive appeals used by advertisers are emotionally charged and often feature marketing characters that children find affectively pleasing. These findings suggest that these types of marketing appeals may overwhelm younger children which can lead to conflict with parents. Consequently, marketers and policy makers may want to re-examine the use of such tactics with younger consumers. Originality/value - While the potential link between children's emotional development and consumer behavior has been suggested in theoretical work, this is the first known study to empirically test this theorized relationship.
author2 University of Arizona. Department of Communication
author_facet University of Arizona. Department of Communication
Lapierre, Matthew Allen
author Lapierre, Matthew Allen
author_sort Lapierre, Matthew Allen
title Emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior
title_short Emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior
title_full Emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior
title_fullStr Emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior
title_full_unstemmed Emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior
title_sort emotion regulation and young children’s consumer behavior
publisher EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/623035
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/623035
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