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Carlos J. Torelli

Other affiliations: University of Minnesota
Bio: Carlos J. Torelli is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The author has contributed to research in topics: Consumer behaviour & Brand equity. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 72 publications receiving 2361 citations. Previous affiliations of Carlos J. Torelli include University of Minnesota.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors found that conservatives donate more when they are accountable to a liberal audience with whom they have a salient shared identity due to their motivation for social approval, but if the donation context activates political identity or if the unifying social identity is not salient, accountability does not impact donation decisions.

49 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article examined the relationship between literacy and consumer memory and found that the use of pictorial representations of brands (i.e., brand signatures) results in superior brand memory for individuals with lower literacy levels when compared to those at higher literacy levels.

46 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two studies show that different culturally based concepts of interpersonal power have distinct implications for information processing, and that making personalized power salient increases stereotyping in processing product information.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the interactive effect of power distance belief (PDB) and consumers' status on their preference for private-label (vs. national) brands was examined and found that in high-PDB contexts, low status consumers are more attracted to national brands.

35 citations

Book
19 Nov 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of consumers' reactions to the Cultural Meanings in Brands and their reactions to Brand Equity. But they do not discuss the role of cultural equity in building an iconic brand.
Abstract: Preface PART I: UNDERSTANDING BRANDS AND THEIR CULTURAL MEANINGS 1. Brands and Models of Brand Equity 2. Cultural Equity PART II: GAINING INSIGHTS INTO HOW CROSS-CULTURAL CONSUMERS VIEW ICONIC BRANDS 3. Consumers from Different Cultures 4. Consumers' Reactions to the Cultural Meanings in Brands 5. Brands and the Fulfillment of Cultural Identity Needs PART III: BUILDING, LEVERAGING AND PROTECTING BRAND EQUITY 6. Putting it all Together: Why and How to Build an Iconic Brand 7. Leveraging and Protecting Cultural Equity

34 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Reading a book as this basics of qualitative research grounded theory procedures and techniques and other references can enrich your life quality.

13,415 citations

Book
01 Jan 1901

2,681 citations

01 Jan 2000
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a method to use the information of the user's interaction with the system to improve the performance of the system. But they do not consider the impact of the interaction on the overall system.
Abstract: Статья посвящена вопросам влияния власти на поведение человека. Авторы рассматривают данные различных источников, в которых увеличение власти связывается с напористостью, а ее уменьшение - с подавленностью. Конкретно, власть ассоциируется с: а) позитивным аффектом; б) вниманием к вознаграждению и к свойствам других, удовлетворяющим личные цели; в) автоматической переработкой информации и резкими суждениями; г) расторможенным социальным поведением. Уменьшение власти, напротив, ассоциируется с: а) негативным аффектом; б) вниманием к угрозам и наказаниям, к интересам других и к тем характеристикам я, которые отвечают целям других; в) контролируемой переработкой информации и совещательным типом рассуждений; г) подавленным социальным поведением. Обсуждаются также последствия этих паттернов поведения, связанных с властью, и потенциальные модераторы.

2,293 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the Shand-McDougall concept of sentiment is taken over and used in the explanation of moral motivation, which is reinforced by social pressures and by religion, treating as an effort of finite man to live in harmony with the infinite reality.
Abstract: In his Preface the author' says that he started out to review all the more important theories upon the topics ordinarily discussed under human motivation but soon found himself more and more limited to the presentation of his own point of view. This very well characterizes the book. It is a very personal product. It is an outline with some defense of the author's own thinking about instincts and appetites and sentiments and how they function in human behavior. And as the author draws so heavily upon James and McDougall, especially the latter, the book may well be looked upon as a sort of sequel to their efforts. There is a thought-provoking distinction presented between instinct and appetite. An instinct is said to be aroused always by something in the external situation; and, correspondingly, an appetite is said to be aroused by sensations from within the body itself. This places, of course, a heavy emphasis upon the cognitive factor in all instinctive behaviors; and the author prefers to use the cognitive factor, especially the knowledge of that end-experience which will satisfy, as a means of differentiating one instinct from another. In this there is a recognized difference from McDougall who placed more emphasis for differentiation upon the emotional accompaniment. The list of instincts arrived at by this procedure is much like that of McDougall, although the author is forced by his criteria to present the possibility of food-seeking and sex and sleep operating both in the manner of an appetite and also as an instinct. The Shand-McDougall concept of sentiment is taken over and used in the explanation of moral motivation. There is the development within each personality of a sentiment for some moral principle. But this sentiment is not a very powerful motivating factor. It is reinforced by social pressures and by religion, which is treated as an effort of finite man to live in harmony with the infinite reality. Those whose psychological thinking is largely in terms of McDougall will doubtless find this volume a very satisfying expansion; but those who are at all inclined to support their psychological thinking by reference to experimental studies will not be so well pleased. The James-Lange theory, for example, is discussed without mention of the many experimental studies which it has provoked. Theoretical sources appear in general to be preferred to experimental investigations.

1,962 citations