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Categorization theory and research in consumer psychology: Category representation and category-based inference.

TLDR
In this paper, the authors define a consumer category as a set of products, services, brands, or other marketing entities, states, or events that appear, to the consumer, related in some way.
Abstract
To make sense of the myriad new and existing products and services in the marketplace, consum­ ers construct and use categorical representations to classify, interpret, and understand information they receive about these products and services. We define a consumer category as a set of products, services, brands, or other marketing entities, states, or events that appear, to the consumer, related in some way. We define a categorical representation as information that becomes stored in the cognitive system for a consumer category, and that is later used to process it.! One important use of category representations is during categorization, when consumers use these representations to assign a particular product or service to a consumer category, so that they can understand and draw inferences about it. Consumers might classify a new product as an MP3 player on the basis of prior knowledge about physical or functional features of MP3 players, for example, that MP3 play­ ers store music efficiently, are small in size, and are rectangular in shape. Once the new product is categorized, prior categorical information about MP3 players may also be used to make inferences about unknown attributes or features of the new product, or to form an evaluation of the new product. From a marketing perspective, a number of questions about categorization have been examined that have implications for marketing decision making. For example, how should a new product be

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Citations
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What Makes It Green? The Role of Centrality of Green Attributes in Evaluations of the Greenness of Products

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that products with identical environmental benefits will be judged more or less green depending on whether the benefit stems from a central versus a peripheral attribute, and they present four studies that support the hypotheses and explore factors that influence the effect of central attributes, including product category membership and integration of the green attribute with other elements of the product.
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The complex search process of invention

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Reputation building: beyond our control? Inferences in consumers' ethical perception formation

TL;DR: This article found that consumers may infer ethical beliefs from product-, company-, category-, and origin-related cues, in the absence of concrete information or personal experience, and the results suggest that controlling corporate reputation becomes increasingly challenging.
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Authenticity as meaning validation: An empirical investigation of iconic and indexical cues in a context of "green" products

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of indexical and iconic cues to an authentic "green" product meaning were investigated in a context of environmentally conscious consumption, and the results provided evidence supporting a meaning validation process as the basis of authenticity judgments.
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Managing a Sponsored Brand: The Importance of Sponsorship Portfolio Congruence

TL;DR: In this paper, two experiments were conducted to evaluate the influence of congruence between a sponsored brand and a sponsoring firm on perceptions of the sponsored organisation's brand equity, and the results of these experiments indicated that congruency is particularly detrimental to the brand equity of the sponsor organisation at the title sponsor level.
References
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the hypothesis that the members of categories which are considered most prototypical are those with most attributes in common with other members of the category and least attributes with other categories and found that family resemblance offers an alternative to criterial features in defining categories.
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Book ChapterDOI

A Continuum of Impression Formation, from Category-Based to Individuating Processes: Influences of Information and Motivation on Attention and Interpretation

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of impression formation that integrates social cognition research on stereotyping with traditional research on person perception is presented. But the model does not consider the impact of stereotypes on impression formation.