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Women's Luxury Products as Signals to Other Women

TLDR
Wang and Griskevicius as discussed by the authors reported that women flaunt luxury products to signal their partners' devotion, thereby guarding their relationships from rivals, and found that perceived partner contribution to possessions was higher for designer products.
Abstract
We present two preregistered replications of the paper by Wang and Griskevicius (2014), which reported that women flaunt luxury products to signal their partners' devotion, thereby guarding their relationships from rivals. In Study 1, which was a conceptual replication with real luxury brands, we did not observe an effect of luxury products on partner devotion but found that women assumed that male partners contribute financial resources to women's luxury possessions. In Study 2, which was a direct replication with designer products, we observed a small-sized effect in the opposite direction, such that perceived partner devotion increased when women used nondesigner products. Similar to Study 1, perceived partner contribution to possessions was higher for designer products. (Less)

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Posted Content

Conspicuous Consumption and Race

TL;DR: Using nationally representative data on consumption, this article showed that Blacks and Hispanics devote larger shares of their expenditure bundles to visible goods (clothing, jewelry, and cars) than do comparable Whites and that these differences exist among virtually all sub-populations, that they are relatively constant over time, and they are economically large.
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Death to Dichotomizing

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that by dichotomizing continuous independent variables, researchers are quite likely to reduce the statistical power available to test their hypotheses and that inappropriate dichotomization of continuous data can at times create spurious significant results if the independent variables are correlated.
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Functional projection: how fundamental social motives can bias interpersonal perception.

TL;DR: Results from 2 experimental studies suggest that self-protection and mate-search goals lead to the perception of functionally relevant emotional expressions in goal-relevant social targets and are consistent with a functionalist, motivation-based account of interpersonal perception.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conspicuous Consumption and Race

TL;DR: The authors show that Blacks and Hispanics devote larger shares of their expenditure bundles to visible goods (clothing, jewelry, and cars) than do comparable Whites and that these differences exist among virtually all subpopulations, are relatively constant over time, and are economically large.
Journal ArticleDOI

Peacocks, Porsches, and Thorstein Veblen: Conspicuous Consumption as a Sexual Signaling System

TL;DR: Findings suggest that flaunting status-linked goods to potential mates is not simply about displaying economic resources, but appears to be part of a more precise signaling system focused on short-term mating.
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Frequently Asked Questions (2)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "Replication note: women's luxury products as signals to other women" ?

The authors present two preregistered replications of the paper by Wang and Griskevicius ( 2014 ), which reported that women flaunt luxury products to signal their partners ’ devotion, thereby guarding their relationships from rivals. 

To eliminate this possibility, the authors conducted Study 2, a direct replication with designer ( vs. nondesigner ) products. One possibility is desirability bias. Another possibility is that women with luxury possessions were implicitly perceived to have materialistic traits, and the participants did not believe that the partner was devoted to a highly materialistic person. Future studies should further scrutinize the boundary conditions of the relationship between luxury products and partner devotion.