Ethical Brand Journal

Welcome to the first iteration of the eb™ Journal. At this stage, it contains over one thousand academic papers and other research that have been produced over several decades by over two thousand authors from around the world. The vast majority are selected because they use terms such as ethical brand and ethical branding to characterise settings and outcomes in many different techno-industrial consumption contexts that concern the social, economic and environmental well-being of humanity.

Article

Consumer Response To Innovations: The Differential Effects Of Focused And Defocused Attention On

Focused and defocused attention has been shown to foster novel product ideas (Ansburg and Hill 2003; Friedman, Fishbach, Förster and Werth, 2003; Nijstad, De Dreu, Rietzschel and Baas 2010) but how Read More »

Date: 2018
Author: Maria Sääksjärvi, Katarina Hellén
Contributor: eb™ Research Team
Article

Explaining The Attraction Effect: An Ambiguity-Attention-Applicability Framework

The attraction effect describes a phenomenon where the addition of a third option (i.e., a decoy) to a set containing two alternatives (target and competitor) enhances the choice of the alternative Read More »

Date: 2018
Author: Sharlene He, Brian Sternthal
Contributor: eb™ Research Team
Article

“Once? No. Twenty Times? Sure!” Uncertainty And Precommitment In Social Dilemmas

In many real-world social dilemmas, interdependent actors must decide whether to invest in preventive measures against uncertain losses. For example, when consumers decide whether to get the flu shot Read More »

Date: 2018
Author: David J. Hardisty, Howard Kunreuther, David H. Krantz, Poonam Arora, Amir Sepehri
Contributor: eb™ Research Team
Article

Alternative “Facts”: The Effects Of Narrative Processing On The Acceptance Of Factual

Recent research in persuasion has distinguished between “narrative” processing, evoked by stories, and “analytical” processing, evoked by facts (Escalas 2007). In practice, consumers often Read More »

Date: 2018
Author: Anne Hamby, David Brinberg
Contributor: eb™ Research Team
Article

If No One Saw It On Instagram, Was It Any Good? Examining Received Attention As A Social Benefit Of

Consumers frequently share experiences online for self-presentation purposes (Schau and Gilly 2003). Social benefits of such sharing are realized when others provide explicit feedback (likes and Read More »

Date: 2018
Author: Matthew J. Hall, Jamie D. Hyodo
Contributor: eb™ Research Team
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