PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Bringing style home

Concordia researcher investigates how tastes are shaped online

2012-08-14
(Press-News.org) Montreal, August 13, 2012 – Does the ideal ratio of couch to rug size keep you up at night? Are the exposed wires of your stereo causing you angst? Is that crocheted toilet paper cover kitschy enough to be cool? If you wonder, then you are not alone. For Concordia University's Zeynep Arsel, such questions have led to exciting new research into buyer behaviour. The assistant professor of marketing at the John Molson School of Business teamed up with Jonathan Bean from Parsons The New School of Design in New York City to co-author a recent article in the Journal of Consumer Research. Together, they investigated how the notion of taste can be seen as an integral part of personal identity in addition to serving as a boundary that sets one apart from the crowd.

The researchers turned to a surprising source for their findings: Apartment Therapy, a popular website with a fresh take on present-day interior decorating that has had more hits than Martha Stewart's online empire. Arsel and Bean painstakingly combed through hundreds of thousands of posts and comments on the website to uncover how its readers were forming their own notions of personal taste by following a prescriptive view of what constitutes cool when it comes to interior decorating.

"It turns out that reading Apartment Therapy or watching a do-it-yourself home decorating show is way more than just a passive leisure activity," explains Arsel. "It's really an element of practice that influences how people relate to objects and what they do with them."

While our choices in interior decorating may begin as a simple imitation of what we see online or on TV, those decisions eventually become ingrained.

Arsel herself was not immune to this pattern of consumer behaviour. She first came to the Apartment Therapy website out of personal curiosity rather than academic interest. "I was just getting my first apartment as a new PhD," she recalls. "It was a lower duplex that was totally typical of Montreal and I wanted some decorating ideas to help me liven up the dark space."

Through personal experience and in-depth research, Arsel and Bean developed a new theory that sees taste-making as a tripartite process that involves problematization, instrumentalization and ritualization. First, the consumer problematizes his or her own environment by comparing it to the prescriptions on the web site and acknowledging that things could be improved. Then, they rationalize a design choice or purchase through the process of instrumentalization or, in other words, linking this choice to goals and meanings. Finally, imitation becomes ingrained behaviour through repetition and ritualization.

"We start by looking at these decorating sites and emulating what we see. But through repeated exposure, we develop our own standards for what can in fact become personal taste," says Arsel.

INFORMATION:

Partners in research: Funding for this research project was provided by the Fonds Québécois de la Recherche sur la Société et la Culture.

Related links: Concordia University's John Molson School of Business: http://johnmolson.concordia.ca/index.php Journal of Consumer Research: http://ejcr.org/ Zeynep Arsel's website: http://zeyneparsel.com/



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Modification of tumor suppressor affects sensitivity to potential GBM treatment

2012-08-14
New York, NY and San Diego, CA, August 13, 2012 – Despite years of research, glioblastoma, the most common and deadly brain cancer in adults, continues to outsmart treatments targeted to inhibit tumor growth. Biologists and oncologists have long understood that a protein called the epidermal growth factor receptor or EGFR is altered in at least 50 percent of patients with glioblastoma. Yet patients with glioblastoma either have upfront resistance or quickly develop resistance to inhibitors aimed at stopping the protein's function, suggesting that there is another signalling ...

New system could predict solar flares, give advance warning

2012-08-14
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Researchers may have discovered a new method to predict solar flares more than a day before they occur, providing advance warning to help protect satellites, power grids and astronauts from potentially dangerous radiation. The system works by measuring differences in gamma radiation emitted when atoms in radioactive elements "decay," or lose energy. This rate of decay is widely believed to be constant, but recent findings challenge that long-accepted rule. The new detection technique is based on a hypothesis that radioactive decay rates are influenced ...

NIST's speedy ions could add zip to quantum computers

2012-08-14
VIDEO: This animation shows rapid transport of a single ion over about 0.37 millimeters within 8 millionths of a second. The ion is held and moved with electric fields, its transport... Click here for more information. Take that, sports cars! Physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) can accelerate their beryllium ions from zero to 100 miles per hour and stop them in just a few microseconds. What's more, the ions come to a complete stop and hardly ...

NASA sees Tropical Storm Kai-tak brushing the Philippines

NASA sees Tropical Storm Kai-tak brushing the Philippines
2012-08-14
NASA's Terra satellite captured an image of Tropical Storm Kai-tak affecting the northern Philippines on August 13 as the storm heads toward China for a final landfall. Warnings are already in effect in part of the Philippines. Tropical storm Kai-tak is the fourteenth tropical cyclone of the western North Pacific season. On August 13 at 11 a.m. EDT, Kai-tak had maximum sustained winds near 40 knots (46 mph/74 kmh). It was located approximately 290 nautical miles (334 miles/ 537 km) east-Northeast of Manila, Philippines, has tracked west-southwestward at 11 knots (12.6 ...

NASA observes a quieter Atlantic to start the week; Hector in east Pacific

2012-08-14
On August 13, the Atlantic tropics are quieter than they were the previous week, when four low pressure areas were marching across the ocean basin. Satellite imagery shows two lows in the Atlantic as Tropical Storm Hector spins in the Eastern Pacific Ocean with System 95E near the Mexican coast. The NOAA GOES-13 satellite sits in a fixed orbit over the eastern U.S. and provides infrared and visible imagery of the Atlantic Ocean basin continuously. At the same time, NOAA's GOES-15 satellite covers the western U.S. and eastern Pacific Ocean. At NASA's GOES Project, the ...

NASA STEREO observes 1 of the fastest CMEs on record

NASA STEREO observes 1 of the fastest CMEs on record
2012-08-14
VIDEO: This movie shows a coronal mass ejection (CME) on the sun from July 22, 2012 at 10 p.m. EDT until 2 a.m. July 23 as captured by NASA's Solar TErrestrial... Click here for more information. On July 23, 2012, a massive cloud of solar material erupted off the sun's right side, zooming out into space, passing one of NASA's Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory (STEREO) spacecraft along the way. Using the STEREO data, scientists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center ...

Scientists discover new type of virus responsible for a devastating disease in snakes

2012-08-14
A mysterious condition called Inclusion Body Disease (IBD) strikes captive boa constrictors and pythons, causing bizarre behavioral changes and eventually death. Scientists investigating an outbreak of IBD among snakes at the Steinhart Aquarium in San Francisco report they may well have found a virus that is responsible for this common but deadly disease, a discovery that could eventually lead to prevention and treatment options. The study appears in the August 14 issue of mBio®, the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology. The authors report ...

Phoenix Web Design Company PrimeView Leads Affordable Gas to the Next Level of E-business

2012-08-14
PrimeView, one of the leading Phoenix SEO Firms in the whole of Arizona, eagerly welcomes Affordable Gas to its growing list of clientele. Affordable Gas is Arizona's Membership Gas Delivery Service which lets you save up on fuel costs. Other than the unique gas on delivery service they offer, Affordable Gas lives up to its name by offering low cost gas to their members. Understanding how pump prices on gasoline has been escalating in the recent years, they have found an economical system to this problem. The secret formula is by not having a gas station they have ...

Fear Overload Haunted Houses Terrorize the SF Bay Area, Open September 29th, 2012

2012-08-14
Fear Overload, one of California's most popular haunted houses, opens its doors on September 29th, 2012. Voted the scariest haunted house in California (-HauntWorld), Fear Overload boasts of its new horrifying tactics it will use to implant fear this Halloween season. "This October, we will be taking fear to the next level," says Creative Director of Fear Overload, Nathan Polanco. "No longer may you expect your haunted house to provide the adventure for you. Now you create your own adventure. This October, we offer each group one flashlight to explore the ...

SmartBuyGlasses UK Launches New Fashion Blog with Giveaways

2012-08-14
The premium British online eyewear retailer, SmartBuyGlasses UK, is delighted to announce the debut of their posh new eyewear blog, Eye Spy. Their newest addition to the blogosphere focuses on the latest designer sunglasses and glasses trends, celebrity eyewear fashion, and current eyewear news. From chic fashion editorials to original photo shoots to eyewear recommendations, the Eye Spy blog features fresh and unique content that cannot be found elsewhere. To bring you the latest fashion trends in the kingdom, SmartBuyGlasses UK has teamed up with an ultra stylish ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Metros cut car use in European cities, but trams fall short

Antarctic ice melt triggers further melting: Evidence for cascading feedbacks 9,000 years ago

Colorectal cancer evades immunotherapy using a dual barrier

MIT research finds particles that enhance mRNA delivery could reduce vaccine dosage and costs

Enhancing ocean wind observation accuracy: New rain correction approach for FY-3E WindRAD

New immobilization strategy enables reliable surface plasmon resonance analysis of membrane proteins

Single organic molecule triggers Kondo effect in molecular-scale “Kondo box”

Drug toxicity predicted by differences between preclinical models and humans

Behind the numbers: The growing mental health crisis among international students in America

Radiative coupled evaporation cooling hydrogel for above‑ambient heat dissipation and flame retardancy

Constructing double heterojunctions on 1T/2H‑MoS2@Co3S4 electrocatalysts for regulating Li2O2 formation in lithium‑oxygen batteries

Massively parallel implementation of nonlinear functions using an optical processor

Electrohydrodynamics pump and machine learning enable portable, high-performance excimer laser

UniSA leads national pilot to improve medication safety in aged care

Engineered biochar emerges as a powerful, affordable tool to combat water pollution

City of Hope appoints leading lung cancer expert Dr. Christine M. Lovly to head national thoracic oncology program

Green space to fewer hospitalizations for mental health

Supervised exercise improves strength and physical performance in patients with advanced breast cancer

NIH award to explore improved delivery systems for school-based substance use prevention and treatment programs

Woodpeckers grunt like tennis stars when drilling

International research team awarded €10 million ERC Synergy Grant to revolutionize drug delivery

Research Spotlight: State-of-the-art 7 Tesla MRI reveals how the human brain anticipates and regulates the body’s needs

Rice and Houston Methodist researchers to study brain-implant interface with Dunn Foundation award

OU biochemists lead global hunt for new antibiotics

October research news from the Ecological Society of America

Kinase atlas uncovers hidden layers of cell signaling regulation

Texas Tech scientists develop novel acceleration technique for crop creation

Worcester Polytechnic Institute to lead $5.2 million state-funded effort to build Central Massachusetts BioHub

China commands 47% of remote sensing research, while U.S. produces just 9%, NYU Tandon study reveals

Grocery store records reveal London food deserts

[Press-News.org] Bringing style home
Concordia researcher investigates how tastes are shaped online