查看原文
其他

「最新研究」什么样性格的人最爱买买买?

近日,英美两国科学家的一项联合研究探索了人的性格和消费习惯的关系,分析了什么性格的人在假期最能花钱,什么性格的人花钱少。


研究结果表明,那些情绪比较稳定的人往往出手更大方;相反,更“神经质(neuroticism)”的人花钱较少。


那些对艺术更感兴趣的,想象力更丰富的,开放性(openness)更高的人,花得较少;而开放性较低的人花得更多。

Emotionally stable people spend more during the holidays, according to new study


Holidays offer a time for families to get together, but for retailers, holiday sales can represent up to 20% of annual revenue.


How consumers spend money during this time period is of interest for retailers as well as for individuals who are looking to better understand and control their spending habits.


New research suggests more emotionally stable people spend more during the holiday season, and people who are nervous and have a lower stress-threshold (higher neuroticism) spend less during the holiday season.

The study, "Who are the Scrooges? Personality Predictors of Holiday Spending," appears in the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science.


"We've known for a while that personality is related to what we call 'broad outcomes:' how much money you make or how happy you are or how long you live," says co-lead author Sara Weston (Northwestern University), "but we know less about why personality is related to those things."


In their study, Weston, co-lead author Joe Gladstone (University College London), and colleagues show that personality traits are related to more specific spending behaviors, which should in turn impact the broad outcomes, like long term financial goals.


Aggregating more than 2 million individual transactions from 2,133 participants' bank accounts, the researchers compared the relationship between the Big 5 personality traits (OCEAN—openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism) and spending over the Christmas season.


The study showed people who are more emotionally stable spend more over the holidays while those high in neuroticism spend less over the same time period.


In addition, those with more artistic interests and more active imaginations, those higher in openness, spend less during the holiday season while those low in openness spend more.


The study also revealed those who are more conscientiousness spend more, and those who are less conscientious spend less.


The scientists emphasize that personality is only one small part of consumer behavior, especially at the individual level. From household size to income and many other factors, there are numerous influences at the individual shopping level.


This research, however, provides a road map of how combining large scale information with personality can provide a "big picture" view of consumer habits.


"By providing objective measures of both annual and holiday spending, the data allow for a truly ecological study of the relationship between personality traits and consumer behavior," says Gladstone.


- END -

LearnAndRecord

2015年2月8日

2018年11月10日

第1372天

每天持续行动学外语

您可能也对以下帖子感兴趣

文章有问题?点此查看未经处理的缓存