The weight of the saddened soul: the bidirectionality between physical heaviness and sadness and its implications for sensory marketing

Yu-Chen Hung (First Author), Xue Zheng (Participant Author), Laura M. Giurge (Participant Author), Jamie Carlson (Participant Author)

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal

3 Citations (Web of Science)

Abstract

Heaviness is a bodily metaphor used to express sadness. Building on embodied cognition theory and metaphor theory, we argue that sadness is grounded in bodily sensation of heaviness, which has important sensory marketing implications for engaging consumer senses to affect consumer decision-making and attitude formation processes. We found support for this metaphorical link between heaviness and sadness across six studies. We showed that carrying a heavy bag saddened individuals and increased the valuation of a teddy bear. Intention to donate to a charity supporting endangered tigers increased when burdened participants watched a sad video about these animals. Conversely, sadness induced physical heaviness and increased preference for an easy-to-maintain sofa. Further, sad individuals disliked an advertisement for a sports drink that figured energy-consuming actions. Our findings inform sensory marketing practice about embedding the bodily sensation of heaviness to induce sadness in marketing communication.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)917-941
JournalJournal of Marketing Management
Volume33
Issue number11-12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Corresponding author email

zhengxue.academic@gmail.com

Keywords

  • Embodied cognition
  • customer experience
  • heavy
  • metaphor
  • sadness
  • sensory marketing

Indexed by

  • ABDC-A
  • Scopus
  • SSCI

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