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First published August 2006

Is Happiness Shared Doubled and Sadness Shared Halved? Social Influence on Enjoyment of Hedonic Experiences

Abstract

Because many hedonic stimuli (e.g., movies, vacations, food) are often consumed in the company of other people, it is important to know how social influence affects the enjoyment of shared experiences. Extrapolation from informational and normative influences suggests that enjoyment is enhanced when others offer positive opinions and diminished when they offer negative opinions about shared stimuli. In this article, the authors propose an alternative model. Building on the need to belong and the need for accuracy, the authors predict that enjoyment from sharing stimuli depends on consumers' perceived interpersonal agreements about the shared stimuli, such that congruence of opinions enhances and incongruence of opinions diminishes the enjoyment of the shared experience. The results from three experiments support the authors' predictions and indicate that under some circumstances, social influence can operate in opposite directions on judgments of shared stimuli and on the enjoyment of sharing them.

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Article first published: August 2006
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Authors

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Rajagopal Raghunathan
Marketing Department, Red McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin
Kim Corfman
Marketing Department, Stern School of Business, New York University

Notes

(e-mail: [email protected]).
(e-mail: [email protected]).
The authors thank Susan Broniarczyk, Wayne Hoyer, Nikki Sooyeon Lee, John Lynch, and the doctoral students in a research seminar of the first author for their helpful comments on previous drafts of the article. This article was accepted and processed under the previous editor, Dick Wittink.

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