Yu-Fang Lin’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Self-construal and regulatory focus influences on persuasion: The moderating role of perceived risk
  • Article

August 2012

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112 Reads

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48 Citations

Journal of Business Research

Ying-Ching Lin

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Yu-Fang Lin

Previous research reports a promotion-focused message persuades individuals having an independent self-view more than a prevention-focused message while the reverse occurs for individuals with an interdependent self-view. Extending these findings, this research proposes that perceived risk moderates the effect of self-construal and regulatory focus on persuasion. That is, when perceived risk is high, a prevention-focused message is likely to be more persuasive, no matter the type of self-construal. However, when perceived risk is low, the persuasiveness of a promotion- versus prevention-focused message depends on the consumer's self-construal (independent or interdependent). Support for these predictions occurs in three empirical studies where perceived risk was manipulated based on temporal frames. Finally, this report discusses theoretical contributions behind and the practical implications of this research.

Citations (1)


... When message content resonates with an individual's regulatory focus, it increases perceived processing fluency and message persuasiveness. For example, individuals with a prevention focus are receptive towards negativity-accentuating losses, while those with a promotion focus welcome positivity-underscoring gains (Lee et al., 2009;Lin et al., 2012). Building on this and combining it with the aforementioned discussions, we suggest that low (high) controllability attributions of ugly appearance activate prevention (promotion) focus in consumers. ...

Reference:

Reducing food waste and promoting sustainable consumption: the role of message framing and controllability attributions in ugly produce marketing
Self-construal and regulatory focus influences on persuasion: The moderating role of perceived risk
  • Citing Article
  • August 2012

Journal of Business Research