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Title: Reflexive Layers of Influence (RLI): A Model of Interpersonal Influence, Vehicle Purchase Behavior, and Pro-societal Values
Accession Number: 01340280
Record Type: Component
Abstract: Understanding consumer purchase behavior will facilitate the successful deployment of new vehicle technologies that offer societal benefits—such as plug-in hybrid vehicle (PHEVs). To move beyond the rational actor model and similarly simplified behavioral approaches, this paper proposes an integrative, theoretically rich alternative: reflexive layers of influence (RLI). RLI is a framework that accounts for the role of social influence in an actor’s (or car buyer’s) development of pro-societal values and purchase behavior. Informed by a multidisciplinary literature review and empirical observation, RLI represents three layers that underlie the actor’s behavior; social influence is characterized by different processes at each layer. The bottom layer is the actor’s functional awareness of the vehicle, which can be influenced by the diffusion of simple information—such as the vehicle’s existence and basic purpose—from other actors or information sources. Next is the actor’s assessment of the vehicle based on perceived private and societal benefits. Assessment can be socially influenced through processes of translation, where the actor forms interpretations based on self-concept and group membership, and negotiates these interpretations through social interactions. The third layer is the actor’s self-concept—and associated values and lifestyle practices. Through reflexivity, self-concept can serve to frame the actor’s assessment, and can also be reinforced or altered according to their assessment, behavior, social interactions and perceived lifestyle practices of other actors. This paper applies the RLI framework to participants in a PHEV demonstration project as well as policy considerations.
Supplemental Notes: The DVD lists the title of this paper as: Reflexive Layers of Influence: Model of Social Influence, Vehicle Purchase Behavior, and Prosocietal Values.
Monograph Title: Monograph Accession #: 01329018
Report/Paper Numbers: 11-1579
Language: English
Corporate Authors: Transportation Research Board 500 Fifth Street, NW Authors: Axsen, JonnKurani, Kenneth SPagination: 18p
Publication Date: 2011
Conference:
Transportation Research Board 90th Annual Meeting
Location:
Washington DC, United States Media Type: DVD
Features: Figures
(5)
; References
(23)
TRT Terms: Uncontrolled Terms: Subject Areas: Highways; Planning and Forecasting; Vehicles and Equipment; I72: Traffic and Transport Planning
Source Data: Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting 2011 Paper #11-1579
Files: TRIS, TRB
Created Date: Feb 17 2011 5:51PM
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