The Relation of Personality Factors to Urban Consumer Cognition
- 1 August 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Journal of Social Psychology
- Vol. 126 (4) , 539-544
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00224545.1986.9713622
Abstract
A self-complete inventory was used to collect data concerning consumer cognition and activity among a sample of 211 young adults. Eysenck's (1958) short personality questionnaire was incorporated into the inventory, so that the respondents could be classified by both degree of extraversion-introversion (E) and stability-neuroticism (N). The results show that, although levels of E and N were not directly related to measures of spatial cognition among the sample consumers, a statistically significant relationship was found between N and actual spatial behavior, with stable consumers tending to use relatively fewer centers. Further analysis, however, revealed that the E dimension of personality was of significance when levels of actual center usage were considered as a proportion of the total universe of known opportunities. Moreover, when the sample was disaggregated by gender, it was found that extraverted-unstable men indulged in more extensive spatial behavior in relation to known opportunities than did other personality groups.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Influence of Personality-Related Variables on Microspatial Consumer ResearchThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1985
- Urban Consumers' Cognitions of DistanceGeografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography, 1985
- Consumer Behavior and Spatial Cognition in Relation to the Extraversion-Introversion Dimension of PersonalityThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1984
- A short questionnaire for the measurement of two dimensions of personality.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1958