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http://dx.doi.org/10.12940/jfb.2015.19.3.43

Identifying Predictors of Compulsive Hoarding Tendencies in Young Adult Consumers  

Lee, Seahee (Dept. of Clothing and Textiles, Ewha Womans University)
Kim, K.P. Johnson (Dept. of Design, Housing, and Apparel, University of Minnesota)
Lee, Soojung (School of Business, Ewha Womans University)
Publication Information
Journal of Fashion Business / v.19, no.3, 2015 , pp. 43-58 More about this Journal
Abstract
Compulsive hoarding becomes a problem when the spaces hoarded items are stored in become unusable due to clutter, health, or safety issues. Our research purpose was to document relationships between two non-normative consumer behaviors (compulsive hoarding, compulsive buying tendency) and two shopping-related variables: hedonic shopping motives and emotional attachment to possessions with everyday consumers. As hedonic shopping motives have been related to compulsive buying, we predicted these motives (e.g., adventure, gratification, role, value, social, and idea) are related to compulsive buying. We also examined the relationship between compulsive buying and compulsive hoarding tendency and whether emotional attachment to possessions moderated this relationship. Participants were 280 undergraduate and graduate students attending a Midwestern university in the U.S. Regression analysis revealed the enhancing emotion motive (a combined motive of adventure and gratification) positively influenced compulsive buying whereas the value motive negatively influenced compulsive buying. All other hedonic shopping motives were non-significant. Participants who tended to buy compulsively were likely to hoard compulsively. This relationship, however, was moderated by participants' emotional attachment to possessions. Participants with high emotional attachment to possessions showed a higher level of hoarding behavior than those with low emotional attachment to possessions. However, the increase in hoarding tendency among participants with low emotional attachment to possessions was larger between those who were low in compulsive buying and those who were high in compulsive buying than the increase between these two groups among participants with high emotional attachment to possessions.
Keywords
compulsive buying; compulsive hoarding; emotional attachment to possessions; hedonic shopping motives;
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Times Cited By KSCI : 3  (Citation Analysis)
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