COVID-19 and Extremeness Aversion: The Role of Safety Seeking in Travel Decision Making
Author(s) -
Jungkeun Kim,
Jooyoung Park,
Jaeseok Lee,
Seongseop Kim,
Héctor GonzálezJiménez,
Jaehoon Lee,
Yung Kyun Choi,
Jacob C. Lee,
Seongsoo Jang,
Drew Franklin,
Mark T. Spence,
Roger Marshall
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of travel research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.403
H-Index - 132
eISSN - 1552-6763
pISSN - 0047-2875
DOI - 10.1177/00472875211008252
Subject(s) - compromise , salience (neuroscience) , risk aversion (psychology) , psychology , social psychology , set (abstract data type) , covid-19 , loss aversion , marketing , economics , cognitive psychology , microeconomics , business , sociology , expected utility hypothesis , computer science , medicine , social science , disease , mathematical economics , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , programming language
Combining conceptual perspectives from emerging research on COVID-19, safety-seeking motivations, and extremeness aversion in choice (i.e., compromise effects), we examine how and why the perceived threat of COVID-19 affects consumers’ choice and decision making in the hotel and restaurant domains. Across seven studies (two studies from secondary data sets and five experimental studies), we provide novel evidence that the perceived threat or threat salience of COVID-19 amplifies the general tendency to select compromise options, avoiding extreme ones, within a choice set. We highlight the role of safety-seeking motivations as the underlying mechanism in the relationship between perceived threat and extremeness aversion in choice. We further document a boundary condition that the extremeness aversion effect is stronger for leisure travelers than for business travelers.
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