Forgiveness from emotion fit: Emotional frame, consumer emotion, and feeling-right in consumer decision to forgive

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Abstract

Three studies examine an emotion fit effect in the crisis communication, namely, the interaction between emotional frames of guilt and shame and consumer emotions of anger and fear on consumer forgiveness. Guilt-framing communication results in higher forgiveness than shame-framing for angry consumers, whereas shame-framing communication results in higher forgiveness than guilt-framing for fearful consumers. These effects are driven by consumers' accessible regulatory foci associated with anger/fear and guilt/shame. Specifically, feelings of anger activate a promotion focus that is represented by guilt frames, while feelings of fear activate a prevention focus that is enacted by shame frames. Compared with emotion non-fit (i.e., anger to shame and fear to guilt), emotion fit (i.e., anger to guilt and fear to shame) facilitates greater feeling-right and consumer forgiveness. The findings offer novel insights for extant literature on emotion, crisis communication, and regulatory focus theory, as well as practical suggestions regarding the emotional frames.

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Ran, Y., Wei, H., & Li, Q. (2016). Forgiveness from emotion fit: Emotional frame, consumer emotion, and feeling-right in consumer decision to forgive. Frontiers in Psychology, 7(NOV). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01775

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