We share; we connect: how shared brand consumption influences relational brand connections

[1]  A. Muñiz,et al.  Religiosity in the Abandoned Apple Newton Brand Community , 2005 .

[2]  B. Davidson A test of equity theory for marital adjustement , 1984 .

[3]  Jay A. Mancini,et al.  Leisure Impacts on Family Interaction and Cohesion , 1990 .

[4]  R. Belk Possessions and the Extended Self , 1988 .

[5]  L. Carstensen,et al.  Affect in Intimate Relationships: The Developmental Course of Marriage , 1996 .

[6]  Sean Lauer,et al.  Is Marriage Individualized? What Couples Actually Do , 2014 .

[7]  S. Fienberg,et al.  Current Population Survey , 2012 .

[8]  Jennifer Edson Escalas,et al.  You Are What They Eat: The Influence of Reference Groups on Consumers’ Connections to Brands , 2003 .

[9]  Leaf Van Boven,et al.  Identifiable but Not Identical: Combining Social Identity and Uniqueness Motives in Choice , 2012 .

[10]  C. Anderson,et al.  Emotional convergence between people over time. , 2003, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[11]  Ronald D. Rogge,et al.  Testing the ruler with item response theory: increasing precision of measurement for relationship satisfaction with the Couples Satisfaction Index. , 2007, Journal of family psychology : JFP : journal of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association.

[12]  Christina C. Norman,et al.  Couples' shared participation in novel and arousing activities and experienced relationship quality. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[13]  A. Aron,et al.  Inclusion of Other in the Self Scale and the structure of interpersonal closeness , 1992 .

[14]  J. Aaker,et al.  When Good Brands Do Bad , 2004 .

[15]  Amna Kirmani,et al.  The self and the brand , 2009 .

[16]  A. Aron,et al.  Close Relationships as Including Other in the Self , 1991 .

[17]  Ran Kivetz,et al.  Productivity Orientation and the Consumption of Collectable Experiences , 2011 .

[18]  Lisa A. Neff,et al.  The Rising Expectations of Marriage: What We Do and Do Not Know , 2014 .

[19]  J. Trost The Social Institution of Marriage , 2010 .

[20]  David J. Burns Husband‐wife innovative consumer decision making: Exploring the effect of family power , 1992 .

[21]  Deborah Roedder John,et al.  The Development of Self-Brand Connections in Children and Adolescents , 2005 .

[22]  D. Russell,et al.  Analyzing data from experimental studies: A latent variable structural equation modeling approach. , 1998 .

[23]  C. Ross Reconceptualizing marital status as a continuum of social attachment. , 1995 .

[24]  Gráinne M. Fitzsimons,et al.  Contextualizing Marriage as a Means and a Goal , 2014 .

[25]  Christian Homburg,et al.  Responsiveness to Customers and Competitors:The Role of Affective and Cognitive Organizational Systems , 2007 .

[26]  B. Perelli-Harris,et al.  How Similar Are Cohabitation and Marriage? Legal Approaches to Cohabitation across Western Europe , 2012 .

[27]  Jennifer Edson Escalas,et al.  Self‐Construal, Reference Groups, and Brand Meaning , 2005 .

[28]  C. Ross The Impact of the Family on Health: The Decade in Review , 1990 .

[29]  R. Zabriskie,et al.  Parent and Child Perspectives of Family Leisure Involvement and Satisfaction with Family Life , 2003 .

[30]  Jennifer Edson Escalas Narrative Processing: Building Consumer Connections to Brands , 2004 .

[31]  S. Czellár,et al.  The Importance of a General Measure of Brand Engagement on Market Behavior: Development and Validation of a Scale , 2009 .

[32]  A. Caspi,et al.  Shared experiences and the similarity of personalities: a longitudinal study of married couples. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[33]  S. Shaw,et al.  An Exploration of Women's Leisure within Heterosexual Romantic Relationships , 2003 .

[34]  M. Brewer,et al.  Who is this "We"? Levels of collective identity and self representations. , 1996 .

[35]  R. Bagozzi,et al.  On the evaluation of structural equation models , 1988 .

[36]  Brian J. Hill,et al.  The Contribution of Couple Leisure Involvement, Leisure Time, and Leisure Satisfaction to Marital Satisfaction , 2006 .

[37]  C. Heath,et al.  Where Consumers Diverge from Others: Identity Signaling and Product Domains , 2007 .

[38]  C. W. Park,et al.  Brand Attachment and Brand Attitude Strength: Conceptual and Empirical Differentiation of Two Critical Brand Equity Drivers , 2010 .

[39]  Cynthia M. Webster,et al.  An Examination of Established Antecedents of Power in Purchase Decision Making: Married and Nontraditional Couples , 2004 .

[40]  Cara Peters,et al.  The consumer quest for authenticity: The multiplicity of meanings within the MG subculture of consumption , 2006 .

[41]  Wayne D. Hoyer,et al.  Emotional Brand Attachment and Brand Personality: The Relative Importance of the Actual and the Ideal Self , 2011 .

[42]  Peter Ward,et al.  Measuring Marital Satisfaction: A Comparison of the Revised Dyadic Adjustment Scale and the Satisfaction with Married Life Scale , 2009 .

[43]  M. S. Hill Marital Stability and Spouses' Shared Time , 1988 .

[44]  W. Powell,et al.  The iron cage revisited institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields , 1983 .

[45]  Aliette Lambert,et al.  Loyal Now, but Not Forever! A Study of Narcissism and Male Consumer–Brand Relationships , 2013 .

[46]  W. Bearden,et al.  Reference Group Influence on Product and Brand Purchase Decisions , 1982 .

[47]  R. Zabriskie,et al.  Leisure and family functioning in adoptive families: implications for therapeutic recreation. , 2003 .

[48]  Elisabeth S. Clemens and,et al.  POLITICS AND INSTITUTIONALISM: Explaining Durability and Change , 1999 .

[49]  C. W. Park,et al.  The Ties That Bind: Measuring the Strength of Consumers’ Emotional Attachments to Brands , 2005 .

[50]  Scott B. MacKenzie,et al.  Common method biases in behavioral research: a critical review of the literature and recommended remedies. , 2003, The Journal of applied psychology.

[51]  Ruth Stock,et al.  As they sow, so shall they reap: customers’ influence on customer satisfaction at the customer interface , 2014 .

[52]  Yongjun Sung,et al.  Nothing Can Tear Us Apart: The Effect of Brand Identity Fusion in Consumer–Brand Relationships , 2014 .

[53]  S. Fournier,et al.  Consumers and Their Brands: Developing Relationship Theory in Consumer Research , 1998 .

[54]  M. Gilly,et al.  We Are What We Post? Self‐Presentation in Personal Web Space , 2003 .

[55]  J. Sobal,et al.  Food choices among newly married couples: convergence, conflict, individualism, and projects , 2003, Appetite.

[56]  R. Guttman,et al.  Spouse similarities in personality items: Changes over years of marriage and implications for mate selection , 1987, Behavior genetics.

[57]  Bernd H. Schmitt,et al.  Brand Experience: What is It? How is it Measured? Does it Affect Loyalty? , 2009 .

[58]  Bernd H. Schmitt,et al.  Using the brand experience scale to profile consumers and predict consumer behaviour , 2010 .

[59]  C. Fornell,et al.  Evaluating structural equation models with unobservable variables and measurement error. , 1981 .

[60]  Bill Merrilees,et al.  Brand Consumption and Narrative of the Self , 2010 .

[61]  S. Lloyd,et al.  Fairness and Reward Level as Predictors of Relationship Satisfaction , 1982 .

[62]  Jonah Berger,et al.  Subtle Signals of Inconspicuous Consumption , 2008 .

[63]  Sean Lauer,et al.  The Deinstitutionalization of Marriage Revisited: A New Institutional Approach to Marriage , 2010 .

[64]  Serena Chen,et al.  The relational self: an interpersonal social-cognitive theory. , 2002, Psychological review.

[65]  Rebecca K. Ratner,et al.  Memories as Assets: Strategic Memory Protection in Choice over Time , 2009 .

[66]  Cynthia M. Webster,et al.  Do established antecedents of purchase decision‐making power apply to contemporary couples? , 2001 .