2014
DOI: 10.1002/mar.20759
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“My Avatar and Her Beloved Possession”: Characteristics of Attachment to Virtual Objects

Abstract: Given the increasing emphasis on online consumption in our digital era, the current study aimed to explore the avatar–self relationship in association with the concept of product attachment. Through constructing their own avatars and selecting certain virtual possessions for them, participants in the sample were able to represent different elements of their identities to be manifested in their embodied virtual presence. Certain attributes and emotions characterizing both the real as well as the virtual existen… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Third, in the virtual world, consumers (represented by avatars) interact with the interface and the characters it contains (Nagy and Koles, 2014;Shin and Shin, 2011). Pennington (2001, p. 33) and Steuer (1992, p. 74) view interactivity as the user's ability to affect the form or content of their mediated experience, to which Van der Meijden and Schijven (2009, p. 1180) add the user's value-extracting ability.…”
Section: Vr Literature Review and Proposed Vrcj Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Third, in the virtual world, consumers (represented by avatars) interact with the interface and the characters it contains (Nagy and Koles, 2014;Shin and Shin, 2011). Pennington (2001, p. 33) and Steuer (1992, p. 74) view interactivity as the user's ability to affect the form or content of their mediated experience, to which Van der Meijden and Schijven (2009, p. 1180) add the user's value-extracting ability.…”
Section: Vr Literature Review and Proposed Vrcj Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We adopt the sense of "possession" used by participants as anything they perceived belonged to them, in that they had control or ownership of the possession: "something that was mine" (participant Brittany). In line with the conceptualization of possession in Belk's landmark work (1988) and in more recent consumer research (Nagy & Koles, 2014;Thomson, MacInnis, & Park, 2005), participants referred to possessions as all those material and nonmaterial things they regarded as "mine;" including objects, family members, friends, pets, their bodies, as well as time, particular places, and mental spaces.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Many of the processes and practices we use to create, affirm, maintain, set aside, and restore aspects of self involve possessions (Ferraro, Escalas, & Bettman, 2011;Kleine & Baker, 2004;Kleine & Kleine, 2000;Nagy & Koles, 2014). Possession-self relations, built on the links between possessions and identity, highlight the symbolic potential and meaning-carrying capacity of possessions (Dommer & Swaminathan, 2013;Escalas & Bettman, 2005;Ferraro et al, 2011).…”
Section: Possessions and Selfmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The attachment to, and investment in, the avatar-persona can often be quite effective in creating emotional responses and even physical reactions in the user, or change patterns of offline behaviour. See, for example, Nagy and Koles (2014), and Plunkett (2011) for discussions of this manifestation. Things that happen to the avatar-persona also affect the user.…”
Section: Considering Interaction Between the Avatar-persona And The Umentioning
confidence: 99%