“…Pleasure describes the extent to which an individual feels pleased, joyful, and happy; arousal corresponds to feelings of excitement, stimulation, and activity; and dominance represents whether the individual feels influential, in control of, and free to act in a given situation (Donovan & Rossiter, ; Otterbring, ; Russell & Mehrabian, ). Support for the claim that these affective dimensions should mediate the effect of environmental stimuli on customers’ behavioral responses has been somewhat mixed, with the exception of pleasure, which has been found to exert the strongest and most consistent impact on customers’ approach‐avoidance behaviors (e.g., Chebat, Gelinas‐Chebat, Vaninski, & Filiatrault, ; Donovan & Rossiter, ; Donovan, Rossiter, Marcoolyn, & Nesdale, ; Otterbring, ). Indeed, the perceived pleasantness induced by the store environment “is a very powerful determinant of approach‐avoidance behaviors” (Donovan & Rossiter, , p. 54), and is therefore the primary affective dimension of interest in the current investigation.…”