Looking a gift horse in the mouth: Suspicion of large gift expenditures undermines gift appreciation

Aybike Mutluoglu, Laurence Ashworth, Nicole Robitaille
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Abstract

Prior work shows that gift recipients are surprisingly insensitive to the amount of money givers spend, even though more expensive gifts represent a greater investment by givers and impart greater value to recipients. We suggest that recipients' apparent indifference may be explained by competing reactions to gift expenditure. Specifically, we propose that recipients are not unresponsive to gift expenditure, per se, but that money's association with instrumentality means that conspicuous monetary expenditures can cause recipients to contemplate givers' instrumental motives (i.e., become suspicious). Four studies show that large gift expenditures can cause recipients to become suspicious of givers' motives and that suspicion undermines recipients' otherwise positive reactions. We further show that expenditures that are less strongly associated with instrumentality (time and effort) and gifts that have a weaker association with money and instrumentality (experiential gifts) are less prone to suspicion and are appreciated more.
对礼物睁一只眼闭一只眼:对巨额礼品支出的怀疑有损礼品鉴赏力
先前的研究表明,礼物收受者对送礼者花费的金额出奇地不敏感,尽管更昂贵的礼物代表着送礼者更大的投资,并给收受者带来更大的价值。我们认为,收礼人表面上的漠不关心可以用对礼物支出的竞争反应来解释。具体来说,我们认为受礼者并非对礼物支出本身没有反应,而是金钱与工具性的关联意味着显眼的金钱支出会导致受礼者考虑送礼者的工具性动机(即变得可疑)。四项研究表明,大额礼品支出会使受赠者对赠送者的动机产生怀疑,而这种怀疑会破坏受赠者原本积极的反应。我们进一步发现,与工具性关联较小的支出(时间和精力)以及与金钱和工具性关联较弱的礼物(体验性礼物)不容易引起怀疑,也更容易得到赞赏。
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