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Hedonic adaptation and satiation: Understanding switching behavior in the restaurant industry
Institution:1. Vanderbilt University, 401 21st Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37203, United States;2. Simon Fraser University, 500 Granville Street, Vancouver, BC, V6C 1W6, Canada;3. University of Minnesota, 321 19th Ave S., Suite 3-161, Minneapolis, MN 55455, United States
Abstract:The role of satiation as a determinant of restaurant patronage has been the subject of increasing research attention. The purpose of this research is to further consider the relationship between satiation and switching behavior in the restaurant industry. Specifically, we seek to address the mediating mechanism of service quality in this framework. Based on the related tenets of diminishing marginal utility and hedonic adaptation, we propose that satiation and service quality are inversely related. The results of an empirical analysis confirm that as consumers become satiated with food, atmosphere, and restaurant service, perceptions of these three facets of overall service quality are diminished, leading to decreased satisfaction and switching intentions. In addition to the practical implications of these results, the finding that satiation directly impacts service quality represents an important step in the overall task of understanding the effects of satiation in determining restaurant patronage behavior.
Keywords:Satiation  Hedonic adaptation  Switching  Satisfaction  Restaurants
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