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Clothing acquisition patterns and size information of Oriental female immigrantsGim, Geummi Jung January 1988 (has links)
The purpose of the study was to investigate Oriental women's clothing acquisition behaviors and to compare their body measurements with the measurements listed in Voluntary Product Standard, PS 42-70. A questionnaire was administered to 101 Oriental women residing in Tucson, Arizona. Thirty-nine body measurements were taken from each subject in the sample. The major type of store used most frequently was department store. It appears that Oriental women were not impulsive buyers or influenced by suggestive selling techniques but highly represented careful shopping characteristics. Fit was the most important consideration in purchasing a garment. Newspapers were the major information source of fashion for Oriental women. A significant fitting problem area appeared in garment length when Oriental women purchased ready-to-wear. Bigger differences were found in vertical than the circumference body measurements for Oriental women when the mean of body measurements was compared with the PS 42-70 measurements.
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An Exploratory Analysis of the Food Consumption Behavior of Up-scale Asian-American ConsumersBoykin, Nancy J. (Nancy Jo) 08 1900 (has links)
The first objective of this research was to identify whether Asian-Americans having higher than average levels of income and education represent an appropriate target market for four food product categories. Second, the impact of national origin membership, demographic variables, and level of acculturation on food consumption was determined. In addition, perceptions related to sensory and nutritional factors and the cultural acceptability of the products were identified and interpreted to determine if the variables differed among specific groups of Asian-American consumers.
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A comparative study of apparel shopping orientations between Asian Americans and Caucasian AmericansHo, Shan-hsin Angie 05 February 1991 (has links)
Very little empirical research has been conducted on
Asian Americans as a whole in relation to their consumer
behavior, specifically their clothing behavior. A review of
literature demonstrated that Asian Americans have been
studied from different psychographic and sociological
aspects. However, the apparel shopping behavior of this
market has received only slight research attention. The
purpose of this study was to compare Asian Americans and
Caucasian Americans with regards to apparel shopping
orientations. This study also examined the relationship
between apparel shopping orientations and intensity of
ethnic identification among Asian Americans.
The multimediation model of consumer behavior (EKB
model) proposed by Engel, Kollat and Blackwell (1973) was
used as a theoretical framework for the present study.
Based on the EKB model, it was expected that people of
different cultural backgrounds were different in terms of
their consumer behavior. Another conceptual framework used
in the present study was the concept of shopping
orientations, introduced by Stone (1954). Apparel shopping
orientations refer to motivations, interests and attitudes
toward apparel shopping.
Seven shopping orientations were selected for the
present study. They were: economic shopping, personalizing
shopping, recreational shopping, social shopping (including
friend social shopping and family social shopping), brand
loyal shopping, impulse shopping and fashion orientations.
The fashion orientation included four factors: fashion
leadership, fashion interest, fashion importance and antifashion
attitude.
The nature of the study was observational, in which no
variables were manipulated. The data collection method
involved a mailed questionnaire. The questionnaire included
questions measuring seven shopping orientations, Asian
Americans' intensity of ethnic identification and questions
on demographic characteristics. A purposive sample of 300
Asian American and 300 Caucasian American students were
drawn from the students enrolled at Oregon State University
for 1990 Fall term.
A pretest was conducted before the data were collected.
Dillman's "Total Design Method" (1978) was used as a
guideline when implementing the data collection procedures.
The response rates were 75.9% for the total sample, with
72.6% for the Asian group and 79.0% for the Caucasian group.
The collected data were analyzed by multivariate analysis of
variance (MANOVA), t-test and Pearson correlation.
Significant differences were found between Asian and
Caucasian American respondents on social shopping, including
both friend social and family social shopping, brand loyal
shopping, and fashion leadership orientations.
The Asian respondents were found to be significantly
more brand loyal and liked to shop with friends or family
members than were the Caucasian respondents. The Asian
American students were also found to be more likely to
regard themselves as fashion leaders than were the Caucasian
students in this study.
Also a negative correlation was found between intensity
of ethnic identification and fashion importance among Asian
American respondents. This finding indicated that the more
an Asian respondent identified with Asian ethnicity, the
less (s)he considered being well-dressed to be important. / Graduation date: 1991
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Consumers' attitudes toward advertising and purchase intentions regarding direct response advertisements in a multicultural marketEdwards, Steven Marc 01 January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Direct marketing and Asian American in Inland EmpireHutabarat, Laura Louisa 01 January 2003 (has links)
This thesis employed a series of surveys of Asian Americans residing in the Inland Empire to determine their personal views towards direct marketing. Data is broken out by age, gender, ethnicity and employment status.
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