广告
影响力营销
业务
互联网隐私
心理学
真人秀
社会化媒体
产量(工程)
风险感知
营销
标识
DOI:10.1080/02650487.2025.2574818
摘要
As social media platforms shape consumer trust, understanding how followers perceive authenticity is crucial. Grounded in attribution theory, this study examines how influencer self-disclosure valence affects authenticity perceptions. Attribution theory suggests that negative self-disclosures are more likely to be perceived as intrinsically motivated, enhancing authenticity perceptions, whereas positive disclosures may be attributed to extrinsic, self-serving motives, thereby diminishing authenticity. Across two experiments, results demonstrate that influencers' negative self-disclosures increase perceived authenticity by reducing perceptions of strategic self-presentation. Study 1 shows that influencers who share negative disclosures are perceived as more authentic than those who share positive ones. Study 2 expands on these findings by establishing the mediating role of perceived strategic self-presentation and the moderating role of influencer trustworthiness. Notably, the impact of influencer self-disclosure valence on authenticity is stronger when influencer trustworthiness is low. These findings offer insights for influencer marketing, guiding strategies to cultivate engagement with consumers.
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