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Although family socialization is a rich field in consumer behavior, to date no re-search has been done to disaggregate family influences on behavior into separate parent and sibling components. Here we use triadic analysis (parent and two siblings) to explore the influence of family on consumer innovativeness. We develop hypotheses that postulate parental influence, and, based on conflicting views of sibling similarity in the recent behavioral genetics and developmental psychology literature, set competing hypotheses about sibling influence on innovativeness and innovative behavior. Using a model tested with triads from 137 families, we find that both parents and siblings influence innovativeness, but that parental influence is stronger than sibling influence. We discuss the implications of our work for the study of family influence in consumer behavior. Afamily exerts a complex influence on the behaviors ofits members. Prior family influence research has focused on intergenerational rather than intragenerational influence in consumer socialization. As has been compellingly demon-strated, parents influence children (Moore, Wilkie, and Lutz
Cotte et al. (Tue,) studied this question.