Substition Effect
Every price change can be converted into a income effect and a substition effect. The substition effect is basically a price change that changes the slope of the budget constraint, but leaves the consumer on the same indifference curve. This effect will always cause the consumer to substitute away from the good that is becoming comparatively more expensive. If the good in question is a normal good, than the income effect will re-enforce the substition effect. If the good is inferior, then the income effect will lessen the substition effect. If the income effect is opposite and stronger than the substition effect, the consumer will buy more of the good when it becomes more expensive. There is no generally agreed upon example of this happening, known as a Giffen good.
See also: Microeconomics, Supply and demand, Indifference curves