Cognitive load during planned and unplanned virtual shopping: Evidence from a neurophysiological perspective
Rapid adoption of virtual-reality-assisted retail applications is inadvertently reshaping consumer buying patterns, making it crucial for businesses to enhance their shopping experience. This new scenario challenges marketers with unique hurdles in both the commercialization of products and in manag...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of information management 2023-10, Vol.72, p.102667, Article 102667 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Rapid adoption of virtual-reality-assisted retail applications is inadvertently reshaping consumer buying patterns, making it crucial for businesses to enhance their shopping experience. This new scenario challenges marketers with unique hurdles in both the commercialization of products and in managing information cues derived via VR retailing. Therefore, this study examined consumers’ impulsive behavior and unplanned purchases in a virtual retail store, using self-reports and electroencephalography. Borrowing assorted perspectives from retailing, virtual reality, and neuromarketing literature, we extended the stimulus-organism-response framework to evaluate how unplanned behavior evolves through conscious and unconscious measures. We found that consumers’ impulsiveness was significantly associated with their unplanned expenditure and the number of unplanned purchases. Using mediation analysis, we observed that flow experience during shopping partially mediated the relationship between the sense of presence and the desire to stay longer in a virtual shopping store. Desire to stay in the virtual store positively influenced store satisfaction, basket-size deviation, and budget deviation. Additionally, cognitive workload obtained via electroencephalogram revealed significant differences during both planned and unplanned purchases. These findings provide fresh opportunities for retailers to leverage the disruptive potential of immersive and interactive virtual technology to transform consumer shopping experiences.
•EEG revealed differences in cognitive load during planned and unplanned shopping.•Cognitive load and time spent were lower during unplanned (vs. planned) shopping.•Sense of presence and desire to stay are partially mediated by flow experience.•Desire to spend more time in VR increased store satisfaction and unplanned purchases.•Consumer impulsiveness positively influenced their unplanned shopping behaviour. |
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ISSN: | 0268-4012 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2023.102667 |