Hard to Ignore: Impulsive Buyers Show an Attentional Bias in Shopping Situations.

Oliver Büttner, Arnd Florack, Helmut Leder, Matthew Arthur Paul, Benjamin Serfas, Anna Maria Schulz

Veröffentlichungen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelPeer Reviewed

Abstract

This research focuses on the attentional processes that underlie buying impulsiveness. It was hypothesized that impulsive buyers are more likely than nonimpulsive buyers to get distracted by products that are unrelated to their shopping goal. The study applied a 2 (buying impulsiveness low vs. high) ﰀ 2 (shopping vs. nonshopping context) ﰀ 2 (product vs. nonsemantic distractors) mixed design. Participants’ attention allocation was measured via eye tracking during a visual distraction paradigm. The results support the distraction hypothesis. Impulsive buyers allocated less attention to a focal product than nonimpulsive buyers. The effect was context-specific and emerged only when the task was framed as a shopping situation. The results show that distraction is not limited to attractive products and suggest that it is driven by a general attentional openness for products in shopping situations.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)343-351
Seitenumfang9
FachzeitschriftSocial Psychological and Personality Science
Jahrgang5
Ausgabenummer3
Frühes Online-Datum27 Juni 2013
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - Apr. 2014
VeranstaltungLa Londe Conference in Marketing Communications and Consumer Behavior - La Londe, La Londe, Frankreich
Dauer: 28 Mai 201331 Mai 2013

ÖFOS 2012

  • 501021 Sozialpsychologie

Schlagwörter

  • impulse buying
  • Consumer behavior
  • attention
  • SELF-REGULATION
  • Personality

Zitationsweisen