When the eyes say buy: visual fixations during hypothetical consumer choice improve prediction of actual purchases

Volume: 5, Issue: 1, Pages: 112 - 122
Published: Jul 1, 2019
Abstract
Consumers typically overstate their intentions to purchase products, compared to actual rates of purchases, a pattern called “hypothetical bias”. In laboratory choice experiments, we measure participants’ visual attention using mousetracking or eye-tracking, while they make hypothetical as well as real purchase decisions. We find that participants spent more time looking both at price and product image prior to making a real “buy” decision than...
Paper Details
Title
When the eyes say buy: visual fixations during hypothetical consumer choice improve prediction of actual purchases
Published Date
Jul 1, 2019
Volume
5
Issue
1
Pages
112 - 122
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