Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
552291 Decision Support Systems 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Product learning aid, which helps consumers to gain product knowledge for subsequent procurement, has fast become an indispensable Information Technology (IT) feature in online shopping website. Contemporary product learning aids differ in the types of the information cues they afford. For instance, some product learning aids, which are of interest to this study, present static product images with text description (text and image-based) while others present animated product images with voice narration (narration and video-based). Anchoring on the cognitive information processing paradigm, we posit that different type of product learning aids (i.e., text and image-based versus narration and video-based) could exert dissimilar impacts on a consumer's recall capacity. Recall capacity is manifested in two aspects, namely the breadth (i.e., the quantity of attributes recallable) and the depth (i.e., the articulation of the comparison of the product attributes during the decision-making process). Through a laboratory experiment, we observed a differentiated impact of a product learning aid on the breadth and depth of a consumer's recall capacity. More elaborately, while a narration and video-based product learning aid could increase the recall breadth, it yields the lowest in recall depth. Implications for research and practice are discussed.

► We investigate the impact of product learning aid on breadth and depth of recall. ► We adopt the cognitive information processing paradigm to predict this impact. ► The impact of product learning aid is characterized by the cues each affords. ► The narration and video-based product learning aid could increase the recall breadth. ► The text and image-based product learning aid could increase the recall depth.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Information Systems
Authors
, , , ,