location: Current position: Home >> Scientific Research >> Paper Publications

Event-related potentials elicited by social commerce and electronic-commerce reviews

Hits:

Indexed by:期刊论文

Date of Publication:2015-12-01

Journal:COGNITIVE NEURODYNAMICS

Included Journals:SCIE、PubMed、SSCI、Scopus

Volume:9

Issue:6

Page Number:639-648

ISSN No.:1871-4080

Key Words:Event-related potentials; Reviews; Social commerce; Electronic commerce; Friend; Stranger

Abstract:There is an increasing interest regarding the use of electroencephalography (EEG) in social commerce and electronic commerce (e-commerce) research. There are several reviews in the field of social commerce or e-commerce; these have great potential value and mining them is fundamental and significant. To our knowledge, EEG is rarely applied to study these. In this study, we examined the neural correlates of social commerce reviews (SCRs) and e-commerce reviews (ECRs) by using them as stimuli to evoke event-related potentials. All SCRs were from friends through a social media platform, whereas ECRs were from strangers through an e-commerce platform. The experimental design was similar to that of a priming paradigm, and included 40 pairs of stimuli consisting of product information (prime stimulus) and reviews (target stimulus). The results showed that the P300 component was successfully evoked by SCR and ECR stimuli. Moreover, the P300 components elicited by SCRs had higher amplitudes than those elicited by ECRs. These findings indicate that participants paid more attention to SCRs than to ECRs. In addition, the associations between neural responses and reviews in social commerce have the potential to assist companies in studying consumer behaviors, thus permitting them to enhance their social commerce strategies.

Pre One:Multi-subject fMRI analysis via combined independent component analysis and shift-invariant canonical polyadic decomposition

Next One:Reduced sensitivity to neutral feedback versus negative feedback in subjects with mild depression: Evidence from event-related potentials study