How tie strength influences purchasing intention in social recommendation: evidence from behavioral model and brain activity
ISSN: 1066-2243
Article publication date: 13 February 2024
Issue publication date: 25 November 2024
Abstract
Purpose
Social recommendation has been recognized as a kind of e-commerce with large potential, but how social recommendations influence consumer decisions is still unclear. This paper aims to investigate how recommendations from different social ties influence consumers’ purchase intentions through both behavior and brain activity.
Design/methodology/approach
Utilizing behavioral (N = 70) and electroencephalogram (EEG) (N = 49) experiments, this study explored participants’ behavior and brain responses after being recommended by different social ties. The data were analyzed using statistical inference and event-related potential (ERP) analysis.
Findings
Behavioral results show that social tie strength positively impacts purchase intention, which can be fitted by a logarithmic model. Moreover, recommender-to-customer similarity and product affect mediate the effect of tie strength on purchase intention serially. EEG findings show that recommendations from weak tie strength elicit larger N100, N200 and P300 amplitudes than those from strong tie strength. These results imply that weak tie strength may motivate individuals to recruit more mental resources in social recommendation, including unconscious processing of consumer attention and conscious processing of cognitive conflict and negative emotion.
Originality/value
This study considers the effects of continuous social ties on purchase intention and models them mathematically, exploring the intrinsic mechanisms by which strong and weak ties influence purchase intentions through recommender-to-customer similarity and product affect, contributing to the applications of the stimulus-organism-response (SOR) model in the field of social recommendation. Furthermore, our study adopting EEG techniques bridges the gap of relying solely on self-report by providing an avenue to obtain relatively objective findings about the consumers’ early-occurred (unconscious) attentional responses and late-occurred (conscious) cognitive and emotional responses in purchase decisions.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by Ministry of Education of China [grant numbers 21YJAZH035], the National Nature Science Foundation of China [grant numbers 72271166], and the Tutor Academic Leadership Program of Shanghai lnternational Studies University [grant numbers 2022113015].
Citation
Jin, J., He, Y., Lin, C. and Diao, L. (2024), "How tie strength influences purchasing intention in social recommendation: evidence from behavioral model and brain activity", Internet Research, Vol. 34 No. 6, pp. 2123-2150. https://doi.org/10.1108/INTR-06-2023-0506
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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