Effects of shopping addiction on consumer decision-making: Web-based studies in real time Cover Image

Effects of shopping addiction on consumer decision-making: Web-based studies in real time
Effects of shopping addiction on consumer decision-making: Web-based studies in real time

Author(s): Hui-Yi Lo, Nigel Harvey
Subject(s): Psychology, Behaviorism, Substance abuse and addiction, ICT Information and Communications Technologies, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: compulsive buying; addictive shopping; materialism; behavioral addiction;

Summary/Abstract: Most research into compulsive buying has focused on its causes: questionnaires have been used to study its association with various factors assumed to be important in its etiology. Few studies have dealt with the effects of being a compulsive buyer on shopping decisions. Also, processes underlying compulsive buying are dynamic but questionnaires give access only to a retrospective view of them from the standpoint of the participant. The aim of the current study was to investigate the decision processes underlying compulsive buying. Methods: Two simulated shopping experiments, each with over 100 participants, were used to compare the decision processes of compulsive shoppers with those of non-compulsive shoppers. This approach allowed us to measure many features of consumer decision-making that are relevant to compulsive shopping. Results: Compulsive shoppers differed from general shoppers in six ways: choice characteristics, searching behavior, overspending, budget-consciousness, effects of credit card availability, and emotional responses to overspending. Conclusions: Results are consistent with the view that compulsive buying, like other behavioral addictions, develops because the cognitive system under-predicts the extent of post-addiction craving produced by emotional and visceral processes.

  • Issue Year: 1/2012
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 162-170
  • Page Count: 9
  • Language: English