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Facial Trustworthiness Influences Age Differences in Visual Attention Toward Credible Versus Non-credible Messages. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how older adults' perception of facial trustworthiness affects their buying decisions compared to younger adults.
  • Research involved tracking the eye movements of 92 younger and 83 older adults as they viewed product advertisements, revealing that both groups preferred credible products, but older adults were less able to distinguish between credible and non-credible information when faces appeared more trustworthy.
  • The findings indicate that while trustworthiness increases purchasing intentions for both age groups, it significantly distracts older adults from assessing content credibility, potentially contributing to their increased risk of fraud.

Article Abstract

Background And Objectives: The literature on consumer decision-making and aging suggests that older adults make less optimal buying decisions than younger adults do, partly because older adults tend to perceive salespersons' faces as more trustworthy. This study aims to directly test the difference in the effect of perceived facial trustworthiness on buying intention between younger and older adults. It also aims to reveal the underlying mechanisms of this age-related difference by testing whether a more trustworthy face disrupts older adults' attention toward credible (vs. non-credible) information to a higher degree compared with younger adults.

Research Design And Methods: A sample of 92 younger (aged 18-37 years) and 83 older (aged 60-82 years) adults viewed advertisements for 32 products while their eye movements were captured by an eye tracker to measure their fixation duration (as an indicator of attention). The advertisements varied in terms of the of the content and the of the salesperson's face.

Results: Both age groups showed higher buying intentions for products featured in advertisements with higher credibility and facial trustworthiness. When facial trustworthiness was lower, both age groups showed greater attentional preferences for credible over non-credible content. However, this distinction in attention disappeared in older but not younger adults with an increase in facial trustworthiness.

Discussion And Implications: Our findings suggest that although facial trustworthiness generally increases buying intention of both younger and older adults, it only reduces older (but not younger) adults' attentional discrimination between credible and non-credible content. This paper offers a novel and promising mechanism for the increase in fraud vulnerability in late adulthood.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10340441PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igad051DOI Listing

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