AI Article Synopsis

  • This study looks at how online shopping, especially through live-streaming, is making people dependent on it, almost like an addiction.
  • It used a survey of 214 shoppers to see if there are steps in this addiction process and found that both helpful things (utilitarian) and fun things (hedonic) can lead to more online shopping.
  • The researchers discovered that stores use special tricks to keep people shopping, and they found out that how risky people feel about their purchases can change how much they get addicted to shopping online.

Article Abstract

While immersive shopping has injected new vitality into China's e-commerce, it has also resulted in consumers' over-reliance on online shopping. Psychological studies have linked online shopping addiction with depression, but business practices challenge this conclusion. This study, grounded in addiction theory, developed a theoretical model, and conducted an online survey with 214 live-streaming shoppers using structural equation modeling for validation. The primary focus was on determining whether consumers truly become addicted to online shopping in the four stages of the addiction model. The study unveils the process of consumers becoming addicted to online shopping. It explores the moderating role of perceived risk in the relationship between utilitarian and hedonic purchases and online shopping addiction. The findings suggest that through tactics such as traffic promotion, traffic trapping, anchor feature utilization, and incorporation of consumer aesthetics, merchants may induce utilitarian and hedonic purchases, leading to addiction to live-streaming shopping among consumers. Furthermore, perceived risk significantly and negatively moderates the relationship between utilitarian purchases and online shopping addiction. Our research indicates that merchants intentionally create external stimuli, enticing consumers to indulge in online shopping, suggesting that online shopping addiction is not merely a simple psychological state but may be influenced by external factors. This study provides novel insights into the phenomenon of online shopping addiction while offering valuable recommendations for consumers seeking to avoid succumbing to its allure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11061708PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e29895DOI Listing

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