Abstract

While prior research has examined the effects of interactive e-commerce avatars that simulate the roles of virtual assistants and recommender agents, there is lack of empirical study that investigates the effects of non-interactive talking avatars in e-commerce. This is unfortunate, as many websites today utilize non-interactive talking avatars that provide one-way dialogue in the forms of greetings, introduction of the company, and description of products and services offered. To bridge this gap, our study aims to investigate the effects of non-interactive talking avatar on perceptions of social presence, credibility, website trust, and patronage intention in an online store. Comparing between the experimental (website with avatar) and control (website without avatar) conditions, the experimental results showed that perceived social presence was significantly enhanced by the presence of the non-interactive talking avatar. Furthermore, the presence of the avatar had positive effects on website trust and patronage intention among male participants; but had negative effects on perceptions of information credibility and website patronage intention among females. Analysis based on participants’ comments suggests that females were more critical towards certain shortcomings of the non-interactive talking avatar; citing limited interactivity and artificial dialogue from text-to-speech engine. Additionally, the comment analysis suggests that females preferred processing textual over auditory information (as spoken by the avatar) about the products in the online store. Theoretical and managerial implications related to non-interactive talking avatars are discussed in this paper.

Highlights

  • The process of shopping is fundamentally social

  • Previous studies examining the effects of embodied avatars on social presence utilized avatars with interactive capabilities, such that they are able to provide real-time responses to user inputs in order to mimic the roles of virtual assistants and recommender agents

  • Our study found preliminary evidence that perceived social presence can be heightened by the presence of non-interactive talking avatar in an online store

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The process of shopping is fundamentally social. The lack of social stimulus in e-commerce websites is one of the key barriers to positive consumer attitudes towards online shopping [1, 2]. E-commerce sites often emphasize more about being proficient and effective, neglect the “human touch”. In the endeavour to infuse social cues in online stores, researchers have incorporated platforms such as live chats, forums, and social media [2]. (2017) 7:42 beings can be integrated in website design to increase the sense of social presence in online stores [3]. It has been suggested that the integration of talking avatars in online stores can help resolve the lack of social cues in e-commerce sites [4,5,6,7]

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call