Carbonell, Guillermo; Barbu, Catalin-Mihai; Vorgerd, Laura; Brand, Matthias:
The impact of emotionality and trust cues on the perceived trustworthiness of online reviews
In: Cogent Business and Management, Vol. 6 (2019), No. 1, p. 1586062
2019article/chapter in journalOA Gold
PsychologyApplied Cognitive ScienceScientific institutes » Erwin L. Hahn Institute for Magnetic Resonance Imaging (ELH)Faculty of Engineering » Computer Science and Applied Cognitive Science » Computer Science » Interactive SystemsFaculty of Engineering » Computer Science and Applied Cognitive Science » Angewandte Kognitions- und Medienwissenschaft » General Psychology: Cognition
Related: 1 publication(s)
Title in English:
The impact of emotionality and trust cues on the perceived trustworthiness of online reviews
Author:
Carbonell, GuillermoUDE
LSF ID
58073
Other
connected with university
;
Barbu, Catalin-MihaiUDE
LSF ID
58102
Other
connected with university
;
Vorgerd, Laura
;
Brand, MatthiasUDE
GND
123076773
LSF ID
50479
ORCID
0000-0002-4831-9542ORCID iD
Other
connected with university
Year of publication:
2019
Open Access?:
OA Gold
Scopus ID
Note:
CA Brand
Language of text:
English
Keyword, Topic:
e-commerce ; fake reviews ; online reviews ; purchase intention ; trust cues

Abstract in English:

Online reviews and trust cues are two core aspects of e-commerce. Based on these features, users can make informed decisions about the products and services they buy online. Although prior studies have investigated on various review characteristics, the writing style has been examined less frequently. This empirical study simulated an e-commerce platform, in which participants (N = 124) were confronted with the reviews and helpfulness votes of other users while searching for one certain product (i.e. a laptop). The task was to rate how trustworthy or fake the reviews are, and the purchase intention after reading each review. Our results show that a factual writing style is considered more trustworthy, less fake, and entails a higher purchase intention when compared to emotional reviews. The trust cues were only relevant in interaction with variables that measure trust in the Internet as a safe environment for making monetary transactions. Furthermore, we found that trustworthiness influenced purchase intention, but the fakeness perception of the review does not yield such effects. We suggest future studies to understand this result and highlight implications for platform design.