- LSF ID
- 61112
- ORCID
- 0000-0002-9517-8797
- Sonstiges
- der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
- LSF ID
- 59931
- ORCID
- 0000-0001-8158-7445
- Sonstiges
- der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
- GND
- 1015876811
- LSF ID
- 3881
- ORCID
- 0000-0001-9603-5272
- Sonstiges
- der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
Abstract in Englisch:
We present a study investigating psychological characteristics of users of a GUI-style conversational recommender system in a real-world application case. We collected data of 496 customers of an online shop using a conversational product advisor (CPA), using questionnaire responses concerning decision- making style and a set of meta-intents, a concept we propose to represent high-level user preferences related to the decision process in a CPA. We also analyzed anonymized data on users’ interactions in the CPA. Concerning general decision-making style, we could identify two clusters of users who differ in their scores on scales measuring rational and intuitive decision-making. We found evidence that rationality and intuitiveness scores are differently correlated with the proposed meta-intents such as efficiency orientation, interest in detail, and openness for guidance. Relations with interaction data could be observed between rationality/intuitiveness scores and overall time spent in the CPA. Trying to classify users’ decision style from their interactions, however did not yield positive results. Despite the limitation that only a single CPA was studied in a single domain, our results provide evidence that the proposed meta-intents are linked to the general decision-making style of a user and can thus be instrumental in translating general decision-making factors into more concrete design guidance for CPA and their potential personalization.