TY - JOUR
T1 - Shining in the center
T2 - Central gaze cascade effect on product choice
AU - Atalay, A. Selin
AU - Bodur, H. Onur
AU - Rasolofoarison, Dina
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Consumers' tendency to choose the option in the center of an array and the process underlying this effect is explored. Findings from two eye-tracking studies suggest that brands in the horizontal center receive more visual attention. They are more likely to be chosen. Investigation of the attention process revealed an initial central fixation bias, a tendency to look first at the central option, and a central gaze cascade effect, progressively increasing attention focused on the central option right prior to decision. Only the central gaze cascade effect was related to choice. An offline study with tangible products demonstrated that the centrally located item within a product category is chosen more often, even when it is not placed in the center of the visual field. Despite widespread use, memory-based attention measures were not correlated with eye-tracking measures. They did not capture visual attention and were not related to choice.
AB - Consumers' tendency to choose the option in the center of an array and the process underlying this effect is explored. Findings from two eye-tracking studies suggest that brands in the horizontal center receive more visual attention. They are more likely to be chosen. Investigation of the attention process revealed an initial central fixation bias, a tendency to look first at the central option, and a central gaze cascade effect, progressively increasing attention focused on the central option right prior to decision. Only the central gaze cascade effect was related to choice. An offline study with tangible products demonstrated that the centrally located item within a product category is chosen more often, even when it is not placed in the center of the visual field. Despite widespread use, memory-based attention measures were not correlated with eye-tracking measures. They did not capture visual attention and were not related to choice.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84869775806
U2 - 10.1086/665984
DO - 10.1086/665984
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
AN - SCOPUS:84869775806
SN - 0093-5301
VL - 39
SP - 849
JO - Journal of Consumer Research
JF - Journal of Consumer Research
IS - 4
ER -