Litcius/Paper detail

Impact of auditory sense on trust and brand affect through auditory social interaction and control

Atieh Poushneh

2020Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Voice assistants—or voice-enabled artificial intelligence—have changed the way people interact with their surroundings dramatically. Utilizing an enactive view of social cognition theory, this study demonstrates how voice assistants can act as [semi] autonomous agents to hold instantaneous social interactions with consumers. This research employed two experimental studies. Study 1 used two voice assistant mobile applications, Microsoft Cortana and Google Assistant, and Study 2 used Amazon Alexa and Microsoft Cortana. The contributions this paper makes are two-fold. First, the results illustrate how perceived auditory sense drives perceived auditory control through auditory social interactions with a voice assistant that lead to brand affect and consumers’ trust in the voice assistant. Second, results shed light on the role of surprise as a repelling drive that attenuates the effect of perceived auditory control on brand affect.

Topics & Concepts

SurpriseAffect (linguistics)Control (management)PsychologyComputer scienceCognitive psychologySocial psychologyCommunicationArtificial intelligenceAI in Service InteractionsSocial Robot Interaction and HRIAction Observation and Synchronization