RAUSP: Revista de Administração da Universidade de São Paulo (Mar 2016)

Information overload, choice deferral, and moderating role of need for cognition: Empirical evidence

  • Luis Eduardo Pilli,
  • José Afonso Mazzon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5700/RAUSP1222
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 1
pp. 36 – 55

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Choice deferral due to information overload is an undesirable result of competitive environments. The neoclassical maximization models predict that choice avoidance will not increase as more information is offered to consumers. The theories developed in the consumer behavior field predict that some properties of the environment may lead to behavioral effects and an increase in choice avoidance due to information overload. Based on stimuli generated experimentally and tested among 1,000 consumers, this empirical research provides evidence for the presence of behavioral effects due to information overload and reveals the different effects of increasing the number of options or the number of attributes. This study also finds that the need for cognition moderates these behavioral effects, and it proposes psychological processes that may trigger the effects observed.

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