Proposing the Affect-Trust Infusion Model (ATIM) to Explain and Predict the Influence of High- and Low-Affect Infusion on Web Vendor Trust

Journal of the Association for Information Systems Theory Development Workshop at the International Conference on Systems Sciences 2011, Shanghai, China, December 3, All Sprouts Content, vol. 11(136), paper 451.

41 Pages Posted: 30 Jun 2013

See all articles by Paul Benjamin Lowry

Paul Benjamin Lowry

Virginia Tech - Pamplin College of Business

Jeffrey L. Jenkins

University of Arizona

Nathan Twyman

University of Arizona - Department of Management Information Systems

Matthew Pickard

Georgia State University

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: December 12, 2011

Abstract

Trust is just as essential to online business as it is to offline transactions but can be more difficult to achieve - especially for newer websites with unknown web vendors. Research on web-based trust development explains that web vendor trust can be created by both cognitive and affective (e.g., emotion-based) influences. But under what circumstances will emotion or cognition be more dominate in trust establishment? Theory-based answers to these questions can help online web vendors design better websites that account for unleveraged factors that will increase trust in the web vendor. To this end, we use the Affect Infusion Model and trust transference to propose the Affect-Trust Infusion Model (ATIM) that explains and predicts how and when cognition, through perceived website performance (PwP), and positive emotion (PEmo) each influence web vendor trust. ATIM explains the underlying causal mechanisms that determine the degree of affect infusion and the subsequent processing strategy that a user adopts when interacting with a new website. Under high-affect infusion, PEmo acts as a mediator between PwP and vendor trust; under low-affect infusion, PwP primarily impacts trust and PEmo is dis-intermediated. We review two distinct, rigorously validated experiments that empirically support ATIM. To further extend the contributions of ATIM, we demonstrate how use of specific contextual features-rooted in theory and that drive one's choice of affect infusion and cognitive processing-can be leveraged into a methodology that we propose to further enhance user-centered design (UCD). We further detail several exciting research opportunities that can leverage ATIM.

Keywords: trust, affect infusion, positive website performance, positive emotion, cognition, Affect-Trust Infusion Model, trust transference

Suggested Citation

Lowry, Paul Benjamin and Jenkins, Jeffrey L. and Twyman, Nathan and Pickard, Matthew, Proposing the Affect-Trust Infusion Model (ATIM) to Explain and Predict the Influence of High- and Low-Affect Infusion on Web Vendor Trust (December 12, 2011). Journal of the Association for Information Systems Theory Development Workshop at the International Conference on Systems Sciences 2011, Shanghai, China, December 3, All Sprouts Content, vol. 11(136), paper 451., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2287394

Paul Benjamin Lowry (Contact Author)

Virginia Tech - Pamplin College of Business ( email )

1016 Pamplin Hall
Blacksburg, VA 24061
United States

Jeffrey L. Jenkins

University of Arizona ( email )

Department of History
Tucson, AZ 85721
United States

Nathan Twyman

University of Arizona - Department of Management Information Systems ( email )

AZ
United States

Matthew Pickard

Georgia State University ( email )

35 Broad Street
Atlanta, GA 30303-3083
United States

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