(Press-News.org) While more and more people are shopping online, purchasing clothes on the internet poses a unique challenge: What if it doesn’t fit? The apparel industry’s latest solution is virtual try-on sessions that allow consumers to share photos or measurements of themselves to create a similar-sized avatar.
While some consumers have significant concerns about the new technology, especially young people, new research from the University of Missouri found that qualities such as the perceived ease of using the technology significantly diminishes privacy concerns.
“This is something that virtual try-on companies should take note of,” said Song-yi Youn, an assistant professor of textile and apparel management at the MU College of Arts and Science and lead author on the study. “The way our society is moving, personal information is becoming a valuable and important commodity, and people, especially young people, are very careful with their personal information because this phenomenon is not going away any time soon.”
To reach her finding, Youn asked participants to create an avatar by submitting body information such as height, weight, bra size and body shape. Once the avatar was created, participants were asked to virtually try-on a jacket and take a screenshot of their avatar. Finally, they were questioned about their experiences and the likelihood that they would shop virtually again using an avatar.
“When the participants in the study found that they had control over their own experience, they were able to personalize that experience and the technology was easily responsive, they were much more likely to use the technology,” Youn said. “In fact, it had a direct impact on the privacy concerns the users were voicing.”
Youn said companies can use these findings to help inform their business models to provide better trade-offs for people’s personal information, like interactivity, ease of use and versatility. Youn was surprised that these features had such an impact on people’s privacy concerns.
“I knew that interactivity and positive aspects of the applications would make people want to use it more,” Youn said. “However, I was shocked to discover that the level of interactivity was connected to people’s privacy concerns. That has huge implications, not only for businesses using virtual try-on software, but also for businesses utilizing consumer information as part of their business model.”
“Privacy paradox in 3D body scanning technology: the effect of 3D virtual try-on experience in the relationship between privacy concerns and mobile app adoption intention” was published in Nature: humanities and social sciences communications.
END
Consumers more likely to use virtual apparel try-on software if interactive
University of Missouri research shows consumers’ concerns about privacy when trying on clothing virtually can be reduced by making the technology versatile and easy to use.
2023-06-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Exclusion of Black and Hispanic women from health studies masked racial disparities on menopausal aging
2023-06-29
Participant selection bias in women’s health studies may mask earlier onset menopause for Black and Hispanic women, according to new research led by University of Michigan.
Researchers say that failure to account for weathering led to exclusion of many Black and Hispanic women from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN) cohort and misses critical racial differences in menopausal age.
Established in 1994, SWAN examines midlife health and menopausal transition to improve ...
Four firms receive ORNL small business awards
2023-06-29
Four firms doing business with the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory received ORNL Small Business Awards during an awards ceremony on June 29. The companies were recognized by the lab’s Small Business Programs Office for their specific capabilities, contributions and strategic problem-solving that often led to cost savings for ORNL.
"Small businesses are essential to ORNL delivering on our mission each day,” interim ORNL Director Jeff Smith said. “It is important that ...
Tracking protein traffic in living cells
2023-06-29
The genetic plans within our DNA come to functional fruition through proteins, which underlie our bodies’ structure and activity. Yet, the proteome – all the proteins within a cell or given area – remains relatively mysterious because protein landscapes are incredibly complex. Humans, for example, make tens of thousands of different proteins.
To help decipher this complexity, a team of Stanford University researchers has led the development of a new method, called TransitID, for tracking the complete activity of proteins in living cells. This method is detailed in a paper published June ...
Historical Redlining May Be Linked to Current Kidney Failure
2023-06-29
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Jillian McKoy, jpmckoy@bu.edu
Michael Saunders, msaunder@bu.edu
##
Historical Redlining May Be Linked to Current Kidney Failure
New study shows that long-term disinvestment in health and wealth resources in historically redlined neighborhoods likely contributes to a disproportionate rate of kidney failure among Black adults today.
Living ...
IceCube shows Milky Way galaxy is a neutrino desert
2023-06-29
The Milky Way galaxy is an awe-inspiring feature of the night sky, dominating all wavelengths of light and viewable with the naked eye as a hazy band of stars stretching from horizon to horizon. Now, for the first time, the IceCube Neutrino Observatory has produced an image of the Milky Way using neutrinos — tiny, ghostlike astronomical messengers.
In a June 30 article in the journal Science, the IceCube Collaboration — an international group of more than 350 scientists — presents this new ...
Scientists edge toward scalable quantum simulations on a photonic chip
2023-06-29
Scientists have made an important step toward developing computers advanced enough to simulate complex natural phenomena at the quantum level. While these types of simulations are too cumbersome or outright impossible for classical computers to handle, photonics-based quantum computing systems could provide a solution.
A team of researchers from the University of Rochester’s Hajim School of Engineering & Applied Sciences developed a new chip-scale optical quantum simulation system that ...
Push to green energy is not without consequences, PSU prof explores
2023-06-29
From a proposed lithium mine near the Oregon-Nevada border to a proposed pumped hydropower facility in Washington, the transition from fossil fuels to renewables is not all clean and green. The extraction, manufacturing, storage and recycling of metals and minerals needed for electric cars, wind and solar has impacts on land, water, wildlife and people — and thanks to a new grant, a Portland State professor will take a closer look at those impacts, both good and bad.
Alida Cantor, associate professor of geography, ...
Honey bees more faithful to their flower patches than bumble bees
2023-06-29
Kim Kaplan
301-588-5314
Kim.Kaplan@usda.gov
Honey Bees More Faithful to Their Flower Patches Than Bumble Bees
MADISON, WI, June 29, 2023—Honey bees are more faithful to their flower patches than bumble bees when it comes to returning to collect more pollen and nectar, according to a study by U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service scientists.
Overall, 76 percent of honey bees in the study revisited the same plot of alfalfa flowers in contrast to just 47 percent of eastern bumble bees.
But size does matter, especially to bumble bees. They were more faithful to larger flower patches, while the likelihood of honey bees returning to a flower patch ...
Where there’s smoke, there’s fire – and normal numbers of national park visitors
2023-06-29
More Americans than ever are heeding the call of the outdoors – spending time recreating outside and enjoying national parks. Simultaneously, smoky skies are worsening as the size and severity of wildfires increase and adversely affect air quality across the country.
Wildfire smoke threatens human health and welfare, especially if humans are exposed to smoke for long periods or while exercising – such as during a hiking trip to one of America’s beloved national parks.
Matthew Clark, a doctoral student at Boise State University studying how social and environmental ...
HIV patients in DC reported intense distress during pandemic
2023-06-29
The COVID-19 pandemic had substantial psychological impacts on the nation and around the world. New research shows patients with HIV were particularly susceptible to psychosocial challenges like depression, anxiety, substance abuse, loneliness and more. The study was co-authored by HIV/AIDS expert Michael Horberg, MD, and published in AIDS Research and Therapy.
Researchers analyzed the results from a 2020 survey of nearly 900 Washington, D.C.-based participants diagnosed with HIV. The survey asked patients to rate the degree to which they experienced challenges with financial stability, mental health, social connections ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
An Alaskan volcano could help scientists understand why ‘stealthy’ volcanoes erupt without warning
Drive an electric motor without metal! KIST develops CNT-based ultra-lightweight coil technology
Cracking the spatial code: A new chapter in bone and muscle research
New oil and gas fields incompatible with Paris climate goals
Smartphone tests could accelerate drug development for Huntington’s disease
Significant gaps in testing for genetic cancer risk, study finds
Payment source shift for surgical care among veterans enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans
Study reveals how fatal school shootings disrupt local economies
American Psychological Association 2025 Convention, Aug. 7-9, Denver
Appendix cancer incidence has quadrupled in older millennials
Even bumble bee queens need personal days, too
Carbon capture method mines cement ingredients from the air
Fostering Integration: SELINA’s 5th project Workshop on the Azores unites partners to strengthen collaboration
Reelin marks cocaine-activated brain neurons and regulates cocaine reward
Creatine is safe, effective and important for everyone, longtime researcher says
Robots made of linked particle chains
Research alert: laying the groundwork for potential age-related macular degeneration therapies
It’s not the game, it’s the group: Sports fans connect the most over rituals
AI identifies key gene sets that cause complex diseases
Virginia Tech study sheds light on solar farm impacts to property values
Study defines key driver of aggressive ovarian cancer
Rings of time: unearthing climate secrets from ancient trees
Medical AI systems failing to disclose inaccurate race, ethnicity information
Light and AI drive precise motion in soft robotic arm developed at Rice
Vital connections between journalists and whistleblowers under increasing pressure
Patients are opting in for 10 years of breast cancer treatment
Center for Bioenergy Innovation taps Cregger, Eckert as chief science officers
Anthropologists map Neanderthals’ long and winding roads across Europe and Eurasia
Stress genes clear dead cells, offering disease insights
Healthy sleep patterns in adolescence predict better cardiovascular health in the future
[Press-News.org] Consumers more likely to use virtual apparel try-on software if interactiveUniversity of Missouri research shows consumers’ concerns about privacy when trying on clothing virtually can be reduced by making the technology versatile and easy to use.