PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Selling on eBay? Get higher bids with a red background

2012-07-18
(Press-News.org) The color red influences consumers to become more aggressive in online auctions and affects how much they are willing to pay for products as varied as video game consoles and Florida vacation packages, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. But the color blue can influence consumers to make lower offers when negotiating directly with a seller.

"Red background color induces aggression through a feeling of arousal and it increases aggression relative to blue or gray backgrounds. This causes individuals to make higher bids in auctions but lower offers in negotiations," write authors Rajesh Bagchi (Virginia Tech) and Amar Cheema (University of Virginia).

The authors asked consumers to imagine they were purchasing a Nintendo Wii video game console on eBay and then showed them identical products on a white computer screen with either a blue, red, gray, or white banner on the page.

Some consumers were shown a screenshot of an eBay auction and given the option to choose a maximum bid or pay a "buy it now" price of $149.99. Buyers offered higher bids when the screen had a red background.

A second group had the option to pay the "buy it now" price or make just one offer that the seller could either accept or reject. In this case, a red background had the opposite effect of reducing willingness to buy the product and consumers were willing to pay more when the background was blue.

Buyers think they are competing against other bidders in auctions. Therefore, a red background is advantageous to sellers as aggressive bidders will try to win by outbidding other potential buyers and therefore offer higher bids. In negotiations, however, buyers are competing against the seller and will try to get the best deal. In this case, sellers will benefit from a blue background.

"Just as influential as the product itself is its selling mechanism—auction or negotiation—which moderates the effect of color on willingness-to-pay," the authors conclude.

###

Rajesh Bagchi and Amar Cheema. "The Effect of Red Background Color on Willingness-to-Pay: The Moderating Role of Selling Mechanism." Journal of Consumer Research: February 2013.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Why does the week before your vacation seem longer when you're going far away?

2012-07-18
Consumer decision-making is affected by the relationship between time and spatial distance, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. "We often think about time in various contexts. But we do not realize how susceptible our judgment of time is to seemingly irrelevant factors like spatial distance," write authors B. Kyu Kim (University of Southern California), Gal Zauberman (Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania), and James R. Bettman (Duke University). Imagine that you are in New York today and will be in a different city in one month. ...

3-D motion of cold virus offers hope for improved drugs using Australia's fastest supercomputer

2012-07-18
Melbourne researchers are now simulating in 3D, the motion of the complete human rhinovirus, the most frequent cause of the common cold, on Australia's fastest supercomputer, paving the way for new drug development. Rhinovirus infection is linked to about 70 per cent of all asthma exacerbations with more than 50 per cent of these patients requiring hospitalisation. Furthermore, over 35 per cent of patients with acute chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are hospitalised each year due to respiratory viruses including rhinovirus. A new antiviral drug to treat ...

Controlling uncertainty: Why do consumers need to believe in certain service providers?

2012-07-18
Consumers evaluate services and make decisions based on the level of uncertainty associated with a product—the greater the uncertainty, the more likely it is they will need to have faith in a company and focus on its unique offerings, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. "Some services can be evaluated with actual experience, whereas other services are difficult to evaluate even with experience—they have to be taken on faith. Services taken on faith are more difficult to evaluate, and are usually perceived to have greater uncertainty and higher ...

Online self-diagnosis: Am I having a heart attack or is it just the hiccups?

2012-07-18
Consumers who self-diagnose are more likely to believe they have a serious illness because they focus on their symptoms rather than the likelihood of a particular disease, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. This has significant implications for public health professionals as well as consumers. "In today's wired world, self-diagnosis via internet search is very common. Such symptom-matching exercises may lead consumers to overestimate the likelihood of getting a serious disease because they focus on their symptoms while ignoring the very low ...

UCSB study reveals brain functions during visual searches

2012-07-18
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– You're headed out the door and you realize you don't have your car keys. After a few minutes of rifling through pockets, checking the seat cushions and scanning the coffee table, you find the familiar key ring and off you go. Easy enough, right? What you might not know is that the task that took you a couple seconds to complete is a task that computers –– despite decades of advancement and intricate calculations –– still can't perform as efficiently as humans: the visual search. "Our daily lives are comprised of little searches that are constantly ...

Glacier break creates ice island 2 times the size of Manhattan

2012-07-18
An ice island twice the size of Manhattan has broken off from Greenland's Petermann Glacier, according to researchers at the University of Delaware and the Canadian Ice Service. The Petermann Glacier is one of the two largest glaciers left in Greenland connecting the great Greenland ice sheet with the ocean via a floating ice shelf. Andreas Muenchow, associate professor of physical ocean science and engineering in UD's College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment, reports the calving on July 16, 2012, in his "Icy Seas" blog. Muenchow credits Trudy Wohleben of the Canadian ...

Mothers who give birth to large infants at increased risk for breast cancer

2012-07-18
Delivering a high-birth-weight infant more than doubles a woman's breast cancer risk, according to research from the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. The researchers suggest that having a large infant is associated with a hormonal environment during pregnancy that favors future breast cancer development and progression. Marking the first time that high birth weight was shown to be an independent risk factor, the finding may help improve prediction and prevention of breast cancer decades before its onset. "We also found that women delivering large babies ...

Study identifies how muscles are paralyzed during sleep

2012-07-18
Washington, D.C. — Two powerful brain chemical systems work together to paralyze skeletal muscles during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, according to new research in the July 18 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience. The finding may help scientists better understand and treat sleep disorders, including narcolepsy, tooth grinding, and REM sleep behavior disorder. During REM sleep — the deep sleep where most recalled dreams occur — muscles that move the eyes and those involved in breathing continue to move, but the most of the body’s other muscles are stopped, potentially ...

A nursing program shows promise for reducing deaths from chronic illnesses

2012-07-18
A community-based nursing program delivered in collaboration with existing health care services is more effective in reducing the number of older people dying from chronic illnesses, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes, than usual care according to a study by US researchers published in this week's PLoS Medicine. The authors led by Kenneth Coburn from Health Quality Partners in Pennsylvania in the US, randomized 1736 eligible patients (aged 65 years and over with heart failure, coronary heart disease, asthma, diabetes, hypertension, and/or hyperlipidemia who received ...

Reporting of hospital infection rates and burden of C. difficile

2012-07-18
A new study published today in PLoS Medicine re-evaluates the role of public reporting of hospital-acquired infection data. The study, conducted by Nick Daneman and colleagues, used data from all 180 acute care hospitals in Ontario, Canada. The investigators compared the rates of infection of Clostridium difficile colitis prior to, and after, the introduction of public reporting of hospital performance; public reporting was associated with a 26% reduction in C. difficile cases. The authors comment "This longitudinal population-based cohort study has confirmed an immense ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

LHAASO uncovers mystery of cosmic ray "knee" formation

The simulated Milky Way: 100 billion stars using 7 million CPU cores

Brain waves’ analog organization of cortex enables cognition and consciousness, MIT professor proposes at SfN

Low-glutamate diet linked to brain changes and migraine relief in veterans with Gulf War Illness

AMP 2025 press materials available

New genetic test targets elusive cause of rare movement disorder

A fast and high-precision satellite-ground synchronization technology in satellite beam hopping communication

What can polymers teach us about curing Alzheimer's disease?

Lead-free alternative discovered for essential electronics component

BioCompNet: a deep learning workflow enabling automated body composition analysis toward precision management of cardiometabolic disorders

Skin cancer cluster found in 15 Pennsylvania counties with or near farmland

For platforms using gig workers, bonuses can be a double-edged sword

Chang'e-6 samples reveal first evidence of impact-formed hematite and maghemite on the Moon

New study reveals key role of inflammasome in male-biased periodontitis

MD Anderson publicly launches $2.5 billion philanthropic campaign, Only Possible Here, The Campaign to End Cancer

Donors enable record pool of TPDA Awards to Neuroscience 2025

Society for Neuroscience announces Gold Sponsors of Neuroscience 2025

The world’s oldest RNA extracted from woolly mammoth

Research alert: When life imitates art: Google searches for anxiety drug spike during run of The White Lotus TV show

Reading a quantum clock costs more energy than running it, study finds

Early MMR vaccine adoption during the 2025 Texas measles outbreak

Traces of bacteria inside brain tumors may affect tumor behavior

Hypertension affects the brain much earlier than expected

Nonlinear association between systemic immune-inflammation index and in-hospital mortality in critically ill patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and atrial fibrillation: a cross-sectio

Drift logs destroying intertidal ecosystems

New test could speed detection of three serious regional fungal infections

New research on AI as a diagnostic tool to be featured at AMP 2025

New test could allow for more accurate Lyme disease diagnosis

New genetic tool reveals chromosome changes linked to pregnancy loss

New research in blood cancer diagnostics to be featured at AMP 2025

[Press-News.org] Selling on eBay? Get higher bids with a red background