The Influence of Privacy Concern on Advertising Persuasion Effect
under Intelligent Recommendation
Junfeng Liao
1,2
, Yongyu Liao
1
, Chufang Huang
1
and Quzhen Zhaxi
3
1
Department of Electronic Business, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
2
College of Economics and Management, Kashi University, Kashi, Xinjiang, China
3
School of International Relations and Public Affairs, Shanghai International Study University, Shanghai, China
Keywords: Privacy Concern, Intelligent Recommendation, Affective Response, Cognitive Response, Advertising
Persuasion Effect.
Abstract: This paper discusses the relationship and mechanism between consumers' privacy concerns, cognitive
responses and advertising persuasion effect. Based on the stimulus response (SOR) model, this paper uses
SPSS and AMOS to analyze the collected questionnaire, and concludes that consumers' privacy concerns are
negatively correlated with advertising persuasion effect under intelligent recommendation. Emotional
response (positive emotion and negative emotion) plays a mediating role between privacy concern and
advertising persuasion effect. Under intelligent recommendation, consumers' cognitive response is positively
correlated with advertising persuasion effect. There is a positive correlation between advertising persuasion
effect and attitude has a positive effect on the intention of continuous use by positively affecting the
willingness to accept.
1 INTRODUCTION
In recent years, with the rapid development of the
media driven by various high and new technologies,
the advertising industry has embraced the era of
intelligent advertising. As the future development
trend of online advertising, intelligent advertising has
received more and more attention. With its precision
and personalization of advertising, intelligent
advertising has attracted the attention of the majority
of advertising industry, which reduces the cost of
advertising and provides convenience and
personalized experience. However, the subsequent
tracking of users' network behavior data will lead to
the disclosure of users' privacy. With the
development of smart advertising and the awakening
of people's privacy awareness, an in-depth
understanding of the impact of privacy concern under
intelligent recommendation on consumer psychology
and behavior has played a vital role in the
development of smart advertising as a whole.
The research on information privacy in academia
mainly starts from three perspectives: concept
definition, privacy attitude and behavior, and
"privacy concern" is accepted by the public as an
indicator of privacy attitude. But privacy concerns of
this paper emphasizes the intelligent recommendation
of Internet privacy concerns, expanding the research
category of privacy concerns. In terms of advertising
persuasion effect, Xu (Xu, 2010) believes from the
perspective of communication that when consumers
have a certain attitude change, it is a general
persuasion. When advertising not only changes the
audience's attitude, but also leads to behavior change,
it is a meaningful persuasion. In addition, this
behavior and attitude change lasts for quite a long
time, which indicates that advertising persuasion
effect is successful. At present, the literature about
the influence of privacy concern and advertising
persuasion effect is almost blank, and the related
theories are scattered in the related research of
privacy concerns and consumers' attitudes or
behavioral willingness to behavior-oriented
advertising.
Therefore, in the context of intelligent
recommendation, this article regards consumers'
attitudes towards advertising, willingness to accept,
and willingness to continue to use advertisement as
the three progressive levels of advertisement
persuasion effect, and creatively introduces the SOR
theoretical model. Emotional response is used as an
intermediate variable to study the relationship
Liao, J., Liao, Y., Huang, C. and Zhaxi, Q.
The Influence of Privacy Concern on Advertising Persuasion Effect under Intelligent Recommendation.
DOI: 10.5220/0011189300003440
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Big Data Economy and Digital Management (BDEDM 2022), pages 515-520
ISBN: 978-989-758-593-7
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
515
between privacy concerns and the persuasive effect
of advertising. And targeted countermeasures are put
forward in the end according to the research results.
2 MATERIALS AND METHODS
2.1 Cognitive Response, Affective
Response and Advertising
Persuasion Effect
In this paper, positive emotion refers to the degree to
which an individual feels happy, or pleasurable when
watching the intelligent advertisement. Negative
emotion refers to the extent to which individuals feel
displeasurable or disgust watching intelligent
advertisement. As an important factor affecting
individual behavior, cognitive response has been
widely recognized, and emotional response also plays
a role that can not be ignored. SOR model believes
that consumers' emotional response will affect
consumer behavior. The cognition and emotion of
consumers constitute the basis and motivation of their
consumption intention. Pham et al. (Pham, et al,
2001) proposed that emotion, with its rapidity and
consistency, can directly guide people to think about
external stimuli, and has higher critical value
compared with cognitive evaluation of target things.
When the subject thinks that the external stimulus is
related to its needs, it will produce subjective
feelings, and then generate the motivation of behavior
intention. In online consumption, consumers' strong
emotional and cognitive responses can enhance their
consumption intentions. Therefore, it is proposed
that: H5: The positive emotion of consumers is
positively correlated with the attitude of intelligent
advertising. H6: Consumers' negative emotions are
negatively correlated with their attitudes towards
intelligent advertising. H11: The cognitive response
of consumers is positively correlated with their
attitude towards intelligent advertising.
The cognitive process of the subject to the
external stimulus should precede the emotional
response, that is the subject generates the emotional
response based on the cognitive evaluation of the
attribute and function of the object. In the online
consumption, consumers will first generate cognitive
evaluation and then form emotion in the face of all
kinds of intelligent advertisements, and the cognitive
response will enhance the emotional response. Thus,
we propose: H1: The cognitive response of
consumers is positively correlated with positive
emotions. H2: The cognitive response of consumers
is negatively correlated with negative emotions.
2.2 The Relationship between
Advertising Persuasion Effect
This paper studies the persuasion effect of intelligent
advertising, emphasizing the psychological change
process of consumers to accept intelligent
advertising. This paper draws lessons from three
levels of persuasion effect, using attitude, accepting
willingness and continuing willingness to use to
measure the persuasion effect of intelligent
advertising. For intelligent advertising, consumers'
attitudes affect their willingness to continue using
through their willingness to accept. Based on these
arguments, we propose: H7: Consumers' attitude
towards intelligent advertising is positively correlated
with their willingness to accept it. H8: Consumers'
willingness to accept intelligent advertisements is
positively correlated with their willingness to
continue using them.
2.3 Privacy Concern, Emotional
Response and Advertising
Persuasion Effect
Intelligent recommendations can capture the needs of
users more accurately, but it also brings some privacy
issues. Cockcroft and Heales (Cockcroft, Heales,
2005) proposed that consumers' privacy concerns
were negatively correlated with their transaction
intentions, with risk as a mediating variable. Eastlick
and Lotz (Eastlick, Lotz, 2006) proposed that
consumers' privacy concern was negatively
correlated with their purchase intention through trust
and loyalty, and trust and loyalty were regarded as
intermediary variables. In this study, consumers'
concern about privacy affects their thoughts and
behaviors, which indirectly affects the effectiveness
of intelligent advertising. Under any circumstances,
emotional response plays a crucial role. Therefore,
we can put forward the hypothesis: H3: Consumer
privacy concerns are negatively correlated with
positive emotions. H4: Consumer privacy concerns
are positively correlated with negative emotions. H9:
Emotional response plays a mediating role between
consumers' privacy concerns and their attitudes
towards intelligent advertising. H10: Consumer
privacy concerns are negatively correlated with
attitudes towards intelligent advertising.
To sum up, this paper proposes the following
research models:
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Figure 1: Theoretical model diagram.
3 RESEARCH DESIGN
This paper adopts the Likert five-point scale, each
variable is measured with reference to the mature
scale related to it at home and abroad, and combined
with the characteristics of intelligent advertising in
this paper and the results of small-scale interviews.
The measurement of privacy concern was based on
the scales of Malhotra (Malhotra 2004) and Hong
(Hong 2013). Assessment of cognitive response was
made by reference to the scale of Shih (Shih 2013).
The evaluation of emotional responses refers to the
scale of Dholakia (Dholakia 2000). The scales of
Taylor & Todd (Taylor, Todd 1995), and Xu (Xu
2007) are the main references for the attitude of
advertising effect, and the scale of Merisavo
(Merisavo 2007) is the reference for the measurement
of acceptance intention. Intention to continue use was
measured by the scale of Bhattacherjee A
(Bhattacherjee 2001).
In this paper, a total of 500 questionnaires were
collected online, of which 419 were valid. The
effective rate of the questionnaire was 83.9%.
4 RESULTS & DISCUSSION
The Cronbach's α value of each variable in the
questionnaire scale is all greater than the standard of
0.7, which has good internal consistency and good
reliability. The KOM coefficients of all variables are
above 0.7, and the significance probability of
Bartlett's sphere test is 0.000, indicating that this
questionnaire scale has high reliability and validity
and is suitable for subsequent analysis.
4.1 Model Fitting Index
When testing the model, multiple fitting indexes
provided by SEM should be considered
comprehensively instead of relying solely on a single
index. As shown in the table below, this paper
comprehensively used a variety of fitting indicators,
and the results were as shown in the table. All
indicators reached the standard level, indicating that
the model fitted well.
Table 1: Integration of fitting index results.
4.2 Hypothesis Testing and Path
Analysis
Figure 2: Model path diagram.
We can conclude from the path coefficients in the
model path analysis that all relevant assumptions are
valid. Consumer privacy concern has a negative
impact on advertising persuasion effect. The higher
the degree of privacy concern, the worse the
advertising persuasion effect. Advertising to
convince the audience is a progressive process, under
the background of intelligent recommendation. The
persuasion process of smart advertising is to
influence the audience’s attitude towards advertising
on the first level, influence the audience’s willingness
to accept advertising on the second level, and
influence the audience’s willingness to continue
using smart advertising on the third level. Attitude
has a positive influence on willingness to continue to
use through positive influence on acceptance.
Figure 3: Relationship between cognitive response and
privacy concern and advertising persuasion effect.
The influence of privacy concerns and cognitive
responses on the persuasive effect of advertising
through emotional responses (positive emotions &
The Influence of Privacy Concern on Advertising Persuasion Effect under Intelligent Recommendation
517
negative emotions) is shown in Figure 3. It can be
found that cognitive response positively (negative)
affects positive (negative) emotions, and positively
affects the persuasive effect of advertising, while
privacy concerns negatively (positively) affect
positive (negative) emotions and negatively affect the
persuasive effect of advertising. That is, not only the
role of privacy concern and cognitive response on
advertising persuasion effect is opposite, but also the
mechanism of both through emotional response
(positive emotion & negative emotion) on advertising
persuasion effect is opposite.
4.3 Mediating Effect of Affective
Response
This article refers to the comparison method proposed
by Mayer & Davis (1999), constructs nested models
as shown in Table 2, and then conducts path analysis
for each model separately.
Table 2: Nested model settings.
Table 3: Test of main path relationship of each competition
model.
From the above results, it can be seen that the path
coefficient from privacy attention to attitude on the
basic model (M) is smaller than the non-mediation
model (MC0, MC1, MC3) and the complete
mediation model (MC2). That is, after the emotional
response is added, the relationship between privacy
attention and attitude is still significant but weakened,
indicating that emotional response plays a part of the
mediating role in the relationship between privacy
attention and attitude. Therefore, emotional response
has a mediating role between privacy concerns and
attitudes towards smart advertising. That is, the
higher the degree of privacy concern, the stronger the
negative emotions, and the worse the advertising
persuasion effect; the lower the degree of privacy
attention, the stronger the positive emotions, and the
better the advertising persuasion effect. The
hypothesis H9 is verified.
5 CONCLUSIONS AND
IMPLICATIONS
5.1 Research Conclusion
In the context of intelligent recommendation, this
paper builds a theoretical model based on the
stimulus-response theory, adds cognitive response as
another independent variable, and introduces
consumer emotional response as an intermediary
variable. After analysis of the results, the following
conclusions can be drawn for the research problems
in this paper:
First, the privacy concern has a significant
negative impact on the advertising persuasion effect,
the higher the consumer privacy concern, the worse
the advertising persuasion effect. Second, the higher
the consumer cognitive response, the better the
advertising persuasion effect and the cognitive
response has a significant positive impact on the
advertising persuasion effect. Third, positive and
negative emotions play a partial mediating role
between consumer privacy concern and advertising
persuasion effect. The higher the negative emotion of
users with high privacy concern, the worse the
advertising persuasion effect; the higher the positive
emotion of users with low privacy concern, the better
the advertising persuasion effect. Fourthly, the
influence mechanism of privacy concern and
cognition on advertising persuasion effect through
emotional response is completely opposite. Privacy
concerns affect the positive (negative) emotion in the
negative (positive) direction, and negatively affect
the persuasive effect of advertising; while the
cognitive response affects the positive (negative)
emotion in the positive (negative) direction, and
positively affect the persuasive effect of advertising.
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5.2 Practical Inspiration
In order to better improve the shopping experience of
consumers, to achieve good advertising persuasion
effect, and then enhance the attraction of the website
to consumers, based on the above research results,
this paper tries to put forward the following
suggestions for shopping websites:
5.2.1 Subdivide Users with Composite
Labels
Privacy concern and cognitive response, as two
important factors affecting the persuasive effect of
intelligent advertising, can be considered as a new
label for user segmentation. Among them, users in the
(high cognitive response × low privacy concern)
group should be the most suitable users to be pushed
smart ads, while (low cognitive response × high
privacy concern) group should be the least suitable
users. Different marketing strategies should be
adopted for different groups of users. For users in the
(high cognitive response × low privacy concern)
group, they should focus on analyzing user data,
mining user preferences, and continuously
optimizing intelligent advertising. It is obviously not
a good idea to push smart ads to users in the (low-
cognition reaction × high-privacy concern) group.
Other methods should be used to help users improve
the shopping experience, such as recommending
products on the list.
5.2.2 Develop Two Parallel Lines to
Cultivate Users
Intelligent advertising is in the development stage,
and many users have no clear understanding of the
difference between it and the ordinary advertising.
Considering marketing means, word of mouth
communication, opinion leader recommendation and
friend recommendation are all helpful to form users'
cognition of intelligent advertising. Of course, in the
long run, we need to work together to create a good
industry atmosphere for the development of
intelligent advertising and e-commerce, including
enterprises' respect and practical protection for user
privacy, government and relevant departments'
supervision and safety of online privacy legislative
protection and consumers' general increased
awareness of privacy and rights protection. After all,
what really disgusts and cares about users of high
privacy concerns is not the smart advertisement itself,
but the risk of personal privacy leakage hidden
behind the smart advertisement. The control and
prevention of such risks cannot be achieved
overnight.
5.2.3 Pay Attention to the Emotional
Response of Users and Optimize the
Service in Time
At present, the after-sales evaluation of products on
online shopping websites is mainly centered on
product quality, store services and logistics. We can
consider increasing the user's evaluation of the use of
intelligent advertising (for users through intelligent
advertising transactions), analyze whether the users'
emotional response to smart advertising is positive or
negative through user evaluation, and then adjust the
service policy to find out where users are dissatisfied
with smart advertising as much as possible and make
timely improvements. This will help keep users in the
(high cognitive response × low privacy concerns)
group, which will have a positive impact on users in
other groups.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks for the support from The National Social
Science Fund of China (18BGL110).
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