From faces to feels: the impact of human images on online review usefulness
From faces to feels: the impact of human images on online review usefulness
This research draws upon visual rhetoric theory to investigate the influence of user-generated photos containing human images on the perceived usefulness of online reviews, the mediating role of perceived support, and the moderating effect of rebate disclosure. We conducted six empirical studies, including a social media analytics study and five experimental studies. The results indicate that online reviews containing human images, especially those with facial features, are perceived as more useful than those without, regardless of the reviews’ valence. Perceived support mediates this effect, while rebate disclosure weakens it. This study offers a fresh theoretical perspective and insights into the role of user-generated photos with human images in online reviews. Findings suggest that managers should prioritize visual rhetoric by incorporating human images in their communication with target customers, while also encouraging tourists to include these images in their posts, signifying support for the audience and improving content effectiveness.
Wang, Luqi
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Chen, Ye
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Xu, Yuanyi
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Lin, Zhibin
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Wang, Luqi
4a2a82f5-67c8-435c-a28d-bddd816a2301
Chen, Ye
fc55fa67-8c33-4e4f-9867-cd897c3d4263
Xu, Yuanyi
1992faac-1dc4-4ba6-ade5-e6d36e174454
Lin, Zhibin
2487a842-74b8-45f2-abd0-da750d7d764b
Wang, Luqi, Chen, Ye, Xu, Yuanyi and Lin, Zhibin
(2023)
From faces to feels: the impact of human images on online review usefulness.
Journal of Travel Research.
(doi:10.1177/00472875231217738).
Abstract
This research draws upon visual rhetoric theory to investigate the influence of user-generated photos containing human images on the perceived usefulness of online reviews, the mediating role of perceived support, and the moderating effect of rebate disclosure. We conducted six empirical studies, including a social media analytics study and five experimental studies. The results indicate that online reviews containing human images, especially those with facial features, are perceived as more useful than those without, regardless of the reviews’ valence. Perceived support mediates this effect, while rebate disclosure weakens it. This study offers a fresh theoretical perspective and insights into the role of user-generated photos with human images in online reviews. Findings suggest that managers should prioritize visual rhetoric by incorporating human images in their communication with target customers, while also encouraging tourists to include these images in their posts, signifying support for the audience and improving content effectiveness.
Text
From-faces-to-feels-the-impact-of-human-images-on-online-review-usefulness
- Accepted Manuscript
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e-pub ahead of print date: 29 December 2023
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 488333
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488333
ISSN: 0047-2875
PURE UUID: e450f87d-3912-41bb-a79c-e33bc1e733be
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Date deposited: 20 Mar 2024 17:53
Last modified: 21 Mar 2024 03:16
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Contributors
Author:
Luqi Wang
Author:
Ye Chen
Author:
Yuanyi Xu
Author:
Zhibin Lin
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