|
Research, Books,
and Honors
Netcentric Behavioral
Lab
The Netcentric Behavioral Laboratory is
one of the resources available to
researchers who are affiliated with the
Center for Excellence in Service. This
lab is designed to allow researchers to
conduct experimental research on human
behavior, and provides new information
technology resources for computer-aided
experiments, as well as traditional
resources.
Recent Research Conducted by CES
Faculty:
Smith PhD student Debora Thompson and
Center for Excellence in Service faculty
Rebecca Hamilton and Roland Rust
recently conducted a series of studies
using the Netcentric Behavioral
Laboratory. The topic of their research
was "feature fatigue:" consumers'
tendency to choose overly complex
products that do not maximize their
satisfaction when using them.
To study the feature fatigue effect,
they had Smith School students use
several different models of virtual
digital video players on the computers
in the lab. The students performed a
series of tasks with the players, such
as opening movie files, playing movies,
and recording parts of a movie. The
lab's software recorded students'
clickstreams as they performed these
tasks, providing an objective measure of
the product's usability. Participants
also rated the capability and usability
of each player and their overall
satisfaction with each player.
The results of the studies showed that
although consumers recognize that
product usability decreases as more
features are added to products, they do
not give sufficient weight to usability
until they use the product. Because
consumers give more weight to capability
and less weight to usability before
relative to after use, consumers tend to
choose products with too many features.
Thus, although a majority of the
participants chose the model with the
largest number of features before using
one of the players, participants who
used the high-feature model before
choosing a player were significantly
less likely to choose this model, even
though they had already invested time
learning to use it.
Having access to the Netcentric
Behavioral Laboratory was critical to
the success of this project. Being able
to actually use the products was a key
part of the study's design because
participants could not imagine how their
product preferences would change after
using the product; they had to actually
use the product for the "feature
fatigue" effect to occur.
For more information about Thompson,
Hamilton and Rust's research on feature
fatigue, see the Spring 2005 issue of
SMITHBusiness Magazine. Their
research paper, "Feature Fatigue: When
Product Capabilities Become Too Much of
a Good Thing," will be published in the
Journal of Marketing Research.
Thompson's dissertation proposal based
on this work won the Marketing Science
Institute's 2004 Alden G. Clayton
Doctoral Dissertation Proposal
Competition.
For more information visit the
Netcentric Behavioral Laboratory.
|