TY - HEAR T1 - Impeding Behavior in Shopping and Product Trial Y1 - 2022 A1 - Lee,Hyun-Seok (Huck) A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann KW - Marketing KW - Supply Chain JA - ACRA 2022 Conference CY - New Orleans, Louisianna U2 - c U4 - 233632526336 ID - 233632526336 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Skip the Line: How Social Comparison Impacts the Mobile App Ordering Experience Y1 - 2022 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann A1 - Keech,Jessica KW - Marketing JA - Association for Consumer Research 2022 CY - Denver, CO U2 - c U4 - 252205977600 ID - 252205977600 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Skip the Line: How Social Comparison Impacts the Mobile App Ordering Experience Y1 - 2022 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann A1 - Keech,Jessica KW - Marketing JA - Frontiers in Service 2022 CY - Babson College, Boston, MA U2 - c U4 - 252205705216 ID - 252205705216 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - On the Other Hand...: Enhancing Promotional Effectiveness with Haptic Cues JF - Journal of Marketing Research Y1 - 2020 A1 - Maille,Virginie A1 - Morrin,Maureen A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann KW - Marketing AB - People like graspable objects more when the objects are located on the dominant-hand side of their body or when the handles point toward their dominant-hand side. However, many products do not have handles or are not graspable (e.g., services, objects hanging on the wall). Can nongraspable products nevertheless benefit from the effects of appealing to viewers’ dominant hands? The present research shows that, yes, consumers respond more positively to nongraspable products if a haptic cue (an object that is graspable or suggestive of hand action) is located within the same visual field as the target and is positioned to appeal to the viewer’s dominant hand. This result is driven by the creation and transfer of perceived ownership from cue to target. These findings extend the use of haptic cues to nongraspable products and uncover the critical role played by perceived ownership, including its ability to transfer from one object to another located in the same visual field. Moreover, the current research demonstrates situations in which the use of haptic cues will not enhance response. VL - 57 UR - https://doi.org/10.1177/0022243719878390 CP - 1 U2 - a U4 - 143266633728 ID - 143266633728 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Increasing Shopper Trust in Retailer Technological Interfaces via Auditory Confirmation Y1 - 2019 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann A1 - Morrin,Maureen KW - Marketing JA - 2019 Northwest Marketing Research Symposium CY - Portland, OR U2 - c U4 - 194567452672 ID - 194567452672 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Increasing Shopper Trust in Retailer Technological Interfaces via Auditory Confirmation JF - Journal of Retailing Y1 - 2019 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann A1 - Morrin,Maureen KW - Marketing AB - This research examines the effects of sounds made by retail technological interfaces – self- checkout kiosks, credit card readers, mobile apps, websites – at point-of-sale. We propose that such sounds, retail transaction auditory confirmation (RTAC), increase trust in technological interfaces by providing auditory confirmation that stages of the checkout process have been successfully executed. Increased trust in technological interfaces leads to positive downstream consequences in the form of satisfaction and purchase intention. Visual and auditory distraction in the retail environment reduces trust, even when visual confirmation is provided, but synchronously provided audio-visual confirmation attenuates the negative effects of environment distraction. VL - 95 UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jretai.2019.10.006 CP - 4 U2 - a U4 - 143266664448 ID - 143266664448 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Auditory Feedback and the Shopping Experience Y1 - 2017 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann KW - Marketing JA - ACRA Annual Conference CY - Bloomington, MN U2 - c U4 - 144086097920 ID - 144086097920 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - How Product-Environment Brightness Contrast and Product Disarray Impact Consumer Choice in Retail Environments JF - Journal of Retailing Y1 - 2017 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann A1 - Morrin,Maureen A1 - Nordfalt,Jens KW - Marketing VL - 93 UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jretai.2017.03.003 CP - 3 U2 - a U4 - 143266607104 ID - 143266607104 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Positive Consumer Sensory Experiences During Economically Uncertain and Technology-Dependent Times Y1 - 2017 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann A1 - Mayor,Lauren A1 - Keech,Jessica A1 - Morrin,Maureen KW - Marketing JA - Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association (APA), Division 23, Society for Consumer Psychology CY - Washington, D.C. U2 - c U4 - 144087355392 ID - 144087355392 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Too Perfect to Touch: Shopper Reluctance to Disturb Neat Product Displays Y1 - 2016 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann KW - Marketing JA - American Collegiate Retail Association Annual Conference CY - Secaucus, NJ U2 - c U4 - 144085874688 ID - 144085874688 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - The Black Sheep of Visual Merchandising: Asymmetric Response to Multicolor Displays Y1 - 2015 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann A1 - Morrin,Maureen A1 - Nordfalt,Jens KW - Marketing JA - American Marketing Association/American Collegiate Retail Association Triennial Conference CY - Coral Gables, FL U2 - c U4 - 144085921792 ID - 144085921792 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - On the Other Hand…: Motor Fluency Effects Elicited by Unrelated Haptic Objects in Print Ads Y1 - 2015 A1 - Maille,Virginie A1 - Morrin,Maureen A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann KW - Marketing JA - Society for Consumer Psychology Winter Conference CY - Phoenix, AZ U2 - c U4 - 144085964800 ID - 144085964800 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Auditory Feedback and the Online Shopping Experience Y1 - 2014 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann KW - Marketing JA - Association for Consumer Research Conference CY - Baltimore, MD U2 - c U4 - 144085987328 ID - 144085987328 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Neatness Matters: The Effect of Display Neatness on Product Color Choice Y1 - 2014 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann A1 - Morrin,Maureen KW - Marketing JA - Understanding the Customer’s Sensory Experience Conference CY - Philadelphia, PA U2 - c U4 - 144086020096 ID - 144086020096 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Neatness Matters: The Effect of Display Neatness on Product Color Choice Y1 - 2014 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann KW - Marketing JA - 2014 Shopper Marketing: In-Store, Online, Social and Mobile Conference CY - Stockholm, Sweden U2 - c U4 - 144086042624 ID - 144086042624 ER - TY - HEAR T1 - Auditory Feedback Affecting the Online Shopping Experience Y1 - 2013 A1 - Reynolds-McIlnay,Ryann KW - Marketing JA - Pricing and Retailing Conference CY - Babson College, Babson Park, MA U2 - c U4 - 144086059008 ID - 144086059008 ER -