Consumers and service robots: Power relationships amid COVID-19 pandemic

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Date

2023

Authors

Merdin-Uygur, Ezgi
Ozturkcan, Selcen

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Publisher

Elsevier Sci Ltd

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Abstract

Robotics significantly influence retail and consumer services. The COVID-19 pandemic further amplified the rise of service robots (SRs) through social distancing measures. While robots are embraced widely by retailers and service providers, consumers' interaction with SRs remains an intriguing avenue of research across contexts. By taking a relative social power perspective, we report on a series of pre- and intra-COVID-19 studies. Our findings suggest that Gen-Z consumers hold more positive attitudes towards SRs perceived as lower in power vis-a-vis the human user. The longitudinal nature of our study also reveals that while attitudes towards such low-power services turned more negative during the COVID-19 pandemic, attitudes towards SRs that are high in power vis-a-vis the human user remained stable. In practical terms, while Gen-Z consumers hold more positive attitudes towards low-power robots, such service providers also face the challenge of relatively changeable attitudes towards them, especially during crisis times.

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Keywords

Choice, Impact, Service robots, Robots, Services, Future, COVID-19 pandemic, Generation Z, Choice, Gen-Z, Impact, Perceptions of power, Future, Sense of power

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Citation

12

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Source

Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services

Volume

70

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