skip to content

Faculty of Economics

CWPE & C-INET Cover

Helmers, C., Krishnan, P. and Patnam, M.

Attention and Saliency on the Internet: Evidence from an Online Recommendation System

CWPE1563

Abstract: Using high-frequency transaction-level data from an online retail store, we examine whether consumer choices on the internet are consistent with models of limited attention. We test whether consumers are more likely to buy products that receive a saliency shock when they are recommended by new products. To identify the saliency effect, we rely on i) the timing of new product arrivals, ii) the fact that new products are per se highly salient upon arrival, drawing more attention and iii) regional variation in the composition of recommendation sets. We find a sharp and robust 6% increase in theaggregate sales of existing products after they are recommended by a new product. To structurally disentangle the effect of saliency on a consumer’s consideration and choice decision, we use data on individual transactions to estimate a probabilistic choice set model. We find that the saliency effectis driven largely by an expansion of consumers' consideration sets.

Keywords: Limited attention, advertising, online markets

JEL Codes: D22 M30 K11 O34

Author links: Pramila Krishnan  

PDF: https://www.econ.cam.ac.uk/research-files/repec/cam/pdf/cwpe1563.pdf

Open Access Link: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.5781