Using an Attribute-Based DSS for
User-Customized Products Online: An Experimental Investigation
Arnold Kamis, Marios Koufaris, and
Tziporah Stern
Abstract
In the decision support systems iterature, most studies have
concentrated on the direct effects of use and design on decision
outcomes and user performance in the workplace. Fewer DSS
studies have integrated decision process variables, such as user
beliefs and attitudes, in their models. In this paper, we
examine the mediating role of decision process variables in the use
of an online customer DSS. We do so through an experimental
study of an alternative-based and an attribute-based DSS for product
customization by online customers. Using cognitive fit and
flow theories, we develop a theoretical model with four mediating
decision process variables (perceived usefulness, perceived ease of
use, perceived enjoyment, and perceived control) and two of their
antecedents: interface design (attribute-based versus
alternative-based) and task complexity (choice set size). Our
results show that the impact of DSS interface design on behavioral
intentions is fully mediated by perceived usefulness and perceived
enjoyment, although not by perceived control. Specifically, we
verify that users of an attribute-based DSS express higher perceived
usefulness and perceived enjoyment than users of an
alternative-based one. In addition, we find that task
complexity has an interesting relationship with usefulness and
enjoyment, both of which follow an inverted U-shaped curve as choice
set size increases. Finally, we find that for users of the
alternative-based DSS, perceived ease of use and perceived control
decrease as task complexity increases. However, the
attribute-based DSS alleviates that decline for both variables.
Among other contributions, our results indicate the importance of
including decision process variables when studying DSS as well as
the complex effect of task complexity on those variables. Our
study also provides some important guidelines for online companies
that provide customer DSS on their websites, especially the danger
of providing too many product choice options that can overwhelm
customers and harm their shopping experience.
Keywords: Decision
support systems, attribute-based decision support systems, decision
process, choice set size, task complexity, perceived control,
perceived ease of use, perceived usefulness, perceived enjoyment,
customization