Do online reviews reflect a product’s true perceived quality? An investigation of online movie reviews across cultures

This paper investigates when the reported average of online ratings matches the perceived average assessment of the population as a whole, including the average assessments of both raters and non-raters. We apply behavioral theory to capture intentions in rating online movie reviews in two dissimila...

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Main Authors: KOH, Noi Sian, HU, Nan, CLEMONS, Eric K.
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2010
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/8218
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sis_research-92212023-10-13T09:18:03Z Do online reviews reflect a product’s true perceived quality? An investigation of online movie reviews across cultures KOH, Noi Sian HU, Nan CLEMONS, Eric K. This paper investigates when the reported average of online ratings matches the perceived average assessment of the population as a whole, including the average assessments of both raters and non-raters. We apply behavioral theory to capture intentions in rating online movie reviews in two dissimilar countries – China and the United States. We argue that consumers’ rating behaviors are affected by cultural influences and that they are influenced in predictable ways. Based on data collected from IMDB.com and Douban.com, we found significant differences across raters from these two different cultures. Additionally, we examined how cultural elements influence rating behavior for a hybrid culture – Singapore. To study whether online consumer reviews are subjected to under-reporting bias, which is, consumers with extreme opinions are more likely to report their opinions than consumers with moderate reviews causing online reviews to be a biased estimator of a product’s true quality, we compare the consumer reviews posted online with those from an experimental study. Our results shows that under-reporting is more prevalent among US online network, thus online reviews are a better movie perceived quality proxy in China and Singapore than in the US. 2010-09-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/8218 info:doi/10.1016/j.elerap.2010.04.001 Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Online reviews Movie ratings Cross-cultural comparisons Under-reporting bias Computer Sciences E-Commerce
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Online reviews
Movie ratings
Cross-cultural comparisons
Under-reporting bias
Computer Sciences
E-Commerce
spellingShingle Online reviews
Movie ratings
Cross-cultural comparisons
Under-reporting bias
Computer Sciences
E-Commerce
KOH, Noi Sian
HU, Nan
CLEMONS, Eric K.
Do online reviews reflect a product’s true perceived quality? An investigation of online movie reviews across cultures
description This paper investigates when the reported average of online ratings matches the perceived average assessment of the population as a whole, including the average assessments of both raters and non-raters. We apply behavioral theory to capture intentions in rating online movie reviews in two dissimilar countries – China and the United States. We argue that consumers’ rating behaviors are affected by cultural influences and that they are influenced in predictable ways. Based on data collected from IMDB.com and Douban.com, we found significant differences across raters from these two different cultures. Additionally, we examined how cultural elements influence rating behavior for a hybrid culture – Singapore. To study whether online consumer reviews are subjected to under-reporting bias, which is, consumers with extreme opinions are more likely to report their opinions than consumers with moderate reviews causing online reviews to be a biased estimator of a product’s true quality, we compare the consumer reviews posted online with those from an experimental study. Our results shows that under-reporting is more prevalent among US online network, thus online reviews are a better movie perceived quality proxy in China and Singapore than in the US.
format text
author KOH, Noi Sian
HU, Nan
CLEMONS, Eric K.
author_facet KOH, Noi Sian
HU, Nan
CLEMONS, Eric K.
author_sort KOH, Noi Sian
title Do online reviews reflect a product’s true perceived quality? An investigation of online movie reviews across cultures
title_short Do online reviews reflect a product’s true perceived quality? An investigation of online movie reviews across cultures
title_full Do online reviews reflect a product’s true perceived quality? An investigation of online movie reviews across cultures
title_fullStr Do online reviews reflect a product’s true perceived quality? An investigation of online movie reviews across cultures
title_full_unstemmed Do online reviews reflect a product’s true perceived quality? An investigation of online movie reviews across cultures
title_sort do online reviews reflect a product’s true perceived quality? an investigation of online movie reviews across cultures
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2010
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sis_research/8218
_version_ 1781793935807479808