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Our study "The Longer the Better? The Interplay Between Review Length and Line of Argumentation in Online Consumer Reviews" has been accepted for presentation at the International Conference on Information Systems 2019 in Munich.

Our study "The Longer the Better? The Interplay Between Review Length and Line of Argumentation in Online Consumer Reviews" has been accepted for presentation at the International Conference on Information Systems 2019 in Munich. The study challenges the prevalent narrative in the academic literature that longer product reviews are uniformly perceived as more helpful.

Authors: Bernhard Lutz, Nicolas Pröllochs, Dirk Neumann

Abstract:

Review helpfulness serves as a focal point in understanding purchase decision-making processes on online retailer platforms. An overwhelming majority of previous works find longer reviews to be more helpful than short reviews. In this paper, we propose that longer reviews should not be assumed to be uniformly more helpful; instead, we argue that the effect depends on the line of argumentation in the review text. To test this idea, we use a large dataset of customer reviews from Amazon in combination with a state-of-the-art approach from natural language processing that allows us to study argumentation lines at sentence level. Our empirical analysis suggests that the frequency of argumentation changes moderates the effect of review length on helpfulness. Altogether, we disprove the prevailing narrative that longer reviews are uniformly perceived as more helpful. Our findings allow retailer platforms to improve their customer feedback systems and to feature more helpful product reviews.

 

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