UC Research Suggests Daydreaming Might Push Consumers to Spend Beyond Their Means

Life is a constant battle between being engaged with one’s surroundings and daydreaming.  Research at UC’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business explores the notion of that dreamy state-of-mind and whether drifting thoughts affect how people make buying decisions. Researchers found that price played a bigger role in purchase decision-making when consumers were engaged and paying attention to their environment as opposed to when their mind wandered, says Ryan Rahinel, assistant professor of marketing at the Lindner College of Business.

Rahinel’s research “Attention Modes and Price Importance: How Experiencing and Mind-Wandering Influence the Prioritization of Changeable Stimuli” with co-author Rohini Ahluwalia, professor of marketing at the Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota, will be published in the August issue of the

Journal of Consumer Research

.

Through a series of studies, Rahinel and Ahluwalia tested the price theory of one’s state of mind and the importance an attentive mind plays in consumer purchases. In one study, the researchers showed subjects an ad for an office chair with six different product attributes, including price. Through a questionnaire, researchers measured if participants were “experiencers” or “mind-wanderers.” Engaged consumers (called experiencers), as opposed to mind-wanderers, said that price was a more important factor in their final buying decision.

“Although their attention disposition did not affect whether they would actually buy the product, it did affect the importance of the attributes they used to come up with that decision,” Rahinel says.

In other studies, consumers were shown different prices for the same product.  Researchers discovered that patrons in an “experiencing mode” (vs. mind-wandering mode), responded more to different levels of price, but not other attributes. Results of the study imply that having more attention to spread one’s attention across a product’s many attributes paradoxically makes the mind prioritize attention to specific attributes.

“The possibility that objects in our environment can change tends to be more important when in an experiencing mode, and since price can change, it tends to attract more attention under those circumstances,” Rahinel says.

Rahinel says the results can be useful for marketers and consumers alike. For marketers, prices communicated in promotional materials will be favored more while consumers are in “experiencing mode” (such as while participating in sales presentations) versus a mind-wandering mode (such as watching TV or flipping through a magazine). For consumers, the findings suggest that reducing mind-wandering episodes may help one stay within a budget because when the mind roams, price consideration wanes.

Related Stories

1

Partnerships powered by philanthropy

December 11, 2025

Scott Dust, PhD, associate dean and Kirk and Jacki Perry Professor in Leadership, is leveraging the best of the University of Cincinnati Carl H. Lindner College of Business to strengthen local companies in the greater Cincinnati area and create new leadership opportunities for students.

2

Celebrating the newest Bearcats on Decision Day

December 11, 2025

The University of Cincinnati admits its newest Bearcats for Fall 2026. Interest in the university is at an all-time high with more than 35,000 applicants for admission. Decision Day was also a time to celebrate 10 new Marian Spencer Scholarship recipients.

3

Be careful when clicking “buy now, pay later”

December 10, 2025

When checking off your holiday lists, it’s hard to keep track of your budget. Sue Heilmayer, executive director of the University of Cincinnati’s Alphaugh Family Economics Center, spoke with Local 12 on the risks of relying on buy now, pay later apps to do your everyday spending.