articleJournal of AdvertisingDec 22, 2022Closed access

Authentically Fake? How Consumers Respond to the Influence of Virtual Influencers

Nanyang Technological University

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Abstract

Artificially created characters–virtual influencers–amass millions of followers on social media and affect digital natives’ engagement and decisionmaking in remarkable ways. Guided by the Uses and Gratification (U&G) approach and the Uncanny Valley Theory, this study seeks to understand this phenomenon. By looking into followers’ engagement with virtual influencers, this study identifies and conceptualizes six primary motivations–namely, novelty, information, entertainment, surveillance, esthetics, and integration and social interaction. Furthermore, we found that most followers perceive virtual influencers as uncanny and authentically fake. However, followers also express acceptance of their staged…

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