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Internet Advertising Falsity and Consumer Harm: A Moderated Mediation Analysis of Consumer Cognitive Processes and Consumer Vulnerability
Internet Advertising Falsity and Consumer Harm: A Moderated Mediation Analysis of Consumer Cognitive Processes and Consumer Vulnerability
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Internet Advertising Falsity and Consumer Harm: A Moderated Mediation Analysis of Consumer Cognitive Processes and Consumer Vulnerability
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Internet Advertising Falsity and Consumer Harm: A Moderated Mediation Analysis of Consumer Cognitive Processes and Consumer Vulnerability
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Internet Advertising Falsity and Consumer Harm: A Moderated Mediation Analysis of Consumer Cognitive Processes and Consumer Vulnerability
Internet Advertising Falsity and Consumer Harm: A Moderated Mediation Analysis of Consumer Cognitive Processes and Consumer Vulnerability
Journal Article

Internet Advertising Falsity and Consumer Harm: A Moderated Mediation Analysis of Consumer Cognitive Processes and Consumer Vulnerability

2026
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Overview
Internet advertising, while enabling unprecedented commercial reach, has become a pervasive vehicle for deceptive practices that inflict measurable harm on consumers. This study empirically investigates the structural relationships between internet advertising falsity and consumer harm by integrating analyses of the mediating role of consumer cognitive processes and the moderating role of consumer vulnerability within a unified structural framework. Survey data were collected from 600 adult consumers with online purchase experience in the Republic of Korea—an advanced digital economy characterized by exceptionally high mobile-commerce penetration, mature e-commerce infrastructure, and evolving digital consumer protection regulation—and analyzed using structural equation modeling (SEM) with AMOS 24.0, supplemented by Hayes’ PROCESS macro Model 59 for conditional process analysis. All 13 hypotheses were supported, although path magnitudes varied substantially across falsity dimensions and mediator pathways—with direct effects ranging from β = 0.156 (false scarcity) to β = 0.224 (performance exaggeration), and indirect effects dominated by the risk assessment distortion pathway. Among the four sub-dimensions of advertising falsity—factual misrepresentation, performance exaggeration, price deception, and false scarcity—performance exaggeration exerted the strongest direct effect on consumer harm. The three cognitive mediators—perceived advertising credibility, risk assessment distortion, and purchase decision pressure—all demonstrated significant partial mediation, with risk assessment distortion emerging as the most powerful indirect pathway. All four consumer vulnerability dimensions—digital literacy level, demographic vulnerability, prior victimization experience, and impulsive buying tendency—significantly moderated the falsity–harm relationship, with low-digital-literacy consumers experiencing approximately 1.7 times the adverse effect of high-literacy counterparts. Moderated mediation analysis revealed that the conditional indirect effect for the high-vulnerability group was approximately 2.3 times that of the low-vulnerability group, confirming that the cognitive harm mechanism intensifies systematically for vulnerable consumers. These findings advance consumer vulnerability theory in the digital context and offer evidence-based implications for consumer protection policy, platform governance, and digital literacy education.