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How Does Caffeine Shape the Way We Spend Money?

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Plus: Did you read this? The protein universe; treaties are mostly bad; and detecting ocean earthqua

Plus: Did you read this? The protein universe; treaties are mostly bad; and detecting ocean earthquakes. [View in browser]( | [Become a member]( August 02, 2022   Did a friend forward this? [Subscribe here](. Good Morning! Here’s this week’s One Question and related Nautilus stories—plus some of the top science news [READ NAUTILUS]( ONE QUESTION How Does Caffeine Shape the Way We Spend Money? INTERVIEW BY BRIAN GALLAGHER One question for [Dipayan Biswas](, Frank Harvey Endowed Professor of Marketing at the Muma College of Business, University of South Florida.   When we started looking into this, it was surprising that there hadn’t been any work linking caffeine consumption with shopping behavior. Caffeine is the most popular stimulant worldwide. It’s actually the most popular legally-available drug. Eighty five percent of Americans, including children, consume caffeine daily, which enhances our energetic arousal. So we wanted to know, when you are in a more energetic state, how does it affect your shopping behavior? We just published our [results]( in the Journal of Marketing. Our first study was at a store in France, just north of Paris, Reims. We offered the customers coming inside a random complimentary beverage—a coffee, espresso, or decaffeinated espresso. We got almost the same number of participants for each condition. On their way out, we asked them if we could see their receipts. We found that people who had caffeinated espresso spent more money. They also bought a higher number of items, not just more expensive items. A similar study of ours in Spain found the same pattern. So did multiple lab studies in the United States, where we gave participating undergrad students a caffeinated beverage or decaffeinated beverage before we sent them to a shopping website. We also tried to see if caffeinated beverages influenced the type of product people purchased. We ran a field study at a store in southern France—the same chain as the store in Reims. This time, along with noting the number of items and the amount of money spent, we also noted the type of item bought. We found that caffeine was affecting impulse purchases, mostly hedonic products. There was no effect for caffeine versus decaf for non-hedonic products. People weren’t buying more notepads or folders or pens or work-related stuff. It was more fun stuff. Our follow-up study in the lab found the same pattern. Interestingly, there’s a growing trend for caffeine being available to customers when they enter a store. Some stores are offering complimentary coffee, and some have coffee bars inside, like Barnes and Noble, Target, even Walmart. I don’t know if they have in-house research that shows maybe their sales go up when people have coffee. There is one documented case. I think it was Mercedes that had free coffee at one of their stores in Germany. They found—there could be other factors contributing—that overall sales were higher after they put in free coffee. I drink coffee in the morning. I’m more sensitive to the effects. If I drink coffee after 4:00pm, I’ll have a tough time going to bed. I’m one of those customers who would be in a really high energetic arousal state and end up spending more. Our effects show up for people who drink up to 2.2 cups on average per day. The people who drink five, six cups of coffee—and we had some of those in our data set—it doesn’t matter whether we give them coffee or not. In similar research, it was shown a few years ago that when you go shopping with an empty stomach, you end up spending more. I knew of that effect. I’ve been a victim. I’m a little bit more careful now.   Related Nautilus Stories   [PSYCHOLOGY]( [The Colors We Eat]( BY TOM VANDERBILT When it comes to food, color is money. [Continue reading →](   [HEALTH]( [Will Coffee Cure You or Kill You?]( BY JESS SCANLON Depending on whom you ask, coffee is either the next super food or the next public health hazard. [Continue reading →](   [NEUROSCIENCE]( [Noise Is a Drug and New York Is Full of Addicts]( BY SUSIE NEILSON As soon as the door slams, I slide to the floor in a cross-legged position and hold my breath.. [Continue reading →](   [NEUROSCIENCE]( [I Am a Heroin User. I Do Not Have a Drug Problem]( BY MARK MACNAMARA Carl Hart is a neuroscientist and Ziff Professor of Psychology at Columbia University—he was the first tenured African-American professor of sciences at Columbia. [Continue reading →](   [HEALTH]( [The Painful Wait for a Hangover Pill]( BY TROY FARAH From freezing showers to ingesting prickly pear to smoking joints, everyone has a home remedy for alcohol’s notorious afterglow: the hangover. [Continue reading →]( Experience the endless possibilities and deep human connections that science offers [SUBSCRIBE TO NAUTILUS](   [For Peace of Mind]( Protect your home with [SimpliSafe](, the award-winning home security system. Save 30% on any new system plus get a free indoor camera. [Shop Now](   DID YOU READ THIS? The Top Science News This Week   [DeepMind has Predicted the Structure of Almost Every Protein Known to Science]( The company’s AlphaFold system might be greatest thing to come out of the AI community for science. [MIT Technology Review→](   [International Treaties Have Mostly Failed to Produce Their Intended Effects]( Treaties are believed to be the best way countries can make commitments to each other. [Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences→](   [Undersea Internet Cables Can Detect Earthquakes—and May Soon Warn of Tsunamis]( Observing shockwaves underneath the ocean could reveal unknown physics at plate tectonic boundaries. [The New Yorker→](   [BECOME A SUBSCRIBER]( [A Surprise Delivered to Your Doorstep]( Your mystery issue of [Nautilus magazine](provides an experience of the endless possibilities and deep human connections that science offers. Discover deep, undiluted, narrative storytelling that brings science into [the most important conversations]( we are having today. [Order Yours Today](   [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( Copyright © 2022 NautilusNext, All rights reserved. You were subscribed to the newsletter from nautil.us. Our mailing address is: NautilusNext 360 W 36th Street, 7S, New York, NY 10018 To view in your browser, [click here]( . Don't want to hear from us anymore? Click here to [unsubscribe]( .

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