Jorge Barraza’s research while affiliated with University of Southern California and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Average peak Immersion for sales associates in (A) the men’s store trended toward significance in its association with customer purchase amount (p = 0.07) without taking in account customer dwell time. The positive relationship did not hold in (B) the women’s store (p = 0.28).
The mediating effects of Peak Immersion on time and purchases depicting the coefficients for both paths. The top panel is the women’s store and the bottom panel is the men’s store. The upward sloping coefficient captures the relationship from Peak Immersion to Time, while the downward sloping coefficient is the Time to Purchase association. The horizontal coefficient is the direct effect of Peak Immersion on Purchases. ***indicates a p < 001 showing that both the direct and indirect relationships are statistically significant.
The contagion of neurologic Immersion predicts retail purchases
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2025

·

29 Reads

·

Kankana Ghosh

·

Jorge Barraza

·

Paul J. Zak

Consumers increasingly demand extraordinary experiences and businesses want to provide such experiences to build loyalty and increase customer lifetime value. One of the most significant aspects of consumer experiences is employee-customer interactions. We hypothesized that the value of customers’ experiences would be reflected in the neurophysiology of sales associates and that these data would predict eventual purchases. We tested this hypothesis by measuring neurologic Immersion of sales associates serving customers (N = 56) in a field study in two luxury retail stores with actual customers. A synthetic dataset was generated from these data and showed that sales associates’ peak Immersion was positively associated with the time customers spent shopping, which, in turn, positively scaled with how much customers spent. Estimating a machine learning model using sales associates’ peak Immersion predicted which customers purchased with between 64% and 80% accuracy. Our results demonstrate that the neurophysiologic Immersion of one person can be used to predict the behavior of another person with whom they are interacting even when their goals may not be perfectly aligned. Moreover, we have shown that such a field study is feasible with real customers who are spending nontrivial amounts of money (M = 323,range:323, range: 0–$2,734). More generally, measuring the contagion of Immersion from one side of an interaction may be an effective way to assess and improve the quality of social engagements of many types.

Download