- Feng-Chao Yang*
- Department of Accounting and Information Da-Yeh University, Taiwan
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17845605
This study
examines the factors influencing consumer adoption of 3D product visualization
in online shopping by extending the Technology Acceptance Model 2 (TAM2).
Survey data from 309 online shoppers were analyzed using regression techniques.
The results show that subjective norm enhances both image and perceived
usefulness, highlighting the continued relevance of social influence in digital
purchase decisions. Task relevance and perceived ease of use also positively
shape perceived usefulness, while both perceived usefulness and perceived ease
of use strongly predict purchase intention. Conversely, the result demonstrates
no significant effect, suggesting that experiential visualization tools may
rely on mechanisms beyond functional clarity. Online shopping experience does
not moderate the examined relationships, indicating consistent behavioral
patterns across user groups. The study contributes to TAM2 by identifying
boundary conditions relevant to interactive product visualization and offers
practical insights for improving interface design, social proof strategies, and
consumer engagement.

