Every click reveals a pattern of choice shaped by unseen psychological forces.
This book investigates how patterns of consumer choice emerge when modern marketing blends human psychology with digital technology, revealing the hidden mechanisms that shape decisions beyond superficial clicks and metrics. It explores how cognitive biases, emotional triggers, and AI driven personalization intertwine to create lasting influence.
First, the attention economy operates as a competitive system where relevance, emotion, and trust act as psychological triggers that determine whether a message breaks through constant noise. Second, digital platforms amplify these triggers through behavioral tracking and AI, enabling micro targeted messaging that aligns with individual cognitive shortcuts such as social proof, scarcity, and anchoring. Third, cyberpsychology shows that design elements such as color, layout, and interaction patterns further shape online behavior, turning passive scrolling into purposeful engagement when aligned with user motivations.
Together, these mechanisms create a feedback loop in which data from user responses refine psychological profiles, which in turn sharpen the relevance, emotion, and trust calculus. This process drives higher conversion rates while also raising ethical questions about the boundary between persuasion and manipulation in digital environments.
Felix Clarke
Felix Clarke is an English-language author specializing in history, technology, and cultural change. His books explore how innovation, political decisions, and shifting social values shape societies across different eras. His writing style combines detailed research with clear, engaging storytelling, making complex historical and contemporary topics accessible to a broad audience.
marketing psychology digital technology consumer behavior cognitive biases emotional triggers AI personalization attention economy