In a clockless, windowless mall, which shopper signal gets weaker?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Shopping-time anchors
Shopping-time anchors ✓ — Right: clocks and daylight are external time anchors, so lacking them makes the outside day less salient during the trip. Retail psychology sources describe missing time cues as temporal distortion, and in-store decision research links time and aisle exposure with unplanned purchases. The payoff is that time is not just a background fact; it is a shopping constraint.
Outdoor mood cues — Almost: daylight can affect mood, so this is a tempting answer. But adding clocks to the stem points to something more specific than comfort or atmosphere: the shopper's sense of where the trip sits in the outside day. The mechanism is about bounded time, not simply feeling brighter or gloomier.
Weather comfort cues — Close, because windows can reveal weather and make a space feel more or less comfortable. But clocks plus daylight point to a different signal: where the trip sits in the outside day. The mechanism here is making the shopping interval feel less bounded.
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