“…Results consistently show that price digits act as signals and consumers indeed change their purchasing behavior depending on a product's price (Coulter and Coulter, 2007;Macé, 2012;Schindler, 2006;Schindler and Wiman, 1989). This purchasing behavior may be explained by the level effect, consumers truncate least significant digit(s), by the image effect, certain trailing digits, 9 most commonly, are associated with discounts (Gedenk and Sattler, 1999;Stiving and Winer, 1997), or by price convenience, which make cash payment easier (Chenavaz et al, 2018;Karoubi and Chenavaz, 2015;Knotek, 2011). However, the effect may be a function of the overall product price, and the effect tends to diminish as price increases (Coulter and Coulter, 2005;Coulter and Norberg, 2009;Hackl et al, 2014).…”