Ch 9- Learning, Memory, and Product Positioning
stimulus generalization
(rub off effect) occurs when a response to one stimulus is elicited by a similar but distinct stimulus (oreos taste good so oreo chocolate cones will taste good)
short term memory
-short lived (must be refreshed through maintenance rehearsal) -limited capacity (thought to only be able to hold five to nine bits of information) -where elaborative activities take place (use of previously stored values/attitudes to interpret/evaluate info in working memory)
aspects of flashbulb memories
-vividly detailed and highly enduring -contain specific situational detail -held with a high degree of confidence -perceived as special and different from other memories
What can marketers do to decrease competitive interference
Avoid competing advertising, strengthen initial learning, reduce similarity to competing ads, provide external retrieval cues
successful brand leverage generally requires that the original brand have a strong positive image and that the new product fit with the original product on at least one of four dimensions
Complement, Substitute, Transfer, Image
flashbulb memory (episodic)
acute memory for the circumstances surrounding a surprising and novel event
analogical reasoning
an inference process that allows consumers to use an existing knowledge base to understand a new situation or object
the most complex form of cognitive learning is:
analytical reasoning
reinforcement
anything that increases the likelihood that a given response will be repeated in the future is considered reinforcement. opposite is punishment
classical conditioning
attempts to create an association between a stimulus and some response
low-involvement learning
consumer has little or no motivation to process the material (consumer whose TV program is interrupted by a commercial they don't care about)
transfer
consumers see the new product as requiring the same manufacturing skills as the original
in conditioned learning, forgetting is often referred to as ____. in cognitive learning, forgetting is often referred to as_____.
extinction; retrieval failure
strength of learning is enhanced by six factors
importance, message involvement, mood, reinforcement, repetition, and dual coding
iconic rote learning
learning a concept or the association between two or more concepts in the absence of conditioning
_____ is the primary determinant of how material is learned
level of involvement
two aspects of forgetting that are of concern to marketers are
likelihood of forgetting and rate of forgetting
brand leverage
marketers capitalizing on brand equity by using an existing brand name for new products
another type of memory of interest to marketers is episodic memory (LTM):
memory of a sequence of events in which a person participated
scripts
memory of how an action sequence should occur, such as purchasing and drinking a soft drink to relieve thirst
most common application of operant conditioning
offer consistent-quality products so that the use of the product to meet a consumer need is reinforcing
mood
positive mood during the presentation of information such as brand names enhances learning
shaping
process of encouraging partial responses leading to the final desired response
pattern of associations round a particular concept is termed a
schema, or knowledge structure
dual coding
storing the same information in different ways (2 dandruff shampoo commercials with office theme and social theme)
explicit memory
the conscious recollection of an exposure event
high involvement learning
the consumer is motivated to process or learn the material (consumer reading PC magazine before purchasing a computer)
repetition
the more likely people are exposed to information or engage in a behavior, the more likely they are to learn and remember it
implicit memory
the non conscious retrieval of previously encountered stimuli
stimulus discrimination
the process of learning to respond differently to similar but distinct stimuli (separate brands from other brands)
importance
the value consumers place on the info to be learned
long term memory
unlimited, permanent storage
brand equity
value consumers assign to a brand above and beyond the functional characteristics of a product
message involvement
when a consumer is not motivated to learn the material, processing can be increased by causing the person to become involved with the message itself
memory interference
when consumers have difficulty retrieving a specific piece of info because other related info gets in the way
operant conditioning
attempts to create an association between a response and some outcome that serves to reinforce the response (trial focused)
marketers are most interested in semantic memory (LTM):
basic knowledge and feelings an individual has about a concept
substitute
the new product can be used instead of the original
image
the new product shares a key image component with the original
complement
the two products are used together
vicarious learning or modeling
using imagery to anticipate the outcome of various courses of action. common in both low and high involvement situations.