CB ch. 3
sensing
(consumer perception phase 1) Immediate response to stimuli that have come into contact with one of the consumer's five senses, Necessary for learning
cognitive organization
(consumer perception phase 2) Process by which the human brain assembles sensory evidence into something recognizable
reacting
(consumer perception phase 3) End of the perceptual process, Occurs as a response or behavior, Includes physical and mental responses to the stimuli encountered
classical conditioning
(unintentional learning) a change in behavior that occurs simply through associating some stimulus with another stimulus that naturally causes a reaction (most famous experiment by Pavlov) ** (scenario about training a pet)
exposure, attention, comprehension
3 elements of consumer perception ** (which element comes first? :exposure)
learning
Change in behavior resulting from interaction between a person and a stimulus ** (different definition: question at the end of test)
JND (just noticeable difference)
Condition in which one stimulus is stronger than another so that one can notice that the two are not the same ** (definition)
perception
Consumer's awareness and interpretation of reality, Shapes learning and behavior ** (definition)
implicit memory
Memory for things that a person did not try to remember, Creates preattentive effects
sensing, organizing, reacting
The consumer perception process (3 steps) **
sensation
a consumer's immediate response to this information
product placements
a way of promoting specific products/brands by placing them in movies or tv shows so people remember that brand and relate it to the medium chosen (transformers camaro) **
sensory marketing
actively seeking to engage consumers' senses as the primary aspect of the value proposition
mere exposure effect
another way that consumers can lear unintentionally. consumers will prefer stimuli they have previously been exposed to over stimuli they haven't seen before
webster's law
as the intensity of the initial stimulus increases, a consumer's ability to detect differences between the two levels of the stimulus decreases ** (definition)
subliminal persuasion
behavior change induced or brought about based on subliminally processing a message
instrumental conditioning
behavior is conditioned through reinforcement-either punishment or rewards associated with undesirable or desirable behavior (positive reinforcers)
intentional learning
consumers set out to specifically learn information devoted to a certain subject
unintentional learning
consumers simply sense and react to the environment. learning without trying to learn, do not attempt to comprehend the information presented (classical conditioning and instrumental conditioning) ** (definition)
ways to enhance attention
intensity of stimuli, contrast, movement, surprising stimuli, size of stimuli, and involvement
selective distortion
interpret information in ways that are biased by their previously held benefits (perception) **
preattentive effects
learning that is developed in the absence of attention (implicit memory creates this)
explicit memory
memory for information one is exposed to, attends to, and applies effort to remember
conditioned stimulus
object or event that does not cause the desired response naturally but can be conditioned to do so by pairing with an unconditioned stimulus (the bell) **
mere association effect
occurs when meaning transfers between two unrelated stimuli that a consumer gets exposed to simultaneously
selective attention
paying attention to only certain stimuli (perception) **
exposure
process of bringing some stimulus within the proximity of a consumer so that it can be sensed by one of the five human senses **
selective perception
rather than processing all stimuli, consumers are selective in what they expose themselves to, what they attend to, and what (how) they comprehend (exposure, attention, distortion) **
unconditioned response
reponse that occurs naturally as a result of exposure to an unconditioned stimulus (salivation from the meat powder) **
consumer perception
represents a subjective reality, during the perceptual process, consumers are exposed to stimuli, devote attention to stimuli, and attempt to comprehend stimuli
JMD (just meaningful difference)
represents the smallest amount of change in a stimulus that would influence consumer consumption and choice **
conditioned response
response that results from exposure to a conditioned stimulus that was originally associated with the unconditioned stimulus (slobbering from the bell because dogs were trained) **
selective exposure
screening out most stimuli and exposing oneself to only a small portion of stimuli (perception) ** (removing stimuli to *submerse* yourself with only certain stimuli)
unconditioned stimulus
stimulus with which a behavioral response is already associated (meat powder that naturally lead to slobbering) **
absolute threshold
the minimum strength needed for a consumer to perceive a stimulus ** (definition)
attention
the purposeful allocation of information processing capacity toward developing an understanding of some stimulus **
subliminal processing
the way in which the human brain senses low strength stimuli,below the level of conscious awareness (unintentional learning)
comprehension
when consumers attempt to derive meaning from information they receive