2012
DOI: 10.1093/scan/nss109
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Branding and a child’s brain: an fMRI study of neural responses to logos

Abstract: Branding and advertising have a powerful effect on both familiarity and preference for products, yet no neuroimaging studies have examined neural response to logos in children. Food advertising is particularly pervasive and effective in manipulating choices in children. The purpose of this study was to examine how healthy children’s brains respond to common food and other logos. A pilot validation study was first conducted with 32 children to select the most culturally familiar logos, and to match food and non… Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(77 citation statements)
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“…In addition, we were underpowered to determine the effects of brain response on laboratory intake, and thus, the lack of associations between brain response and intake at the test meals should be interpreted with caution. These exploratory analyses used a liberal threshold (P , 0.01) similar to the approaches used in previous studies (58,59). Because of recent arguments for the use of higher thresholds (i.e., P , 0.001) (60), we advocate for future investigations to apply more-stringent thresholds to potentially improve the cluster inference and control over false positives.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, we were underpowered to determine the effects of brain response on laboratory intake, and thus, the lack of associations between brain response and intake at the test meals should be interpreted with caution. These exploratory analyses used a liberal threshold (P , 0.01) similar to the approaches used in previous studies (58,59). Because of recent arguments for the use of higher thresholds (i.e., P , 0.001) (60), we advocate for future investigations to apply more-stringent thresholds to potentially improve the cluster inference and control over false positives.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Areas of the brain related to both reward and cognitive control have been shown to be activated in children in response to food commercials [97] and food logos [98,99], with obese children showing more pronounced responses to food logos (p<0.01) [98].…”
Section: Experimental Studies Using Premium Offersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of particular interest is the neural reward circuitry related to decisions about food, and the role of nutrition, brands, and labels (e.g., Bruce et al, 2014;Grabenhorst et al, 2013;Hutcherson, Plassmann, Gross, & Rangel, 2012;Linder et al, 2010). Much of this work is motivated by rising public health care costs partially attributed to the prevalence of obesity and other dietary related diseases (Flegal, Carroll, Kit, & Ogden, 2012;Moses et al, 2013) with an eye toward encouraging and marketing healthier foods in light of short-term desires for good taste and lower prices.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%