2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcps.2010.08.004
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Brands on the brain: Do consumers use declarative information or experienced emotions to evaluate brands?

Abstract: An fMRI study was conducted with unfamiliar and familiar (strong and weak) brands to assess linguistic encoding and retrieval processes, and the use of declarative and experiential information, in brand evaluations. As expected, activations in brain areas associated with linguistic encoding were higher for unfamiliar brands, but activations in brain areas associated with information retrieval were higher for strong brands. Interestingly, weak brands were engaged simultaneously in both processes. Most important… Show more

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Cited by 139 publications
(128 citation statements)
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“…Esch et al . () highlight the dichotomy of inferential needs across both practitioners and scientists as a significant methodological issue. In contrast to neuroscientists who may be interested primarily in mapping brain areas to mental processes, more applied researchers (e.g.…”
Section: Methodological Debates and Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Esch et al . () highlight the dichotomy of inferential needs across both practitioners and scientists as a significant methodological issue. In contrast to neuroscientists who may be interested primarily in mapping brain areas to mental processes, more applied researchers (e.g.…”
Section: Methodological Debates and Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neuropsychological research uses functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure the activation and functioning of various brain centres; this shows that the behaviour of an individual as a consumer is also reflected in the functioning of specific brain areas (Murray, 2007;Shiv, 2007). Recent studies (e.g., Glimcher, 2011;Esch et al, 2012;Santos et al, 2012;Shiv & Yoon, 2012) emphasise that when assessing brands the more active brain parts are those responsible for emotions, and less active ones are those responsible for receiving and processing information. In other words, when assessing which product to buy, people's brains process and transmit more messages related to emotional elements of the product, whereas the information about the characteristics of the product are not dominant.…”
Section: Neuropsychological Correlates Of Motivation and Emotionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When a branded product is new then there are few associations that a consumer can make about it, other than from its brand name. Over time new associations are formed based on marketing programmes and consumer experience of using the product (Esch et al, 2012, Misrah et al, 2014. This may lead to a situation where the actual brand name of an established product contributes little to the associations typically held about the branded entity and therefore now has little importance (Riezebos, 1994).…”
Section: Established Branded Productsmentioning
confidence: 99%