“…Much more promising when it comes to neurodesign is the use of the various cognitive-neuroscience inspired approaches (what Senior et al, 2007, call “neuro” techniques). These include everything from the growing use of eye tracking (e.g., Blazquez, Velasco, Salgado-Montejo, & Spence, 2015; Clement, 2007; Gofman, Moskowitz, Fyrbjork, Moskowitz, & Mets, 2009; Juravle, Velasco, Salgado-Montejo, & Spence, 2015; Piqueras-Fiszman, Velasco, Salgado-Montejo, & Spence, 2013; Wedel & Pieters, 2007) through to the latest in behavioral tasks such as modified versions of the Implicit Association Test (e.g., Maison, Greenwald, & Bruin, 2004; Parise & Spence, 2012). The suggestion from those working in the field is that such neuroscience-inspired implicit behavioral testing approaches effectively overcome many of the limitations associated with subjective report (Mast & Zaltman, 2005).…”