Browsing Category
Neuromarketing
General news and opinion in the field of using brain science in marketing
Art, Science, and Ads
Every human culture has developed some kind of art, and scientists puzzling over art's appeal are proposing a neuroscience-based explanation. Vilayanur Ramachandran of the University of San Diego's Center for Brain and Cognition, along…
Free Money? Just Say No!
I'm still catching up on the reading I missed during my extended trip (and posting hiatus) a few weeks ago, and one of the more interesting things I've run across is an article in the UK's Times Online, Why say no to free money? It's…
Cruise Marketing and Neuroeconomics
One of the most successful sectors in the travel industry has been cruising. Megalines like Carnival and others are building ever-bigger ships to handle the increased traffic and offer more amenities. There's no doubt that a good part of…
Food Ads and Marketing to “Cravers”
Last May, we posted Food Ads: How Brains Respond, which discussed research showing that images of food triggered a response in the brain’s reward centers. Now, as reported in the Seattle Times in Chocolate: Love at first bite or sight,…
“Neuroplanning” and Neuromarketing in the Czech Republic
The Prague Post, a popular English-language weekly in the Czech Republic, ran both an article, Picking Your Brain, and an opinion piece, On the brains (and ethics) of neuroplanning, on the topic of neuromarketing. The former covers the…
Calcium Sensors for Better Brain Imaging
Using fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging, to create colorful maps of brain activity has pervaded almost every area of neuroscience research, not to mention the fledgling field of neuromarketing. Conventional fMRI, though, has…
Warranties, Neuromarketing, and Neuroeconomics
There's a neuromarketing lesson in extended warranties. If you have purchased any kind of electronic product in the last few years, you were almost certainly offered an opportunity to extend the product's warranty. Despite the fact that…
Neuromarketing in Korea
We ran across this sketchy news item in Digital Chosunilbo, Korean Firms Turn to Neuromarketing. The article describes use of fMRI scans to aid the product development process:Korea?s largest cosmetics company Amorepacific asked Prof. Sung…
Neuroeconomics, Asymmetric Paternalism, and Marketing
How can neuroscience inform marketing? One example comes from the increasingly hot field of neuroeconomics: a practice called asymmetric paternalism. In New Yorker writer John Cassidy's superb neuroeconomics article, Mind Games: What…
Neuromarketing and Neuroeconomics Roundup
The nearly simultaneous release of a neuromarketing article, Brain Sells, in TIME Europe, and a neuroeconomics article, Mind Games, in the New Yorker, has generated a considerable amount of blog activity. (See our commentary, TIME Europe…