neuromarketing

neuromarketing
(noo.roh.MAR.kuh.ting)
n.
The neurological study of a person's mental state and reactions while being exposed to marketing messages. Also: neuro-marketing.
neuromarketer n.
Example Citations:
When we reached the M.R.I. control room, Clint Kilts, the scientific director of the BrightHouse Institute, was fiddling away at a computer keyboard. A professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Emory, Kilts began working with Meaux in 2001. Meaux had learned that Kilts and a group of marketers were founding the BrightHouse Institute, and she joined their team, becoming perhaps the world's first full-time neuromarketer. Kilts is confident that there will soon be room for other full-time careers in neuromarketing. "You will actually see this being part of the decision-making process, up and down the company," he predicted. "You are going to see more large companies that will have neuroscience divisions."
The BrightHouse Institute's techniques are based, in part, on an experiment that Kilts conducted earlier this year. He gathered a group of test subjects and asked them to look at a series of commercial products, rating how strongly they liked or disliked them. Then, while scanning their brains in an M.R.I. machine, he showed them pictures of the products again. When Kilts looked at the images of their brains, he was struck by one particular result: whenever a subject saw a product he had identified as one he truly loved — something that might prompt him to say, "That's just so me!" — his brain would show increased activity in the medial prefrontal cortex.
Kilts was excited, for he knew that this region of the brain is commonly associated with our sense of self. Patients with damage in this area of the brain, for instance, often undergo drastic changes in personality; in one famous case, a mild-mannered 19th-century railworker named Phineas Gage abruptly became belligerent after an accident that destroyed his medial prefrontal cortex. More recently, M.R.I. studies have found increased activity in this region when people are asked if adjectives like "trustworthy" or "courageous" apply to them. When the medial prefrontal cortex fires, your brain seems to be engaging, in some manner, with what sort of person you are. If it fires when you see a particular product, Kilts argues, it's most likely to be because the product clicks with your self-image.
— Clive Thompson, "There's a Sucker Born in Every Medial Prefrontal Cortex," The New York Times, October 26, 2003
KELLY: Marketers have used everything from focus groups and dream therapy to skin tests. Using science to map the unconscious mind of consumers is the latest trick, and it has some Ivy League backing. Neuromarketing was born here at Harvard University. In the late 1990's, marketing professor Gerry Zaltman and his associate began scanning people's brains for corporations. He's stopped that work now, and he's concentrating on another method [ ZMET] to probe the subconscious mind of consumers. ...
KELLY: Companies didn't want to talk to us about ZMET, and it remains a secret who's using neuromarketing. That doesn't surprise Allan Middleton.
MIDDLETON: Some of these techniques are controversial because they are trying to get at people's less than totally conscious and less than totally rational response. And in a way, in a lot of people's minds, that sends up signals of subliminal communication and manipulation.
— Margo Kelly, "The science of shopping," Marketplace (CBC TV), December 3, 2002
Earliest Citation:
The founders of the BrightHouse Institute for Thought Sciences in Atlanta believe the future of marketing research lies in something they call "neuromarketing," a technique that combines science and business.
BrightHouse Institute has begun using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a technology traditionally used in health care to create images of activity within the brain, to reveal how people feel about things, such as products and commercials, more accurately than those people can explain their feelings in focus groups and surveys.
— "Neuromarketing' firm launched by Atlanta ad veteran," Atlanta Business Chronicle, June 14, 2002
Related Words: Categories:
Without knowing how the mind works, how can you market effectively to it?
This is an important part of our human evolution - the findings are not just for business, but understanding how we think is a breakthrough for humanity as a whole.

New words. 2013.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Neuromarketing — is a new field of marketing that studies consumers sensorimotor, cognitive, and affective response to marketing stimuli. Researchers use technologies such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure changes in activity in parts of… …   Wikipedia

  • Neuromarketing — ist ein interdisziplinäres Forschungsgebiet und relativ neues und kontrovers diskutiertes Teilgebiet des Marketings, in welchem psychologische und neuro physiologische Erkenntnisse für das Marketing interpretiert werden. Es weist einen engen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • neuromarketing — UK US /ˈnjʊərəʊˌmɑːkɪtɪŋ/ US  /ˈnʊərəʊˌmɑrkɪtɪŋ/ noun [U] MARKETING ► the study of how people s brains react to advertising: »In the emerging field of neuromarketing, researchers study the human brain s decision making processes …   Financial and business terms

  • Neuromarketing — Le neuromarketing est l’application des connaissances issues de la recherche publique en neurosciences cognitives au marketing et à la communication. Le but de cette discipline émergente est de mieux comprendre les comportements des consommateurs …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Neuromarketing — El neuromarketing consiste en la aplicación de técnicas pertenecientes a las neurociencias al ámbito de la mercadotecnia, estudiando los efectos que la publicidad y otras acciones de comunicación tiene en el cerebro humano con la intención de… …   Wikipedia Español

  • neuromarketing — noun A marketing discipline that studies consumers sensorimotor, cognitive, and affective responses to marketing stimuli …   Wiktionary

  • neuromarketing — /njuroʊˈmakətɪŋ/ (say nyoohroh mahkuhting) noun marketing which employs neuroscience in devising strategies to make an impression on those targeted by an advertising campaign …  

  • neuromarketing —  n.m. Étude de l impact des messages publicitaires sur le cerveau …   Le dictionnaire des mots absents des autres dictionnaires

  • Marketing Olfativo — es una de las estrategias de posicionamiento más importantes en Mercadotecnia que está tomando un gran auge y este se ve presente en una nueva disciplina dentro el area de conocimiento que es es el Neuromarketing la cual es la encargada de… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Neuroeconomics — is an interdisciplinary field that seeks to explain human decision making, the ability to process multiple alternatives and to choose an optimal course of action. It studies how economic behavior can shape our understanding of the brain, and how… …   Wikipedia

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