Brain scans could be marketing tool of the future

Posted In: Policy & Industry

By EurekAlert

Thursday, March 4, 2010

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DURHAM, N.C. -- Using advanced tools to see the human brain at work, a new generation of marketing experts may be able to test a product's appeal while it is still being designed, according to a new analysis by two researchers at Duke University and Emory University.

So-called "neuromarketing" takes the tools of modern brain science, like the functional MRI, and applies them to the somewhat abstract likes and dislikes of customer decision-making.

Though this raises the specter of marketers being able to read people's minds (more than they already do), neuromarketing may prove to be an affordable way for marketers to gather information that was previously unobtainable, or that consumers themselves may not even be fully aware of, says Dan Ariely, the James B. Duke professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke.

In a perspective piece appearing online in the journal Nature Reviews Neuroscience , Ariely and Gregory S. Berns of Emory's departments of psychiatry, economics and neuropolicy, offer tips on what to look for when hiring a neuromarketing firm, and what ethical considerations there might be for the new field. They also point to some words of caution in interpreting such data to form marketing decisions.

Neuromarketing may never be cheap enough to replace focus groups and other methods used to assess existing products and advertising, but it could have real promise in gauging the conscious and unconscious reactions of consumers in the design phase of such varied products as "food, entertainment, buildings and political candidates," Ariely says.

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1 Comments

  • While I applaud the science behind neuromarketing, sometimes simpler is better. For the past 20 years, we've been conducting market research in microscopy, spectroscopy, and imaging, frequently on markets that don't exist yet and nearly always before the technology went to CadCam stage. In the early days, it was paper and pen; today, it's just the click of a mouse. As for interpreting the results, we've now successfully launched over 100 products based on this sort of data, dramatically bending the cost/time/competitive curve. I'd rather see this sort of technology put to more critical use, like helping to cure Alzheimers.
    Barbara Foster, President, The Microscopy & Imaging Place

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