Neurophysiological Tools to Investigate Consumer’s Gender Differences during the Observation of TV Commercials

Abstract
Neuromarketing is a multidisciplinary field of research whose aim is to investigate the consumers’ reaction to advertisings from a neuroscientific perspective. In fact, there are high hopes that neuroimaging technology could cope with some of the unsolved problems that marketers face. In particular, the neuroscience field is thought to be able to reveal information about consumer preferences which are unobtainable through conventional methods, including submitting questionnaires to large samples of consumers, or performing psychological personal or group interviews. In this scenario, we performed an experiment in order to investigate cognitive and emotional changes of cerebral activity evaluated by neurophysiologic indices during the observation of several TV commercials. In particular, we recorded the electroencephalographic (EEG), galvanic skin response (GSR) and heart rate (HR) in a group of 28 healthy subjects during the observation of a series of TV advertisements that have been grouped by commercial categories. Comparisons of cerebral indices have been performed to highlight gender differences between commercial categories and scenes of interest of two specific commercials. Findings show how EEG methodologies, along with the measurements of autonomic variables such as skin conductance and heart rate, could be used to obtain hidden information to marketers not obtainable otherwise. Most importantly it was suggested how these tools could help to analyse the perception of TV advertisements and differentiate their production according to the consumer’s gender.
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Citation
Vecchiato G., Maglione A., Cherubino P., Wasikowska B., Wawrzyniak A., Latuszynska A., Latuszynska M., Nermend K., Graziani I., Leucci M., Trettel A., Babiloni : Neurophysiological Tools to Investigate Consumer’s Gender Differences during the Observation of TV Commercials, Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine 07/2014. Volume 2014 (2014), Article ID 912981, s. 1-12.
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