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Brain Scans Predict Buying Behavior

by: Roger Dooley

Only a day ago, in our post Neuro-Hype, we lamented the abundance of brain scan hype and the dearth of research that examines real purchase behavior. As if on cue, Carnegie Mellon University released Researchers Use Brain Scans To Predict When People Will Buy. While we haven’t perused the full study details, which appear in Neuronin Neural Predictors of Purchases, the work seems to be some of the most useful and exciting neuromarketing and neuroeconomics research published to date:

Twenty-six adults participated in the study, in which they were given $20 to spend on a series of products that would be shipped to them. If they made no purchases, they would be able to keep the money. The products and their prices appeared on a computer screen that the participants viewed while lying in an fMRI scanner. The researchers found that when the participants were presented with the products, a subcortal brain region known as the nucleus accumbens that is associated with the anticipation of pleasure was activated. When the subjects were presented with prices that were excessive, two things happened: the brain region known as the insula was activated and a part of the brain associated with balancing gains versus losses - the medial prefrontal cortex - was deactivated.

Furthermore, by studying which regions were activated, the authors were able to successfully predict whether the study participants would decide to purchase each item. Activations of the regions associated with product preference and with weighing gains and losses indicated that a person would decide to purchase a product. In contrast, when the region associated with excessive prices was activated participants chose not to buy a product.

The researchers who authored the paper are Scott Rick and George Loewenstein of the Department of Social and Decisions Sciences at Carnegie Mellon; Brian Knutson and G. Elliott Wimmer of the Department of Psychology at Stanford; and Drazen Prelec at MIT’s Sloan School of Management.

It seems likely that this work will spark some creative thinking. The Market Psychology blog speculates in Excited about a Good Deal that Warren Buffet and other value investors may like stocks when their medial prefrontal cortex is activated. For neuromarketers, this looks like a ground-breaking study that will help establish the basis for fMRI-based evaluation of ads, price points, and other marketing variables. (We think it’s doubtful that Wal-Mart will install brain scanners as suggested by the Life of Learning blog. ;) ) We’ll report further on this work after we study the paper and gather more details.

Original Post: http://www.neurosciencemarketing.com/blog/articles/brain-scan-buying.htm

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2 Comments

Mark Earls said:

Please don't let 'em off so easy.

If only purchasing stuff was what we spent our lives doing...all these experiments assume i. individuals decide to act on their own ii. consumption/purchasing is both a separate and prime field of behaviour.

There's a good argument to suggest that we largely do what we do as result of the interaction (real or imagined) with other individuals and that moreover other folk are the the prime focus and content of our lives. If this is true - or at least half-true - then the gadget obsessed neuromarketers would be looking in the wrong place to understand the mechanisms underlying behaviour and decision making.

Oh, and in terms of science, could we not have an amnesty on small sample studies? While it's good to see somebody trying to find a link between the brain activity studied and the behaviour neuromarketing researchers are trying to predict in the first place, 26 subjects is still not exactly exhaustive...


Anita said:

I'd actually submit myself for real-time magnetic brainscans if I knew that I'd receive less, not more, advertisements. It seems like we keep going down a road of more and more advertisements, and less real products.

Soon, we'll have advertisements for advertisements ... actually, now that I think about it, isn't that called the Super Bowl?

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