Deck 3: Perception

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Question
Sensory marketing has proven to be largely effective as a marketing approach.
Use Space or
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Question
The process by which people select, organize, and interpret sensations is called ________.

A) consumption
B) perception
C) adaption
D) application
Question
A process by which the way a word sounds influences our assumptions about a product's attributes is called sound symbolism.
Question
Because the brain's capacity to process information is limited, consumers are very selective about what they pay attention to and tend to select stimuli that relate to their current needs. This type of perceptual filter is called ________.

A) perceptual defense
B) perceptual vigilance
C) subliminal perception
D) adaptation
Question
Colors look duller to older people, which is why they prefer white and other bright tones.
Question
Size, color, position, and novelty are all strategies for creating which of the following?

A) contrast
B) adaptation
C) vigilance
D) thresholds
Question
The sensory characteristic of a product that sticks with consumers, helping them to remember the product in a unique way, is called the ________.

A) phoneme
B) schema
C) sensory input
D) interpretant
Question
Processing information from more than one medium at a time is known as ________.

A) multitasking
B) perceptual hyperactivity
C) perceptual chunking
D) interactive attention
Question
Which term refers to sensations that subtly influence how we think about a product?

A) Perception
B) Hedonic consumption
C) Context effect
D) Respondents
Question
In the Western Countries the color black is often associated with ________.

A) mourning
B) innocence
C) fear
D) cult
Question
Research has indicated that the color ________ creates feelings of arousal and stimulates appetite.

A) blue
B) red
C) yellow
D) black
Question
Companies that think carefully about the impact of sensations on product experiences are practicing ________.

A) hedonic consumption
B) need marketing
C) want marketing
D) sensory marketing
Question
When Coke weaves a sound into a piece of music, the advertisement is using ________.

A) sound marketing
B) audio watermarking
C) sound watermarking
D) music marketing
Question
The average adult is exposed to about 3,500 pieces of advertising information every single day, far more information than they can or are willing to process. Consumers who are exposed to more information than they can process are in a state of ________.

A) advertising bombardment
B) sensory overload
C) sensory shifting
D) circuit overcapacity
Question
Mary Nabholz travels the same way to work every day. She notices advertisements in store windows when the ads first go up. However, after a few days, Mary no longer pays any attention to these ads because they have become familiar. Which of the following is affecting Mary's response to the ads?

A) perceptual vigilance
B) perceptual defense
C) contrast
D) adaptation
Question
The ________ sense appears to moderate the relationship between product experience and judgment confidence.

A) sound
B) haptic
C) taste
D) sight
Question
A philosophy that translates customers' feelings into design elements is called ________ engineering.

A) Kansei
B) Sigma
C) relationship
D) reverse
Question
As manufacturing costs decrease and the amount of products that people accumulate goes up, consumers increasingly want to buy things that will provide ________ value.

A) hedonic
B) Gestalt
C) embedded
D) referent
Question
As people's income rise, they are more likely to prefer additional experiences over additional possessions.
Question
Which term refers to the process by which the way a word sounds influences the listener's assumptions about what the word describes?

A) sound symbolism
B) audio watermarking
C) semiotics
D) the principle of similarity
Question
A stage in the perception process is ________.

A) exposure
B) attention
C) interpretation
D) all of the above
Question
A billboard is positioned beside a busy highway. However, the merchant that has purchased the billboard complains that no response is being generated by his advertising message. Upon closer inspection, the billboard company determines that the typeface used is too small to be effectively read by a motorist going 60+ mph on the highway. Which of the following sensory thresholds would be most appropriate to explain the failure of this advertisement to connect with motorists?

A) the intensity threshold
B) the differential threshold
C) the absolute threshold
D) the relative threshold
Question
According to the ________ factor leading to adaptation, simple stimuli habituate because they do not require attention to detail.

A) exposure
B) vigilance
C) discrimination
D) relevance
Question
When a stimulus comes within the range of someone's sensory receptor, a(n) ________ occurs.

A) just noticeable difference
B) retention
C) subliminal suggestion
D) exposure
Question
Ben Perez is driving along a mountain road. In the distance, he sees a road crew working on a fallen tree that has blocked the highway. When Ben first sees the road crew, which of the following perceptual processes has been engaged?

A) exposure
B) attention
C) adaptation
D) interpretation
Question
Explain the term "trade dress" and give an example.
Question
Haptic senses refers to a consumer's sense of touch.
Question
According to Weber's Law, the ________ the initial stimulus, the greater a change must be for people to notice the change.

A) more common
B) stronger
C) weaker
D) more unusual
Question
Research has shown that Kansei engineering can be an effective way to design products. Explain how Kansei engineering works and give an illustration that demonstrates your understanding.
Question
If a consumer chooses not to perceive, they are reaching a(n) ________.

A) just noticeable difference
B) differential threshold
C) sensory threshold
D) absolute threshold
Question
Which term refers to perception that is below the level of the consumer's awareness?

A) perceptual vigilance
B) relative difference
C) subliminal perception
D) attention
Question
One of the principles of psychophysics is that change in the physical environment is not always matched by equal changes perceptually. If Madison Wilson were creating a new drink, what would psychophysics tell her?

A) She could make the drink twice as sweet by adding twice the amount of sugar.
B) She would need to research how the perception of "sweetness" changed by the amount of sugar added.
C) She would need to look at the subliminal aspects of "sweetness."
D) She would need to create promotions to tell customer's how "sweet" the new drink is.
Question
Which of the following is most relevant to a company that wants to position a new brand on price leadership?

A) Gestalt psychology
B) Weber's Law
C) augmented reality
D) the closure principle
Question
The minimum difference that can be detected between two stimuli is known as the ________.

A) absolute threshold
B) gradual differentiation
C) just noticeable difference
D) graded difference
Question
Some color combinations can become so associated with a company that the corporation may be granted exclusive use of these colors.
Question
The ________ threshold refers to the ability of a sensory system to detect changes between two stimuli.

A) absolute
B) differential
C) intensity
D) relative
Question
Advertising has increasingly become less effective because of increased clutter. How can advertisers use contrast to cut through the clutter?
Question
Alba is dedicated to fitness and nutrition. She rarely eats fast food because of the high calories and low nutritional value. Though Alba is exposed to many advertising messages from fast food restaurants each day, she rarely processes these messages. This is an example of subliminal perception.
Question
According to the exposure factor leading to adaptation, frequently encountered stimuli ________ as the rate of exposure increases.

A) adapt
B) habituate
C) prime
D) overload
Question
A retailer decides to reduce the price of a sport coat that normally costs $98. The reduction in price is $3. The storeowner believes that the reduction will catch the eye of the value shopper. If the sport coat does not sell, the retailer might wish to consider which of the following before making another price change?

A) subliminal perception
B) the figure-ground principle
C) the golden triangle
D) Weber's Law
Question
Tiny figures that are inserted in magazine advertising via high-speed photography or airbrushing are called ________.

A) embeds
B) hidden images
C) attention images
D) novelties
Question
Which of the following most accurately reflects the current thinking about the use of subliminal perception in marketing promotion and advertising?

A) Subliminal messages are below the threshold of perception, so they cannot be utilized in marketing.
B) Subliminal ads can be effective, but customers do not like them; therefore marketers avoid them.
C) There is some evidence that subliminal perception can have limited effects, but the effects are not specific enough to make subliminal messages effective in advertising.
D) It comes down to a matter of attention. If a viewer will pay enough attention to a subliminal message, then it can have specific effects.
Question
When we ________ products, we evaluate them using schemas we typically apply to classify people.

A) prime
B) filter
C) imprint
D) anthropomorphize
Question
Unlike computers, people do not passively process whatever information happens to be present.
Question
Interpretation is the last stage of the perceptual process.
Question
A Green Giant ad campaign relied on the ________ when it used a redesigned package for Green Giant products that showed the Green Giant in a "sea of green." It was felt that the Green Giant products were not unified under a common design banner.

A) similarity principle
B) figure-ground principle
C) subliminal principle
D) closure principle
Question
The first step in the perception process is called exposure.
Question
The absolute threshold is an important consideration when a marketing stimuli is designed.
Question
All consumers carry schemata in their minds when they enter the marketplace. According to the principles of perceptual vigilance and defense, a marketer should be careful to create a promotion for the new product that ________.

A) conforms to the consumers' schemata
B) violates the customers' schemata
C) requires that customers defend their current views about the product category
D) is simple and easy to understand
Question
________ refers to the extent to which processing activity is devoted to a particular stimulus.

A) Subliminal perception
B) Sensory marketing
C) An embed
D) Attention
Question
The ________ perspective is best summarized by the saying "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts."

A) Freudian traits analysis
B) Weber's law
C) Gestalt
D) Kansei
Question
When Coca-Cola embeds sexual images in their advertising, they are using ________.

A) sensory marketing
B) attention marketing
C) subliminal perception
D) threshold marketing
Question
In the past, ketchup formed an unbecoming "scum" on its surface when exposed to air, so manufacturers created the traditionally shaped ketchup bottle with the narrow opening. When chemicals were developed to reduce the oxidation, it was then possible to sell ketchup in more conveniently shaped containers. Customers, however, rejected bottles that didn't have the traditional ketchup shape. This is an example of the power of ________ in the marketplace.

A) sensory overload
B) thresholds
C) hyperreality
D) schema
Question
Nadia Ali loves the feel of her new sweater and the smell of her leather car seats on a crisp fall day. As she passes a billboard, she sees an ad for Baskin-Robbins ice cream and immediately does a U-turn into the shopping center where she knows the famous ice cream store is located. In the above example, Nadia is responding to ________.

A) sensory inputs emanating from the external environment
B) sensory inputs emanating from the internal environment
C) emotional outputs
D) decision sequences dictated by sensory outputs
Question
A consumer's ability to detect a difference between two stimuli is relative to the strength of those stimuli.
Question
Perception refers to the immediate response of our sensory receptors to basic stimuli.
Question
________ refers to the meanings we assign to sensory stimuli.

A) Contrast
B) Perception
C) Interpretation
D) Cues
Question
When consumers see only what they want to see-don't see what they don't want to see it is called ________.

A) perceptual retention
B) perceptual contrast
C) perceptual defense
D) perceptual attention
Question
When consumers are exposed to far too much information they are experiencing sensory overload.
Question
Our brains tend to relate incoming sensations to others already in memory, based on some fundamental organizational principles. These principles derive from ________, a school of thought that maintains that people interpret meaning from the totality of a set of stimuli rather than from any individual stimulus.

A) Freudian psychology
B) Gestalt psychology
C) Simmons psychology
D) the Covey approach
Question
Describe multitasking and explain why multitasking is a concern for marketers?
Question
A(n) ________ is a sign that relates to a product by either conventional or agreed-on associations.

A) icon
B) index
C) symbol
D) schema
Question
What is the difference between sensation and perception?
Question
Individuals have different absolute thresholds for visual and aural stimuli. This fact supports the statement that subliminal advertising would need to be tailored to the individual in order to be effective.
Question
Consumers are more likely to be aware of stimuli that relate to their current needs. This is an example of perceptual vigilance.
Question
At a business meeting, a consultant states that "perception is reality, because a customer never works with the actual product, but only with his or her perception of that product." In a university lab, researchers determine that when a rat is looking at a brightly colored rectangle, a close inspection of the rat's optic nerves (that connect the eyes to the cortex) show no visible change from when the rat is looking at a green circle; however electrodes placed in the nerve show a different pattern of transmitted codes. How are these two events related, and what does this relationship tell us about perception?
Question
When consumers become aware of stimuli that relate to their currents needs, they are practicing perceptual vigilance.
Question
Blind taste tests in the 1980s showed that most Coke drinkers preferred a cola that was sweeter than the current product. When Coca-Cola attempted to make its product sweeter, brand loyal customers revolted and demanded the old product be returned. Explain how Coca-Cola marketers could have used the principles of psychophysics to introduce the new Coke without creating these problems.
Question
As people age, their sensory detection abilities decline. The Baby Boomers are fast reaching retirement age. How will advertisements in the future likely change sensory stimuli to accommodate this changing demographic?
Question
The location of a product's image on a package influences the way our brains make sense of it; we perceive objects lower in a frame to be heavier than objects higher in the frame and objects on the right side of a frame heavier than those on the left side of the frame.
Question
According to the retailer's rule of thumb based on the closure principle, when a sale catalog is created, the prices (on average) of the products in the catalog should be reduced by about 20 percent.
Question
Evaluate the effectiveness of subliminal persuasion and messages in marketing. Be sure to demonstrate your knowledge of the evidence about the success of the technique as presented in the text.
Question
What is a just noticeable difference (j.n.d)?
Question
Novelty in the form of interruption intensifies our experiences, increases our enjoyment of pleasant stimuli and amplifies our dislike of unpleasant stimuli.
Question
Define perceptual selection and describe the types of filters that prevent clear perception and the reception of marketing stimuli.
Question
Explain the closure principle.
Question
Weber's Law states that the intensity of the stimulus is greater if its duration is increased.
Question
Outline and explain the parts of the perceptual process that would allow a shopper to recognize a ketchup bottle in a supermarket.
Question
As a personal selection factor, adaptation is seen as the degree to which consumers continue to notice a stimulus over time. Five factors can lead to adaptation. List and briefly describe the connection with adaptation.
Question
You can understand the following uniquely-printed sentence because of the Gestalt principle of closure. Perception is imptant in undrstdng consmr bhavr.
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Deck 3: Perception
1
Sensory marketing has proven to be largely effective as a marketing approach.
True
2
The process by which people select, organize, and interpret sensations is called ________.

A) consumption
B) perception
C) adaption
D) application
B
3
A process by which the way a word sounds influences our assumptions about a product's attributes is called sound symbolism.
True
4
Because the brain's capacity to process information is limited, consumers are very selective about what they pay attention to and tend to select stimuli that relate to their current needs. This type of perceptual filter is called ________.

A) perceptual defense
B) perceptual vigilance
C) subliminal perception
D) adaptation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Colors look duller to older people, which is why they prefer white and other bright tones.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Size, color, position, and novelty are all strategies for creating which of the following?

A) contrast
B) adaptation
C) vigilance
D) thresholds
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The sensory characteristic of a product that sticks with consumers, helping them to remember the product in a unique way, is called the ________.

A) phoneme
B) schema
C) sensory input
D) interpretant
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Processing information from more than one medium at a time is known as ________.

A) multitasking
B) perceptual hyperactivity
C) perceptual chunking
D) interactive attention
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which term refers to sensations that subtly influence how we think about a product?

A) Perception
B) Hedonic consumption
C) Context effect
D) Respondents
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
In the Western Countries the color black is often associated with ________.

A) mourning
B) innocence
C) fear
D) cult
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Research has indicated that the color ________ creates feelings of arousal and stimulates appetite.

A) blue
B) red
C) yellow
D) black
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Companies that think carefully about the impact of sensations on product experiences are practicing ________.

A) hedonic consumption
B) need marketing
C) want marketing
D) sensory marketing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
When Coke weaves a sound into a piece of music, the advertisement is using ________.

A) sound marketing
B) audio watermarking
C) sound watermarking
D) music marketing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The average adult is exposed to about 3,500 pieces of advertising information every single day, far more information than they can or are willing to process. Consumers who are exposed to more information than they can process are in a state of ________.

A) advertising bombardment
B) sensory overload
C) sensory shifting
D) circuit overcapacity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Mary Nabholz travels the same way to work every day. She notices advertisements in store windows when the ads first go up. However, after a few days, Mary no longer pays any attention to these ads because they have become familiar. Which of the following is affecting Mary's response to the ads?

A) perceptual vigilance
B) perceptual defense
C) contrast
D) adaptation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The ________ sense appears to moderate the relationship between product experience and judgment confidence.

A) sound
B) haptic
C) taste
D) sight
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
A philosophy that translates customers' feelings into design elements is called ________ engineering.

A) Kansei
B) Sigma
C) relationship
D) reverse
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
As manufacturing costs decrease and the amount of products that people accumulate goes up, consumers increasingly want to buy things that will provide ________ value.

A) hedonic
B) Gestalt
C) embedded
D) referent
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
As people's income rise, they are more likely to prefer additional experiences over additional possessions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Which term refers to the process by which the way a word sounds influences the listener's assumptions about what the word describes?

A) sound symbolism
B) audio watermarking
C) semiotics
D) the principle of similarity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A stage in the perception process is ________.

A) exposure
B) attention
C) interpretation
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
A billboard is positioned beside a busy highway. However, the merchant that has purchased the billboard complains that no response is being generated by his advertising message. Upon closer inspection, the billboard company determines that the typeface used is too small to be effectively read by a motorist going 60+ mph on the highway. Which of the following sensory thresholds would be most appropriate to explain the failure of this advertisement to connect with motorists?

A) the intensity threshold
B) the differential threshold
C) the absolute threshold
D) the relative threshold
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
According to the ________ factor leading to adaptation, simple stimuli habituate because they do not require attention to detail.

A) exposure
B) vigilance
C) discrimination
D) relevance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
When a stimulus comes within the range of someone's sensory receptor, a(n) ________ occurs.

A) just noticeable difference
B) retention
C) subliminal suggestion
D) exposure
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Ben Perez is driving along a mountain road. In the distance, he sees a road crew working on a fallen tree that has blocked the highway. When Ben first sees the road crew, which of the following perceptual processes has been engaged?

A) exposure
B) attention
C) adaptation
D) interpretation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Explain the term "trade dress" and give an example.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Haptic senses refers to a consumer's sense of touch.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
According to Weber's Law, the ________ the initial stimulus, the greater a change must be for people to notice the change.

A) more common
B) stronger
C) weaker
D) more unusual
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Research has shown that Kansei engineering can be an effective way to design products. Explain how Kansei engineering works and give an illustration that demonstrates your understanding.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
If a consumer chooses not to perceive, they are reaching a(n) ________.

A) just noticeable difference
B) differential threshold
C) sensory threshold
D) absolute threshold
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which term refers to perception that is below the level of the consumer's awareness?

A) perceptual vigilance
B) relative difference
C) subliminal perception
D) attention
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
One of the principles of psychophysics is that change in the physical environment is not always matched by equal changes perceptually. If Madison Wilson were creating a new drink, what would psychophysics tell her?

A) She could make the drink twice as sweet by adding twice the amount of sugar.
B) She would need to research how the perception of "sweetness" changed by the amount of sugar added.
C) She would need to look at the subliminal aspects of "sweetness."
D) She would need to create promotions to tell customer's how "sweet" the new drink is.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Which of the following is most relevant to a company that wants to position a new brand on price leadership?

A) Gestalt psychology
B) Weber's Law
C) augmented reality
D) the closure principle
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The minimum difference that can be detected between two stimuli is known as the ________.

A) absolute threshold
B) gradual differentiation
C) just noticeable difference
D) graded difference
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Some color combinations can become so associated with a company that the corporation may be granted exclusive use of these colors.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The ________ threshold refers to the ability of a sensory system to detect changes between two stimuli.

A) absolute
B) differential
C) intensity
D) relative
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Advertising has increasingly become less effective because of increased clutter. How can advertisers use contrast to cut through the clutter?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Alba is dedicated to fitness and nutrition. She rarely eats fast food because of the high calories and low nutritional value. Though Alba is exposed to many advertising messages from fast food restaurants each day, she rarely processes these messages. This is an example of subliminal perception.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
According to the exposure factor leading to adaptation, frequently encountered stimuli ________ as the rate of exposure increases.

A) adapt
B) habituate
C) prime
D) overload
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
A retailer decides to reduce the price of a sport coat that normally costs $98. The reduction in price is $3. The storeowner believes that the reduction will catch the eye of the value shopper. If the sport coat does not sell, the retailer might wish to consider which of the following before making another price change?

A) subliminal perception
B) the figure-ground principle
C) the golden triangle
D) Weber's Law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Tiny figures that are inserted in magazine advertising via high-speed photography or airbrushing are called ________.

A) embeds
B) hidden images
C) attention images
D) novelties
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Which of the following most accurately reflects the current thinking about the use of subliminal perception in marketing promotion and advertising?

A) Subliminal messages are below the threshold of perception, so they cannot be utilized in marketing.
B) Subliminal ads can be effective, but customers do not like them; therefore marketers avoid them.
C) There is some evidence that subliminal perception can have limited effects, but the effects are not specific enough to make subliminal messages effective in advertising.
D) It comes down to a matter of attention. If a viewer will pay enough attention to a subliminal message, then it can have specific effects.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
When we ________ products, we evaluate them using schemas we typically apply to classify people.

A) prime
B) filter
C) imprint
D) anthropomorphize
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Unlike computers, people do not passively process whatever information happens to be present.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Interpretation is the last stage of the perceptual process.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
A Green Giant ad campaign relied on the ________ when it used a redesigned package for Green Giant products that showed the Green Giant in a "sea of green." It was felt that the Green Giant products were not unified under a common design banner.

A) similarity principle
B) figure-ground principle
C) subliminal principle
D) closure principle
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The first step in the perception process is called exposure.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
The absolute threshold is an important consideration when a marketing stimuli is designed.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
All consumers carry schemata in their minds when they enter the marketplace. According to the principles of perceptual vigilance and defense, a marketer should be careful to create a promotion for the new product that ________.

A) conforms to the consumers' schemata
B) violates the customers' schemata
C) requires that customers defend their current views about the product category
D) is simple and easy to understand
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
________ refers to the extent to which processing activity is devoted to a particular stimulus.

A) Subliminal perception
B) Sensory marketing
C) An embed
D) Attention
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
The ________ perspective is best summarized by the saying "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts."

A) Freudian traits analysis
B) Weber's law
C) Gestalt
D) Kansei
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 91 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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52
When Coca-Cola embeds sexual images in their advertising, they are using ________.

A) sensory marketing
B) attention marketing
C) subliminal perception
D) threshold marketing
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53
In the past, ketchup formed an unbecoming "scum" on its surface when exposed to air, so manufacturers created the traditionally shaped ketchup bottle with the narrow opening. When chemicals were developed to reduce the oxidation, it was then possible to sell ketchup in more conveniently shaped containers. Customers, however, rejected bottles that didn't have the traditional ketchup shape. This is an example of the power of ________ in the marketplace.

A) sensory overload
B) thresholds
C) hyperreality
D) schema
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54
Nadia Ali loves the feel of her new sweater and the smell of her leather car seats on a crisp fall day. As she passes a billboard, she sees an ad for Baskin-Robbins ice cream and immediately does a U-turn into the shopping center where she knows the famous ice cream store is located. In the above example, Nadia is responding to ________.

A) sensory inputs emanating from the external environment
B) sensory inputs emanating from the internal environment
C) emotional outputs
D) decision sequences dictated by sensory outputs
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55
A consumer's ability to detect a difference between two stimuli is relative to the strength of those stimuli.
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56
Perception refers to the immediate response of our sensory receptors to basic stimuli.
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57
________ refers to the meanings we assign to sensory stimuli.

A) Contrast
B) Perception
C) Interpretation
D) Cues
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58
When consumers see only what they want to see-don't see what they don't want to see it is called ________.

A) perceptual retention
B) perceptual contrast
C) perceptual defense
D) perceptual attention
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59
When consumers are exposed to far too much information they are experiencing sensory overload.
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60
Our brains tend to relate incoming sensations to others already in memory, based on some fundamental organizational principles. These principles derive from ________, a school of thought that maintains that people interpret meaning from the totality of a set of stimuli rather than from any individual stimulus.

A) Freudian psychology
B) Gestalt psychology
C) Simmons psychology
D) the Covey approach
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61
Describe multitasking and explain why multitasking is a concern for marketers?
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62
A(n) ________ is a sign that relates to a product by either conventional or agreed-on associations.

A) icon
B) index
C) symbol
D) schema
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63
What is the difference between sensation and perception?
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64
Individuals have different absolute thresholds for visual and aural stimuli. This fact supports the statement that subliminal advertising would need to be tailored to the individual in order to be effective.
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65
Consumers are more likely to be aware of stimuli that relate to their current needs. This is an example of perceptual vigilance.
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66
At a business meeting, a consultant states that "perception is reality, because a customer never works with the actual product, but only with his or her perception of that product." In a university lab, researchers determine that when a rat is looking at a brightly colored rectangle, a close inspection of the rat's optic nerves (that connect the eyes to the cortex) show no visible change from when the rat is looking at a green circle; however electrodes placed in the nerve show a different pattern of transmitted codes. How are these two events related, and what does this relationship tell us about perception?
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67
When consumers become aware of stimuli that relate to their currents needs, they are practicing perceptual vigilance.
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68
Blind taste tests in the 1980s showed that most Coke drinkers preferred a cola that was sweeter than the current product. When Coca-Cola attempted to make its product sweeter, brand loyal customers revolted and demanded the old product be returned. Explain how Coca-Cola marketers could have used the principles of psychophysics to introduce the new Coke without creating these problems.
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69
As people age, their sensory detection abilities decline. The Baby Boomers are fast reaching retirement age. How will advertisements in the future likely change sensory stimuli to accommodate this changing demographic?
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70
The location of a product's image on a package influences the way our brains make sense of it; we perceive objects lower in a frame to be heavier than objects higher in the frame and objects on the right side of a frame heavier than those on the left side of the frame.
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71
According to the retailer's rule of thumb based on the closure principle, when a sale catalog is created, the prices (on average) of the products in the catalog should be reduced by about 20 percent.
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72
Evaluate the effectiveness of subliminal persuasion and messages in marketing. Be sure to demonstrate your knowledge of the evidence about the success of the technique as presented in the text.
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73
What is a just noticeable difference (j.n.d)?
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74
Novelty in the form of interruption intensifies our experiences, increases our enjoyment of pleasant stimuli and amplifies our dislike of unpleasant stimuli.
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75
Define perceptual selection and describe the types of filters that prevent clear perception and the reception of marketing stimuli.
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76
Explain the closure principle.
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77
Weber's Law states that the intensity of the stimulus is greater if its duration is increased.
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78
Outline and explain the parts of the perceptual process that would allow a shopper to recognize a ketchup bottle in a supermarket.
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79
As a personal selection factor, adaptation is seen as the degree to which consumers continue to notice a stimulus over time. Five factors can lead to adaptation. List and briefly describe the connection with adaptation.
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80
You can understand the following uniquely-printed sentence because of the Gestalt principle of closure. Perception is imptant in undrstdng consmr bhavr.
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