The Psychology of Advertising

Höfundur Bob M. Fennis; Wolfgang Stroebe

Útgefandi Taylor & Francis

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9780367346355

Útgáfa 3

Útgáfuár 2021

8.190 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Praise Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Chapter 1 Setting the stage
  • The origins of modern-day advertising
  • Advertising in practice: the nuts and bolts of the industry
  • The functions of advertising
  • The effects of advertising: a psychological perspective
  • Consumer responses
  • Can advertising create desires and boost materialism?
  • Assessing advertising effects on consumer responses
  • Source and message variables in advertising
  • Source credibility
  • Source attractiveness
  • Argument quality and message structure
  • Message sidedness
  • Argument-based and affect-based appeals
  • Advertising in context: integrated marketing communications and the promotional mix
  • Direct marketing
  • Interactive marketing
  • Sales promotion
  • Public relations
  • Personal selling
  • Classic and contemporary approaches of conceptualizing advertising effectiveness
  • Sales-response models
  • Early models of individual responses to advertising: hierarchy-of-effects models
  • Information processing research in advertising
  • Cognitive response approach
  • Dual process approaches
  • Unconscious processes in consumer behaviour
  • The replication crisis in psychology
  • Plan of the book
  • Summary and conclusions
  • Notes
  • Chapter 2 How consumers acquire and process information from advertising
  • Preattentive analysis
  • Feature analysis and semantic analysis
  • Matching activation
  • Preattentive processing and hedonic fluency
  • Focal attention
  • Salience
  • Vividness
  • Novelty
  • Categorization
  • Product and brand line extensions
  • Typicality and the pioneering advantage
  • Assimilation and contrast
  • Impression formation and impression correction
  • Comprehension
  • Seeing is believing
  • Miscomprehension and misleading advertising claims
  • Elaborative reasoning
  • Self-schema and elaborative reasoning
  • Consumer meta-cognition
  • Summary and conclusions
  • Chapter 3 How advertising affects consumer memory
  • The structure and function of human memory
  • The model of Atkinson and Shiffrin
  • Sensory memory
  • Working or short-term memory
  • Long-term memory
  • Evidence for the multi-systems view of memory
  • Problems with the model of Atkinson and Shiffrin
  • Levels of processing
  • The model of working memory of Baddeley and Hitch
  • Forms of long-term memory
  • Declarative or explicit memory
  • Implicit memory
  • Priming
  • Knowledge structures in long-term memory
  • Implications for advertising
  • The role of memory in judgements: on the ineffectiveness of traditional measures of advertising effectiveness
  • Implicit memory and the measurement of ad effectiveness
  • Memory-based versus online judgements
  • Memory factors in brand choice: the role of cognitive accessibility
  • Forgetting the message: advertising clutter and competitive interference
  • Competitive interference and memory for advertisements
  • Moderators of the impact of advertising clutter
  • Combating interference due to advertising clutter
  • Can advertising distort memory?
  • Summary and conclusions
  • Notes
  • Chapter 4 How consumers form attitudes towards products
  • What is an attitude? A matter of contention
  • Defining the concept
  • Implicit and explicit attitudes: challenging the unity of the attitude concept?
  • Implicit attitude measures and consumer behaviour
  • Are attitudes stable or context dependent?
  • Implications for the definition of the attitude concept
  • Attitude strength
  • Accessibility
  • Attitude importance
  • Attitude knowledge
  • Attitude certainty
  • Attitudinal ambivalence
  • Evaluative–cognitive consistency
  • Attitude strength and the context dependence of attitudinal judgements
  • Attitude formation
  • The formation of cognitively based evaluative responses
  • Attitudes based on direct experience versus memory
  • Using heuristics to form attitudes towards products
  • The formation of evaluative responses based on affective or emotional experience
  • Mere exposure
  • Classical and evaluative conditioning
  • Affect as information
  • The formation of evaluations based on behavioural information
  • Attitude structure
  • Expectancy–value models
  • Are beliefs the cause of attitudes?
  • Attitudes towards the advertisement and the dual mediation hypothesis
  • The functions of attitudes and attitude objects
  • Attitude functions: why people hold attitudes
  • Consumer goals and the functions of consumer goods
  • The relationship between attitudes, goals and intentions
  • Why people acquire goods
  • Utilitarian goals
  • Self-expression goals
  • Identity-building goals
  • Hedonic goals
  • Implications for advertising
  • Summary and conclusions
  • Notes
  • Chapter 5 How consumers yield to advertising: Principles of persuasion and attitude change
  • The Yale reinforcement approach
  • The information processing model of McGuire
  • The cognitive response model
  • Dual process theories of persuasion
  • The multiple-role assumption
  • Biased processing of information
  • Assessing the intensity of processing
  • Processing ability, processing intensity and attitude change
  • The impact of working knowledge on processing ability
  • The impact of distraction on processing ability
  • The impact of message repetition on processing ability
  • Processing motivation, processing intensity and attitude change
  • Personal relevance as motivator
  • Fear as a motivator
  • Individual differences in processing motivation
  • Processing intensity and stability of change
  • Simplifying dual process theories: the unimodel
  • Self-validation: a new process of persuasion
  • Strategies to attract attention to advertising
  • Humour in advertising
  • Humour, distraction and memory
  • Humour and liking for the ad and the brand
  • Humorous advertisements and brand choice
  • Limitations
  • Summary and conclusions
  • Sex in advertising
  • The impact of sexual advertisements on information processing
  • The impact of sexual advertising on attitudes
  • Conclusions
  • Strategies to lower resistance to advertising
  • Persuasion knowledge and reactance
  • Two-sided advertisements
  • Product placement
  • Native advertising
  • Sponsorship
  • Summary and conclusions
  • Notes
  • Chapter 6 How advertising influences buying behaviour
  • The attitude–behaviour relationship: a brief history
  • Predicting specific behaviour: the reasoned action approach
  • The standard model
  • Extending the standard model
  • Reformulating the standard model: the theory of reasoned goal pursuit
  • Narrowing the intention–behaviour gap: forming implementation intentions
  • Implications for advertising
  • Beyond reasons and plans: the automatic instigation of behaviour
  • Automatic and deliberate influence of attitudes
  • Automatic and deliberate influence of social norms
  • Automatic and deliberate influence of goals
  • Goals, habits and behaviour
  • The role of mindsets in goal-directed information processing and behaviour
  • Goal conflict and impulsive behaviour
  • Implications for advertising: the return of the hidden persuaders
  • Summary and conclusions
  • Note
  • Chapter 7 Beyond persuasion: Achieving consumer compliance without changing attitudes
  • Social influence and compliance without pressure
  • The principle of reciprocity
  • The door-in-the-face technique
  • That’s-not-all technique
  • Beyond reciprocity
  • Product samples as reciprocity traps
  • The principle of commitment/consistency
  • Foot-in-the-door technique
  • Lowball technique
  • The principle of social validation
  • Reference groups
  • Individual differences and social proof
  • Motivation and social validation
  • Values and lifestyles
  • The principle of liking
  • Determinants of liking in social influence situations
  • Physical attractiveness
  • Similarity
  • Ingratiation
  • Bringing good news
  • The principle of authority
  • Symbols of authority
  • Authority and obedience
  • The principle of scarcity
  • The principle of confusion
  • Mindlessness revisited: the limited-resource account
  • Summary and conclusions
  • Note
  • Chapter 8 Advertising in the new millennium: How the Internet affects consumer judgement and choice
  • Features of online advertising
  • Big data, online tracking and privacy concerns
  • Three types of online advertising
  • When does online advertising promote persuasion?
  • A critical precursor to online persuasion: online trust
  • Building online trust
  • Online trust and regulatory focus
  • How banner ad placement and content affects online persuasion
  • How does online advertising promote persuasion? The role of conscious versus unconscious processes
  • Online heuristics
  • Supplementing regular online advertising: persuasion via decision support systems
  • Online stereotyping
  • Unintended and incidental effects of being online on consumer cognition (and what they mean for online advertising)
  • How Google affects consumer memory
  • Us and our devices
  • Implications for advertising: an online ‘truth effect’?
  • Beyond online advertising: persuasion via online interpersonal communication
  • Company effects of online chatter
  • How emotion affects online diffusion and diffusion affects online emotion
  • Summary and conclusions
  • Notes
  • References
  • Glossary
  • Author index
  • Subject index
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