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How Certain Advertising Creates “The False Experience Effect”

How Certain Advertising Creates “The False Experience Effect”

By Emma Hutchings on May 27, 2011

A study carried out by two marketing professors called I Imagine, I Experience, I Like: The False Experience Effect has found that “exposure to an imagery-evoking ad can result in an erroneous belief that an individual has experienced the advertised brand.”

Two groups of people were given a description of a brand of popcorn, one group’s was detailed, the other was succinct. Then, a selection of participants from the groups were given a sample of the popcorn to taste. When asked a week later, those who had read the full and elaborate description of the popcorn but hadn’t eaten any were just as likely to report that they’d tasted it as those who actually had. So a well-written, detailed description that evokes a person’s imagination about a product could make them crave foods they think they’ve tasted but actually haven’t.

I Imagine, I Experience, I Like: The False Experience Effect

[via Gizmodo]

TOPICS:Advertising, Branding & Marketing, Health & Wellness, Science, Work & Business
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Emma Hutchings is a daily contributor to PSFK. Emma is a Film Studies graduate, freelance writer, movie reviewer and blogger from the UK. Her favorite topics are gadgets, design, gaming, tv & film.

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