Consumers’ Implicit Motivation Of Purchasing Luxury Brands: An EEG Study

Purpose This study aims to explore consumers’ implicit motivations for purchasing luxury brands based on the functional theories of attitudes by using event-related potentials (ERPs). Methods Brand authenticity and logo prominence were used to modulate the social-adjustive function and value-expressive function, respectively. Twenty right-handed healthy female undergraduates and graduates participated in an experiment that has a 2 brand authenticity (genuine/counterfeit) × 2 brand prominence (prominent logo/no logo) design. In the experiment, participators browsed different luxury handbags with different brand authenticity and logo prominence, and then reported their purchase intentions on a five-point scale. Meanwhile, EEGs were recorded from the subjects throughout the experiment. In the analysis process, three ERP components, which can, respectively, reflect the cognitive conflict (N200), emotional conflict (N400) and motivational emotional arousal (LPP) during the evaluation of marketing-related stimuli, were mainly focused. Results For counterfeit brands, the no logo condition elicited significant larger N200 amplitude, marginally significant larger N400 amplitude and significant smaller LPP amplitude than the prominent logo condition. However, for genuine brands, this modulation effect of logo prominence cannot be found. These results imply that consumers’ implicit social motivations for purchasing luxury brands come from the satisfaction of at least one social goal. When one goal cannot be satisfied, consumers will more expect the satisfaction of another one. If this expectation is violated, it seems to be unexpected and unacceptable. Thus, greater anticipation conflict (N200) and emotion conflict (N400) will be induced, and the purchase motivation (LPP) cannot be aroused. Conclusion Consumers’ preferences for luxury brands are based on the satisfaction of their social goals. These social goals always coexist and perform as compensation with each other. The dissatisfaction of one social goal would promote their expectation of the satisfaction of another social goal.

[1]  S. Geisser,et al.  On methods in the analysis of profile data , 1959 .

[2]  D. Katz THE FUNCTIONAL APPROACH TO THE STUDY OF ATTITUDES , 1960 .

[3]  R. Thayer,et al.  Personality and discrepancies between verbal reports and physiological measures of private emotional experiences. , 1971, Journal of personality.

[4]  M. Kutas,et al.  Reading senseless sentences: brain potentials reflect semantic incongruity. , 1980, Science.

[5]  W. Bearden,et al.  Reference Group Influence on Product and Brand Purchase Decisions , 1982 .

[6]  M. Rugg The effects of semantic priming and work repetition on event-related potentials. , 1985, Psychophysiology.

[7]  Mark Snyder,et al.  Appeals to image and claims about quality: Understanding the psychology of advertising. , 1985 .

[8]  H. Semlitsch,et al.  A solution for reliable and valid reduction of ocular artifacts, applied to the P300 ERP. , 1986, Psychophysiology.

[9]  Carl Shapiro,et al.  Foreign Counterfeiting of Status Goods , 1986 .

[10]  Sharon Shavitt,et al.  The role of attitude objects in attitude functions , 1990 .

[11]  John Gastil Why We Believe in Democracy: Testing Theories of Attitude Functions and Democracy , 1992 .

[12]  Bernard Dubois,et al.  The Market for Luxury Goods: Income versus Culture , 1993 .

[13]  J. Zaichkowsky,et al.  Brand Imitation: Do the Chinese Have Different Views? , 1999 .

[14]  Margot J. Taylor,et al.  Guidelines for using human event-related potentials to study cognition: recording standards and publication criteria. , 2000, Psychophysiology.

[15]  M. Bradley,et al.  Affective picture processing: the late positive potential is modulated by motivational relevance. , 2000, Psychophysiology.

[16]  V. Benet‐Martínez,et al.  Consumption symbols as carriers of culture: a study of Japanese and Spanish brand personality constructs. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[17]  A. Dijksterhuis Think different: the merits of unconscious thought in preference development and decision making. , 2004, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[18]  Raj Mehta,et al.  The Timing of Repeat Purchases of Consumer Durable Goods: The Role of Functional Bases of Consumer Attitudes , 2004 .

[19]  A. Gutchess,et al.  A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study of Neural Dissociations between Brand and Person Judgments , 2006 .

[20]  Greg Hajcak,et al.  Attending to affect: appraisal strategies modulate the electrocortical response to arousing pictures. , 2006, Emotion.

[21]  Hilke Plassmann,et al.  A window to the consumer’s mind: application of functional brain imaging techniques to advertising research , 2006 .

[22]  Martin Eisend,et al.  Explaining Counterfeit Purchases – A Review and Preview , 2006 .

[23]  Susan E. Watt,et al.  Functions of attitudes towards ethnic groups: Effects of level of abstraction ☆ , 2007 .

[24]  D. Thomas,et al.  Deluxe: How Luxury Lost Its Luster , 2007 .

[25]  Qingguo Ma,et al.  Event-related potential N270 correlates of brand extension , 2007, Neuroreport.

[26]  Amanda J. Broderick,et al.  The application of physiological observation methods to emotion research , 2007 .

[27]  Qingguo Ma,et al.  P300 and categorization in brand extension , 2008, Neuroscience Letters.

[28]  Jonathan R. Folstein,et al.  Influence of cognitive control and mismatch on the N2 component of the ERP: a review. , 2007, Psychophysiology.

[29]  Xiao Wang,et al.  Integrating the Theory of Planned Behavior and Attitude Functions: Implications for Health Campaign Design , 2009, Health communication.

[30]  Mario Liotti,et al.  Early frontal responses elicited by physical threat words in an emotional Stroop task: Modulation by anxiety sensitivity , 2009, Biological Psychology.

[31]  Alice Mado Proverbio,et al.  RP and N400 ERP components reflect semantic violations in visual processing of human actions , 2009, Neuroscience Letters.

[32]  K. White,et al.  Wait, what? Assessing stereotype incongruities using the N400 ERP component. , 2009, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[33]  Sankar Sen,et al.  Why Do Consumers Buy Counterfeit Luxury Brands? , 2009 .

[34]  Paurav Shukla Status consumption in cross-national context: socio-psychological, brand and situational antecedents , 2010 .

[35]  N. Yen,et al.  Emotional modulation of the late positive potential (LPP) generalizes to Chinese individuals. , 2010, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[36]  Mingliang Chen,et al.  Cognitive and emotional conflicts of counter-conformity choice in purchasing books online: An event-related potentials study , 2010, Biological Psychology.

[37]  C. Tynan,et al.  Co-creating value for luxury brands , 2010 .

[38]  Joseph C. Nunes,et al.  Signaling Status with Luxury Goods: The Role of Brand Prominence , 2010 .

[39]  Michiel M. A. Spapé,et al.  Author's Personal Copy Biological Psychology Compatibility-sequence Effects in the Simon Task Reflect Episodic Retrieval but Not Conflict Adaptation: Evidence from Lrp and N2 , 2022 .

[40]  M. van vugt,et al.  The wandering mind of men: ERP evidence for gender differences in attention bias towards attractive opposite sex faces. , 2011, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[41]  David R. Herring,et al.  Electrophysiological responses to evaluative priming: the LPP is sensitive to incongruity. , 2011, Emotion.

[42]  Jorge Alves,et al.  Affective picture modulation: valence, arousal, attention allocation and motivational significance. , 2012, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[43]  P. Hagoort,et al.  Empathy matters: ERP evidence for inter-individual differences in social language processing , 2010, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[44]  Keyoor Purani,et al.  Comparing the importance of luxury value perceptions in cross-national contexts ☆ , 2012 .

[45]  Hilke Plassmann,et al.  Branding the brain: A critical review and outlook , 2012 .

[46]  L. Zhan,et al.  Understanding luxury consumption in China: Consumer perceptions of best-known brands , 2012 .

[47]  G. Berns,et al.  A Neural Predictor of Cultural Popularity , 2010 .

[48]  S. Jin The potential of social media for luxury brand management , 2012 .

[49]  Israel Liberzon,et al.  Decision neuroscience and consumer decision making , 2012 .

[50]  Qingguo Ma,et al.  N400 as an index of uncontrolled categorization processing in brand extension , 2012, Neuroscience Letters.

[51]  Sandra Forsythe,et al.  Purchase intention for luxury brands: A cross cultural comparison , 2012 .

[52]  Scott A. Baldwin,et al.  Performance monitoring following conflict: Internal adjustments in cognitive control? , 2012, Neuropsychologia.

[53]  S. Salloch,et al.  Ethics by opinion poll? The functions of attitudes research for normative deliberations in medical ethics , 2013, Journal of Medical Ethics.

[54]  Xiao Wang,et al.  The Role of Attitude Functions, Efficacy, Anticipated Emotions, and Relationship Status on College Students' Condom Use Intentions , 2013, Journal of sex research.

[55]  Qing-guo Ma,et al.  Two-Stage Categorization in Brand Extension Evaluation: Electrophysiological Time Course Evidence , 2014, PloS one.

[56]  Michael Schade,et al.  The impact of attitude functions on luxury brand consumption: An age-based group comparison , 2014 .

[57]  Shinobu Kitayama,et al.  Advancing consumer neuroscience , 2014 .

[58]  K. Kendrick,et al.  Social conflicts elicit an N400-like component , 2014, Neuropsychologia.

[59]  Greg H. Proudfit,et al.  The Negativity Bias in Affective Picture Processing Depends on Top-down and Bottom-up Motivational Significance the Negativity Bias Motivational Relevance in Evaluative Processing Picture-presentation Paradigms Electrophysiological Recording Experiment 1 Results and Discussion Motivational Relevance , 2022 .

[60]  Carol M. Megehee,et al.  When higher prices increase sales: How chronic and manipulated desires for conspicuousness and rarity moderate price's impact on choice of luxury brands , 2014 .

[61]  Colin F. Camerer,et al.  Introduction to the Journal of Marketing Research Special Issue on Neuroscience and Marketing , 2015 .

[62]  Scott A. Huettel,et al.  Consumer Neuroscience: Applications, Challenges, and Possible Solutions , 2015 .

[63]  Ale Smidts,et al.  Brain Responses to Movie Trailers Predict Individual Preferences for Movies and Their Population-Wide Commercial Success , 2015 .

[64]  Extending or creating a new brand: evidence from a study on event-related potentials , 2015, Neuroreport.

[65]  William H. Hampton,et al.  Predicting Advertising success beyond Traditional Measures: New Insights from Neurophysiological Methods and Market Response Modeling , 2015 .

[66]  Qing-guo Ma,et al.  The undermining effect of facial attractiveness on brain responses to fairness in the Ultimatum Game: an ERP study , 2015, Front. Neurosci..

[67]  Richard P. Bagozzi,et al.  Merely Being with you Increases My Attention to Luxury Products: Using EEG to Understand Consumers’ Emotional Experience with Luxury Branded Products , 2015 .

[68]  Ariel Telpaz,et al.  Using EEG to Predict Consumers’ Future Choices , 2015 .

[69]  Qi Wang,et al.  How do social-based cues influence consumers’ online purchase decisions? An event-related potential study , 2016, Electron. Commer. Res..

[70]  Naeem Gul Gilal,et al.  Linking product design to consumer behavior: the moderating role of consumption experience , 2018, Psychology research and behavior management.

[71]  Rukhsana Gul Gilal,et al.  Association between a parent’s brand passion and a child’s brand passion: a moderated moderated-mediation model , 2018, Psychology research and behavior management.

[72]  Rukhsana Gul Gilal,et al.  Integrating self-determined needs into the relationship among product design, willingness-to-pay a premium, and word-of-mouth: a cross-cultural gender-specific study , 2018, Psychology research and behavior management.