Effective Marketing Communication: Pre-existing Knowledge Structures and Contextual Effects. Applied findings in the area of sponsorship-linked marketing communications would support business, government and sponsored activities such as sport, art, and charity. Findings will also enhance the reputation of research in cognition and in business. Execution of the research will provide a national benefit by affording the opportunity of experience and training to a research associate as well as any P ....Effective Marketing Communication: Pre-existing Knowledge Structures and Contextual Effects. Applied findings in the area of sponsorship-linked marketing communications would support business, government and sponsored activities such as sport, art, and charity. Findings will also enhance the reputation of research in cognition and in business. Execution of the research will provide a national benefit by affording the opportunity of experience and training to a research associate as well as any PhD or honours students affiliated with the project. Further, application of the research findings will result in smart information use in an industry setting, where sponsors and events organisers stand to benefit from marketing campaigns that promote their messages more efficiently.Read moreRead less
Learning and Deciding Under Low Levels of Awareness: Representation Issues and Memory Processes. Human decision making is frequently sub-optimal and can be influenced by factors of which we are only dimly aware. At times, this sub-optimality produces large social, economic, and health costs. We address decisions made under low levels of awareness including those typically influenced by advertising and other marketing activities, such as pairing brands with images of attractive people. We examine ....Learning and Deciding Under Low Levels of Awareness: Representation Issues and Memory Processes. Human decision making is frequently sub-optimal and can be influenced by factors of which we are only dimly aware. At times, this sub-optimality produces large social, economic, and health costs. We address decisions made under low levels of awareness including those typically influenced by advertising and other marketing activities, such as pairing brands with images of attractive people. We examine the cognitive processes invoked by this pairing in order to determine how it competes with the provision of factual information. We aim to improve decision making in areas such as food choice and consumer understanding, as well as provide the knowledge base to support policy for regulating marketing communications.Read moreRead less