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NeuroPsychoEconomics
ssoc a on or euro syc o conom cs
http://www.neuropsychoeconomics.orgISSN 1861-8243
Martin Reimann
Oliver Schilke
Editorial Board
2010
NeuroPsychoEconomics
Conference Proceedings
ngo BalderjahnAntoine BecharaPeter BossaertsEduard BrandsttterWolfgang Breuerohn T. Cacioppo
Michael CzinkotaMargit EnkeChristian E. ElgerGuilln FernndezDieter FreyFlemming HansenScott HuettelAndrea Grppel-KleinGert GutjahrHans-Georg HuselManfred HollerScott HuettelPeter KenningErich KirchlerChristian KorunkaFrank Krueger
Marco Lehmann-WaffenschmidtGeorge LoewensteinKevin A. McCabeMichael I. Nortonohn P. O'Doherty
Andreas OehlerHilke PlassmannPeter Politser
Scott RickLutz von RosenstielAldo RusticiniGad SaadAlan G. SanfeyDirk SchiereckFriedrich SchneiderHeinz SchulerBaba ShivAle SmidtsManfred SpitzerVolker TrommsdorffBodo VogtKathleen D. VohsBernd WeberPeter WeinbergKlaus Wertenbroch
Carolyn YoonPaul J. Zak
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Imprint
Editors
Association for NeuroPsychoEconomics &
The Decision Neuroscience Research Group, Copenhagen Business School
Flemming Hansen | Martin Reimann | Oliver Schilke
Office in Germany:
Haslangstrasse 7
Munich, Germany 80689
Office in the USA:
American Psychological Association
c/o Jessica Karp
750 First Street, NE
Washington, DC 20002, USA
E-Mail: [email protected]
Internet (English): http://www.jnpe.org
Internet (German): http://www.neuropsychoeconomics.org
Copyright
All rights of reproduction are reserved. All material published in this proceedings is protected by copyright,
which covers exclusive rights to reproduce and distribute the material. Apart from any fair dealing for the
purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, this publication may be reproduced, stored or
transmitted, in any form or by any means, only with the prior permission in writing of the publishers. For queries
relating to reproduction rights, please contact [email protected].
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2010 NeuroPsychoEconomics / ConNEcs Conference Program
Copenhagen Business School(Solbjerg Plads 3, DK-2000 Frederiksberg, Denmark)
Presentations will be held in English.
May 31, 2010
04:00-05:30 PM: Annual Meeting of the Editorial Boards oftheJournal of Neuroscience, Psychology, and Economics
and NeuroPsychoEconomics
(Limited to editorial board members only)
Location: Augustinus Meeting Room at Copenhagen Business School
06:00-07:00 PM: Registration
Location: SPs16
06:00-07:00 PM: Reception
Location: SPs16
07:00-10:00 PM: Copenhagen NightlifeMeeting point: SPs16Location: Copenhagen Cityexact location to be announced during the reception(paid on your own)
June 1, 2010
08:00 AM: Registration
Location: SPs16
09:00 AM: Welcome note from the conference chairs
Flemming Hansen, Copenhagen Business School &Martin Reimann, University of Southern CaliforniaLocation: SPs16
09:15 AM: Invited talk:Julian Jamison, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Advertising and the welfare implications of endogenous preferencesLocation: SPs16
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10:00 AM: Competitive paper session I
Track: Organizational Behavior & OrganizationalDecision Neuroscience
Track chair: Ale Smidts, Erasmus UniversityLocation: SPs16
10:00 AM: A neural network approach to forecasting large and medium regional U.S. air carrier
financial stress and bankruptcyGritta, Davalos
10:25 AM: Eye-tracking analysis as a complementary technique to psychometric scale analysis The case of evaluating different answer formats
Koller, Salzberger, Himmer
10:50AM: The influence of others on our decisions A closer look at the fundamental nature of
reference group influence on decision-makingStallen, Smidts, Sanfey
Track: Behavioral Economics & Neuroeconomics 1Track chair: Thomas Zoga Ramsy, Copenhagen Business
SchoolLocation: SPs14
10:00 AM: Augmented replicator equation and socioeconomic dynamics
Dilmaghani
10:25 AM: On mental transformationsKontek
10:50 AM: Neural basis of risk and ambiguity: An fMRI study
Welpe, Hewig, Stanton, Hecht, Miltner
11:15 AM: Coffee break & Poster sessionLocation: Strget
11:45 PM: Key note speech:Antoine Bechara, University of Southern CaliforniaThe somatic marker hypothesis and human decision making: Withstanding the test of
timeLocation: SPs16
12:45 PM: Lunch(included in conference fee)
Location: Tnden
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01.45 PM Competitive paper session II
Track: Consumer Behavior & NeuromarketingTrack Chair: Hilke Plassmann, INSEADLocation: SPs16
01:45 PM: What advertising managers can learn from brain researchersFehse
02:10 PM: Emotions and intention to buy: Applying neuro-IS on the adoption of the iPhoneHedman, Tscherning
02:35 PM: Net emotional response strength and fMRIHubert, Hubert, Hansen, Kenning
03:00 PM: The insentience of brand equity Two studies of consciousness and brandsRamsy, Skov
Track: Behavioral Economics & Neuroeconomics 2Track chair: Isabell Welpe, Technical University of MunichLocation: SPs14
01:45 PM: How neuroscience methodology can help sponsorship research solving the blackbox problem
Breuer, Rumpf
02:10 PM: Trading and emotion regulation: The heart of financial decision-making?
Fenton-OCreevy, Smidts, Lins
02:35 PM: Unconscious brand reactions influence financial decision-making
Harris, Murawski
03:00 PM: An economic institutional analysis of the retirement pro-vision information in
GermanyHaupt, Yollu-Tok
03:25 PM: Best paper award ceremony
Location: SPs16
04:00 PM: Coffee break & Poster sessionLocation: Strget
04:30 PM: Invited Talk:Tim Ambler, London Business School
Predicting consumer supermarket brand choices with neural markersLocation: SPs16
05:15 PM: Good bye note from the editorsMartin Reimann, University of Southern California andOliver Schilke, University of California, Los AngelesLocation: SPs16
05:30 PM: End
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2010 NeuroPsychoEconomics / ConNEcs Poster Session
Poster sessions will take place from 11:15 AM to 11:45 AM and from 04:00 PM -04:30 PM at Strget.
Poster session participants must display their poster by 08:30 AM on Tuesday, June 1 2010 at designated spacesat the conference venue.
P1 Call-response improvisation. New insights in the study of creativity
Friis-Olivarius, Wallentin, Roepstorff, Ramsy, Vuust
P2 A model of hypnotic communication in the consumption experience
Guido, Prete, Pichierri, Bleve
P3 Exchange or communal: An examination of customer relationships orientation from the salespersonsperspectiveGuo
P4 Perception and effectiveness of commercials: An experimental study using eye-Tracking
Hofer
P5 Automatic processes and neural correlates of compulsive buying behavior in menHubert, Hubert, Bttner, Florack, Kenning
P6 Price memory and the life you liveLinzmajer, Eberhardt, Kenning
P7 Are every-day consumer choices driven by value or brightness of choice options? Insights from visionscience
Milosavljevic, Navalpakkam, Koch, Rangel
P8 The contribution of emotions and nonverbal attitude
Schlegl
P9 Ad-editorial congruency and side of ad presentation affect attention and memory for print
advertisementsSimola, Kivikangas, Krause
P10 Level of perceptual expectedness influences the preference for novel brand logosSkov, Ramsy
P11 Disorganized children: The emotional and financial cost of unidentified neuro-developmentaldifficulties in children and adolescents
Stein, Chowdhury
P12 What happenedand how fix it? Resolving conflict at home, at school and in the workplaceStein, Pearce, McMillan
P13 Excalibur: Multi-agency intervention and support barometer
Stein, Sebire
P14 Frames, decisions and cardiac-autonomic control
Stterlin, Herbert, Schmitt, Vgele
P15 Cognitive control capabilities, routinization and decision-makingLaureiro-Martinez, Brusoni, Zollo
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Map of Copenhagen Business School
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Contents
Gritta, DavalosA neural network approach to forecasting large and medium regional US air carrier financial stress and bankruptcy............................................................................................................................................................. 13
Koller, Salzberger, HimmerEye-tracking analysis as a complementary technique to psychometric scale analysis The case of evaluating different answer formats ........................................................ ....................................... 14
Stallen, Smidts, SanfeyThe influence of others on our decisions A closer look at the fundamental nature of reference group influence on decision-making ............................. 15
Dilmaghani
Augmented replicator equation and socioeconomic dynamics ............................................................... .............. 16
Kontek
On mental transformations ................................................................. ................................................................... 17
Welpe, Hewig, Stanton, Hecht, Miltner
Neural basis of risk and ambiguity: An fMRI study ............................................................................................. 18
FehseWhat advertising managers can learn from brain researchers ............................................................. .................. 19
Hedman, TscherningEmotions and intention to buy: Applying neuro-IS on the adoption of the iPhone............................................... 20
Hubert, Hubert, Hansen, Kenning
Net emotional response strength and fMRI ................................................................ ........................................... 21
Ramsy, SkovThe insentience of brand equity Two studies of consciousness and brands ....................................................... 22
Breuer, Rumpf
How neuroscience methodology can help sponsorship research solving the black box problem ...................... 23
Fenton-OCreevy, Smidts, LinsTrading and emotion regulation: The heart of financial decision-making? .......................................................... 24
Harris, MurawskiUnconscious brand reactions influence financial decision-making .................................................. .................... 25
Haupt, Yollu-TokAn economic institutional analysis of the retirement pro-vision information in Germany ................................... 26
Friis-Olivarius, Wallentin, Roepstorff, Ramsy, VuustCall-response improvisation. New insights in the study of creativity ................................................................... 27
Guido, Prete, Pichierri, BleveA model of hypnotic communication in the consumption experience .................................................................. 28
GuoExchange or communal: An examination of customer relationships orientation from the salespersonsperspective ............................................................................................................................................................ 29
HoferPerception and effectiveness of commercials: An experimental study using eye-tracking ................................... 30
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Hubert, Hubert, Bttner, Florack, KenningAutomatic processes and neural correlates of compulsive buying behavior in men ............................................. 31
Linzmajer, Eberhardt, KenningPrice memory and the life you live ........................................................................................ ............................... 32
Milosavljevic, Navalpakkam, Koch, RangelAre every-day consumer choices driven by value or brightness of choice options?
Insights from vision science ................................................................ .................................................................. 33
SchleglThe contribution of emotions and nonverbal attitude............................................................................................ 34
Simola, Kivikangas, KrauseAd-editorial congruency and side of ad presentation affect attention and memory for print advertisements ....... 35
Skov, RamsyLevel of perceptual expectedness influences the preference for novel brand logos .............................................. 36
Stein, ChowdhuryDisorganised children: The emotional and financial cost of unidentified neuro-developmental difficulties in
children and adolescents ....................................................................................................................................... 37
Stein, Pearce, McMillanWhat happened and how fix it? Resolving conflict at home, at school and in the workplace ......................... 38
Stein, SebireExcalibur: Multi-agency intervention and support barometer .................................................................... ........... 39
Stterlin, Herbert, Schmitt, VgeleFrames, decisions and cardiac-autonomic control ................................................................................................ 40
Laureiro-Martinez, Brusoni, ZolloCognitive control capabilities, routinization and decision-making ....................................................................... 41
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A neural network approach to forecasting large andmedium regional US air carrier financial stress and
bankruptcyRichard Gritta*, Sergio Davalos
Abstract
Analysts have turned increasingly to newer techniques to measure the financial health of firms. Neural networks
(NN) borrowed from Artificial Intelligence (AI) have been one of the newer approaches. This paper applies the
use of neural networks to an important applied forecasting problem. That problem is the health of the U.S. airline
industry, a vital part of the nations transportation system. It is the continuation of our research into the
forecasting of air carrier financial stress and bankruptcy. Prior studies (Chow, Gritta, Leung, 1991; Davalos,
Gritta, Chow, 1999) focused on the larger airlines, called majors and nationals by the Department of
Transportation (DOT). These studies utilized neural networks, Multiple Discriminant Analysis (MDA), Genetic
Algorithms (GAs), and other models, such as logit/probit, to identify financially stressed or failing airlines. The
applications of several of these models (MDA, GA, logit/probit, etc.) to the smaller carriers did not initially
achieve the same results. The use of a neural network seemed to be a good alternative to many of these
techniques for reasons that will be explored. A preliminary NN study (Gritta, Chow, Davalos, Wang, 2000)
using only smaller carriers showed promise. Since that study included only 9 failed carriers, a larger sample was
needed to better gauge the powers of the model. A subsequent study (Davalos, Gritta, Wang, 2002) expanded the
sample and obtained more significant results. The purpose of the current study is to add several more carriers and
to update that analysis to be if the neural network maintains its ability to separate out the healthy from the
financially stressed.
*Corresponding author: Richard Gritta, University of Portland, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Eye-tracking analysis as a complementary techniqueto psychometric scale analysis
The case of evaluating different answer formats
Monika Koller*, Thomas Salzberger, Christoph Himmer
Abstract
Measurement in the social sciences is typically concerned with latent variables like attitudinal predispositions or
behavioral intentions. In both survey research and experimental research their quantification usually relies on
multi-item scales. Each item and its associated response scale represent a stimulus, the respondent reacts to. It
has been demonstrated repeatedly that the type and the design of the response scale (e.g., appropriate number of
response categories or labeling of response options) may have a major impact on the responses provided.
However, another important characteristic of the response scale, namely the direction of a Likert-type response
scale (agree>>disagree format versus disagree>>agree), has attracted less attention. In two different studies
Salzberger and Koller (2008, 2009) investigated these two different formats in both PAP and ONL settings and
concluded that the agree>>disagree format performs much better, exemplified by two different latent constructs,
based on the Rasch measurement model. In the present study, eye-tracking data of a total of 30 right-handed
respondents was collected in order to get more insight into the process of answering to a verbal stimulus and
varying response formats. Preliminary eye-tracking results show that, as hypothesized, different reading patterns
emerged for the two response formats presented.
*Corresponding author: Monika Koller, Vienna University of Economics and Business, E-Mail: [email protected].
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The influence of others on our decisions
A closer look at the fundamental nature of reference
group influence on decision-making
Mirre Stallen*, Ale Smidts, Alan Sanfey
Abstract
Decision-making is often influenced by the behavior of others. For instance, people frequently make similar
decisions as their friends do (e.g. teenagers may choose to wear clothing that is identical to that of their buddies),
while they also often choose differently than the ones they do not like (e.g. the clothing should not be identical to
what is worn by uncool kids). Groups that influence an individual in the process of decision-making have been
labeled as reference groups. Given the large impact of reference groups on individual decision-making, these
groups are of great importance for marketers. Therefore we designed a study to get more insight into the
automatic nature of reference group influence. Our results suggest that the influence of reference groups on
decision-making is a very fundamental process which occurs under surprisingly minimal conditions: Even whendecision-making takes place in a domain for which identity signaling is irrelevant and even when group
identification is low, peoples decisions are shaped by the behavior of others. In a next phase of the experiment,
the neural correlates of the mechanism underlying reference group influence will be investigated.
*Corresponding author: Mirre Stallen, Erasmus University, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Augmented replicator equation and socioeconomicdynamics
Maryam Dilmaghani*
Abstract
The replicator equation is one of the standard frameworks for evolutionary analysis. It is used for modelling the
changes in population proportion of types through selection mechanisms. This work proposes a modified version
for the replicator equation that incorporates emotional incentives behind human social behaviour, making this
equation suitable for the modelling of social influence. Existing literature suggests these emotional incentives to
be conformity and status-seeking. In my proposed version the dynamic impacts of these incentives are
formulated in terms of population proportions, leaving the analytical tractability of the replicator equation intact.
The equation is then examined in order to derive its main patterns. It is shown through illustrative examples that
this version of the equation proves to be both empirically useful and theoretically instructive.
*Corresponding author: Maryam Dilmaghani, Mount Allison University, E-Mail: [email protected].
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On mental transformations
Krzysztof Kontek*
Abstract
The paper presents an alternative interpretation of the experimental data published by Kahneman and Tversky in
their 1992 study "Advances in Prospect Theory, which describes the Cumulative version of their Prospect
Theory from 1979. It was assumed that, apart from the operations made during the initial stage of problem
resolution, which Prospect Theory defines as Editing (here generalized as Mental Adaptation), other mental
transformations such as Prospect Scaling (resulting from Focused Attention) and Logarithmic Perception of
Financial Stimuli should be considered when analyzing the experimental data. This led to the design of an
explicit, simple and symmetric solution without the use of the probability weighting function. The double S-type
function obtained (the aspiration function) resembles the utility curve specified by the Markowitz hypothesis
(1952) and substitutes the fourfold pattern of risk attitudes introduced by Cumulative Prospect Theory. The
results presented constitute a basis for negating Prospect Theory as a theory which correctly describes how
decisions are made under conditions of risk and may signal a return to a description of peoples behavior that
only relies on the utility-like function
* Corresponding author: Krzysztof Kontek, Artal Investments, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Neural basis of risk and ambiguity:
An fMRI study
Isabell M. Welpe*, Johannes Hewig, Angela Stanton, Holger Hecht,Wolfgang Miltner
Abstract
Risk and ambiguity are important concepts in theories of managerial and entrepreneurial behavior. Whereas risk
is defined as a pure gamble with known probabilities and outcomes (e.g. a lottery ticket), ambiguity is defined as
a compound case of risks in which more than one outcome is possible and the probability associated with each
outcome is unknown. It is often assumed that managers and entrepreneurs have a superior ability to deal with
decisions under risk and with ambiguous information. Previous research has often used simple risk as proxy to
measure entrepreneurial decisions under risk, transposed the answers to entrepreneurial decision-making in
response to ambiguity, thus combining and treating risk and ambiguity parameters as one. We argue that it is
necessary to differentiate between the two for the following reasons. First, using simple risk-type questions that
do not relate to real managerial decision-making tasks ignore that agents have the propensity to turn them into an
unknown degree of ambiguity or uncertainty. Second, managers and entrepreneurs rarely play pure gambles and
thus seldom deal with pure risk. Rather they are surrounded with ambiguity or even uncertainty, a type of risk
that arises from lack of information. The present study aims to extend the knowledge about brain structures
involved in decision-making under different degrees of risk and under ambiguity.
*Corresponding author: Isabell M. Welpe, Technical University of Munich, E-Mail: [email protected].
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What advertising managers can learn from brainresearchers
Kai Fehse*
Abstract
In order to assess the potential relevance of neuroscience to marketing-communications, one should look beyond
the few fmri-studies that have been published on this topic. Marketing and advertising practitioners can
particularly benefit from instead applying generic findings from cognitive neuroscience. These findings often
strongly conflict with the prevailing doctrine of advertising science, and even more with the heuristics of its
practitioners. For example, advertising managers seem to be unaware of the fact that the brain constructs its
environment instead of perceiving it; that there are two dissociated memory systems; and that emotional and
rational cognitions are tightly interwoven on a neuronal level and are by no means separate phenomena.
Naturally, these general findings also apply to advertising stimuli. What the advertising industry can learn may
seem trivial to ist teachers from neuroscience; for their pupils in agencies and advertising departments, these
lessons are still valuable and useful. Even more so, if these teachings are summed up by a simple heuristic likethe CASE2-model for advertising impact.
*Corresponding author: Kai Fehse, Institute for Cognition and Communication, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Emotions and intention to buy:
Applying neuro-IS on the adoption of the iPhone
Jonas Hedman, Heidi Tscherning*
Abstract
Neuro-IS assumes that all behavior, including intention to behave, is elicited by stimuli, emotions and emotional
response. We develop and test the Emotion Cognition Behavior model and introduce feeling words in an
Information Systems (IS) context. We test the role of emotions in an exploratory setting, namely the adoption of
the iPhone in Demark. The iPhone was chosen as study object, as it had not yet been released in Denmark at the
time of the study and thus was a novel study object. A research model that includes stimuli, emotions, emotional
response and cognitive processes as latent variables and intention to buy as predictor was developed to test the
role of emotions. The hypotheses derived from the research model are tested by the use of Structural Equation
Modelling (SEM). Five hypotheses were developed to explain the relationship between the latent variables and
the predictor, and the results show that positive emotions elicit the cognitive process constructs image and
compatibility as well as the predictor intention to buy. However, the test does not support that image is
positively related to peoples intention to buy and the test only provides some support for the hypothesis that
compatibility is positively related to peoples intention to buy an iPhone.
*Corresponding author: Heidi Tscherning, Copenhagen Business School, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Net emotional response strength and fMRI
Marco Hubert*, Mirja Hubert, Flemming Hansen, Peter Kenning
Abstract
The application of traditional measurement instruments to analyze emotional responses towards brands often
seems to be insufficient to capture intangible and unconscious aspects within the consumer decision-making
process. On the other hand neurological studies emphasize the importance of essential emotional processes
underlying human decision making. Therefore, the focus of this preliminary study is to link a questionnaire
based measurement technology (Net Emotional Response Strength (NERS)) with an fMRI experiment in order
to firstly, shed light on the functionality and the validity of the traditional measurement instrument and secondly,
to interpret results of the behavioural level in the light of neurophysiologic insights into emotional processing.
Within the fMRI experiment, all participants had to evaluate 35 different brand logos twice according to their
attractiveness. Additionally, we applied a modified version of the original NERS Measurement for each brand
after the fMRI. Three brands (BOSS, Calvin Klein, and Giorgio Armani) were analyzed within a first
preliminary investigation. Thus, by applying NERS-scores for grouping the participants we observed significant
activity changes within brain regions associated with reward, emotions and memory processing. Although the
revealed results are very preliminary, first insights for linking traditional measurements of emotional responses
to brands and fMRI could be provided. Nevertheless further research and analysis is needed and underway to
develop and validate our results.
*Corresponding author: Marco Hubert, Zeppelin University, E-Mail: [email protected].
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The insentience of brand equity
Two studies of consciousness and brands
Thomas Zega Ramsy*, Martin Skov
Abstract
Perceiving known brands usually lead to numerous conscious associations that relate to visual, narrative and
episodic memories of previous exposures, and in particular to positive or negative associations. By comparison,
less is known of potential differences between conscious and unconscious responses to known brands, and
whether subjective brand valence can affect these responses. Previous studies have suggested that implicit
processing of brands may affect motivated behaviour, even without conscious awareness (Chartrand 2008).
However, such studies have not determined whether it is possible to measure these implicit brand preferences.
Furthermore, it is yet unknown whether preference for complex cultural information such as brands may have an
impact on the subjective threshold for conscious and unconscious perception. To approach this problem, we
conducted two behavioural studies with equipment that allowed controlled presentation of stimulus durations
and precise measurements of reaction times.
*Corresponding author: Thomas Zega Ramsy, Copenhagen Business School, E-Mail: [email protected].
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How neuroscience methodology can help sponsorshipresearch solving the black box problem
Christoph Breuer, Christopher Rumpf*
Abstract
The industrys expenditure on sport sponsorship activities has significantly increased during the last two
decades. Since then, a large number of research studies has been accomplished to examine the relative
effectiveness of this marketing communication instrument. However, most studies are methodologically limited
to assessing either the stimulus impact by exposure analysis or the consumers response by recall or recognition
measures. Consequently, contributions on the cognitive perception and information processing of sponsorship
stimuli remain marginal. The present paper takes this limitation as a starting point in order to discuss the capacity
of neuroscience methods like eye-tracking. Eye-tracking enables researchers to measure the consumers visual
attention to sponsorship stimuli and thereby contributes to our understanding of sponsorship stimuli processing.
This is relevant to the evaluation of economic benefits since it reveals the effective contact with a certain
sponsorship activity rather than a mere opportunity to be seen. After giving a brief outline of the consumersgeneral reception in a sport sponsorship context we will discuss the black box problem and the difficulties with
an economic sponsorship evaluation. Next, an experimental study will be presented in which visual attention to
sport sponsorship stimuli has been investigated.
*Corresponding author: Christopher Rumpf, German Sport University Cologne, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Trading and emotion regulation:
The heart of financial decision-making?
Mark Fenton-OCreevy*, Ale Smidts, Jeffrey Todd Lins
Abstract
We study the role of emotions and emotion regulation in financial markets. We argue that variability in emotion
regulation is a good candidate to explain important intra and inter-individual variability in susceptibility to key
decision-making biases and hence in financial performance of market actors. We will present the results of a
pilot study in which we investigate the role of emotion regulation in relation to the decision-making of
professional traders in an investment bank. Highly experienced and less experienced traders will be compared in
how they react to a news event that is salient to the pricing of products they trade. The traders are monitored over
a period from one hour prior to the news event to one hour after the news event. The monitoring consists of
measuring: 1) heart rate and heart rate variability, 2) video capture of activity to study facial expressions, activity
and audio (the trader is asked to provide a constant spoken narrative of their actions and decisions including
commentary on feelings), and 3) time stamped trading data will be captured along with relevant price data.
Analysis focuses first on providing a rich description of the unfolding of trading performance episodes, including
the nature of emotional response and regulation. A rich qualitative account of reactions to key market events will
be constructed for each trader and comparisons will be made between traders in the expert/inexperienced pairs.
*Corresponding author: Mark Fenton-OCreevy, Open University Business School, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Unconscious brand reactions influence financialdecision-making
Philip Harris*, Carsten Murawski
Abstract
A growing body of research shows that consumer decision-making for products and brands is meaningfully
shaped by affect. In parallel, research examining influences of mood states and other transient affective states on
judgement and decisions demonstrate that incidental affect powerfully shapes judgement and decisions. In this
research we examine incidental effects of brand presentation on financial decision-making. We explore the
possibility that brands can impact on decisions by influencing affective systems underlying decision-making.
Our results indicate that brand images with affective value can shift incidental decision-making towards
affectively-driven choices. Furthermore, these effects occur without conscious awareness of the identity of the
brand stimuli. These findings provide initial evidence that brands may impact on behaviour outside of the
consumer context by modulating affective systems underlying decision-making.
*Corresponding author: Philip Harris, University of Melbourne, E-Mail: [email protected].
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An economic institutional analysis of the retirementpro-vision information in Germany
Marlene Haupt*, Aysel Yollu-Tok
Abstract
As a result of demographic and economic developments as well as the reduction in the benefit levels provided by
the Federal German Retirement Fund, the provisions of individuals' private pensions have gained in importance.
Consequently, the informational needs of beneficiaries have increased, as a wider range of options are open to
them and more diverse obligations are associated with complex pension products and services that are
supplemented by public subsidies. Drawing on an economic-institutional framework, an analysis of the Federal
Pension Fund in Germany as well as the privately funded 'Riester' pensions can be used to illustrate, firstly, how
the normative and actual behaviour of beneficiaries differ and, secondly, the behaviour-theoretical reasons for
that discrepancy. A holistic and analytical concept that can be used to explain human behaviour is the homo
oeconomicus institutionalis. This links economic and psychological preferences. The paper concludes by noting
that a delta analysis can identify the behavioural modifications that contribute to a reduction in the gaps betweennormative and actual behaviour. This can lead to recommendations for policy makers so that existing
information on retirement provisions can be optimized.
*Corresponding author: Marlene Haupt, University Koblenz-Landau, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Call-response improvisation:
New insights in the study of creativity
Morten Friis-Olivarius*, Mikkel Wallentin, Andreas Roepstorff, ThomasZega Ramsy, Peter Vuust
Abstract
Nearly all neuroimaging studies of creative behavior investigate verbal associations. These studies find an
involvement of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). In contrast, two recent studies of pianists found
the right DLPFC to be linked with non-verbal creative behavior. Musicians, however, often communicate on
stage through their playing. But does this improvised interaction involve left- or right-lateralized prefrontal brain
regions? To investigate this, we conducted a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment where
participants had to improvise a musical answer to a given musical rhythmic phrase. We found that only the left
DLPFC was activated during response creation compared to control, indicating that musical communication
resembles that of linguistic behavior rather than strictly non-linguistic behavior.
*Corresponding author: Morten Friis-Olivarius, Copenhagen Business School, E-Mail: [email protected].
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A model of hypnotic communication in theconsumption experience
Gianluigi Guido*, M. Irene Prete, Marco Pichierri, Barbara Bleve
Abstract
In their purchase decision processes, consumers can be affected by a magnetic mechanism similar to what
influences hypnotized individuals. Purchasing decisions are often based on apparently unconscious and
emotional reasons, and the response to this need can be provided by hypnotic communications, which turn an
abstract idea into a real and credible benefit for products/services. Defined hypnosis as a state of focused
attention, it is plausible to make the comparison between the hypnotic phenomena and the "absorption" of the
consumer in the consumptions experience. This study describes how the methods of the persuasive
communication replicate the workings of the hypnotic phenomena and how hypnotic and persuasive marketing
communication can be a powerful tool for implanting ideas or suggestions. A model of persuasive
communication structured on the following three levels is proposed: i) Appealing to emotions and latent stimuli
is the first stage to activate the post-hypnotic suggestion; ii) The post-hypnotic suggestion becomes action whena situation or a state recalls the hypnotists suggestion; iii) Suggestion needs to be reinforced so that an action
could be repeated. Implications for marketing are discussed.
*Corresponding author: Gianluigi Guido, University of Lecce, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Exchange or communal:
An examination of customer relationships orientation
from the salespersons perspective
Lei Guo*
Abstract
Cultivation of successful customer relationships is accomplished through individual firms employees, especially
the salesperson. Although prior research has established a link between salespersons characteristics and
customer relationships, little research has addressed salespersons perspective in cultivating customer
relationships. In the present study, we have drawn on the literature on relationship marketing and social
psychology; and formalized our conceptual model of customer relationship orientations from the salespersons
perspective. This model illustrates that a customer relationship is either communal or exchange oriented where
the salespersons perceived relationship benefits and customers characteristics are determinants of the
relationship orientation. We tested the model with salespeople from business-to-business companies in Chinese business context. Initial 132 survey responses indicated that customer relationship is both exchange and
communal oriented. Furthermore, we noted that salespeople are likely to develop communal type relationships
with their favorable customers as well as with those who are similar.
*Corresponding author: Lei Guo, University of Exeter, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Perception and effectiveness of commercials:
An experimental study using eye-tracking
Natalie Hofer*
Abstract
In the underlying study a theoretical model has been designed in order to explain the perception and
effectiveness of TV commercials. The model centers on the influence of product involvement, familiarity with
the commercial, attitude toward advertising in general (as factors which influence visual attention top-down),
and brand position/position of the web address in the commercial (as a bottom-up factor) on eye movements of
consumers. The study is the first to confirm the influence of top-down-factors such as product involvement and
familiarity with the commercial on eye movements. Within commercials with moderate compared to low or
very high complexity the position of the web address has a positive impact on the number of fixations on the
address, if the address is shown all over the commercial instead of being shown only at the end. Eye movements
of the respondents also predict the effectiveness of commercials in regard to the attitude toward the commercial
(e.g. relevance, transparency) and the attitude toward the brand (e.g. cognitive aspects). The findings
support that a commercials power to concentrate consumers attention (= fixation density) predicts the
respondents attitude toward the commercial. The greater a respondents fixation density is, the better the
commercial is rated by the respondent concerning the relevance of the commercial.
*Corresponding author: Natalie Hofer, Vienna University of Economics and Business, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Automatic processes and neural correlates ofcompulsive buying behavior in men
Mirja Hubert*, Marco Hubert, Oliver B. Bttner, Arnd Florack, PeterKenning
Abstract
A considerable number of consumers suffer from financial problems that are the result of impulse buying and
overspending. Indeed, in an extreme form impulse buying and overspending can be considered as a compulsive
buying disorder. Recent studies have shown that lacking self-control is an important determinant of compulsive
buying. Our research completes these studies by showing that male consumers who suffer from problems related
to compulsive buying also differ in how much shopping related stimuli automatically activate positive impulses.
In two studies, we presented participants brand logos from the high price segment of various product categories
and measured automatically activated positive associations (Study 1) and the activation of brain areas related to
the reward system (Study 2). We found that automatically activated positive associations with the brand logos
were correlated with indicators of compulsive buying such as overspending (Study 1) and that groupsdifferentiated on the basis of a compulsive buying index showed the expected differences in activation patterns
in brain regions associated with reward.
*Corresponding author: Mirja Hubert, Zeppelin University, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Price memory and the life you live
Marc Linzmajer*, Tim Eberhardt, Peter Kenning
Abstract
Price knowledge has been one of the top behavioral pricing themes over the last decades with considerable
research investigating price knowledge of consumers. A minor focus of research is so far to what degree price
knowledge is dependent on the individuals memory system. This study tries to combine the marketing concept
of price knowledge with psychophysiological evidence on memory performance with the focus on individual
lifestyle components and its influence on price memory. The exploratory approach is based on a sequential price
processing model and leads to an interesting outcome: When dealing with price knowledge of consumers, a
reconsideration including lifestyle components showed significant effects. Recognition performance was
significantly predicted by twice as much lifestyle components (health status, nutritional habits, physical activity,
satisfaction and affective state, smoking, mental activity) than recall memory performance (health status,
nutritional habits, physical activity). Therefore the results have strong practical and future research implications.
New perspectives are opened up for marketing and sales professionals by better understanding their customers
way of memorizing price information. In the light of relative imprecise knowledge about lifestyle factors going
beyond the medical sphere, further research in this sense should try to create more reliable measurements.
*Corresponding author: Marc Linzmajer, Zeppelin University, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Are every-day consumer choices driven by value orbrightness of choice options?
Insights from vision science
Milica Milosavljevic*, Vidhya Navalpakkam, Christof Koch, AntonioRangel
Abstract
Imagine that you are in a hurry and have a few seconds available to choose a food item (e.g. from a vending
machine). The available items vary both in subjective value - how much you like each and in their visual
properties brightness. How do the two factors affect your choice? In four eye-tracking and button-press
experiments, subjects made choices between pairs of food items with different subjective values. We also
manipulated visual saliency by changing the brightness of the food items. The results indicate that such choices
can be made at sub-second speeds and that visual saliency affects choices when the value of the two items is
similar, which is highly representative of todays cluttered shopping environment, but that value wins over whenone of the options is highly preferred. The current findings carry important implications for marketing practice,
such as product packaging and shelf-positioning.
*Corresponding author: Milica Milosavljevic, California Institute of Technology, E-Mail: [email protected].
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The contribution of emotions and nonverbal attitude
Sandra Brigitte Schlegl*
Abstract
The aim of this poster is to demonstrate the use of nonverbal attitude measurement (i.e. via pictures and
emotions) for brand management. A positive attitude towards a brand serves as a predictor for future behaviour
(e.g. buying intention). Therefore, the periodical ascertainment of attitudes is one of the main parts of brand
management. As human information processing mainly works with pictures and emotions, it is doubtful if
attitudes can be surveyed true to reality by sole means of verbal measurement. This is where the method of
nonverbal attitude measurement can be assessed. In this method, the emotional component of the customers'
attitude is ascertained by pictures. Thereby, not only the existence but also the intensiveness of the relevant
emotion can be measured. The empirical study has been examined by structural equation modelling.
* Corresponding author: Sandra Brigitte Schlegl, Vienna University of Economics and Business, E-Mail:[email protected].
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Ad-editorial congruency and side of ad presentationaffect attention and memory for print advertisements
Jaana M. Simola*, Markus Kivikangas, Christina M. Krause
Abstract
Previous research on visual processing of advertisements has mainly focused on formal aspects such as graphics,
size and location of the ads. Currently, little is known about ad content related factors. The present experiment
investigated how semantic relation between the ads and editorials, as well as the side of ad presentation
influenced processing of print advertisements. Ad processing was studied in a typical newspaper reading
situation, where the eyes land on the ads as part of scanning on the page. We examined situations in which the
topic of the ad was either semantically congruent or incongruent with the content of the editorial texts. The aim
was to test to which extent the semantic congruency and the side of the ad presentation affected attention and
memory for the advertisement pictorials and brand-logos. We recorded eye movements since the method has
proven to be a good indicator of the locus of visual attention. Recognition of the ads and the logos was measured
to infer how deeply the ad message was processed during the initial viewing of the newspaper pages.
*Corresponding author: Jaana M. Simola, University of Helsinki, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Level of perceptual expectedness influences thepreference for novel brand logos
Martin Skov*, Thomas Zega Ramsy
Abstract
Brands are among the main vehicles for companies to ensure consumers attention and memory. Influencing the brand equity of a given brand starts at the formation of first impressions. It is well documented that novel
information, including novel brands, are initially treated with a relative skepticism. With repeated exposure this
negative response has been shown to fade and change into a more favorable evaluation of the information.
Although this initial exposure effect has been demonstrated across different domains, little is known about the
underlying psychological and neural factors influencing it. Recent studies suggest that skepticism for novel
information is in part caused by stimulus predictability where unexpected stimuli, by activating specific aversion
related brain states, cause avoidance behavior. Using a recently devised method from cognitive neuroscience, we
sought to test whether auditory predictability and unpredictability, known to produce aversive behavioral and
neural responses, would influence first impressions to novel brand logos. During testing, novel brand logos
associated with unpredictable sounds were rated significantly lower than brand logos associated with predictable
sounds. Exploratory analyses uncovered unexpected effects of gender and brand logo category. These results are
discussed in light of factors influencing first impressions, suggesting implications for brand logo design.
*Corresponding author: Martin Skov, Copenhagen Business School, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Disorganised children:
The emotional and financial cost of unidentified neuro-developmental difficulties in children and adolescents
Samuel Stein*, Uttom Chowdhury
Abstract
Disorganised children suffer from a wide array of neuro-developmental processing problems that actively
impede their emotional, social and academic progress. Unfortunately, rather than being recognised early as
having neurologically-based deficits, they are often referred to child and adolescent mental health services much
later due to concerns about emotional and behavioural problems. Whilst these disorganised children often fail
to meet the strict diagnostic criteria for any one particular diagnosis, their presentation is extremely consistent
with subtle neuro-biological deficits which are of sufficient severity to cause difficulties day to day, both within
the family and within the classroom. If these children can be identified early, and receive appropriate therapeutic
help, they are more likely to remain in school and engage within the community rather than becoming
educationally and socially marginalised. The aim of this presentation is to highlight the needs of this very
interesting, and yet often overlooked, group of children before they are negatively and unhelpfully labelled as
simply being badly behaved, with an emphasis on punishment rather than on help and support. If not identified
and treated when still young enough to change, the emotional and financial costs of this missed diagnosis are
potentially astronomical with significantly worse adult outcomes.
*Corresponding author: Samuel Stein, Bedfordshire & Luton Community NHS Trust, E-Mail: [email protected].
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What happened and how fix it?
Resolving conflict at home, at school and in the
workplace
Samuel Stein*, Duncan Pearce, Helen McMillan
Abstract
Getting on with other people can sometime be very difficult. Everyone has their own ideas about what is right,
and their own thoughts about how to do things. This can lead to arguments at home, at school or in the
workplace when people want to do things differently, or dont see things the same way. Often when this
happens, people spend most of their time worrying about who did what, and who is to blame. They dont spend
nearly as much time thinking about how to fix the problem. This mediation-based approach therefore attempts to
change that, and to have most people spending most of their time and energy looking at making things better. It
may be that no-one will get everything they want, or have everything their own way, but at least everyone should
get a fair share of what they want. It can be used with families at home, and with pupils in schools. It can also beused by adults experiencing marital friction or for problems at work. If implemented effectively, mediated and
negotiated solutions can provide a more viable, more satisfying and more economical way of dealing with
conflict across a whole range of settings.
*Corresponding author: Samuel Stein, Bedfordshire & Luton Community NHS Trust , E-Mail: [email protected].
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Excalibur:
Multi-agency intervention and support barometer
Samuel Stein*, Christopher Sebire
Abstract
Over the past decade, heavy criticism has been directed towards mental health and social care services for failing
to manage children and families at risk more effectively. Unfortunately, traditional risk assessment tools have
proved of limited usefulness, especially as they struggle to address multiple risks within a single measure and
fail to facilitate effective communication between different professionals and agencies. Risk management should
also be conducted in a spirit of collaboration with service user, building on their strengths and emphasising
recovery. Recognising these problems, the Multi-Agency Intervention and Support Barometer has been designed
to provide a unique but comprehensive approach to risk management. It utilizes a broad-based clinical approach,
in a user-friendly format, with major emphasis on intervention and recovery rather than on risk identification
alone. The barometer also promotes follow-through from assessment to treatment, and provides effective
communication across teams, services and agencies. In addition, the barometer allows for easy updating and
tracking of changes over time, and emergency alerts are automatically triggered when patients score highly on
risk factors being measured. If integrated into health and social care, the barometer will actively reduce risk
whilst also improving clinical care and providing essential support for vulnerable children and families.
*Corresponding author: Samuel Stein, Bedfordshire & Luton Community NHS Trust , E-Mail: [email protected].
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Frames, decisions and cardiac-autonomic control
Stefan Stterlin*, Cornelia Herbert, Michael Schmitt, Claus Vgele
Abstract
The framing effect (FE) describes the phenomenon that human choices are susceptible to the way they are
presented rather than objective information. The present study extends common decision-making paradigms with
frame variation by including inhibitory control, operationalized as vagally mediated heart rate variability (HRV)
at rest and motor response inhibition during a stop-signal task (SST). We hypothesized that inhibitory control is
inversely associated with susceptibility to framing effects. Forty adult volunteers performed a risky choice
framing task in which identical information about wins and losses was presented using loss or gain frames. As
predicted, there was an inverse association between HRV and framing effects, accounting for 23% of the
variance in framing effects. Inhibitory control as indexed by performance in the SST was not associated with
framing effects. These results are discussed in terms of the role of inhibitory processes (as indicated by vagal
activity) for decision-making processes.
*Corresponding author: Stefan Stterlin, Universit du Luxembourg, E-Mail: [email protected].
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Cognitive control capabilities, routinization anddecision-making
Daniella Laureiro-Martinez*, Stefano Brusoni, Maurizio Zollo
Abstract
The link between the mindful and less-mindful perspectives is relatively underdeveloped (Levinthal & Rerup,
2006) and even less so is our understanding of the combined impact that superior cognitive abilities (i.e.
mindful) and routinization (i.e., less mindful) simultaneously have on decision-making. This paper intends to fill
this gap introducing the concept of cognitive control capabilities, i.e. an individuals ability to regulate ones
attention modulation processes. Through an experimental study we first show that differences in individuals
cognitive control capabilities actually influence adaptive managerial decision-making. Second, better
performance in a decision making task is obtained only when superior cognitive control capabilities are
combined with the ability to routinize decisions. Finally, we conclude this paper exploring the implications of
our results.
*Corresponding author: Daniella Laureiro-Martinez, Bocconi University, E-Mail: [email protected].
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2011 Call for papers
Please be invited to submit a paper to the 2011 NeuroPsychoEconomics / ConNEcs Conference in Munich,
Germany. The conference will be held from May 26-27, 2011 at TUM Business School of the Technical
University of Munich (Arcisstrasse 21, Munich, Germany). The conference will be chaired by Isabell Welpe,Professor of Strategic Management and Organizations, TUM Business School. The deadline for submissions isJanuary 15, 2011.
The conference theme of 2011 is:
Excellence in Neuroeconomics Striving for Impact
in Economics, Management, and Marketing ResearchManuscripts should combine concepts from neuroscience and/or psychology with problems of business andeconomics. Topics may include (but are not restricted to):
Application of concepts and methods from neuroscience and/or psychology in solving business and economicsproblems (e.g., marketing, behavioral finance, organization science, management, and decision science)
Analysis of interpersonal behavior (e.g., relationships between customer-supplier, supervisor-subordinate,and/or investor-firm) with the means of neuroscience and/or psychology
Discussion of ethical and legal issues at the interface of psychology, neuroscience, and business and
economics research
Evaluation of the state of the field of research in neuroeconomics
Presentation of state-of-the-art techniques for solving neuroeconomic problems
Empirical as well as conceptual manuscripts are welcome. Manuscripts submitted for the conference must not be
published elsewhere at the time of the conference. The conference language will beEnglish.
Full paper submissions
Manuscripts for the 2011 NeuroPsychoEconomics / ConNEcs Conference must be submitted byJanuary 15,2011.
Manuscripts passing the double-blind review process will be accepted for presentation at the conference.Manuscript submissions must be accompanied by a cover letter that indicates the intention to publish the
paper, if accepted, either in its entirety in the Journal of Neuroscience, Psychology, and Economics (ISSN1937-321X) for English submissions, in the journal NeuroPsychoEconomics (ISSN 1861-4523) for German
submissions, or in abstract form (English only) in the NeuroPsychoEconomics Conference Proceedings(ISSN 1861-8243).
English manuscript submissions must conform to the author guidelines of the American Psychological
Association (APA). Please see http://www.jnpe.org for more submission information.
German manuscript submissions must conform to the author guidelines of the Association forNeuroPsychoEconomics. Please see http://www.neuropsychoeconomics.org for more submission information.
In submitting a manuscript, the authors affirm that, if accepted, at least one author will register for the2011 NeuroPsychoEconomics / ConNEcs Conference and appear at the conference to present the paper.
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Poster submissions
Posters for the 2011 NeuroPsychoEconomics / ConNEcs Conference must be submitted byJanuary 15, 2011.
Posters passing the double-blind review process will be accepted for presentation at the conference. Postersubmissions must be accompanied by a cover letter that indicates poster submission and an extendedabstracts (1,000 words max.) that describes the research presented on the poster. Please submit the extended
abstract through http://www.jnpe.org. Extended abstracts will be published in the NeuroPsychoEconomicsConference Proceedings (ISSN 1861-8243).
Englishposter submissions (that is, extended abstracts) must conform to the author guidelines of the AmericanPsychological Association (APA).
Posters may have a maximal size of 120cm (height) x 90cm (width).
In submitting a poster, the authors affirm that, if accepted, at least one author will register for the2011 NeuroPsychoEconomics / ConNEcs Conference and appear at the conference to present the poster.
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Membership & mailing list
Membership
You can become a member of the Association for NeuroPsychoEconomics online at http://www.jnpe.org or
http://www.neuropsychoeconomics.org.
Membership includes a subscription to either the peer-reviewed scientific English Journal of Neuroscience, Psychology, and Economics or the peer-reviewed scientific German journal NeuroPsychoEconomics, adiscount in conference fees, and special announcements.
Mailing list
In order to subscribe to the NeuroPsychoEconomics mailing list, please send an e-mail [email protected] with Subscribe in the subject field.
You will receive up-to-date information on topics at the interface of economics, management, psychology, and
neuroscience through the official NeuroPsychoEconomics mailing list. The list will also cover information aboutconferences and publications from those fields.
You will also have the possibility to send own information through the list.
Please refrain from SPAM.
In order to unsubscribe, please send an e-mail to [email protected] with Remove in thesubject line.
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