17,650 research outputs found
Mind-reading versus neuromarketing: how does a product make an impact on the consumer?
Purpose
â This research study aims to illustrate the mapping of each consumerâs mental processes in a market-relevant context. This paper shows how such maps deliver operational insights that cannot be gained by physical methods such as brain imaging.
Design/methodology/approach
â A marketed conceptual attribute and a sensed material characteristic of a popular product were varied across presentations in a common use. The relative acceptability of each proposition was rated together with analytical descriptors. The mental interaction that determined each consumerâs preferences was calculated from the individualâs performance at discriminating each viewed sample from a personal norm. These personal cognitive characteristics were aggregated into maps of demand in the market for subpanels who bought these for the senses or for the attribute.
Findings
â Each of 18 hypothesized mental processes dominated acceptance in at least a few individuals among both sensory and conceptual purchasers. Consumers using their own descriptive vocabulary processed the factors in appeal of the product more centrally. The sensory and conceptual factors tested were most often processed separately, but a minority of consumers treated them as identical. The personal ideal points used in the integration of information showed that consumers wished for extremes of the marketed concept that are technologically challenging or even impossible. None of this evidence could be obtained from brain imaging, casting in question its usefulness in marketing.
Research limitations/implications
â Panel mapping of multiple discriminations from a personal norm fills three major gaps in consumer marketing research. First, preference scores are related to major influences on choices and their cognitive interactions in the mind. Second, the calculations are completed on the individualâs data and the cognitive parameters of each consumerâs behavior are aggregated â never the raw scores. Third, discrimination scaling puts marketed symbolic attributes and sensed material characteristics on the same footing, hence measuring their causal interactions for the first time.
Practical implications
â Neuromarketing is an unworkable proposition because brain imaging does not distinguish qualitative differences in behavior. Preference tests are operationally effective when designed and analyzed to relate behavioral scores to major influences from market concepts and sensory qualities in interaction. The particular interactions measured in the reported study relate to the major market for healthy eating.
Originality/value
â This is the first study to measure mental interactions among determinants of preference, as well as including both a marketed concept and a sensed characteristic. Such an approach could be of great value to consumer marketing, both defensively and creatively
Comparative Monte Carlo Efficiency by Monte Carlo Analysis
We propose a modified power method for computing the subdominant eigenvalue
of a matrix or continuous operator. Here we focus on defining
simple Monte Carlo methods for its application. The methods presented use
random walkers of mixed signs to represent the subdominant eigenfuction.
Accordingly, the methods must cancel these signs properly in order to sample
this eigenfunction faithfully. We present a simple procedure to solve this sign
problem and then test our Monte Carlo methods by computing the of
various Markov chain transition matrices. We first computed for
several one and two dimensional Ising models, which have a discrete phase
space, and compared the relative efficiencies of the Metropolis and heat-bath
algorithms as a function of temperature and applied magnetic field. Next, we
computed for a model of an interacting gas trapped by a harmonic
potential, which has a mutidimensional continuous phase space, and studied the
efficiency of the Metropolis algorithm as a function of temperature and the
maximum allowable step size . Based on the criterion, we
found for the Ising models that small lattices appear to give an adequate
picture of comparative efficiency and that the heat-bath algorithm is more
efficient than the Metropolis algorithm only at low temperatures where both
algorithms are inefficient. For the harmonic trap problem, we found that the
traditional rule-of-thumb of adjusting so the Metropolis acceptance
rate is around 50% range is often sub-optimal. In general, as a function of
temperature or , for this model displayed trends defining
optimal efficiency that the acceptance ratio does not. The cases studied also
suggested that Monte Carlo simulations for a continuum model are likely more
efficient than those for a discretized version of the model.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
Photoionization Rates of Cs Rydberg Atoms in a 1064 nm Far Off-Resonance Trap
Experimental measurements of photoionization rates of Rydberg
states of Cs () in a 1064 nm far off-resonance dipole trap
are presented. The photoionization rates are obtained by measuring the
lifetimes of Rydberg atoms produced inside of a 1064 nm far off-resonance trap
and comparing the lifetimes to corresponding control experiments in a
magneto-optical trap. Experimental results for the control experiments agree
with recent theoretical predictions for Rydberg state lifetimes and measured
photoionization rates are in agreement with transition rates calculated from a
model potential.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Explicitly correlated plane waves: Accelerating convergence in periodic wavefunction expansions
We present an investigation into the use of an explicitly correlated plane
wave basis for periodic wavefunction expansions at the level of second-order
M{\o}ller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2). The convergence of the electronic
correlation energy with respect to the one-electron basis set is investigated
and compared to conventional MP2 theory in a finite homogeneous electron gas
model. In addition to the widely used Slater-type geminal correlation factor,
we also derive and investigate a novel correlation factor that we term
Yukawa-Coulomb. The Yukawa-Coulomb correlation factor is motivated by analytic
results for two electrons in a box and allows for a further improved
convergence of the correlation energies with respect to the employed basis set.
We find the combination of the infinitely delocalized plane waves and local
short-ranged geminals provides a complementary, and rapidly convergent basis
for the description of periodic wavefunctions. We hope that this approach will
expand the scope of discrete wavefunction expansions in periodic systems.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figure
Observation of blue-shifted ultralong-range Cs Rydberg molecules
We observe ultralong-range blue-shifted Cs molecular states near
Rydberg states in an optical dipole trap, where .
The accidental near degeneracy of and Rydberg states for in
Cs, due to the small fractional quantum defect, leads to non-adiabatic
coupling among these states, producing potential wells above the
thresholds. Two important consequences of admixing high angular momentum states
with states are the formation of large permanent dipole moments, Debye, and accessibility of these states via two-photon association.
The observed states are in excellent agreement with theory. Both projections of
the total angular momentum on the internuclear axis are visible in the
experiment
Horizon energy and angular momentum from a Hamiltonian perspective
Classical black holes and event horizons are highly non-local objects,
defined in terms of the causal past of future null infinity. Alternative,
(quasi)local definitions are often used in mathematical, quantum, and numerical
relativity. These include apparent, trapping, isolated, and dynamical horizons,
all of which are closely associated to two-surfaces of zero outward null
expansion. In this paper we show that three-surfaces which can be foliated with
such two-surfaces are suitable boundaries in both a quasilocal action and a
phase space formulation of general relativity. The resulting formalism provides
expressions for the quasilocal energy and angular momentum associated with the
horizon. The values of the energy and angular momentum are in agreement with
those derived from the isolated and dynamical horizon frameworks.Comment: 39 pages, 3 figures, Final Version : content essentially unchanged
but many small improvements made in response to referees, a few references
adde
X-ray Absorption Fine Structure in Embedded Atoms
Oscillatory structure is found in the atomic background absorption in
x-ray-absorption fine structure (XAFS). This atomic-XAFS or AXAFS arises from
scattering within an embedded atom, and is analogous to the Ramsauer-Townsend
effect. Calculations and measurements confirm the existence of AXAFS and show
that it can dominate contributions such as multi-electron excitations. The
structure is sensitive to chemical effects and thus provides a new probe of
bonding and exchange effects on the scattering potential.Comment: 4 pages plus 2 postscript figures, REVTEX 3.
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