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Saturday, May 5, 2012

Effective Ad? Ask Your Brain



by Jane J. Lee 
Hidden wisdom. Researchers used antismoking campaigns to assess how well brain activity predicts behavior.
Credit: Digital Vision/Thinkstock
Companies and health organizations spend millions of dollars on surveys, polls, and focus groups trying to suss out what people will like, buy, or do. But research shows that these techniques aren't all that accurate. Can brain scans do any better? It's possible, according to a new study that finds that a neural activity predicts people's responses to a public service ad about cigarette smoking better than simply asking a focus group.
Researchers led by neuroscientist Emily Falk at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and Matthew Lieberman, a social neuroscientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, focused on the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC), located at the front of the brain. Of the many roles its neurons play, scientists were most interested in the ones related to self-reflection, thinking of what you value, and identity. Activity in this region increases when people identify with what they see or try to determine the value of something as it relates to them. A previous study by Falk found that MPFC activity that was recorded while people viewed slides with messages urging regular sunscreen use predicted which individuals were most likely to comply. But Lieberman and Falk wanted to go a step further and see if activity in the MPFC in one group of people could predict the behavior of a much bigger population.
They looked at the effectiveness of three ad campaigns aimed at getting smokers to call the National Cancer Institute's quit hotline. The researchers took functional magnetic resonance imaging scans of brain activity in 30 heavy smokers who intended to quit, evenly split between men and women and ranging from 28 to 69 years old, as they watched three ad campaigns. Then scientists asked participants to rank the campaigns according to how effective they thought they'd be for the public.
Participants thought one particular ad on the difficulty of quitting, similar to one featuring a woman who imagines jumping out of a window to retrieve a lit cigarette, would be the most effective at getting people to call the hotline. They ranked a humorous ad similar to one about a manlearning to drink coffee without a cigarette, second, and thought a humorous ad similar to one with finger puppets would be the least effective. Health messaging experts also came up with the same rankings. But the brain scans showed a different pattern, the researchers report online this month in Psychological Science.
The finger puppet-like ad elicited the most activity in the MPFC of the smokers, followed by one like the jumping woman, and then the one similar to the man drinking coffee. The finger puppet-like ad elicited a 32-fold increase, the commercial like the jumping woman increased calls 11.5-fold, and the one like the coffee drinker increased them only 2.3-fold.
"Overall, I thought it was a clever, provocative study," says psychologist Michael Sayette of the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania. He cautions that the sample size was small, only 30 individuals, and that other regions of the brain may also forecast behavior changes.
Lieberman is currently working on a study of whether MPFC activity while viewing movie trailers can predict box office receipts. "Focus groups aren't a bad thing, [but] they aren't telling the whole story," he says. 
*Correction, 30 April: The researchers presented ads to subjects that were similar to ones where a man jumps out a window to retrieve a lit cigarette and a man learns to drink coffee without a cigarette, as well as a humorous ad featuring finger puppets. These were not the actual ads used in the research.
Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek

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