A blog by Prof. Dante Pirouz, a consumer behavior researcher at the Ivey Business School - University of Western Ontario, who specializes in understanding why our brain and body drive us to consume what we do and what we consumers can do about it.
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Monday, June 29, 2009
Assymetry in Distribution of Single Men and Women...Why?
The pivotal question Dan asks is what explains this disparity? I'm thinking it might be due to the ratio of ethnic groups such as African Americans where women dominate in numbers and many males are incarcerated or outside the traditional system (homeless, transient, illegal activity) and less likely to participate in a census. Just my guess!
Friday, May 15, 2009
Trial and Error Works! Past Experience Changes Neural Circuitry

Past Experience Is Invaluable For Complex Decision Making, Brain Research Shows
ScienceDaily (2009-05-15) -- Researchers have shown that past experience really does help when we have to make complex decisions based on uncertain or confusing information. They show that learning from experience actually changes the circuitry in our brains so that we can quickly categorize what we are seeing and make a decision or carry out appropriate actions. ... > read full article
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
IQ Linked to Better Financial Decisions

People With Higher IQs Make Wiser Economic Choices, Study Finds
ScienceDaily (2009-04-28) -- People with higher measures of cognitive ability are more likely to make good choices in several different types of economic decisions, according to a new study. ... > read full article
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Jet Lag a Myth?

Since I live with sleep deprivation, I have always wondered, given the severe effect on my cognitive and emtional judgement my lack of sleep causes, how it impacts consumer psychology. This latest post by my esteemed colleague Dan Goldstein at London B School states the case for why jet lag may not exist and that the effect people feel when they travel across time zones is actually sleep deprivation. See more here!
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Color and Behavior!!!
Red Enhances Men's Attraction To Women, Psychological Study Reveals
ScienceDaily (2008-10-28) -- Psychologists have added color -- literally and figuratively -- to the age-old question of what attracts men to women. Psychologists have demonstrated that the color red makes men feel more amorous toward women. And men are unaware of the role the color plays in their attraction. ... > read full article
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
The Eyes Have It: Face Recognition In 2 Points - Just Left and Center of the Nose
The Nose Knows: Two Fixation Points Needed For Face Recognition
ScienceDaily (2008-10-21) -- Many of us are bad at remembering names but we are very quick to point out that at least we never forget a face. Never mind recognizing a familiar face -- how is it that we recognize faces at all? ... > read full article
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Attention and Brand Location
DVR Fast-forwarding May Not Be Fatal To TV Advertising
ScienceDaily (2008-11-21) -- With the advent of digital video recorders and products like TiVo, viewers can fast-forward past commercials while playing back their favorite shows. Researchers found that viewers can retain valuable brand information even from an ad glimpsed for a fraction of its actual length. However, they also found that ads with brand information located on the periphery of the TV screen are of virtually no value. ... > read full article
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Financial risk behavior shown in men with higher testosterone levels!
Risk taking gene isolated!
Material versus experiential gifts and happiness!
Women's mirror neurons activate when looking at other's emotional faces but men's do not!
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Dopamine Uptake and Risk Taking

Risk Takers, Drug Abusers Driven By Decreased Ability To Process Dopamine
ScienceDaily (2008-12-30) -- For risk-takers and impulsive people, New Year's resolutions often include being more careful, spending more frugally and cutting back on dangerous behavior, such as drug use. But new research finds that these individuals -- labeled as novelty seekers by psychologists -- face an uphill battle in keeping their New Year's resolutions due to the way their brains process dopamine. ... > read full article
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Men Are From Mars -- Neuroscientists Find That Men And Women Respond Differently To Stress
Sunday, July 13, 2008
Haptic Response: How it Feels Matters
Touch Can Trump Taste, Even When It Comes To Selecting Mineral Water
ScienceDaily (2008-07-14) -- For some consumers, the way a cup of mineral water tastes has more to do with the container than the contents. Especially for consumers who are less likely to enjoy touching items or products before deciding to buy them. ... > read full article
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Alcohol Ads and Adolescent Drinking
Advertising, Alcohol And Adolescents
ScienceDaily (2008-06-08) -- The advertising of alcohol, the marketing of alcoholic products, peer pressure and parental influence all play a part in the level of alcohol consumption among young people. Researchers found that advertising seems to be most effective in the case of alcopops and cider. ... > read full article
Death and Consumption
Morbid Thoughts Whet The Appetite
ScienceDaily (2008-06-25) -- Can watching TV news or crime shows trigger overeating? According to new research, people who are thinking about their own deaths want to consume more. ... > read full article
Ventral Striatum Key to Adventure Seeking Behavior
ScienceDaily (2008-06-25) -- Wellcome Trust scientists have identified a key region of the brain which encourages us to be adventurous. The region, located in a primitive area of the brain, is activated when we choose unfamiliar options, suggesting an evolutionary advantage for sampling the unknown. It may also explain why rebranding of familiar products encourages to pick them off the supermarket shelves. ... > read full article