Perception
Learning & Memory
Motivation
Attitudes & Persuasion
Decision Making
100

the immediate response of our sensory receptors (i.e., eyes, ears, nose, mouth, fingers) to basic stimuli such as light, color, sound, odor, and texture.

What is a sensation?

100

Behavioral and cognitive approaches.

What are the two theoretical approaches to learning?
100

Utilitarian and hedonic.

What are the two classification of consumer needs?

100

You can have this towards an object, a brand, an advertisement, or a product category.

What is an attitude?

100

Problem recognition, information search, evaluation of alternatives, purchase decision, and post-purchase.

What are the five stages of decision-making?

200

Intensity, ability to discriminate stimuli, exposure, and relevance are factors that result in this.

What is adaptation?

200

Classical conditioning and operant or instrumental conditioning.

What are the two primary types of behavioral learning theories?

200

An inner state of arousal that provides energy to achieve some goal.

What is motivation?

200

Central route and peripheral route are two pathways captured in this model.

What is the ELM model?
200

The set of alternatives a consumer is evaluating to purchase.

What is the consideration set?

300

Size, color, positioning, and novelty are ways that brand managers can help create this.

What is a point of difference?

300
Helps to strengthen the stimulus-response associations formed in the associative network.

What is repetition?

300

This theory helps explain why consumers are motivated to reduce tensions.

What is the theory of cognitive dissonance?

300

A model that attempts to capture someone's attitude toward an object based on the relevant attributes and their corresponding evaluations.

Multiattribute model

300

Decision rule that leads consumers to choose based off the largest number of positive attributes.

What is the compensatory rule?

400

Exposure, attention, and interpretation.

What are the stages of perception?

400

Involves a process of acquiring information to encode, storing it over time, and retrieving it when needed.

What is memory?

400

This increases when something is personally relevant, when perceived risk is high, when there is a discrepancy between our beliefs, or our needs are unsatisfied.

What is involvement?

400

Creates incongruency between expectations and beliefs that requires a resolution.

What is cognitive dissonance?

400

Shortcuts that provoke us to make fast, intuitive, and largely unconscious decisions.

What are heuristics?

500

The set of beliefs that influences how consumers perceive and assign meaning to a stimulus.

What is a schema?

500

Sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory.

What are the three types of memory?

500

This increases attention and fosters careful evaluation.

What is high involvement?

500

Change the belief, evaluation, or add a new attribute or belief.

What are ways to change someone's attitude?

500

An inverse U relationship, where experts perform selective searches, novices rely on others opinions, and moderate knowledgeable consumers generally search the most.

What is the relationship between information search and product knowledge?