Neuroscience

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Our connection to content
Using neuroscience tools, Innerscope Research explores the connections between consumers and media.
It’s often said that humans are wired to connect: The neural wiring that helps us read the emotions and actions of other people may be a foundation for human empathy.
But for the past eight years, MIT Media Lab spinout Innerscope Research has been using neuroscience technologies that gauge subconscious emotions by monitoring brain and body activity to show just how powerfully we also connect to media and marketing communications.
“We are wired to connect, but that connection system is not very discriminating. So while we connect with each other in powerful ways, we also connect with characters on screens and in books, and, we found, we also connect with brands, products, and services,” says Innerscope’s chief science officer, Carl Marci, a social neuroscientist and former Media Lab researcher.
With this core philosophy, Innerscope — co-founded at MIT by Marci and Brian Levine MBA ’05 — aims to offer market research that’s more advanced than traditional methods, such as surveys and focus groups, to help content-makers shape authentic relationships with their target consumers.
“There’s so much out there, it’s hard to make something people will notice or connect to,” Levine says. “In a way, we aim to be the good matchmaker between content and people.”
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Our connection to content

Using neuroscience tools, Innerscope Research explores the connections between consumers and media.

It’s often said that humans are wired to connect: The neural wiring that helps us read the emotions and actions of other people may be a foundation for human empathy.

But for the past eight years, MIT Media Lab spinout Innerscope Research has been using neuroscience technologies that gauge subconscious emotions by monitoring brain and body activity to show just how powerfully we also connect to media and marketing communications.

“We are wired to connect, but that connection system is not very discriminating. So while we connect with each other in powerful ways, we also connect with characters on screens and in books, and, we found, we also connect with brands, products, and services,” says Innerscope’s chief science officer, Carl Marci, a social neuroscientist and former Media Lab researcher.

With this core philosophy, Innerscope — co-founded at MIT by Marci and Brian Levine MBA ’05 — aims to offer market research that’s more advanced than traditional methods, such as surveys and focus groups, to help content-makers shape authentic relationships with their target consumers.

“There’s so much out there, it’s hard to make something people will notice or connect to,” Levine says. “In a way, we aim to be the good matchmaker between content and people.”

Read more

Filed under advertising neuroimaging hippocampus amygdala prefrontal cortex precuneus empathy neuroscience science

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  6. dermoosealini reblogged this from neurosciencestuff and added:
    In a capitalist consumer society advertising makes the world go round folks, and to merely exist is to contribute to the...
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  15. 20owleyes reblogged this from neurosciencestuff and added:
    Hm…
  16. rcginger reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  17. seeingthestoke reblogged this from neurosciencestuff and added:
    Social circuitry applies to much more than physical interactions with people.
  18. djudiya-djingana-so-iyo reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
  19. takethevibrations reblogged this from neurosciencestuff and added:
    tldr; how to prey on people’s emotions to make them buy your stuff.
  20. strangecuriosity reblogged this from neurosciencestuff and added:
    Not our fault :p
  21. majeet reblogged this from neurosciencestuff
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