Back to Search Start Over

Towards a brain-to-society systems model of individual choice

Authors :
Douglas Spencer Moore
Antoine Bechara
Scott A. Huettel
Yan Kestens
Asim Ansari
Terry T.-K. Huang
Peter Kooreman
Alain Dagher
Ulf Böckenholt
Bärbel Knäuper
Lesley K. Fellows
Ross A. Hammond
Ale Smidts
Laurette Dubé
Mark Daniel
Wayne S. DeSarbo
Dube, Laurette
Bechara, A
Bockenholt, Ulf
Ansari, A
Dagher, A
Daniel, Mark
Desarbo, W S
Fellows, G
Hammond, R
Huang, Terry TK
Huettel, S
Kestens, Yan
Knauper, Barbel
Kooreman, P
Moore, Douglas
Smidts, A
Department of Marketing Management
Source :
Marketing Letters, 19(3-4), 323-336, Marketing Letters, 19(3/4), 323-336. Springer New York, Marketing Letters 19 (2008) 3-4
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Canonical models of rational choice fail to account for many forms of motivated adaptive behaviors, specifically in domains such as food selections. To describe behavior in such emotion- and reward-laden scenarios, researchers have proposed dual-process models that posit competition between a slower, analytic faculty and a fast, impulsive, emotional faculty. In this paper, we examine the assumptions and limitations of these approaches to modeling motivated choice. We argue that models of this form, though intuitively attractive, are biologically implausible. We describe an approach to motivated choice based on sequential sampling process models that can form a solid theoretical bridge between what is known about brain function and environmental influences upon choice. We further suggest that the complex and dynamic relationships between biology, behavior, and environment affecting choice at the individual level must inform aggregate models of consumer choice. Models using agent-based complex systems may further provide a principled way to relate individual and aggregate consumer choices to the aggregate choices made by businesses and social institutions. We coin the term "brain-to-society systems" choice model for this broad integrative approach.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09230645
Volume :
19
Issue :
3/4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marketing Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7cb2b50d6b81a4a22dfb8a2b30ee4d7f