what is learning
a relatively permanent change in behaviour caused by experience
what are the characteristics of learning
what is incidental learning
causal, unintentional acquisition of knowledge
what are the four types of learning
what is behavioural learning
stimulus-response connections:
- classical conditioning
- instrumental conditioning
what is classical conditioning
a stimulus that elicits a response paired with another stimulus that initially does not elicit a response on its own
what are the components of conditioning
when is classical conditioning effective
what is the halo effect
stimulus generalisation: tendency of stimuli similar to a CS to evoke, conditioned response
what are the principles of market applications of classical conditioning
what is instrumental conditioning also known as
operant conditioning
what is intrumental conditioning
the individual learns to perform behaviours that produce positive outcomes and to avoid those that yield negative outcomes
how does instrumental conditioning occur
what is the instrumental conditioning reinforcement schedule
1) fixed interval reinforcement
- after some time passes, the first correct response brings a reward
2) variable interval reinforcement
- the time that passes before you get reinforced varies based on some average
3) fixed ratio reinforcement
- reinforcement occurs only after a fixed number of responses, this motivates you to continue to perform the same behaviour
4) variable ratio reinforcement
- you get reinforced after a certain number of responses
what are the marketing applications of instrumental conditioning principles
the marketer rewards or punishes the consumer:
- ‘thank you’ email
- discounts
- awards
- loyalty programmes
what do cognitive theories focus on
they focus on consumers as problem solvers and stress the importance of internal mental processes:
- observational learning
- cognitive learning
what is observational learning
we learn about products by observing others’ behaviours, items include:
- observer
- model
- vicarious experience
- modeled behaviour
what are the observational learning conditions
what are the marketing applications of cognitive learning principles
they can show what happens to desirable models who use or do not use their products, the marketer must meet four conditions:
1) the consumer must want to emulate
2) they must remember what the model says or does
3) they must convert the information into action
4) the consumer must be motivated to perform these actions
what is cognitive learning
learning is the accumulation of information and also building knowledge
is learning conscious
there is evidence to support the existence of nonconscious procedural knowledge
what does the strength and speed of learning depend on
what is memory
a process of acquiring information and storing it over time so it will be available when we need it
what is the process approach of memory
1) external inputs
2) encoding
3) storage
4) retrieval