Suomala Jyrki
NeuroLab, Laurea Leppävaara, Laurea University of Applied Sciences, Espoo, Finland.
Front Psychol. 2020 Sep 29;11:570430. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.570430. eCollection 2020.
Consumers can have difficulty expressing their buying intentions on an explicit level. The most common explanation for this intention-action gap is that consumers have many cognitive biases that interfere with rational decision-making. The current resource-rational approach to understanding human cognition, however, suggests that brain environment interactions lead consumers to minimize the expenditure of cognitive energy according to the principle of Occam's Razor. This means that the consumer seeks as simple of a solution as possible for a problem requiring decision-making. In addition, this resource-rational approach to decision-making emphasizes the role of inductive inference and Bayesian reasoning. Together, the principle of Occam's Razor, inductive inference, and Bayesian reasoning illuminate the dynamic human-environment relationship. This paper analyzes these concepts from a contextual perspective and introduces the Consumer Contextual Decision-Making Model (CCDMM). Based on the CCDMM, two hypothetical strategies of consumer decision-making will be presented. First, the SIMilarity-Strategy (SIMS) is one in which most of a consumer's decisions in a real-life context are based on prior beliefs about the role of a commodities specific to real-life situation being encountered. Because beliefs are based on previous experiences, consumers are already aware of the most likely consequences of their actions. At the same time, they do not waste time on developing contingencies for what, based on previous experience, is unlikely to happen. Second, the What-is-Out-there-in-the-World-Strategy (WOWS) is one in which prior beliefs do not work in a real-life situation, requiring consumers to update their beliefs. The principle argument being made is that most experimental consumer research describes decision-making based on the WOWS, when participants cannot apply their previous knowledge and situation-based strategy to problems. The article analyzes sensory and cognitive biases described by behavioral economists from a CCDMM perspective, followed by a description and explanation of the typical intention-action gap based on the model. Prior to a section dedicated to discussion, the neuroeconomic approach will be described along with the valuation network of the brain, which has evolved to solve problems that the human has previously encountered in an information-rich environment. The principles of brain function will also be compared to CCDMM. Finally, different approaches and the future direction of consumer research from a contextual point of view will be presented.
消费者可能难以明确表达他们的购买意图。对于这种意图与行动之间差距的最常见解释是,消费者存在许多认知偏差,这些偏差会干扰理性决策。然而,当前理解人类认知的资源理性方法表明,大脑与环境的相互作用会使消费者根据奥卡姆剃刀原则尽量减少认知能量的消耗。这意味着消费者会为需要决策的问题寻求尽可能简单的解决方案。此外,这种资源理性的决策方法强调归纳推理和贝叶斯推理的作用。奥卡姆剃刀原则、归纳推理和贝叶斯推理共同阐明了动态的人与环境关系。本文从情境视角分析这些概念,并介绍消费者情境决策模型(CCDMM)。基于CCDMM,将提出两种消费者决策的假设策略。首先,相似性策略(SIMS)是指消费者在现实生活情境中的大多数决策基于对特定于所遇到的现实生活情况的商品角色的先验信念。由于信念基于先前的经验,消费者已经意识到其行动最可能产生的后果。同时,他们不会浪费时间为基于先前经验不太可能发生的事情制定应急方案。其次,世界上有什么策略(WOWS)是指先验信念在现实生活情境中不起作用,这要求消费者更新他们的信念。主要观点是,大多数实验性消费者研究描述的是基于WOWS的决策,即参与者无法将他们先前的知识和基于情境的策略应用于问题时的决策。本文从CCDMM视角分析行为经济学家描述的感官和认知偏差,随后基于该模型对典型的意图与行动差距进行描述和解释。在专门讨论的部分之前,将描述神经经济学方法以及大脑的估值网络,大脑的估值网络已经进化以解决人类先前在信息丰富的环境中遇到的问题。大脑功能的原理也将与CCDMM进行比较。最后,将从情境角度介绍消费者研究的不同方法和未来方向。