Group 3 Memory and Knowledger Reporting
Group 3 Memory and Knowledger Reporting
Group 3 Memory and Knowledger Reporting
MEMORY AND
KNOWLEDGE
Learning Objectives:
After studying this chapter, you will be able to:
1.Distinguish among sensory, working, long-term, implicit, and
explicit memory, and explain why marketers must be aware of
these different types of memory.
2.Describe how schemas and scripts affect consumers’ knowledge
content.
3.Explain how and why the content and structure of knowledge,
including associative networks, categories, and prototypicality, are
relevant to marketers; and
4.Discuss what memory retrieval is, how it works, and how
marketers try to affect it.
WHAT IS MEMORY?
• Consumer Memory- is the persistence of learning
over time, via the storage and retrieval of
information, either consciously or unconsciously.
• Retrieval- the process of remembering or accessing
what was previously stored in memory.
• SENSORY MEMORY- Input from the five senses stored
temporarily in memory.
• WORKING MEMORY(WM)- The portion of memory where
incoming information is encoded or interpreted in the
context of existing knowledge, and kept available for more
processing.
• LONG-TERM MEMORY(LTM)-The part of memory where
information is permanently stored for later use.
–Episodic (autobiographical) memory- knowledge we
have about ourselves and our personal, past
experiences.
- Semantic memory- General knowledge about an
entity, detached from specific episodes.
• EXPLICIT MEMORY- When consumers are
consciously aware that they remember
something.
• IMPLICIT MEMORY- Memory without any
conscious attempt at remembering something.
HOW MEMORY IS ENHANCED
Recognition - The process of identifying whether we
have previously encountered a stimulus when re-
exposed to it.