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The inhibiting effect of brand salience on brand name recall

conference contribution
posted on 2001-01-01, 00:00 authored by Julian Vieceli, B Sharp
This paper reports on a replication of Alba and Chattopadhyay’s (1986) study of the effects of substantially heightened brand salience upon the recall of competing brand names. Heightened salience was consistently shown to have an inhibiting effect on recall across a variety of experimental conditions. However, in the replication study this salience effect was not observed. Instead a trend in the reverse direction was found. This new finding is congruent with associative network model of memory and its prediction that subjects concentrating on a brand should trigger links in memory to the brand and other brands in the category.

History

Title of proceedings

ANZMAC 2001 : Proceedings of the Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy Conference 2001.

Event

Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy. Conference (2001 : Auckland, New Zealand)

Pagination

1 - 6

Publisher

[Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy]

Location

Auckland, New Zealand

Place of publication

[Auckland, N.Z.]

Start date

2001-12-01

End date

2001-12-05

ISBN-10

0473082063

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2001

Editor/Contributor(s)

S Chetty, B Collins

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