Journal Article10.1353/ASR.2018.0015
Advertising as Experimentation on Human Subjects
Tamara R. Piety
- 01 Jan 2018
- Vol. 19, Iss: 2
3
TL;DR: In a university setting, research on human subjects must be approved by an Institutional Review Board (IRB), which is supposed to ensure that research subjects' participation is voluntary and informed, and that the potential benefits of the research outweigh the potential harms as discussed by the authors.
read more
Abstract: Within the industry, it is an article of faith that consumers distrust advertising. One reason for that distrust may be that they fear being manipulated. Yet the debate about advertising and manipulation always seems to revolve around how much manipulation is really going on and whether consumer skepticism ensures that manipulation tactics will likely fail. But consumer skepticism is a flimsy defense in the face of decades of research, ever more sophisticated tactics of persuasion, billions of dollars spent, and data mining capabilities that permit increasingly detailed and granular analysis. The persuasion industry’s tactics are tested in the field, by trial and error. If a tactic works, we get more of it. In this practice we are all the guinea pigs. In a university setting, research on human subjects must be approved by an Institutional Review Board (IRB). The IRB process is supposed to ensure that research subjects’ participation is voluntary and informed, and that the potential benefits of the research outweigh the potential harms. Yet there is no IRB for our present-day marketing environment. What if it is bad for our health? More ominously still in light of recent events, what if it is bad for democracy?
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
•Posted Content
Economics of Information
TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce the concept of ''search'' where a buyer wanting to get a better price, is forced to question sellers, and deal with various aspects of finding the necessary information.
4.2K
•Posted Content
'Merchants of Discontent': An Exploration of the Psychology of Advertising, Addiction and the Implications for Commercial Speech
TL;DR: The authors compared the psychology of addiction and advertising and argued that parallels suggest that some regulation of advertising may be justified in the interest of public health, and compared the two domains in a similar way.
8
References
Television food marketing to children revisited: the Federal Trade Commission has the constitutional and statutory authority to regulate.
TL;DR: The authors analyzes the constitutional authority for the FTC to regulate television food marketing directed at children as deceptive in light of the most robust public health evidence on the subject and concludes that children do not have the same First Amendment right to receive speech as adults.
57
Fear Appeals and Persuasion: Assumptions and Errors in Advertising Research
TL;DR: For instance, the authors suggests that researchers might have been incorrect in assuming that a certain type of message would always engender the greatest degree of fear with all subjects, and the oft-repeated "optimal level of fear" for persuasion is not a supported theory that explains such findings.
50
•Journal Article
A Case Study of Volkswagen Unethical Practice in Diesel Emission Test
TL;DR: In this case, the participants and primary reasons of this rigging in diesel emission test are identified in line with previous studies and recommendations are provided in order to prevent such scandal to take place in the future.
•Journal Article
Decisionmaking and the Limits of Disclosure: The Problem of Predatory Lending: Price
TL;DR: In this article, the authors apply decision-making from psychology and behavioral economics fields to the problem of predatory lending, and show how sellers of home loans exploit widespread cognitive heuristics, biases, and emotional coping mechanisms to sell overpriced home loans to a significant segment of the borrowing population.
•Book
Blurring the Lines: Market-Driven and Democracy-Driven Freedom of Expression
Maria Edström,Andrew T. Kenyon +1 more
- 01 Jan 2016
TL;DR: Blurring the Lines as mentioned in this paper focuses on challenges from the market to free speech and how free speech can be protected, promoted, and developed when l..., where the market-driven and democracy-driven freedom of expression can overlap.
34