Video: Thursday, 9 November 2017

As a business school, RSM does a surprising amount of brain research! To celebrate World Science Day 2017, here's an overview of three recent studies that explain or predict behaviour in maketing and accounting by scanning the brain.

Brain scans reveal what makes a TV advert effective - Linda Couwenberg

What is it about a TV advert that triggers people to find the product online? Scanning consumers’ brains has allowed RSM's Linda Couwenberg to discover that a TV advert works best when it both highlights a product’s functional benefits and triggers the viewer’s imagination. This particular combination of elements activates specific parts of the viewer’s brain most intensely, she found, which makes the advert more effective.

How the brain's sensitivity for emotions causes accounting fraud - Frank Hartmann

World-shaking accounting scandals often originate in financial reporting from internal accountants. By studying internal accountants’ brain activity, Professor Frank Hartmann discovered that some misreporting comes from a neurological make-up that makes them more vulnerable to social pressure from managers promoting their own personal interests. Hartmann says the results shed a different light on who should – and who shouldn’t ‒ be hired for internal accountants’ positions.

Brain activity can forecast success of crowd-funded projects - Alexander Genevsky

Determining how well a crowdfunded project will be received by the ‘crowd’ has traditionally been done through surveys and polls. Research by Alexander Genevsky and a team of researchers now finds that scanning brain activity can make predictions of individual choices more accurate. But more importantly, the study also discovered that activity in one area of the brain can forecast the success of crowdfunded projects on the internet more reliably than the answers people give.

Dr. Linda Couwenberg

Behavioral Economist

Google

Profile picture of Dr. Linda Couwenberg

Prof. Frank Hartmann

Head of Department of Economics

Nijmegen School of Management 

Profile picture of Professor Frank Hartmann

Dr. Alexander Genevsky

Assistant Professor

Rotterdam School of Management (RSM)

Profile picture of Dr. Alexander Genevsky
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