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Test your basic knowledge |
Consumer Behavior
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
business-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Allowing a well-known brand name to be affixed to products of another manufacturer
Licensing
PRIZM NE
Persuasion Effects
Buzz Agents
2. Aka product placement - a marketing technique in which a product is integrated into a TV show or film through its use by the characters
Branded Entertainment
Instrumental (operant) Conditioning
Cognitive Dissonance Theory
Stimulus Generalization
3. The practice of encouraging individuals to pass on an email message to others - thus creating the potential for exponential growth in the message's exposure and infuence
Order Effects
Viral Marketing
Cognitive Dissonance Theory
Consumer Socialization
4. Measures concerned with consumers' overall feelings about the product and the brand and their purchase intentions
Field Observation
Attitudinal Measures
Multiattribute Attitude Models
Interference Effects
5. Originally defined as a person whom the message receiver knows personally - such as a parent or friend who gives product information or advice - today it includes people who influence one's consumption via online social networks
Positive Reinforcement
Advertising Wearout
Licensing
Informal Communication Source
6. The response given to a communicated message - whether a spoken reply - nonverbal communication - or some other variant
Institutional Advertising
Communication Feedback
Ego-Defensive Function
Audience Profile
7. The point at which an individual can become satiated with numerous exposures and both attention and retention decline
Social Status
Corrective Advertising
Advertising Wearout
Subjective Measures
8. The perceived honesty and objectivity of the source of the communication
New Media
Source Credibility
Functional Approach
Passive Learning
9. The process by which we recover information from long-term storage
Geodemographic Clusters
Retrieval
Cross-Cultural Consumer Analysis
Unaided Recall
10. A theory that suggest the memory of a negative cue simply decays faster than the message itself - leaving behind the primary message content
Attributions Toward Things
Culture
Informal Communication Source
Differential Decay
11. A component of the functional approach to attitude-change that suggests that consumers want to protect their self-concepts from inner feelings of doubt
Composite-Variable Indexes
Theory of Trying to Consume
Co-Branding
Ego-Defensive Function
12. Making the same response to a slightly different stimuli
Socialization of Family Members
Content Analysis
Formal Communication Source
Stimulus Generalization
13. Traits and tendencies often associated with a particular gender; for example - masculine traits include aggressiveness and competitiveness - whereas feminine traits include neatness - tactfulness - gentleness and talkativeness
Sex Roles
Social Class
Exposure Effects
Stimulus Discrimination
14. A cognitive theory of human learning patterned after a computer information processing that focuses on how information is stored in human memory and how it is retrieved
Information Processing
Utilitarian Function
Branded Entertainment
Modeling (observational/vicarious learning)
15. An anthropological measurement technique that focuses on observing behavior within a natural environment (often without the subjects awareness)
Attributions Toward Others
Generation X
Attitudinal Measures
Field Observation
16. According to Pavlovian theory - conditioned learning results when a stimulus paired with another stimulus that elicits a known response serves to product the same response by itself
Content Analysis
Advertising Resonance
Institutional Advertising
Classical Conditioning
17. The placement of ads in the specific media read - viewed - or heard by each targeted audience - based on consumer profile
Theory of Planned Behavior
Audience Profile
Addressable Advertising
Media Strategy
18. All ads that reach the consumer online and on any mobile communication devices such as PDAs - cell phones and smartphones (aka mobile advertising)
Consumer Generated Media
Self-Perception Theory
Physiological Measures
Social Class
19. Attitudes consist of three major components: cognitive component - an affective component - and a conative component
Media Strategy
Traditional Family Life Cycle
Tricomponent Attitude Model
New Media
20. Recasts the theory-of-reasoned-action model by replacing actual behavior with trying to behave as the variable to be explained and/or predicted
Theory of Trying to Consume
Participant Observers
Negative Reinforcement
Encoding
21. The learning of associations among events through classical conditioning that allows the organism to anticipate and represent its environment
Value-Expressive Function
Index of Status Characteristics
Central Route to Persuasion
Cognitive Associative Learning
22. An individual's perceived age (usually 10 to 15 years younger than his chronological age)
Exploitive Targeting
Global Strategy
Cross-Cultural Consumer Analysis
Cognitive Ages
23. When two brand names are featured on a single product
Addressable Advertising
Differential Decay
Co-Branding
Single-Variable Indexes
24. Used to assess the likelihood of a consumer purchasing a product or behaving in a certain way
Attributions Toward Others
Intention-to-Buy Scales
Culture
Licensing
25. A theory that suggest consumers are likely to accept credit for successful outcomes (internal attribution) and to blame other persons or products for failure (external attribution)
Attitude-Toward-Behavior Model
Defensive Attribution
Source Amnesia
Culture
26. Others behave in response to certain situations (stimuli) and the ensuing results (reinforcement) that occur - and they imitate (model) the positively reinforced behavior when faced with similar situations
Corrective Advertising
Buzz Agents
Cognitive Learning
Modeling (observational/vicarious learning)
27. A theory of learning based on mental information processing - often in response to problem solving
Advertising Resonance
Socioeconomic Status Score
Cognitive Learning
Advertising Wearout
28. Priorities and codes of conduct that both affects and reflects the character of American society
Core Values
External Attributions
Knowledge Function
Societal Marketing Concept
29. The number of consumers exposed to a message and how they react
Exposure Effects
Media Strategy
Value-Expressive Function
Baby Boomers
30. When consumers feel that another person is responsible for either positive or negative product performance
Attributions Toward Others
Generation X
Retrieval
Socioeconomic Status Score
31. Persistent critics of marketers who initiate bad publicity online
Self-Perception Theory
Determined Detractors
Tricomponent Attitude Model
Differential Decay
32. Individuals born between 1946 and 1964 (approx. 40% of the adult population)
Branded Entertainment
Rehearsal
Hemispheric Lateralizatio
Baby Boomers
33. The practice of marketing a whole line of company products under the same brand name
Family Branding
Information Processing
Communication Feedback
Self-Perception Theory
34. A comprehensive theory of the interrelationship among attitudes - intentions and behavior
Theory-of-Reasoned-Action (TRA) Model
Corrective Advertising
Content Analysis
Traditional Family Life Cycle
35. Marketing messages and promotional materials that appear to come from independent parties - although they are sent by marketers
Global Strategy
Socialization of Family Members
Covert - Masked or Stealth Marketing
Behavioral Learning
36. The ability to select a specific stimulus from among similar stimuli because of perceived differences
Stimulus Discrimination
Core Values
Socioeconomic Status Score
Consumer Ethics
37. The division of members of a society into a hierarchy of distinct status classes - so that members of each class have either higher or lower status than members of other classes
Country-of-Origin Effects
Social Class
Determined Detractors
Mixed Strategies
38. The process by which the sender (or source) of a communication message selects and assigns words or visual images to represent the message's contents
Encoding
Global Strategy
Buzz Agents
Information Processing
39. Advertising that explicitly names or otherwise identifies one or more competitors of the advertised brand for the purpose of claiming superiority - either on an overall basis or on selected product groupings
Attributions Toward Others
Socioeconomic Status Score
Corrective Advertising
Comparative Advertising
40. The amount of status members of one social class have in comparison with members of other social classes
Social Class
Family Branding
Social Status
Formal Communication Source
41. Observational research by anthropologists of the behaviors of a small sample of people from a particular society
Consumer Fieldwork
Utilitarian Function
Shaping
Class Consciousness
42. A component of the functional approach to attitude-change theory that suggest that consumers have a strong need to know and understand the people and products with which they come into contact
Attitudinal Measures
Cognitive Dissonance Theory
Knowledge Function
Co-Branding
43. A communication channel - generally classified as either impersonal (mass medium) and interpersonal (conversations between people)
Retrieval
Medium
Defensive Attribution
PRIZM NE
44. Advertising technique in which all the viewers of a given TV show or readers of a magazine receiver the same advertising content
Functional Approach
Instrumental (operant) Conditioning
Broadcast Model
Social Status
45. A feeling of social-group membership that reflects an individual's sense of belonging or identification with others
Class Consciousness
Field Observation
Participant Observers
Societal Marketing Concept
46. The use of a single socioeconomic variable (such as income) to estimate an individual's relative social class
Global Strategy
Shaping
Single-Variable Indexes
Rehearsal
47. Researchers who participate in the environment that they are studying without notifying those who are being observed
Theory-of-Reasoned-Action (TRA) Model
Peripheral Route to Persuasion
Attributions Toward Things
Participant Observers
48. Learning theory in which the basic premise is that the righta dn left hemispheres of the brain "specialize" in the kinds of information that they process
Sleeper Effect
Hemispheric Lateralizatio
Culture
Single-Variable Indexes
49. A model that proposes that a consumer forms various feelings (affects) and judgments (cognition) as the result of exposure to an advertisement - which - in turn - affect the consumer's attitude toward the ad and beliefs and attitudes toward the br
Branded Entertainment
Attitude-Toward-the-Ad Models
Index of Status Characteristics
Class Consciousness
50. A promotional theory that proposes that highly involved consumers are best reached through ads that focus on the specific attributes of the product
Exploitive Targeting
Central Route to Persuasion
Neo-Pavlovian Conditioning
Tricomponent Attitude Model