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pick up a package or enter a store. By connecting the conscious and nonconscious response patterns we now can have a depth of understanding never imagined. This brings market research leaders such as Ipsos to observe that it is the perfect time for connecting traditional Marketing Research with Neuro and Behavioral Science methods. It also leaves us wondering, “Shouldn’t every analysis have a nonconscious data component?” New Methods For Unlocking The Consumer Brain The reason that Market Research has been able to leverage these advancements in consumer understanding is because there are a number of neuroscientific based methodologies which lend themselves to meaningful nonconscious measurements. Most are adapted to get at engagement and emotional response. At the Ipsos Neuro and Behavioral Science Center, all the leading System 1 measurement tools are offered around the world and integrated into ongoing research programs such as ad testing tracking, product testing, brand asset evaluation and shopper research. Below is a continuum of available methods from least sensitive for nonconscious measurement to most sensitive. The area in the middle showcases the System 1 tools that are most popular because they provide useful insights, are easy to integrate into surveys, comfortable for consumers and affordable. Briefly, Facial Coding captures online response to advertising using machine learning software and the computer camera to measure facial expressions for revealing 6 types of positive and negative emotion, second by second. IRT™ or Implicit Reaction Time testing is an online 36 MAL 17/17 ISSUE ‘‘After more than 100 years trying to understand consumer behavior by mostly asking questions and observing, we now have an array of nonconscious measurement tools which can help us get at how people feel when they see an ad, pick up a package or enter a store. By connecting the conscious and nonconscious response patterns we now can have a depth of understanding never imagined.’’ analytics approach that measures the speed of response to questions and ratings to indicate nonconscious conviction and certainty. Eye Tracking is an invaluable tool for understanding natural attention and viewing patterns. It tells us what is noticed, how long the interest is held for and in what order the eye travels from element to element. Plus, eye tracking is now possible online, in central locations and moving naturally with mobile glasses through stores and customer experiences with great accuracy. EEG and Biometrics are very sensitive for evaluating packaging, media context, shopper experience etc. Voice Pitch analysis is still experimental, but can reveal many types of emotional responses based upon audio recordings of responses to open ended questions. All of these mentioned, relatively new Neuro Market Research measurement tools are used by Ipsos everyday somewhere in the world to make our research more insightful and our clients smarter about how to optimize and select among marketing alternatives. We have standard integrated solutions for copy testing, product testing, tracking, brand asset profiling, shopper, etc. Many of these study types serve to provide greater insights and optimize results. But sometimes Ipsos conducts leading edge R&D research to gain new knowledge. The following Neuro and Behavioral Science Shopper Research Study called “Flower Power” is an example of the type of discovery that is now possible with the right combination of System 1 tools. Breaking New Ground In Shopper Research: Case Study “Flower Power” One of the important things we learn from brain science is that context makes a huge impact on how we perceive stimuli like advertising and how we respond to consumer experiences. Knowing also the importance of emotion on decision making, we asked ourselves, can a positive in-store experience change a shopper’s mood? And, if mood is uplifted, what impact might be measured with respect to the shopper’s response and behavior? To explore these questions, Ipsos conducted a major in- store study in a large American supermarket. It was a test/control cell study where all shoppers were intercepted at the front of the store and asked to continue with their intended shop while wearing biometric devices and eye tracking glasses.