Skip to main content
Article
A Fluency Heuristic Account of Supraliminal Prime Effects on Product Preference
Psychology and Marketing
  • Nobuyuki Fukawa, Missouri University of Science and Technology
  • Ronald W. Niedrich
Abstract

The effects of supraliminal primes on product preference have been explained by two activation mechanisms, goal activation and trait activation. In this research, an additional activation mechanism not explained by goals or traits is identified. Using the implicit association test as a process measure, this article provides evidence that the effect of supraliminal primes on product preference is the result of conceptual fluency and the fluency heuristic. To provide evidence that this mechanism affects preference nonconsciously, this article proposes a dual-processing framework where conscious effects are mediated by explicit attitude and nonconscious effects are mediated by implicit attitude and moderated by the motivation and opportunity to process information. The experimental findings support the authors' propositions, which provide a number of theoretical, methodological, and practical implications.

Department(s)
Business and Information Technology
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
11-1-2015
Publication Date
01 Nov 2015
Disciplines
Citation Information
Nobuyuki Fukawa and Ronald W. Niedrich. "A Fluency Heuristic Account of Supraliminal Prime Effects on Product Preference" Psychology and Marketing Vol. 32 Iss. 11 (2015) p. 1061 - 1078 ISSN: 0742-6046; 1520-6793
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/nobuyuki-fukawa/7/