Brand Names & Linguistics
Brand Names & Linguistics
Brand Names & Linguistics
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Psychology of Brands and Brand
Names
• Do brands "matter" for consumers?
– Yes!
• Experimental subjects enjoy their favorite brand more
when they know its identity than when they receive it
anonymously.
• This manifests as a different neural response to the
same physical stimulus, depending on whether the
subject was told the brand of the stimulus*
• If you’re a Coke loyalist, Coke tastes better when you
know its Coke.
* Maclure, S. et al. 2004. Neural Correlates of Behavioral Preference
for Culturally Familiar Drinks. Neruon, Vol. 44, 379–387
Psychology of Brands and Brand
Names
• Do novel/unfamiliar brand names actually
communicate semantic meaning?
– Yes! Consumers treat brand names as search
attributes.
• Experimental subjects make different inferences about
products’ quality, value, and overall desirability based
on very subtle attributes of the brand names. *
• This effect occurred even when the subjects had no
other information about the product, besides the brand
name.
Klink, Richard R. 2001. Creating meaningful new brand names: A study of semantics and sound
symbolism. Journal of Marketing.
Wanke, Michaela et al. 2007. Brand Name Influence on Brand Perception. Psychology & Marketing
Brand Names as New Lexical Material
• Many brand names are newly invented words
• What do coined brand names mean?
– Aside from just arbitrarily referring to the product
• How do coined brand names get their
meanings?
– Aside from advertising campaigns, product
packaging, etc.
• How do any new words get their meaning?
From their parts
Morphology in Linguistics
• In linguistics, morphology is the study of
words and word parts, and the principles
governing how word parts can be combined.
Basics of Morphology
• Morphemes are the smallest independently
meaningful units of language.
– Root words (cheese, the, of, speak, fast)
– Prefixes (un-, pre-, counter-, re-)
– Suffixes (-ing, -ize, -s, -ly, -th)
• Vegetarianize
• Demagnifier
• Aporkalypse
• Gayby boom
• Alcoholiday
Sound Symbolism
• Typical words have an arbitrary sound-meaning association.