Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Oohs and aahs: Vowel sounds affect our perceptions of products

Oohs and aahs: Vowel sounds affect our perceptions of products

September 13, 2007

Would you drive a SUV called a Himmer" Phonetic symbolism refers to the notion that the sounds of words, apart from their assigned definition, convey meaning. A fascinating forthcoming paper from the October issue of the Journal of Consumer Research applies this theory to product names. The researchers find that product names with vowel sounds that convey positive attributes about the product are deemed more favorable by consumers.

Front vowel sounds are ones that are made with the tongue forward in the mouth, such as the sound of the letter "I" in mill. Back vowel sounds are ones that are made with the tongue farther back in the mouth, such as the "a" sound in mall. Numerous prior studies have shown that the two types of vowel sounds tend to be associated with different concepts that are strikingly uniform, even across cultures. Front vowel sounds convey small, fast, or sharp characteristics, while back vowel sounds convey large, slow, or dull characteristics.




"The implications of phonetic symbolism for brand names are relatively straightforward," write Tina M. Lowrey and L. J. Shrum (University of Texas - San Antonio). "If sounds do convey certain types of meaning, then perceptions of brands may be enhanced when the fit between the sound symbolism and the product attributes is maximized."

The researchers created fictitious brand names that varied only by one vowel sound (e.g. nillen/nallen). They then varied product categories between small, fast, sharp objects - such as knives or convertibles -- and products that are large, slow, and dull, such as hammers and SUVs. They asked participants to choose which of the word pair they thought was a better brand name for the product.

Overwhelmingly, participants preferred words with front vowel sounds when the product category was a convertible or a knife (by about a 2:1 margin), but preferred words with back vowel sounds when the product category was an SUV or hammer (again, by about a 2:1 margin).

The researchers also tested a vowel sound that is generally associated with negative meaning (e.g., the "yoo" sound in the word "putrid"). Regardless of product category, words this vowel sound were least preferred by consumers.

"New brands are frequently created, and thus so are new brand names. In many cases, brand managers use various linguistic devices to increase the memorability of those names," the researchers write. "Our findings suggest that in these cases, understanding the relation between the sounds generated by vowels and consonants and the meanings that are associated with these sounds would be useful."

University of Chicago Press Journals



Related Symbolism Current Events and Symbolism News Articles Symbolism Current Events and Symbolism News RSS Symbolism Current Events and Symbolism News RSS
Oldest evidence of leprosy found in India
A biological anthropologist from Appalachian State University working with an undergraduate student from Appalachian, an evolutionary biologist from UNC Greensboro, and a team of archaeologists from Deccan College (Pune, India) recently reported analysis of a 4000-year-old skeleton from India bearing evidence of leprosy.

Pre-verbal number sense common to monkeys, babies, college kids
Basic arithmetic and "number sense" appear to be part of the shared evolutionary past of many primates; it's the use of language to explain abstractions that apparently takes human math to a higher level.

Researchers find earliest evidence for modern human behavior in South Africa
Evidence of early humans living on the coast in South Africa, harvesting food from the sea, employing complex bladelet tools and using red pigments in symbolic behavior 164,000 years ago, far earlier than previously documented, is being reported in the Oct. 18 issue of the journal Nature.

Evidence from ancient European graves raises questions about ritual human sacrifice
A fascinating new paper from the June issue of Current Anthropology explores ancient multiple graves and raises the possibility that hunter gatherers in what is now Europe may have practiced ritual human sacrifice.

International exhibition of sculptures at University of Leicester
Game of Light and Shadow with a Thousand Meanings

Discovery of an ancient civilization in the west of the Amazon Basin
The western part of the Amazon basin is covered by tropical rainforest, severely eroded in places. The area is still largely unknown to archaeologists. It covers the lower eastern flanks of the Andean cordillera and extends from the piedmont down to the Amazon plain. It is in these twisting watershed areas that the River Amazon springs forth, loading itself with silts and other sediments. The fauna and flora of this region, called ceja de monta'±a, features among the richest on Earth : the number of species far exceeds that on the alluvial plain. That humans might have chosen sites here is therefore not surprising. Settlement would have been a consequence of the plentiful resources they coul

Remarkable double burial
Archaeologist P.W. van den Broeke discovered this remarkable grave last summer when he was excavating a small Iron Age burialground. C-14 dating has pinpointed the burial in the fifth century BC. In the region cremations were predominant in this period. But for a short span of time some deceased were inhumated. The Iron Age burialground of Lent, belonging to a farming community, contains some twenty cremations and five inhumations. Behind the inhumations Van den Broeke suspects the influence of the Celtic Marne-culture of Northern France. This influence can also be shown in the local pottery. However, why few people were inhumated while in the same the others were cremated remains unclear. V
More Symbolism Current Events and Symbolism News Articles
Dictionary of Symbolism: Cultural Icons and the Meanings Behind Them

Dictionary of Symbolism: Cultural Icons and the Meanings Behind Them
by Hans Biedermann (Author), James Hulbert (Translator)

A rose, a cross, a heart, and hundreds of other common items hold great symbolic value--their meanings as varied as they are powerful. This encyclopedic work explores the rich and diverse meanings of more than 2,000 symbols, delving into the power of symbols in the past and present worlds of mythology, fairy tales, religion, literature, history, and archaeology. Over 600 illustrations.

  The symbolism of freemasonry
by Albert Gallatin Mackey (Author)

Albert Gallatin Mackey (1807-1881), was an American medical doctor, and is best known for his authorship of many books and articles about freemasonry, particularly Masonic Landmarks. He served as Grand Lecturer and Grand Secretary of The Grand Lodge of South Carolina; Secretary General of the Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Rite for the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States.

The United Symbolism of America: Deciphering Hidden Meanings in America's Most Familiar Art, Architecture, and Logos

The United Symbolism of America: Deciphering Hidden Meanings in America's Most Familiar Art, Architecture, and Logos
by Robert Hieronimus (Author), Laura Cortner (Author)

The Statue of Liberty is an ancient goddess. But why are there seven rays emanating from her crown? And why was the torch switched from her left to her right hand?

Did you know that the 13 stars and stripes are not simply to honor the 13 colonies?

Or why the six-pointed stars on the original American flag were changed to five-pointed stars?

Did you know the CBS eye logo is considered by many to be the eye of the devil watching over us?

Were you aware that the Washington Monument resembles an Egyptian obelisk channeling energy?

America is young, but its symbols are old. Of the symbols and myths we chose since European colonization, the ones that have become American icons are those representing hope, positive growth, and...

The Lost Language of Symbolism (Dover Books on Anthropology and Folklore)

The Lost Language of Symbolism (Dover Books on Anthropology and Folklore)
by Harold Bayley (Author)

This remarkable book reveals the hidden meaning behind familiar images and words, from the origins of Santa Claus to the metaphoric significance of the unicorn and the fleur-de-lys. It draws upon mythology, folklore, religious texts, and fairy tales from around the world as well as upon the secret traditions of ancient cultures and sects. 1,400 illustrations.


Symbolism (Big Art S.)

Symbolism (Big Art S.)
by Michael Gibson (Author), Gilles Neret (Creator)

A key movement in modern art "To clothe the idea in perceptible form," proposed the poet Jean Moréas in his 1886 Manifesto of Symbolism. It was in France and Belgium, the cradles of literary Symbolism, that Symbolist painting was born. It plunged headlong into the cultural space opened up by the poetry of Baudelaire and Mallarmé and by the operas of Wagner. Symbolist painters sought not to represent appearances but to express "the Idea," and the imaginary therefore plays an important part in their work. "Dream" was their credo; they execrated, with a fanatical hatred, impressionism, realism, naturalism, and the scientistic. The main principle of Symbolism, that of "correspondences," was to attain harmony between all the different arts, or even to realise the total work of art...

Symbolism (Big Series Art)

Symbolism (Big Series Art)
by Michael Francis Gibson (Author)

Part of the "Big Art" series of illustrated texts, this one covers Symbolism.

Symbolism

Symbolism
by Rodolphe Rapetti (Author)

The result of over ten years of research, this work offers a new analysis of European Symbolist art. It situates the Symbolist artistic movement in its historical context-industrial Europe at the end of the nineteenth century-and retraces its links with the evolution of ideas, particularly in literature. This work includes new, rare, and previously unpublished archival documents among its sources, alongside a large number of iconic and lesser-known Symbolist images, all carefully analyzed and beautifully reproduced in color.Symbolism had a huge impact on the arts and literature of its day, but also prefigured numerous aspects of modern art from Abstraction to Surrealism. Symbolist artists sought to merge the cultural spheres of art, painting, and poetry through color and line. Works by...

Alchemy: An Introduction to the Symbolism and the Psychology (Studies in Jungian Psychology)

Alchemy: An Introduction to the Symbolism and the Psychology (Studies in Jungian Psychology)
by Marie-Louise Von Franz (Author)



Symbolism (Icon Editions)

Symbolism (Icon Editions)
by Robert Goldwater (Author)



Symbolism Alive

Symbolism Alive
by The Garden of Delight



© 2009 BrightSurf.com