Washington - Sexual cues cause people to be impatient and can affect their monetary decisions. Earlier theories indicated that impatience in response to sexual cues is solely an outcome of escalated desire for immediate gratification.
But new research by USC Marshall School of Business Assistant Professor of Marketing Kyu Kim and Gal Zauberman, associate professor of marketing at The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, revealed that the cognitive processes put into play by sexual cues are more complicated.
The researchers argue that arousal actually affects our perception of time.
For example, in one of five studies conducted, male subjects were presented with sexually charged imagery. Afterwards, the subjects were asked to judge whether three and six-month time frames were “very short†or “very long†distances away from the present time.
Those who had been exposed to individuals to whom they were attracted, reported the three and six-month time frames to be further into the future than others in the control group, according to the study.
In another study, the researchers presented 116 males with images from an online Victoria’s Secret catalog and gauged their response to receiving one of two fictitious Amazon.com promotions: a gift certificate available that day or one available three months from now.
They asked the subjects the dollar value that would compensate for having to wait. Those exposed to sexually charged imagery (versus those in a control group exposed to nature images) were found to be more impatient and expressed that future discounts would have to be steeper to compensate for the time delay.
The finding has implications for marketers. For those exposed to sexually charged imagery, future rewards were even less appealing than those with more immediate promotions.
Marketers, therefore, who invoke sexual imagery to sell products, must make sure promotions are offered in a more immediate time frame. Consumers with sex on the brain might be more inclined to spend money more quickly.
The research was published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.
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