Faculty of International Social Sciences

澁谷 覚

シブヤ サトル  (Satoru Shibuya)

基本情報

所属
学習院大学 国際社会科学部 国際社会科学科 教授
学位
博士(経営学)(慶應義塾大学)

J-GLOBAL ID
200901033047759300
researchmap会員ID
6000015436

外部リンク

論文

 27
  • 澁谷 覚
    マーケティングジャーナル 36(3) 23-36 2017年6月  査読有り招待有り
  • 久保田進彦, 澁谷覚
    吉田秀雄記念事業財団助成研究 1-154 2017年3月  
  • 澁谷 覚, 鈴木 寛, 池田 達哉
    日経広告研究所報 47(6) 3-13 2014年12月  
  • Ryoichi Yokoyama, Takayuki Nozawa, Motoaki Sugiura, Yukihito Yomogida, Hikaru Takeuchi, Yoritaka Akimoto, Satoru Shibuya, Ryuta Kawashima
    NEUROIMAGE 91 120-128 2014年5月  査読有り
    Social considerations significantly influence daily purchase decisions, and the perception of social risk (i.e., the anticipated disapproval of others) is crucial in dissuading consumers from making purchases. However, the neural basis for consumers' perception of social risk remains undiscovered, and this novel study clarifies the relevant neural processes. A total of 26 volunteers were scanned while they evaluated purchase intention of products (purchase intention task) and their anticipation of others' disapproval for possessing a product (social risk task), using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The fMRI data from the purchase intention task was used to identify the brain region associated with perception of social risk during purchase decision making by using subjective social risk ratings for a parametric modulation analysis. Furthermore, we aimed to explore if there was a difference between participants' purchase decisions and their explicit evaluations of social risk, with reference to the neural activity associated with social risk perception. For this, subjective social risk ratings were used for a parametric modulation analysis on fMRI data from the social risk task. Analysis of the purchase intention task revealed a significant positive correlation between ratings of social risk and activity in the anterior insula, an area of the brain that is known as part of the emotion-related network. Analysis of the social risk task revealed a significant positive correlation between ratings of social risk and activity in the temporal parietal junction and the medial prefrontal cortex, which are known as theory-of-mind regions. Our results suggest that the anterior insula processes consumers' social risk implicitly to prompt consumers not to buy socially unacceptable products, whereas ToM-related regions process such risk explicitly in considering the anticipated disapproval of others. These findings may prove helpful in understanding the mental processes involved in purchase decisions. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc All rights reserved.

MISC

 5

書籍等出版物

 12

共同研究・競争的資金等の研究課題

 9