The effect of music on consumers’ nostalgic responses towards advertisements under personal, historical and non-nostalgic conditions

This article examines the influence of notalgic-themed music on cognitive and attitudinal responses towards advertisements with personal, historical and non-nostalgic appeals. An experimental design using a 2 (with/without music) x 3 (type of nostalgia) factorial design is used to collect data from...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marchegiani, Chris, Phau, Ian
Format: Journal Article
Published: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/61903
_version_ 1848760749280722944
author Marchegiani, Chris
Phau, Ian
author_facet Marchegiani, Chris
Phau, Ian
author_sort Marchegiani, Chris
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This article examines the influence of notalgic-themed music on cognitive and attitudinal responses towards advertisements with personal, historical and non-nostalgic appeals. An experimental design using a 2 (with/without music) x 3 (type of nostalgia) factorial design is used to collect data from 244 valid respondents. Participants view one of six advertisements and complete instruments revealing their thoughts and attitudes. Changes in responses between the music and non-music conditions are hypothesised and analysed. Music with only a nostalgic theme does not enhance either nostalgic type under the nostalgic conditions. Introducing music to the intended non-nostalgic condition increases personal nostalgic reactions and brand/message-related thoughts. Attitude towards the advert improves significantly under all conditions, while attitude towards the brand does not. The non-nostalgic condition proves problematic, with participants experiencing a small and unintended level of both nostalgic types. Only one piece of music and brand/product category is used. The successful indication of each distinct nostalgic response provides considerable support for further studies. Marketing practitioners are better informed when including nostalgic-orientated music. A predisposition to personal nostalgia is found, suggesting this is a more salient response. The improvement in attitudes provides continued support for the importance of music in advertising. Many important future research directions are supported. This is the first study to empirically test reactions resulting from the inclusion of music while taking into account personal and historical nostalgic appeals and reactions as separate constructs.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T10:20:43Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-61903
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:20:43Z
publishDate 2012
publisher Routledge Taylor & Francis Group
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-619032018-02-01T05:20:27Z The effect of music on consumers’ nostalgic responses towards advertisements under personal, historical and non-nostalgic conditions Marchegiani, Chris Phau, Ian music personal nostalgia cognition historical nostalgia attitudes This article examines the influence of notalgic-themed music on cognitive and attitudinal responses towards advertisements with personal, historical and non-nostalgic appeals. An experimental design using a 2 (with/without music) x 3 (type of nostalgia) factorial design is used to collect data from 244 valid respondents. Participants view one of six advertisements and complete instruments revealing their thoughts and attitudes. Changes in responses between the music and non-music conditions are hypothesised and analysed. Music with only a nostalgic theme does not enhance either nostalgic type under the nostalgic conditions. Introducing music to the intended non-nostalgic condition increases personal nostalgic reactions and brand/message-related thoughts. Attitude towards the advert improves significantly under all conditions, while attitude towards the brand does not. The non-nostalgic condition proves problematic, with participants experiencing a small and unintended level of both nostalgic types. Only one piece of music and brand/product category is used. The successful indication of each distinct nostalgic response provides considerable support for further studies. Marketing practitioners are better informed when including nostalgic-orientated music. A predisposition to personal nostalgia is found, suggesting this is a more salient response. The improvement in attitudes provides continued support for the importance of music in advertising. Many important future research directions are supported. This is the first study to empirically test reactions resulting from the inclusion of music while taking into account personal and historical nostalgic appeals and reactions as separate constructs. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/61903 Routledge Taylor & Francis Group restricted
spellingShingle music
personal nostalgia
cognition
historical nostalgia
attitudes
Marchegiani, Chris
Phau, Ian
The effect of music on consumers’ nostalgic responses towards advertisements under personal, historical and non-nostalgic conditions
title The effect of music on consumers’ nostalgic responses towards advertisements under personal, historical and non-nostalgic conditions
title_full The effect of music on consumers’ nostalgic responses towards advertisements under personal, historical and non-nostalgic conditions
title_fullStr The effect of music on consumers’ nostalgic responses towards advertisements under personal, historical and non-nostalgic conditions
title_full_unstemmed The effect of music on consumers’ nostalgic responses towards advertisements under personal, historical and non-nostalgic conditions
title_short The effect of music on consumers’ nostalgic responses towards advertisements under personal, historical and non-nostalgic conditions
title_sort effect of music on consumers’ nostalgic responses towards advertisements under personal, historical and non-nostalgic conditions
topic music
personal nostalgia
cognition
historical nostalgia
attitudes
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/61903