Consumer Learning: Meaning and Definition of Learning
Learning is defined as a relatively permanent change in behavior or response tendencies that results from experience. It involves acquiring new responses to situations through processing information from the environment. Consumer learning plays an important role in consumer behavior, as people learn attitudes, preferences, and behaviors from social and cultural influences. Learning is essential to the consumption process and is how consumers adapt to their environment. For learning to occur, the acquired knowledge must be reflected in lasting behavioral changes.
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Consumer Learning: Meaning and Definition of Learning
Learning is defined as a relatively permanent change in behavior or response tendencies that results from experience. It involves acquiring new responses to situations through processing information from the environment. Consumer learning plays an important role in consumer behavior, as people learn attitudes, preferences, and behaviors from social and cultural influences. Learning is essential to the consumption process and is how consumers adapt to their environment. For learning to occur, the acquired knowledge must be reflected in lasting behavioral changes.
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CONSUMER LEARNING
Meaning and Definition of Learning
Learning may be described as The process of acquiring the ability to respond adequately to a situation which may or may not have been previously encountered, the favorable modification of response tendencies consequent upon previous experience, particularly the building of a new series of complex coordinated motor response; the fixation of times in memory so that they can be recalled or organized; the process of acquiring insight into situation. Thus, learning can be defined as a relatively permanent change in behavior as a result of prior experiences. According to E. R. Hilgard, Learning is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as a result of prior experience. Ironically, it can be said that change in behavior indicates that learning has taken place and that learning is a change in behavior. According to W. McGehee, Learning has taken place if an individual behaves reacts; respond as a result of experience in a manner different from the way he formerly behaved.
Nature of Learning Consumers learning is an important component of their behavior. Learning certainly occurs intentionally, as when a problem is recognized and information is acquired about products which might solve the problem. Consumer learning can occur unintentionally and this type of learning can strongly influence the behavior of consumers. Learning mechanism helps consumers to adapt to a changing environment. Consequently, knowledge of learning principles can be useful in understanding how consumers wants and motives are acquired and how their tastes are developed. Learning is essential to the consumption process. In fact, consumer behavior is largely learned behavior. People acquire most of their attitudes, values, tastes, behaviors, preferences, symbolic meanings, and feelings through learning. Culture and social class through such institutions as schools and religious organizations, as well as family, friends, mass media, and advertising, provide learning experiences that greatly influence the type of lifestyle people seek and the products they consume. Learning is any change in the content or organization of long-term memory or behavior. Thus, learning is the result of information processing.
Conditions for learning There are following two conditions: 1) Whatever knowledge is being acquired, it should be reflected in the behavior, i.e., knowledge should be implemented. 2) Change should last for a considerable period of time, i.e., it should not be temporary, and rather it should be permanent. 1. Learned Behavior A learned behavior is a behavior that was observed by an individual that they find it to be beneficial to them in some way, there's a motivating factor behind it, and also it can be conditioned. The learned behavior is a conditioned response to a stimulus through either voluntary or unvoluntary intent. A learned behavior is some type of action or reflex that learns. For example tying r shoes is a learned behavior crying is not. It is adaptive modification of behavior by experience. Genetic constraints may limit what can be learned.