{"title":"利用神经营销增强在线课堂的学习动机和学习表现","authors":"Hedda Martina Šola, F. Qureshi, Sarwar Khawaja","doi":"10.46827/ejmms.v7i1.1169","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In recent years, the newly emerging discipline of neuromarketing, which employs brain (emotions and behaviour) research in an organisational context, has grown in prominence in academic and practice literature. With the increasing growth of online teaching, COVID-19 left no option for higher education institutions to go online. As a result, students who attend an online course are more prone to lose focus and attention, resulting in poor academic performance. Therefore, the primary purpose of this study is to observe the learner's behaviour while making use of an online learning platform. This study presents neuromarketing to enhance students' learning performance and motivation in an online classroom. Using a web camera, we used facial coding and eye-tracking techniques to study students' attention, motivation, and interest in an online classroom. In collaboration with Oxford Business College's marketing team, the Institute for Neuromarketing distributed video links via email, a student representative from Oxford Business College, the WhatsApp group, and a newsletter developed explicitly for that purpose to 297 students over the course of five days. To ensure the research was both realistic and feasible, the instructors in the videos were different, and students were randomly allocated to one video link lasting 90 seconds (n=142) and a second one lasting 10 minutes (n=155). An online platform for self-service called Tobii Sticky was used to measure facial coding and eye-tracking. During the 90-second online lecture, participants' gaze behaviour was tracked overtime to gather data on their attention distribution, and emotions were evaluated using facial coding. In contrast, the 10-minute film looked at emotional involvement. The findings show that students lose their listening focus when no supporting visual material or virtual board is used, even during a brief presentation. Furthermore, when they are exposed to a single shareable piece of content for longer than 5.24 minutes, their motivation and mood decline; however, when new shareable material or a class activity is introduced, their motivation and mood rise. \n \nJEL: I20; I21 \n \n Article visualizations:","PeriodicalId":109875,"journal":{"name":"European Journal of Management and Marketing Studies","volume":"11 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"ENHANCING THE MOTIVATION AND LEARNING PERFORMANCE IN AN ONLINE CLASSROOM WITH THE USE OF NEUROMARKETING\",\"authors\":\"Hedda Martina Šola, F. 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In collaboration with Oxford Business College's marketing team, the Institute for Neuromarketing distributed video links via email, a student representative from Oxford Business College, the WhatsApp group, and a newsletter developed explicitly for that purpose to 297 students over the course of five days. To ensure the research was both realistic and feasible, the instructors in the videos were different, and students were randomly allocated to one video link lasting 90 seconds (n=142) and a second one lasting 10 minutes (n=155). An online platform for self-service called Tobii Sticky was used to measure facial coding and eye-tracking. During the 90-second online lecture, participants' gaze behaviour was tracked overtime to gather data on their attention distribution, and emotions were evaluated using facial coding. In contrast, the 10-minute film looked at emotional involvement. The findings show that students lose their listening focus when no supporting visual material or virtual board is used, even during a brief presentation. 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引用次数: 4
摘要
近年来,新兴的神经营销学科在学术和实践文献中日益突出,该学科在组织背景下运用大脑(情绪和行为)研究。随着在线教学的不断发展,新冠肺炎疫情让高等教育机构别无选择。因此,参加在线课程的学生更容易失去注意力和注意力,导致学习成绩不佳。因此,本研究的主要目的是观察学习者在使用在线学习平台时的行为。本研究以网络课堂为研究对象,透过神经行销提升学生的学习表现与学习动机。使用网络摄像头,我们使用面部编码和眼球追踪技术来研究学生在在线课堂上的注意力、动机和兴趣。在与牛津商学院(Oxford Business College)营销团队的合作下,神经营销研究所(Institute for Neuromarketing)在五天的课程中,通过电子邮件、牛津商学院的一名学生代表、WhatsApp群,以及一份明确为此目的编写的通讯,向297名学生分发了视频链接。为了保证研究的真实性和可行性,视频中的讲师是不同的,学生被随机分配到一个持续90秒的视频链接(n=142)和另一个持续10分钟的视频链接(n=155)。一个名为Tobii Sticky的自助服务在线平台被用来测量面部编码和眼球追踪。在90秒的在线讲座中,参与者的凝视行为被长期跟踪,以收集他们注意力分布的数据,并通过面部编码来评估情绪。相比之下,10分钟的电影关注的是情感投入。研究结果表明,当没有使用辅助的视觉材料或虚拟板时,即使是在简短的演讲中,学生也会失去听力的重点。此外,当他们接触单一可分享内容的时间超过5.24分钟时,他们的动机和情绪就会下降;然而,当新的可共享材料或课堂活动被引入时,他们的动机和情绪就会上升。凝胶:I20;I21文章可视化:
ENHANCING THE MOTIVATION AND LEARNING PERFORMANCE IN AN ONLINE CLASSROOM WITH THE USE OF NEUROMARKETING
In recent years, the newly emerging discipline of neuromarketing, which employs brain (emotions and behaviour) research in an organisational context, has grown in prominence in academic and practice literature. With the increasing growth of online teaching, COVID-19 left no option for higher education institutions to go online. As a result, students who attend an online course are more prone to lose focus and attention, resulting in poor academic performance. Therefore, the primary purpose of this study is to observe the learner's behaviour while making use of an online learning platform. This study presents neuromarketing to enhance students' learning performance and motivation in an online classroom. Using a web camera, we used facial coding and eye-tracking techniques to study students' attention, motivation, and interest in an online classroom. In collaboration with Oxford Business College's marketing team, the Institute for Neuromarketing distributed video links via email, a student representative from Oxford Business College, the WhatsApp group, and a newsletter developed explicitly for that purpose to 297 students over the course of five days. To ensure the research was both realistic and feasible, the instructors in the videos were different, and students were randomly allocated to one video link lasting 90 seconds (n=142) and a second one lasting 10 minutes (n=155). An online platform for self-service called Tobii Sticky was used to measure facial coding and eye-tracking. During the 90-second online lecture, participants' gaze behaviour was tracked overtime to gather data on their attention distribution, and emotions were evaluated using facial coding. In contrast, the 10-minute film looked at emotional involvement. The findings show that students lose their listening focus when no supporting visual material or virtual board is used, even during a brief presentation. Furthermore, when they are exposed to a single shareable piece of content for longer than 5.24 minutes, their motivation and mood decline; however, when new shareable material or a class activity is introduced, their motivation and mood rise.
JEL: I20; I21
Article visualizations: