The Chaos of Choice: How ‘noise’ shapes consumer behavior
Marco Baldocchi
Consumer Behavior, Neuromarketing&Neurobranding Specialist | CEO @ Neuralisys | Vice President & Research Director @ ONCEMS | Author | TEDx Speaker | Keynote Speaker | Mentor
For years, traditional marketing has portrayed consumers as rational beings, making decisions based on logic and clear information. However, neuroscience has proven that this view is incomplete and misleading.
Consumer purchasing behavior does not follow a purely rational process: the consumer is an emotional being, driven by intuition, perceptions, and unconscious processes that standard marketing analysis often overlooks. The human brain is influenced by factors such as attention, implicit memory, and emotions, making consumer behavior complex but not random.
One key aspect of this complexity is "noise" in decision-making processes, meaning the variability in behaviors and choices. Recent research shows that this is not an error to eliminate but rather a tool to understand the consumer’s mind better.
What Is "Noise" in Decision-Making?
In psychology, noise refers to variability in people's responses, even in identical situations. This phenomenon appears in various ways in consumer behavior:
For a long time, marketing aimed to reduce this variability to create "cleaner" behavioral models. But neuroscience teaches us that noise is not a problem—it is a signal of how the human brain works.
Recent Research: What Does Noise Teach Us About Consumer Decisions?
Three recent studies explored the role of noise in cognitive processes, providing key insights into consumer behavior and marketing.
1. Noise in Product Categorization
? (Seitz et al., 2025 - University of Basel)
When a consumer sees a product, their brain does not identify it objectively but categorizes it based on subjective perceptions. This seemingly simple process is unstable and influenced by several factors.
How Does Noise in Categorization Arise?
Seitz et al. found that categorization is subject to three types of noise:
Implications for Marketing and Retail
2. Noise in Decision-Making: Bug or Feature?
? (Sanborn et al., 2025 - University of Warwick)
If Seitz showed that noise affects categorization, what happens at the moment of decision-making? Sanborn et al. (2025)found that noise is not a flaw but rather an evolutionary strategy of the brain to manage uncertainty.
How Does the Brain Use Noise to Make Decisions?
Sanborn's team demonstrated that the human mind does not follow a rigid model but operates with a probabilistic sampling system:
Implications for Marketing and E-Commerce
3. Noise and Intuition vs. Analysis
? (Sundh et al., 2025 - University of Uppsala)
The Sundh et al. (2025) team developed the Precise/Not Precise (PNP) model to distinguish intuitive decisions from analytical ones.
What Does Noise Tell Us About the Type of Decision?
Implications for UX, E-Commerce, and Sales Strategies
How to Leverage Noise in Marketing and Retail?
If consumers are emotional beings rather than rational ones, then marketing should adapt to their minds instead of trying to force decisions. This is where consumer neuroscience plays a crucial role: understanding unconscious behavior through research can help optimize marketing strategies, retail experiences, and e-commerce performance.
Conclusion
Consumers are not rational, but they are predictable in their impulses, emotions, and unconscious processes. Understanding noise means better understanding their behavior and transforming uncertainty into opportunities.
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I bring the consumer voice into intelligent decision making
3 天前Great summary of recent academic work on this important topic! This work highlights a phenomenon I see in my work in that some marketers may in fact 'see' products and messages differently from how consumers do. Differences in familiarity, context, background, etc. can make the way one person sees the same message/stimuli extremely different from how someone else sees it, even though it's objectively the exact same message/stimuli. I also appreciate the point about our biases not being flaws. We often point out how biases make us act contrary to the rational model of thinking but there are real evolutionary reasons for this. In this fast-paced world, acting rational 100% of the time does not make sense. Rationality takes conscious thought and if we consciously thought about every decision we made, we'd be pretty bad at being human. Not too mention that each decision is taxing on our cognitive resources - this is where strategies like habit formation and 'making things easier' helps reduce this cognitive load. Rather than getting frustrated when people do not react in the ways that we expected or predicted, we should be using that as a path toward knowledge - this is an opportunity to learn something new about our customers!