NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL STUDY OF CONSUMER EMOTIONAL REACTIONS IN A SIMULATED MULTISENSORY RETAIL ENVIRONMENT
- Liviu Poenaru

- 2 days ago
- 1 min read
Nov. 2025
Julia Eremenko
Vladimir Kosonogov
Vladislav Aksiotis
Victoria Moiseeva
Anastasia Obukhova
Alisa Godovanets
Oksana Zinchenko
Vasily Klucharev
Anna Shestakova
Introduction: Emotions play a crucial role in shaping consumer experiences and decisions. Neurophysiological tools offer objective markers of emotional reactions in multisensory environments, where positive valence promotes approach behavior and negative valence fosters avoidance.
Methods: We applied the Osgood semantic differential (SD) to establish correspondences between visual, auditory, and olfactory stimuli and target emotions relevant to retail zoning. Based on SD results, we selected stimuli to create multisensory environments. These were presented in immersive virtual reality (VR) to 27 participants. Emotional responses were assessed via heart rate (HR), heart rate variability (HRV), and electrodermal activity (EDA).
Results: SD analysis identified cross-modal associations between sensory stimuli and retail zones, allowing refinement of semantic positioning. VR experiments revealed that HRV significantly increased in pleasant environments, indicating enhanced parasympathetic activation. HR and EDA showed no significant correlation with emotional valence, though both displayed trends toward reduction in pleasant conditions.
Discussion: Our findings suggest that HRV is a reliable physiological marker of consumers’ approach behavior in multisensory retail environments, whereas HR and EDA are less sensitive. Combining SD with VR-based neurophysiological assessment enables objective evaluation of emotional zoning strategies, offering a scientifically grounded alternative to intuitive design practices for optimizing consumer experience.
CITE
Eremenko, J., Kosonogov, V., Aksiotis, V., Moiseeva, V., Obukhova, A., Godovanets, A., Zinchenko, O., Klucharev, V., & Shestakova, A. (2025). Neurophysiological study of consumer emotional reactions in a simulated multisensory retail environment. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 19.
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