Subliminal news You pick up your New Moon magazine Time magazine from the breakfast table and begin to browse these pages. Before you get the opportunity to read the next war article, you will see advertisements for Marlborough cigarettes; but you do not see cigarettes in advertisements, beautiful sunset over the desert cross Only pictures. Such advertisements can be seen anywhere, it is obviously the target to be sold. Each natural performance always sells different information, so the actual product will be more convincing for the consumer.
An interesting but unconfirmed theory is subliminal information. Subliminal messages are business messages, music, even movies hidden messages. These messages mean that the audience does not notice them, but their purpose is to motivate the audience in some way to react. According to an article by Robert Fink, an ancient journal of ancient music, advertisers claim that anyone can have something purchased by including subliminal information in their advertisements. In 1957, market researcher James Vicary announced that consumers can convince consumers to purchase what impresses consumers by embedding subliminal information in radio advertising music. The public is concerned that this is true and they believe they are being hypnotized by advertising (Crossen)
In 1973, the book "temptation of subconsciousness" claimed that subconscious technology was widely used in advertisements. This book evokes the general atmosphere (subliminal message transmission) threatening the danger of Orwell. Since it involves "deliberately deceiving" the public, public concern is sufficient for the Federal Communications Commission to open a hearing and declare a non-subconscious advertisement "in violation of public interest." Unconscious recognition or unconscious recognition is a subset of unconscious recognition and unconscious recognition includes tracking other signals unconsciously while focusing on signals in noisy environments (in crowded rooms Many people). One of sounds) and autocomplete task (such as driving a car)