Modul
Consumer Research [M-WIWI-105714]
Credits
9Recurrence
Jedes SemesterDuration
2 SemesterLanguage
German/EnglishLevel
4Version
5Responsible
Organisation
- KIT-Fakultät für Wirtschaftswissenschaften
Part of
Bricks
Identifier | Name | LP |
---|---|---|
T-WIWI-107720 | Market Research | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-111100 | Current Directions in Consumer Psychology | 3 |
T-WIWI-111100 | Current Directions in Consumer Psychology | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-111393 | Behavioral Experiments in Action | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-111395 | Experimental Design | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-111806 | Behavioral Lab Exercise | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-113471 | Bayesian Statistics for Analyzing Data | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-113095 | Behavioral Lab Exercise | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-111099 | Judgement and Decision Making | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-111394 | Open Science & Reproducibility | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-111392 | Cognitive Modeling | 4.5 |
T-WIWI-111109 | KD²Lab Hands-On Research Course: New Ways and Tools in Experimental Economics | 4.5 |
Competence Certificate
The assessment is based on partial exams within the classes offered in this module. Please check the descriptions of the classes for details.
The overall grade of the module is the arithmetic mean of the grades for each course weighted by the number of credits and truncated after the first decimal.
Competence Goal
- Understand human judgment and decision making in an economic context
- Learn how to plan, program, conduct, statistically analyze, visualize, model, and report behavioral experiments
- Critically evaluate scientific findings in the aftermath of the replication crisis
Prerequisites
Willingness to actively engage with the topic.
Content
This module provides students with in-depth knowledge about consumer research at the intersection between Marketing, Psychology, and Cognitive Science. The module consists of classes that look into how individuals and groups make judgments and decisions and what factors influences their behavior (e.g. the lecture on judgment and decision making). Because most findings in this area of research rely on behavioral experiments, this module also focuses on methodological skills. This includes classes on how to plan and design behavioral experiments, conduct and report meaningful statistical analyses, and develop computational cognitive models. The module also includes classes about reproducibility and transparency in the behavioral sciences. The module is a pre-requisite for writing a Master thesis at the KIT Cognition and Consumer Behavior lab.
Recommendation
Interest in behavioral research.
Workload
The total workload for this module is approximately 270 hours.