
Does social distancing affect the processing of brand logos?
Author(s) -
D'Ascenzo Stefania,
Scerrati Elisa,
Villani Caterina,
Galatolo Renata,
Lugli Luisa,
Nicoletti Roberto
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
brain and behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.915
H-Index - 41
ISSN - 2162-3279
DOI - 10.1002/brb3.2501
Subject(s) - social distance , logos bible software , psychology , affect (linguistics) , distancing , social psychology , perception , pandemic , cognition , social isolation , cognitive psychology , covid-19 , developmental psychology , communication , computer science , medicine , disease , pathology , neuroscience , infectious disease (medical specialty) , psychotherapist , operating system
Social distancing and isolation have been imposed to contrast the spread of COVID‐19. The present study investigates whether social distancing affects our cognitive system, in particular the processing of different types of brand logos in different moments of the pandemic spread in Italy. In a size discrimination task, six different logos belonging to three categories (letters, symbols, and social images) were presented in their original format and spaced. Two samples of participants were tested: one just after the pandemic spread in Italy, the other one after 6 months. Results showed an overall distancing effect (i.e., spaced stimuli are processed slower than original ones) that interacted with the sample, revealing a significant effect only for participants belonging to the second sample. However, both groups showed a distancing effect modulated by the type of logo as it only emerged for social images. Results suggest that social distancing behaviors have been integrated in our cognitive system as they appear to affect our perception of distance when social images are involved.