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When a new business sets out to design a logo, there will be a multitude of factors to consider. Color, layout, font, and style are just of the few choices that a new CEO will need to make when using an online logo maker.
As veteran designers, our team has gone through the logo design process, many times, but we never sat down to think about what was going on inside our heads when we created or saw a logo.
The whole process is surprisingly complex and still takes just a little under 400 milliseconds—less than half a second.
We took a look through a stack of scientific journals to find out what scientists have been learning from the latest brain science—and to learn how humans “see” and think about the logos they encounter.
We compiled what we found into an infographic that you can post on your website or share on social media. We think this stuff is fascinating and hope you do too.
To see a larger version, just click the link at the bottom of the infographic.
This info graphic is also available as a presentation!
Some of our other posts on Logos and Science:
• How a Logo “Primes” You to Think
• How Logos Trigger High and Low Information Thinking
• Logos, Familiarity, and Cognitive Ease
For those of you who would rather just read the text (and for the Googlebot), here’s the most interesting stuff from the graphic:
What Your Brain is “Looking” At:
Color
Scientists believe that your eye doesn’t see color at all—your brain creates it through neural processes that take place along the fusiform gyrus, the hippocampus, and the primary visual cortex located at the back of the brain.1,2
Shape
Once the color is identified near the back of the visual cortex, a signal is sent forward to the “what pathway” near the front of the visual cortex where shape and objects are recognized. It can even see shapes that aren’t there (like objects hidden in the white space of a logo). 3
Meaning
While color and shape are “bottom up” information, that is, it is gathered from the immediate environment; context and meaning is “top down” information added by your memory to help you understand and think about what it all means. This process uses many parts of the brain, but primarily the amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex where emotions and rewards are processed.
What Science Says About A Logo’s Effect on Your Thinking
Over the past two decades, neuroscientist have used brain imaging (fMRI) to take a closer look at how we think about logos. Here are some of the most interesting findings:
Sources:
1 “Study Shows that Color Plays Musical Chairs in the Brain”, UChicagoNews, October 2, 2009.
2 Zeki, S. and Ludovica, Marina, “Three Cortical Stages of Colour Processing in the Human Brain”, Brain, Vol 121, pp. 1669-1685, 1998.
3 Sanguinetti, Joseph, et all, “The Ground Side of an Object: Perceived as Shapeless yet Processed for Semantics”, Psychological Science, November 12, 2013.
4 Schaefer, Michael and Rotte, Michael, “Thinking on Luxury or Pragmatic Brand Products: Brain Reponses to Different Categories of Culturally Based Brands”, Brain Research, Vol. 1165, Aug. 24, 2007, pp, 98-104.
5 Journal of Customer Behaviour, Volume 11, Number 1, Spring 2012, pp. 69-93(25)
6 Esch, Franz-Rudolf, “Brands on the Brain: Do Consumers Use Declarative Information or Experienced Emotions to Evaluate Brands?” Journal of Consumer Psychology, Vol. 22.1, Jan. 2012, pp. 75-85.
7 Santos, José Paulo, “Perceiving Brands After Logo Perception: An Event-related fMRI Study” Online: bit.ly/1usO5ue
8 Fitzsimons, Grainne, et all, “Automatic Effects of Brand Exposure on Motivated Behavior: How Apple Makes You ‘Think Different’”, Journal of Consumer Research, Vol. 35, June 2008, pp. 21-35.
Designer: Dave Riley.