NEURAL CORRELATES OF SUSTAINABLE LUXURY VERSUS “FAST FASHION”: A NEUROPHYSIOLOGICAL STUDY ON BRAND EXPERIENCE
Abstract
This article addresses how fashion advertising activates attentional, emotional, and cognitive processes that are difficult to capture through self-reporting and considers whether neurophysiological responses differ between luxury and fast fashion brands, as well as the modulating effect of sustainability messages. The research is justified by the attitude-behaviour gap in sustainable fashion and the need for objective methods to understand it. A 2x2 experimental study was conducted with 50 young adults, manipulating brand type and message type. Visual attention (eye-tracking), emotional arousal (GSR), and cognitive load and neural engagement (EEG) were measured while participants viewed eight controlled advertisements. The analysis included repeated measures ANOVAs and regressions to predict purchase intention. Luxury advertisements generated greater initial attention to the logo, greater arousal, and more parietal gamma activity. Sustainability messages increased frontal alpha power, raising cognitive load, especially in fast fashion. Emotional arousal and neural engagement positively predicted purchase intention, while cognitive load reduced it. In conclusion, advertising effectiveness depends on aligning the type of message with the activated cognitive system, and the neurometric approach is useful for optimising strategies.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2026 Isidro Sánchez-Crespo , Francisco J. Cristòfol, Carmen Cristófol Rodríguez

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Articles published in this journal are protected under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license. This means that authors retain full rights over their research and publications at all times. As a journal, we fully respect and promote the principles of open access established by this license, allowing the work to be shared, adapted, and distributed for non-commercial purposes, provided that appropriate credit is given to the authors and any derivative works are licensed under the same terms.
Authors are responsible for obtaining the required permission when they wish to reproduce part of the material (figures, etc.) from other publications.
Likewise, CNPs allows authors to host in their personal sites or other repositories that they deem convenient the Final and Definitive Version of the published article with the format assigned by the journal. In no case do we allow access to preprints of the article under evaluation or already published.
When submitting an article to CNPs you are aware that all the contents of CNPs are under a Creative Commons License. In which it is allowed to copy and share the contents freely, always making reference to the origin of the publication and its author.







