Children: Research among children

 

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Paper
1.
Protection or participation? - Getting research ethics right for children in the digital age
Agnes Nairn, ESOMAR, Congress, Montreux, September 2009
Children’s economic influence is increasing, stimulating a rich youth research market. However,mounting criticism of the “commercialisation of childhood” has resulted in a plethora of (often conflicti ...

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Paper
2.
Researching young people: don't fall foul of the United Nations
Barbie Clarke, Admap, May 2009, Issue 505, pp.27-29
The article discusses the ethics governing research among children. It must comply with ethical standards as well as international law (including the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Chi ...

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Paper
3.
Conference notes - Research ethics in the virtual world
Agnes Nairn, International Journal of Market Research, Vol. 51, Issue 2, 2009, pp.276-278
This paper summarises the presentation by Agnes Nairn on "Research ethics in the virtual world" given at the IJMR Research Methods Forum: ‘Methods Matter: Interviewing and Beyond’, 25 Novemb ...

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Paper
4.
Boy culture - an ecological systems approach to generate insights
Marsha E. Williams, ESOMAR, Consumer Insights, Dubai, February 2009
This describes a research project for Cartoon Network in the US to understand 8-12 -year-old boys, in terms of a) social and emotional dynamics (between boys and with other groups such as girls, autho

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Paper
5.
Communicating with Youth
Roderick White, Warc Best Practice, April 2006
Provides an overview of the complex and ever-changing youth market, including how to research it and identify its sub-segments. The paper also discusses youth media, communicating with opinion former ...

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Paper
6.
Resolving issues in children's research
Debbie Solomon and Jo Peters, Young Consumers, Vol.7, Issue 1 (2005), pp.68-73
This article examines the ethical and practical considerations of conducting market research with children and discusses challenges such as limited vocabulary and reading skills, in addition to govern ...

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Paper
7.
Youth marketing in Japan
Nana Sato and Yuko Kato, Young Consumers, Vol.6, Issue 4 (2004), pp.56-60
Describes how child-centred marketing in Japan is growing, as a declining birth rate means that parents and other relatives have more money to spend on their children. Particular markets desired by ch ...

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Paper
8.
Construction of identity in a global and commercialized media landscape - with children's use of websites as an example
Birgitte Tufte, Forum for Advertising Research, July 2005
This article discusses how 'tweens' (children up to age 14) develop their personalities, attitudes and socialisation as they grow in to becoming teenagers. It is based on various research studies, mai ...

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Paper
9.
Kids research meets reality TV
Anuska Wolfman, Young Consumers, Vol.6, Issue 2 (2005), pp.60-62
Argues that traditional qualitative research methods are no longer good enough for researching young children. It is more effective to get away from the classroom atmosphere and allow children to run ...

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Classic paper - a key, timeless read
10.
Measuring children's behaviour in a complex multi-media world
Debbie Solomon and Jo Peters, ESOMAR, Age Matters Conference, London Jan 2005
We all live in a rapidly changing world where, arguably, children are at the forefront of technological developments. It is imperative for marketers to understand the behaviour, attitudes and motivati ...

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Paper
11.
Peer Survey method. A new approach to kids and youth behaviour, environment and market
Roberto Porciello and Angela Cortese, ESOMAR, Age Matters Conference, London Jan 2005
The information available about the world of youth is not sufficient to foster our understanding or perception of it. Can the quality of “listening” be improved by enhancing interpersonal relationship ...

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Paper
12.
If this child were a car, what sort of car would it be? The global child: Using appropriate projective techniques to view the world through their eyes
Barbie Clarke, ESOMAR, Qualitative Research, Cannes, November 2004
Many clients around the world are trying to understand what appeals to a young audience, raising many challenges. Children differ vastly between age and gender, with clear global social and cultural d ...

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Paper
13.
A new scale to assess children's attitude toward TV advertising
Claude Pecheux and Christian Derbaix, Journal of Advertising Research, Vol. 43, No. 4, December 2003, pp.390-399
Children's opinion of advertising and their general skepticism toward it is of the utmost importance to both practitioners and those responsible for advertising Control. In this article, the authors d ...

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Paper
14.
Insight through ethnography: researching children in a different way
Lucy Peile, Young Consumers, Vol.5, Issue 1 (2003), pp.63-67
In this article, Lucy Peile shows how ethnographic research can improve our understanding of children by providing us with insights into how they live their daily lives. Using observational research t ...

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Paper
15.
Interactive TV: controlling the remote
Caroline Bond, Young Consumers, Vol.4, Issue 4 (2003), pp.39-45
How do you research people who wriggle and giggle, can't concentrate, and are still learning to talk? In this article, Caroline Bond delves into the sticky-faced world of researching infants and finds ...

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Paper
16.
Generation XO - from 'slacker' to vigilant family gatekeeper
Tom Wong and Ron Coughlin, Young Consumers, Vol.4, Issue 4 (2003), pp.25-30
Generation X was characterised by its 'whatever' attitude to life. But now the erstwhile X-ers have grown into responsible home-owning tax-paying adults, what set of values are they imposing on their ...

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Paper
17.
Video, Ergo, Agnosco
Nic Hall, ESOMAR, Consumer insights conference, Madrid, April 2003
Direct consumer contact programmes – in which people from all levels of the organisation aim to meet the ‘real people’, who use their products and services – are all the rage. It is generally accepted ...

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Classic paper - a key, timeless read
18.
Brainsqueeze
Jane Gould, ESOMAR, Consumer insights conference, Madrid, April 2003
BRAINSqueeze is a rare client-side case study that went on to have real and effective business implications, influencing on-air, on-line, programming and marketing decisions. The findings provided a u ...

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Paper
19.
Picture This!
Delphine du Crest and Shari Donnenfeld, ESOMAR, Consumer insights conference, Madrid, April 2003
This paper is a summary of findings from a photo study conducted among 450 kids aged 8 and 11 years from nine European countries: United Kingdom, Germany, Spain, France, Italy, Netherlands, Sweden, De ...

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Paper
20.
Kids and the creative process
Gary Pope, Young Consumers, Vol.4, Issue 3 (2003), pp.11-18
Developing creative solutions for kids brands is far from simple. Displaying an attitude usually reserved for nourishing meals, children will reject most of what is put in front of them. In this artic ...

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Paper
21.
Creating 'KIDnections'
Mindy Stockfield, The Advertiser, Jan 2003, pp.34-37
The author describes the problems and opportunities when marketing to children in the USA today.

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Paper
22.
Making kids online research work
Rohin Malhotra, Young Consumers, Vol.4, Issue 2 (2002), pp.17-24
Where better to research the internet generation than through their most favoured medium? Rohin Malhotra explores the various methods of onlive research, and shows how best to adapt them to the kids c ...

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Classic paper - a key, timeless read
23.
Using semiotics to build powerful brands for children
Virginia Valentine, Young Consumers, Vol.4, Issue 2 (2002), pp.9-16
If you want to know where your brand is going, look at the signposts. Semiotics does exactly this, deconstructing our views of ourselves and the rest of the world to find out exactly what makes us tic ...

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Paper
24.
Bunking with your customers
Petra Sonderegger and Laura E. Wendt, ESOMAR, Qualitative Research, Boston, November 2002, pp.317-332
This paper presents the methodology and findings from an innovative research programme specially designed for Kids, created by BrainStore and commissioned by Nickelodeon International. Nickelodeon Int ...

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Paper
25.
How to fit the product to the child
Axel Dammler, Young Consumers, Vol. 4, No. 1, 2002, pp.21-28
Kids can tell which products are designed for them - but can you? Children can be merciless in their rejection of some of the products aimed at them. Axel Dammler demonstrates how this can happen and ...

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Paper
26.
Children's television programming
Sara Guciardo, Joel Schneider and Michael Cohen, Young Consumers, Vol.3, Issue 4 (2002), pp.3-15
Sesame Street marked the beginning of television for children that was both entertaining and educational. This article describes how the Sesame Workshop has applied research to the development and eva ...

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Paper
27.
The universal and the singular, the permanent and the ephemeral
Telma Urich and Monica La Madrid, ESOMAR, Latin American Conference, Sao Paulo, May 2002, pp.261-288
This paper delves into children and their relationship with the characters that make up their world, their features, origins, aesthetics, the stories in which they are involved and the different roles ...

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Paper
28.
Word-of-Mouth Marketing: Beyond Pester Power
Joanne Procter and Martyn Richards, Young Consumers, Vol.3, Issue 3 (2002), pp.3-12
Pester power or 'the nag factor' is not the dominant force in purchase decisions - Many factors are at play, most notably word of mouth. Long considered to be beyond the realms of the marketer, the a ...

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Paper
29.
Zoom! Creating new interactive media platforms for children
Pamela Laws, Pat Tobin, Kate Taylor and Michael Cohen, ESOMAR, Marketing Transformation Congress, Rome, Sept 2001, pp.339-355
This paper examines how WGBH and Applied Research and Consulting LLC conducted collaborative research that identified strategies for transforming ZOOM, a highly successful 1970s children's educational ...

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Paper
30.
Millennial Mediavores
Alana Storey and Briar Harland, ESOMAR, Reinventing Advertising, Rio, November 2000, pp.109-123
The authors' experience suggested that using traditionally broad media groupings could limit the effectiveness of a media recommendation. This is increasingly becoming of major concern as the media op ...

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