The Heritage Brain Response: why Generation Z prefers traditional and spiritual imagery
Relevant topics Archive, Strategy
Your brain forms preferences before you realize it
Imagine scrolling through Instagram. One post shows a sleek glass skyscraper. Another shows an ancient temple garden surrounded by traditional architecture. Which one makes you pause?
Conventional marketing assumptions suggest Generation Z prefers modern, urban, and technologically advanced imagery. However, neuroscience research tells a different story.
Cheng et al., measured brain activity of Generation Z participants using Event-Related Potential (ERP) technology, traditional and spiritual heritage landscapes triggered significantly stronger neural responses than modern urban environments. Religious and folk heritage sites produced higher P200 responses, indicating stronger early attention capture within the first 200 milliseconds. They also generated larger Late Positive Potential (LPP) signals, reflecting deeper emotional engagement. Neural measurements show that emotional engagement develops much earlier in the decision-making process.
The Heritage Brain Response: from imagination to preference
Traditional and spiritual environments stimulate what researchers call place imagination, which is the ability to mentally project oneself into a location. This mental simulation often evokes feelings of awe, wonder, or transcendence. These emotions significantly influence preference formation. This process happens largely unconsciously.
This research reveals a clear psychological pathway explaining why traditional imagery resonates more strongly: First their is heritage imagery which evolves place imagination. This creates a possible feeling of awe. Creating a stronger preference for the specific heritage.
Importantly, not all heritage performs equally. Sacred and folk environments consistently generate stronger neural engagement than industrial heritage sites. Factories and industrial monuments often lack the symbolic depth that triggers imagination and awe.
Why modern marketing often misses the mark
Much contemporary content emphasizes innovation, urban modernity, and visual complexity. However, the data suggests that high visual stimulation alone does not guarantee stronger engagement. In case of Gen Z in China (Jingdezhen), traditional environments often outperform modern visuals because they:
- provide cultural meaning
- stimulate curiosity and imagination
- evoke emotional depth
- connect individuals to something larger than themselves
Generation Z does not necessarily reject modern aesthetics, but their neural responses suggest a stronger emotional connection to imagery that feels authentic, symbolic, or culturally grounded.
When the effect is strongest
The heritage brain response becomes more powerful under specific conditions:
1. High imagination potential
Images that allow viewers to mentally place themselves in the environment trigger stronger emotional processing. Example: An image of a ceramic artisan hand-painting blue-and-white porcelain in a traditional workshop inan image of a ceramic artisan hand-painting blue-and-white porcelain in a traditional workshop in Jingdezhen, with visible brushes, pigments, and unfinished ceramics. The viewer can easily imagine sitting at the table and participating in the craft process.
2. Spiritual or symbolic depth
Religious architecture, rituals, and cultural symbols generate stronger neural engagement than purely functional
heritage structures. Example: Porcelain decorated with traditional dragon or lotus motifs produced in Jingdezhen, where symbolism relates to prosperity, harmony, and purity in Chinese cultural traditions.
3. Authenticity
Gen Z shows sensitivity to whether heritage feels genuine or artificially constructed for marketing purposes. Example: An active kiln site such as Jingdezhen Imperial Kiln Factory Site, where original production techniques are preserved and still demonstrated by craftspeople.
4. Human meaning
Industrial heritage becomes more engaging when it highlights worker stories, community traditions, or cultural significance. Example: Documentation of multi-generational ceramic families in Jingdezhen who have passed down porcelain techniques for centuries. Personal stories of mastery, patience, and craftsmanship make the heritage relatable and emotionally engaging.
5. Visual clarity of heritage value
Sites that clearly communicate cultural or spiritual meaning produce stronger neural responses than those requiring explanation. Example: Rows of iconic blue-and-white porcelain displayed in a museum such as China Ceramics Museum, clearly signalling historical craftsmanship and global cultural influence without requiring extensive explanation.
Implications for content and heritage strategy
The findings suggest that effective communication with Generation Z requires more than demographic targeting. Content should activate emotional and imaginative processing. Effective communication with Generation Z in the context of Jingdezhen requires activating emotional and imaginative processing by emphasizing cultural meaning, authentic visual cues, and human stories behind porcelain heritage. These principles are particularly relevant for organisations in the cultural heritage sector, museums, tourism organisations, creative studios, and heritage brands connected to Jingdezhen, where content can highlight craftsmanship traditions and immersive experiences that help audiences imagine themselves engaging with the heritage.
Practical applications include:
- emphasize cultural meaning rather than only visual aesthetics
- highlight human stories behind heritage sites
- create content that helps audiences imagine themselves in the environment
- use traditional visual cues that signal authenticity
Importantly, this approach does not require brands to focus exclusively on heritage products. Even modern brands can integrate traditional visual storytelling to activate imagination and emotional engagement.
Take-away
Generation Z’s preferences are not driven only by trends or aesthetics, but by deeper psychological mechanisms linked to imagination and emotional meaning. Neuroscience evidence shows that traditional and spiritual imagery activates stronger attention and emotional engagement than modern or industrial visuals. Understanding the Heritage Brain Response helps marketers, designers, and cultural institutions create content that resonates more deeply by connecting to fundamental human perception processes.
Further Reading
-
The Eye Never Lies: Revolutionary Do's and Don'ts for Visual Destination Marketing
Imagine this: You’re scrolling through travel photos online. A bright coastal landscape catches your eye. You pause for a moment, zoom in, and look again. But when it’s time to choose your next trip, you pick somewhere else entirely. This small contradiction happens more often than marketers think.
A recent neuromarketing eye-tracking study from Rùben Pinhal and colleagues explored how people visually engage with destination images.

