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COM 242- Persuasive Effects of the Media What is Persuasion? • • • • The three dimensions of persuasion Change in attitude Change in behavior Persistence of behavior over time How Media Messages Persuade without even Trying • Entertainment messages can exert a powerful influence on attitude and behavior • Possible to change someone’s attitude or behavior without even consciously trying to do so. Happy days - libraries around the country reported to have a 500% increase in library card applications after the character ‘the Fonz’ applied for a card in one particular episode. The Day After… • The Day After - two researchers discovered that exposure of the movie was sufficient to change attitudes about the seriousness of the nuclear war The Day After Tomorrow The Day After Tomorrow- researchers reported that after seeing the film, people were willing to give 50% more money toward the effort to mitigate changes in climate. Elaboration Likelihood Model • Elaboration Likelihood Model • Richard Petty and John Cacioppo • Persuasion process as approaching a persuasive situation with their defenses up • Two main routes by which people might be persuaded Central Route to Persuasion a. highly rational and cognitive route to persuasion b. careful scrutiny of messages c. tendency to think up many counterarguments d. counter attitudinal messages-when the message is different from the position that the person holds Peripheral-route to Persuasion • less scrutiny of messages • Certain cues in the message lead people to accept the persuasive proposition • E.g. Persuaded while watching movies and programs that were designed to entertain Peripheral-route vs. Central route Peripheral-route vs. central route Advertisers use creative ways to entertain audience, people will process the ad as another entertaining bit of media Viewers are more willing to change attitudes and behavior with little though and scrutiny (central route to persuasion during TV commercials) http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/dl/free/0072415444/22501/04003.jpg The Theory of Media Cultivation • George Gerbner’s Theory of Media Cultivation • The idea that consumption of entertaining media can change people’s attitudes • Process is gradual and cumulative • World of media entertainment presents a particular view of social reality • eg. A person who is a heavy TV viewer, will tend to believe that the world is more violent place than it really is and more likely to express fear of criminal victimization (attitude) and more likely to purchase a home security system (behavior) Characteristics of the Cultivation Theory • Mainstreaming • Everyone is similarly cultivated by the media • differences expected on the basis of group membership becomes less pronounced • Resonance • a persons real life environment strongly resembles to environment depicted in the media • a person receives a “double dose effect” of the same messages Weapons of Influence Reciprocation Commitment and Consistency Social Proof Liking Authority Scarcity Reciprocation •We should try to repay in kind, what another person has provided us •By the virtue of the reciprocity rule, we are obligated to the future repayments of favors, gifts, invitations and the like Amway BUG •Leave the product to the customers for some time to try without cost and obligation •Salesperson will collect it after trial period •Sales was amazingly high Consistency High degree of consistency is normally associated with personal and intellectual strength ●Fall in a habit of being consistent even when situations where it is not sensible to be ● Consistency Consistency in toy sales •Increase advertising before Christmas •Undersupply the toy being advertised •Parents have to get a substitute toy •Increase advertising of the same toy after Christmas •Kids will want it even more than ever and parents have to keep their word Commitment •Once a stand is taken, there is a natural tendency to behave in ways that are stubbornly consistent with the stand •Will be even more committed to something if they wrote it down (acts as tangible proof) Commitment Marketers use commitment in testimonial contests ●“I like the company because ....” ●Consumers would tend to believe in the product more ● Social Proof We determine what is correct by finding out what other people think is correct ● Social Proof Product is “fastest growing”, “largest-selling” ●The message that marketers want to give is, “look at all the people who decided to buy. It must be the correct thing to do” ● Liking ● We tend to agree to the requests of people that we know and like Liking Tupperware Party The Tupperware reperesentator is a friend to everyone invited to the party ●By providing the representative with a percentage of the sales, the company arranges for its customers to buy from and for a friend rather than an unknown salesperson ● Authority We are trained from birth to believe that obedience to proper authority is right and disobedience is wrong ●Religious instructions contribute as well ● Authority Marketers commissioned the respect accorded doctors by hiring actors to play a role of doctors on behalf of the products ●An example is actor Robert Young warning people on the damages of caffeine ●Encourages caffeine-free Sanka coffee ●Highly successful ● Scarcity •Opportunities seem more valuable to us when they are less available Scarcity “limited number” tactic ●Deadline tactic (“while stocks last!”) ● Intentional Persuasion in the Media Questions to Consider • How well do these messages work? • If they do work, what are the theoretical principles behind their success? Using Entertainment to Improve Public Health: • Happy Days ~ Library card applications • Felicity ~ Date rape • ER ~ morning-after pill Using Entertainment to Improve Public Health: • Problems – May not be met with enthusiasm on the part of the creators or the producers – Believe it interferes with their creative license – Turns entertainment into advertising The Great American Values Test (1979) • Sandra Ball-Rokeach, Milton Rokeach, Joel Grube • Persuasive impact of TV in the real-world The Great American Values Test (1979) • Program content – Viewers encouraged to think about and renew their commitment to “freedom” and “equality” – Viewers convinced to place high value on the importance of the environment and living in “a world of beauty” • How was it conducted? – Aired simultaneously on three commercial channels in the Tri-cities area in eastern Washington (i.e. Richland, Pasco, Kennewick) – NOT aired in Yakima, a comparable city The Great American Values Test (1979) • Results – Those who watched the program were more likely to donate – Uninterrupted viewers donated 4 to 6 times more money than non-viewers – Likewise, they donated 9 times more money than interrupted viewers – Their ideas of freedom, equality, and a world of beauty were all elevated The Great American Values Test (1979) • Limitations – Differences in donations may have little to do with interruptions during the program – Individual differences among participants and their households How Does an Advertiser Determine Success? • Cost-per-person statistic (In marketing: Cost per thousand – CPM) • Response rate Effective if 99% of the audience fails to respond Some Evidence for the Effectiveness of Advertising: • Newspaper: Single-page ad Min. revenue = 10x the cost of the ad • TV – Northwest Mutual Life Insurance Company ~ improved name recognition – Mattel ~ increased value by a factor of about 25 Some Evidence for the Effectiveness of Advertising: • Mattel’s Children Issues – Charles Atkin heavy viewers of TV ads = more likely to consume and to ask their parents to buy the products they see advertised • 1965 Barbie Commercial • 2006 Barbie Commercial – Action for Children’s Television (ACT) lobbied Congress to prohibit children-directed advertising Key Ingredients of the Power of Media Persuasion Power of the Source (Credibility) • Experiment: – Conducted a survey on the feasibility of atomicpowered submarines for future development – One message source was the official newspaper of the Communist Party, Pravada – The other source was from J. Robert Oppenheimer, a well-respected atomic physicist – People were more likely to believe and change their views after hearing Oppenheimer’s view- More credible source than Pravada Power of the Source (Credibility) • 2 Chief Components of Credibility: 1. Expertise- is the message source a real expert in the topic that is being discussed? 2. Trustworthiness- is the source of the message reliable and truthful? Power of the Source (Credibility) • Case Study: – Reynold’s cigarettes case study: • The advertisement featured Patrick Reynolds- the grandson of the Reynolds family-founder of a tobacco company (Camel, Winston and Salem) • Mentioned about the many cigarette-caused diseases and deaths in his family • He even provided detailed statistics on the diseases- adds impact to the seriousness of the issue • Tells others about his current medical condition Power of the Source (Credibility) Audience perceives that the message source has little to gain from delivering the message- the source will be perceived as more trustworthy Message Features • Simplicity – Very often, advertising people make the mistake of delivering complicated messages- compares it with getting tangled in your own underwear – Straight and to the point is best • Repetition – Repeated messages are more persuasive than messages that have been heard only once – Limits of repetition- after 3 exposures to the same message, persuasive impact starts decreasing – T.V commercials face “burn-out” with the audience- need infusions of new life to curb consumer boredom • Fear – Fear appeals increase persuasion – Protection Motivation Theory- audience fear is based on the severity of a threat, vulnerability of a threat and their ability to respond effectively to the threat Message Features • Guilt – Making the audience feel guilty for not responding to a persuasive appeal – Relatively easy to make people feel guilty – Guilt appeals are especially persuasive in the context of interpersonal communication – People are motivated to do things because they feel guilty – Although people avoid people who make us feel guilty, there is no one person that a person can blame in a media campaign • Humor – Being funny makes it easier to be persuasive – Humor attracts attention to the message, creates a favorable attitude and produces a general feeling that the message is less critical – Humor might backfire- people might be more attracted to the joke instead of the actual message – However, humor is better tolerated than repetition The Health Campaign • Discusses the deliberate attempts to persuade people to change their behaviors for their personal health • Conflicting ideas about health-related behaviors- ban of cigarette ads for example but the encouraging smoking through other media outlets on the other hand • Conducted 2 surveys involving over 3000 participants- evaluate the effectiveness of a major campaign to encourage reproductive health practices • 11 different radio and TV spots- people exposed to the campaign were more likely to adopt contraception during sex • media campaign had a bigger effect on individuals who did not have a rich interpersonal network The Health Campaign • Bolivia – 1200 mothers surveyed in Philippines – exposure to media campaign about preventing measlessignificant impact on increasing specific knowledge on measles – media, instead of interpersonal communication seemed to be providing the information • University of Kentucky Study – found that sensation seekers are more likely to use drugs and more likely to respond to media messages that are high in novelty and action – Found out that it is easier to convince people to adopt a new behavior rather than to persuade them to stop an unhealthy habit, eg: smoking Subliminal Persuasion What IS Subliminal Persuasion? • Sub·lim·i·nal Pronunciation: (")s&b-'lim-&n-&l, 's&bFunction: adjective 1 : inadequate to produce a sensation or a perception 2 : existing or functioning below the threshold of consciousness <the subliminal mind> <subliminal advertising> —sub·lim·i·nal·ly /-E/ adverb Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary, © 2002 Merriam-Webster, Inc. What IS Subliminal Persuasion? • Embedded message designed to pass below the normal limits of perception. • Indiscernible to the conscious mind, but are alleged to be perceptible to the subconscious mind. – An image transmitted so briefly that it is only perceived subconsciously, otherwise unnoticed. Subliminal Messaging, Wikipedia, 2007 What Subliminal Involves • Audio – Back masking • Television and Video • Film • Print Urban Myth? • Often used in advertising and propaganda. • Effectiveness and frequency of such techniques are often debated upon. – No clear explanation or documentation of what subliminal messaging is. Living VICARY-ously • 1957 – James Vicary’s experiment: • Slogans "Drink Coca-Cola" and "Eat popcorn" were flashed during a movie for 1/3 of a millisecond at fivesecond intervals. – Vicary claimed that sales for both Coca Cola and popcorn sales increased by 57.5% and 18.1% respectively. – Vicary coined the term Subliminal Advertising. Living VICARY-ously • 1958 – Vicary conducted a television test in which he flashed the message "telephone now" hundreds of times during a Canadian Broadcasting Company program. – However, there were no increase in phone calls. • 1962 – Vicary admitted to fabricating his claim. – Attempts to recreate the results of Vicary’s claim have never end up in success. Sublime Advertising • Advertising community not particularly interested in confessing to the use of subliminal messages. • No documented proof of its prevalence. – Statistically, about 10% of all ads use some form of subliminal technique. Sparks, Media Effects Research The Good, the Bad and the Useless • So subliminal messaging can be use for good too, theoretically – Self-help audio CDs for weight loss, relaxation and other desirable results. • Anthony Pratkanis and Anthony Greenwald proved otherwise. – Results: People had an Illusory Placebo Effect. – People placed emphasis on labels • Conclusion of study: – Effectiveness of subliminal messages are predicated on the notion that the message enters the mind undetected. Sparks, Media Effects Research How does Subliminal Messaging work? • Subliminal perception (hypnosis, for example) are known to affect the perceiver without any conscious knowledge of the effect on his/her part. – However, there is NO strong evidence that subliminal messages are effective. • Subliminal messages are potentially more powerful than normal suggestions. – This form of influence/persuasion is akin to hypnosis • Where the receiver is encouraged to be in a relaxed state so that suggestions can be directed to the deeper (more gullible) parts of the mind. Subliminal Messaging, Wikipedia, 2007 Experimentally Unfalsified • It is suggested that the effects of subliminal messages would be no more than that of a glimpse of a billboard in the corner of an eye. • Controlled experiments that attempt to demonstrate the influence of subliminal messages found little to no effect. Examples of Subliminal Persuasion • Product Placements – 2001 • Josie and the Pussycats; The Movie – There were so many product placements and logos that the movie looked like an ad itself. – Occurs in almost every scene. – Viewed as a satire of how product placements have invaded movie screens. O’Bar, W. M. (2005). “Subliminal” Advertising. Advertising and Society Review. Examples of Subliminal Persuasion • US Army Recruitment Campaign – 2004 • The Simpsons – While watching a video for the Party Posse, Lisa notices the phrase "Yvan Eht Nioj" being repeated continuously by bellydancers. » http://youtube.com/ watch?v=PVKAgD CwajY Examples of Subliminal Persuasion • McDonalds – 2007-01-27 • A McDonald's logo appeared for one frame during the Food Network's Iron Chef America series • The Food Network replied that it was simply a technical glitch. » http://youtube.com/ watch?v=2xPvYgTv r8I