C1- Theories of Persuasion Flashcards

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1
Q

3 Theories of persuasion

A
  • Hovland- Yale theory
  • Fear arousal theory
  • Elaboration likelihood model
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2
Q

Hovland- Yale theory of persuasion

A

3 main factors to change behaviour
- The communicator (source)
- The communication (message)
- The recipients (audience)

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3
Q

The communicator
(source)

A
  • a communicator is more persuasive when they are perceived as credible
  • greater credibility when they’re experts
  • credibility derived from experience
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4
Q

The communication
(message)
- 2 factors

A

emotional appeal
- fear related threat can change behaviour if there is an explanation of how to avoid

2 sided argument
- an anti-smoking message should contain + and -
- a one sided argument is biased and therefore less persuasive

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5
Q

The recipients
(audience)

A
  • highly intelligent people are less easily persuaded
  • people lacking self-esteem are easily persuaded
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6
Q

Evaluation
- strength

A

Research support
- a study showed groups of participants were more persuaded by threatening messages ‘you might get cancer’ with a suggestion it is possible to quit

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7
Q

Evaluation
- weakness

A

Role of self-esteem
- a study showed people with high self-esteem are more easily persuaded just less willing to admit to it

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8
Q

Fear arousal theory

A

argued that persuasion messages can change behaviour if they arouse fear in people

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9
Q

Fear
- negative reinforcement

A

fear motivates us to change as it creates unpleasant arousal
We change our behaviour to avoid the unpleasant fear arousal

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10
Q

Fear- behaviour relationship

A

no fear arousal = no behavioural change

moderate fear arousal = change in behaviour

too much fear arousal = no behavioural change

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11
Q

Evaluation
- strength

A

Research Support
- fear is an important motivator
- a study showed arousing fear about tetanus caused people to get vaccinated
- validity and practical use

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12
Q

Evaluation
- weakness

A

Mixed evidence:
- others suggest more fear = more likely to change behaviour, and that it doesn’t decrease when there is too much fear
- low validity

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13
Q

Elaboration likelihood model

A
  • 2 ways to persuade behaviour change
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14
Q
  1. Central Route
    - high elaboration
A

the information given is personalised and highly relevant to the individual so it interests them and motivates change

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15
Q
  1. Peripheral Route ability
    - low elaboration
A

the information isn’t processed as its not relevant but it may be looked at if it is attractive/pretty

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16
Q

High elaboration

A

messaged is processed in detail

17
Q

Low elaboration

A

evaluation of message is minimal

18
Q

Factors of influence

A

Determines which route to use:
- relevance of message
- need for cognition
- where source is pointing

19
Q

Individual differences

A

people differ in their ability and motivation to process a message centrally

High NFC = Central route
Low NFC = peripheral route

20
Q

Evaluation
- strength

A

Practical application
- can make health messages more persuasive
- study showed using both central and peripheral routes is most effective
- helps audience to process message and appeals to hard- to- reach groups

21
Q

Evaluation
- weakness

A

Poor explanatory power
- ELM offers 2 routes but doesn’t explain why or how, lacks theory of psychological processes involved
- hard to use ELM to predict behaviour change