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Theories and Models of Persuasion. ELM, HSM, and TRA. Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM). Two basic routes to persuasion Central route: is reflective, requires mental effort, relies on cognitive elaboration, thinking about, reflecting on a message
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Theories and Models of Persuasion ELM, HSM, and TRA
Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM) • Two basic routes to persuasion • Central route: is reflective, requires mental effort, relies on cognitive elaboration, thinking about, reflecting on a message • Motivation (willingness) to process a message • Ability to process (understand) a message • Example: Babbs is car shopping. She looks up information comparing safety, reliability, performance, customer satisfaction, mileage, and depreciation for three makes of sporty cars.
ELM, continued • The Peripheral route: is reflexive, based on mental shortcuts, credibility, appearance cues, quantity of arguments • heuristic cues (decision rules): rules for simplifying the thought process • “Experts can be trusted,” “As seen on TV” • Source attractiveness (celebrity endorsements) “Brad Pitt is in the movie, so it has to be good.” • Perceived similarity: “I’ll study with her, she’s a Christian too.”
Alcohol ads and peripheral processing • American children view 2,000 beer and wine commercials per year (American Academy of Pediatrics, 1995). • Beer advertisements are a significant predictor of adolescent preference for beer brands (Gentile, 2001). • 56% of students in grades 5-12 say that alcohol advertising encourages them to drink (American Academy of Pediatrics, 2001).
Central or peripheral processing? • Typical tobacco ad and two counter-ads advocating an anti-smoking message
Involvement and the ELM • The role of involvement in the topic or issue: • high involvement increases the likelihood of central processing, e.g. message scrutiny • low involvement increases the likelihood of peripheral processing. • high involvement decreases reliance on credibility (peripheral cue)
Criticisms of the ELM • no accommodation for parallel (simultaneous) processing. • Stiff and others (Stiff, 1994; Stiff & Boster, 1987) have charged that the ELM is not falsifiable. • They claim the ELM can’t specify a priori whether a particular cue will be processed centrally or peripherally. • The operationalization of “strong” and “weak” arguments is tautological. • A limited range of topics or issues has been studied • Studies conducted by Petty & Cacioppo show stronger, more robust findings than studies conducted by others using the ELM (Stiff, 1994)
Heuristic-Systematic Model • Bears many similarities to the ELM • Two basic routes or modes of information processing • Systematic processing: more thoughtful, deliberate, analytical • Analogous to “central” processing in the ELM • Heuristic processing: more reflexive, automatic, • Analogous to “peripheral” processing in the ELM • relies on decision rules, e.g., always tip 15% • decision rules are activated under the appropriate circumstances
Is multitasking real? • Is information processing serial in nature? • reciting the alphabet • Can information processing occur on different levels? (hippocampus vs. parietal cortex) • knitting while talking • Is there true simultaneous processing, or simply rapid switching back and forth? • driving + cellphone • If simultaneous processing exists, does it exists for words? For images? • Processing to oral or written messages at once • Processing a written message and an image
Heuristic processing in pharmaceutical ads • A majority of ads for pharmaceutical manufacturers relied on emotional appeals to attract consumers
Heuristic cues must be: • Available: stored in memory for potential use • Accessible: activated from memory • Applicable: related to the receiver’s goals or objectives
HSM, continued • Motivation and ability to process a message are key determinants in persuasion • Sufficiency principle: people don’t want to spend too much or too little time/effort making a decision • HSM allows for the possibility of simultaneous processing (both systematic and heuristic) • Example: Ned thinks Mini Coopers look really cool and, after doing some research, he finds they also perform well in NHTSA crash tests and have higher than average reliability.
Simultaneous processing? • One’s initial reaction to this ad might be shock revulsion • If studies the ad further, one realizes it is an anti-animal cruelty ad • The initial shock value of the ad might cause a person to read further and figure out what the ad means.
Theory of Reasoned Action (TRA) • Developed by Fishbein & Ajzen in the 1970’s • TRA is a “rational” model of persuasion • Presumes people are rational decision makers • Presumes people make use of the information available to them • Behavior intentions are the best predictor of actual behavior
Illustration of the TRA • Ned has been drinking heavily ever since he started college. • Attitude toward the behavior: “I think drinking is ruining my health and it caused me to get fired from my job” • Subjective Norm component: “I know my friends would like me to stop drinking” • Intention: “I intend to stop drinking altogether” • Behavior: Ned attends his first AA meeting the next day
Criticisms of the TRA • As its name suggests, the theory of reasoned action does not apply to habitual behavior that is not subject to conscious processing. • Even so, several tests of the model have been conducted with habitual behaviors (e.g., Kahle & Beatty, 1987). • the attitudinal and normative components are not conceptually distinct