1 / 62

Theories of persuasion and attitude change

Theories of persuasion and attitude change. Lecture 8. Attitude  behavior. Theories of persuasion (Yale school) Theory of reasoned action (M. Fishbein & I. Ajzen Theory of planned behavior (I. Ajzen) Elaboration likelihood model (R. Petty & J. Caccioppo)

india
Download Presentation

Theories of persuasion and attitude change

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Theories of persuasion and attitude change Lecture 8

  2. Attitude  behavior • Theories of persuasion (Yale school) • Theory of reasoned action (M. Fishbein & I. Ajzen • Theory of planned behavior (I. Ajzen) • Elaboration likelihood model (R. Petty & J. Caccioppo) • Assimilation-contrast theory (M. Sherif)

  3. Elaboration likelihood model by R. Petty and J. Caccioppo John Caccioppo Richard Petty

  4. Elaboration likelihood model • Two routes of persuasion: • Central – through quality of arguments • Peripheral – through peripheral cues • Length of the message • Source credibility • Source attractiveness

  5. Central route The issue is important Recipient is focused on the message Message is easy to process Recipient is in a sad mood Peripheral route The issue is of no importance Distractors are present (e.g., noise) The message is difficult to process Recipient is in a good mood Determinants of central vs. peripheral route

  6. Theory of reasoned action M. Fishbein & I. Ajzen Martin Fishbein Icek Ajzen

  7. Attitude = result of rational decision • Rational decision – choice of the best alternative • Expected value of the chosen alternative • Probabilities x utilities of decision consequences • Choose this alternative which has the highest sum of products

  8. Theory of reasoned action Attitude Behavioral intention Behavior Social norms

  9. Attitude= result of rational choice Utility of A x Probability of A Utility of C X Probability of C Attitude Utility of B X Probability of B Utility of D X Probability of D

  10. Social norms Expectation X X Motivation X Expectation Z X Motivation Z Norm Expectation Y X Motivation Y Expectation U X Motivation U

  11. Examples • Attitudes towards EU • Consequences of entering EU vs. not entering EU • Evaluation (utilities) • Probability • Social norms • What others expect of me • Do I want to yield to the expectation • Attitudes towards removing own dogs’ shit from pavements • Consequences • Social norms

  12. Theory of planned behavior Attitude Behavioral intention Behavior Social norms Control

  13. Assimilation-contrast theory by M. Sherif

  14. Judgments (descriptive, evaluative) • Absolute vs. comparative judgments • Harry Helson: Absolute judgments are never absolute • Evaluations are made with respect to some reference points • Reference points: • Adaptation level (point of „psychological neutrality”) • Anchoring points

  15. Anchoring effects • Anchors – points of reference • Contrast effects • Comparison with an anchor – accentuates the difference • Assimilation effects • Comparison with an anchor attenuates the difference

  16. Contrast effects in perception of physical stimuli 50oC 30oC 10oC

  17. Attitude scales and assimilation-contrast effects • Types of scales • Likert scale – the majority of known questionnaires and attitude scales • Thurstone scale • Guttman scale (e.g. social distance scale)

  18. Attitudes • Toward European Union • Abortion • Church • Paid education • Immigrants • Homosexuals

  19. Thurstone Scale • Interval scale (items differ by equal intervals) • Each item described with two parameters; • Scale value (position on the domension of positivity-negativity towards the attitude object) • Variance (amount of agreement on how positive is the statement) Louis Thurstone (1887-1955)

  20. Constructing the Thurstone scale • Collecting attitudinal statements (about 300) • Eliminate • Factual statements • Statements difficult to understand • Double negations etc.. • Competent judges (minimum 50) • 11 categories • „1” – statement expresses an exteremely positive attitude (e.g. „Without membership in EU Poland will never be a truly democratic country” • „11” – statement expresses an extremely negative attitude (e.g.”Our membership in EU will deprive us of our Polish culture and identity”) • „6” – neither positive nor negative („EU money helps build highways in Poland”).

  21. Computing scale values of attitudinal statements N judges Statement 215 Statement 24 Statement 13 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Me=9.8 Me=2,6 Me=6.2

  22. Computing scale values and measures of variance • Scale value = median (or mean) • Variance = quartile deviation (or standard deviation)

  23. Selecting statements to the final version of the scale • Statements with scale values covering the whole scale in equal intervals (1,2,3,4...11 lub 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5.......10.5, 11.0 itp.) • Choice of statements with lowest variation

  24. Administering the scale and computing the final score • Participant marks only these statements that he/she agrees with • Final score (attitude) = means of scale values of marked items

  25. Thurstone vs Sherif • Criticisms of assumptions underlying the Thurstone scale • Competent judges are not competent • Competent judges have own attitudes • Attitudes act as anchors • Contrast effects • Assimilation effects

  26. Assimilation-contrast theory (ego involvement) by Muzafer Sherif • Own attitude acts as an anchor • Beliefs that are close to own attitude  assimilation effects • Beliefs distant from own attitude  contrast effects • Categorization of beliefs • Latitude of acceptance („yes” – I agree with it) • Latitude of rejectance („no” – I don’t agree with it) • Latitude of noncommitment („I don’t know” or „both agree and disagree”)

  27. Three latitudes High ego-involvement Low ego-involvement Number of opinions Latitude of acceptance Latitude of noncommitment Latitude of rejectance

  28. Ego-involvement effects • The higher ego-involvement, the larger latitude of rejection, the smaller – latitude of noncommitment • The higher ego-involvement, the higher probability that the persuasive message will be categorized as „not acceptable”  boomerang effects in persuasion

  29. Persuasion as communication • Yale school: Carl I. Hovland, Muzafer Sherif, Irving Janis • Processes of attitude change = processes of communication • Persuasion techniques = techniques of efficient communication

  30. Yale School Carl I. Hovland Muzafer Sherif Irving Janis William McGuire

  31. Persuasion as communication source message audience

  32. Persuasion as an effect of: • Characteristics of the source of the message • Characteristics of the message • Characteristics of the channel • Characteristics of the audience

  33. Persuasive source: role of credibility • Trustworthy • speaking fast (Miller et al.. 1976: fast speakers judged as more intelligent, objective and knowledgeable) • No perceived intention to persuade the audience • Arguing for a position against own • Competent • Confident tone • Effects of source credibility fade with time • Remembered message , not source  sleeper effect

  34. Sleeper effect • A delayed impact of a message, occurs when we remember the message but forget a reason for discounting it. • Incredible source more effective after a longer lapse of time

  35. Persuasive source: role of attractiveness • Physical attractiveness • Similarity vs. dissimilarity of a source • Message concerns subjective issues (tastes, preferences)  similar source more persuasive • Message concerns objective issues (facts)  dissimilar source more persuasive

  36. Persuasive message: Role of emotions • Appeal to reason vs. emotions • Central vs. peripheral route • Type of audience (educated or not) • Influence of positive affect • Positive emotions  more persuasion • Role of fear • Fear or fear + behavioral instruction? • Curvilinear relationship?

  37. Positive affect caused by eating facilitated persuasion

  38. Persuasive message: construction of a message • One-sided vs. two-sided • Role of education • Previous or future exposure to counterarguments • Distance from attitude of the audience • Boomerang effects • With or without a clear conclusion • Effects of order: primacy vs. recency

  39. One sided message is more persuasive if the audience initially agreed, to-sided – when disagreed

  40. Persuasive message: primacy vs. recency

  41. Persuasive message: role of the channel • Personal contact  more influence than media • Concrete example  more influence then dry statistical data • Written vs. video-taped • Difficult to understand messages  more persuasive when written • Easy to understand messages  more persuasive when video-taped • Power-Point presentations?

  42. Susceptible audience • Self-esteem • Education • Gender • Age and generation • Involvement in an issue

  43. Inocculation theory by McGuire • How to create resistance to persuasive meassages? • Vaccination: contact with a small dose of a virus  stimulation of antibodies • A small dose of arguments against own attitude  generation of counterarguments  bolstering the attitude

  44. Attitudes as constructions

  45. Attitudes: retrieved from memory or constructed on the spot? • Are attitudes really stable dispositions? • Effects of • Context of other questions • Induced affect (F. Strack) • Affect as information (N. Schwartz & Clore) • Availability heuristic • Thinking about reasons of attitudes (T. Wilson)

  46. Affect as information hypothesis After: Schwartz & Clore, 1983)

More Related