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Public belief in the power of subliminals. 75% of Americans believe that subliminal messages are omnipresent in advertising, and that they work (Rogers
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2. Public belief in the power of subliminals 75% of Americans believe that subliminal messages are omnipresent in advertising, and that they work (Rogers & Seiler, 1994)
Why?
James Vicarys purported movie theater experiment in 1957
Wilson Brian Keys claims of planted images in advertising
Claims of subliminals in Disney movies and other media
Media spoofs: In a Simpson's episode, Homer receives a subliminal self-help tape which increases vocabulary instead of weight loss. He begins talking like Shakespeare.
3. The early years: An urban myth is born James Vicary claimed to have flashed the words eat popcorn and Drink Coca-Cola on a movie screen for 1/200th of a second, every 5 seconds during the movie Picnic
He claimed popcorn sales increased 58% and Coke sales increased 18%
Vicarys experiment was never successfully replicated
He later acknowledged the study was a fraud (Advertising Age ,1962)
4. Claims of embedded text and images in advertising Wilson Brian Keys claimed to have found phallic symbols in Tanqueray, Chivas Regal, Ritz cracker, and Betty Crocker ads.
Can you find the embedded text in this Gilbeys Gin ad?
5. Why the fascination? The prospect of mind control is frightening
Its fun to entertain conspiracy theories
The popular press sensationalizes the issue, but fails to critically analyze the evidence
There are just enough isolated cases to keep the myth alive
6. Methodological shortcomings lack of control groups
lack of double-blind procedures
possibility of bias or cueing
lack of replication
lack of rigorous blind review
7. Definitions and conceptualizations Subliminal message
Below (sub) the threshold (limen) of human perception
Example: a message flashed so quickly that it cant be recognized
Example: a sound played so faintly that it cant be heard
Embedding is a form of subliminal persuasion Supraliminal message
A message that is consciously recognized and processed
Example: an image so faint that it is difficult to see
Example: a sound that is played quietly, yet is still audible
Product placement is a form of supraliminal persuasion
8. The middle years: Embedded images and text Embedded images and text are subliminal messages
This ad for Tanqueray allegedly contains a phallic symbol.
9. Product placement (a.k.a. product planting) Product placement is a form of supraliminal persuasion Subtle, perhaps, but not subliminal
10. More phallic imagery, but by no means subliminal Subtle, but not subliminal
11. More about product placement Product placement will exceed $4.25 billion in 2005 (Advertising Age, Apr 4, 2005)
Reality TV shows, like Apprentice and American Idol depend on product placements
product placement in TV shows has moved from mere props to becoming part of the story lines.
Modern cinema relies on product placement to offset production costs.
The practice is now so widespread that movies parody product placement
Austin Powers
Josie and the Pussycats
Truman Show
12. A key distinction Subliminal priming has been well documented in controlled laboratory settings
Stimuli can be perceived or processed without conscious awareness
Priming can produce changes in beliefs, attitudes, and behavior Commercial applications of subliminal priming have not been demonstrated.
Flashing Starbuckswill not make a consumer buy that brand of coffee
13. Types of subliminals Embedded images: pictures or words that are hidden or flashed quickly (in 100ths of a second)
Sub-audible messages: sounds or words that are too faint to be heard, or are played at extremely high frequencies
Electronically altered signals: backward masking and other voice alterations
14. Embedded images: Now you see em, now you dont Champion & Turner (1958) inserted Wonder Rice in a food ad
Vokay & Read (1985) embedded the word sex in ads
Smith and Rogers (1994) found supraliminal messages that said choose this were far more effective than subliminal messages
15. Embedded images in Disney movies? Jessica (sans underwear?) in Who Framed Roger Rabbit
It is much more likely that this was a prank by a cell painter than a corporate conspiracy
16. Embedded images in Disney movies The Little Mermaid
Is that a sandcastle in the background, or are you just glad to see me?
The artist who painted this scene claimed the resemblance to a phallic symbol was unintentional
17. More Disney embedding The Rescuers Down Under (whos in the window?)
Little Mermaid: boney knee?
The Lion King
18. More embedding
Pall Mall cigarettes and embedding?
Some claim that the banner on the bottom of the Kent cigarette package shows two KKK Klansmen
Pepsi and embedding
The graphics on the cans line up to form the word SEX
19. Embedding as a conspiracy theory Examples of embedded images appear to be isolated cases
The incidents appear to be pranks rather than organized marketing strategies.
The mere existence of subliminals does not prove their effectiveness.
20. What advertisers really do marketers keep finding new ways to deactivate our advertising early warning systems (Safer 2003)
product placement
branded entertainment (The Apprentice, American Idol, Extreme Makeover Home Edition)
product integration; relying on a multi-pronged approach based on word-of-mouth, blogs, youtube, and traditional media.
The goal for these newer strategies is to appear as seamless, natural, and integrated into the context as possible
21. Why product placement is so popular Viewers can flip past commercials or zap them using TIVO
product planting cant be eliminated
A commercial, advertisement, or billboard is temporary
a planted product remains on a film forever
Product placement is cheaper than buying commercial time
a 30 second spot can cost $475,000, whereas a seasons worth of placements costs $200,000 (Law & Braun, 2000)
22. Commentary on product placement We never want to hit the movie goers over the head with product exposure, the best placements are natural and seamless
Steve Ross; 20th Century Fox
When a Star uses a recognizable product, people in the audience will pat themselves on the back and say look how smart I am, Im using the same thing as the hero in the movie. Its the most inexpensive way to get visibility and sales power.
Gisela Dawson; The Catalyst Group
23. Unintentional product placement
24. Recent subliminal research: Eureka! They found it. Priming occurs when a subliminal stimulus precedes, or is paired with, a supraliminal message (Strahan, Spencer, & Zanna, 2000).
The prime is flashed at about 16 milliseconds, below the threshold of conscious perception.
The results reveal that such priming improves subjects performance (Debner & Jacoby, 1994; Klinger & Greenwald, 1995).
25. A sample subliminal priming study Patton (1992) exposed normal females and bulimia prone females to one of three subliminal messages:
Mama is leaving me
Mona is loaning it
Mama is loaning it.
Afterward, the females were taken to another room where they were invited to participate in a taste-test involving crackers.
The bulimia prone females who were exposed to the maternal separation message (Mama is leaving me) ate twice as many crackers as the females in the other two groups.
26. Subliminal priming can affect attitudes Graham & Lowery (2004): Subliminal priming can activate negative racial stereotypes
police officers were exposed subliminal primes embodying negative stereotypes of African Americans
Next, all the officers were presented with a hypothetical scenario involving a criminal defendant.
The primed group attributed more negative traits to the defendant, found him more culpable, and favored a stiffer sentence compared to the control group.
27. Subliminal priming can alter behavior Winkielman, Berridge, & Wilbarger (2005): Subliminal priming can alter behavior
Exposed participants to subliminal images of happy or angry faces
Participants then tasted a new, lemon-lime flavored drink. After reporting how thirsty they were, they were told to drink as much as they wanted.
Participants exposed to happy faces consumed more than twice as muchbut only if they were already thirsty
Priming may act as a trigger, but only if there is a prior need, goal or drive.
28. Cautions regarding subliminal priming effects
Effects of priming are short-lived
The subliminal prime must still be perceived, even if perception is without awareness
No proof of commercial viability
29. Electronically altered signals: The Devil Made Me Do It The strange case of Raymond Belknap and James Vance
Did backward masked lyrics persuade them to commit suicide?
But millions of other teens listened to the album who didnt commit suicide
Alternative causal explanations
Drugs?
Depression?
Lack of parental supervision?
30. Other backward masking controversies Queen: Another One Bites the Dust
The Beatles: Revolution #9
Disney: Aladdin
31. You must be hearing things Perceived meanings may be pure coincidence
Vokay (2002) noted the phrase Jesus loves you played backwards sounds like we smell sausage.
Vokay and Read (1995) found that:
Subjects cant make out words or content of messages played in reverse
Subjects can discern gender
Backward masked messages had no effect on task performance
32. Final thoughts If you stare at clouds long enough, you will see a rubber ducky
Beware of the fallacy that presence implies effectiveness
Even in controlled laboratory settings, subliminal effects tend to be weak and transitory
Difficulty of proving a negative (e.g. that there arent subliminals everywhere)