Message-Elicited Brain Response Moderates the Relationship Between Opportunities for Exposure to Anti-Smoking Messages and Message Recall.

IF 5.5 1区 文学 Q1 COMMUNICATION Journal of Communication Pub Date : 2019-12-01 Epub Date: 2019-12-06 DOI:10.1093/joc/jqz035
Elissa C Kranzler, Ralf Schmälzle, Rui Pei, Robert C Hornik, Emily B Falk
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Campaign success is contingent on adequate exposure; however, exposure opportunities (e.g., ad reach/frequency) are imperfect predictors of message recall. We hypothesized that the exposure-recall relationship would be contingent on message processing. We tested moderation hypotheses using 3 data sets pertinent to "The Real Cost" anti-smoking campaign: past 30-day ad recall from a rolling national survey of adolescents aged 13-17 (n = 5,110); ad-specific target rating points (TRPs), measuring ad reach and frequency; and ad-elicited response in brain regions implicated in social processing and memory encoding, from a separate adolescent sample aged 14-17 (n = 40). Average ad-level brain activation in these regions moderates the relationship between national TRPs and large-scale recall (p < .001), such that the positive exposure-recall relationship is more strongly observed for ads that elicit high levels of social processing and memory encoding in the brain. Findings advance communication theory by demonstrating conditional exposure effects, contingent on social and memory processes in the brain.

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信息诱发的脑反应调节反吸烟信息暴露机会与信息回忆之间的关系。
活动的成功取决于足够的曝光率;然而,曝光机会(例如,广告覆盖范围/频率)是信息召回的不完美预测因素。我们假设暴露-回忆关系取决于信息处理。我们使用与“真实成本”反吸烟运动相关的3个数据集检验了适度假设:从13-17岁青少年的全国滚动调查中回顾过去30天的广告(n = 5110);广告特定目标评级点(TRPs),衡量广告覆盖范围和频率;以及14-17岁青少年(n = 40)大脑中涉及社会处理和记忆编码区域的广告引发反应。这些区域的平均广告水平的大脑激活调节了全国性TRPs和大规模回忆之间的关系(p < 0.001),因此,对于引起大脑中高水平的社会处理和记忆编码的广告,积极的暴露-回忆关系更为强烈。研究结果通过证明条件暴露效应(取决于大脑中的社会和记忆过程)推进了交流理论。
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来源期刊
Journal of Communication
Journal of Communication COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
11.60
自引率
5.10%
发文量
41
期刊介绍: The Journal of Communication, the flagship journal of the International Communication Association, is a vital publication for communication specialists and policymakers alike. Focusing on communication research, practice, policy, and theory, it delivers the latest and most significant findings in communication studies. The journal also includes an extensive book review section and symposia of selected studies on current issues. JoC publishes top-quality scholarship on all aspects of communication, with a particular interest in research that transcends disciplinary and sub-field boundaries.
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