Positively valenced, calming political ads their influence on the correspondence between implicit and explicit attitudes

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Positively valenced, calming political ads their influence on the correspondence between implicit and explicit attitudes. / Arendt, Florian; Marquart, Franziska; Matthes, Jörg.

I: Journal of Media Psychology, Bind 25, Nr. 2, 2013, s. 72-82.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Arendt, F, Marquart, F & Matthes, J 2013, 'Positively valenced, calming political ads their influence on the correspondence between implicit and explicit attitudes', Journal of Media Psychology, bind 25, nr. 2, s. 72-82. https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-1105/a000085

APA

Arendt, F., Marquart, F., & Matthes, J. (2013). Positively valenced, calming political ads their influence on the correspondence between implicit and explicit attitudes. Journal of Media Psychology, 25(2), 72-82. https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-1105/a000085

Vancouver

Arendt F, Marquart F, Matthes J. Positively valenced, calming political ads their influence on the correspondence between implicit and explicit attitudes. Journal of Media Psychology. 2013;25(2):72-82. https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-1105/a000085

Author

Arendt, Florian ; Marquart, Franziska ; Matthes, Jörg. / Positively valenced, calming political ads their influence on the correspondence between implicit and explicit attitudes. I: Journal of Media Psychology. 2013 ; Bind 25, Nr. 2. s. 72-82.

Bibtex

@article{d2fc7e3a59994ceabe0d0c171871a561,
title = "Positively valenced, calming political ads their influence on the correspondence between implicit and explicit attitudes",
abstract = "We investigated whether political print ads were able to moderate the influence of automatic affective gut reactions (i.e., implicit attitudes) on overtly expressed evaluations (i.e., explicit attitudes) of foreigners. In accordance with the feeling-as-information theory (Schwarz, 2012, In Van Lange et al. (Eds.), Handbook of Theories of Social Psychology, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage), we assumed that political ads containing positive, calming stimuli (e.g., nature pictures) signal a benign environment and thus should lead to less-effortful processing in subsequent situations. Due to the fact that the implicit-explicit correspondence is assumed to be higher under less-effortful processing, we hypothesized that these political print ads are able to increase the implicit-explicit correspondence. We tested this in an experiment in which participants (N = 164) were exposed to three positively valenced, calming ads of a European right-wing party (treatment group 1), or three negatively valenced, arousing ads of the same party (treatment group 2), or bogus ads (control group). As predicted, implicit attitudes better predicted explicit attitudes in participants who watched the positively valenced, calming ads. Thus, these participants based their overtly expressed evaluation of foreigners more on their (mostly negative) automatic gut reactions. In contrast, we found that egalitarian-related nonprejudicial goals predicted explicit attitudes in participants who watched negatively valenced, arousing ads. Thus, the content of these ads seemed to be {"}too strong{"} for participants and activated egalitarian-related values, which in turn predicted explicit attitudes. Taken together, our findings underline the importance of considering the relationship between explicit and implicit attitudes when studying the effects of political advertising.",
keywords = "IAT, Implicit Association Test, Implicit attitudes, Political advertising",
author = "Florian Arendt and Franziska Marquart and J{\"o}rg Matthes",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1027/1864-1105/a000085",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "72--82",
journal = "Journal of Media Psychology",
issn = "1864-1105",
publisher = "Hogrefe Publishing",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Positively valenced, calming political ads their influence on the correspondence between implicit and explicit attitudes

AU - Arendt, Florian

AU - Marquart, Franziska

AU - Matthes, Jörg

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - We investigated whether political print ads were able to moderate the influence of automatic affective gut reactions (i.e., implicit attitudes) on overtly expressed evaluations (i.e., explicit attitudes) of foreigners. In accordance with the feeling-as-information theory (Schwarz, 2012, In Van Lange et al. (Eds.), Handbook of Theories of Social Psychology, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage), we assumed that political ads containing positive, calming stimuli (e.g., nature pictures) signal a benign environment and thus should lead to less-effortful processing in subsequent situations. Due to the fact that the implicit-explicit correspondence is assumed to be higher under less-effortful processing, we hypothesized that these political print ads are able to increase the implicit-explicit correspondence. We tested this in an experiment in which participants (N = 164) were exposed to three positively valenced, calming ads of a European right-wing party (treatment group 1), or three negatively valenced, arousing ads of the same party (treatment group 2), or bogus ads (control group). As predicted, implicit attitudes better predicted explicit attitudes in participants who watched the positively valenced, calming ads. Thus, these participants based their overtly expressed evaluation of foreigners more on their (mostly negative) automatic gut reactions. In contrast, we found that egalitarian-related nonprejudicial goals predicted explicit attitudes in participants who watched negatively valenced, arousing ads. Thus, the content of these ads seemed to be "too strong" for participants and activated egalitarian-related values, which in turn predicted explicit attitudes. Taken together, our findings underline the importance of considering the relationship between explicit and implicit attitudes when studying the effects of political advertising.

AB - We investigated whether political print ads were able to moderate the influence of automatic affective gut reactions (i.e., implicit attitudes) on overtly expressed evaluations (i.e., explicit attitudes) of foreigners. In accordance with the feeling-as-information theory (Schwarz, 2012, In Van Lange et al. (Eds.), Handbook of Theories of Social Psychology, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage), we assumed that political ads containing positive, calming stimuli (e.g., nature pictures) signal a benign environment and thus should lead to less-effortful processing in subsequent situations. Due to the fact that the implicit-explicit correspondence is assumed to be higher under less-effortful processing, we hypothesized that these political print ads are able to increase the implicit-explicit correspondence. We tested this in an experiment in which participants (N = 164) were exposed to three positively valenced, calming ads of a European right-wing party (treatment group 1), or three negatively valenced, arousing ads of the same party (treatment group 2), or bogus ads (control group). As predicted, implicit attitudes better predicted explicit attitudes in participants who watched the positively valenced, calming ads. Thus, these participants based their overtly expressed evaluation of foreigners more on their (mostly negative) automatic gut reactions. In contrast, we found that egalitarian-related nonprejudicial goals predicted explicit attitudes in participants who watched negatively valenced, arousing ads. Thus, the content of these ads seemed to be "too strong" for participants and activated egalitarian-related values, which in turn predicted explicit attitudes. Taken together, our findings underline the importance of considering the relationship between explicit and implicit attitudes when studying the effects of political advertising.

KW - IAT

KW - Implicit Association Test

KW - Implicit attitudes

KW - Political advertising

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84877291426&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1027/1864-1105/a000085

DO - 10.1027/1864-1105/a000085

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84877291426

VL - 25

SP - 72

EP - 82

JO - Journal of Media Psychology

JF - Journal of Media Psychology

SN - 1864-1105

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 255169715