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Showing papers by "Joseph N. Cappella published in 2003"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Hypotheses predicting a relationship between media skepticism and news media consumption are tested and findings show that media skepticism is negatively associated with mainstream news exposure but positively associated with nonmainstream news exposure.
Abstract: This article explores a possible association between skepticism toward the media and audience exposure patterns. Hypotheses predicting a relationship between media skepticism and news media consumption are tested on four large sample data sets. Findings show that media skepticism is negatively associated with mainstream news exposure but positively associated with nonmainstream news exposure.

433 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that the gateway message should not be used in anti-drug interventions, and there is some possibility that an explicit gateway argument may actually boomerang.
Abstract: Successful anti-marijuana messages can be hypothesized to have two types of effects, namely persuasion effects, that is, a change in people's beliefs about using marijuana, and priming effects, that is, a strengthened correlation between beliefs and associated variables such as attitude and intention. This study examined different sets of anti-drug advertisements for persuasion and priming effects. The ads targeted the belief that marijuana is a gateway to stronger drugs, a belief that is often endorsed by campaign planning officials and health educators. A sample of 418 middle and high school students was randomly assigned to a control video or one of three series of ads, two of which included the gateway message in either an explicit or implicit way. Results did not support the use of the gateway belief in anti-marijuana interventions. Whereas no clear persuasion or priming effects were found for any of the ad sequences, there is some possibility that an explicit gateway argument may actually boomerang....

69 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a now-famous article, Robert Putnam traced changes in interpersonal (IP) trust, civic engagement, and political trust in the United States during the past three decades.
Abstract: In a now-famous article, Robert Putnam traced changes in interpersonal (IP) trust, civic engagement, and political trust in the United States during the past 3 decades. Although trust in government has declined, so have IP trust and civic engagement. Putnam places the blame for the loss of the various components of so-called civic or social capital squarely on television as a medium. We analyze 4 data sets to explain IP trust. Education, newspaper readership, and age are consistent and strong associates of trusting attitudes and behaviors. Reported political talk radio listening and elite electronic news use also are linked to trust. Those high in social trust, however, are not consistently heavier or lighter consumers of television. Putnam's hypothesis, in other words, is not confirmed in these data. Implications, as well as some reasons to continue to entertain the hypothesis, are explored.

40 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Theoretical approaches to communication campaigns have been studied in a variety of domains, such as health, education, and social change as mentioned in this paper, with a focus on the social normative component of behavioral intention.
Abstract: The articles published in this symposium make contributions to an increased understanding of the theoretical bases for communication campaigns. They add to a growing literature that aims to move communication campaigns from a formulaic craft to a theory-driven, but practical, endeavor (Hornik, 2002a; Rice & Atkin, 2001; Zaller, 1992). This journal article is available at ScholarlyCommons: http://repository.upenn.edu/asc_papers/110 Editor’s Introduction: Theoretical Approaches to Communication Campaigns The articles published in this symposium make contributions to an increased understanding of the theoretical bases for communication campaigns. They add to a growing literature that aims to move communication campaigns from a formulaic craft to a theory-driven, but practical, endeavor (Hornik, 2002a; Rice & Atkin, 2001; Zaller, 1992). Communication campaigns have long been accepted as a means for forming attitudes, increasing knowledge, and achieving social and behavioral change. Despite the almost formulaic treatment of the design and execution of communication campaigns (Maibach & Parrott, 1995), researchers in politics (Holbrook, 1996), health (Hornik, 2002b), development (Thomas, 1994), and other arenas have questioned the efficacy of even well-designed campaigns. Some are beginning to weigh seriously the conditions under which campaigns might produce consequences opposite to those intended (Werch & Owen, 2002). At the same time, communication campaigns can be effective (Snyder & Hamilton, 2002) even with behaviors that are difficult to modify, such as cigarette smoking (Worden, Flynn, et al., 1988) and drug use (Palmgreen, Donohew, Lorch, Hoyle, & Stephenson, 2001). Understanding the mechanisms that activate campaign effects and, perhaps more importantly for the discipline of communication, the theoretical bases for the creation of effective messages to inform, persuade, and motivate audiences is the sine qua non of the design of effective campaigns. The papers in this symposium take rather different approaches to the theoretical foundations of communication campaigns. Fishbein and Yzer work through the implications of the integrated theory of behavior change to explore the general content of messages that campaign designers need to consider. This is an important step. Some theories of persuasion, such as the elaboration likelihood model (Petty & Cacioppo, 1986), describe the conditions under which high argument quality is essential. However, the theory is mute about the domain (or topics) of the arguments. Fishbein and Yzer offer useful guidance to campaign designers concerning the Joseph N. Cappella beliefs that are especially relevant to changing a targeted intention or behavior. Rimal and Real focus specifically on the social normative component of behavioral intention, exploring the conceptual bases of social norms that might work alone or in concert to account for alcohol consumption. Social norms are a potentially powerful but complex arena involving not only actual levels of behavior by those in the target person’s social network, but also perception of the prevalence of the behavior. These objective aspects of normative force (that is, prevalence) are balanced by perceived approval and disapproval by significant others and motivation to comply with others’ attitudes. Rimal and Real explore these components’ ability to predict alcohol consumption in an empirical test targeting college-aged drinkers. Hornik and Yanovitzky raise a somewhat different set of theoretical concerns. Many communication campaigns are subjected to careful evaluation to determine their effects on knowledge, attitudes, intentions, and behaviors. In order to build theory from a strong empirical base, we must know which campaigns are effective and which are ineffective. Hornik and Yanovitzky argue that evaluations of campaigns can themselves fail to detect success if the evaluation investigates an incomplete set of paths through which a communication campaign might exert its influence. In effect, a successful and accurate campaign evaluation requires a well-specified theory of the campaign’s routes to influence. Morris offers readers a metatheoretical perspective on communication campaigns, especially those geared toward developing regions of the globe. She compares campaigns aimed at participation and empowerment to those aimed at diffusion of information and behavior change. In some cases, the former are an inadvertent by-product of the latter class of campaigns. Morris invites campaign evaluators (and designers) to think in terms of both classes of outcomes even if one or the other is primary at the initial stages of design. Morris’s perspective on the problem of campaign goals can be seen as an expansion of Hornik and Yanovitzky’s call for a theory of the campaign’s influence and a broadening of the scope of the more precise (but limiting) perspectives of behavior change and social normative theories. The articles in this symposium make significant steps toward building the theoretical substructure for communication campaigns. Large gaps remain, however. Although theories such as the integrated model of behavior change can tell us what general topics a campaign should pursue, it tells us little about how to build persuasive messages about those topics. Although the field of communication has developed some theories of message design to affect behavior and attitude change (Donohew, Lorch, & Palmgreen, 1998; Zillman & Brosius, 2000), investing additional resources will help to secure a central place for communication theory in the design of campaigns, their evaluation, and the creation of messages carrying the campaign. Joseph Cappella (PhD, Michigan State University) is the Gerald R. Miller Professor of Communication in the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Joseph N. Cappella, Annenberg School for Communication, 3620 Walnut St., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104–6220 or by email: jcappella@asc.upenn.edu. Donohew, L., Lorch, E. P., & Palmgreen, P. (1998). Applications of a theoretic model of information exposure to health intervention. Human Communication Research, 24, 454–468. Holbrook, T. M. (1996). Do campaigns matter? Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Hornik, R. C. (Ed.). (2002a). Public health communication: Evidence for behavior change. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. Hornik, R. C. (2002b). Public health communication: Making sense of contradictory evidence. In R. C. Hornik (Ed.), Public health communication: Evidence for behavior change (pp. 1–22). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. Maibach, E., & Parrott, R. L. (Eds.). (1995). Designing health messages: Approaches from communication theory and public health practice. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Palmgreen, P., Donohew, L., Lorch, E. P., Hoyle, R. H., & Stephenson, M. T. (2001). Television campaigns and adolescent marijuana use: Tests of sensation seeking targeting. American Journal of Public Health, 91, 292–296. Petty, R. E., & Cacioppo, J. T. (1986). The elaboration likelihood model of persuasion. In L. Berkowitz (Ed.), Advances in experimental social psychology (Vol. 19, pp. 123–205). New York: Academic Press. Rice, R. E., & Atkin, C. K. (Eds.). (2001). Public communication campaigns (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Snyder, L. B., & Hamilton, M. A. (2002). A meta-analysis of U.S. health campaign effects on behavior: Emphasize enforcement, exposure, and new information, and beware the secular trend. In R. C. Hornik (Ed.), Public health communication: Evidence for behavior change (pp. 1–22). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. Thomas, P. (1994). Participatory development communication: Philosophical premises. In S. A. White, K. S. Nair, & J. Ashcroft (Eds.), Participatory communication: Working for change and development (pp. 49–59). New Delhi, India: Sage. Werch, C. E., & Owen, D. M. (2002). Iatrogenic effects of alcohol and drug prevention programs. Journal on Studies of Alcohol, 63, 581–590. Worden, J. K., Flynn, B. S., Geller, B. M., Chen, M., Shelton, L. G., Secker-Walker, R. H., Solomon, L. J., Couchey, S., & Costanza, M. C. (1988). Development of a smoking prevention mass media program using diagnostic and formative research. Preventive Medicine, 17, 531–538. Zaller, J. R. (1992). The nature and origin of mass opinion. New York: Cambridge University Press. Zillman, D., & Brosius, H. (2000). Exemplification in communication: The influence of case reports on the perception of issues. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

6 citations



01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: The authors explored a possible association between skepticism toward the media and audience exposure patterns and found that media skepticism is negatively associated with mainstream news exposure but positively associated with nonmainstream news exposure.
Abstract: This article explores a possible association between skepticism toward the media and audience exposure patterns. Hypotheses predicting a relationship between media skepticism and news media consumption are tested on four large sample data sets. Findings show that media skepticism is negatively associated with mainstream news exposure but positively associated with nonmainstream news exposure.