Ch. 6 ...Just do it Flashcards

1
Q

Persuasion

A

Process by which a message changes a person’s attitudes or behaviours

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2
Q

Source

A

Origin of persuasive effort

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3
Q

Message

A

Content and method of persuasive effort

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4
Q

Target

A

Recipient or audience of effort

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5
Q

Yale approach

A

Approach that considers 3 factors that influence persuasion:
Source
Message
Audience

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6
Q

Effect of attractiveness

A

Perceived attraction improves persuasiveness

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7
Q

Effect of likeability

A

Perceived likeability improves persuasiveness, especially in video and audio messages

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8
Q

Effect of similarity

A

More perceived similarity to self, more likeable and attractive, generally more persuasive

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9
Q

Perceived credibility and trustworthiness

A

Perceived credibility and trustworthiness improves persuasiveness

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10
Q

Message length

A

Long messages more effective if strong
Long messages less effective if weak
Long messages less impact than short

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11
Q

Strong message

A

Objective facts without superfluous information, no peripheral info, likable, credible and consistent

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12
Q

Fear arousal

A

Making people feel badly increases persuasive effect, inverse bell curve, level of fear to attitude change

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13
Q

Scarcity technique

A

Emphasizes rareness of item, increases attractiveness

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14
Q

Factual advertising

A

Uses objective facts

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15
Q

Evaluative advertising

A

Focuses on subjective opinions

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16
Q

Two sided arguments

A

Present both sides of argument, counter argument makes persuasion more successful

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17
Q

Primacy effect

A

Information first receives most influential

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18
Q

Recency effect

A

Most recent information most influential, seen with persuasion over time

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19
Q

Gender effect

A

Woman more susceptible to persuasion than men, more cooperation focused and socially sensitive, which heightens receptivity to persuasion

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20
Q

Age effect

A

Late adolescents/ young adults most susceptible to persuasion, less stable attitudes, less experiences to create resistance

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21
Q

Need for cognition

A

Individual need to think, how much they derive fulfillment from thinking

22
Q

Need for cognitive closure

A

Extent to which Individual is closed-minded, desiring quick, certain answers and resistant to ambiguity and dis-confirmation

23
Q

Mood effect

A

Making people feel good improves persuasion

24
Q

Dual process model

A

Elaboration likelihood model and heuristic-systematic model assert 2 routes to persuasion

25
Q

Central cues

A

Message quality and argument that require processing

26
Q

Central route to persuasion

A

Processing of a message that occurs when people have the ability and motivation to attend to a message

27
Q

Elaboration likelihood model (ELM)

A

Asserts variations in nature of persuasion outcomes are dependent on likelihood that recipients will think about arguments relevant to issue

28
Q

Peripheral cues

A

Persuasive features such as slogans, jingles

29
Q

Peripheral route to persuasion

A

Processing that occurs when people do not have the ability and motivation to attend to a message, instead persuaded by peripheral cues

30
Q

Systematic processing

A

Occurs when people attend to message

31
Q

Heuristic processing

A

Occurs when people use cognitive shortcuts to process message

32
Q

Heuristic-systematic model (HSM)

A

Essentially the same as ELM, but uses Systematic Central, and Heuristic peripheral

33
Q

Key factor is processing route

A

Ability to focus, lack of focus leads to pripheral cus being more persuasive

34
Q

Ingratiation

A

Technique that makes recipient like you

35
Q

Reciprocity principle

A

Do a favor before asking them f=to do so for you

36
Q

Door in face

A

Large and unrealistic request before small realistic one

37
Q

That’s not all

A

Request with added extras to pressure audience

38
Q

Foot in door

A

Small and unobtrusive request before large request

39
Q

Lowball tactic

A

Changing term if agreement by introducing hidden osts

40
Q

Reactance/ negative attitude change

A

Negative reaction to influence attempt, become annoyed, resentful. May be considered threat to personal freedom

41
Q

Boomerang effect

A

Lay term for reactance

42
Q

Forewarning

A

Prior knowledge that renders persusion less effective

43
Q

Counter arguing

A

Addressing and arguing against inconsistent arguments

44
Q

Attitude innoculation

A

Presenting people with weak, attitude-inconsistent attacks prior to a stronger persuasive attempt to help people resist message

45
Q

Selective avoidance

A

People’s tendency to filter out information that is inconsistent with pre-existing attitudes

46
Q

Attitude polarization

A

People’s tendency to evaluate mixed info in a way that strengthen pre-existing attitudes

47
Q

Biased assimilation

A

People’s tendency to evaluate counter-attitudinal info as unreliable

48
Q

Hostile media bias

A

People’s tendency to evaluate counter-attitudinal media as unreliable and untrustworthy

49
Q

Third person effect

A

People’s tendency to assume persuasion more effective on others

50
Q

Subliinal messages

A

Attempt to influence subconsciously, often with flashed images