2016
DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2016.1250186
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Clash of the Primary Motivations: Motivated Processing of Emotionally Experienced Content in Fear Appeals About Obesity Prevention

Abstract: This study examined individuals' physiological and cognitive responses to different types of emotionally experienced content located in obesity prevention fear appeals. Results suggested that experienced valence impacted individuals' attention and memory as a function of experienced arousal level. Local content that created coactive highly arousing experiences received the most attention, though visual recognition suggested these messages were more difficult to encode. Local content that created negative moder… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Image features rated as effective in discouraging vaping in YAs (i.e., presence of vapor, device/e-liquid, warning images) were rated as less likable than images without those features. In models adjusting for all image features, color was not associated with likeability or PE and the presence of people reduced the likeability of images with no effect on PE, contrary to our expectations which were supported by prior research on EVP messaging appeal [ 16 , 17 , 25 ]. Results were comparable in past 30-day EVP users and non-users, supporting the utility of similar imagery in vaping prevention and reduction efforts.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 97%
“…Image features rated as effective in discouraging vaping in YAs (i.e., presence of vapor, device/e-liquid, warning images) were rated as less likable than images without those features. In models adjusting for all image features, color was not associated with likeability or PE and the presence of people reduced the likeability of images with no effect on PE, contrary to our expectations which were supported by prior research on EVP messaging appeal [ 16 , 17 , 25 ]. Results were comparable in past 30-day EVP users and non-users, supporting the utility of similar imagery in vaping prevention and reduction efforts.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 97%
“…It is therefore expected that the more perceived severity and susceptibility of harm, lead to the more fear is stimulated, and more fear leads to the behavioral intentions of adopting a healthy diet. This finding agrees with that of some preceding studies (17,26,(30)(31)(32). Analysis of variance of behavioral intentions scores of the six experimental groups indicate significant main effect of fear intensity on behavioral intention (hypothesis 4 supported).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Accordingly, once the appraisal of the perceived threat increases (if enough levels of perceived self-efficacy exist), people probably adapt their behavior so as to protect their health (15). Regarding the critical nature of obesity, researchers in different disciplines have increasingly started investigating this subject (9,10,(16)(17)(18)(19). Since anti-obesity advertisements are extremely costly, it is of high importance to know how health-based advertisements impact upon consumers' decisions (20).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Appeals utilizing both positive and negative emotions are labeled inconsistently in the literature. For example, Hong and Lee [60] and Taute et al [61] employ the term mixed emotional appeals while others utilized the term coactive appeal [7,8,[62][63][64]. The current study employs the term coactive appeals as coactivity is used to explain the mixed state of emotions and is applied more heavily in the marketing communication literature [8,62,64].…”
Section: Positive Negative and Coactive Appealsmentioning
confidence: 99%