Increasing the Persuasiveness of Fear Appeals: The Effect of Arousal and Elaboration

We investigate the conditions under which messages that prompt low and high levels of fear are likely to be effective. Our premise is that when a low level of fear is ineffective, it is because there is insufficient elaboration of the harmful consequences of engaging in the destructive behavior. By...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of consumer research 1996-03, Vol.22 (4), p.448-459
Hauptverfasser: Keller, Punam Anand, Block, Lauren Goldberg
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container_title The Journal of consumer research
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creator Keller, Punam Anand
Block, Lauren Goldberg
description We investigate the conditions under which messages that prompt low and high levels of fear are likely to be effective. Our premise is that when a low level of fear is ineffective, it is because there is insufficient elaboration of the harmful consequences of engaging in the destructive behavior. By contrast, when appeals arousing high levels of fear are ineffective, it is because too much elaboration on the harmful consequences interferes with processing of the recommended change in behavior. We find support for these expectations in the context of a communication advocating that people stop smoking. The elaboration-enhancing interventions used, self-reference and imagery processing, increased the persuasiveness of a low-fear appeal by prompting elaboration on the harmful consequences of smoking, whereas the use of two elaboration-suppressing interventions, reference to others and objective processing, increased the persuasiveness of a high-fear appeal by decreasing the extent to which consumers deny harmful consequences.
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source EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current)
subjects Advertisements
Cigarette smoking
Cognition & reasoning
Consumer attitudes
Consumer behavior
Consumer research
Fear
Fear & phobias
Impact analysis
Marketing
Medical conditions
Oratory
Persuasion
Recommendations
Self referential statements
Social psychology
Studies
title Increasing the Persuasiveness of Fear Appeals: The Effect of Arousal and Elaboration
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