Back in 2012, the Lung Cancer Alliance launched their
advertising campaign titled “No One Deserves to Die.” The campaign features a
series of images depicting certain stereotypes (in addition to the two images
above, others include hipsters and the tattooed) along with the caption
‘deserve to die.’ The aim of the campaign is to "help put an end to the
stigma and the disease."
The problem with this campaign is that it requires almost
too much effort from the audience in order to grasp its true meaning. It is
only in the small print that the actual message is made clear; that people with
lung cancer are often viewed as bringing the disease upon themselves but lung
cancer doesn’t discriminate when deciding who it affects! Thus to properly
appreciate its value the audience needs to engage in systematic (effortful,
pros and cons analysed in detail) rather than heuristic (less effortful, relies
on short-cuts and simple cues) processing. If an individual only uses heuristic
processing when attending to the Lung Cancer Alliance posters then they may
only base their opinion of the campaign based on the main text and image. By
doing this they are likely to fail to understand the real message; they may
just take home the message of “cat lovers deserve to die.” Accordingly in order
to improve the effectiveness of this campaign the promoters need to establish a
method of ensuring the majority of people will choose to process its message
systematically.
An experiment by Petty, Cacioppo and Goldman (1981)
demonstrates one way of increasing the likelihood of systematic processing – by
making the audience highly involved in a message's content. Undergraduates at the
University of Missouri were told that the university chancellor was seeking the
opinions of students regarding possible academic policy changes. Half were told
that the chancellor was seeking recommendations about policy changes to be
instituted the following year (high personal involvement), whereas the other
half were told that the chancellor was seeking recommendations about changes
that would take effect in 10 years (low personal involvement). All participants
listened to a tape advocating that seniors be required to take a comprehensive
examination in their major area as a prerequisite to graduation, but for half
of the participants this was supposedly prepared by a local high school class
(low expertise) and the other half by the Carnegie Commission on Higher
Education (high expertise). The recorded arguments also differed in quality;
half of the participants heard a weak argument (personal opinions, quotations…)
and the other half a strong argument (statistics, data…). After listening to
the tape participants rated their own opinion of comprehensive examinations as
well as the extent to which they agreed with the proposal requiring seniors to
take a comprehensive exam before graduating. If participants are using
heuristic processing then they should be more influenced by the presence of an
apparent expert source (expert therefore must be right) and less influenced by
a strong argument (they aren’t processing it fully anyway) than those using
systematic processing.
As shown in the figure above, the expertise manipulation had
a stronger effect on persuasion in the low-involvement condition, such that a
source of high expertise produced significantly more agreement than a source of
low expertise only under the
low-involvement conditions. On the other
hand, the argument quality manipulation had a stronger effect under high
personal-involvement conditions than under low, such that the strong arguments
produced significantly more agreement than the weak only under the high involvement conditions. The results therefore
demonstrate that under conditions of low-involvement heuristic processing is
used whilst under conditions of high-involvement systematic processing is used.
In regards to the Lung Cancer Alliance campaign then, I
would suggest that if they want to continue to require systematic processing
they need to make the campaign more involving for passers-by in general. At
present only those who consider themselves to fall within the stereotyped
category might become involved enough to fully process the message when first
viewing. One way of doing this may be to change to large font to “British
Citizens Deserve to Die” (location changed according to target population).
Reference: Chaiken, S. (1980). Heuristic versus systematic information processing and the use of source versus message cues in persuasion. Journal of personality and social psychology, 39, 752-766.
Petty, R. E., Cacioppo, J. T., & Goldman, R. (1981). Personal involvement as a determinant of argument-based persuasion. Journal of personality and social psychology, 41, 847-855.
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