The above advert was produced by PETA and attempts to
demonstrate that people should turn to vegetarianism because consuming meat is
potentially fatal. The poster was produced after the death of a Scottish women
and her unborn child during the Swine flu outbreak 6 years ago where people who
came into contact - usually by eating contaminated meat - with infected animals
fell ill and in a lot of cases died.
What is especially bad about this advert is that it attempts
to appeal to the peripheral processing route by using a short and loaded
message that grabs the attention. However, deciding whether or not to change to
vegetarianism or veganism is a deeply personal choice and one that requires a
lot of thought (i.e. use of central route processing), simply highlighting the
various bad things that eating meat can lead to is not a particularly
persuasive method of advertisement when you are advertising a complete change
in lifestyle. Multiple powerful arguments have to be used and be relevant to
the viewer if they are to engage with it. The "argument" used in the
above banner is neither particularly powerful or relevant considering such
outbreaks of animal-to-human disease are rare.
Indeed, for this advert and for the most part all PETA
adverts to not be terrible, the entire way the poster is designed must be changed
to appeal to central route processing successfully. One way to do this is by
employing 'empathy', so people feel more aligned with the suffering experienced
by animals and understand that such suffering is both gratuitous and needless.
Archer et al. (1979) conducted one such study on empathy and
how it might influence a change in behaviour and attitude. In the experiment a
'Mock Trial' was set up with participants acting as jurors. The background to
the trial was described to the participants so they had an understanding of the
case beforehand and from that point the trial proceeded as if it were the real
thing with the prosecution and defence giving their cases and presenting
evidence. Following the prosecution's case the defence initiated their case
with one of two appeal-manipulations,
either the Imagine-self Appeal or Listen-to-facts Appeal. These were the
two primary experimental conditions tested.
In the Imagine-Self
Appeal participants were told to focus on how they would feel if subjected
to the same experience as the defendant; in the Listen-to-facts Appeal they were told just to assess and consider
the facts presented. Also in the judge's closing statement, either a 'Fact-Focus' (reminder to be as
objective as possible) or 'No Fact-Focus' condition was reinforced.
The participants then went off and rated on a 9 point scale from lawful to
unlawful their assessment of the defendants action and proceeded to judge the
defendant guilty or not guilty.
They found that when only the imagine-self appeal was
enforced and no other manipulation was in play, participants attributed less
causality to the defendant for his actions and rated his actions as more lawful
than in the other conditions. These results can be seen in the figure above. By
making the jurors focus on the defendant and place themselves in his position
at the time of the incident, the defence implicitly call for the jury to
empathize with the defendant and as a result of employing such a technique the
participants were more likely to be motivated by the account given by the person
whom they were empathizing with.
It can therefore be seen that empathy is a particularly
effective persuasive tactic. So it would be better for PETA's marketing
campaign to draw our attention to the suffering animals undergo at the hands of
humans in the meat industry and invoke empathy along these lines, rather than
just trying to use shock tactics and techniques that don't portray the
positives of turning vegetarian. By employing strong arguments for
vegetarianism - of which there are numerous - and using persuasive methods like
eliciting empathy the adverts PETA produce like the one above will become a lot
more effective.
And as an aside, the context in which PETA put up such posters
and other advertisements is better off being uncontroversial instead of the confrontational
style they currently use which only gets them bad press and weakens their
overall image and subsequently the message they are trying to present.
References:
Archer,
R. L., Foushee, H. C., Davis, M. H., & Aderman, D. (1979). Emotional
Empathy in a Courtroom Simulation: A Person‐Situation Interaction1. Journal
of Applied Social Psychology, 9(3), 275-291.
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