Attitude change as a function of the number of words in which thoughts are expressed
Entity
UAM. Departamento de Psicología Social y MetodologíaPublisher
ElsevierDate
2017-10-16Citation
10.1016/j.jesp.2017.09.012
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 74 (2018): 196–211
ISSN
0022-1031 (print); 1096-0465 (online)DOI
10.1016/j.jesp.2017.09.012Funded by
This work was supported in part by the Spanish Government [grant number PSI2014-58476-P] to the second author and to NSF [grant 0847834] to the third authorProject
Gobierno de España. PSI2014-58476-PSubjects
Attitude Change; Self-validation analysis; Peripheral routes; Opinion change; Persuasion; PsicologíaRights
© 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reservedEsta obra está bajo una licencia de Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada 4.0 Internacional.
Abstract
This research examines whether varying the number of words in which thoughts are expressed can influence subsequent evaluations. Across six studies, keeping the number of thoughts constant, we tested to what extent the length of the thoughts, the personal importance of the topic, and the extent of practice in short versus long thought expression influenced attitude change. In the first two studies, expressing thoughts in one word (vs.
many words) led to less thought use when the topic was high in importance (Experiment 1) but to more thought use when topic was low in importance (Experiment 2). In a third study, the number of words used was manipulated along with the perceived importance of the experimental task. As predicted, expressing thoughts was perceived to be easier with one vs. many words when the task was low in importance but the opposite held when it was high in importance. In Experiment 4, attitudes were more influenced by thoughts when one word was used in a task that was framed to low importance task but many words were used on the task framed with high importance. Experiment 5 included a direct manipulation of ease and extended these results from a motivational framework to an ability setting by using a paradigm in which familiarity (based on prior training) interacted
with thought length to affect attitudes. A final study replicated the key effect with more real-world materials, and extended the contribution from an experimental approach to testing process to a measurement approach to mediation
Files in this item
Google Scholar:Gandarillas, Beatriz
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Briñol Turnes, Pablo Antonio
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Petty, Richard E.
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Díaz, Darío
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