Title: Manipulative Language Strategies in Tobacco Industry Media Statements
1Manipulative Language Strategies in Tobacco
Industry Media Statements
- Donald Rubin
- Norbert Hirschhorn
- Lona Jean Turner
2Linguistic Analyses of Tobacco Industry Documents
NIH/NCI RO1 CA87490 -conclusions are solely the
views of the authors
3Two Kinds of Document Samples
- Rhetorical Samples
- Multiple draft cases
- Cross-audience cases
- Internal audience ? in employ of tobacco
- External audience? evidence of dissemination
(e.g., press statements)
- Linked by topic, date
- Stratified Random Sample (Quota)
- Random selection within decade, /- internal
audience, /- named audience
- Quotas established by earlier core sample
- 500,000 words (800 documents)
- Functions as baseline for comparing biased
samples
4Primary On-Line Sites for Searching Tobacco
Industry Documents
- Legacy Library http//legacy.library.ucsf.edu/
- Tobacco Documents On-line
- http//tobaccodocuments.org/
- Industry Sites http//www.tobaccoarchives.com/
- E.g., http//www.pmdocs.com/
5Samples for Present Study
- Press Statements
- Evidence of dissemination (e.g., letterhead)
- N11,212 words 18 documents
- Internal Counterpart Documents
- Includes in-house memos, position development
- N14213 words 18 documents
- Quota Sample
- N268338 words 400 documents
- Not participating in statistical testing
6Computer-Assisted Language Analysis XML Coding
7Computer-Assisted Language Analysis Concordance
Comparison
- Relative frequency of each type (word) divided by
total tokens.
- Z-test for equal proportions (?.05)
- Allows comparison between any two documents or
between sets of documents (e.g., external
audience docs vs. reference corpus)
- Authored by Clayton Darwin, UGA
8Computer-Assisted Language Analysis DICTION
- Contains 32 dictionaries of rhetorical themes
(e.g., temporal, denial, blame, aggression)
- Yields 5 composite dimensions certainty,
activity, commonality, realism, optimism
- Yields 4 stylistic properties variety,
embellishment, insistence, complexity
- Provides norms for variety of genres (e.g.,
corporate relations, based on 163 specimens)
- Authored by Rod Hart, UTexas
9Computer-Assisted Language Analysis D. Bibers
Corpus Linguistics
10Findings Press statements use fewer hedges, more
certain language than internal counterpart
documents
11Findings Press statements invoke popular themes,
avoid mention of disease
12Findings Internal counterpart docs create
identity with insiders Press statements
establish a 3rd-person stance
13Findings Press statements repeat key words
excessively other stylistics are normal for PR
genre
14Findings Internal counterparts, press statements
are within most genre norms
15Findings Press statements are low on praise,
satisfaction high on certainty
16General Conclusions
- Extensive on-line (and depository) searching is
necessary to identify internal counterparts to
publicly released tobacco industry statements
- Computer-assisted linguistic analysis is a
scientific means for establishing differential
language use in external vs internal documents
- Tobacco industry press statements are
characterized by repetition of key words, use of
popular themes, 3rd person stance, and avoidance
of disease terms, high certainty, and high blame
and negativism (low optimism)