Title: Theories of Self-Persuasion
1Theories of Self-Persuasion
2Objectives
- What is self-persuasion?
- What is motivation?
- What is involvement?
- What is Elaboration Likelihood Model?
3Self-persuasion
- The theory of self-persuasion was created by Dr.
Hovland at Yale University. - It suggests that a receiver takes an active role
in persuading himself or herself to change his or
her attitude.
4Important Factors in Self-persuasion Motivation
and Involvement
Involvement is perceived importance evoked by a
subject.
Motivation is an activated state that leads to
goal-directed behavior. It is the reason for
behavior.
5Involvement and Leaning Situations
High-involvement learning situation
Classical
Low-involvement learning situation
Operant
Conditioning
Conditioning
Reasoning
Thinking
Thinking
Commonly used Occasionally used
6The Four Levels of Involvement
- Greenwald and Leavitt
- Preattention
- Focal attention
- Comprehension
- Elaboration
7Preattention
- Receivers use immediate analysis to process
messages. - This stage Involves little perceptual capacity.
8Focal attention
- Receivers attend to messages.
- Receivers typically pay attention to the messages
concerned with the sensory elements such as
unexpected or emotionally arousing elements.
9Comprehension
- Receivers attend to the semantic elements of the
messages (words and language). - Receivers learn the content of the messages
10Elaboration
- Receivers generate his or her own arguments
concerning messages arguments or conclusions. - Receivers connect with messages personally.
- Receivers use imagery to imagine the implications
and interpret messages.
11Summary
- Preattention
- Immediate analysis
- Involves little capacity
- Focal attention
- Representations between texts and pictures
- Comprehension
- Intended meaning of representations
- Elaboration
- Personally connected
- Implications
12What is One of the Most Important Theories of
Self-persuasion?
- Petty and Cacioppo - The Elaboration Likelihood
Model - It describes how receivers elaborate on messages.
- It suggests that a receiver engages in
issue-relevant thinking. - Elaboration depends on individual and situational
factors. - Ability
- Motivation
13Exercise
You are driving from NYC to Stamford for a party
on a Friday evening. Based on your motivation and
ability to navigate through the traffic, please
decide whether to take I-95 or Route 1.
14The Essence of ELM
A receiver will tend to take on either peripheral
or central route of information processing to
elaborate on messages based on his or her ability
and motivation to process information.
15Two Main Routes of Processing
- Peripheral route
- Receivers try to react to messages.
- Receivers look for peripheral cues that are
appealing to them to process information. - Credibility trustworthiness or expertise
- Liking likeability
- Distinctiveness
- Consistency
- Consensus
- Attitudes formed or changed by this route process
are relatively less persistent, resistant and
predictive of long-term behaviors.
16Two Main Routes of Processing
- Central Route
- Receivers actively engage in processing messages.
- Receivers look for central cues that are relevant
or important. - Credibility trustworthiness or expertise
- Consensus
- Attitudes formed or changed by this route are
relatively persistent, predictive of behaviors
and resistant to change.
17ELM Process
18Effects of Elaboration/Counter Argument on
Persuasion
High
Area 1
Area 4
Favorability
Area 3
Area 2
Low
High
Elaboration
19Exercise 1 Peripheral or Central Cues?
Motivation
Lower
Higher
lower
Ability
Higher
20Exercise 2 Easy or Difficult to Persuade?
Motivation
Lower
Higher
lower
Ability
Higher
21Summary
Motivation
Lower
Higher
lower
1
2
Ability
Higher
3
4
221 Lower Motivation and Ability
- Receivers process persuasive communications and
look for peripheral cues to form temporary
attitudes toward specific messages that represent
peripheral cues. - Receivers also focus on processing messages that
formulate elementary meaning analysis (Alba and
Hutchinson, 1987). - Classical conditioning may be executed in
persuasive communications.
232 Higher Motivation and Lower Ability
- This condition is ideal.
- Operant conditioning may be executed in
persuasive communications. - Higher levels of motivation could facilitate
information processing of persuasive
communications that feature appealing and
simplified messages.
243 Lower Motivation and Higher Ability
- This condition could present some challenges.
- The lower levels of motivation could prevent
receivers from wanting to process persuasive
communications. - Because receivers have higher levels of ability
to process persuasive communications, they could
either ignore or reject any messages in
persuasive communications. - Research, for example, has found that experiences
in using a credit card could have an inverse and
negative effect on comprehension of the financial
disclosures related to a credit card
advertisement (Wang, 2012).
254 Higher Motivation and Ability
- Receivers would activate higher levels of
involvement with persuasive communications (Wang,
2012). - Disconfirmation could emerge when knowledgeable
receivers evaluations of persuasive
communications indicate discrepancies due to
their counter-arguments (Alba and Hutchinson,
2000 Chang, 2004 Wang, 2009). - Strategically selecting selling points to include
in persuasive communications that appeal to
knowledgeable receivers could be the most
important and challenging task.
26Message Strategies
Motivation
Lower
Higher
Peripheral cues Simplified messages Classical conditioning Peripheral cues Incentives Operant conditioning
Vivid and attention-getting visuals. Using priming and framing Consistency Credible messages Consensus Strong arguments Details Important benefits
lower
Ability
Higher
27Exercise 3
Motivation
Lower
Higher
lower
Ability
Higher
28Strengths Weaknesses
- Strengths
- It recognizes the importance of receiver
responses that are specific to message arguments. - It recognizes the importance of individual and
motivational factors in information processing.
- Weaknesses
- It can not calculate the result.
- It may not account all factors in the process.
29Questions
- Can ELM model help explain Yale Schools Message
Learning Theory?