HIV/AIDS messagingin Germany and Nigeria : a corpus linguistics study

Modelling success in HIV messaging is notoriously difficult in part because of the diversity of disciplines interested in the subject (e.g. public health, psychology, communication, education, sociology, linguistics) and the claims made in each, often on the basis of different coming-to-know process...

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Main Authors: Antia, Bassey E., Razum, Oliver
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: Stellenbosch University 2012-12-01
Series:Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
Subjects:
Online Access:https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/80
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spelling doaj-1a1615c54bbb4453878894d3ccc7dd432020-11-25T03:30:27ZafrStellenbosch UniversityStellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus1726-541X2224-33802012-12-0141012310.5842/41-0-80HIV/AIDS messagingin Germany and Nigeria : a corpus linguistics studyAntia, Bassey E.0Razum, Oliver1University of the Western Cape, South AfricaUniversity of Bielefeld, GermanyModelling success in HIV messaging is notoriously difficult in part because of the diversity of disciplines interested in the subject (e.g. public health, psychology, communication, education, sociology, linguistics) and the claims made in each, often on the basis of different coming-to-know processes. For instance, although relevant research in public health and communication emphasizes audience responses but sometimes slights detailed analyses of texts, work in applied linguistics tends to engage with texts without, however, framing its claims in the context of theories of behaviour. This study makes a case for attention to both text and behaviour by showing how a corpus linguistics study of texts of HIV messaging can be accommodated within a behavioural framework. A corpus of HIV messages from Germany and Nigeria, analyzed from the standpoint of predictions of a behavioural theory, suggests that only two German messages and one Nigerian message (out of the eleven messages in each national corpus) had the mix of features (high threat, high efficacy) predicted by the model to elicit message acceptance. In view of the implication that the observed nexus between messaging and society does not necessarily translate into better acceptance prospects as defined within the particular behavioural theory, this study may be seen as problematising certain claims in applied linguistics research on HIV, especially recommendations dealing with the need for messaging to reflect local (knowledge) perspectives. https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/80hiv/aids messagingnigeriagermanycomputer-assisted text analysisexpanded parallel process model
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antia, Bassey E.
Razum, Oliver
spellingShingle Antia, Bassey E.
Razum, Oliver
HIV/AIDS messagingin Germany and Nigeria : a corpus linguistics study
Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
hiv/aids messaging
nigeria
germany
computer-assisted text analysis
expanded parallel process model
author_facet Antia, Bassey E.
Razum, Oliver
author_sort Antia, Bassey E.
title HIV/AIDS messagingin Germany and Nigeria : a corpus linguistics study
title_short HIV/AIDS messagingin Germany and Nigeria : a corpus linguistics study
title_full HIV/AIDS messagingin Germany and Nigeria : a corpus linguistics study
title_fullStr HIV/AIDS messagingin Germany and Nigeria : a corpus linguistics study
title_full_unstemmed HIV/AIDS messagingin Germany and Nigeria : a corpus linguistics study
title_sort hiv/aids messagingin germany and nigeria : a corpus linguistics study
publisher Stellenbosch University
series Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus
issn 1726-541X
2224-3380
publishDate 2012-12-01
description Modelling success in HIV messaging is notoriously difficult in part because of the diversity of disciplines interested in the subject (e.g. public health, psychology, communication, education, sociology, linguistics) and the claims made in each, often on the basis of different coming-to-know processes. For instance, although relevant research in public health and communication emphasizes audience responses but sometimes slights detailed analyses of texts, work in applied linguistics tends to engage with texts without, however, framing its claims in the context of theories of behaviour. This study makes a case for attention to both text and behaviour by showing how a corpus linguistics study of texts of HIV messaging can be accommodated within a behavioural framework. A corpus of HIV messages from Germany and Nigeria, analyzed from the standpoint of predictions of a behavioural theory, suggests that only two German messages and one Nigerian message (out of the eleven messages in each national corpus) had the mix of features (high threat, high efficacy) predicted by the model to elicit message acceptance. In view of the implication that the observed nexus between messaging and society does not necessarily translate into better acceptance prospects as defined within the particular behavioural theory, this study may be seen as problematising certain claims in applied linguistics research on HIV, especially recommendations dealing with the need for messaging to reflect local (knowledge) perspectives.
topic hiv/aids messaging
nigeria
germany
computer-assisted text analysis
expanded parallel process model
url https://spilplus.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/80
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