Immediate and Persisting Effects of Controversial Media Information on Young People’s Judgement of Health Issues

Whether true or false, media information shapes people’s thinking. False information trigger beliefs which could compromise health behaviour. In this intervention study, the effect of controversial messages on 91 young participants’ judgement of health issues was tested. Held opinions about health-r...

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Main Author: Attila Szabo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2020-05-01
Series:Europe's Journal of Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/1929
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spelling doaj-3c3b189601184c939fe46b415fc416cc2020-11-25T03:31:12ZengPsychOpenEurope's Journal of Psychology1841-04132020-05-0116224926110.5964/ejop.v16i2.1929ejop.v16i2.1929Immediate and Persisting Effects of Controversial Media Information on Young People’s Judgement of Health IssuesAttila Szabo0Institute of Health Promotion and Sport Sciences, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, HungaryWhether true or false, media information shapes people’s thinking. False information trigger beliefs which could compromise health behaviour. In this intervention study, the effect of controversial messages on 91 young participants’ judgement of health issues was tested. Held opinions about health-related issues were assessed before, after and one week after viewing a controversial TV-interview. Using pre-interview opinions for baseline, changes in judgements were assessed immediately after and one week after the interview. At both times, the opinions differed statistically significantly from baseline (p < .001). The relationship between opinions immediately- and one week-after viewing the interview was statistically significantly stronger (p < .001) than their association with the baseline. The results provide evidence for immediate change in judgment resulting from controversial information and demonstrate that the change persists for at least one week. The findings can be explained based on the schema theory and suggest that controversial information could have powerful impact on subjective judgement. Consequently, young people need to be educated in health issues and in the evaluation of media information to enable them to make the right choice when the need arises.https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/1929beliefsinfluenceopinionsschema theoryviews
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Attila Szabo
spellingShingle Attila Szabo
Immediate and Persisting Effects of Controversial Media Information on Young People’s Judgement of Health Issues
Europe's Journal of Psychology
beliefs
influence
opinions
schema theory
views
author_facet Attila Szabo
author_sort Attila Szabo
title Immediate and Persisting Effects of Controversial Media Information on Young People’s Judgement of Health Issues
title_short Immediate and Persisting Effects of Controversial Media Information on Young People’s Judgement of Health Issues
title_full Immediate and Persisting Effects of Controversial Media Information on Young People’s Judgement of Health Issues
title_fullStr Immediate and Persisting Effects of Controversial Media Information on Young People’s Judgement of Health Issues
title_full_unstemmed Immediate and Persisting Effects of Controversial Media Information on Young People’s Judgement of Health Issues
title_sort immediate and persisting effects of controversial media information on young people’s judgement of health issues
publisher PsychOpen
series Europe's Journal of Psychology
issn 1841-0413
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Whether true or false, media information shapes people’s thinking. False information trigger beliefs which could compromise health behaviour. In this intervention study, the effect of controversial messages on 91 young participants’ judgement of health issues was tested. Held opinions about health-related issues were assessed before, after and one week after viewing a controversial TV-interview. Using pre-interview opinions for baseline, changes in judgements were assessed immediately after and one week after the interview. At both times, the opinions differed statistically significantly from baseline (p < .001). The relationship between opinions immediately- and one week-after viewing the interview was statistically significantly stronger (p < .001) than their association with the baseline. The results provide evidence for immediate change in judgment resulting from controversial information and demonstrate that the change persists for at least one week. The findings can be explained based on the schema theory and suggest that controversial information could have powerful impact on subjective judgement. Consequently, young people need to be educated in health issues and in the evaluation of media information to enable them to make the right choice when the need arises.
topic beliefs
influence
opinions
schema theory
views
url https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/1929
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