An Experimental Test of the Persuasive Effect of Source Similarity in Narrative and Nonnarrative Health Blogs

BackgroundBlogs, or websites containing online personal journals, are a form of popular personal communication with immense potential for health promotion. ObjectiveNarratives are stories with a beginning, middle, and end that provide information about the charact...

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Main Author: Lu, Amy Shirong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2013-07-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2013/7/e142/
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spelling doaj-8160e089212b4ac18c53a11ec051f6972021-04-02T18:40:19ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712013-07-01157e14210.2196/jmir.2386An Experimental Test of the Persuasive Effect of Source Similarity in Narrative and Nonnarrative Health BlogsLu, Amy Shirong BackgroundBlogs, or websites containing online personal journals, are a form of popular personal communication with immense potential for health promotion. ObjectiveNarratives are stories with a beginning, middle, and end that provide information about the characters and plot. Source similarity refers to the degree to which the message source and each recipient are alike with respect to certain attributes. Narratives and source similarity have seldom been examined in tandem as strategies for health persuasion. Personal health blogs provide a suitable platform for such an investigation. This study examined the persuasive effects of message type and source similarity on participants’ intentions to adopt a specific health behavior (running for exercise). MethodsA total of 150 participants were randomly assigned to conditions (n=25 per condition) in a completely crossed, 2 (message type: narrative and nonnarrative) × 3 (source similarity: no similarity, non-health-related similarity, and health-related similarity) between-subjects experiment. First, in an online questionnaire, participants provided personal information in 42 categories and rated the relatedness of each category to running and then completed pretest measures of the dependent variables. Based on their responses, 150 personal health blogs were created. Two weeks later, the initial participants read the blog created with their personal characteristics and completed a questionnaire online. ResultsThe source similarity effect was stronger in nonnarrative than narrative blogs. When the blogs were nonnarrative, those with health-related similarities were more persuasive than those with non-health-related similarities. Narrative blogs generated more positive thoughts and stronger blogger identification than nonnarrative blogs. ConclusionsHealth-related source similarity is key for persuasive health communication, especially when the messages are nonnarrative.http://www.jmir.org/2013/7/e142/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lu, Amy Shirong
spellingShingle Lu, Amy Shirong
An Experimental Test of the Persuasive Effect of Source Similarity in Narrative and Nonnarrative Health Blogs
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Lu, Amy Shirong
author_sort Lu, Amy Shirong
title An Experimental Test of the Persuasive Effect of Source Similarity in Narrative and Nonnarrative Health Blogs
title_short An Experimental Test of the Persuasive Effect of Source Similarity in Narrative and Nonnarrative Health Blogs
title_full An Experimental Test of the Persuasive Effect of Source Similarity in Narrative and Nonnarrative Health Blogs
title_fullStr An Experimental Test of the Persuasive Effect of Source Similarity in Narrative and Nonnarrative Health Blogs
title_full_unstemmed An Experimental Test of the Persuasive Effect of Source Similarity in Narrative and Nonnarrative Health Blogs
title_sort experimental test of the persuasive effect of source similarity in narrative and nonnarrative health blogs
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2013-07-01
description BackgroundBlogs, or websites containing online personal journals, are a form of popular personal communication with immense potential for health promotion. ObjectiveNarratives are stories with a beginning, middle, and end that provide information about the characters and plot. Source similarity refers to the degree to which the message source and each recipient are alike with respect to certain attributes. Narratives and source similarity have seldom been examined in tandem as strategies for health persuasion. Personal health blogs provide a suitable platform for such an investigation. This study examined the persuasive effects of message type and source similarity on participants’ intentions to adopt a specific health behavior (running for exercise). MethodsA total of 150 participants were randomly assigned to conditions (n=25 per condition) in a completely crossed, 2 (message type: narrative and nonnarrative) × 3 (source similarity: no similarity, non-health-related similarity, and health-related similarity) between-subjects experiment. First, in an online questionnaire, participants provided personal information in 42 categories and rated the relatedness of each category to running and then completed pretest measures of the dependent variables. Based on their responses, 150 personal health blogs were created. Two weeks later, the initial participants read the blog created with their personal characteristics and completed a questionnaire online. ResultsThe source similarity effect was stronger in nonnarrative than narrative blogs. When the blogs were nonnarrative, those with health-related similarities were more persuasive than those with non-health-related similarities. Narrative blogs generated more positive thoughts and stronger blogger identification than nonnarrative blogs. ConclusionsHealth-related source similarity is key for persuasive health communication, especially when the messages are nonnarrative.
url http://www.jmir.org/2013/7/e142/
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