Low message sensation health promotion videos are better remembered and activate areas of the brain associated with memory encoding.

Greater sensory stimulation in advertising has been postulated to facilitate attention and persuasion. For this reason, video ads promoting health behaviors are often designed to be high in "message sensation value" (MSV), a standardized measure of sensory intensity of the audiovisual and...

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Main Authors: David Seelig, An-Li Wang, Kanchana Jagannathan, James W Loughead, Shira J Blady, Anna Rose Childress, Daniel Romer, Daniel D Langleben
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4237381?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-cfed4b42061c41d18b3a8d2830a50faa2020-11-24T22:17:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01911e11325610.1371/journal.pone.0113256Low message sensation health promotion videos are better remembered and activate areas of the brain associated with memory encoding.David SeeligAn-Li WangKanchana JagannathanJames W LougheadShira J BladyAnna Rose ChildressDaniel RomerDaniel D LanglebenGreater sensory stimulation in advertising has been postulated to facilitate attention and persuasion. For this reason, video ads promoting health behaviors are often designed to be high in "message sensation value" (MSV), a standardized measure of sensory intensity of the audiovisual and content features of an ad. However, our previous functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) study showed that low MSV ads were better remembered and produced more prefrontal and temporal and less occipital cortex activation, suggesting that high MSV may divert cognitive resources from processing ad content. The present study aimed to determine whether these findings from anti-smoking ads generalize to other public health topics, such as safe sex. Thirty-nine healthy adults viewed high- and low MSV ads promoting safer sex through condom use, during an fMRI session. Recognition memory of the ads was tested immediately and 3 weeks after the session. We found that low MSV condom ads were better remembered than the high MSV ads at both time points and replicated the fMRI patterns previously reported for the anti-smoking ads. Occipital and superior temporal activation was negatively related to the attitudes favoring condom use (see Condom Attitudes Scale, Methods and Materials section). Psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analysis of the relation between occipital and fronto-temporal (middle temporal and inferior frontal gyri) cortices revealed weaker negative interactions between occipital and fronto-temporal cortices during viewing of the low MSV that high MSV ads. These findings confirm that the low MSV video health messages are better remembered than the high MSV messages and that this effect generalizes across public health domains. The greater engagement of the prefrontal and fronto-temporal cortices by low MSV ads and the greater occipital activation by high MSV ads suggest that that the "attention-grabbing" high MSV format could impede the learning and retention of public health messages.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4237381?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Seelig
An-Li Wang
Kanchana Jagannathan
James W Loughead
Shira J Blady
Anna Rose Childress
Daniel Romer
Daniel D Langleben
spellingShingle David Seelig
An-Li Wang
Kanchana Jagannathan
James W Loughead
Shira J Blady
Anna Rose Childress
Daniel Romer
Daniel D Langleben
Low message sensation health promotion videos are better remembered and activate areas of the brain associated with memory encoding.
PLoS ONE
author_facet David Seelig
An-Li Wang
Kanchana Jagannathan
James W Loughead
Shira J Blady
Anna Rose Childress
Daniel Romer
Daniel D Langleben
author_sort David Seelig
title Low message sensation health promotion videos are better remembered and activate areas of the brain associated with memory encoding.
title_short Low message sensation health promotion videos are better remembered and activate areas of the brain associated with memory encoding.
title_full Low message sensation health promotion videos are better remembered and activate areas of the brain associated with memory encoding.
title_fullStr Low message sensation health promotion videos are better remembered and activate areas of the brain associated with memory encoding.
title_full_unstemmed Low message sensation health promotion videos are better remembered and activate areas of the brain associated with memory encoding.
title_sort low message sensation health promotion videos are better remembered and activate areas of the brain associated with memory encoding.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Greater sensory stimulation in advertising has been postulated to facilitate attention and persuasion. For this reason, video ads promoting health behaviors are often designed to be high in "message sensation value" (MSV), a standardized measure of sensory intensity of the audiovisual and content features of an ad. However, our previous functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) study showed that low MSV ads were better remembered and produced more prefrontal and temporal and less occipital cortex activation, suggesting that high MSV may divert cognitive resources from processing ad content. The present study aimed to determine whether these findings from anti-smoking ads generalize to other public health topics, such as safe sex. Thirty-nine healthy adults viewed high- and low MSV ads promoting safer sex through condom use, during an fMRI session. Recognition memory of the ads was tested immediately and 3 weeks after the session. We found that low MSV condom ads were better remembered than the high MSV ads at both time points and replicated the fMRI patterns previously reported for the anti-smoking ads. Occipital and superior temporal activation was negatively related to the attitudes favoring condom use (see Condom Attitudes Scale, Methods and Materials section). Psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analysis of the relation between occipital and fronto-temporal (middle temporal and inferior frontal gyri) cortices revealed weaker negative interactions between occipital and fronto-temporal cortices during viewing of the low MSV that high MSV ads. These findings confirm that the low MSV video health messages are better remembered than the high MSV messages and that this effect generalizes across public health domains. The greater engagement of the prefrontal and fronto-temporal cortices by low MSV ads and the greater occipital activation by high MSV ads suggest that that the "attention-grabbing" high MSV format could impede the learning and retention of public health messages.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4237381?pdf=render
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