Message processing of evidence and long-term retention and judgment of beliefs.

This communication study investigated characteristics of evidence that influenced memory and beliefs about juvenile delinquency across multiple time periods. Four hypotheses were proposed: (H1) vivid evidence is more memorable than nonvivid evidence, (H2) story evidence is more memorable than statis...

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Main Author: Baesler, Erland James.
Other Authors: Burgoon, Judee
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185392
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1853922015-10-23T04:31:08Z Message processing of evidence and long-term retention and judgment of beliefs. Baesler, Erland James. Burgoon, Judee Burgoon, Michael Buller, David Sabers, Darrell Nicholson, Glen Long-term memory Evidence Juvenile delinquency This communication study investigated characteristics of evidence that influenced memory and beliefs about juvenile delinquency across multiple time periods. Four hypotheses were proposed: (H1) vivid evidence is more memorable than nonvivid evidence, (H2) story evidence is more memorable than statistical evidence, (H3) vivid evidence is more persuasive than nonvivid evidence after 48 hours, but not after one week, and (H4) story evidence is more persuasive than statistical evidence after 1 week, but not after 48 hours. A 2 x 2 x 3 factorial design with an offset control was employed, using evidence (story or statistical), vividness (vivid or nonvivid), and time (immediate, or 48 hour delay, or 1 week delay) as independent variables, and recognition memory and judgment of belief as dependent variables. Four written messages, reflecting a complete crossing of evidence and vividness, were used as different types of evidence to attempt to persuade beliefs. A total of 280 undergraduate college students participated in the experiment. Hypotheses 1 and 2 were supported by main effects for vividness and evidence, and by a significant ordinal two-way interaction between vividness and evidence such that vivid story was the most memorable form of evidence. The two-way interactions used to test Hypotheses 3 and 4 were nonsignificant. A main effect for evidence related to Hypothesis 4 indicated that statistical evidence was more persuasive than story evidence at the delayed time periods. Thus, Hypotheses 3 and 4 were not supported. Alternative explanations were discussed to account for the persuasiveness of statistical evidence and the lack of persuasiveness of story evidence at the delayed time periods. Limitations of the study were noted, such as the small amount of experimental variance accounted for in some of the findings, and the limited generalizability of the findings. Finally, several suggestions for future research, including reconceptualizing evidence as a multidimensional construct, were presented. 1991 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185392 681757430 9123166 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Long-term memory
Evidence
Juvenile delinquency
spellingShingle Long-term memory
Evidence
Juvenile delinquency
Baesler, Erland James.
Message processing of evidence and long-term retention and judgment of beliefs.
description This communication study investigated characteristics of evidence that influenced memory and beliefs about juvenile delinquency across multiple time periods. Four hypotheses were proposed: (H1) vivid evidence is more memorable than nonvivid evidence, (H2) story evidence is more memorable than statistical evidence, (H3) vivid evidence is more persuasive than nonvivid evidence after 48 hours, but not after one week, and (H4) story evidence is more persuasive than statistical evidence after 1 week, but not after 48 hours. A 2 x 2 x 3 factorial design with an offset control was employed, using evidence (story or statistical), vividness (vivid or nonvivid), and time (immediate, or 48 hour delay, or 1 week delay) as independent variables, and recognition memory and judgment of belief as dependent variables. Four written messages, reflecting a complete crossing of evidence and vividness, were used as different types of evidence to attempt to persuade beliefs. A total of 280 undergraduate college students participated in the experiment. Hypotheses 1 and 2 were supported by main effects for vividness and evidence, and by a significant ordinal two-way interaction between vividness and evidence such that vivid story was the most memorable form of evidence. The two-way interactions used to test Hypotheses 3 and 4 were nonsignificant. A main effect for evidence related to Hypothesis 4 indicated that statistical evidence was more persuasive than story evidence at the delayed time periods. Thus, Hypotheses 3 and 4 were not supported. Alternative explanations were discussed to account for the persuasiveness of statistical evidence and the lack of persuasiveness of story evidence at the delayed time periods. Limitations of the study were noted, such as the small amount of experimental variance accounted for in some of the findings, and the limited generalizability of the findings. Finally, several suggestions for future research, including reconceptualizing evidence as a multidimensional construct, were presented.
author2 Burgoon, Judee
author_facet Burgoon, Judee
Baesler, Erland James.
author Baesler, Erland James.
author_sort Baesler, Erland James.
title Message processing of evidence and long-term retention and judgment of beliefs.
title_short Message processing of evidence and long-term retention and judgment of beliefs.
title_full Message processing of evidence and long-term retention and judgment of beliefs.
title_fullStr Message processing of evidence and long-term retention and judgment of beliefs.
title_full_unstemmed Message processing of evidence and long-term retention and judgment of beliefs.
title_sort message processing of evidence and long-term retention and judgment of beliefs.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1991
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185392
work_keys_str_mv AT baeslererlandjames messageprocessingofevidenceandlongtermretentionandjudgmentofbeliefs
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