Authors
George Y Bizer, Jeff T Larsen, Richard E Petty
Publication date
2011/2
Journal
Political psychology
Volume
32
Issue
1
Pages
59-80
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc
Description
In his now‐classic research on inoculation theory, McGuire (1964) demonstrated that exposing people to an initial weak counterattitudinal message could lead to enhanced resistance to a subsequent stronger counterattitudinal message. More recently, research on the valence‐framing effect (Bizer & Petty, 2005) demonstrated an alternative way to make attitudes more resistant. Simply framing a person's attitude negatively (i.e., in terms of a rejected position such as anti‐Democrat) led to more resistance to an attack on that attitude than did framing the same attitude positively (i.e., in terms of a preferred position such as pro‐Republican). Using an election context, the current research tested whether valence framing influences attitude resistance specifically or attitude strength more generally, providing insight into the effect's mechanism and generalizability. In two experiments, attitude valence was manipulated by …
Total citations
201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320244491417142016161420291510