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題名 Ambivalent Attitudes and Persuasion
作者 Chang, Chingching
張卿卿
貢獻者 廣告系
日期 2010
上傳時間 2-九月-2015 15:33:28 (UTC+8)
摘要 By extending prior research that has shown that people who feel ambivalent toward a target object engage in systematic processing, the first experiment in this study demonstrates that people engage in systematic processing when they feel ambivalent toward an information source as well. Experiments 2 and 3 demonstrate in turn that identification with the source/target can enhance motivated processing among ambivalent people. According to Experiment 2, when a manipulation causes people to feel ambivalent toward a positive source, their identification with the source influences their responses to the endorsed information, such that stronger identifiers exhibit motivated processing and express indiscriminately positive responses to the endorsed information. Experiment 3 demonstrates that when a manipulation makes people feel ambivalent toward a target, those who strongly identify with that target engage in motivated processing by improving their attitudes upon their exposure to new positive information about the target. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript
關聯 Conference Papers -- International Communication Association, 2010, 1
資料類型 conference
dc.contributor 廣告系
dc.creator (作者) Chang, Chingching
dc.creator (作者) 張卿卿zh_TW
dc.date (日期) 2010
dc.date.accessioned 2-九月-2015 15:33:28 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.available 2-九月-2015 15:33:28 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 2-九月-2015 15:33:28 (UTC+8)-
dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/78162-
dc.description.abstract (摘要) By extending prior research that has shown that people who feel ambivalent toward a target object engage in systematic processing, the first experiment in this study demonstrates that people engage in systematic processing when they feel ambivalent toward an information source as well. Experiments 2 and 3 demonstrate in turn that identification with the source/target can enhance motivated processing among ambivalent people. According to Experiment 2, when a manipulation causes people to feel ambivalent toward a positive source, their identification with the source influences their responses to the endorsed information, such that stronger identifiers exhibit motivated processing and express indiscriminately positive responses to the endorsed information. Experiment 3 demonstrates that when a manipulation makes people feel ambivalent toward a target, those who strongly identify with that target engage in motivated processing by improving their attitudes upon their exposure to new positive information about the target. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript
dc.format.extent 173090 bytes-
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf-
dc.relation (關聯) Conference Papers -- International Communication Association, 2010, 1
dc.title (題名) Ambivalent Attitudes and Persuasion
dc.type (資料類型) conferenceen