Self-affirmation and the biased processing of threatening health-risk information

被引:239
|
作者
Harris, PR [1 ]
Napper, L [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sheffield, Dept Psychol, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TP, S Yorkshire, England
关键词
self-affirmation; defensive processing; perceived risk; optimistic bias; persuasion;
D O I
10.1177/0146167205274694
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Self-affirming before reading about the link between alcohol and breast cancer promoted increased message acceptance among young women at higher risk. Differences were maintained on variables measured up to 1 month later Relative to their nonaffirmed counterparts, higher risk, self-affirmed participants had higher ratings of risk, imagination, intention to reduce alcohol consumption, and negative affect, such as fear, while reading the leaflet. In contrast, there were no differences between the groups on measures of broader message acceptance (belief in the link, evidence strength). Thus, self-affirmation promoted acceptance of the personal relevance of the message, a critical step in the precaution adoption process. Overall, the findings support the view that self-affirmation in an unrelated domain can offset defensive processing of a threatening health message, promoting central route persuasion and producing consequential and durable increases in message acceptance.
引用
收藏
页码:1250 / 1263
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Self-Affirmation Reduces Biased Processing of Health-Risk Information
    Mark B. Reed
    Lisa G. Aspinwall
    Motivation and Emotion, 1998, 22 : 99 - 132
  • [2] Self-affirmation reduces biased processing of health-risk information
    Reed, MB
    Aspinwall, LG
    MOTIVATION AND EMOTION, 1998, 22 (02) : 99 - 132
  • [3] Self-affirmation inductions to reduce defensive processing of threatening health risk information
    Iles, Irina A.
    Gillman, Arielle S.
    Ferrer, Rebecca A.
    Klein, William M. P.
    PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, 2022, 37 (10) : 1287 - 1308
  • [4] How Self-Affirmation Reduces Defensive Processing of Threatening Health Information: Evidence at the Implicit Level
    van Koningsbruggen, Guido M.
    Das, Enny
    Roskos-Ewoldsen, David R.
    HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 28 (05) : 563 - 568
  • [5] Autonomy and defensiveness: Experimentally increasing adaptive responses to health-risk information via priming and self-affirmation
    Pavey, Louisa J.
    Sparks, Paul
    PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, 2012, 27 (03) : 259 - 276
  • [6] Self-affirmation and memory for health information
    Cooke, R.
    PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, 2009, 24 : 23 - 23
  • [7] Self-affirmation increases acceptance of health-risk information among UK adult smokers with low socioeconomic status
    Armitage, Christopher J.
    Harris, Peter R.
    Hepton, Gareth
    Napper, Lucy
    PSYCHOLOGY OF ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2008, 22 (01) : 88 - 95
  • [8] Accepting threatening information: Self-affirmation and the reduction of defensive biases
    Sherman, DK
    Cohen, GL
    CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2002, 11 (04) : 119 - 123
  • [9] Social exclusion, self-affirmation, and health information avoidance
    Howell, Jennifer L.
    Shepperd, James A.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 68 : 21 - 26
  • [10] Cognitive self-affirmation inclination: An individual difference in dealing with threatening health messages
    Pietersma, S.
    Dijkstra, A.
    PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, 2009, 24 : 24 - 24