{"title":"Dispelling myths, motivating action: rhetorical complexities and information challenges in the heart healthy advocacy website, go red for women","authors":"A. Larkin","doi":"10.1145/2775441.2775467","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In this paper, the design challenges inherent in achieving Kenneth Burke's consubstantiality---shared identification between people and/or organizations achieved through the practice of rhetoric---is explored in the branded heart health awareness and advocacy website of the Go Red for Women Movement. Nelson et al identify a two-stage process for health communication: an awareness stage which pushes messages for an audience to contemplate often via television and social media, and a pull phase where the audience pulls health information from mediated sources such as a website. A consubstantial site has effective navigation, design and content. The American Medical Association's guidelines for health information (HI) sites urges the inclusion of a robust search engine, FAQs, a site map and accessibility statement and text accessible to a wide audience (i.e. sixth grade reading level) which when adopted further consubstantiality. From a semiotics perspective, the modality and salience of photographs that accompany text on an HI site are also vital to enhance inclusivity and consubstantiality, as is promotional graphics such as the logo. Information designers need to resist branding demands which often sacrifice above-the-fold space to photographs without high information value. In this instance, without culturally relevant photographs and images, the HI site remains stuck in a push phase with HI seekers being contemplators of rather than actors in their own heart health. By practicing consubstantiality, information designers can help HI seekers become engaged actors.","PeriodicalId":340459,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings of the 33rd Annual International Conference on the Design of Communication","volume":"27 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-07-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Proceedings of the 33rd Annual International Conference on the Design of Communication","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1145/2775441.2775467","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In this paper, the design challenges inherent in achieving Kenneth Burke's consubstantiality---shared identification between people and/or organizations achieved through the practice of rhetoric---is explored in the branded heart health awareness and advocacy website of the Go Red for Women Movement. Nelson et al identify a two-stage process for health communication: an awareness stage which pushes messages for an audience to contemplate often via television and social media, and a pull phase where the audience pulls health information from mediated sources such as a website. A consubstantial site has effective navigation, design and content. The American Medical Association's guidelines for health information (HI) sites urges the inclusion of a robust search engine, FAQs, a site map and accessibility statement and text accessible to a wide audience (i.e. sixth grade reading level) which when adopted further consubstantiality. From a semiotics perspective, the modality and salience of photographs that accompany text on an HI site are also vital to enhance inclusivity and consubstantiality, as is promotional graphics such as the logo. Information designers need to resist branding demands which often sacrifice above-the-fold space to photographs without high information value. In this instance, without culturally relevant photographs and images, the HI site remains stuck in a push phase with HI seekers being contemplators of rather than actors in their own heart health. By practicing consubstantiality, information designers can help HI seekers become engaged actors.
在本文中,在实现Kenneth Burke的同质性(通过修辞学实践实现的人和/或组织之间的共同认同)的设计挑战中,通过品牌心脏健康意识和Go Red for Women运动的倡导网站进行了探索。Nelson等人确定了健康传播的两阶段过程:意识阶段,通常通过电视和社交媒体向受众推送信息,让他们思考;拉动阶段,受众从网站等媒介来源获取健康信息。同质网站有有效的导航、设计和内容。美国医学协会的健康信息(HI)网站指南敦促包括一个强大的搜索引擎、常见问题解答、网站地图和可访问性声明以及广泛受众(即六年级阅读水平)可访问的文本,如果采用进一步的一致性。从符号学的角度来看,HI网站上伴随文字的照片的形式和显著性对于增强包容性和一致性也至关重要,就像徽标等促销图形一样。信息设计师需要抵制品牌需求,因为这些需求往往会牺牲版面上方的空间来放置没有高信息价值的照片。在这种情况下,没有与文化相关的照片和图像,HI网站仍然停留在推动阶段,HI寻求者是自己心脏健康的沉思者,而不是行动者。通过实践一致性,信息设计师可以帮助HI寻求者成为参与的演员。