在潜意识广告中走“低路”——2000年一则总统广告中“大鼠”的预知性启动效应测试研究

P. Stewart, J. Schubert
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引用次数: 6

摘要

尽管广泛的研究成功地利用潜意识影响个人的态度,公众的理解和公共政策反应反映出缺乏对其有效性的认识。这篇文章试图纠正这一点,通过提出有关一类阈下刺激,预知启动的有效性的发现。然后考虑了有争议的“RATS”潜意识政治广告的影响。在这里,“RATS”一词出现在屏幕上一帧,即三十分之一秒,作为共和党全国委员会批评总统候选人阿尔·戈尔处方药计划的攻击广告的一部分。在2000年选举日进行的一项实验中,受试者分别看到了带有或不带有RATS框架的广告,以及戈尔竞选团队制作的与之平行的Medicare广告。研究结果表明,阈下刺激对评价和行为意图的影响不显著,但对医疗保险、政党和戈尔的态度受到阈下刺激的显著影响。该实验规模很小,因此研究结果还远未确定。但他们认为有必要对这个话题进行进一步的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Taking the “Low Road” with Subliminal AdvertisementsA Study Testing the Effect of Precognitive Prime “RATS” in a 2000 Presidential Advertisement
Despite extensive research successfully using subliminals to affect individual attitudes, public understanding and public policy response reflect a lack of awareness of their effectiveness.This article attempts to redress this by presenting findings concerning the effectiveness of one class of subliminal stimuli, precognitive primes. It then considers the effect of the controversial “RATS” subliminal political advertisement. Here the term “RATS” appeared on screen for one frame, that is, one-thirtieth of a second, as part of an attack ad by the Republican National Committee criticizing presidential candidate Al Gore's prescription drug plan. An experiment carried out on Election Day 2000 presented the advertisement with or without the RATS frame, as well as a parallel Medicare ad by the Gore campaign, to subjects. Findings suggest that while evaluations and behavioral intentions were not significantly affected, attitudes toward Medicare, the political parties, and Al Gore were significantly affected by the subliminal stimulus.The experiment was small in scale, so the findings are far from definitive. But they suggest a need for further research on the topic.
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