Reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing

While framing studies in health communication research are grounded in prospect theory, there are deviations from the original prospect theory in three major areas: (1) the conceptualization of risk as susceptibility/severity rather than certainty, (2) the presentation of outcomes of different event...

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Main Authors: Lee, Tae Kyoung, Kim, Hye Kyung
Other Authors: Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181893
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1818932024-12-30T00:58:10Z Reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing Lee, Tae Kyoung Kim, Hye Kyung Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social Sciences Prospect theory Framing While framing studies in health communication research are grounded in prospect theory, there are deviations from the original prospect theory in three major areas: (1) the conceptualization of risk as susceptibility/severity rather than certainty, (2) the presentation of outcomes of different events in gain- and loss-framed messages rather than different aspects of the same outcome, and (3) the use of participants’ ratings as outcome variables instead of participants’ choice of one option over the other. To understand the implications of these discrepancies, two randomized experiments were conducted within the context of obesity policy support. In experiment 1, participants were asked to rate their support for policies. With a framing approach consistent with prospect theory (called prospect-theory framing in this study), participants’ ratings were marginally significant but in a consistent pattern with prospect theory; however, no effect was found with the framing approach described in health communication literature (called persuasion framing in this study). In Study 2, participants were asked to choose one policy for obesity over the other, revealing a result aligning with the prospect theory predictions. These findings underscore the influence of both framing conceptualization and outcome measurement on observed framing effects. 2024-12-30T00:58:10Z 2024-12-30T00:58:10Z 2024 Journal Article Lee, T. K. & Kim, H. K. (2024). Reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing. Asian Communication Research, 21(2), 175-194. https://dx.doi.org/10.20879/acr.2024.21.015 1738-2084 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181893 10.20879/acr.2024.21.015 2-s2.0-85204962102 2 21 175 194 en Asian Communication Research © 2024 by the Korean Society for Journalism and Communication Studies. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Prospect theory
Framing
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Prospect theory
Framing
Lee, Tae Kyoung
Kim, Hye Kyung
Reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing
description While framing studies in health communication research are grounded in prospect theory, there are deviations from the original prospect theory in three major areas: (1) the conceptualization of risk as susceptibility/severity rather than certainty, (2) the presentation of outcomes of different events in gain- and loss-framed messages rather than different aspects of the same outcome, and (3) the use of participants’ ratings as outcome variables instead of participants’ choice of one option over the other. To understand the implications of these discrepancies, two randomized experiments were conducted within the context of obesity policy support. In experiment 1, participants were asked to rate their support for policies. With a framing approach consistent with prospect theory (called prospect-theory framing in this study), participants’ ratings were marginally significant but in a consistent pattern with prospect theory; however, no effect was found with the framing approach described in health communication literature (called persuasion framing in this study). In Study 2, participants were asked to choose one policy for obesity over the other, revealing a result aligning with the prospect theory predictions. These findings underscore the influence of both framing conceptualization and outcome measurement on observed framing effects.
author2 Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
author_facet Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Lee, Tae Kyoung
Kim, Hye Kyung
format Article
author Lee, Tae Kyoung
Kim, Hye Kyung
author_sort Lee, Tae Kyoung
title Reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing
title_short Reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing
title_full Reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing
title_fullStr Reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing
title_full_unstemmed Reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing
title_sort reconsidering prospect theory in health communication: interplay of certainty with different types of framing
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181893
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