The effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context

The present research examines the effects of message discrepancy and existing source beliefs on elaboration and belief certainty. Unlike most studies, which examined young adults from Western, educated, industrialized, rich and democratic (WEIRD) populations, it focuses on non-Western, rural, less-e...

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Main Author: Thanomwong Poorisat
Other Authors: Benjamin Hill Detenber
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/62166
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-621662020-06-01T12:12:12Z The effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context Thanomwong Poorisat Benjamin Hill Detenber Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication The present research examines the effects of message discrepancy and existing source beliefs on elaboration and belief certainty. Unlike most studies, which examined young adults from Western, educated, industrialized, rich and democratic (WEIRD) populations, it focuses on non-Western, rural, less-educated, older adults. Two studies were conducted. Using a survey with mostly open-ended questions, Study One identified two elaboration strategies: a positive test and a negative test. When a message was congruent with existing issue beliefs (i.e., low message discrepancy) or when existing source beliefs were positive, most participants used a positive test: they decided whether to believe the news based on whether they had information to support it. When a message was incongruent with existing issue beliefs (i.e., high message discrepancy) or existing source beliefs were negative, most participants used a negative test: they decided whether to believe the news based on whether they had information that contradicted it. Using a non-laboratory experiment, Study Two tested and provided support for the hypotheses derived from Study One. Message discrepancy and existing source beliefs exerted independent effects on the type of test, which in turn predicted belief certainty. Message discrepancy did not predict the amount of elaboration, but existing source beliefs did. Positive existing source beliefs led to more elaboration but this effect did not depend on the level of involvement and message discrepancy as reported by previous studies (Clark, Wegener, Habashi, & Evans, 2012; Tormala, Brinol, & Petty, 2007). Interestingly, Study Two shows that when message discrepancy was low but existing source beliefs were negative, participants changed their issue beliefs as opposed to changing their beliefs about the source. The present research offers insights about the mechanism behind belief revision and belief preservation and provides clues about how to change political beliefs. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (WKWSCI) 2015-02-16T01:33:36Z 2015-02-16T01:33:36Z 2015 2015 Thesis Thanomwong Poorisat. (2015). The effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/62166 10.32657/10356/62166 en Nanyang Technological University 161 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication
Thanomwong Poorisat
The effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context
description The present research examines the effects of message discrepancy and existing source beliefs on elaboration and belief certainty. Unlike most studies, which examined young adults from Western, educated, industrialized, rich and democratic (WEIRD) populations, it focuses on non-Western, rural, less-educated, older adults. Two studies were conducted. Using a survey with mostly open-ended questions, Study One identified two elaboration strategies: a positive test and a negative test. When a message was congruent with existing issue beliefs (i.e., low message discrepancy) or when existing source beliefs were positive, most participants used a positive test: they decided whether to believe the news based on whether they had information to support it. When a message was incongruent with existing issue beliefs (i.e., high message discrepancy) or existing source beliefs were negative, most participants used a negative test: they decided whether to believe the news based on whether they had information that contradicted it. Using a non-laboratory experiment, Study Two tested and provided support for the hypotheses derived from Study One. Message discrepancy and existing source beliefs exerted independent effects on the type of test, which in turn predicted belief certainty. Message discrepancy did not predict the amount of elaboration, but existing source beliefs did. Positive existing source beliefs led to more elaboration but this effect did not depend on the level of involvement and message discrepancy as reported by previous studies (Clark, Wegener, Habashi, & Evans, 2012; Tormala, Brinol, & Petty, 2007). Interestingly, Study Two shows that when message discrepancy was low but existing source beliefs were negative, participants changed their issue beliefs as opposed to changing their beliefs about the source. The present research offers insights about the mechanism behind belief revision and belief preservation and provides clues about how to change political beliefs.
author2 Benjamin Hill Detenber
author_facet Benjamin Hill Detenber
Thanomwong Poorisat
format Theses and Dissertations
author Thanomwong Poorisat
author_sort Thanomwong Poorisat
title The effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context
title_short The effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context
title_full The effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context
title_fullStr The effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context
title_full_unstemmed The effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context
title_sort effect of message discrepancy and source beliefs : evidence from a non-weird sample in a real-world political context
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/62166
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