Publication | Closed Access
The Use of Vivid Stimuli to Enhance Comprehension of the Content of Product Warning Messages
51
Citations
18
References
1989
Year
Consumer ResearchConsumer AttitudeCognitionPsycholinguisticsProduct Warning MessagePsychologySocial SciencesRisk CommunicationVivid Product WarningsExperimental PragmaticConsumer Product SafetyManagementConsumer BehaviorConsumer IssueUser PerceptionConsumer ProductsCognitive ScienceEnhance ComprehensionProduct Warning MessagesUser ExperienceVivid StimuliHuman CognitionExperimental PsychologyMarketingAdvertisingSocial CognitionProduct SafetyInteractive MarketingLanguage ComprehensionPersuasion
Thousands of consumers are injured annually using consumer products. It is intuitively plausible that vivid product warnings may improve communication of the hazards associated with product use, yet vividness effects have been difficult to demonstrate empirically. Vivid product warnings are shown to increase accurate memory of the hazards associated with product use by enhancing cognitive elaboration on the content of a product warning message. Moreover, vivid product warnings may not, in and of themselves, generate negative elaborations regarding the safety of the product in question.
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