Publication | Open Access
When, How and Why is Loss-Framing More Effective than Gain- and Non-Gain-Framing in the Promotion of Detection Behaviors?
29
Citations
14
References
2017
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingSocial PsychologyMediation ModelCommunicationSocial SciencesPsychologyAttitude TheoryRisk CommunicationNegative ResultHealth CommunicationBiasCognitive Bias MitigationBehavioral PrincipleLoss-framing Versus GainBehavioral SciencesMessage FramingHealth PromotionApplied Social PsychologyCholesterol ScreeningExperimental PsychologyFraming EffectsDetection BehaviorsBehavioral InsightArtsPersuasion
This short paper aims to untangle the effect of loss-framing versus gain and non-gain; explaining when, how and why it influences individuals’ intentions to engage in cholesterol screening. We argue that framing-effects are (1) significant only when individuals perceive the issue to be highly relevant and (2) are mediated by perceived negative consequences (resulting from undergoing the test) and response-efficacy. In a 2(issue-relevance: high vs low) × 3(framing: gain vs non-gain vs loss) experiment, 229 participants received a message and answered to a questionnaire measuring personal relevance, perceived negative consequences, response-efficacy, intention. Results validated a mediation model, explaining that loss-framing is more persuasive than non-gain, which is more persuasive than gain-framing, partly because of their effect on individuals’ perceptions of response-efficacy.
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