Marketing Department, SKEMA Business School, Sophia Antipolis, France.
J Health Commun. 2012;17(9):1011-27. doi: 10.1080/10810730.2012.665416. Epub 2012 Jun 13.
This article investigates the effects of different emotional appeals in HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns using printed advertisements. More specifically, it examines the effectiveness of humor appeal compared with shock and fear appeals. The authors experimentally test the level of attention drawn and the spontaneous recall arising when young Italian adults are shown different HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns. Findings show that humor appeals are less effective than fear and shock appeals, evidencing the failures in HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns in Italy, a country where the former communication strategy has been used in substantive ways. The results also indicate the higher effectiveness of fear appeals (over shock and humor) in printed HIV/AIDS advertising campaigns. The implications of these results for further studies and for improving the design, implementation, and evaluation of HIV/AIDS campaign efforts are also discussed.
本文研究了使用印刷广告进行艾滋病预防宣传时不同情感诉求的效果。更具体地说,它研究了幽默诉求与震惊和恐惧诉求相比的有效性。作者通过实验测试了年轻的意大利成年人观看不同艾滋病预防宣传活动时所引起的注意力水平和自发回忆。研究结果表明,幽默诉求不如恐惧和震惊诉求有效,这表明在意大利,艾滋病预防运动存在失败,因为在意大利,这种新的沟通策略已经以实质性的方式被采用。结果还表明,在印刷艾滋病广告宣传活动中,恐惧诉求(超过震惊和幽默)更有效。这些结果对进一步的研究以及改进艾滋病运动的设计、实施和评估也具有重要意义。