Falk Emily B, O'Donnell Matthew Brook, Tompson Steven, Gonzalez Richard, Dal Cin Sonya, Strecher Victor, Cummings Kenneth Michael, An Lawrence
Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA, Research Center for Group Dynamics, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48106, USA,
Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2016 Feb;11(2):204-14. doi: 10.1093/scan/nsv108. Epub 2015 Sep 23.
Mass media can powerfully affect health decision-making. Pre-testing through focus groups or surveys is a standard, though inconsistent, predictor of effectiveness. Converging evidence demonstrates that activity within brain systems associated with self-related processing can predict individual behavior in response to health messages. Preliminary evidence also suggests that neural activity in small groups can forecast population-level campaign outcomes. Less is known about the psychological processes that link neural activity and population-level outcomes, or how these predictions are affected by message content. We exposed 50 smokers to antismoking messages and used their aggregated neural activity within a 'self-localizer' defined region of medial prefrontal cortex to predict the success of the same campaign messages at the population level (n = 400,000 emails). Results demonstrate that: (i) independently localized neural activity during health message exposure complements existing self-report data in predicting population-level campaign responses (model combined R(2) up to 0.65) and (ii) this relationship depends on message content-self-related neural processing predicts outcomes in response to strong negative arguments against smoking and not in response to compositionally similar neutral images. These data advance understanding of the psychological link between brain and large-scale behavior and may aid the construction of more effective media health campaigns.
大众媒体能够对健康决策产生强大影响。通过焦点小组或调查进行预测试是一种衡量效果的标准方法,尽管并不一致。越来越多的证据表明,与自我相关处理相关的脑系统活动能够预测个体对健康信息的行为反应。初步证据还表明,小群体中的神经活动能够预测群体层面的宣传效果。对于连接神经活动和群体层面结果的心理过程,以及这些预测如何受到信息内容的影响,我们了解得还比较少。我们让50名吸烟者接触反吸烟信息,并利用他们在内侧前额叶皮质一个“自我定位”定义区域内的聚合神经活动,来预测相同宣传信息在群体层面(n = 40万封电子邮件)的成功情况。结果表明:(i)在接触健康信息期间独立定位的神经活动,在预测群体层面的宣传反应时,对现有的自我报告数据起到补充作用(模型综合R(2)高达0.65);(ii)这种关系取决于信息内容——自我相关的神经处理能够预测对强烈反吸烟论据的反应结果,而不是对结构相似的中性图像的反应结果。这些数据推进了对大脑与大规模行为之间心理联系的理解,并可能有助于构建更有效的媒体健康宣传活动。