Compton Josh, Jackson Ben, Dimmock James A
Institute for Writing and Rhetoric, Dartmouth College Hanover, NH, USA.
School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health, The University of Western Australia Perth, WA, Australia.
Front Psychol. 2016 Feb 9;7:122. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00122. eCollection 2016.
Inoculation theory, a theory of conferring resistance to persuasive influence, has established efficacy as a messaging strategy in the health domain. In fact, the earliest research on the theory in the 1960s involved health issues to build empirical support for tenets in the inoculation framework. Over the ensuing decades, scholars have further examined the effectiveness of inoculation-based messages at creating robust positive health attitudes. We overview these efforts, highlight the structure of typical inoculation-based health messages, and describe the similarities and differences between this method of counter-persuasion and other preparatory techniques commonly employed by health researchers and practitioners. Finally, we consider contexts in which inoculation-oriented health messages could be most useful, and describe how the health domain could offer a useful scaffold to study conceptual issues of the theory.
接种理论是一种赋予对说服性影响的抵抗力的理论,已确立其作为健康领域信息传播策略的有效性。事实上,20世纪60年代对该理论的最早研究涉及健康问题,以建立对接种框架中原则的实证支持。在随后的几十年里,学者们进一步研究了基于接种的信息在塑造强烈的积极健康态度方面的有效性。我们概述这些努力,突出典型的基于接种的健康信息的结构,并描述这种反说服方法与健康研究人员和从业者常用的其他准备技术之间的异同。最后,我们考虑以接种为导向的健康信息最有用的背景,并描述健康领域如何能够提供一个有用的框架来研究该理论的概念问题。