Department of Psychology, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
College of Public Health, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Ann Behav Med. 2019 Mar 20;53(4):358-371. doi: 10.1093/abm/kay050.
Pictorial cigarette warning labels are thought to increase risk knowledge, but experimental research has not examined longer-term effects on memory for health risks named in text.
To investigate memory-consolidation predictions that high- versus low-emotion warnings would support better long-term memory for named cigarette health risks and to test a mediational model of warning-label effects through memory on risk perceptions and quit intentions.
A combined sample of U.S.-representative adult smokers, U.S.-representative teen smokers/vulnerable smokers, and Appalachian-representative adult smokers were randomly assigned to a warning-label condition (High-emotion pictorial, Low-emotion pictorial, Text-only) in which they were exposed four times to nine warning labels and reported emotional reactions and elaboration. Memory of warning-label risk information, smoking risk perceptions, and quit intentions were assessed immediately after exposures or 6 weeks later.
Recall of warning-label text was low across the samples and supported memory-consolidation predictions. Specifically, immediate recall was highest for Low-emotion warnings that elicited the least emotion, but recall also declined the most over time in this condition, leaving its 6-week recall lowest; 6-week recall was similar for High-emotion and Text-only warnings. Greater recall was associated with higher risk perceptions and greater quit intentions and mediated part of warning-label effects on these important smoking outcomes. High-emotion warnings had additional non-memory-related effects on risk perceptions and quit intentions that were superior to text-only warnings.
High- but not Low-emotion pictorial warning labels may support the Food and Drug Administration's primary goal to "effectively convey the negative health consequences of smoking."
CLINICALTRIALS.GOV IDENTIFIER: NCT03375840.
图像警示标签被认为可以增加对风险的认识,但实验研究尚未检验文本中提到的健康风险在记忆方面的长期影响。
调查记忆巩固的预测,即高情绪和低情绪的警示标签会支持对所提到的香烟健康风险的长期记忆,并通过对风险认知和戒烟意愿的记忆来测试警示标签效果的中介模型。
一个由美国代表性成年吸烟者、美国代表性青少年吸烟者/易受影响吸烟者以及阿巴拉契亚代表性成年吸烟者组成的综合样本,被随机分配到一个警示标签条件(高情绪图像、低情绪图像、纯文本)中,他们四次接触到九个警示标签,并报告情绪反应和详细描述。在接触后或 6 周后立即评估对警示标签风险信息的记忆、吸烟风险认知和戒烟意愿。
记忆对警示标签文本的回忆在所有样本中都很低,这支持了记忆巩固的预测。具体来说,低情绪警示标签引起的情绪最少,即时回忆最高,但在这种情况下,回忆也随着时间的推移下降最多,导致 6 周后的回忆最低;高情绪和纯文本警示标签的 6 周回忆相似。更多的回忆与更高的风险认知和更强的戒烟意愿相关,并在一定程度上解释了警示标签对这些重要吸烟结果的影响。高情绪警示标签对风险认知和戒烟意愿还有额外的非记忆相关影响,优于纯文本警示标签。
高情绪而非低情绪的图像警示标签可能支持食品和药物管理局的主要目标,即“有效地传达吸烟对健康的负面影响”。
临床试验.gov 标识符:NCT03375840。