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Selective Exposure to Television Programmes and Advertising Effectiveness

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posted on 2008-08-04, 15:29 authored by Claire E. Norris, Andrew M. Colman, Paulo A. Aleixo
This study focused on the influence of selective exposure within an experiment designed to investigate context effects on advertising effectiveness. In a semi-natural viewing environment, 86 participants chose one of four television programmes to view. The programmes belonged to diverse genres: news and current affairs, light entertainment, sport, and action-adventure. Each programme was interrupted by two commercial breaks containing unfamiliar advertisements for familiar product types. Self-rated involvement, entertainment, and enjoyment of programmes correlated positively with subsequent measures of memory for and responses to the advertisements. The results support the hypothesis that the operation of selective exposure within an experimental situation may result in positive relationships between predictor variables and measures of advertisement effectiveness.

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Citation

Norris, C. E., Colman, A. M., & Aleixo, P. A. (2003). Selective exposure to television programmes and advertising effectiveness. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 17, 593-606.

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Norris

Publisher

Applied Cognitive Psychology

Available date

2008-08-04

Notes

An experiment on selective exposure and context effects on memory for TV advertisements

Language

en

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