Abstract:
Although self-persuasion was shown to be more effective than direct persuasion in changing attitudes and intentions, its effectiveness in different cultures remains unclear. Furthermore, research suggests that Eastern individuals tend to incorporate close others in the self to a larger extent than Western individuals. Combining both lines of research, the current studies examined whether thinking of a close other would influence the effectiveness of (self)-persuasion across cultures. Two parallel studies were conducted. U.S. participants (n study 1 = 195; n study 2 = 292) and Chinese participants (n study 1 = 187; n study 2 = 313) reported their initial attitudes and intentions toward five target behaviors prior to either think of a specific close other or not. Subsequently, they were randomly assigned to receive either a self-persuasion or a direct persuasion task. Specifically, the self-persuasion task led participants to generate own arguments or arguments that they think the close other would give; the direct persuasion task led participants to read given arguments or imagine that the arguments were from the close other. In the end, all participants reported their attitudes and intentions again after doing the persuasion tasks. The moderation effect of culture was only found in Study 1, such that direct persuasion worked more effectively in Chinese participants than self-persuasion, whereas the effectiveness of the two persuasive techniques did not differ in U.S. participants. In both studies, thinking of a close other was not found to influence the effectiveness of (self-)persuasion across cultures. Possible explanations and future research directions were discussed.
Keywords: Attitude change, close others, culture, direct persuasion, intention change, self-persuasion
JOURNAL OF GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY
PubMed ID: 32762424
ISSN: 0022-1309
DOI:10.1080/00221309.2020.1803193
在线发表日期: AUG 2020
网址链接:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/00221309.2020.1803193?needAccess=true