Literature DB >> 28255280

Selective Exposure to Health Information: The Role of Headline Features in the Choice of Health Newsletter Articles.

Hyun Suk Kim1, Heather Forquer1, Joseph Rusko2, Robert C Hornik1, Joseph N Cappella1.   

Abstract

This study investigated how content and context features of headlines drive selective exposure when choosing between headlines of a monthly e-mail health newsletter in a naturalistic setting over a period of nine months. Study participants received a monthly e-mail newsletter and could freely open it and click any headline to read the accompanying article. In each e-mail newsletter, nine headlines competed with each other for selection. Textual and visual information of the headlines was content-analyzed, and clickstream data on the headlines were collected automatically. The results showed that headlines invited more frequent audience selections when they provided efficacy-signaling information in an imperative voice, when they used a moderate number of negative emotion words, when they presented negative thumbnail images while mentioning cancer or other diseases, and when they were placed higher in position.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Internet; health communication; message effects; news; selective exposure

Year:  2016        PMID: 28255280      PMCID: PMC5330294          DOI: 10.1080/15213269.2015.1090907

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Media Psychol        ISSN: 1521-3269


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9.  Effects of scanning (routine health information exposure) on cancer screening and prevention behaviors in the general population.

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10.  Negative affective consequences of thinking about disease detection behaviors.

Authors:  M G Millar; K Millar
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