Resistance to persuasive messages as a function of majority and minority source status |
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Authors: | Robin Martin Miles Hewstone |
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Affiliation: | a School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld. 4072, Australia b Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3UD, UK c School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Brisbane QLD 4072, Australia |
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Abstract: | Three experiments examined the extent to which attitudes following majority and minority influence are resistant to counter-persuasion. In Experiment 1, participants’ attitudes were measured after being exposed to two messages which argued opposite positions (initial pro-attitudinal message and subsequent, counter-attitudinal counter-message). Attitudes following minority endorsement of the initial message were more resistant to a (second) counter-message than attitudes following majority endorsement of the initial message. Experiment 2 replicated this finding when the message direction was reversed (counter-attitudinal initial message and pro-attitudinal counter-message) and showed that the level of message elaboration mediated the amount of attitude resistance. Experiment 3 included conditions where participants received only the counter-message and showed that minority-source participants had resisted the second message (counter-message) rather than being influenced by it. These results show that minority influence induces systematic processing of its arguments which leads to attitudes which are resistant to counter-persuasion. |
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