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The Influence of Episodic and Thematic Frames on Policy and Group Attitudes: Mediational Analysis
Authors:Sheila A. Springer  Jake Harwood
Affiliation:Department of Communication, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721‐0025, USA
Abstract:An experiment examined how episodic and thematic political message frames affect attitudes toward older adults and Social Security. When exposed to messages about abolishing Social Security, participants exposed to episodic frames were significantly more likely to endorse message‐consistent attitudes than participants exposed to a thematic frame. In mediation analyses, an episodic frame featuring a counterstereotypical exemplar increased endorsement of individual responsibility for retirement planning, which then led to more negative attitudes toward Social Security. These effects did not occur with a stereotypical exemplar in an episodic frame. The same mediated pathway influenced attitudes toward older adults in a more complex manner. Results provide support for individual responsibility attributions as a mediating mechanism underlying the effects of certain episodic frames.
Keywords:Episodic and Thematic Frames  Framing  Media Exemplars  Political Messages  Policy Attitudes  Attitudes Toward Aging  Group Attitudes
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