Journalartikel

Beyond words: Credibility attribution on the basis of nonverbal and verbal information as a function of judgment relevance


AutorenlisteReinhard, MA; Sporer, SL

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2005

Seiten21-32

ZeitschriftZeitschrift für Sozialpsychologie

Bandnummer36

Heftnummer1

ISSN0044-3514

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1024/0044-3514.36.1.21

VerlagHuber, Hogrefe


Abstract
We tested the assumptions of the elaboration-likelihood model regarding the influence of involvement on information processing in the field of credibility attribution in everyday life situations in two experiments. Experiment 1 showed that participants under high involvement reported more thoughts about the content than about the source of a statement, and that their credibility judgments were exclusively correlated with the thoughts about the content. In contrast, participants under low involvement reported more thoughts about the source than about the content, and their credibility judgments were only correlated with the thoughts about the source. In Experiment 2, nonverbal and content information were directly manipulated. As expected the manipulation of content information only influenced the credibility judgments of highly involved participants. The nonverbal information about the source exclusively affected the credibility judgments of less involved participants.



Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilReinhard, M. and Sporer, S. (2005) Beyond words: Credibility attribution on the basis of nonverbal and verbal information as a function of judgment relevance, Zeitschrift für Sozialpsychologie, 36(1), pp. 21-32. https://doi.org/10.1024/0044-3514.36.1.21

APA-ZitierstilReinhard, M., & Sporer, S. (2005). Beyond words: Credibility attribution on the basis of nonverbal and verbal information as a function of judgment relevance. Zeitschrift für Sozialpsychologie. 36(1), 21-32. https://doi.org/10.1024/0044-3514.36.1.21



Schlagwörter


BELIEFSCOMMUNICATORScontent cuescredibility attributionDECEPTIONDESIREelaboration-likelihood modellay judgmentLAY PERSONSLIE DETECTIONnonverbal cuesOPINION CHANGEsocial judgment

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