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Attentional effects of self-affirmation in response to graphic anti-smoking images

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 01:37 authored by Loes T E Kessels, Pete HarrisPete Harris, Robert A C Ruiter, William M P Klein
Objective Self-affirmation has been shown to reduce defensive responding to threatening information. However, little is known about the cognitive and attentional processes underlying these effects. In the current eye-movement study we explored whether self-affirmation affects attention allocation (i.e., number of fixations) among those for whom a threatening health message is self-relevant. Methods After a self-affirmation manipulation, 47 smokers and 52 non-smokers viewed a series of cigarette packs displaying high or low threat smoking-related images accompanied by a brief smoking message containing risk, coping or neutral textual information. Results Self-affirmed smokers made more fixations to the cigarette packs than did non-affirmed smokers (across both high and low threat images), whereas self-affirmed non-smokers made fewer fixations to the cigarette packs than did non-affirmed non-smokers (again across both image types). The textual information did not moderate responses. Conclusions Findings indicate attention-increasing effects of self-affirmation among those for whom the information is self-relevant (smokers) and attention-decreasing effects of self-affirmation among those for whom the information is not self-relevant (non-smokers). Such findings are consistent with the calibration model of self-affirmation (Griffin & Harris, 2011) in which self-affirmation increases sensitivity to the self-relevance of health-risk information. The use of an implicit measure of visual orienting informs our understanding of the working mechanisms of self-affirmation when encoding health information, and may also hold practical implications for the design and delivery of graphic warning labels.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Accepted version

Journal

Health Psychology

ISSN

0278-6133

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Issue

8

Volume

35

Page range

891-897

Department affiliated with

  • Psychology Publications

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2016-06-09

First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date

2016-06-09

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