ABSTRACT

This volume represents one of the first major scholarly effort to unravel the psychological and symbolic processing of political advertising. Utilizing survey, experimental, qualitative, and semiotic methodologies to study this phenomenon, the contributors to Television and Political Advertising trace how political ads help to interpret the psychological reality of the presidential campaign in the minds of millions of voters. A product of the National Political Advertising Research Project, this interdisciplinary effort is valuable to researchers in advertising, communication, and consumer psychology since it helps define future work on the relationship between television, politics, and the mind of the voter.

This volume, Television and Political Advertising: Psychological Processes, is the first of two, and covers such topics as Models and Theories for Viewing Political Television; Psychological Processing of Issues, Images, and Form; Differential Processing of Positive and Negative Advertising; and The Psychological Contexts of Processing.

 

part 1|122 pages

Viewing Political Television

chapter 1|23 pages

In Search of the Model Model

Political Science Versus Political Advertising Perspectives on Voter Decision Making

chapter 2|63 pages

Viewers' Mental Models of Political Messages

Toward a Theory of the Semantic Processing of Television

chapter 3|32 pages

Models of a Successful and an Unsuccessful Ad

An Exploratory Analysis

part 1|72 pages

Psychological Processing of Issues, Images, and Form

part 3|68 pages

Differential Processing of Positive and Negative Advertising

chapter 7|24 pages

Emotion and Memory Responses for Negative Political Advertising

A Study of Television Commercials Used in the 1988 Presidential Election

chapter 9|18 pages

Positive and Negative Political Advertising

Effectiveness of Ads and Perceptions of Candidates

part 4|88 pages

The Psychological Contexts of Processing