Affiliation:
1. Amsterdam School of Communication Research/ASCoR University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands
2. Tilburg University Department of Communication and Cognition The Netherlands Tilburg The Netherlands
3. University of Amsterdam Amsterdam School of Communication Research/ASCoR Amsterdam The Netherlands
Abstract
Abstract
Socioemotional selectivity theory (SST), an influential life-span theory, suggests that older adults prefer persuasive messages that appeal to emotionally-meaningful goals over messages that appeal to knowledge-related goals, whereas younger adults do not show this preference. A mixed-factorial experiment was conducted to test whether older adults (≥65 years) differ from younger adults (25–45 years) in their preference for emotionally-meaningful appeals over knowledge-related appeals, when appeals are clearly developed in line with SST. For older adults we found the expected preference for emotionally-meaningful appeals for cancer centers but not for grocery stores and travel organizations. As expected, in most cases, younger adults did not show a preference. Implications for SST-based communication research and for practice are discussed.
Subject
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication
Cited by
4 articles.
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