Who are others in the third-person effect? : downward comparison toward a smoking issue among non-smokers and smokers

Date

2010-05-21T16:30:42Z

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kansas State University

Abstract

With regards to the third-person effect, the purpose of this paper is to answer the fundamental question ‘who are others?’ when assessing the perceived effects of anti-tobacco advertising and cigarette advertising. The particular interest in this study is investigation of the underlying mechanism of the third-person effect between non-smokers and smokers by applying the social comparison theory to the third-person effect. Findings indicate that, in terms of overall third-person effect judgments, people are inclined to consider as others those persons sharing similar demographic characteristics including gender, race, and age. However, in terms of smoking status, people have a tendency to contrast themselves with other smokers rather than non-smokers, regardless of whether or not they themselves smoke. Moreover, the first-person effect toward an anti-tobacco advertisement was found amongst non-smokers, but it was not found amongst smokers. The magnitude of the third-person toward a cigarette-advertisement effect was greater among non-smokers than it was among smokers.

Description

Keywords

The third-person effect

Graduation Month

August

Degree

Master of Science

Department

Department of Journalism and Mass Communications

Major Professor

Hyunseung Jin

Date

2010

Type

Thesis

Citation