Ricketts, Mitchell S.Hai-Jew, Shalin2013-09-032013-09-032013-09-03http://hdl.handle.net/2097/16397Research suggests people often fail to understand the personal relevance of generalized health information. To make health information more meaningful, communicators can employ anecdotes that take the form of instructive stories about the illnesses or injuries of particular people. Appropriate anecdotes may help audiences internalize health information by triggering insights such as: “I see how that could happen to me…I’d better take action.” Vivid anecdotes appear to activate many of the same neurological pathways that help us extract meaning from direct experience and observation. By eliciting vivid imagery, provoking deep thought, and forging lasting memories, anecdotes may shape beliefs and behaviors to nearly the same extent as a lived event. This chapter explores methods for integrating anecdotes into health messages to increase personal relevance and prompt important changes in health-related behavior.en-USThis chapter appears in Packaging Digital Information for Enhanced Learning and Analysis: Data Visualization, Spatialization, and Multidimensionality edited by Shalin Hai-Jew. Copyright 2014, IGI Global, www.igi-global.com. Posted by permission of the publisher.Health informationAnecdotesHealth messagesMaking health information personal: how anecdotes bring concepts to lifeBook chapter (publisher version)