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Subject: AEJ 95 KettereS CTM Political communication, mass media, and ELM
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Thu, 1 Feb 1996 10:53:41 EST
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                                 Political Communication and ELM
 
 
 
 
Political Communication,
the Mass Media and the
 Elaboration Likelihood Model:
 Match or Misamatch
 
 
 
 
                  Stan Ketterer
                  2115 Hunter Lane
                  Columbia, Mo. 65202
 
                  Phone: (314) 882-5740; (314) 474-3767
 
                  E-mail: [log in to unmask]
                          [log in to unmask]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
        Since the dawn of political communication research with Paul F.
 
  Lazarsfeld's Erie County study in 1940 (Lazarsfeld, Berelson & Gaudet,
 
        1944), communication scholars have sought to explain voter behavior and
the
 mass media's role in it. Specifically, researchers have concentrated on
 
          identifying how a voter acquires political knowledge and on
pinpointing
 
         what factors affect a voter's decision to select a candidate or favor
or
 
          oppose a ballot issue.
        Lazarsfeld's studies at Columbia University and subsequent psychological
 
          studies at the University of Michigan found that the mass media had
 
     "limited effects" on voting decisions (Chaffee & Hochheimer, 1985.)
 
     Instead, predetermined factors such as party identification, the party
 
        affiliation of parents and socioeconomic status were more important
 
     predictors of voter behavior (Lowery & De Fleur, 1988).
        Since Joseph T. Klapper's watershed book synthesizing the minimal effects
 
          model (Klapper, 1960), researchers have discovered that the mass media
have
 more impact on political communication than was originally believed. In a
 
          1985 article in in the Mass Communication Review Yearbook titled "The
 
       Beginnings of Political Communication Research in the United States,"
 
       Steven H. Chaffee and John L. Hochheimer argue that the empirical support
 
          for the limited effects model was problematic because of the way the
 
      Columbia University studies were designed and conducted (Chaffee &
 
    Hochheimer, 1985).  For instance, they point out that the studies were
 
        conducted in a racially homogenous, largely rural and conservative area
of
 
          Ohio dominated by Republicans. News coverage, they say, also favored
the R
 
          epublican Party.
        More than two-thirds of the respondents in the initial study mentioned
 
         newspapers and radio as a "helpful" source of political information
while
 
          less than half mentioned any type of personal source, Chaffee and
 
   Hochheimer point out. Despite these findings, they note that the Columbia
 
          authors concluded that "more than anything else people can move
people,"
 
          which became the basis for the two-step flow model of personal
influence
 
          (Katz & Lazarsfeld, 1955).
        Although Chaffee and Hochheimer note that a "new flowering" of research
 
          has explored the role of mass communication research in the political
 
       process by breaking out of the Lazarsfeld model in many ways, "most of
the
 
          assumptions of the original studies continue to structure current
 
   research." They stress the need for new approaches for looking at political
 communication without the constraints of prior assumptions.
        Two years before Chaffee and Hochheimer formally issued their appeal, Yuko
 Miyo took such an approach in a study testing the knowledge gap
 
  hypothesis. The study, conducted at the University of Wisconsin-Madison as
 
          part of the 1980 presidential election campaign and political
socialization
 project, used a three-way panel design to test how media use would affect
 
          political knowledge (Miyo, 1983). A year earlier, Chaffee and Miyo
 
    presented a paper based on a different aspect of the same project (Chaffee
 
          & Miyo, 1982).
        Panel members participated in telephone surveys that were conducted six
 
          months before the election, the month before the election and a year
after
 
          the election. They were classified according to the type of media that
they
 used and to their amount of media use. Their level of political knowledge
 
          was determined by a combined score of basic political knowledge
questions
 
          and specific questions about the Democratic and the Republican
positions on
 campaign issues. Their level of education was also determined.
        As hypothesized, Miyo found that the level of political knowledge for all
 
          panel members increased over the course of the campaign. She also
found as
 
          expected that the knowledge gap between newspaper readers and
television
 
          viewers decreased as the election approached and as television
coverage of
 
          the races and the issues increased. As expected, the gap again widened
a
 
          year after the election, although all panel members had a higher level
of
 
          political knowledge than before the election.
        In addition, those panel members with the highest media use had the
 
      highest level of political knowledge, a hypothesized result. The level of
 
          political knowledge as expected also increased as the level of
education
 
          increased.
        These results showed that media exposure can have an effect on the level
 
          of political knowledge over the course of an election campaign. They
also
 
          indicated that the level of political knowledge varies with the level
of
 
          education.
Elaboration Likelihood Model
        A model persuasion that could help explain political communication and the
 media's role in it has received little attention in mass communication
 
         circles, except for in advertising research (Petty & Cacioppo, 1983;
 
      MacInnis and Jaworski, 1989; Schumann, Petty & Clemons, 1990; James and
 
         Hensel, 1991; MacInnis, Moorman and Jaworski, 1991; Petty, Cacioppo and
 
         Haugtvedt, 1992; Darley and Smith, 1993). Developed in 1981 at the
 
    University of Missouri-Columbia by psychologists Richard E. Petty and John
 
          T. Cacioppo, the Elaboration Likelihood Model essentially uses
motivational
 and cognitive factors to explain attitude change (Petty & Cacioppo, 1981;
 
          Petty & Cacioppo, 1986).
        The Elaboration Likelihood Model, or ELM, assumes that people are
 
    motivated to have "correct" attitudes when presented with a persuasive
 
        message. A correct attitude is one that is correct for the person, i.e.
an
 
          attitude that fits in with the person's beliefs and other attitudes.
In
 
         order to form an attitude about a particular message, a person must use
one
 of two routes: the central route or the peripheral route.
        To use the central route, the person must have the ability to understand
 
          the message, the motivation to read or view the message, and/or the
 
     opportunity to read or view the message. In a political campaign the
 
      message might be a candidate's position paper or fliers, newspaper or
 
       magazine articles, television or radio broadcasts, candidate speeches and
 
          television or radio commercials.
        Using the central route, the person will purposefully evaluate, or
 
     process, the message based on the quality of the arguments that are
 
     presented. During the evaluation, the person will generate thoughts about
 
          the message. If the arguments are strong, the person will generate
positive
 thoughts about the message. The greater the number of positive thoughts
 
          that are generated, the greater the attitude change in favor of the
 
     message.
        If the arguments are weak, however, the person's attitude generally will
 
          not change. The person might even generate counterarguments against
the
 
         message, which could result in a more negative attitude, the boomerang
 
        effect.
        In an era of information overload, ELM assumes that people are "cognitive
 
          misers" who hoard their cognitive resources (Petty & Cacioppo, 1983).
 
       Although motivated to hold correct attitudes, people do not have the time
 
          or cognitive energy to process all of the messages via the central
route.
 
          If a person does not have the ability or motivation to process the
message
 
          or has not been exposed to it, the peripheral route will be used.
        Because the person wants to hold a correct attitude but doesn't want to
 
          exert much energy to form it, the person will survey the setting and
find
 
          one or more cues on which to base the attitude. The cues can be any
piece
 
          of information, including the candidate's appearance, reputation,
political
 party or what friends say about the candidate. Because a cue is being
 
        used, the person will not evaluate the candidate's arguments. Instead,
the
 
          person's attitude will be based solely on the quality of the cues.
        People will not use central or peripheral processing exclusively. Petty
 
          and Cacioppo envision a continuum of elaboration likelihood. On one
end of
 
          the continuum are people that are highly motivated, have a high
ability to
 
          process the message and/or are presented with the opportunity to do
so.
 
         There is a high likelihood that these people will elaborate on the
message
 
          using the central route. On the opposite end of the continuum are
people
 
          who have low motivation to process the message, low ability to
understand
 
          it and/or have little exposure to the message. There is a low
likelihood
 
          that these people will elaborate on the message. Instead, they will
use
 
         peripheral processing. In the middle is a vast gray area where people
will
 
          use varying amounts of both types of processing. Little research has
been
 
          conducted in this area.
        Because people using the central route have expended more cognitive energy
 in evaluating the message, Petty and Cacioppo say their attitudes will be
 
          more enduring and more predictive of behavior (Petty & Cacioppo,
1983). On
 
          the other hand, because people using the peripheral route have
invested
 
         little energy in their decision, their attitude change will be
temporary
 
          and not very predictive of behavior.
        The major question that this study seeks to answer is whether the ELM can
 
          be used to predict the level of political knowledge and cue use of
likely
 
          voters. If the ELM can be shown to make these predictions accurately,
it
 
          could be a valuable tool in understanding how political knowledge is
gained
 and how the mass media fits into the equation.
 
Literature Review
        There have been two scholarly political articles published involving ELM:
 
          one by Petty and Cacioppo and another by Jeffery J. Mondak, a
political
 
         scientist at Indiana University.
        The main purpose of Petty and Cacioppo's study was not to research voting
 
          behavior, but to "refine the contemporary conceptualization of need
for
 
         cognition, to examine whether the effects of need for cognition on
message
 
          processing and persuasion observed in previous research are
attributable
 
          simply to intelligence, and to test a self-contained individual
difference
 
          assumption in the elaboration likelihood model (Petty & Cacioppo,
1986)."
 
          Need for cognition is a motivational measure of a person's craving for
 
        cognitive activity, and Petty and Cacioppo have developed a Need for
 
      Cognition Scale to measure it. Their findings have shown that people high
 
          in need for cognition will use central route processing (Petty &
Cacioppo,
 
          1982).
        For this study, psychology students in introductory classes at the
 
     University of Iowa completed the scales along with other forms at the
 
       beginning of the semester. The scales were used to obtain subjects with
 
         both high and low need for cognition. In a telephone survey eight weeks
 
         before the 1994 presidential election, subjects were asked questions
about
 
          political knowledge and voting intentions. After the elections, they
were
 
          contacted again and asked about voting behavior.
        As predicted, Petty and Cacioppo found that subjects high in need for
 
        cognition had more political knowledge than those low in need for
 
   cognition. Also as predicted, they found that the
pre-election attitudes of high need for cognition subjects were better
 
        predictors of voting behavior than the pre-election attitudes of those
 
        subjects low in need for cognition.
        In another part of the study, Petty and Cacioppo found that both need for
 
          cognition and intelligence, an ability variable, contributed to higher
 
        message processing. But intelligence accounted for more of the variance.
        Overall, Petty and Cacioppo concluded that the attitude-behavior
 
   consistency demonstrated by high need for cognition subjects showed that
 
          cognitive elaboration was at work. As a result, they said the study
 
     supported the ELM.
        In the second article, Mondak conducted three experiments to determine the
 role of source credibility regarding the public's reaction to U.S. Supreme
 Court decisions (Mondak, 1990). In the first experiment, Mondak
 
  manipulated the credibility of the source by varying the use of three
 
       well-known Supreme Court cases as supporting information to back up three
 
          messages involving
hypothetical cases. Forty-eight students in introductory political science
 
          classes at Indiana University filled out surveys among many forms at
the
 
          beginning of the semester. Under this low elaboration likelihood
condition
 
          with few arguments available, Mondak found that subjects relied on
source
 
          credibility as a cue.
        In the second experiment, Mondak manipulated source credibility and
 
      argument strength. As predicted, he found that the perceived legitimacy of
 
          a policy increased when arguments were strong and decreased when they
were
 
          weak. Source credibility was found to be important under low and high
 
       elaboration likelihood conditions. (Petty and Cacioppo argue that under
 
         certain conditions, a variable can serve multiple roles. Here
credibility
 
          serves as a cue and an argument.)
        In the third experiment, personal relevance, a motivational variable, was
 
          added. For two of the three questions, policy legitimacy increased
under
 
          high relevance conditions.
        Mondak concluded that source credibility can: provide a cue for receivers
 
          who do not process a persuasive message; prompt an ambivalent receiver
to
 
          examine a persuasive appeal; and be evidence considered during a
cognitive
 
          assessment of a political message.
Hypotheses
        Both of these studies tested college students, and neither of them was
 
         conceived primarily as a test of the ELM regarding political
communication.
 Neither of them mentioned the mass media. To test the ELM's ability to
 
         explain political communication, it was applied in a heated campaign
for a
 
          ballot issue in 1994.
        Amendment 7, a statewide Missouri ballot initiative commonly known as
 
        Hancock II, provided a unique opportunity to test the  ELM. Formulated
by
 
          Republican U.S. Rep. Mel Hancock, author of the Hancock I Amendment to
the
 
          Missouri Constitution, Hancock II would have required voter approval
of tax
 increases at all levels of government.
        The initiative was very complicated, and the ballot language was difficult
 to understand. The stakes in the election were very high, causing
 
    University of Missouri system President George Russell to declare a hiring
 
          freeze and to estimate that the jobs of as many as 1,000 university
faculty
 and staff members could be eliminated if the measure were approved (Meyer,
 1994).
        Legal wrangling contributed to the difficulty in understanding Hancock II.
 Four lawsuits were filed concerning the initiative (Godmer, 1994). The
 
         primary lawsuit was one questioning the accuracy of a fiscal note that
was
 
          approved by the state legislature and appeared on the ballot.
        The complexity of the issue made it ideal for a study of the ELM. Unlike a
 companion ballot measure authorizing riverboat gambling, some people would
 have the ability, motivation and/or opportunity to process messages about
 
          Hancock II and others would not. Therefore, we should be able to test
 
       whether subjects were using central route or peripheral route processing.
 
        Using the ELM, the following four hypotheses were formulated regarding
 
         political communication and Hancock II:
        Hypothesis 1: Likely voters who have a low level of elaboration likelihood
 will rely on cues while likely voters with a high level of elaboration
 
         likelihood will not.
        Hypothesis 2: Likely voters with a low level of elaboration likelihood
 
         will rely on friends, a cue, for information while likely voters who
have a
 high level of elaboration likelihood will rely on the mass media, which
 
          will provide information for central processing.
        Hypothesis 3: Likely voters with a high level of elaboration likelihood
 
          will use the media more than likely voters with a low level of
elaboration
 
          likelihood.
        Hypothesis 4: Likely voters with a high external motivation will have a
 
          high level of elaboration likelihood.
Method
        The Center for Advanced Social Research at the University of
          Missouri-Columbia, the Columbia Missourian, KOMU-TV/Channel 8 and
KBIA/91.3
 FM conducted a statewide telephone poll from Oct. 22, 1994, to Oct. 26,
 
          1994, of 527 voters who said they were "very likely" to vote in the
Nov. 8
 
          general election. These respondents also said they had voted in the
last
 
          presidential election.
        Fifty questions, including some specifically generated for this study,
 
         were formulated based on input from various faculty members at the
School
 
          of Journalism. The questions were mainly about Hancock II, although
some
 
          questions about the another ballot measure allowing games of chance on
 
        riverboats were also included.
        The responses to three factual questions about Hancock II were used for a
 
          combined measure of political knowledge, the dependent variable.
Unlike
 
         Miyo's general political knowledge questions, these questions were very
 
         specific.
        Educational level was based upon a demographic question and was used as a
 
          measure of ability. Motivation was measured by the combined values of
two
 
          questions about intrinsic motivation. Questions about how much
attention
 
          subjects were paying to newspaper, radio and television news stories
and
 
          advertisements about Hancock II were used as a measure of opportunity.
More
 types of media were included in this study than in Miyo's study, which
 
         only included television and newspapers.
        A hierarchical regression was performed to obtain a measure of elaboration
 likelihood. All of the relevant demographic variables except for education
 level were entered first. Then education level, the opportunity measure
 
          and the intrinsic motivation measure, all variables associated with
the
 
         ELM, were entered last. Political knowledge was the dependent variable.
        The intercept and the betas significant at the 0.05 level along with the
 
          values of their associated variables were then used to form a equation
for
 
          elaboration likelihood. An elaboration likelihood score was calculated
for
 
          each subject. Based on the scores, the subjects were divided into
nearly
 
          equal categories of high, medium and low elaboration likelihood.
        Chi-square tests were then performed to test association. The first test
 
          included the elaboration likelihood categories and an attention
question
 
          regarding friends, which were used as cues. The second test used the
 
      elaboration likelihood categories and a question about the main sources of
 
          information about Hancock II. The categories were mass media as the
primary
 source of information and friends and other sources. The third test
 
      involved questions about weekly media use. The final test concerned a
 
       measure of external motivation. The categories were employed by a
 
   government agency, a category in which subjects were assumed to be highly
 
          motivated because their jobs were at stake, and other job statuses.
All of
 
          the questions are included in the appendix.
 
 Results
        As indicated by Table 1, the regression equation yielded four variables
 
          with significant betas: age, sex, news (the opportunity variable), and
 
        education level. Their betas and values were used to form the following
 
         equation: ELM = -0.362862 + 0.0005790 (age) + 0.171925 (sex) + 0.119137
 
         (edlevel) + 0.058561 (news).
        The standardized regression coefficients showed news to be the most
 
      important variable. Its coefficient of 0.28181466 was more than twice as
 
          large as its nearest rival, education level, at 0.1310849. Age and sex
had
 
          nearly identical coefficients at 0.09610546 and 0.09021624
respectively.
        Hypothesis 1 suggested that likely voters low in elaboration likelihood
 
          would be associated with cue use. As indicated in Table 2, the
chi-square
 
          test yields a value of 38.944 at a P-value of 0.000.
        Hypothesis 2 suggested that voters low in elaboration likelihood would be
 
          associated with cue use and those voters high in elaboration
likelihood
 
         would be associated with mass media use. The chi-square test gives a
value
 
          of 14.334 and a P-value of 0.001.
        Hypothesis 3 suggested that elaboration likelihood would be
associated with the frequency of media use. The more frequent a subject
 
         used the media, the more that subject would be associated with
          central-route processing. The chi-square test for newspaper use had a
value
 of 34.750 and a P-value of 0.002 while the test for network television
 
         news use had a value of 41.056 and a P-value of 0.000. The chi-square
test
 
          for local television news use yielded a value of 30.039 and a P-value
of
 
          0.008.
        Hypothesis 4 suggested high external motivation would be associated with
 
          high elaboration likelihood. The chi-square test had a value of 24.342
and
 
          a P-value of 0.007.
        Interestingly, a chi-square test of elaboration likelihood and a question
 
          about the perceived difficulty of understanding Hancock II yielded a
value
 
          of 16.523 and a P-Value of 0.011, what the ELM would predict.
 
Discussion
        The results of the regression analysis show that opportunity, i.e.
 
     attention to the mass media, and education level were important factors in
 
          determining the level of political knowledge. All of the demographic
 
      factors combined except education level explained only 0.0196 percent of
 
          the variance in political knowledge, as Table 2 indicates. The
addition of
 
          education level nearly doubled than amount to 0.0361 percent, a
finding
 
         that shows the impact of ability.
        But putting opportunity into the equation boosted the total to 0.1177, an
 
          increase of more than 8 percent of the explained variance. This
finding is
 
          evidence that the mass media can play an important role in the
formation of
 political knowledge. Under high elaboration conditions, this knowledge
 
         will be used to process the message and apparently to help make voting
 
        decisions.
        The addition of the intrinsic motivation variable only accounted for less
 
          than 1 percent of the explained variance and did not have a
significant
 
         beta. In this case, intrinsic motivation alone might not have been
 
    sufficient to induce subjects to process the difficult message via the
 
        central route.
        The results of the chi-square tests add more support for the role of
 
       media. The tests showed that mass media are associated with high levels
of
 
          elaboration likelihood, and high levels of media use are associated
with
 
          high levels of elaboration likelihood. Both results are consistent
with the
 ELM.
        Conversely, the chi-square tests indicated that cue use is associated with
 low elaboration likelihood and that the use of friends and other nonmedia
 
          sources of information are also associated with low elaboration
likelihood.
 Again, these findings are consistent with the ELM.
        Finally, a chi-square test showed that high extrinsic motivation is
 
      associated with high elaboration likelihood, another finding that is
 
      consistent with the ELM.
 
Future Research
        This study has applied the ELM to an area in which it had not been applied
 before, i.e. mass media use and political communication. It has also
 
       applied a different research technique, multiple regression, to develop a
 
          measure to identify central and peripheral processors. And it then
used the
 resulting model to test the use of ELM in several areas.
        In future studies, the use of this model should be expanded. If a survey
 
          technique is used, the questions should be designed to test the ELM
 
     exclusively and more questions about other possible cues and information
 
          sources should be included. The studies could also have a panel design
 
        similar to Miyo's study in order to build on Petty and Cacioppo's
research
 
          into the predictive power of the ELM regarding actual voting. Such
studies
 
          should also track changes in central and peripheral processing during
and
 
          after the campaign.
         Follow-up interviews should also be conducted with respondents in an
 
        attempt to pinpoint what information sources and cues had the most
impact
 
          on their decisions in the polling booth.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Bibliography
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     Beginning of Political Communication Research in the United
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Chaffee, Steven H. and Miyo, Yuko (1982). "Selective Exposure and
         the Reinforcement Hypothesis in the 1980 Presidential
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Darley, W.K., Smith, R.E. (October 1993). "Advertising Claim
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Godmer, Adam (1994, October 20). Amendment 7 Creates Twisted
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James, Karen E., and Hensel, Paul J. (June 1991). Negative
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Katz, Elihu, and Lazarsfeld, Paul F. (1955). Personal Influence.
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MacInnis, D.J., and Jaworski, B.J. (1989, October). "Information
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Petty, Richard E., Cacioppo, John T., Kao, Chuan Feng, and       Rodriguez,
 
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Petty, Richard E., Schumann, David W., and Clemons, D. Scott
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     Repetition-Variation Hypothesis." Journal of Consumer
     Research. 17, 192-202.
 
Petty, Richard E., Cacioppo, John T. and Haugtvedt, Curtis P.
        (1992). "Need for Cognition and Advertising: Understanding
        the Role of Personality Variables in Consumer Behavior."
        Journal of Consumer Psychology. 1, 239-260.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
                                  Political Communication and ELM
Appendix POLL QUESTIONS
 
 
 
 
Knowledge
 
 
        Hancock Two would require voter approval of any tax
     increase.
 
        Hancock Two would prohibit large state tax increases from
     one year to the next whether approved by the voters or
     not.
 
        Hancock Two sets a limit on how high state revenue can go up
     each year without a vote of the people.
 
 
Internal Motivation
 
        Introduction: Different people like the news for different
     reasons. I'm going to read a list of some reasons for paying
     attention to the news. As I do, please tell me whether you
     strongly agree, agree, disagree, strongly disagree or have
     no opinion about each reason.
 
        To keep up with the latest news.
 
        To figure out what is important.
 
 
 
Cue (Attention Measure)
 
 
        On a scale of 1 to 5 where 1 in not at all and 5 is a lot,
     how much attention are you paying to what your family,
     friends and colleagues are saying about Hancock Two?
 
 
Opportunity
 
 
        On a scale of 1 to 5 where 1 is not at all and 5 is a lot
     how much attention are you paying to newspaper coverage of
     Hancock Two?
 
        On a scale of 1 to 5 where 1 is not at all and 5 is a lot,
     how much attention are you paying to TV news coverage of
     Hancock Two?
 
        On a scale of 1 to 5 where 1 is not at all and 5 is a lot,
     how much attention are you paying to radio news and talk
     shows about Hancock Two?
 
        On a scale of 1 to 5 where 1 is not at all and 5 is a lot,
     how much attention are you paying to television commercials
     about Hancock Two?
 
 
Mass Media/ Not Mass Media
 
        If you had to choose ONE source to help you understand
     complex local or state issues, would you pick . . .
 
        Word-of-mouth, Or some other source? (not mass media);
     television commercials, television news, radio, newspapers
 
         (mass media).
 
 
Use of Mass Media
 
 
        On average, how many days in a week do your read a
     newspaper?
 
        On average, how many days in a week do you watch the
     national network news on TV?
 
        On average, how many days in a week do you watch the local
     news on TV?
 
 
Extrinsic Motivation (potential lost job)
 
        Is the primary wage earner in your family ...
 
        Employed by a government agency, self-employed, employed by a private
 
        company, employed by a government agency, unemployed, retired or
something
 
          else.

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