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Subject: AEJ 95 CremedaM RTVJ Influence of vivid v. pallid news presentations
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Sat, 10 Feb 1996 17:58:52 EST
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THE INFLUENCE OF VIVID VS. PALLID PRESENTATIONS IN TELEVISION NEWS ON
 
       INTEREST, RECALL AND PERCEPTION OF NEWSWORTHINESS
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
by
 
 
 
 
 
 
Michael E. Cremedas, Ph. D., Catherine A. Steele, Ph. D.,
and A. Randall Wenner, B. S.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications
Syracuse University
215 University Place
Syracuse, NY 13244-2100
(315) 443-4036
[log in to unmask]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Submitted to the Radio-Television Journalism Division of the Association
 
          for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication 1995 Annual
Conference,
 
          Washington, D. C.
THE INFLUENCE OF VIVID VS. PALLID PRESENTATIONS IN TELEVISION NEWS ON
 
       INTEREST, RECALL AND PERCEPTION OF NEWSWORTHINESS
 
 
by
 
 
Michael E. Cremedas, Ph. D., Catherine A. Steele, Ph. D.,
and A. Randall Wenner, B. S.
S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications
Syracuse University
215 University Place
Syracuse, NY 13244-2100
(315) 443-4036
[log in to unmask]
 
 
 
 
 
ABSTRACT
 
This experiment investigated how vivid versus pallid portrayals in
 
         television news affected three dependent variables: interest, recall
and
 
          perception of newsworthiness. The results demonstrated that a vivid
 
     presentation may raise the interest level of a story that is already quite
 
          dramatic, but may not do so for a story that is less inherently
compelling.
 The researchers also found some evidence that vividness may interfere with
 the imparting of useful information.
 
 
 
 
 
 
        _
 
 
THE INFLUENCE OF VIVID VS. PALLID PRESENTATIONS IN TELEVISION NEWS ON
 
       INTEREST, RECALL AND PERCEPTION OF NEWSWORTHINESS
 
One of the dominant values of television journalism is the belief that news
 should be presented in the most dramatic manner possible in order to gain
 
               and hold the interest of viewers. A former president of NBC news,
Reuven
 
          Frank noted more than two decades ago that, "Every news story should,
 
       without any sacrifice of probity or responsibility, display the
attributes
 
          of fiction, or drama. It should have structure and conflict, problem
and
 
          denouement, rising action and falling action, a beginning, a middle
and an
 
          end" (quoted in Epstein, 1973, p. 242).
Such a dictum, even today, describes a seemingly universal attitude among
 
               television journalists that places extraordinary emphasis on
vividness.
 
         Professionals argue that for viewers to understand and learn from TV
news,
 
          they must be drawn in so that they will pay attention. A story rich in
 
        strong visuals, action, emotion, and conflict commands more time and
 
      prominence than one that lacks these dynamics.
Vividness may be thought of as having two dimensions: substance and form.
 
               Substance refers to the informational "angle," i.e., what the
story is
 
        about. Professionals argue that the more dramatic and confrontational
the
 
          substance, the better: "You're more likely to attract an audience to a
 
        story about a real estate developer who is about to evict four
impoverished
 families from a rundown apartment building than to a story about a
 
     developer who proposes a shopping center on a vacant city block" (Gibson,
 
          1991, p. 137). Form refers to the physical and editorial structure of
the
 
          story, i.e., the visual and aural elements that are included to
support the
 substance. In the example quoted above, if faced with the choice of
 
      including a soundbite of a weeping mother pleading that she not be evicted
 
          from her home, or using one in which she more calmly admits that she
 
      squandered her meager monthly income on entertainment instead of paying
the
 rent, the TV reporter is more likely to use the one in which the mother is
 weeping: "The best television journalism...is what we can see, hear and
 
          experience...it's what we remember because it touched us and was
important
 
          to us in some way" (Shook, 1994, p. 5).
By professional habit, then, TV news practitioners seek out stories that
 
               are inherently vivid (substance), and strive to enhance vividness
by
 
      including the most dramatic elements (form). With little time for
 
   reflection or thought, viewers often are caught up in the emotional power
 
          of the vividness effect. However, as Kennamer (1988) cautions: "Vivid
 
       information may not be the best information for use in decision-making
and
 
          inference drawing, and over-reliance on it can lead to errors of
perception
 and judgment" (p. 108).
 The present study examines the influence of vividness in TV news
 
        presentations on three dependent variables: interest, recall and
perception
 of newsworthiness. The results contribute to an established body of
 
      cognitive psychological research into how news information is processed
 
         (e.g., Berry, Gunter & Clifford, 1982; Findahl & Hoijer, 1985; Lang,
1989;
 
          Schleuder, White & Cameron, 1993; Stauffer, Frost & Rybolt, 1983).
The Vividness Effect.  The concept of vividness has been defined as the
 
              qualities of a message that enhance cognitive elaboration, i.e.,
that make
 
          the message more likely to be thought about, remembered and
incorporated in
 judgmental and inferential processes (Taylor & Thompson, 1982). The effect
 is thought to be achieved by the use of pictorial symbols (visual images)
 
          and concrete (specific) language. Vividness may enhance judgmental
impact
 
          because such information is more successful in attracting attention,
and
 
          eliciting memorable imagery, specific emotions or generalized arousal
 
       (e.g., Bell & Loftus, 1985; Fiske & Taylor, 1991; Kisielius & Sternthal,
 
          1984, 1986; Mitchell, 1983).
As described by Nisbett and Ross (1980), information is vivid "to the
 
            extent that it is (a) emotionally interesting, (b) concrete and
imagery
 
         provoking, and (c) proximate in a sensory, temporal or spatial way" (p.
 
         45). Emotional interest is greatest, according to Nisbett and Ross,
when an
 event involves the motives, needs, desires and values of the participants.
 Because perceivers of the event have the same motives, needs, desires and
 
          values, vivid information permits a surrogate experience. "Pallid"
inform
 
          ation is the opposite of vivid. It is more general, abstract and,
 
   therefore, less "interesting." The pervasive assumption is that vivid
 
       messages have some special power that pallid information does not.
Nisbett and Ross warn of a vividness bias that gives "inferential weight to
 information in proportion to its vividness" (1980, p. 62). While this
 
             hypothesis seems intuitively compelling, the research literature
does not
 
          support it unequivocally. In a review of more than twenty studies,
Taylor
 
          and Thompson (1982) found that concrete (vivid) descriptions proved to
have
 no significantly greater effect on judgments than did more general
 
     (pallid) ones. Furthermore, pictorially illustrated or videotaped informati
 
          on was no more persuasive than oral or written communication. They
 
    concluded that: (1) communications containing concrete and specific
 
     language are not reliably more persuasive than communications containing
 
          more abstract and general language; (2) vivid information is only
 
   moderately more memorable than pallid information and may even have reverse
 effects on memory. In a more recent study, Frey and Eagly (1993) confirmed
 that vivid messages can be less memorable and less persuasive than pallid
 
          ones.
  A number of studies have found evidence of vividness bias in at least one
 distinct situation: when vividness is operationally defined as individual
 
               case histories, as contrasted to abstract statistical
information. In one
 
          experiment, for example, a report of a single mother on welfare had
 
     significantly more influence on participants' beliefs about the motivation
 
          and character of welfare recipients than did a story summarizing
 
  statistical information on the characteristics of all welfare recipients
 
          (Hamill, Wilson & Nisbett, 1980). Taylor and Thompson (1982) also
found
 
         support for the vividness hypothesis under similar  experimental
 
  conditions.
Other researchers, however, have observed contrary evidence in TV news
 
             presentations. Iyengar and Kinder (1987) performed experiments
comparing
 
          the impact of vivid and pallid portrayals on participants' rating of
the
 
          importance of national issues.  In one experiment using news reports
of
 
         unemployment, viewers presented with dull, statistical information were
 
         more likely to rate joblessness as an important issue than participants
who
 were shown an additional story depicting the impact of unemployment on a
 
          single family.  The researchers concluded:  "Viewers may get so caught
up
 
          in one family's troubles that they fail to make the connection back to
the
 
          national condition. Overwhelmed by concrete details, they miss the
general
 
          point" (p.42).
Some research indicates that the vividness effect manifests only after a
 
               delay (Reyes, Thompson & Bower, 1980), while other studies
demonstrated no
 
          such effect (Shedler & Manis,1986). Collins, Taylor, Wood and Thompson
 
        (1988) argue that the vividness effect is illusory. Their research found
 
          that vivid presentations produced an effect on judgments about a
message's
 
          persuasiveness, but not on actual attitude change.
Overall, the relevant literature on the vividness effect presents a mixed
 
               picture. In some experiments, the impact of vividness was clearly
 
   demonstrated, while other studies failed to find significant evidence of
 
          it. The discrepancies raise fundamental questions about the faith that
TV
 
          news places on vividness.
 
Hypotheses
The primary focus of this study is on how TV viewers cognitively process
 
               vivid versus pallid news messages. While previous findings are
inconclusive
 regarding evidence of vividness bias in persuasion and judgmental impact,
 
          much of the literature does lend support to a vividness effect in
 
   attracting and holding attention. Therefore, within the context of TV news
 
          presentations, we predict:
 
H1:     Level of interest will be higher for vivid television news
 
     presentations than for pallid.
 
H2:     Perception of newsworthiness will be higher for vivid television news
 
               presentations than for pallid.
 
H3:  Recall of story facts will be higher for vivid television news
 
          presentations than for pallid.
 
H4: Interest, perception of newsworthiness, and recall will have a strong
 
               positive correlation.
 Study Objectives.
This experiment is one of a series examining how encoding practices of
 
             television journalists influence the way viewers perceive and
internalize
 
          news messages. "Encoding," as per Schramm's model (1971, p. 23),
refers to
 
          the form in which TV news is portrayed, and includes such factors as
the
 
          use of videotape, graphics, soundbites, camera angles, reporter/anchor
 
        narration, story formats, and so on.
Our general purpose is to authenticate how variations in encoding can
 
            influence the ways that viewers "decode" the information and
interpret the
 
          meanings of what they have seen and heard. The goal is to develop a
body of
 knowledge that is more methodical than currently exists regarding the
 
        influence of encoding choices by TV news practitioners. Ultimately, the
 
         inquiry can lead to an encoding theory for television news.
 
Method
Stimulus Stories.  Two local news stories that had been previously
 
         broadcast in a medium-sized television market were selected as stimulus
 
         material. They were chosen because both were vivid in substance and in
form
 of presentation. To preclude the possible influence of the experiment's
 
          subjects having prior knowledge of the stories, the reports were not
of
 
         recent events that would have been likely to be remembered. As a
further
 
          precaution, primary factual information was altered and fictitious
names
 
          used.
One story concerned a demonstration by several hundred citizens in a nearby
 town who gathered to disrupt a planned rally by white supremacists. The
 
               other report was of a controversial parade celebrating gay pride
in the
 
         city. Both stories fit Nisbett and Ross's (1980) criteria for vividness
in
 
          that they were emotionally interesting, image-provoking and
proximate.[1]
Each story was produced in both a vivid and a pallid version. The vivid
 
              treatment of the white supremacists report was nearly identical to
the one
 
          that originally was broadcast. It contained tense, dramatic scenes of
 
       confrontation. They included a segment in which a counter-demonstrator
 
        threw punches at a white supremacist, and various shots of angry
 
  participants shouting and chanting anti-white supremacist slogans. Also
 
         included was an emotionally-charged soundbite with a Nazi death camp
 
      survivor. These scenes were all removed for the pallid version. What
 
      remained was a report of the anti-white supremacist crowd gathering, a
 
        couple of soundbites from those opposed to the white-supremacists,
slogan
 
          chanting and singing of peace songs, and a brief segment of the van
 
     carrying white supremacists arriving, then immediately being escorted by
 
          police away from the demonstration site.
The vivid rendition of the gay pride celebration was, with only minor
 
            modification, the same version that aired on the local television
station.
 
          It contained an interview with a Christian minister who came out to
 
     demonstrate against homosexuality. Also, the reporter's narration told of
 
          an attempt by some city council members earlier in the week to block
the
 
          parade. The pallid presentation eliminated the two elements of
controversy,
 merely reporting on the parade, including interviews with gay rights
 
       supporters.
The two reports were embedded in a ten-minute newscast consisting of four
 
               stories, using a "newsbrief" format typical of local stations. To
ensure
 
          that the stories and newscast fit the general style, time constraints
and
 
          other "encoding" features of local news, the writing, editing and
 
   production were handled by professional television journalists.
 Subjects and Procedure.  The 163 participants in the experiment were
 
            students in an introductory mass communication course at a mid-sized
 
      private university in the northeastern United States. Separate groups were
 
          assigned to the two experimental conditions to view a newscast
containing
 
          the vivid and pallid stories.[2]
The order in which the vivid/pallid treatments appeared was alternated
 
             between the subject groups. In the newscast viewed by Group I, the
vivid
 
          version of the white supremacists story was first followed later by
the
 
         pallid rendition of the gay pride parade. For Group II, the pallid
white
 
          supremacists report came first followed by the vivid gay pride story.
After viewing the assigned newscast, the subjects completed a
 
    questionnaire. It included an aided-recall test (multiple-choice)
 
   consisting of five questions about each report. The questions covered major
 facts common to both the vivid and pallid versions.   The sum of the
 
       correct answers was the recall score. The subjects' judgment of a story's
 
          interest was measured by a simple five-position rating scale, ranging
from
 
          very interesting (level 5) through a neutral point (level 3) to not at
all
 
          interesting (level 1). Perception of newsworthiness was ascertained
using
 
          the same type of scale.
Statistical Tests. Three statistical strategies were employed to examine
 
               the data. Analyses of Variance tested for differences in the
dependent
 
        measures (interest, recall, newsworthiness) attributable to the
independent
 conditions (vivid/pallid). Paired t-tests were performed to look for
 
       contrasts by story across both versions. Finally, Pearson correlation
 
       coefficients were computed to evaluate relationships among the dependent
 
          measures.
 
Results
Table 1 summarizes the results for the dependent variables in an Analysis
 
               of Variance (ANOVA). For the white supremacists story, the
difference in
 
          interest between the vivid and pallid versions was significant, with a
 
        higher mean score for the vivid presentation. The gay pride parade story
 
          demonstrated no significant difference for the interest variable.
 
   Therefore, H1 was supported for the highly vivid story, but not for the
 
         low-to-moderately vivid one. Differences for perception of
newsworthiness
 
          and recall were not significant for either of the two stories. Thus,
H2 and
 H3 were not supported.
 
[Table 1 about here]
 
Table 2 presents the results of paired t-tests comparing means by story
 
              (both versions combined). The interest and newsworthiness
variables scored
 
          significantly higher for the white supremacists report, while recall
was
 
          significantly higher for the gay pride story.
 
[Table 2 about here]
 
In assessing the relationship of dependent measures, Pearson correlation
 
          coefficients showed a strong positive association between interest and
 
        perception of newsworthiness for the two versions of both stories
combined
 
          (r = .51, p < .001). The correlation for recall and interest was also
 
       positive, but extremely weak (r = .14, p < .001). There was no
significant
 
          association between recall and newsworthiness. Therefore, H4 was
partially
 
          supported, i.e., for a relationship between interest and
newsworthiness.
 
Discussion and Implications
Within the limited scope of this study, the results demonstrated that
 
            vividness can heighten interest in a news report; the white
supremacists
 
          story was seen as more interesting when it was portrayed in a form
that
 
         emphasized its most vivid elements. The gay pride parade story,
however,
 
          was not made more interesting in its vivid rendition. The implication
is
 
          that vivid presentation can raise the interest level of a story that
is
 
         already quite dramatic, but cannot do so for a story that is less
 
   inherently compelling. It is also possible, of course, that our
 
 manipulation of vivid/pallid for the gay pride story was not strong enough
 
          to demonstrate differences in the ANOVA comparison.
For both stories, there were no differences between vivid and pallid
 
           versions in how newsworthy they were perceived to be. This suggests
that
 
          perception of newsworthiness may be a function of a story's substance
and
 
          may not be influenced by the form of portrayal. In other words, when a
 
        story is newsworthy on its own merits, emphasizing the vivid aspects may
 
          not enhance the perception of its value as news.
A somewhat surprising finding concerned the recall variable. We had
 
          predicted that vivid portrayal would increase a viewer's ability to
 
     remember facts about a story. However, the vivid versions were recalled no
 
          better than the pallid. Even more surprisingly, while interest and
 
    newsworthiness were significantly higher across both versions of the white
 
          supremacists story compared to the gay pride report, recall was
 
 significantly lower.
A possible explanation is that viewers may get so caught up in the
 
    emotionality and drama of a highly vivid news portrayal that they are
 
       distracted from the story's informational content. This finding is
 
    consistent with research in psychology which argues that emotional arousal
 
          causes a focusing of attention on the vivid and, therefore,
inattention to
 
          peripheral details (e.g., Bruner, Matter, & Papanek, 1955;
Easterbrook,
 
         1959; Loftus, 1982; Mandler, 1975).
We also had expected a fairly robust relationship among the dependent
 
            measures, i.e., that a story perceived to be interesting would be
 
   considered newsworthy as well, and that recall would be correlated. While
 
          the Pearson correlation coefficients revealed that interest and
 
 newsworthiness  were indeed strongly associated, the relationship of recall
 to both was weak. We can surmise, therefore, that a viewer may perceive a
 
          news story as both interesting and newsworthy, yet those two factors
do not
 necessarily stimulate the recall of story details.
This experiment was designed to investigate how vivid versus pallid
 
          portrayals in television news affected cognitive information
processing.
 
          Overall, the results support a conclusion that the vividness effect is
 
        elusive if not illusory. We challenge, therefore, the pervasive belief
by
 
          TV news practitioners in the power of vividness to explain events and
 
       issues. To the contrary, as the findings on recall suggest, vivid
 
   portrayals may actually interfere with the imparting of useful information.
Professional news values traditionally have had the impact of sifting out
 
               and separating the vivid from the pallid. Television often covers
events
 
          based on the potential for "good" visuals while ignoring stories that
 
       involve "talking heads." More than thirty years ago Boorstin (1961) noted
 
          that many "colorful" news stories were the outcome of "pseudo-events"
 
       staged for the express purpose of gaining media attention. The oft-cited
 
          deficiencies of television news D that it is superficial,
sensationalistic,
 obsessed with conflict and violence D to some degree stem from the
 
     fixation on the vivid.
As noted previously, Iyengar and Kinder observed that viewers may "miss the
 general point" when exposed to vivid portrayals. What is more disturbing
 
               is that TV journalists also may be "missing the point" while
pursuing
 
       vividness in stories. What is vivid is not necessarily what is important,
 
          and the element of vividness should be seen as only one measure D an
 
      inexact one at that D of a story's worth. By primarily attending to the
 
         vivid, reporters and producers may produce "good television" but
neglect a
 
          story's real significance.
 
__________ Notes
 
 [1]
 Three television journalists and a communications schola
r judged
 
   independently and unanimously that the two
 stories fit the vividness
 
      "criteria." Also, the fo
ur judges were unanimous in rating the white
 
      suprem
acists story as "highly" vivid, and the gay pride story as "low t
o
 
          moderately" vivid.
 
[2]  Pre-test measures on
 the subjects demonstrated near-perfect
 
  "between-gr
oups" comparability on such measures as age, education, family
 
 
          income level, political ideology, and opinions about
both mainstream and
 
          deviant political and social gr
oups.
 
 
 
 
References
 
 
 
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        effect. Psychological Bulletin, 98 (2), 155-181.

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