Doubt Versus Trust: Framing Effects of the News About the 2018 Trump‒Kim Jong Un Summit in Singapore on American College Students

Authors

  • Chang Sup Park University at Albany, State University of New York
  • Barbara K. Kaye University of Tennessee Knoxville

Keywords:

framing effects, North Korea, denuclearization summit, need to evaluate

Abstract

This article examines the effects of trust versus doubt news frames during the 2018 denuclearization summit between the United States and North Korea in June 2018, an issue that is characterized by negative media coverage about North Korea and its leader Kim Jong Un. An experimental study conducted in 2018 at a public university in the United States found that participants (N = 297) showed a more negative attitude toward North Korea if they read an article framed as doubt compared with an article framed as trust. Exposure to the doubt-framed article was significantly related to participants’ strong support for maintaining sanctions against North Korea and weak support for deepening diplomatic ties with the country. The analysis also reveals that low “need to evaluate” individuals were more affected by the doubt-framed news about North Korea than the trust-framed news.

Author Biographies

Chang Sup Park, University at Albany, State University of New York

Assistant Professor at Department of Communication, University at Albany. 518-482-4886

Barbara K. Kaye, University of Tennessee Knoxville

Professor, School of Journalism & Electronic Media, University of Tennessee Knoxville

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Published

2020-07-15

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Section

Articles