Toward an Implicit Cognition Account of Attribute Agenda Setting

Authors

  • Florian Arendt Department of Communication Science and Media Research, University of Munich (LMU)
  • Cornelia Brantner Department of Communication, University of Vienna

Keywords:

attribute agenda setting, implicit, cognition, attitudes, European Union, Affect Misattribution Procedure, AMP

Abstract

 We propose an implicit cognition account of attribute agenda setting (AAS). We draw a distinction between implicit AAS, which conceptualizes media effects on automatically activated object-attribute associations, and explicit AAS, which deals with their overt expression. Previous research has relied almost exclusively on explicit AAS. This is unfortunate, because people must have the motivation and the ability to report inner mental associations. We investigated AAS in the context of the 2014 European Union parliamentary elections using a content analysis and a two-wave panel survey. Exposure to the mediated attribute agenda elicited implicit AAS effects, but no impact on the explicit dimension could be discerned. Only by additionally taking into account implicit cognition were we able to reveal substantial AAS effects.

Author Biographies

Florian Arendt, Department of Communication Science and Media Research, University of Munich (LMU)

Ph.D. (Communication)Akademischer Rat (post-doc level, similar to an Assistant Professor in the US),+49 89 2180-9413Department of Communication Science and Media Research, University of Munich (LMU)

Cornelia Brantner, Department of Communication, University of Vienna

Ph.D. (Communication)Post-doctoral researcher,+43-1-4277-493 21Department of Communication, University of Vienna

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Published

2015-08-13

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Section

Articles