articleCommunication MonographsFeb 25, 2016Closed access

Meta-analytic evidence for the persuasive effect of narratives on beliefs, attitudes, intentions, and behaviors

Pennsylvania State University

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Abstract

Although narratives are often credited with the capacity to change opinions, empirical tests of this prediction have produced mixed results. To provide a more precise test of narrative's effect on beliefs, attitudes, intentions, and behaviors, we performed meta-analyses on studies that evaluated narrative's persuasive influence on these outcomes. Results suggested positive relationships between exposure to a narrative and narrative-consistent beliefs (k = 37; N = 7,376; r = .17), attitudes (k = 40; N = 7,132; r = .19), intentions (k = 28; N = 5,211; r = .17), and behaviors (k = 5; N = 978; r = .23). Moderator analyses on the effect of fictionality yielded mixed results. Neither medium of presentation nor…

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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Persuasion
  • Narrative
  • Moderation
  • Psychology
  • Social psychology
  • Test (biology)
  • Developmental psychology
  • Literature
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