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Wiley InterScience

Journal of Communication

Journal of Communication

Volume 55 Issue 2, Pages 242 - 256

Published Online: 10 Jan 2006

© 2009 International Communication Association



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Third-Person Effects and the Environment: Social Distance, Social Desirability, and Presumed Behavior
Jakob D. Jensen 1 , Ryan J. Hurley 1
  1 Jakob D. Jensen and Ryan J. Hurley are doctoral candidates in the Department of Speech Communication at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
 Correspondence should be addressed to Jakob D. Jensen, Department of Speech Communication, 244 Lincoln Hall, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801; email: jdjensen@uiuc.edu.
Copyright 2005 by the Journal of Communication

ABSTRACT

Previous research has documented third-person effects (persons presuming that others will be more susceptible to media effects than they themselves are) and explored moderators such as social desirability (the effect reverses when the media effects are undesirable) and social distance (the effect increases as the social distance from the self increases). In a study of environmental news coverage, the authors observed the general third-person effect and the moderating role of social desirability; however, they also found that social distance affected presumed influence in complex ways reflecting varying perceptions of issue relevance for the comparison groups. A new variable, presumed behavior (the presumed effect of media coverage on others' behavior), was found to be independent of presumed influence and to offer improved prediction of perceivers' behavioral intentions.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1460-2466.2005.tb02670.x About DOI

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