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Narratives, information and manifestations of resistance to persuasion in online discussions of HPV vaccination

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Narratives, information and manifestations of resistance to persuasion in online discussions of HPV vaccination. / Semino, Elena; Coltman-Patel, Tara; Dance, William et al.
In: Health Communication, 21.09.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Semino E, Coltman-Patel T, Dance W, Deignan A, Demjen Z, Hardaker C et al. Narratives, information and manifestations of resistance to persuasion in online discussions of HPV vaccination. Health Communication. 2023 Sept 21. Epub 2023 Sept 21. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2023.2257428

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@article{a0f906dc8bf04adeb606caadf5dd50f0,
title = "Narratives, information and manifestations of resistance to persuasion in online discussions of HPV vaccination",
abstract = "There are both theoretical accounts and empirical evidence for the fact that, in health communication, narratives (story telling) may have a persuasive advantage when compared with information (the provision of facts). The dominant explanation for this potential advantage is that narratives inhibit people{\textquoteright}s resistance to persuasion, particularly in the form of counterarguing. Evidence in this area to date has most often been gathered through lab or field experiments. In the current study we took a novel approach, gathering our data from naturally-occurring, non-experimental and organically evolving online interactions about vaccinations. We focus on five threads from the parenting forum Mumsnet Talk that centred on indecision about the HPV vaccination. Our analysis revealed narratives and information were used by posters in similar quantities as a means of providing vaccination-related advice. We also found similar frequencies of direct engagement with both narratives and information. However, our findings showed that narratives resulted in a significantly higher proportion of posts exhibiting supportive engagement, whereas information resulted in posts exhibiting a significantly higher proportion of challenges, including counterarguing and other manifestations of posters{\textquoteright} resistance to persuasion. The proportions of supportive versus challenging engagement also varied depending on the topic and vaccine stance of narratives. Notwithstanding contextual explanations for these patterns, our findings, based on this original approach of using naturalistic data, provide a novel kind of evidence for the potential of narratives to inhibit counterarguing in authentic health-related discourse.",
author = "Elena Semino and Tara Coltman-Patel and William Dance and Alice Deignan and Zsofia Demjen and Claire Hardaker and Alison Mackey",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
day = "21",
doi = "10.1080/10410236.2023.2257428",
language = "English",
journal = "Health Communication",
issn = "1532-7027",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Narratives, information and manifestations of resistance to persuasion in online discussions of HPV vaccination

AU - Semino, Elena

AU - Coltman-Patel, Tara

AU - Dance, William

AU - Deignan, Alice

AU - Demjen, Zsofia

AU - Hardaker, Claire

AU - Mackey, Alison

PY - 2023/9/21

Y1 - 2023/9/21

N2 - There are both theoretical accounts and empirical evidence for the fact that, in health communication, narratives (story telling) may have a persuasive advantage when compared with information (the provision of facts). The dominant explanation for this potential advantage is that narratives inhibit people’s resistance to persuasion, particularly in the form of counterarguing. Evidence in this area to date has most often been gathered through lab or field experiments. In the current study we took a novel approach, gathering our data from naturally-occurring, non-experimental and organically evolving online interactions about vaccinations. We focus on five threads from the parenting forum Mumsnet Talk that centred on indecision about the HPV vaccination. Our analysis revealed narratives and information were used by posters in similar quantities as a means of providing vaccination-related advice. We also found similar frequencies of direct engagement with both narratives and information. However, our findings showed that narratives resulted in a significantly higher proportion of posts exhibiting supportive engagement, whereas information resulted in posts exhibiting a significantly higher proportion of challenges, including counterarguing and other manifestations of posters’ resistance to persuasion. The proportions of supportive versus challenging engagement also varied depending on the topic and vaccine stance of narratives. Notwithstanding contextual explanations for these patterns, our findings, based on this original approach of using naturalistic data, provide a novel kind of evidence for the potential of narratives to inhibit counterarguing in authentic health-related discourse.

AB - There are both theoretical accounts and empirical evidence for the fact that, in health communication, narratives (story telling) may have a persuasive advantage when compared with information (the provision of facts). The dominant explanation for this potential advantage is that narratives inhibit people’s resistance to persuasion, particularly in the form of counterarguing. Evidence in this area to date has most often been gathered through lab or field experiments. In the current study we took a novel approach, gathering our data from naturally-occurring, non-experimental and organically evolving online interactions about vaccinations. We focus on five threads from the parenting forum Mumsnet Talk that centred on indecision about the HPV vaccination. Our analysis revealed narratives and information were used by posters in similar quantities as a means of providing vaccination-related advice. We also found similar frequencies of direct engagement with both narratives and information. However, our findings showed that narratives resulted in a significantly higher proportion of posts exhibiting supportive engagement, whereas information resulted in posts exhibiting a significantly higher proportion of challenges, including counterarguing and other manifestations of posters’ resistance to persuasion. The proportions of supportive versus challenging engagement also varied depending on the topic and vaccine stance of narratives. Notwithstanding contextual explanations for these patterns, our findings, based on this original approach of using naturalistic data, provide a novel kind of evidence for the potential of narratives to inhibit counterarguing in authentic health-related discourse.

U2 - 10.1080/10410236.2023.2257428

DO - 10.1080/10410236.2023.2257428

M3 - Journal article

JO - Health Communication

JF - Health Communication

SN - 1532-7027

ER -