Cognitive effects of political microtargeting

Autor(en)
Selina Noetzel, Alice Binder, Jörg Matthes
Abstrakt

Political microtargeting (PMT) is theorized to impact citizens’ attention and cognitive processes required for coping with persuasive messages. The empirical basis for these assumptions is limited. This study compares accurate to inaccurate microtargeting by manipulating issue fit and political fit (i.e. the congruence between the advertised issue and political party with citizens’ preferences). It investigates their impact on visual attention (i.e. first pass dwell time, total dwell time, ambient/focal viewing), cognitive schema activation (i.e. advertising schema, targeting schema), and conceptual persuasion knowledge activation (i.e. targeting awareness, advertising awareness). We conducted a 2 × 2 mixed-design experiment (N = 193) combining implicit (i.e. eye-tracking, lexical decision task) and explicit measures (i.e. self-reports). Multi-level analysis results suggest that issue and political fit increased first pass dwell time, but only political fit increased total dwell time. Advertising and targeting schema were activated irrespective of the experimental conditions. Issue and political fit increased targeting awareness, and their interaction increased advertising awareness. In other words, insights suggest that (1) PMT fulfills its attention-grabbing potential most when employed by a favored party, (2) individuals activate baseline cognitive resources upon exposure to PMT irrespective of the targeting accuracy but (3) deeper cognitive processing is activated with increasing PMT accuracy.

Organisation(en)
Institut für Publizistik- und Kommunikationswissenschaft
Externe Organisation(en)
Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt
Journal
Media Psychology
ISSN
1521-3269
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/15213269.2025.2527612
Publikationsdatum
07-2025
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ÖFOS 2012
508007 Kommunikationswissenschaft
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Social Psychology, Communication, Applied Psychology
Link zum Portal
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/de/publications/ca0f3525-900c-433a-a88c-c95083eb2b0b