Title of article
Epistemic motives moderate the effect of metaphoric framing on attitudes
Author/Authors
Landau، نويسنده , , Mark J. and Keefer، نويسنده , , Lucas A. and Rothschild، نويسنده , , Zachary K.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
14
From page
125
To page
138
Abstract
People frequently encounter messages framing abstract sociopolitical issues (e.g., drug law enforcement) metaphorically in terms of superficially unrelated, more concrete concepts (e.g., military combat). These metaphoric framings are not mere figures of speech; instead, they prompt observers to interpret the target issue using their knowledge of the concrete concept, despite their surface differences. In this paper we examine how this effect is moderated by observersʹ motivation to think about the target issue. Integrating conceptual metaphor and lay epistemology theories, we propose that metaphor can satisfy three epistemic motives: to be certain, consistent, and accurate. Studies 1a–b provide preliminary evidence that participants exposed to a metaphoric framing transfer knowledge of a concrete concept (vehicle operation) to interpret a target issue (system failure). Studies 2 to 4 show that this effect holds only when the metaphoric framing serves an epistemic motive. Findings illuminate when and why people rely on metaphor to think.
Keywords
Conceptual metaphor theory , Lay epistemology theory , social cognition , persuasion , Political attitudes
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1961516
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