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      Analysis of the interactive meaning of journalistic images of the human papillomavirus vaccine and the perceptions of female undergraduate students

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          Abstract

          Objectives

          This paper focuses on the underlying mechanisms of women’s perceptions of persuasive visual health information.

          Methods

          In the image viewing process, a separation between the image producer and the image viewer occurs, and the connection between the two is fractured. This mixed method research included modal discourse analysis (coding based on visual grammar theory), an eye tracking experiment, a questionnaire survey, and in-depth semi-structured interviews. The interactive meanings of journalistic images related to the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine were identified through four sets of codes. In addition, the perceptions of female viewers were analyzed.

          Results

          In the first set of stimuli, i.e., the infographic, the female participants focused most of their attention on information about the nine-valent HPV vaccine. An analysis of the interactive meaning of two sets of journalistic pictures, i.e., fictional pictures and nonfictional pictures, indicated that the image producers did not implement useful viewer involvement strategies to persuade viewers. Furthermore, female viewers focused their attention on the “similar other” during the viewing process, gazing at the patient the longest as the primary area of interest (AOI).

          Conclusions

          The study indicates that the current persuasive visual information about the HPV vaccine needs further improvement due to the high demand for information about HPV from the Chinese female audience.

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          Most cited references4

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          Validating measures of scanned information exposure in the context of cancer prevention and screening behaviors.

          Individuals may obtain health information, particularly from the mass media, without engaging in purposeful information searches (called scanning). This study used the Seeking and Scanning Behavior Survey of the General Population (SSBG), a nationally representative survey of adults aged 40-70 years (n = 2,489), to validate measures of scanned information exposure about cancer prevention and screening behaviors. Scanned exposure measures concerning specific behaviors (exercise; fruit and vegetable consumption; dieting; and mammogram, prostate-specific antigen (PSA) text, and colonoscopy screening) have good face validity and are convergent across behaviors (mean correlation across six preventive behaviors = 0.50, sd = 0.09). These measures can be discriminated from measures of general media exposure (mean r = 0.23, sd = 0.02) and seeking exposure for the same behaviors (mean r = 0.25, sd = 0.06). Scanned information exposure was associated with weekly volume of newspaper coverage for two of six behaviors, providing additional evidence of nomological validity. Scanned information exposure at the first round of measurement was associated with identical exposure 1 year later (mean r = .41, sd = .04). Scanned exposure measures also were significantly associated with five of the six preventive behaviors. These results provide evidence that scanned information exposure measures are valid indicators of the construct. Researchers might consider their use to capture scanned media influence on cognitions and behaviors.
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            A content analysis of visual cancer information: prevalence and use of photographs and illustrations in printed health materials.

            Andy King (2015)
            Researchers and practitioners have an increasing interest in visual components of health information and health communication messages. This study contributes to this evolving body of research by providing an account of the visual images and information featured in printed cancer communication materials. Using content analysis, 147 pamphlets and 858 images were examined to determine how frequently images are used in printed materials, what types of images are used, what information is conveyed visually, and whether or not current recommendations for the inclusion of visual content were being followed. Although visual messages were found to be common in printed health materials, existing recommendations about the inclusion of visual content were only partially followed. Results are discussed in terms of how relevant theoretical frameworks in the areas of behavior change and visual persuasion seem to be used in these materials, as well as how more theory-oriented research is necessary in visual messaging efforts.
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              A survey of college students’ attitude towards HPV and its preventive vaccine in chengdu

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Int J Nurs Sci
                Int J Nurs Sci
                International Journal of Nursing Sciences
                Chinese Nursing Association
                2096-6296
                2352-0132
                09 July 2020
                10 September 2020
                09 July 2020
                : 7
                : Suppl 1
                : S61-S66
                Affiliations
                [a ]School of Languages and Communication studies, Beijing Jiaotong University, Beijing, China
                [b ]School of Journalism and Communication, Peking University, Beijing, China
                [c ]School of New Media, Peking University, Beijing, China
                Author notes
                Article
                S2352-0132(20)30097-1
                10.1016/j.ijnss.2020.07.004
                7501498
                fad1121f-0e3e-4f1f-8ed2-23f573c355a4
                © 2020 The authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 29 March 2020
                : 6 July 2020
                Categories
                Special Issue: Medicine, Humanity and Media

                attention,eye tracking,journalistic image;,medical decision making,papillomavirus vaccines,visual grammar

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