The effect of processing fluency on impressions of familiarity and liking.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_D09AC78ACACB
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The effect of processing fluency on impressions of familiarity and liking.
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition
Author(s)
Westerman D.L., Lanska M., Olds J.M.
ISSN
1939-1285
0278-7393
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2015
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
41
Number
2
Pages
426-438
Language
english
Abstract
Processing fluency has been shown to have wide-ranging effects on disparate evaluative judgments, including judgments of liking and familiarity. One account of such effects is the hedonic marking hypothesis (Winkielman, Schwarz, Fazendeiro, & Reber, 2003), which posits that fluency is directly linked to affective preferences via a positive emotional reaction that is triggered by fluent processing. The evidence supporting this account suggests that fluency may exert a stronger influence on affective judgments than other judgments. The current study compared the effect of fluency on judgments of familiarity and liking. Contrary to predictions, liking judgments were not more strongly affected by fluency than familiarity judgments. In fact, the balance of the results showed the opposite pattern. When the type of judgment was manipulated between subjects (Experiment 1) or in a blocked design (Experiment 2), fluency had comparable effects on impressions of liking and familiarity. But when the type of judgment was manipulated in a mixed design (Experiments 3 and 6), or when both familiarity and liking judgments were given for all items (Experiments 4 and 5), only familiarity judgments were affected by the fluency manipulation. The dominance of the familiarity interpretation was found when fluency was manipulated artificially, via priming, and when inherent variations in fluency across the stimuli were considered. These results suggest that, within a given context, participants adopt a single interpretation for fluency, and the sense of familiarity that arises from fluent processing overshadows the sense of positivity, thus questioning aspects of the hedonic marking hypothesis.
Keywords
Linguistics and Language, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Language and Linguistics
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
10/11/2017 11:40
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:50
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