TY - JOUR
T1 - Does product placement change television viewers' social behavior?
AU - Paluck, Elizabeth Levy
AU - Lagunes, Paul
AU - Green, Donald P.
AU - Vavreck, Lynn
AU - Peer, Limor
AU - Gomila, Robin
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are indebted to our network partners, who made this experiment possible but bear no responsibility for the conclusions we draw. Special thanks go to the collaborating network and to its scriptwriters, who wove the messages into their plotlines of their stories, and those who helped to furnish our time series data: Phil Goff and the Center for Police Leadership and Equity (city police department data on drunk driving), Eitan Hersh (voter registration), BB&T Bank (bank account openings in branches with and without Hispanic consumer bases), Lilia Santiago and the Hispanic Scholarship Fund (Scholarship website data), Heather Geffen at Experian marketing services, and David Parker and Rock the Vote (website data). Izzy Gainsburg participated in the data management. Susanne Baltes assisted with manuscript preparation and feedback. Peter Aronow, the Paluck lab, Seth Green, Lindsay Dolan, and Alex Coppock provided feedback. Funding for this study came from the Institution for Social and Policy Studies at Yale University and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Paluck et al.
PY - 2015/9/23
Y1 - 2015/9/23
N2 - To what extent are television viewers affected by the behaviors and decisions they see modeled by characters in television soap operas? Collaborating with scriptwriters for three prime-time nationally-broadcast Spanish-language telenovelas, we embedded scenes about topics such as drunk driving or saving money at randomly assigned periods during the broadcast season. Outcomes were measured unobtrusively by aggregate city- and nation-wide time series, such as the number of Hispanic motorists arrested daily for drunk driving or the number of accounts opened in banks located in Hispanic neighborhoods. Results indicate that while two of the treatment effects are statistically significant, none are substantively large or long-lasting. Actions that could be taken during the immediate viewing session, like online searching, and those that were relatively more integrated into the telenovela storyline, specifically reducing cholesterol, were briefly affected, but not behaviors requiring sustained efforts, like opening a bank account or registering to vote.
AB - To what extent are television viewers affected by the behaviors and decisions they see modeled by characters in television soap operas? Collaborating with scriptwriters for three prime-time nationally-broadcast Spanish-language telenovelas, we embedded scenes about topics such as drunk driving or saving money at randomly assigned periods during the broadcast season. Outcomes were measured unobtrusively by aggregate city- and nation-wide time series, such as the number of Hispanic motorists arrested daily for drunk driving or the number of accounts opened in banks located in Hispanic neighborhoods. Results indicate that while two of the treatment effects are statistically significant, none are substantively large or long-lasting. Actions that could be taken during the immediate viewing session, like online searching, and those that were relatively more integrated into the telenovela storyline, specifically reducing cholesterol, were briefly affected, but not behaviors requiring sustained efforts, like opening a bank account or registering to vote.
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U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0138610
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0138610
M3 - Article
C2 - 26398217
AN - SCOPUS:84946944061
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 10
JO - PLoS One
JF - PLoS One
IS - 9
M1 - e0138610
ER -