The neuroscience of persuasion: A review with an emphasis on issues and opportunities

ABSTRACT Persuasion, a prevalent form of social influence in humans, refers to an active attempt to change a person’s attitudes, beliefs, or behavior. There is a growing literature on the neural correlates of persuasion. As is often the case in an emerging literature, however, there are a number of questions, concerns, and alternative interpretations that can be raised about the research and interpretations. We provide a critical review of the research, noting potential problems and issues that warrant attention to move the field forward. Among the recommendations are greater integration of neuroimaging approaches with existing behavioral theories and methods on the information processes (cognitive and affective) underlying persuasion, and moving beyond solely correlative approaches for specifying underlying neural mechanisms. Work in this area has the potential to contribute to our understanding of brain–behavior relationships as well as to advance our understanding of persuasion and social influence more generally.

[1]  R. Perloff Attitudes , 2020, The Dynamics of Persuasion.

[2]  Matthew D. Lieberman,et al.  The mere green effect: An fMRI study of pro-environmental advertisements , 2017, Social neuroscience.

[3]  Matthew D. Lieberman,et al.  Modulating the neural bases of persuasion: why/how, gain/loss, and users/non-users , 2016, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[4]  Francis Tuerlinckx,et al.  Increasing Transparency Through a Multiverse Analysis , 2016, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

[5]  James F. Thrasher,et al.  Neural response to pictorial health warning labels can predict smoking behavioral change , 2016, Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience.

[6]  Luke J. Chang,et al.  Large-Scale Meta-Analysis of Human Medial Frontal Cortex Reveals Tripartite Functional Organization , 2016, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[7]  William A. Cunningham,et al.  Journal of Experimental Psychology : General Neural Dissociations in Attitude Strength : Distinct Regions of Cingulate Cortex Track Ambivalence and Certainty , 2016 .

[8]  Steven Tompson,et al.  Functional brain imaging predicts public health campaign success. , 2016, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[9]  Alexander J. Rothman,et al.  The impact of changing attitudes, norms, and self-efficacy on health-related intentions and behavior: A meta-analysis. , 2015, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[10]  A. Thornton,et al.  Counting conformity: evaluating the units of information in frequency-dependent social learning , 2015, Animal Behaviour.

[11]  Christopher J. Carpenter,et al.  A Meta-Analysis of the ELM's Argument Quality × Processing Type Predictions , 2015 .

[12]  Emily B. Falk,et al.  Brain Activity in Self- and Value-Related Regions in Response to Online Antismoking Messages Predicts Behavior Change , 2015, J. Media Psychol. Theor. Methods Appl..

[13]  Maxim Milyavsky,et al.  The rocky road from attitudes to behaviors: Charting the goal systemic course of actions. , 2015, Psychological review.

[14]  Emily B. Falk,et al.  Self-affirmation alters the brain’s response to health messages and subsequent behavior change , 2015, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[15]  James F. Thrasher,et al.  Neural biomarkers for assessing different types of imagery in pictorial health warning labels for cigarette packaging: a cross-sectional study , 2014, BMJ Open.

[16]  Robert P. Spunt,et al.  Validating the Why/How contrast for functional MRI studies of Theory of Mind , 2014, NeuroImage.

[17]  Richard E. Petty,et al.  Wanting other attitudes: Actual–desired attitude discrepancies predict feelings of ambivalence and ambivalence consequences , 2014 .

[18]  G. Francis Replication, statistical consistency, and publication bias. , 2013 .

[19]  Joseph W. Kable,et al.  The valuation system: A coordinate-based meta-analysis of BOLD fMRI experiments examining neural correlates of subjective value , 2013, NeuroImage.

[20]  Angus W. MacDonald,et al.  Affective and Executive Network Processing Associated with Persuasive Antidrug Messages , 2013, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[21]  K. Lynch,et al.  Content Matters: Neuroimaging Investigation of Brain and Behavioral Impact of Televised Anti-Tobacco Public Service Announcements , 2013, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[22]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Power failure: why small sample size undermines the reliability of neuroscience , 2013, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[23]  JamesW. Lewis,et al.  Beyond human intentions and emotions , 2013, Front. Hum. Neurosci..

[24]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  Recommendations for Increasing Replicability in Psychology † , 2013 .

[25]  R. Cabeza,et al.  Frontal Lobes and Aging , 2013 .

[26]  Norbou Buchler,et al.  Where is ELSA? The early to late shift in aging. , 2012, Cerebral cortex.

[27]  Mark Snyder,et al.  The Oxford Handbook of Personality and Social Psychology , 2012 .

[28]  C. Grady The cognitive neuroscience of ageing , 2012, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[29]  Emily B. Falk,et al.  From Neural Responses to Population Behavior , 2012, Psychological science.

[30]  K. Laland,et al.  Social information, conformity and the opportunity costs paid by foraging fish , 2012, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.

[31]  R. Petty,et al.  10. Knowing our attitudes and how to change them , 2012 .

[32]  R. Poldrack Inferring Mental States from Neuroimaging Data: From Reverse Inference to Large-Scale Decoding , 2011, Neuron.

[33]  Elliot T. Berkman,et al.  Neural activity during health messaging predicts reductions in smoking above and beyond self-report. , 2011, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[34]  H. Chua,et al.  Self-related neural response to tailored smoking-cessation messages predicts quitting , 2011, Nature Neuroscience.

[35]  R. Cabeza,et al.  Frontal lobes and aging : Deterioration and Compensation , 2011 .

[36]  Emily B. Falk,et al.  The Neural Correlates of Persuasion: A Common Network across Cultures and Media , 2010, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[37]  Scott T. Grafton,et al.  Understanding Actions of Others: The Electrodynamics of the Left and Right Hemispheres. A High-Density EEG Neuroimaging Study , 2010, PloS one.

[38]  R. N. Spreng,et al.  Reliable differences in brain activity between young and old adults: A quantitative meta-analysis across multiple cognitive domains , 2010, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.

[39]  Emily B. Falk,et al.  Predicting Persuasion-Induced Behavior Change from the Brain , 2010, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[40]  R. Petty,et al.  18. Attitude structure and change: implications for implicit measures , 2010 .

[41]  R. Andersen,et al.  Intention, Action Planning, and Decision Making in Parietal-Frontal Circuits , 2009, Neuron.

[42]  Guillén Fernández,et al.  Celebrities and Shoes on the Female Brain: The Neural Correlates of Product Evaluation in the Context of Fame , 2009 .

[43]  I. Ajzen,et al.  Predicting and Changing Behavior: The Reasoned Action Approach , 2009 .

[44]  Stephanie Ortigue,et al.  Right hemisphere dominance for understanding the intentions of others: evidence from a split-brain patient , 2009, BMJ Case Reports.

[45]  Junko Kato,et al.  Neural Correlates of Attitude Change Following Positive and Negative Advertisements , 2009, Front. Behav. Neurosci..

[46]  M. Raichle A brief history of human brain mapping , 2009, Trends in Neurosciences.

[47]  Israel Liberzon,et al.  Neural Correlates of Message Tailoring and Self-Relatedness in Smoking Cessation Programming , 2009, Biological Psychiatry.

[48]  S. Ortigue,et al.  Why is your spouse so predictable? Connecting mirror neuron system and self-expansion model of love. , 2008, Medical hypotheses.

[49]  Richard E Petty,et al.  The mere perception of elaboration creates attitude certainty: exploring the thoughtfulness heuristic. , 2008, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[50]  Guillén Fernández,et al.  Brain Mechanisms of Persuasion: How "Expert Power" Modulates Memory and Attitudes , 2008, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[51]  B. Galef,et al.  ‘Conformity’ in Norway rats? , 2008, Animal Behaviour.

[52]  M. Brass,et al.  Unconscious determinants of free decisions in the human brain , 2008, Nature Neuroscience.

[53]  Catherine A. Cole,et al.  The Orbitofrontal Cortex, Real‐World Decision Making, and Normal Aging , 2007, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[54]  Andrew Whiten,et al.  The evolution of animal ‘cultures’ and social intelligence , 2007, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[55]  G. Maio,et al.  The Epistemic-Teleologic Model of Deliberate Self-Persuasion , 2007, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

[56]  J. Platt Strong Inference , 2007 .

[57]  Multiple Indicator Approach , 2006 .

[58]  Kenneth F. Valyear,et al.  Human parietal cortex in action , 2006, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.

[59]  R. Poldrack Can cognitive processes be inferred from neuroimaging data? , 2006, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[60]  W. Crano,et al.  Attitudes and persuasion. , 2006, Annual review of psychology.

[61]  Kevin N. Laland,et al.  The role of conformity in foraging when personal and social information conflict , 2004 .

[62]  T. Salthouse,et al.  Executive functioning as a potential mediator of age-related cognitive decline in normal adults. , 2003, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[63]  Scott B. MacKenzie,et al.  Common method biases in behavioral research: a critical review of the literature and recommended remedies. , 2003, The Journal of applied psychology.

[64]  T. Seeley,et al.  Deciding on a new home: how do honeybees agree? , 2002, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.

[65]  R. Andersen,et al.  Intentional maps in posterior parietal cortex. , 2002, Annual review of neuroscience.

[66]  Hans Hoeken,et al.  Anecdotal, Statistical, and Causal Evidence: Their Perceived and Actual Persuasiveness , 2001 .

[67]  Shelly Chaiken,et al.  CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE 5 Do Attitudes Affect Memory? Tests of the Congeniality Hypothesis , 2022 .

[68]  J. Yager,et al.  Stroke in Children and Young Adults , 1995 .

[69]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  Electrophysiological Evidence of Implicit and Explicit Categorization Processes , 2000 .

[70]  W. Wood Attitude change: persuasion and social influence. , 2000, Annual review of psychology.

[71]  A. Kruglanski,et al.  Persuasion by a Single Route: A View From the Unimodel , 1999 .

[72]  M. Raichle Behind the scenes of functional brain imaging: a historical and physiological perspective. , 1998, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[73]  Duane T. Wegener,et al.  Attitude change: Multiple roles for persuasion variables. , 1998 .

[74]  R. West,et al.  An application of prefrontal cortex function theory to cognitive aging. , 1996, Psychological bulletin.

[75]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  Brain imaging and cognitive neuroscience. Toward strong inference in attributing function to structure. , 1996, The American psychologist.

[76]  R. Petty,et al.  Attitude strength : antecedents and consequences , 1995 .

[77]  Russell H. Fazio,et al.  Attitudes as object-evaluation associations: Determinants, consequences, and correlates of attitude accessibility. , 1995 .

[78]  D. Mccloskey,et al.  One Quarter of GDP Is Persuasion , 1995 .

[79]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  Relationship between attitudes and evaluative space: A critical review, with emphasis on the separability of positive and negative substrates. , 1994 .

[80]  Daniel Kahneman,et al.  Predicting a changing taste: Do people know what they will like? , 1992 .

[81]  John T. Cacioppo,et al.  Rudimentary determinants of attitudes: Classical conditioning is more effective when prior knowledge about the attitude stimulus is low than high , 1992 .

[82]  M. R. Leippe,et al.  The Psychology of Attitude Change and Social Influence , 1991 .

[83]  John T. Cacioppo,et al.  Involvement and Persuasion: Tradition Versus Integration , 1990 .

[84]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  Inferring psychological significance from physiological signals. , 1990, The American psychologist.

[85]  John T. Cacioppo,et al.  Effects of message Repetition on Argument Processing, Recall, and Persuasion , 1989 .

[86]  Franziska Marquart,et al.  Communication and persuasion : central and peripheral routes to attitude change , 1988 .

[87]  Rebecca L. Collins,et al.  The vividness effect: Elusive or illusory? , 1988 .

[88]  John T. Cacioppo,et al.  The Elaboration Likelihood Model of Persuasion , 1986, Advances in Experimental Social Psychology.

[89]  Marcia K. Johnson,et al.  Do alcoholic Korsakoff's syndrome patients acquire affective reactions? , 1985, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[90]  Russell H. Fazio,et al.  Spontaneous Attitude Formation , 1984 .

[91]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  The Effects of Involvement on Responses to Argument Quantity and Quality: Central and Peripheral Routes to Persuasion , 1984 .

[92]  M. Heesacker,et al.  Field dependence and attitude change: Source credibility can alter persuasion by affecting message-relevant thinking , 1983 .

[93]  Fred Luthans,et al.  Social Desirability Response Effects: Three Alternative Models , 1983 .

[94]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  Personal involvement as a determinant of argument based persuasion , 1981 .

[95]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  Attitudes and Persuasion: Classic and Contemporary Approaches , 1981 .

[96]  S. Chaiken Heuristic versus systematic information processing and the use of source versus message cues in persuasion. , 1980 .

[97]  Timothy D. Wilson,et al.  Telling more than we can know: Verbal reports on mental processes. , 1977 .

[98]  A. Greenwald,et al.  Is it time to lay the sleeper effect to rest , 1974 .

[99]  N. Lemon Attitudes and their measurement. , 1973 .

[100]  J. Platt Strong Inference: Certain systematic methods of scientific thinking may produce much more rapid progress than others. , 1964, Science.

[101]  S. Cook,et al.  A MULTIPLE-INDICATOR APPROACH TO ATTITUDE MEASUREMENT. , 1964, Psychological bulletin.

[102]  Carl I. Hovland,et al.  Reconciling conflicting results derived from experimental and survey studies of attitude change. , 1959 .

[103]  A. A. Lumsdaine Communication and persuasion , 1954 .

[104]  A. A. Lumsdaine,et al.  Experiments On Mass Communication , 1949 .

[105]  E. Miller Handbook of Social Psychology , 1946, Mental Health.

[106]  A. Tokovinin,et al.  Experiments with MASS , 2022 .