Advancing Research on the Spread of Stigmatizing Beliefs With Insights From Rumor Transmission

The essay examined a commonly stated but rarely elaborated assumption in stigma theories: Stigma must be socialized to engender community-level marginalization and discrimination. Existing research has focused on intrapersonal processes and structural factors that promote stigma socialization, but much less is known about how interpersonal sharing messages that induce stigmatization (i.e., stigma appeals) contributes to the diffusion and adoption of stigma throughout a community. Drawing from theories and research on rumor transmission, the essay explored three questions: Why do people share stigma appeals with others; what do they say; and with whom do they share them? The essay highlighted directions for future research on interpersonal sharing of stigma appeals and provided a heuristic foundation for research into mechanisms through which stigma is created and becomes persistent.

[1]  Axel Gelfert Rumor , 2018, The Routledge Handbook of Applied Epistemology.

[2]  L. McGillis Hall,et al.  Public Understanding of the Role of Nurses During Ebola. , 2016, Journal of nursing scholarship : an official publication of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing.

[3]  Lu Tang,et al.  Representation of Autism in Leading Newspapers in China: A Content Analysis , 2015, Health communication.

[4]  Joseph N. Cappella,et al.  Selection and Transmission Processes for Information in the Emerging Media Environment: Psychological Motives and Message Characteristics , 2015, Media psychology.

[5]  Jonah A. Berger Word of mouth and interpersonal communication: A review and directions for future research , 2014 .

[6]  Rachel A. Smith Testing the Model of Stigma Communication with a Factorial Experiment in an Interpersonal Context , 2014, Communication studies.

[7]  Rachel A. Smith,et al.  Infectious Disease Stigmas: Maladaptive in Modern Society , 2014, Communication studies.

[8]  K. Brownell,et al.  Do media portrayals of obesity influence support for weight-related medical policy? , 2014, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[9]  M. Steiner,et al.  Pass the Popcorn: “Obesogenic” Behaviors and Stigma in Children’s Movies , 2013, Obesity.

[10]  Mary Bresnahan,et al.  Communicating Stigma About Body Size , 2013, Health communication.

[11]  P. Michaels,et al.  The Effects of News Stories on the Stigma of Mental Illness , 2013, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[12]  Rachel A. Smith An Experimental Test of Stigma Communication Content with a Hypothetical Infectious Disease Alert , 2012 .

[13]  Nicholas DiFonzo,et al.  Rumors About Cancer: Content, Sources, Coping, Transmission, and Belief , 2012, Journal of health communication.

[14]  Nicolas Rüsch,et al.  Challenging the public stigma of mental illness: a meta-analysis of outcome studies. , 2012, Psychiatric services.

[15]  M. Bresnahan,et al.  HIV/AIDS stigma in Chinese Internet forums: a content analysis approach , 2012 .

[16]  S. Gollust,et al.  Picturing obesity: analyzing the social epidemiology of obesity conveyed through US news media images. , 2012, Social science & medicine.

[17]  K. Brownell,et al.  Positive media portrayals of obese persons: impact on attitudes and image preferences. , 2012, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[18]  Chelsea A. Heuer,et al.  Obesity Stigma in Online News: A Visual Content Analysis , 2011, Journal of health communication.

[19]  Rachel A. Smith Stigma, Communication, and Health , 2011 .

[20]  R. Garrett Troubling Consequences of Online Political Rumoring , 2011 .

[21]  Chelsea A. Heuer,et al.  Obesity in the News: Do Photographic Images of Obese Persons Influence Antifat Attitudes? , 2011, Journal of health communication.

[22]  Brian E. Weeks,et al.  The Symbiosis of News Coverage and Aggregate Online Search Behavior: Obama, Rumors, and Presidential Politics , 2010 .

[23]  Allan J. Kimmel,et al.  Analysis of commercial rumors from the perspective of marketing managers: Rumor prevalence, effects, and control tactics , 2010 .

[24]  Annie Lang,et al.  Rethinking theoretical approaches to stigma: a Framework Integrating Normative Influences on Stigma (FINIS). , 2008, Social science & medicine.

[25]  Bruce G. Link,et al.  Stigma and prejudice: one animal or two? , 2008, Social science & medicine.

[26]  Tim Kurz,et al.  Cultural dynamics of stereotyping : Social network processes and the perpetuation of stereotypes , 2008 .

[27]  Elizabeth Behm-Morawitz,et al.  Exposure to Television Portrayals of Latinos: The Implications of Aversive Racism and Social Identity Theory , 2008 .

[28]  Rachel A. Smith,et al.  Language of the Lost: An Explication of Stigma Communication , 2007 .

[29]  Laura Eichelberger,et al.  SARS and New York's Chinatown: The politics of risk and blame during an epidemic of fear , 2007, Social Science & Medicine.

[30]  Rachel A. Smith Media Depictions of Health Topics: Challenge and Stigma Formats , 2007, Journal of health communication.

[31]  P. Bordia,et al.  Rumor, Gossip and Urban Legends , 2007 .

[32]  Adrian Kuhn Collective Behavior , 2007 .

[33]  P. Bordia,et al.  Rumor Psychology: Social and Organizational Approaches , 2006 .

[34]  G. Scambler Sociology, social structure and health-related stigma , 2006, Psychology, health & medicine.

[35]  Mark V. Pezzo,et al.  A Multilevel Analysis of Rumor Transmission: Effects of Anxiety and Belief in Two Field Experiments , 2006 .

[36]  Saundra K. Schneider Administrative Breakdowns in the Governmental Response to Hurricane Katrina , 2005 .

[37]  K. Rasinski,et al.  Newspaper stories as measures of structural stigma. , 2005, Psychiatric services.

[38]  Hyunyi Cho,et al.  Development and Validation of Value-, Outcome-, and Impression-Relevant Involvement Scales , 2005, Commun. Res..

[39]  R. Burt Structural Holes and Good Ideas1 , 2004, American Journal of Sociology.

[40]  Eric K. Foster Research on Gossip: Taxonomy, Methods, and Future Directions , 2004 .

[41]  Robin I. M. Dunbar Gossip in Evolutionary Perspective , 2004 .

[42]  I. Janssen,et al.  Associations between overweight and obesity with bullying behaviors in school-aged children. , 2004, Pediatrics.

[43]  J. Stadler Rumor, gossip and blame: implications for HIV/AIDS prevention in the South African lowveld. , 2003, AIDS education and prevention : official publication of the International Society for AIDS Education.

[44]  P. Aggleton,et al.  HIV and AIDS-related stigma and discrimination: a conceptual framework and implications for action. , 2003, Social science & medicine.

[45]  James Jay Carafano,et al.  Rumors of War , 2003 .

[46]  O. Wahl,et al.  Newspaper Coverage of Mental Illness: Is It Changing? , 2002 .

[47]  Prashant Bordia,et al.  Corporate rumor activity, belief and accuracy , 2002 .

[48]  S. Spencer,et al.  Contending with group image: The psychology of stereotype and social identity threat , 2002 .

[49]  Gina Lai,et al.  The tie effect on information dissemination: the spread of a commercial rumor in Hong Kong , 2002, Soc. Networks.

[50]  C. Heath,et al.  Interpersonal Relations and Group Processes Emotional Selection in Memes: the Case of Urban Legends , 2022 .

[51]  Rebecca A. Weldon An "Urban Legend" of Global Proportion: An Analysis of Nonfiction Accounts of the Ebola Virus , 2001, Journal of health communication.

[52]  Steven L. Neuberg,et al.  Why people stigmatize: Toward a biocultural framework. , 2000 .

[53]  T. Sche Being mentally ill: A sociological theory , 1999 .

[54]  E. Pinel,et al.  Stigma consciousness: the psychological legacy of social stereotypes. , 1999, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[55]  R. L. Rosnow,et al.  Rumor rest stops on the information highway: Transmission patterns in a computer-mediated rumor chain , 1998 .

[56]  Michael A. Kamins,et al.  Consumer Responses to Rumors: Good News, Bad News , 1997 .

[57]  G. D. Vos Tales, Rumors, and Gossip: Exploring Contemporary Folk Literature in Grades 7-12 , 1996 .

[58]  O. Wahl Media Madness: Public Images of Mental Illness , 1995 .

[59]  R. L. Rosnow,et al.  Reining in rumors , 1994 .

[60]  Patricia Turner,et al.  I Heard It Through the Grapevine: Rumor in African-American Culture , 1993 .

[61]  K. Witte Putting the fear back into fear appeals: The extended parallel process model , 1992 .

[62]  S. Anthony The Influence of Personal Characteristics on Rumor Knowledge and Transmission Among the Deaf , 1992, American annals of the deaf.

[63]  S. Petronio Communication Boundary Management: A Theoretical Model of Managing Disclosure of Private Information Between Marital Couples , 1991 .

[64]  Allan J. Kimmel,et al.  Psychological Correlates of the Transmission and Acceptance of Rumors About AIDS1 , 1991 .

[65]  R. L. Rosnow Inside rumor: A personal journey. , 1991 .

[66]  N. Schwarz Feelings as information: Informational and motivational functions of affective states. , 1990 .

[67]  Blair T. Johnson,et al.  Effects of involvement on persuasion: a meta-analysis , 1989 .

[68]  N. Signorielli The stigma of mental illness on television , 1989 .

[69]  Bruce G. Link,et al.  A modified labeling theory approach to mental disorders : an empirical assessment , 1989 .

[70]  Irwin Katz,et al.  Racial ambivalence and American value conflict: Correlational and priming studies of dual cognitive structures. , 1988 .

[71]  Ralph L. Rosnow,et al.  Rumor as Communication: A Contextualist Approach. , 1988 .

[72]  Gregory M. Herek,et al.  The Instrumentality of Attitudes: Toward a Neofunctional Theory. , 1986 .

[73]  Ralph L. Rosnow,et al.  Belief in rumor and likelihood of rumor transmission , 1986 .

[74]  J. Dovidio,et al.  The aversive form of racism. , 1986 .

[75]  P. Ambrosini,et al.  Clinical assessment of group and defensive aspects of rumor. , 1983, International journal of group psychotherapy.

[76]  Jan Harold Brunvand,et al.  The Vanishing Hitchhiker: American Urban Legends and Their Meanings , 1982 .

[77]  Ralph L. Rosnow,et al.  Who Hears What from Whom and with What Effect , 1980 .

[78]  Ralph L. Rosnow,et al.  Psychology of rumor reconsidered. , 1980 .

[79]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  Issue involvement can increase or decrease persuasion by enhancing message-relevant cognitive responses. , 1979 .

[80]  D. Seibold,et al.  Stigma Management in Normal-Stigmatized Interactions: Test of the Disclosure Hypothesis and a Model of Stigma Acceptance. , 1978 .

[81]  C. Carver,et al.  Favorable Evaluations of Stigmatized Others , 1977 .

[82]  Karl E. Weick,et al.  Rumor and gossip: The social psychology of hearsay. , 1977 .

[83]  Terry Ann Knopf Rumors, Race and Riots , 1975 .

[84]  S. Anthony,et al.  Anxiety and rumor. , 1973, The Journal of social psychology.

[85]  J. Mausner,et al.  Report on a phantom epidemic of gonorrhea. , 1967, American journal of epidemiology.

[86]  E. Goffman Stigma; Notes On The Management Of Spoiled Identity , 1964 .

[87]  S. Schachter,et al.  A field experiment of rumor transmission and distortion. , 1955, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[88]  J. Prasad,et al.  A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF RUMOURS AND REPORTS IN EARTHQUAKES , 1950 .

[89]  Leon Festinger,et al.  A Study of a Rumor: Its Origin and Spread , 1948 .

[90]  R. H. Knapp,et al.  A PSYCHOLOGY OF RUMOR , 1944 .