Order Effects Theory
References

Who said what, and when.

 

  Persuasion                Primacy|Recency                 One-Sided|Two-Sided          Climax|Anti-Climax

                  Truth Effect                Propaganda|Marketing                    Conclusion                     References

 
 


Anderson, Chris (1999). On Propaganda and Marketing.
     Brandweek, Vol. 40 Issue 3, 24-26.

Crano, William D. (1977). Primacy Versus Recency In Retention
      of Information and Opinion Change. The Journal of Social
      Psychology
, 101, 87-96

Cromwell, H. (1950). The Relative Effect on Audience Attitude
      of the First Versus the Second Argumentative Speech of
      a Series. Speech Monog., 17, 105-122.

Hovland, C.I., Mandell, E., Campbell, E., Brock, T., Luchins, A.,
      Cohen, A., McGuire, W., Janis, I., Feierabend, R., and
      Anderson, N. H. (1957). The Order of Presentation in
      Persuasion. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Igou, Eric R. and Bless, Herbert (2003). Inferring the Importance
      of Arguments: Order Effects and Conversational Rules.
      Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 39, 91-99.

Lund, F.H. (1925). The Psychology of Belief: IV. The Law of
      Primacy in Persuasion. Journal of Abnormal and Social
      Psychology, 20, 183-191.

Roggeveen, Anne L. and Johar, Gita Venkataramani (2002).
      Perceived Source Variability Versus Familiarity: Testing
      Competing Explanations for the Truth Effect. Journal of
      Consumer Psychology, 12 (2), 81-91.

Wartella, Ellen and Middlestadt, Susan (1991). The Evolution of
      Models of Mass Communication and Persuasion. Health
      Communication, 3(4), 205-215

Webster’s Dictionary (1913)

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A Paper by Christine Kohler
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