Skip to main content
Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1027/1864-1105/a000020

This paper explores the cultivation effect of a newspaper on its readers’ reality estimates and attitudes. Additionally, the study tries to advance cultivation research by examining implicit attitudes (i.e., automatic affective reactions toward an object). A content analysis of four months of news coverage in one particular newspaper showed that foreigners were overrepresented as offenders and that the newspaper had a negative view of the EU. According to cultivation theory, it is assumed that the more people read a newspaper, the more their reality estimates and attitudes correspond to the most recurrent, stable, and overarching patterns of the newspaper’s content. To test this hypothesis, a total of 453 students participated in a study that used a cross-lagged panel design with two waves and a time-lag of two months. Consistent with the cultivation hypothesis, those who spent more time reading the newspaper were more likely to overestimate the frequency of foreigners as offenders (i.e., first-order cultivation) and had more negative self-reported attitudes toward the EU (i.e., second-order cultivation). Additionally, those who read more of the newspaper showed more negative implicit attitudes toward the EU (i.e., implicit cultivation). The data show evidence of a significant causal influence of newspaper exposure on implicit attitudes, and a marginally significant causal effect on the overestimation of foreigners as offenders and on explicit attitudes toward the EU. The consideration of implicit attitudes as an additional dependent variable could advance cultivation theory and research.

References

  • Appel, M. (2008). Fictional narratives cultivate just-world beliefs. Journal of Communication, 58, 62–83. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Arendt, F. (2008). Zur kultivierenden Wirkung der Kronen Zeitung [Cultivation effect of Kronen Zeitung]. Medien Journal, 32(4), 3–21. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Arendt, F. (2009). Explizite und implizite kultivierende Wirkung der Kronen Zeitung. Eine empirische Untersuchung von Kultivierungseffekten auf explizite und implizite politische Einstellungen [The newspaper Kronen Zeitung’s long-term cultivation effects on explicit and implicit attitudes]. Medien & Kommunikationswissenschaft, 57, 217–237. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Art, D. (2007). Reacting to the radical right. Lessons from Germany and Austria. Party Politics, 13, 331–349. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Barth, B. (1988). Fernsehnutzung und Realitätswahrnehmung: Zur Überprüfung der Kultivierungshypothese [Exposure to television and reality estimates: Testing the cultivation hypothesis]. Rundfunk und Fernsehen, 36, 67–79. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Bauer, M. W. (2005). Distinguishing red and green biotechnology: Cultivation effects of the elite press. International Journal of Public Opinion Research, 17, 64–89. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Berkel, B (2006). Political parallelism in news and commentaries on the Haider-conflict. A comparative analysis of Austrian, British, German, and French quality newspapers. Communications, 31, 85–104. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Bilandzic, H. , Rössler, P. (2004). Life according to television. Implications of genre-specific cultivation effects: The Gratification/Cultivation model. Communications, 29, 295–326. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Bryant, J. , Oliver, M. B. (Eds.). (2009). Media effects. Advances in theory and research (3rd ed.). New York, NY: Routledge. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Burkholder, G. J. , Harlow, L. L. (2003). An illustration of a longitudinal cross-lagged design for larger structural equation models. Structural Equation Modeling, 10, 465–486. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Diamantopoulos, A. , Siguaw, J. A. (2007). Introducing LISREL. London, UK: Sage Publications. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Früh, W. (2007). Inhaltsanalyse. Theorie und Praxis. [Content analysis. Theory and practice] (6th ed.). Konstanz, Germany: UVK Verlagsgesellschaft mbH. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Gawronski, B. , Bodenhausen, G. V. (2006). Associative and propositional processes in evaluation: An integrative review of implicit and explicit attitude change. Psychological Bulletin, 132, 692–731. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Gawronski, B. , Conrey, F. (2004). Der Implizite Assoziationstest als Maß automatisch aktivierter Assoziationen: Reichweite und Grenzen. [The Implicit Association Test as a tool to measure automatic associations: Scope and limits]. Psychologische Rundschau, 55, 118–126. First citation in articleLinkGoogle Scholar

  • Gerbner, G. , Gross, L. (1976). Living with television: The violence profile. Journal of Communication, 26, 173–199. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Grabe, M. E. , Drew, D. G. (2007). Crime cultivation: Comparisons across media genres and channels. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 51, 147–171. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Greenwald, A. G. , McGhee, D. E. , Schwartz, J. L. K. (1998). Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: The implicit association test. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 74, 1464–1480. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Guo, Z. , Zhu, J. J. , Chen, H. (2001). Mediated reality bites: Comparing direct and indirect experience as sources of perceptions across two communities in China. International Journal of Public Opinion Research, 13, 398–418. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Henry, P. J. , Sears, D. (2002). The symbolic racism 2000 scale. Political Psychology, 23, 253–283. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Hetsroni, A. (2007). Open or closed – this is the question: The influence of question format on the cultivation effect. Communication Methods and Measures, 1, 1–12. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Hicks, G. , Lee, T. T. (2004, May). Learning to be prejudiced? Media usage and anti-gay attitudes. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, New Orleans, LA. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Hogg, M. A. , Vaughan, G. M. (2005). Social psychology. Edinburgh Gate, UK: Pearson Education Limited. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Holbert, R. L. , Stephenson, M. T. (2008). Commentary on the uses and misuses of structural equation modeling in communication research. In A. F. Hayes, M. D. Slater, L. B. Snyder, (Eds.), The sage handbook of advanced data analysis methods for communication research (pp. 185–218). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Horvath, P. (2006). Die Feindbilder der Kronen Zeitung [The “enemies” of Kronen Zeitung]. Medienimpulse, 14, 30–32. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Kenny, D. A. (1975). Cross-lagged panel correlation: A test for spuriousness. Psychological Bulletin, 82, 887–903. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Lemm, K. M. , Lane, K. A. , Sattler, D. N. , Khan, S. R. , Nosek, B. A. (2008). Assessing implicit cognitions with a paper-format implicit association test. In M. A. Morrison, T. G. Morrison, (Eds.), The psychology of modern prejudice (pp. 123–146). Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • MacCallum, R. C. , Browne, M. W. , Sugawara, H. (1996). Power analysis and determination of sample size for covariance structure modeling. Psychological Methods, 1, 130–149. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • McCroskey, J. C. , Richmond, V. P. (1996). Fundamentals of human communication: An interpersonal perspective. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Morgan, M. , Shanahan, J. , Signorielli, N. (2009). Growing up with television: Cultivation processes. In J. Bryant, M. B. Oliver, (Eds.), Media effects. Advances in theory and research (pp. 34–49). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Nabi, R. L. , Sullivan, J. L. (2001). Does television viewing relate to engagement in protective action against crime? A cultivation analysis from a theory of reasoned action perspective. Communication Research, 28, 802–825. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Nisbet, E. , Wang, Z. (2004, May). Polarization versus the mainstream: Differentiating the effects of the news media. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, New Orleans, LA. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Petty, R. E. , Brinol, P. , Priester, J. R. (2009). Mass media attitude change. Implications of the elaboration likelihood model of persuasion. In J. Bryant, M. B. Oliver, (Eds.), Media effects. Advances in theory and research (pp. 125–164). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Plasser, F. , Lengauer, G. (2010). Politik vor Redaktionsschluss: Kommunikationsorientierungen von Macht- und Medieneliten in Österreich [Orientation of media elites in Austria]. In F. Plasser, (Ed.), Politik in der Medienarena. Praxis politischer Kommunikation in Österreich [Political communication in Austria] (pp. 53–100). Vienna, Austria: Facultas. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Quick, B. L. , Stephenson, M. T. (2008). Examining the role of trait reactance and sensation seeking on perceived threat, state reactance, and reactance restoration. Human Communication Research, 34, 448–476. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Reber, B. H. , Chang, Y. (2000). Assessing cultivation theory and public health model for crime reporting. Newspaper Research Journal, 21, 99–112. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Reimer, B. , Rosengren, K. E. (1990). Cultivated viewers and readers: A life-style perspective. In N. Signorielli, M. Morgan, (Eds.), Cultivation analysis: New directions in media effects research (pp. 181–206). Newbury Park, CA: Sage. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Reinecke, J. (2005). Strukturgleichungsmodelle in den Sozialwissenschaften [Structural equation models in the social sciences]. München, Germany: Oldenburg. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Rössler, P. , Brosius, H. B. (2001). Do talk shows cultivate adolescents’ views of the world? A prolonged-exposure experiment. Journal of Communication, 51, 143–163. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Rossmann, C. (2008). Fiktion Wirklichkeit. Ein Modell der Informationsverarbeitung im Kultivierungsprozess [Fiction reality. An information processing model for the cultivation process]. Wiesbaden, Germany: VS Verlag. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Rossmann, C. , Brosius, H. B. (2004). The problem of causality in cultivation research. Communications, 29, 379–397. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Shanahan, J. , Morgan, M. (1999). Television and its viewers. Cultivation theory and research. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Shrum, L. J. (2007). Social cognition and cultivation. In D. R. Roskos-Ewoldson, J. L. Monahan, (Eds.), Communication and social cognition: Theories and methods. (pp. 245–272). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Shrum, L. J. (2009). Media consumption and perceptions of social reality: Effects and underlying processes. In J. Bryant, M. B. Oliver, (Eds.), Media effects. Advances in theory and research (pp. 50–73). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Stark, B. , Kraus, D. (2008). Crossmediale Strategien überregionaler Tageszeitungen. Empirische Studie am Beispiel des Pressemarkts in Österreich [Cross-media strategies of newspapers. An empirical investigation in Austria]. Media Perspektiven, 38, 307–317. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Steinmaurer, T. (2009). Diversity through delay? The Austrian case. International Communication Gazette, 71, 77–87. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Strohman, C. A. , Seltzer, R. (1985). Media use and perceptions of crime. Journalism Quarterly, 62, 340–345. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Verein Arbeitsgemeinschaft Media-Analysen . (2008). Media Analyse 2008 [Media Analysis 2008]. Retrieved from www.media-analyse.at First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Vergeer, M. , Lubbers, M. , Scheepers, P. (2000). Exposure to newspapers and attitudes toward ethnic minorities: A longitudinal analysis. The Howard Journal of Communications, 11, 127–143. First citation in articleCrossrefGoogle Scholar

  • Weimann, G. (2000). Communicating unreality: Modern media and the reconstruction of reality. London, UK: Sage. First citation in articleGoogle Scholar

  • Wise, M. Z. (2002, January). Austria’s troubling tabloid. Columbia Journalism Review, 40(5), 12. Retrieved from: www.michaelzwise.com/articleDisplay.php?article_id=6 First citation in articleGoogle Scholar