Effects of Metaphors on Children's Comprehension and Perception of Print Advertisements
- 1 June 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Advertising
- Vol. 27 (2) , 83-98
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00913367.1998.10673554
Abstract
In an experiment, children in three grade levels (second, fourth, and sixth) viewed four advertisements. The children were shown advertisements with either metaphors in both pictorial and verbal form or a literal equivalent. The sixth graders interpreted more metaphors correctly than the fourth and second graders. In terms of recall of advertised content, the sixth and fourth graders recalled brand names, products, and additional copy better than the second graders. Within each grade level, metaphors did not enhance children's recall of advertised content or perceptions of the understandability of the advertisements and liking of the advertised products. The authors speculate that metaphors are most likely to enhance recall under conditions in which the metaphor serves as a direct representation linking the metaphor to the advertised product. Their findings suggest that advertisers should be aware that young readers may have difficulty interpreting metaphors and that metaphors may not be more effective in terms of children's recall and perception of understandability than literal versions of advertisements.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Young Children's Perceptions of Cigarette Brand Advertising Symbols: Awareness, Affect, and Target Market IdentificationJournal of Advertising, 1995
- Context Effects on Recall and Recognition of Magazine AdvertisementsJournal of Advertising, 1992
- Visual metaphors in the representation of communication technologyCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1990
- Professional resourcesReading Research and Instruction, 1989
- How Does an Ad Mean? Language in Services AdvertisingJournal of Advertising, 1988
- Children and MetaphorsChild Development, 1987
- Metaphor and the free recall of technical textDiscourse Processes, 1986
- The Emergence of the Literal-Metaphorical-Anomalous Distinction in Young ChildrenChild Development, 1983
- Memory for metaphorsJournal of Psycholinguistic Research, 1979
- Children's Memory for Inferential Relationships in ProseChild Development, 1976