The Moderating Role of Gender and Compulsive Buying Tendencies in the Cultivation Effects of TV Show and TV Advertising: A Cross Cultural Study Between the United States and South Korea
- 1 February 2002
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Media Psychology
- Vol. 4 (1) , 77-111
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s1532785xmep0401_04
Abstract
Cultivation effect has been one of the dominant theories in mass communication studies to explain the impact of television contents on viewers. Using cross-cultural samples from the United States (n = 298) and South Korea (n = 1,136), we investigated two major research themes: (a) the direct impact of television shows (i.e., dramas and movies) and television advertising on the audience's perceived "fear of crime" and perceived "materialistic society," and (b) the resonance (moderating) role of gender and compulsive buying tendency on the cultivation effects. Using structural equation modeling, we found evidence of cultivation effects in both cultures. The results also suggest that the cultivation effects of television shows and television ads on viewers' perceived fear of crime and perceptions of a materialistic society are stronger for females than for males in the two cultures. Finally, viewers' compulsive buying tendencies are found to be a moderator between television advertising and perceptions of a ...Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Family Structure, Materialism, and Compulsive ConsumptionJournal of Consumer Research, 1997
- Two Forms of Compulsive Consumption: Comorbidity of Compulsive Buying and Binge EatingJournal of Consumer Research, 1995
- From the EditorJournal of Advertising, 1994
- Television viewing: Cultivating perceptions of affluence and support for capitalist valuesPolitical Communication, 1993
- A Clinical Screener for Compulsive BuyingJournal of Consumer Research, 1992
- Money Changes EverythingAmerican Behavioral Scientist, 1992
- Television exposure measures and the cultivation hypothesisJournal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 1990
- Communication‐acculturation and the cultivation hypothesis: A comparative study between two Korean communities in the U.S.Howard Journal of Communications, 1988
- Living with Television: The Violence ProfileJournal of Communication, 1976
- Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of testsPsychometrika, 1951