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Clinically studied or clinically proven? Memory for claims in print advertisements

Dillon H. Murphy, Shawn T. Schwartz, Kylie O. Alberts, Alexander L. M. Siegel, Brandon J. Carone, Alan D. Castel, Aimee Drolet

Applied Cognitive Psychology

July 13, 2023DOIPDF

Abstract

Advertisers often use specifically chosen wording to convey the effectiveness of their product and we investigated memory accuracy for the scientific claims put forth by product advertisements. Participants were shown a cognitive enhancement product advertisement and were tested on their memory for various details. Critically, we were interested in participants' memory for a phrase describing the product as either "clinically proven" (indicating the product is effective) or "clinically studied" (which is ambiguous). Generally, both younger and older adults demonstrated poor memory for this detail and were more likely to remember the product as having been "proven" to be effective than to have been "studied". Thus, we demonstrate the fallibility of memory and the potential for reliance on schematic knowledge in the absence of a veridical record of one's memory for the advertisement. We suggest that ambiguous efficacy claims be carefully considered by consumers so as not to be misled.

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Cite this paper

@article{murphy2023,
  title = {Clinically studied or clinically proven? Memory for claims in print advertisements},
  author = {Dillon H. Murphy and Shawn T. Schwartz and Kylie O. Alberts and Alexander L. M. Siegel and Brandon J. Carone and Alan D. Castel and Aimee Drolet},
  year = {2023},
  journal = {Applied Cognitive Psychology},
  doi = {10.1002/acp.4106}
}