Term ID: T1295

Elaboration Likelihood Model

/elaboration-likelihood-model/
A dual-process theory of persuasion proposing two routes to attitude change: the central route involving careful evaluation of argument quality, and the peripheral route relying on surface cues like source attractiveness or credibility. The route taken depends on motivation and ability to process information.
Example: An informed voter carefully analyzing candidate policy positions (central route) versus someone choosing based on candidate appearance or celebrity endorsements (peripheral route).

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Reference: Petty & Cacioppo (1986)