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Source: Journal of Communication ISSN 0021-9916

Identifying Influence: Development and Validation of the Connectivity, Persuasiveness, and Maven Scales. Source: Journal of Communication ISSN 0021-9916 Author : Franklin J. Boster , Michael R. Kotowski , Kyle R. Andrews , & Kim Serota Presenter – Allan Wu. Agenda. Introduction

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Source: Journal of Communication ISSN 0021-9916

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  1. IdentifyingInfluence:DevelopmentandValidationoftheConnectivity,Persuasiveness,andMavenScalesIdentifyingInfluence:DevelopmentandValidationoftheConnectivity,Persuasiveness,andMavenScales Source: Journal of Communication ISSN 0021-9916 Author: Franklin J. Boster, Michael R. Kotowski, Kyle R. Andrews , & Kim Serota Presenter – Allan Wu

  2. Agenda • Introduction • Three constructs • Three Studies • General discussion

  3. Introduction • The use of influential network members to facilitate the process of behavioral change has long been a goal of communication campaign designers, particularly in health settings.

  4. Introduction • Opinion leadership consists of the ability to influence others’ attitudes and behavior frequently and in a desired direction is a useful beginning point. • Opinion leaders are those who exert opinion leadership

  5. Introduction • Opinion leaders have at least three particularly important characteristics. They are very knowledgeable in the sphere in which they exert opinion leadership, they are well connected socially, and they are effective at presenting their ample knowledge to their numerous contacts.

  6. Introduction • Purpose: • Measures, Developed ,and Validated of 3 types of influential others (those who are highly connected, persuasive, and informed) who play an important role in the dissemination of information through social networks • These dimensions being highly informed, connected, and persuasive.

  7. Connectivity • A handful of well-connected people serve to connect others who are far removed both in physical and social distance. • The ability to bridge multiple groups results from the formation of weak-tie relationships

  8. Connectivity • Some weak-tie relationships serve as bridges, a network connection that is the only connection between two groups. • When two people are connected only weakly, they are exposed to different groups, increasing the chance of unique information being available to either or both.

  9. Connectivity • It is these types of people—those who have a disproportionate number of weak-tie relationships—who are pivotal in transmitting information.

  10. Persuasiveness • Those with a high need for cognition generate more arguments and more valid arguments than those low on need for cognition and tend to be viewed as more competent at persuasion • Persuasive people engage frequently in influence attempts, often advancing their opinions.

  11. Persuasiveness • They are able to conceive and articulate their positions on issues from different perspectives and are effective at enabling others to view favorably their side of the issue • Persuasive people would be highly argumentative and effective debaters.

  12. Mavens • ‘Individuals whohaveinformation about many kinds of products, places to shop, and other facets of markets, and initiate discussions with consumers and respond to requests from consumers for market information”

  13. Mavens • Mavens are distinguishable conceptually from opinion leaders and early adopters. • Although the concepts of opinion leaders and early adopters vary somewhat in technical discourse, generally it is believed that their involvement in markets is within a specific product category with which they have direct experience • Mavens have general market knowledge.

  14. Mavens • Mavens also like to discuss the deals they get and frequently volunteer advice to others regarding purchasing decisions. • Mavens are typically recognized by others as such and are sought after by others for information (curator)

  15. Mavens • Health mavens would have knowledge of a broad range of health behavior and health topics, would enjoy volunteering health information to others, and would be recognized as health experts by others.

  16. Study 1 • Study 1 was designed to assess both the content validity of three sets of self-report items that were developed to identify connectivity, persuasiveness, and health mavens. • Additional constructs were measured to examine both the convergent and divergent construct validity of each of the three focal scales.

  17. Study 1 • It is difficult to conceive of someone with numerous weak-tie relationships who is reticent to communicate with other people; therefore, it is expected that the connectivity construct will correlate negatively and substantially with social anxiety. • To a lesser extent, the same point can be made for persuasiveness.

  18. Study 1 • there is no reason to expect health mavens to have more or less social anxiety than those who lack domain expertise. • The correlation between the health maven index and social anxiety is expected to approximate zero.

  19. Study 1 • It is hypothesized that the persuasiveness index will correlate positivelyand amply with argumentativeness

  20. Study 1 • There is no theoretical reason to expect argumentativeness to correlate substantially with the connectivity or health maven constructs.

  21. Study 1 • the health maven index is hypothesized to correlate positively and substantially with value-relevant involvement • It is anticipated that the well connected and highly persuasive will be either high or low in value- relevant involvement in approximately equivalent proportions;

  22. Study 1 • A study was designed to assess these predictions.

  23. Study 1- Method • Subjects received course credit for their participation • 189 students undergraduate • Females composed 66% of the sample. • The mean age was 20.20 (SD = 2.81).

  24. Study 1- Method • Procedure Participation was solicited, and the questionnaire was administered, in classroom settings. • Measuring general communication behavior and traits

  25. Study 1- Method • Thequestionnairewascomposedoffouritemsdesignedtoidentifyconnectivity,four items designed to identify persuasiveness, and four items designed to identify health mavens. • Subjects also completed Leary’s (1983) social anxiousness scale, Infante and Rancer’s (1982) argumentativeness scale, and ChoandBoster’s (2005) value-relevant involvement scale • 8-point Likert response scales

  26. Study 1- Method • A confirmatory factor analysis (CFA; Hunter & Hamilton, 1992) was performed to test the fit of the model. • A centroid algorithm was employed to estimate factorloadings, and both internal consistency and parallelism analyses were conducted to test the fit of the model

  27. Study 1- Method • The internal consistency theorem (rij = riTrjT, whereiand j are alternative indicators of the same latent variable, T) was used to generate predicted correlations between all items that were specified as alternative indicators of the same latent variable

  28. Study 1- Method • Parallelism theorem (rij = riTrjUrTU, wherei is an indicator of a latent variable, T, and j is an indicator of a latent trait, U) was used to generate predicted correlations between all items that were indicators of different latent variables.

  29. Study 1- Method • Predicted correlation (P) was then compared with its respective observed correlation (O) and the errors or residuals (i.e., the difference between the observed and predicted correlations, O–P) were inspected.

  30. Study 1- Method • The adequacy of the model can be judged by examining the factor loadings and the residuals. Specifically, ample factor loadings and small residuals are indicants of excellent fit.

  31. Study 1- Results • The one-factor model was tested for the connectivity, persuasiveness, and health maven (CPM) constructs to ascertain if the items were indicators of a general opinion leadership construct. • the residuals were large and more numerous than would be expected by chance, RMSE = .22.

  32. Study 1- Results • The predicted three-factor model for the CPM constructs was then tested. • The factor loadings were ample, ranging from .62 to.96, • The residuals were modest, RMSE = .05. • The correlation between the pairs of predicted and obtained correlations was .97..

  33. Study 1- Results

  34. Study 1- Results • Formal tests showed that the social anxiety, argumentativeness, and value- relevant involvement measures lacked both internal consistency and parallelism. • Items with the weakest factor loadings and those producing the largest errors of fit were removed from each measure until a set of internally consistent and parallel items were identified that produced data consistent with the hypothesized measurement model.

  35. Study 1- Results

  36. Study 1- Results • The importance of this analysis was the parallelism tests not yet performed among the three focal constructs and the three construct validity variables. Ample factor loadings and the modest overall RMSE = .06 indicated that the data fit the model closely.

  37. Study 1- Results • Validity assessment

  38. Study 1- Results • These results indicated that there was considerable variance in the correlations among the connectivity, persuasiveness, and health maven indices with social anxiety, argumentativeness, and value-relevant involvement. • The predicted convergent effects were all ample, suggesting that the measures exhibited convergent validity

  39. Study 1- DISSCUSION • The results of Study 1 provided evidence of both content validity and construct validity for the three focal measures • The connectivity and persuasiveness measures were not distributed normally. Moreover, none of the three measures had reliabilities exceeding α = .87.

  40. Study 2 • Six items were added for each of the three indices, creating 10-item indices for each of the three focal constructs. • According to the Spearman-Brown prophecy formula, the revised connectivity, persuasiveness, and health maven measures will produce α ≈ .94 for the connectivity and health maven measures and α ≈ .92 for the persuasiveness measure. • There was some evidence that subjects’ skewed responses to the connectivity and persuasiveness items were produced by a ceiling effect.

  41. Study 2 • The connectivity, persuasiveness, and health maven constructs might be thought of as similar conceptually to the constructs of opinion leadership and activism,

  42. Study 2 • Sampled 178 students • The sample was constrained to students at least 18 years old who had not participated in Study 1. • 73% were female. • The mean age was 20.65 (SD = 2.38) years, • When asked if they had ever held a leadership position, 85% responded ‘‘yes.’’

  43. Study 2

  44. Study 2- Results • Only the health maven index is associated strongly with opinion leadership (r = .81). • To provide a more rigorous test of the proposition that the health maven index, and only the health maven index, is a strong predictor of responses to the opinion leadership scale, the three focal measures (connectivity, persuasiveness, and health maven) were employed as predictors of opinion leadership. • The standardized regression coefficient for the health maven scale was β = .74, t(170) = 13.48, p <.001.

  45. Study 2- Results • Correlational analyses also suggest that only the health maven index is associated strongly with healthy lifestyle activism (r = .54). • For the same reason, and in a parallel fashion, healthy lifestyle activism scores were regressed onto the connectivity, persuasiveness, and health maven indices as well as all two- way and three-way interaction terms • . • Once again, only the health maven scale emerged as a substantial and statistically significant predictor(β= .52,t(170)= 7.72, p <.01).

  46. Study 2- Discussion • Discussion • α = .86 as observed in Study 1 to α = .91. • Moreover, the regression analyses indicated that connectedness and persuasiveness contribute little to the prediction of opinion leadership or healthy lifestyle activism either as direct effects or non-additively.

  47. Study 3 • Study 3 does so by examining the content validity and reliability of the focal measures using a nationally representative sample of adults.

  48. Study 3 • An Internet survey of 2,000 U.S. adults (18 years of age or older) was conducted using the SynovateeNation omnibus panel. • Subjects received an invitation via electronic mail asking them to participate in a specific day’s omnibus survey

  49. Study 3 • A 5-point scale was used instead of the 8-point scale found in the earlier two studies because the survey firm used for the national sample typically uses a 5-point response scale, and the decision was made not to deviate from the scale to which the respondents were accustomed.

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