This volume focuses on persuasion and the structure and analysis of persuasive communication. It brings together contributions from scholars from a variety of backgrounds in communication sciences and psychology, with insights into the processing of persuasive messages, attitude theory as viewed from a neural network model, and models of resistance to influence. This series compiles research from a range of disciplines such as information science, library science, and international relations, that share the unifying purpose of understanding communication and information processing. It offers reviews of those diverse areas that fall within the broad rubrics of information and communication science, as well as an overview of how people use information. The volumes report on research in three important areas: information transfer and information systems; the uses and effects of communications; and the control of communications and information.
ContributorsForewordPrefaceContents of Previous VolumesThe Phase-Interfaced Omnistructure Underlying the Processing of Persuasive Messages, Mark A. HamiltonSelf-Organizing Social Systems: Necessary and Surfficient Conditions for the Emergence of Clustering, Consolidation, and Continuing Diversity, Bibb Latané and Andrjez NowakMessage Discrepancy and Persuasion, Stan A. Kaplowitz and Edward L. FinkPersuasion, Public Address, and Progression in the Sciences: Where We Are at What We Do, Michael Allen and Raymond PreissThe Inoculation Model of Resistance to Influence, Michael PfauNews Values and Public Opinion: A Theoretical Account of Media Priming and Framing, Vincent Price and David TewksburyAttitudes as Nonhierarchcal Clusters in Neural Networks, Joseph WoelfelConnecting Attitude Theory with Cognitive Science, J. Richard EiserAuthor IndexSubject Index