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People in E-Cigarette Ads Attract More Attention: An Eye-tracking Study

Elise M. Stevens, Amanda L. Johnson, Glenn Leshner, Fuwei Sun, Seung Hyun Kim, Eleanor L.S. Leavens, Alayna P. Tackett, Emily T. Hébert, Theodore L. Wagener

2020Tobacco Regulatory Science28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objectives: Minimally regulated electronic cigarettes (e-cigarette) advertising may be one potential factor driving the increasing prevalence of young adult e-cigarette use. Using eye-tracking, the current study examined which e-cigarette advertising features were the most appealing to young adults as a first step in examining how to regulate e-cigarette advertising. Methods: Using a within-subjects design, 30 young adults (M age = 20.0 years) viewed e-cigarette ads in a laboratory. Ad features or areas of interest (AOIs) included: (1) brand logo, (2) product descriptor, and (3) people. During ad viewing, eye-tracking measured participants' dwell time and time to first fixation for each AOI as well as each ad brand. Harm perceptions pre- and post-viewing were measured. Results: Participants spent the longest dwell time on people (M = 2701 ms), then product descriptors (M = 924 ms), then brand logos (M = 672 ms; ps < .001). They also fixated fastest on AOIs in that order. Participant sex significantly impacted dwell time of ad brand, and harm perceptions decreased after viewing the ads (ps < .05). Conclusions: This study provides initial evidence about which e-cigarette ad features may appeal most to young adults and may be useful when designing evidence-based policy.

Topics & Concepts

Eye trackingYoung adultFixation (population genetics)HarmPerceptionAdvertisingPsychologyDwell timeVisual attentionMedicineComputer scienceSocial psychologyDevelopmental psychologyEnvironmental healthClinical psychologyArtificial intelligenceBusinessNeurosciencePopulationSmoking Behavior and CessationBehavioral Health and InterventionsPrivacy, Security, and Data Protection
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