Do People Prefer to Pass Along Good or Bad News? Valence and Relevance of News as Predictors of Transmission Propensity

@article{Heath1996DoPP,
  title={Do People Prefer to Pass Along Good or Bad News? Valence and Relevance of News as Predictors of Transmission Propensity},
  author={Heath},
  journal={Organizational behavior and human decision processes},
  year={1996},
  volume={68 2},
  pages={
          79-94
        }
}
  • Heath
  • Published 1 November 1996
  • Psychology
  • Organizational behavior and human decision processes
Anecdotal evidence seems to indicate that exaggeratedly bad news may propagate in the marketplace of ideas. Three studies investigate whether people prefer to pass along pieces of bad news or good news that are equated for "surprisingness." People typically prefer to pass along central rather than extreme information (i.e., news that is less surprising rather than more surprising). However, when confronted with extreme information, the results support a preference for congruence, that is… 

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