689 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
689 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
The Cargo Cult Science of Subliminal Persuasion
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Anthony R. Pratkanis
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Skeptical Inquirer, Spring 1992
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Imagine that it is the late 1950s-a time just
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after the Korean War, when terms like
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brainwashing and mind control were on the
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public's mind and films like the Manchurian
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Candidate depicted the irresistible influence of
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hypnotic trances. You and your friend are off
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to see Picnic, one of the more popular films of
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the day. However, the movie theater, located
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in Fort Lee, New Jersey. is unlike any you have
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been in before. Unbeknownst to you, the
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projectors have been equipped with a special
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device capable of flashing short phrases onto
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the movie screen at such a rapid speed that you
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are unaware that any messages have been
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presented. During the film. you lean over to
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your companion and whisper. "Gee. I'd love a
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tub of buttered popcorn and a Coke right now."
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To which he replies. "You're always hungry and
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thirsty at movies, shhhhh." But after a few
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moments he says, "You know, some Coke and
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popcorn might not be a bad idea."
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A short time later you hear that you and
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your friend weren't the only ones desiring
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popcorn and Coke at the theater that day.
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According to reports in newspapers and
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magazines, James Vicary, an advertising expert,
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had secretly flashed. at a third of a millisecond,
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the words "Eat Popcorn" and "Drink Coke" onto
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the movie screen. His studies, lasting six weeks,
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involved thousands of moviegoing subjects who
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received a subliminal message every five seconds
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during the film. Vicary claimed an increase in
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Coke sales of l8 percent and a rise in popcorn
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sales of almost 58 percent. Upon reading their
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newspapers, most people were outraged and
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frightened by a technique so devilish that it
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could bypass their conscious intellect
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and beam subliminal commands
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directly to their subconscious. (See
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Moore, this issue, for a definition of
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"subliminal.")
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In an article titled "Smudging the
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Subconscious," Norman Cousins
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(1957) captured similar feelings as he
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pondered the true meaning of such a
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device. As he put it, "If the device is
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successful for putting over popcorn,
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why not politicians or anything else?"
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He wondered about the character of
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people who would dream up a machine
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to "break into the deepest and most
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private parts of the human mind and
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leave all sorts of scratchmarks."
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Cousins concluded that the best
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course of action would be "to take this
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invention and everything connectcd
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to it and attach it to the center of the
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next nuclear explosive scheduled for
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testing."
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Cousins's warnings were taken to
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heart. The Federal Communications
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Commission immediately investigated
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the Vicary study and ruled that the
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use of subliminal messages could re-
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sult in the loss of a broadcast license.
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The National Association of Broad-
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casters prohibited the use of sublim-
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inal advertising by its members.
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Australia and Britain banned sublim-
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inal advertising. A Nevada judge ruled
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that subliminal communications are
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not protected as free speech.
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The Vicary study also left an
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enduring smudge on Americans' con-
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sciousness-if not their subconscious.
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As a teacher of social psychology and
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a persuasion researcher, one of the
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questions I am most frequently asked
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is, "Do you know about the 'Eat
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Popcorn/Drink Coke' study that they
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did?" At cocktail parties. I am often
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pulled aside and, in hushed tones, told
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about the "Eat Popcorn/Drink Coke"
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study. Indeed. my original interest in
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subliminal persuasion was motivated
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by an attempt to know how to respond
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to such questions.
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Three public-opinion polls indicate
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that the American public shares my
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students' fascination with subliminal
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influence (Haber 1959; Synodinos
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1988; Zanot, Pincus. and Lamp 1983).
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By 1958, just nine months after the
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Vicary subliminal story first broke, 41
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percent of survey respondents had
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heard of subliminal advertising. This
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figure climbed to 81 percent in the
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early 1980s, with more than 68
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percent of those aware of the term
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believing that it was effective in selling
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products. Most striking, the surveys
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also revealed that many people learn
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about subliminal influence through
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the mass media and through courses
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in high school and college.
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But there is a seamier side to the
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"Eat Popcorn/Drink Coke-' study-
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one that is rarely brought to public
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attention. In a 1962 interview with
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Advertising Age, James Vicary
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announced that the original study was
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a fabrication intended to increase
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customers for his failing marketing
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business. The circumstantial evidence
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suggests that this time Vicary was
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telling the truth. Let me explain by
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recounting the story of the "Eat
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Popcorn/Drink Coke" study as best I
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can, based on various accounts pub-
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lished in academic journals and trade
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magazines (see Advertising Research
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Foundation 1958; "ARF Checks" 1958;
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Danzig 1962; McConne11. Cutler, and
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McNeil 7958; "Subliminal Ad" 1958;
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"Subliminal Has- 1958; Weir 1984).
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Advertisers, the FCC, and research
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psychologists doubted Vicary's claims
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from the beginning and demanded
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proof. To meet these demands, Vicary
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set up demonstrations of his machine.
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Sometimes there were technical dif-
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ficulties in getting the machine to
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work. When the machine did work,
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the audience felt little compulsion to
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comply with subliminal commands,
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prompting an FCC commissioner to
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state, "I refuse to get excited about
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it-I don't think it works" ("Subliminal
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Has" 1958).
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In 1958, the Advertising Research
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Foundation pressed Vicary to release
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his data and a detailed description of
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his procedures. They argued that it
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had been more than a year since the
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results were made public and yet there
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had been no formal write-up of the
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experiment, which was necessary to
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evaluate the claims. To this day, there
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has been no primary published
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account of the study, and scientists
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interested in replicating the results
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must rely on accounts published in
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such magazines as the Senior Scholastic
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("Invisible Advertising" 1957), which,
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although intended for junior-high
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students, presents one of the most
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detailed accounts of the original study.
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Pressures for a replication accu-
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mulated. Henry Link, president of
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Psychological Corporation, challenged
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Vicary to a test under controlled
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conditions and supervised by an
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independent research firm. No change
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occurred in the purchase of either
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Coke or popcorn (Weir 1984). In one
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of the more interesting attempted
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replications, the Canadian Broadcast
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Corporation, in 1958, subliminally
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flashed the message "Phone Now" 352
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times during a popular Sunday-night
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television show called CIose-up
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("Phone Now" 1958). Telephone
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usage did not go up during that period.
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Nobody called the station. When asked
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to guess the message, viewers sent
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close to five hundred letters, but not
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one contained the correct answer.
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However, almost half of the respond-
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ents claimed to be hungry or thirsty
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during the show. Apparently, they
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guessed (incorrectly) that the message
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was aimed at getting them to eat or
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drink.
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Finally, in 1962 James Vicary
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lamented that he had handled the
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subliminal affair poorly. As he stated,
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"Worse than the timing, though, was
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the fact that we hadn't done any
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research, except what was needed for
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filing for a patent. I had only a minor
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interest in the company and a small
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amount of data-too small to be
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meaningful. And what we had
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shouldn't have been used promotion-
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ally" (Danzig1962). This is not exactly
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an affirmation of a study that sup-
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posedly ran for six weeks and involved
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thousands of subjects.
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My point in presenting the details
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of the Vicary study is twofold. First,
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the "Eat Popcorn/Drink Coke" affair
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is not an isolated incident. The topic
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of subliminal persuasion has attracted
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the interest of Americans on at least
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four separate occasions: at the turn
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of the century. in the 1950s, in the
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1970s, and now in the late 1980s and
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early 1990s. Each of these four flour-
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ishings of subliminal persuasion show
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a similar course of events. First,
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someone claims to find an effect; next,
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others attempt to replicate that effect
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and fail; the original finding is then
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criticized on methodological grounds;
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nevertheless the original claim is
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publicized and gains acceptance in lay
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audiences and the popular imagina-
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tion. Today we have reached a point
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where one false effect from a previous
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era is used to validate a false claim
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from another. For example, I recently
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had the occasion to ask a manufac-
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turer of subliminal self-help audio-
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tapes for evidence of his claim that
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his tapes had therapeutic value. His
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reply: "You are a psychologist. Don't
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you know about the study they did
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where they flashed Eat Popcorn and
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Drink Coke' on the movie screen?"
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During the past few years. I have
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been collecting published articles on
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subliminal processes-research that
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goes back over a hundred years
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(Suslowa 1863) and includes more
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than a hundred articles from the mass
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media and more than two hundred
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academic papers on the topic (Pratkan-
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is and Greenwald 1988). In none of
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these papers is there clear evidence in
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support of the proposition that sub-
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liminal messages influence behavior.
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Many of the studies fail to find an
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effect, and those that do either cannot
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be reproduced or are fatally flawed on
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one or more methodological grounds,
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including: the failure to control for
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subject expectancy and experimenter
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bias effects, selective reporting of
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positive over negative findings, lack
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of appropriate control treatments,
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internally inconsistent results, unre-
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liable dependent measures, presenta-
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tion of stimuli in a manner that is not
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truly subliminal, and multiple exper-
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imental confounds specific to each
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study. As Moore (SI, this issue) points
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out, there is considerable evidence for
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subliminal perception or the detection
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of information outside of self-reports
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of awareness. However. subliminal
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perception should not be confused
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with subliminal persuasion or influ-
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ence-motivating or changing behav-
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ior-for which there is little good
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evidence (see McConnell, Cutler, and
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McNeil 1958; Moore 1982 and 1988).
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My second reason for describing
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the Vicary study in detail is that it
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seems to me that our fascination with
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subliminal persuasion is yet another
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example of what Richard Feynman
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(1985) called "cargo-cult science." For
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Feynman, a cargo-cult science is one
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that has all the trappings of science-
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the illusion of objectivity, the appear-
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ance of careful study, and the motions
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of an experiment-but lacks one
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important ingredient: skepticism, or a
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leaning over backward to see if one
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might be mistaken. The essence of
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science is to doubt your own inter-
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pretations and theories so that you
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may improve upon them. This skep-
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ticism is often missing in the inter-
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pretation of studies claiming to find
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subliminal influence. Our theories and
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wishes for what we would like to think
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the human mind is capable of doing
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interferes with our ability to see what
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it actually does.
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The cargo-cult nature of subliminal
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research can be seen in some of the
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first studies on the topic done at the
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turn of the century. In 1900, Dunlap
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reported a subliminal Muller-Lyer
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illusion-a well-known illusion in
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which a line is made to appear shorter
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or longer depending on the direction
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of angles placed at its ends. Dunlap
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flashed an "imperceptible shadow" or
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line to subliminally create this illusion.
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He claimed that his subjects'judgment
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of length was influenced by the
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imperceptible shadows. However.
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Dunlap's results could not be imme-
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diately replicated by either Titchener
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and Pyle (1907) or by Manro and
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Washburn (1908). Nevertheless, this
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inconsistency of findings did not stop
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Hollingworth (1913) from discussing
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the subliminal Muller-Lyer illusion in
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his advertising textbook or from
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drawing the conclusion that sublim-
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inal influence is a powerful tool avail-
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able to the advertiser.
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I contend that it was no accident
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that subliminal influence was first
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investigated in America at the turn of
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the century. The goal of demonstrat-
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ing the power of the subliminal mind
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became an important one for many
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people at that time. It was a time of
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great religious interest, as illustrated
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by academic books on the topic,
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religious fervor among the populace,
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and the further development of a
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uniquely American phenomenon-
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the spiritual self-help group. One such
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movement, popular in intellectual
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circles, was called "New Thought."
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which counted William James among
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its followers. The doctrine of New
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Thought stated that the mind pos-
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sesses an unlimited but hidden power
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that could be tapped-if one knew
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how-to bring about a wonderful,
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happy life and to exact physical cures.
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Given the rise of industrialization and
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the anonymity of newly formed city
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life, one can see how a doctrine of the
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hidden power of the individual in the
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face of realistic powerlessness would
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be well received in some circles.
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The historian Robert Fuller (1982;
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1986) traces the origins of New
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Thought and similar movements to
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early American interest in the teach-
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ings of Franz Anton Mesmer. Fuller's
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point is thst the powerful unconscious
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became a replacement for religion's
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"soul." Mesmer's doctrines contended
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that each person possessed a hidden,
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though strong, physical force, which
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he termed animal magnetism. This
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force could be controlled by the careful
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alignment of magnets to effect per-
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sonality changes and physical cures.
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On one level, mesmerism can be
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viewed as a secularization of the meta-
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phor of spiritual humans that under-
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lies witchcraft. Animal magnetism
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replaced the soul, and good and bad
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magnets replaced angels and devils
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that could invade the body and affect
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their will. Mesmerism was introduced
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to America at the beginning of the
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nineteenth century and, characteristic
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of Yankee ingenuity, self-help move-
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ments soon sprang up with the goal
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of improving on Mesmer's original
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magnet therapy; they did so by
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developing the techniques of hypnot-
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ism, seances, the healing practices of
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Christian Science, positive thinking,
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and the speaking cure.
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With the distance of a century, we
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overlook the fact that many journals
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of the nineteenth century were
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devoted to archiving the progress of
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mesmerism and with documenting the
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influence of the unconscious on the
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conscious. As Dunlap (1900) said in
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the introduction to his article on the
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subliminal Muller-Lyer illusion, "If
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such an effect is produced, then we
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have evidence for the belief that under
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certain conditions things of which we
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are not and can not become conscious
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have their immediate effects upon
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consciousness." In other words, we
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would have one of the first scientific
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demonstrations that the unconscious
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can powerfully influence the con-
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scious. A simple step perhaps, but
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who knows what wonderful powers
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of the human mind wait to be un-
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leashed.
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As a postscript to the subliminal
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Muller-Lyer affair. I should point out
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that 30 years later Joseph Bressler-
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a student of Hollingworth-was able
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to reconcile the empirical differences
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between Dunlap and his opponents.
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Bressler (1931) found that as the
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subliminal angles increased in inten-
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sity-that is, as they approached the
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threshold of awareness-the illusion
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was more likely to be seen. This
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finding, along with many others,
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served as the basis for concluding that
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there is no absolute threshold of
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awareness-it can vary as a function
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of individual and situational factors-
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and led to the hypothesis that, on
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some trials, subjects could see enough
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of the stimulus to improve their
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guessing at what might be there. (See
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also Holender 1986 and Cheesman
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and Merikle's 1985 distinction
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between objective and subjective
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thresholds.)
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Other manifestations of "sub-
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liminal-mania" illustrate additional
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aspects of a cargo-cult science. In the
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early 1970s, during the third wave of
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popular interest in subliminal persua-
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sion, the best-selling author Wilson
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Bryan Key (1973; 1976; 1980; 1989)
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advanced the cargo-cult science of
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subliminal seduction in two ways. (See
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also Creed 1987.) First, Key argued
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that subliminal techniques were not
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just limited to television and movies.
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Cleverly hidden messages aimed at
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inducing sexual arousal are claimed to
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be embedded in the photographs of
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print advertisements. Key found the
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word sex printed on everything from
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Ritz crackers to the ice cubes in a
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Gilbey Gin ad. Second, Key was
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successful in linking the concept of
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subliminal persuasion to the issues
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of his day. The 1970s were a period
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of distrust by Americans of their
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government. businesses, and institu-
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tions. Key claimed that big advertisers
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and big government dre in a conspir-
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acy to control our minds using sublim-
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inal implants.
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The legacy of Key's cargo-cult
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science is yet with us. I often ask my
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students at the University of Califor-
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nia, Santa Cruz, if they have heard
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of the term subliminal persuasion and,
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if so, where. Almost all have heard
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of the term and about half report
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finding out about it in high school.
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Many received an assignment from
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their teachers to go to the library and
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look through magazine ads for sub-
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liminal implants.
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These teachers miss an opportu-
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nity to teach science instead of cargo-
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cult science. Key (1973) reports a
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study where more than a thousand
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subjects were shown the Gilbey Gin
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ad that supposedly contained the word
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sex embedded in ice cubes. Sixty-two
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percent of the subjects reported
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feeling "aroused," "romantic." "sensu-
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ous." Instead of assuming that Key
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was right and sending students out
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to find subliminals, a science educator
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would encourage a student to ask,
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"But where is the control group in the
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Gilbey Gin ad study? Perhaps an even
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higher percentage would report feel-
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ing sexy if the subliminal "sex" was
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removed-perhaps the same, perhaps
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less. One just doesn't know.
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Now in the late 198Os and early
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1990s, we see a fourth wave of
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interest in subliminal influence. Entre-
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preneurs have created a $50-million-
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plus industry offering subliminal self-
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help audio- and video-tapes designed
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to improve everything from self-
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esteem to memory, to employee and
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customer relations, to sexual respon-
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siveness, and-perhaps most contro-
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versial-to overcoming the effects of
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family and sexual abuse (Natale1988).
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The tapes work, according to one
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manufacturer, because "subliminal
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messages bypass the conscious mind,
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and imprint directly on the subcon-
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scious mind, where they create the
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basis for the kind of life you want."
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Part of the popularity of such tapes
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no doubt springs from the tenets of
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New Age. Like its predecessor New
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Thought, New Age also postulates a
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powerful hidden force in the human
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personality that can be controlled for
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the good, not by magnets. but by
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crystals, and can be redirected with
|
||
subliminal commands.
|
||
Accusations concerning the sinis-
|
||
ter use of subliminal persuasion
|
||
continue as well. In the summer of
|
||
1990, the rock band Judas Priest was
|
||
placed on trial for allegedly recording.
|
||
in one of their songs, the subliminal
|
||
implant "Do it." This message sup-
|
||
posedly caused the suicide deaths of
|
||
Ray Belknap and James Vance.
|
||
What is the evidence that sublim-
|
||
inal influence, despite not working in
|
||
the 1900s, 1950s, and 1970s, is now
|
||
effective in the 1990s? Tape company
|
||
representatives are likely to provide
|
||
you with a rather lengthy list of
|
||
"studies" demonstrating their claims.
|
||
Don't be fooled. The studies on these
|
||
lists fall into two camps-those done
|
||
by the tape companies and for which
|
||
full write-ups are often not available,
|
||
and those that have titles that sound
|
||
as if they apply to subliminal influence,
|
||
but really don't. For example. one
|
||
company lists many subliminal-
|
||
perception studies to support its
|
||
claims. It is a leap of faith to see how
|
||
a lexical priming study provides
|
||
evidence that a subliminal self-help
|
||
tape will cure insomnia or help over-
|
||
come the trauma of being raped.
|
||
Sadly, the trick of claiming that
|
||
something that has nothing to do with
|
||
subliminal influence really does prove
|
||
the effectiveness Or subliminal influ-
|
||
ence goes back to the turn of the
|
||
century. In the first footnote to their
|
||
article describing a failure to replicate
|
||
Dunlap's subliminal Muller-Lyer
|
||
effect, Titchener and Pyle (1907) state:
|
||
"Dunlap finds a parallel to his own
|
||
results in the experiments of Pierce
|
||
and Jastrow on small difference of
|
||
sensations. There is. however, no
|
||
resemblance whatever between the
|
||
two investigations." In a cargo-cult
|
||
science, any evidence-even irrelevant
|
||
facts-is of use and considered
|
||
valuable.
|
||
Recently, there have been a num-
|
||
ber of studies that directly tested the
|
||
effectiveness of subliminal self-help
|
||
tapes. I conducted one such study in
|
||
Santa Cruz with my colleagues Jay
|
||
Eskenazi and Anthony Greenwald
|
||
(Pratkanis, Eskenazi, and Greenwald
|
||
1990). We used mass-marketed audio-
|
||
tapes with subliminal messages
|
||
designed to improve either self-
|
||
esteem or memory abilities. Both
|
||
types of tapes contained the same
|
||
supraliminal content-various pieces
|
||
of classical music. However, they
|
||
differed in their subliminal content.
|
||
According to the manufacturer, the
|
||
self-esteem tapes contained subliminal
|
||
messages like "I have high self-worth
|
||
and high self-esteem." The memory
|
||
tape contained subliminal messages
|
||
like "My ability to remember and recall
|
||
is increasing daily."
|
||
Using public posters and ads placed
|
||
in local newspapers, we recruited
|
||
volunteers who appeared most inter-
|
||
ested in the value and potential of
|
||
subliminal self-help therapies (and
|
||
who were probably similar to those
|
||
likely to buy such tapes). On the first
|
||
day of the study, we asked our
|
||
volunteers to complete three different
|
||
self-esteem and three different
|
||
memory measures. Next they ran-
|
||
domly received their subliminal tape,
|
||
but with an interesting twist. Half of
|
||
the tapes were mislabeled so that some
|
||
of the subjects received a memory
|
||
tape, but thought it was intended to
|
||
improve self-esteem, whereas others
|
||
received a self-esteem tape that had
|
||
been mislabeled as memory improve-
|
||
ment. (Of course half the subjects
|
||
received correctly labeled tapes.)
|
||
The volunteers took their tapes
|
||
home and listened to them every day
|
||
for five weeks (the period suggested
|
||
by the manufacturer for maximum
|
||
effectiveness). During the listening
|
||
phase, we attempted to contact each
|
||
subject about once a week to encour-
|
||
age their daily listening. Only a
|
||
handful of subjects were unable to
|
||
complete the study, suggesting a high
|
||
level of motivation and interest in
|
||
subliminal therapy. After five weeks
|
||
of daily listening, they returned to the
|
||
laboratory and once again completed
|
||
self-esteem and memory tests and
|
||
were also asked to indicate if they
|
||
believed the tapes to be effective.
|
||
The results: the subliminal tapes
|
||
produced no effect (improvement or
|
||
decrement) on either self-esteem or
|
||
memory. But our volunteers did not
|
||
believe this to be the case. Subjects
|
||
who thought they had listened to a
|
||
self-esteem tape (regardless of
|
||
whether they actually did or not) were
|
||
more likely to be convinced that their
|
||
self-esteem had improved, and those
|
||
who thought they had listened to a
|
||
memory tape were more likely to
|
||
believe that their memory had
|
||
improved as a result of listening to
|
||
the tape. We called this an illusory
|
||
placebo effect-placebo, because it
|
||
was based on expectations; illusory,
|
||
because it wasn't real. In sum, the
|
||
subliminal tapes did nothing to
|
||
improve self-esteem ar memory abil-
|
||
ities but, to some of our subjects, they
|
||
appeared to have an effect. As we put
|
||
it in the title of our report of this
|
||
study, "What you expect is what you
|
||
believe, but not necessarily what you
|
||
get."
|
||
Our results are not a fluke. We
|
||
have since repeated our original study
|
||
twice using different tapes and have
|
||
yet to find an effect of subliminal
|
||
messages upon behavior as claimed by
|
||
the manufacturer (Greenwald, Span-
|
||
genberg, Pratkanis, and Eskenazi
|
||
1991). By combining our data from all
|
||
three studies, we gain the statistical
|
||
power to detect quite small effects.
|
||
Still, there is no evidence of a sub-
|
||
liminal effect consistent with the
|
||
manufacturers' claims.
|
||
Other researchers are also finding
|
||
that subliminal self-help tapes are of
|
||
no benefit to the user. In a series of
|
||
three experiments, Auday, Mellett,
|
||
and Williams (1991) tested the effec-
|
||
tiveness of bogus and real subliminal
|
||
tapes designed either to improve
|
||
memory, reduce stress and anxiety. or
|
||
increase self-confidence. The sublim-
|
||
inal tapes proved ineffective on all
|
||
three fronts. Russell, Rowe, and
|
||
Smouse (1991) tested subliminal tapes
|
||
designed to improve academic
|
||
achievement and found the tapes
|
||
improved neither grade point average
|
||
nor final examination scores. Lenz
|
||
(1989) had 270 Los Angeles police
|
||
recruits listen for 24 weeks to music
|
||
with and without subliminal implants
|
||
designed to improve either knowledge
|
||
of the law or marksmanship. The
|
||
tapes did not improve either. In a
|
||
recent test, Merikle and Skanes (1991)
|
||
found that overweight subjects who
|
||
listened to subliminal weight-loss
|
||
tapes fpr five weeks showed no more weight loss than
|
||
did control subjects. In sum, independent researchers have
|
||
conducted nine studies to evaluate the effectiveness of
|
||
subliminal self-help tapes. All nine studies
|
||
failed to find an effect consistent with the manufacturers' claims.
|
||
|