Abstract
The aim of this paper is to contrast whether cognitive memory and
emotional recall related to a tragic event and exposure to
advertisements that evoke such an experience generates a negative
emotional change in the target. We performed an experiment that
analyzes emotional changes derived from advertisements featured
in the national press ten years after terrorist attacks. We chose the
attacks: September 11, 2001, in New York City, and March 11, 2004,
in Madrid and analyze the cognitive recall in a set of Spanish and
United States focus groups. The results show a significant
emotional change in the respondents after the advertisement
visualization that is more strongly linked to the recall of a negative
event than to the advertisement creativity.
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Universidad de Navarra
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Martinez-Pastor, E., & Simón-de-Blas, C. (2020). Emotional Perception in 11S (USA) and 11M (Spain) Advertisement. Communication & Society, 33(4), 169-183. https://doi.org/10.15581/003.33.4.169-183
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