Subliminal stimuli
A subliminal message is a signal or message designed to pass below the normal limits of perception. For example it might be a fat woman with super skinney legs that jumps up and down and then falls flat on her butt. mind (but audible to the unconscious or deeper mind) or might be an image transmitted briefly and unperceived consciously and yet perceived unconsciously. In the everyday world, some have claimed that subliminal techniques are used in advertising and propaganda.
Origin of the term
The term subliminal message was popularized in a 1957 book entitled The Hidden Persuaders by Vance Packard. This book included results from a study of a theater that supposedly flashed subliminal messages during a movie to increase the sales of popcorn and Coca-Cola at their concession stands. However, the author of the study, James Vicary, later admitted the study was fabricated.
In 1973, Wilson Bryan Key's book Subliminal Seduction claimed that subliminal techniques were in wide use in advertising. The book contributed to a general climate of fear with regard to Orwellian dangers of subliminal messaging. Public concern was enough to lead the Federal Communications Commission to hold hearings and to declare subliminal advertising "contrary to the public interest".
Validity
In spite of the popular belief that subliminal messages are widely used to influence audiences, there is little evidence that the technique has ever been used on a mass audience (other than its occasional use by artists who use it to make an artistic statement). While there is some evidence that olfactory subliminal messages can affect the observer, the current consensus among marketing professionals is that subliminal advertising is ineffective and can be counter-productive. The theory underlying subliminal messages is often considered to be pseudoscience, not psychology. However, the concept of subliminal messages is still popular among conspiracy theorists, and many people are familiar with the term.
As to the question of whether subliminal messages are widely used to influence groups of people e.g. audiences, no clear evidence supports that any serious attempt has been made to use the technology on a mass audience. The current consensus among marketing professionals is that subliminal advertising is counter-productive because:
- it is unethical
- it is ineffective, and
- even if it were effective, it would be a public relations disaster if its use were discovered.
Effectiveness
Subliminal perception or cognition, can be considered a subset of unconscious cognition where the forms of unconscious cognition also include attending to one signal in a noisy environment while unconsciously keeping track of other signals (e.g. one voice out of many in a crowded room) and tasks done automatically.
An important question about subliminal perception is: How much of the unattended or unconscious signal or message is perceived? That is, is the whole message sensed and fully digested or perhaps only its main and simpler features? There are at least two schools of thought about this. One of them argues that only the simpler features of unconscious signals could be perceived. The second school of thought argues that unconscious cognition is comprehensive and that much more is perceived than can be verbalized.
Various types of studies of subliminal perception have been conducted. The findings of recent studies demonstrate that subliminal stimuli can influence behavior and subsequent perceptions but it is as yet unclear how these results may generalize to real world settings. A related field is the question of whether anaesthetized patients are completely unaware whilst apparently completely asleep/unconscious.
Proponents of the power of subliminal messages claim they gain influence or power from the fact that they circumvent the critical functions of the conscious mind, and therefore subliminal suggestions are potentially more powerful than ordinary suggestions. This route to influence or persuasion would be akin to auto-suggestion or hypnosis wherein the subject is encouraged to be (or somehow induced to be) relaxed so that suggestions are directed to deeper (more gullible) parts of the mind; some observers have argued that the unconscious mind is incapable of critical refusal of hypnotic or subliminal suggestions.
Research findings do not support the conclusion that subliminal suggestions are peculiarly powerful, or even have any effect at all. However, some olfactory subliminal messages might work, be it in advertising, be it otherwise.
Mechanism
A form of subliminal messaging commonly believed to exist involves the insertion of "hidden" messages into movies and TV programs.
Instances
During the 2000 U.S. presidential campaign, a television ad campaigning for Republican candidate George W. Bush showed words (and parts thereof) scaling from the foreground to the background on a television screen. When the word BUREAUCRATS flashed on the screen, one frame showed only the last part, RATS. Democrats promptly asked the FCC to look into the matter, but no penalties were ever assessed in the case. The effect this had on the overall presidential race was unclear. The Democrats and Al Gore received ridicule for finding malicious intent in something that could have been a simple mistake; the Republicans received ridicule for the lack of attention to detail and Bush's mispronunciation of "subliminal" (it came out as "subliminable").
Another use instance of subliminal advertising revolves around commercials for the game Hüsker Dü which flashed the message 'Get it', in the United States and Canada, prompting a furor.
Some conservative groups have made occasional claims that subliminal messages can be found in various forms of popular entertainment such as the supposed use of "backward messages" in rock and roll songs. Conservative activist Donald Wildmon has claimed that The Walt Disney Company inserted the word "SEX" into the clouds in a scene in animated film The Lion King. According to Disney, however, the frame in question actually reads "SFX", a common abbreviation for "sound effects", and was a signature by the effects animation team for their work. The lettering is ambiguous but apparently supports Disney's claim.
See also
Quotations
- "Over the years there have been literally hundreds of studies"..."these studies show that considerable information capable of informing decisions and guiding actions is perceived even when observers do not experience any awareness of perceiving". Philip Merikle, Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo.
External links
- Hidden Persuaders: Subliminal messages in product packaging and advertisements (Snopes.com)
- Subliminal Advertising: Did an early experiment in subliminal advertising at a movie theater increase sales of popcorn and soda? (Snopes.com)
- Optical Illusions and Visual Paradoxes
- Subliminal messages- create them yourself
- Subliminal Seduction: How Did the Uproar over Subliminal Advertising Affect the Advertising Industry?
- 1984 testimony about subliminal messages to the Federal Communications commission
- Subliminal Influence and NLP Article
- Scientific Consensus and Expert Testimony: Lessons from the Judas Priest Trial
References
- Subliminal Perception: The nature of a controversy, N.F.Dixon, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1971.
- Psychological Investigations of Unconscious Perception, Journal of Consciousness Studies, P.M Merikle and M. Daneman, 1998.
- New Look 3: Unconscious Cognition Reclaimed, American Psychologist, 47, Anthony W. Greenwald, 1992.
- Holender, D. (1986). Semantic activation without conscious identification in dichotic listening, parafoveal vision, and visual masking: A survey and appraisal. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 9, 1-23.
- Seitz and Watanabe. (2003). Is subliminal learning really passive. Nautre, 422, 36.
- The Beetles. (1968-1974) Paul Alhambra High