9. Visual health communication: Why and how do literate and low literate South Africans differ in their understanding of visual health messages?
- Author(s): Fons Maes 1 , Karen Foesenek 1 and Hanneke Hoogwegt 1
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View Affiliations Hide AffiliationsAffiliations:1 Dept of Communication and Information Sciences, University of Tilburg
- Source: Adapting Health Communication to Cultural Needs , pp 151-170
- Publication Date August 2008
This chapter focuses on the use of stand alone visuals as a health promotion medium in South-Africa. First, we survey the effectiveness of visuals as health intervention medium in a low literacy context. Second, we present an interpretation framework for complex communicative visuals, based on two related ideas: (i) the interpretation of visuals benefits from different types of natural correspondences with perceptual real world experiences, and (ii) interpreting visuals requires three interpretation strategies (symptomatic, iconic, symbolic) which increase in the level of abstraction they require and decrease in the level of natural correspondence with the real world they rely on. This framework enables us to predict an increase in comprehension problems as visuals rely less on natural correspondences and require more abstract interpretation strategies. Furthermore, these comprehension problems are expected to increase as viewers are less experienced and educated in reading the formal language of visuals. Third, we present the set up and results of a study in which we tested these predictions. We asked literate and low literate South African respondents to interpret complex visuals taken from recent South African HIV/AIDS brochures. The results confirm a decrease in comprehension performance as visuals require more abstract, convention based interpretation strategies, an evolution which is more pronounced in the group of low literates.
- Affiliations: 1: Dept of Communication and Information Sciences, University of Tilburg
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