Framing beneficiary photos to elicit donations in online medical crowdfunding: through the perspectives of sympathy and deliberation
Abstract
Purpose
Beneficiary photos on charity appeals are believed to engender prosocial behavior. This study explores photo framing of healthy and unhealthy beneficiary photos in the context of photo-rich online medical crowdfunding. Based on framing theory, emphasis framing effect (i.e. unhealthy photos only vs both healthy and unhealthy photos) and equivalency framing effect (i.e. healthy photos prior to unhealthy photos vs unhealthy photos prior to healthy photos) are identified.
Design/methodology/approach
A scenario-based experiment with 135 participants was used to empirically test the proposed research hypotheses. The subjects were randomly assigned to three treatment groups, with 45 subjects in each group. ANOVA, linear regression, and multiple mediation analysis were used to analysis data.
Findings
The results reveal that disclosing both healthy and unhealthy photos can elicit stronger sympathy and perceived need than merely disclosing unhealthy photos. Moreover, the order of unhealthy photos prior to healthy photos leads to a higher level of sympathy than the order of healthy photos prior to unhealthy photos. Furthermore, sympathy and perceived need are positively related to donation intention.
Originality/value
First, this study extends the photo-related research limited to certain characteristics of a single photo to the sequence effect of multiple photos. Second, this study contributes to framing theory by introducing photo framing, particularly the equivalence and emphasis framing effect of beneficiary photos. Finally, this study reveals the emotional and cognitive routes through which beneficiary photos stimulate prosocial behavior. It also offers practical guidance in the aspects of the framing effect of beneficiary photos for crowdfunding management.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors also wish to acknowledge the National Natural Science Foundation of China (72172103, 72231004, 72172102, 72171165), the Chinese Ministry of Education of Humanities and Social Science Fund (21YJA630021), and Zhejiang Gongshang University “Digital+” Disciplinary Construction Management Project (SZJ2022B003) for financial support.
Citation
Wang, X., Guo, J. and Wu, Y. (2024), "Framing beneficiary photos to elicit donations in online medical crowdfunding: through the perspectives of sympathy and deliberation", Information Technology & People, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/ITP-04-2023-0327
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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