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Wikipedia

Credibility

Credibility comprises the objective and subjective components of the believability of a source or message. Credibility dates back to Aristotle theory of Rhetoric. Aristotle defines rhetoric as the ability to see what is possibly persuasive in every situation. He divided the means of persuasion into three categories, namely Ethos (the source's credibility), Pathos (the emotional or motivational appeals), and Logos (the logic used to support a claim), which he believed have the capacity to influence the receiver of a message. According to Aristotle, the term "Ethos" deals with the character of the speaker. The intent of the speaker is to appear credible. In fact, the speaker's ethos is a rhetorical strategy employed by an orator whose purpose is to "inspire trust in his audience". Credibility has two key components: trustworthiness and expertise, which both have objective and subjective components. Trustworthiness is based more on subjective factors, but can include objective measurements such as established reliability. Expertise can be similarly subjectively perceived, but also includes relatively objective characteristics of the source or message (e.g., credentials, certification or information quality).[1] Secondary components of credibility include source dynamism (charisma) and physical attractiveness.

Scientists with PhD degrees are considered credible sources in their field of expertise, due to their advanced study.

Credibility online has become an important topic since the mid-1990s. This is because the web has increasingly become an information resource. The Credibility and Digital Media Project @ UCSB[2] highlights recent and ongoing work in this area, including recent consideration of digital media, youth, and credibility. In addition, the Persuasive Technology Lab[3] at Stanford University has studied web credibility and proposed the principal components of online credibility and a general theory called Prominence-Interpretation Theory.[4]

In journalism edit

According to the Society of Professional Journalists' code of ethics, professional integrity is the cornerstone of a journalist's credibility.[5] A journalist's number one obligation is to be honest.

According to Gallup polls, Americans' confidence in the mass media has been consistently declining each year since 2007.[6]

In 2013, a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press found that credibility ratings for major news organizations are at or near their all-time lows.[7]

"As audiences lose confidence in traditional news outlets, many see great promise in the Internet as a response to this crisis in journalism."[8]

The widespread use of the internet has helped motivate journalists to become more credible. The reason for this is because the competition of providing news increased when consumers had the chance and ability to choose the media that they consume through online sources. The internet has provided a chance for anyone to report news. In order to increase credibility, and therefore increase readers of their articles, journalists should be objective, accurate, trustworthy, and reliable.

Three aspects of credibility: clarity (how easily the article can be understood), accuracy (how well documented the information is), and trustworthiness (how believable the information is).[9]

In academia edit

Students' perception of instructors has great importance and possible consequences. Instructor credibility, which is defined as "the attitude of a receiver which references the degree to which a source is seen to be believable",[10] consists of three dimensions-, competence, character, and caring.[11] Competence focuses on his or her expertise or knowledge in a subject matter.[10] Character refers to the "goodness" (i.e., honesty, trustworthiness) of an instructor.[12] Caring focuses on whether the instructor shows concern or empathy for the students' welfare or situation.[10] Although an instructor may show one or two of these qualities, the best and most respected exude all three qualities.[10] A study done by Atkinson and Cooper revealed that students who are taught by an instructor they perceive as credible, results in extreme allegiance to those instructors.

Generally, instructors who are perceived to have credibility are associated with effective teaching skills. Instructors who demonstrate competence, character, and/or caring are perceived to engage in a variety of effective instructional communication behaviors such as argumentativeness,[13] verbal and nonverbal immediacy,[14] affinity seeking,[12] and assertiveness and responsiveness.[15] Moreover, credible instructors are perceived to be low in verbal aggressiveness[16] and less likely to use behaviors that interfere with student learning.[17]

Unlike instructor competence which centers on instructors' perceived expertise,[10] instructor character and caring are rooted in students' perceptions of their instructors' interpersonal communication behaviors. Students can feel more connected to the material being taught and have the information stay in their mind, if the instructor sharing the information has credibility. According to studies, when instructors exemplify the qualities of character (i.e., kind, virtuous, good) and caring (i.e., empathetic, understanding, responsive), students report a greater likelihood of communicating with them.[18]

Teachers who are concerned with whether students communicate with them, either in class or out of class, may want to reconsider the role their own in-class communication behaviors play in students' willingness or likelihood to communicate with them. Instructors who are interested in how students perceive their competence, character, and caring should examine how their in-class communication behaviors contribute to these perceptions. They can evaluate themselves, go back over their lectures, scores that students give them at the end of the semester, and seek advice and training from their peers. By doing so, instructors may find students are more willing, likely, or interested in communicating with them. [18]

In science edit

Scientific credibility has been defined as the extent to which science in general is recognized as a source of reliable information about the world.[19] The term has also been applied more narrowly, as an assessment of the credibility of the work of an individual scientist or a field of research. Here, the phrase refers to how closely the work in question adheres to scientific principles, such as the scientific method.[20] The method most commonly used to assess the quality of science is peer review and then publication as part of the scientific literature.[21] Other approaches include the collaborative assessment of a topic by a group of experts, this process can produce reviews such as those published by the Cochrane Collaboration,[22] or the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.[23]

The general public can give a great deal of weight to perceptions of scientific authority in their decisions on controversial issues that involve scientific research, such as biotechnology.[24] However, both the credibility and authority of science is questioned by groups with non-mainstream views, such as some advocates of alternative medicine,[25] or those who dispute the scientific consensus on a topic, such as denialists of AIDS[26][27] and of evolution.[citation needed]

In medicine edit

People rely on doctors' expertise to respond to issues relating to their health. Trust in a doctor's credibility is essential to a patient's health: depending on the patient's trust in the doctor they will be more or less willing to seek help, reveal sensitive information, submit to treatment, and follow the doctor's recommendations. According to numerous studies, done over 15 years we can conclude that we see a doctor's credibility as having five overlapping characteristics: Fidelity, which is caring and advocating for the patient's interests or welfare and avoiding conflicts of interest; competence, which is having good practice and interpersonal skills, making correct decisions, and avoiding mistakes; honesty, which is telling the truth and avoiding intentional falsehoods; confidentiality, which is proper use of sensitive information; and global trust, which is the irreducible "soul" of trust, or aspects that combine elements from some or all of the separate dimensions.[28]

In general, it is easy to see what patients are looking for when it comes to a trustworthy doctor and the best way they can have their needs satisfied. There does seem to be a growing discontent with the medical field, however, because of for-profit drug companies that are influencing money behind the medical field. In 2002 a doctor attended the hearings of a drug company that was on trial for the death of adolescents who committed suicide while taking their antidepressants. Before the hearing studies had been filed with the FDA under the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act of 2002. These studies reflected a congressional effort to motivate drug companies to study the effects of medications on children. Since children are a much smaller market for new drugs, the pharmaceutical industry was suspected to not study them as much. The Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act of 2002 was meant to strengthen drug companies credibility by rewarding those that performed pediatric studies. The law, however, did not require these pediatric studies performed to be publicized or published[29]

According to a New England Journal of Medicine study, 94% of American doctors have some relationship with a drug or medical device company, including payments but also drug samples and industry lunches, for example.[30] Such alarming evidence is what has prompted a growing mistrust in medical professionals credibility. Despite the studies conducted intended on finding out how to increase doctors' credibility, the findings are inconclusive. It is a strong general consensus that increased visibility of the relationship between doctors and pharmaceutical companies is the first place to start.

We are seeing some progress towards transparency. The US Open Payments Act (Physician Payments Sunshine Act) has from October 2014 required drug companies to disclose payments to doctors, but it's still does not give total transparency. There is a long way to go in establishing trust and credibility behind what the doctors recommend to patients. Being honest and showing that they are acting off their expertise instead of motivated by incentives given by pharmaceutical companies.[31]

In the Web edit

In case of the Web pages, vast majority of researchers identifies two key components of credibility:[32]

  • Trustworthiness – related to well-intentioned, truthful, unbiased information and perceived goodness or morality of the source.
  • Expertise – connected with such terms as knowledgeable, experienced, competent and captures the perceived knowledge and skill of the source.

On the street edit

Street credibility or "street cred" (also referred to as "the word on the street") is the degree to which someone's word can be believed by a typical person, the "person on the street".[33] Corporations have gone through their own ways of getting street credibility; however, it goes by a different name: branding. This is a process in which companies spend billions of dollars a year to convey information about a product, who is using it, and why others should also. They are targeting certain individuals as to increase their ability to grow their "street cred" so that the sales growth does not end. From clothing like running shoes and jeans to food and alcoholic beverages, branding is used to assist companies improve their street cred and better sell a product.[34][35]

The CEO of the company is the face of what the public sees. A CEO helps illustrate the organization's internal and external shareholders. CEOs are spokesmen who are actively visible and shape the corporate image. The role of the CEO is to influence employees' attitudes, perceptions, and performances through example of leadership and support.[36]

In business leadership edit

CEO credibility is made up of two factors: knowing what one is talking about, or expertise; and being able to be trusted, or trustworthiness. One of the ways that a CEO's expertise is measured is by the way his/her employees perceive them. If the CEO is seen as someone to whom the senior employees can go to for knowledge and help, this goes to show they have confidence that the CEO holds the skills necessary to help, and is thus valued in their position as such. The extent to which the employee gives their confidence to the CEO determines the CEO's trustworthiness. An employee may totally embrace or quietly set aside the message of the CEO, these results measure the degree of trustworthiness there is in the CEO. The whole reputation of the organization represented by the CEO is built mainly by the experience of the employees as time passes. This reputation is carefully built by many factors experienced by the employees such as the actual services or products sphere, social aspects related to work and the overall foresight and ability to lead in a successful manner.

There is a natural connection link between the CEO and the organization. A CEO's credibility affects how employees view the organization's image. Employees who perceive the CEO as more qualified, competent, knowledgeable, and possessing more expertise and skills tend to view the organizational reputation more positively. Employees who view the CEO as more honest and trustworthy tend to evaluate the organization in a positive manner.

The employees view of the organization completely intervenes the positive relationship between the CEO credibility and the employee's involvement of engagement. Although the CEO's credibility positively affects employee engagement, the actual impact is exercised by the employee's view of the organization's reputation.[37]

In social media edit

Social media credibility is dependent on cues and heuristics. Cues used to assess credibility online are authority cues, identity cues, and bandwagon cues. Authority cues are the most influence source credibility. Authority cues are cues that let the viewer know that it is an expert source such as a university or government institution. Identity cues are peer information. Users trust information more if they can identify the person that published it the publisher is not anonymous. Users view information as more credible if a peer shared it than a stranger. Bandwagon cues triggers credibility processing based on the logic that "if others think it's good, so should I. [38]

Two-phase model of credibility edit

Jürgen Habermas in his theory of communicative action developed four validity claims (truth, sincerity, appropriateness and understandability) leading to the concept of credibility.

In a different study[39] researchers empirically validated the claims and derived a two-phase model of "reporting credibility", where first of all understandability needs to be reached. Only then the three other validity claims make a difference and may lead to credibility in the Habermasian sense.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Flanagin and Metzger (2008), Digital media and youth: Unparalleled opportunity and unprecedented responsibility. In J. Metzger, & A. Flanagin (editors), Digitaingl media, youth, and credibility (pp. 5–28). Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
  2. ^ Credibility.ucsb.edu[bare URL]. 7 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 March 2011. Retrieved 30 June 2006.[bare URL]
  4. ^ Credibility.stanford.edu[bare URL].
  5. ^ SPJ.org[bare URL] (see Preamble).
  6. ^ Elizabeth Mendes (19 September 2013). "In U.S., Trust in Media Recovers Slightly from All-Time Low". Gallup.
  7. ^ The Pew Center for the People & the Press, "Amid Criticism, Support for Media's 'Watchdog' Role Stands Out", The Pew Center for the People & the Press, 8 Aug. 2013, http://www.people-press.org/2013/08/08/amid-criticism-supportfor-medias-watchdog-role-stands-out/[permanent dead link].
  8. ^ HEFLIN, K. (2015). The Internet Is Not the Antidote. Journalism History, 41(3), 165–175.
  9. ^ Mosier, N. R., Ahlgren, A. (1981). Credibility of Precision Journalism. Journalism Quarterly, 58(3), 375–518.
  10. ^ a b c d e McCroskey, J. C. (1998). An introduction to communication in the classroom (2nd ed.).Acton, MA: Tapestry Press.
  11. ^ Teven, J. J., McCroskey, J. C. (1997). The relationship of perceived teacher caring with student learning and teacher evaluation. Communication Education, 46, 1–9.
  12. ^ a b Frymier, A. B., & Thompson, C. A. (1992). Perceived teacher affinity-seeking in relation to perceived teacher credibility. Communication Education, 41, 388–399.
  13. ^ Schrodt, P. (2003). Students' appraisals of instructors as a function of students' perceptions of instructors' aggressive communication. Communication Education, 52, 106–121.
  14. ^ Johnson, S. D., Miller, A. N. (2002). A cross-cultural study of immediacy, credibility, and learning in the U.S. and Kenya. Communication Education, 51, 280–292.
  15. ^ Martin, M. M., Chesebro, J. L., Mottet, T. P. (1997). Students' perceptions of instructors' socio-communicative style and the influence on instructor credibility and situational motivation. Communication Research Reports, 14, 431-44i0.
  16. ^ Martin, M. M., Weber, K., Burant, P. A. (1997, April). Students' perceptions of a teacher's use of slang and verbal aggressiveness in a lecture: An experiment. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Eastern Communication Association, Baltimore, MD.
  17. ^ Thweatt, K. S., McCroskey, J. C. (1998). The impact of teacher immediacy and misbehaviors on teacher credibility. Communication Education, 47, 348–358.
  18. ^ a b Myers, S. A. (2004). The Relationship between Perceived Instructor Credibility and College Student In-class and Out-of-class Communication. Communication Reports, 17(2), 129–137. doi:10.1080/08934210409389382.
  19. ^ Bocking, Stephen (2004). Nature's experts: science, politics, and the environment. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. p. 164. ISBN 0-8135-3398-8.
  20. ^ Alkin, Marvin C. (2004). Evaluation roots: tracing theorists' views and influences. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage. p. 134. ISBN 0-7619-2894-4.
  21. ^ Bocking, Stephen (2004). Nature's experts: science, politics, and the environment. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. p. 165. ISBN 0-8135-3398-8.
  22. ^ What is a Cochrane review. 16 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Cochrane Collaboration, Accessed 5 January 2009.
  23. ^ Agrawala, S. (1998). "Structural and Process History of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change". Climatic Change. 39 (4): 621–642. doi:10.1023/A:1005312331477. S2CID 153213293.
  24. ^ Brossard, Dominique; Nisbet, Matthew C. (2007). "Deference to Scientific Authority Among a Low Information Public: Understanding U.S. Opinion on Agricultural Biotechnology". International Journal of Public Opinion Research. 19 (1): 24. doi:10.1093/ijpor/edl003. Dennis Chaptman (1 May 2007). "Survey examines Americans' trust in science". University of Wisconsin–Madison (Press release).
  25. ^ O'callaghan, F. V.; Jordan, N. (2003). "Postmodern values, attitudes and the use of complementary medicine". Complementary Therapies in Medicine. 11 (1): 28–32. doi:10.1016/S0965-2299(02)00109-7. PMID 12667972.
  26. ^ Smith TC, Novella SP (August 2007). "HIV denial in the Internet era". PLOS Med. 4 (8): e256. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0040256. PMC 1949841. PMID 17713982.
  27. ^ Epstein, Steven (1996). "Impure science: AIDS, activism, and the politics of knowledge". Medicine and Society. Berkeley: University of California Press: 1–466. ISBN 0-520-21445-5. PMID 11619509.
  28. ^ Hall, M. A., Camacho, F., Dugan, E., Balkrishnan, R. (2002). Trust in the Medical Profession: Conceptual and Measurement Issues. Health Services Research, 37(5), 1419–1439. doi:10.1111/1475-6773.01070.
  29. ^ Diller, L. H. (2005). Fallout from the Pharma Scandals: The Loss of Doctors' Credibility? Hastings Center Report, 35(3), 28–29. doi:10.1353/hcr.2005.0058.
  30. ^ A National Survey of Physician–Industry Relationships Eric G. Campbell, PhD, Russell L. Gruen, M.D., PhD, James Mountford, M.D., Lawrence G. Miller, M.D., Paul D. Cleary, PhD, David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P. A National Survey of Physician–Industry Relationships. N. Engl. J. Med. 2007; 356:1742–1750. 26 April 2007. doi:10.1056/NEJMsa064508.
  31. ^ Wen, L. (2014). Patients can't trust doctors' advice if we hide our financial connections with drug companies. Bmj, 348(Jan15 6)[clarify]. doi:10.1136/bmj.g167.
  32. ^ Fogg, B. J., et al. "What makes Web sites credible?: a report on a large quantitative study". Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems. ACM, 2001.
  33. ^ "Definition of cred". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  34. ^ Seabright, P. (2001). Street Credibility for Sale: a Theory of Branding. Universite de Toulous, 1–21. Retrieved 19 April 2017, from http://idei.fr/sites/default/files/medias/doc/by/seabright/brand.pdf
  35. ^ Men, L. R. (2012). CEO credibility, perceived organizational reputation, and employee engagement. Public Relations Review, 38(1), 171–173. doi:10.1016/j.pubrev.2011.12.011.
  36. ^ Journal of Public Relations Research, 16 (2004), pp. 93–125.
  37. ^ Men, L. R. (2012) CEO credibility, perceived organizational reputation, and employee engagement. Public Relations Review, 38(1), 171–173. doi:10.1016/j.pubrev.2011.12.011.
  38. ^ Lin, X., Spence, P., Lachlan, K. (2016). Social media and credibility indicators: The effect of influence cues. Computers in Human Behavior, 63, 264–271.
  39. ^ Lock, Irina; Seele, Peter (2016): The credibility of CSR reports in Europe. Evidence from a quantitative content analysis in 11 countries. Journal of Cleaner Production. 122. 186–200. doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2016.02.060.

External links edit

  • Handbook of Management Scales: Credibility
  • College students' news habits, preferences, and credibility perceptions

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Cred redirects here For other uses see Cred disambiguation Credible redirects here For the American financial technology company see Credible company For the concept in monetary policy see Monetary policy credibility Credibility comprises the objective and subjective components of the believability of a source or message Credibility dates back to Aristotle theory of Rhetoric Aristotle defines rhetoric as the ability to see what is possibly persuasive in every situation He divided the means of persuasion into three categories namely Ethos the source s credibility Pathos the emotional or motivational appeals and Logos the logic used to support a claim which he believed have the capacity to influence the receiver of a message According to Aristotle the term Ethos deals with the character of the speaker The intent of the speaker is to appear credible In fact the speaker s ethos is a rhetorical strategy employed by an orator whose purpose is to inspire trust in his audience Credibility has two key components trustworthiness and expertise which both have objective and subjective components Trustworthiness is based more on subjective factors but can include objective measurements such as established reliability Expertise can be similarly subjectively perceived but also includes relatively objective characteristics of the source or message e g credentials certification or information quality 1 Secondary components of credibility include source dynamism charisma and physical attractiveness Scientists with PhD degrees are considered credible sources in their field of expertise due to their advanced study Credibility online has become an important topic since the mid 1990s This is because the web has increasingly become an information resource The Credibility and Digital Media Project UCSB 2 highlights recent and ongoing work in this area including recent consideration of digital media youth and credibility In addition the Persuasive Technology Lab 3 at Stanford University has studied web credibility and proposed the principal components of online credibility and a general theory called Prominence Interpretation Theory 4 Contents 1 In journalism 2 In academia 3 In science 4 In medicine 5 In the Web 6 On the street 7 In business leadership 8 In social media 9 Two phase model of credibility 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksIn journalism editAccording to the Society of Professional Journalists code of ethics professional integrity is the cornerstone of a journalist s credibility 5 A journalist s number one obligation is to be honest According to Gallup polls Americans confidence in the mass media has been consistently declining each year since 2007 6 In 2013 a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People amp the Press found that credibility ratings for major news organizations are at or near their all time lows 7 As audiences lose confidence in traditional news outlets many see great promise in the Internet as a response to this crisis in journalism 8 The widespread use of the internet has helped motivate journalists to become more credible The reason for this is because the competition of providing news increased when consumers had the chance and ability to choose the media that they consume through online sources The internet has provided a chance for anyone to report news In order to increase credibility and therefore increase readers of their articles journalists should be objective accurate trustworthy and reliable Three aspects of credibility clarity how easily the article can be understood accuracy how well documented the information is and trustworthiness how believable the information is 9 In academia editStudents perception of instructors has great importance and possible consequences Instructor credibility which is defined as the attitude of a receiver which references the degree to which a source is seen to be believable 10 consists of three dimensions competence character and caring 11 Competence focuses on his or her expertise or knowledge in a subject matter 10 Character refers to the goodness i e honesty trustworthiness of an instructor 12 Caring focuses on whether the instructor shows concern or empathy for the students welfare or situation 10 Although an instructor may show one or two of these qualities the best and most respected exude all three qualities 10 A study done by Atkinson and Cooper revealed that students who are taught by an instructor they perceive as credible results in extreme allegiance to those instructors Generally instructors who are perceived to have credibility are associated with effective teaching skills Instructors who demonstrate competence character and or caring are perceived to engage in a variety of effective instructional communication behaviors such as argumentativeness 13 verbal and nonverbal immediacy 14 affinity seeking 12 and assertiveness and responsiveness 15 Moreover credible instructors are perceived to be low in verbal aggressiveness 16 and less likely to use behaviors that interfere with student learning 17 Unlike instructor competence which centers on instructors perceived expertise 10 instructor character and caring are rooted in students perceptions of their instructors interpersonal communication behaviors Students can feel more connected to the material being taught and have the information stay in their mind if the instructor sharing the information has credibility According to studies when instructors exemplify the qualities of character i e kind virtuous good and caring i e empathetic understanding responsive students report a greater likelihood of communicating with them 18 Teachers who are concerned with whether students communicate with them either in class or out of class may want to reconsider the role their own in class communication behaviors play in students willingness or likelihood to communicate with them Instructors who are interested in how students perceive their competence character and caring should examine how their in class communication behaviors contribute to these perceptions They can evaluate themselves go back over their lectures scores that students give them at the end of the semester and seek advice and training from their peers By doing so instructors may find students are more willing likely or interested in communicating with them 18 In science editScientific credibility has been defined as the extent to which science in general is recognized as a source of reliable information about the world 19 The term has also been applied more narrowly as an assessment of the credibility of the work of an individual scientist or a field of research Here the phrase refers to how closely the work in question adheres to scientific principles such as the scientific method 20 The method most commonly used to assess the quality of science is peer review and then publication as part of the scientific literature 21 Other approaches include the collaborative assessment of a topic by a group of experts this process can produce reviews such as those published by the Cochrane Collaboration 22 or the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 23 The general public can give a great deal of weight to perceptions of scientific authority in their decisions on controversial issues that involve scientific research such as biotechnology 24 However both the credibility and authority of science is questioned by groups with non mainstream views such as some advocates of alternative medicine 25 or those who dispute the scientific consensus on a topic such as denialists of AIDS 26 27 and of evolution citation needed In medicine editPeople rely on doctors expertise to respond to issues relating to their health Trust in a doctor s credibility is essential to a patient s health depending on the patient s trust in the doctor they will be more or less willing to seek help reveal sensitive information submit to treatment and follow the doctor s recommendations According to numerous studies done over 15 years we can conclude that we see a doctor s credibility as having five overlapping characteristics Fidelity which is caring and advocating for the patient s interests or welfare and avoiding conflicts of interest competence which is having good practice and interpersonal skills making correct decisions and avoiding mistakes honesty which is telling the truth and avoiding intentional falsehoods confidentiality which is proper use of sensitive information and global trust which is the irreducible soul of trust or aspects that combine elements from some or all of the separate dimensions 28 In general it is easy to see what patients are looking for when it comes to a trustworthy doctor and the best way they can have their needs satisfied There does seem to be a growing discontent with the medical field however because of for profit drug companies that are influencing money behind the medical field In 2002 a doctor attended the hearings of a drug company that was on trial for the death of adolescents who committed suicide while taking their antidepressants Before the hearing studies had been filed with the FDA under the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act of 2002 These studies reflected a congressional effort to motivate drug companies to study the effects of medications on children Since children are a much smaller market for new drugs the pharmaceutical industry was suspected to not study them as much The Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act of 2002 was meant to strengthen drug companies credibility by rewarding those that performed pediatric studies The law however did not require these pediatric studies performed to be publicized or published 29 According to a New England Journal of Medicine study 94 of American doctors have some relationship with a drug or medical device company including payments but also drug samples and industry lunches for example 30 Such alarming evidence is what has prompted a growing mistrust in medical professionals credibility Despite the studies conducted intended on finding out how to increase doctors credibility the findings are inconclusive It is a strong general consensus that increased visibility of the relationship between doctors and pharmaceutical companies is the first place to start We are seeing some progress towards transparency The US Open Payments Act Physician Payments Sunshine Act has from October 2014 required drug companies to disclose payments to doctors but it s still does not give total transparency There is a long way to go in establishing trust and credibility behind what the doctors recommend to patients Being honest and showing that they are acting off their expertise instead of motivated by incentives given by pharmaceutical companies 31 In the Web editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2021 In case of the Web pages vast majority of researchers identifies two key components of credibility 32 Trustworthiness related to well intentioned truthful unbiased information and perceived goodness or morality of the source Expertise connected with such terms as knowledgeable experienced competent and captures the perceived knowledge and skill of the source On the street editStreet credibility or street cred also referred to as the word on the street is the degree to which someone s word can be believed by a typical person the person on the street 33 Corporations have gone through their own ways of getting street credibility however it goes by a different name branding This is a process in which companies spend billions of dollars a year to convey information about a product who is using it and why others should also They are targeting certain individuals as to increase their ability to grow their street cred so that the sales growth does not end From clothing like running shoes and jeans to food and alcoholic beverages branding is used to assist companies improve their street cred and better sell a product 34 35 The CEO of the company is the face of what the public sees A CEO helps illustrate the organization s internal and external shareholders CEOs are spokesmen who are actively visible and shape the corporate image The role of the CEO is to influence employees attitudes perceptions and performances through example of leadership and support 36 In business leadership editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Credibility news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message CEO credibility is made up of two factors knowing what one is talking about or expertise and being able to be trusted or trustworthiness One of the ways that a CEO s expertise is measured is by the way his her employees perceive them If the CEO is seen as someone to whom the senior employees can go to for knowledge and help this goes to show they have confidence that the CEO holds the skills necessary to help and is thus valued in their position as such The extent to which the employee gives their confidence to the CEO determines the CEO s trustworthiness An employee may totally embrace or quietly set aside the message of the CEO these results measure the degree of trustworthiness there is in the CEO The whole reputation of the organization represented by the CEO is built mainly by the experience of the employees as time passes This reputation is carefully built by many factors experienced by the employees such as the actual services or products sphere social aspects related to work and the overall foresight and ability to lead in a successful manner There is a natural connection link between the CEO and the organization A CEO s credibility affects how employees view the organization s image Employees who perceive the CEO as more qualified competent knowledgeable and possessing more expertise and skills tend to view the organizational reputation more positively Employees who view the CEO as more honest and trustworthy tend to evaluate the organization in a positive manner The employees view of the organization completely intervenes the positive relationship between the CEO credibility and the employee s involvement of engagement Although the CEO s credibility positively affects employee engagement the actual impact is exercised by the employee s view of the organization s reputation 37 In social media editSocial media credibility is dependent on cues and heuristics Cues used to assess credibility online are authority cues identity cues and bandwagon cues Authority cues are the most influence source credibility Authority cues are cues that let the viewer know that it is an expert source such as a university or government institution Identity cues are peer information Users trust information more if they can identify the person that published it the publisher is not anonymous Users view information as more credible if a peer shared it than a stranger Bandwagon cues triggers credibility processing based on the logic that if others think it s good so should I 38 Two phase model of credibility editJurgen Habermas in his theory of communicative action developed four validity claims truth sincerity appropriateness and understandability leading to the concept of credibility In a different study 39 researchers empirically validated the claims and derived a two phase model of reporting credibility where first of all understandability needs to be reached Only then the three other validity claims make a difference and may lead to credibility in the Habermasian sense See also editCentre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters CRED Credibility gap Credibility theory Credibility thesis Epistemology the philosophical study of truth and belief Expertise finding Indie cred Integrity Objectivity Source credibility from social psychology theory Source criticism Web literacy credibility WitnessReferences edit Flanagin and Metzger 2008 Digital media and youth Unparalleled opportunity and unprecedented responsibility In J Metzger amp A Flanagin editors Digitaingl media youth and credibility pp 5 28 Cambridge MA The MIT Press Credibility ucsb edu bare URL Archived 7 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine Captology stanford eu Archived from the original on 5 March 2011 Retrieved 30 June 2006 bare URL Credibility stanford edu bare URL SPJ org bare URL see Preamble Elizabeth Mendes 19 September 2013 In U S Trust in Media Recovers Slightly from All Time Low Gallup The Pew Center for the People amp the Press Amid Criticism Support for Media s Watchdog Role Stands Out The Pew Center for the People amp the Press 8 Aug 2013 http www people press org 2013 08 08 amid criticism supportfor medias watchdog role stands out permanent dead link HEFLIN K 2015 The Internet Is Not the Antidote Journalism History 41 3 165 175 Mosier N R Ahlgren A 1981 Credibility of Precision Journalism Journalism Quarterly 58 3 375 518 a b c d e McCroskey J C 1998 An introduction to communication in the classroom 2nd ed Acton MA Tapestry Press Teven J J McCroskey J C 1997 The relationship of perceived teacher caring with student learning and teacher evaluation Communication Education 46 1 9 a b Frymier A B amp Thompson C A 1992 Perceived teacher affinity seeking in relation to perceived teacher credibility Communication Education 41 388 399 Schrodt P 2003 Students appraisals of instructors as a function of students perceptions of instructors aggressive communication Communication Education 52 106 121 Johnson S D Miller A N 2002 A cross cultural study of immediacy credibility and learning in the U S and Kenya Communication Education 51 280 292 Martin M M Chesebro J L Mottet T P 1997 Students perceptions of instructors socio communicative style and the influence on instructor credibility and situational motivation Communication Research Reports 14 431 44i0 Martin M M Weber K Burant P A 1997 April Students perceptions of a teacher s use of slang and verbal aggressiveness in a lecture An experiment Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Eastern Communication Association Baltimore MD Thweatt K S McCroskey J C 1998 The impact of teacher immediacy and misbehaviors on teacher credibility Communication Education 47 348 358 a b Myers S A 2004 The Relationship between Perceived Instructor Credibility and College Student In class and Out of class Communication Communication Reports 17 2 129 137 doi 10 1080 08934210409389382 Bocking Stephen 2004 Nature s experts science politics and the environment New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press p 164 ISBN 0 8135 3398 8 Alkin Marvin C 2004 Evaluation roots tracing theorists views and influences Thousand Oaks Calif Sage p 134 ISBN 0 7619 2894 4 Bocking Stephen 2004 Nature s experts science politics and the environment New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press p 165 ISBN 0 8135 3398 8 What is a Cochrane review Archived 16 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Cochrane Collaboration Accessed 5 January 2009 Agrawala S 1998 Structural and Process History of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Climatic Change 39 4 621 642 doi 10 1023 A 1005312331477 S2CID 153213293 Brossard Dominique Nisbet Matthew C 2007 Deference to Scientific Authority Among a Low Information Public Understanding U S Opinion on Agricultural Biotechnology International Journal of Public Opinion Research 19 1 24 doi 10 1093 ijpor edl003 Dennis Chaptman 1 May 2007 Survey examines Americans trust in science University of Wisconsin Madison Press release O callaghan F V Jordan N 2003 Postmodern values attitudes and the use of complementary medicine Complementary Therapies in Medicine 11 1 28 32 doi 10 1016 S0965 2299 02 00109 7 PMID 12667972 Smith TC Novella SP August 2007 HIV denial in the Internet era PLOS Med 4 8 e256 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 0040256 PMC 1949841 PMID 17713982 Epstein Steven 1996 Impure science AIDS activism and the politics of knowledge Medicine and Society Berkeley University of California Press 1 466 ISBN 0 520 21445 5 PMID 11619509 Hall M A Camacho F Dugan E Balkrishnan R 2002 Trust in the Medical Profession Conceptual and Measurement Issues Health Services Research 37 5 1419 1439 doi 10 1111 1475 6773 01070 Diller L H 2005 Fallout from the Pharma Scandals The Loss of Doctors Credibility Hastings Center Report 35 3 28 29 doi 10 1353 hcr 2005 0058 A National Survey of Physician Industry Relationships Eric G Campbell PhD Russell L Gruen M D PhD James Mountford M D Lawrence G Miller M D Paul D Cleary PhD David Blumenthal M D M P P A National Survey of Physician Industry Relationships N Engl J Med 2007 356 1742 1750 26 April 2007 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa064508 Wen L 2014 Patients can t trust doctors advice if we hide our financial connections with drug companies Bmj 348 Jan15 6 clarify doi 10 1136 bmj g167 Fogg B J et al What makes Web sites credible a report on a large quantitative study Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems ACM 2001 Definition of cred Merriam Webster Retrieved 22 March 2014 Seabright P 2001 Street Credibility for Sale a Theory of Branding Universite de Toulous 1 21 Retrieved 19 April 2017 from http idei fr sites default files medias doc by seabright brand pdf Men L R 2012 CEO credibility perceived organizational reputation and employee engagement Public Relations Review 38 1 171 173 doi 10 1016 j pubrev 2011 12 011 Journal of Public Relations Research 16 2004 pp 93 125 Men L R 2012 CEO credibility perceived organizational reputation and employee engagement Public Relations Review 38 1 171 173 doi 10 1016 j pubrev 2011 12 011 Lin X Spence P Lachlan K 2016 Social media and credibility indicators The effect of influence cues Computers in Human Behavior 63 264 271 Lock Irina Seele Peter 2016 The credibility of CSR reports in Europe Evidence from a quantitative content analysis in 11 countries Journal of Cleaner Production 122 186 200 doi 10 1016 j jclepro 2016 02 060 External links edit nbsp Look up credibility in Wiktionary the free dictionary Handbook of Management Scales Credibility College students news habits preferences and credibility perceptions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Credibility amp oldid 1210312033 On the street, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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