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򽴫ý communication assistant professor tapped for media interview on success of coronavirus PSAs

򽴫ý communication assistant professor tapped for media interview on success of coronavirus PSAs

Studio portrait of Holli Seitz
Holli H. Seitz (Photo by Russ Houston)

Contact: Sasha Steinberg

STARKVILLE, Miss.—A faculty member in Mississippi State’s Department of Communication recently spotlighted her research on how to efficiently and effectively evaluate public service announcements during a Hearst Television interview.

In the conducted by Hearst Chief National Investigative Correspondent Mark Albert, 򽴫ý Assistant Professor of Communication Holli H. Seitz shared insight on the effectiveness of various COVID-19 PSAs that have gone viral. Public Service Announcements are brief informational messages designed to raise awareness on important issues.

“Giving a concrete message and stirring emotion—those are two things that will make a message incredibly memorable,” said Seitz, who also serves as director of The Message Laboratory in 򽴫ý’s Social Science Research Center. “If you can have a message that is effective in changing the desired health behavior and you can somehow get virality, then you have a larger, better chance of making a big positive effect.”

For the interview, Seitz drew her scholarly insight on the perceived success of PSAs from her 2012 co-authored research paper titled “Efficiently and Effectively Evaluating Public Service Announcements: Additional Evidence for the Utility of Perceived Effectiveness.”

The discussion aired on Hearst Television and radio stations across the country, including WAPT-TV in Jackson.

Seitz earned an 򽴫ý bachelor’s degree in communication in 2005 and a Master of Public Health in health behavior from the University of Alabama at Birmingham in 2007. She also holds a master’s and Ph.D. in communication from the University of Pennsylvania. At 򽴫ý, she has taught introductory communication, elements of persuasion, and health communication courses. Her research interests include health communication, message effects, media effects, health equity, and science communication.

Learn more about 򽴫ý’s College of Arts and Sciences at and Department of Communication at .

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