Predictors of channel switching during live prime time television advertising

The focus of this study is on viewers’ channel switching behaviour during prime-time television advertising breaks. While the extent of channel switching has been studied repeatedly, the factors underlying channelswitching have not been extensively researched within a single study. To date, methodol...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dix, Stephen Richard
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Curtin University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/1737
_version_ 1848743754376151040
author Dix, Stephen Richard
author_facet Dix, Stephen Richard
author_sort Dix, Stephen Richard
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The focus of this study is on viewers’ channel switching behaviour during prime-time television advertising breaks. While the extent of channel switching has been studied repeatedly, the factors underlying channelswitching have not been extensively researched within a single study. To date, methodological limitations associated with self-reports, in-home cameras and electronic tracking data have restricted the scope for identifying the predictors of channel switching.The study makes use of a dual observation/survey methodological approach that has been largely overlooked in this area of research. This approach makes it possible to determine the influence of previously untested potential predictors of channel switching. The aim of this study is to determine the influence of six identified predictors on television viewers’ channel switching. The predictor variables tested include Perceived Clutter, Channel Proliferation, Attitude towards Television Advertising, Planned versus Impulse Viewing, Advertising Triggers and Remote Control Device (RCD) Empowerment. The last two predictors (Advertising Triggers and RCD Empowerment) result from factors drawn from a scale (SITUZAP) developed to measure the situational factors associated with channel switching. Moreover, the study determines the impact of these six predictor variables on observed channel switching (observed PROPZAP) across 1,283 observations as well as on reported channel switching (reported PROPZAP) across 848 respondents.The empowerment provided by the RCD emerges as the dominant predictor of channel switching behaviour. Access to the RCD as a means of controlling the viewing environment is the foremost influencer of both observed and reported propensity to switch channels. However, while reported switching propensity is influenced by ‘advertising triggers’ (for example, a repetitive or irritating commercial) and ‘perceived clutter’ (too much advertising on television), observed switching propensity is unaffected by these factors.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T05:50:36Z
format Thesis
id curtin-20.500.11937-1737
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T05:50:36Z
publishDate 2006
publisher Curtin University
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-17372017-02-20T06:39:00Z Predictors of channel switching during live prime time television advertising Dix, Stephen Richard remote control device empowerment prime-time television advertising viewers' channel switching behaviour attidude towards television advertising planned versus impulse viewing dual observation/survey methodological approach perceived clutter advertising triggers channel proliferation The focus of this study is on viewers’ channel switching behaviour during prime-time television advertising breaks. While the extent of channel switching has been studied repeatedly, the factors underlying channelswitching have not been extensively researched within a single study. To date, methodological limitations associated with self-reports, in-home cameras and electronic tracking data have restricted the scope for identifying the predictors of channel switching.The study makes use of a dual observation/survey methodological approach that has been largely overlooked in this area of research. This approach makes it possible to determine the influence of previously untested potential predictors of channel switching. The aim of this study is to determine the influence of six identified predictors on television viewers’ channel switching. The predictor variables tested include Perceived Clutter, Channel Proliferation, Attitude towards Television Advertising, Planned versus Impulse Viewing, Advertising Triggers and Remote Control Device (RCD) Empowerment. The last two predictors (Advertising Triggers and RCD Empowerment) result from factors drawn from a scale (SITUZAP) developed to measure the situational factors associated with channel switching. Moreover, the study determines the impact of these six predictor variables on observed channel switching (observed PROPZAP) across 1,283 observations as well as on reported channel switching (reported PROPZAP) across 848 respondents.The empowerment provided by the RCD emerges as the dominant predictor of channel switching behaviour. Access to the RCD as a means of controlling the viewing environment is the foremost influencer of both observed and reported propensity to switch channels. However, while reported switching propensity is influenced by ‘advertising triggers’ (for example, a repetitive or irritating commercial) and ‘perceived clutter’ (too much advertising on television), observed switching propensity is unaffected by these factors. 2006 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/1737 en Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle remote control device empowerment
prime-time television advertising
viewers' channel switching behaviour
attidude towards television advertising
planned versus impulse viewing
dual observation/survey methodological approach
perceived clutter
advertising triggers
channel proliferation
Dix, Stephen Richard
Predictors of channel switching during live prime time television advertising
title Predictors of channel switching during live prime time television advertising
title_full Predictors of channel switching during live prime time television advertising
title_fullStr Predictors of channel switching during live prime time television advertising
title_full_unstemmed Predictors of channel switching during live prime time television advertising
title_short Predictors of channel switching during live prime time television advertising
title_sort predictors of channel switching during live prime time television advertising
topic remote control device empowerment
prime-time television advertising
viewers' channel switching behaviour
attidude towards television advertising
planned versus impulse viewing
dual observation/survey methodological approach
perceived clutter
advertising triggers
channel proliferation
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/1737