Black Holes and Vacuum Cleaners: Using Metaphor, Relevance, and Inquiry in Labels for Space Images
Lisa F. Smith, Kimberly Kowal Arcand, Benjamin K. Smith, Randall K., Smith, Jay Bookbinder, Jeffrey K. Smith

TL;DR
This study investigates how metaphor, relevance, and inquiry in labels for space images influence public understanding, interest, and appreciation, revealing that relevance boosts curiosity, while traditional labels enhance aesthetic appreciation.
Contribution
It introduces and tests new label strategies incorporating metaphors and relevance, showing their effects on comprehension and engagement with space images.
Findings
Relevance labels significantly increase desire to learn more.
Original labels enhance overall aesthetic appreciation.
Smartphone users show higher curiosity and appreciation levels.
Abstract
This study extended research on the development of explanatory labels for astronomical images for the non-expert lay public. The research questions addressed how labels with leading questions/metaphors and relevance to everyday life affect comprehension of the intended message for deep space images, the desire to learn more, and the aesthetic appreciation of images. Participants were a convenience sample of 1,921 respondents solicited from a variety of websites and through social media who completed an online survey that used four high-resolution images as stimuli: Sagittarius A*, Solar Flare, Cassiopeia A, and the Pinwheel Galaxy (M101). Participants were randomly assigned initially to 1 of 3 label conditions: the standard label originally written for the image, a label with a leading question containing a metaphor related to the information for the image, or a label that contained a…
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