"Photographs were shown to be more credible, but cartoons were more likely to change behaviour," said Lulu Rodriguez, professor at the University of Illinois in the US.
"A cartoon grabs people's attention long enough to deliver the message," said Rodriguez, who led the study.
In the study, participants were shown one of two versions of the same set of brochures. Each set was designed to debunk a myth about wind energy, the intent being to give readers scientific information about wind energy and assuage their fears.
The only difference was that the originally designed brochures featured a beautiful, professional photograph of wind turbines, while the look-alike brochures created for the study swapped out the photograph with a cartoon.
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"You have to spend more time with a cartoon to figure out the meaning of the illustrations, and the situation," Rodriguez said.
"People look at cartoons longer, so they're more cognitively engaged with the cartoon. Usually it includes humor and people work hard at figuring out the punch line," she said.
"The photos used to represent wind energy on the original brochures were just beautiful scenic shots of the turbine blades or a landscape dotted with turbines so people didn't look at them as long," she added.
The power of cartoons to persuade can be of value to agencies working to educate the public about a science-laden concept - one for which they would like to change opinion, intentions, or behaviours.
The research was published in the Journal of Visual Literacy.