Images depicting scenes that violate physical expectations (objects in impossible positions or scales) are more memorable than images with plausible scene arrangements.
Posts that explicitly acknowledge uncertainty in their own position are perceived as more credible and are more effective at changing minds.
Responses that match the emotional register of the original post are more persuasive than those that adopt a neutral or contrasting tone.
Images with a single dominant focal point and high figure-ground contrast are more memorable than visually complex scenes with distributed attention targets.
Counterarguments that use specific numerical evidence or statistics are more persuasive than those relying on anecdotal evidence alone.
Images with warm color palettes (reds, oranges, yellows) are more memorable than those with cool palettes (blues, greens), controlling for content and composition.
Counterarguments structured as personal stories with a clear causal narrative change opinions more effectively than abstract logical arguments.
Images containing human faces in unexpected or incongruent contexts are significantly more memorable than images with faces in typical settings.
The interaction between accuracy-motivating elements and identity-relevant claims produces a non-obvious amplification of persuasive effect.
Expanding the perceived decision space from a binary choice to a spectrum of options is more persuasive than arguing for a single alternative position.
Being among the first three responders to a post doubles the likelihood of changing the original poster's opinion compared to later responses.
Counterarguments that acknowledge the original poster's viewpoint before presenting rebuttals are significantly more persuasive than those that directly oppose.