Communicating Science, Health, Environment, and Risk Division

2021 Abstracts

Research Paper • An Ecological Approach to Understand Scientists’ Commitment to Engage: Push, Pull, and Drag Forces • AbiGhannam, Niveen, University of Texas at Austin • Whereas norms have been traditionally linked to behavioral outcomes, their function within public engagement with science (PES) contexts are mixed. This paper takes an ecological approach to examine the PES pressures and expectations perceived by publicly engaged scientists. We found that scientists perceive unidirectional factors within science (push forces) and engagement contexts (pull forces) that drive them towards PES. Running counter to those are drag forces, or pressures not to engage. However, our analyses reveal that such pressures are mitigated through employing goal-oriented engagement strategies. Those findings enrich our understanding of the complex operation of norms in the ever-changing PES landscape.

Research Paper • The growth and disciplinary convergence of environmental communication: A bibliometric analysis of the field (1970-2019) • Akerlof, Karen, George Mason University • Recent reviews describe environmental communication as focused on mass media. However, these reviews may not provide a full picture of the discipline. We searched Scopus for articles published 1970 to 2019 containing the root environment* communicat*. Instead of siloed disciplines, we found dense, interconnected networks of journals across disparate areas of scholarship, including social sciences, natural sciences, engineering, and business. This convergence is a positive sign for the field’s ability to answer fundamental questions.

Extended Abstract • Understanding COVID-19-related Stigma: A Topic Modelling and Exploratory Analysis of 353k Tweets • Ali, Mohammad, Syracuse University • This topic modelling and exploratory analysis of 350k Tweets examined people’s discussion on COVID-19 related stigma on Twitter.

Research Paper • Young adults’ preferences of vaping content on Instagram: Qualitative interviews utilizing the associative imagery technique • Alpert, Jordan • Vaping among young adults (YA) continues to rise, resulting in adverse health effects and vulnerability to nicotine dependence. Social influence theory and prior research indicate that vaping content appearing on Instagram is widespread and highly influential. Vaping content on Instagram is often portrayed positively, which may motivate YA to vaping trials. Using a photo-elicitation method, the associative imagery technique, we interviewed 24 YA about their perceptions of vaping content appearing on Instagram. Images representing popular posts were shown, such as colorful devices, people vaping, and depictions of flavors. Data synthesis from the interview transcripts revealed three main themes: 1) the power of color and visual aesthetics, meaning that YA were drawn to Instagram posts that were visually striking, which stood out from other posts, 2) distancing, as participants who vape socially were hesitant to like, share, and comment because they did not want to be labeled as a “vaper” to their followers, and 3) the environment influences perceptions, signifying how there are certain norms associated with using Instagram, and this dictates how content is viewed and the meaning it represents. For instance, warning labels appearing on vaping posts may remind YA about the dangers of vaping, but we also found that they enhanced perceived credibility and transparency of vaping brands. Overall, findings indicate that effective interventional campaigns to reduce YA vaping must get users’ attention through dynamic visuals, while also considering in-group and out-group identities related to vaping culture.

Research Paper • Fast Food Menu Calorie Labeling Contexts as Complex Contributing Factors to Overeating • Bailey, Rachel, Florida State University • The effectiveness of menu calorie labeling in limiting the amount of calories selected has been called into question since it was mandated within the Affordable Care Act. This study examined how contexts that are known to influence motivational and information processing might limit the effectiveness of calorie labeling in order to shed some light on the mixed findings in this area. An online experiment was conducted in which calorie labels were paired or not paired with visual cues in different motivational contexts: greater and lesser variety and energy density choices available. Results contribute to the general conclusions that calorie labels are not particularly effective. Specifically, the only context in which a calorie label succeeded in reducing calories selected was a high variety mix of low and high energy density foods with visual food cues present; however, this type of context elicited the greatest number of calories selected on average, even more than when only highly energy dense items were present. Limitations and future directions are discussed.

Research Paper • Cultural Competence in Health Communication: A Concept Explication • Belobrovkina, Evgeniia • Cultural competence constitutes one of the cornerstones of effective health communication. Yet, there is a gap in the explication of cultural competence in health communication outside the healthcare setting. Therefore, the purpose of the study was: (1) to develop the conceptual definition of cultural competence for strategic health communication beyond the healthcare setting, and (2) to distinguish cultural competence from similar concepts. The proposed conceptual definition of cultural competence is presented.

Research Paper • COVID-19 vaccine intention and social cognitive theory: The role of individual responsibility and partisan media use • Borah, Porismita • We use national survey data and a moderated moderated mediation PROCESS model to examine the 1) associations between self-efficacy about COVID-19 and vaccine intention mediated by expectancies 2) moderating roles of individual responsibility and partisan media use. The findings show that the path from efficacy to expectancies is moderated by individual responsibility, while the path from efficacy to vaccine intention is moderated by liberal media use in meaningful ways. Implications are discussed.

Extended Abstract • EXTENDED ABSTRACT: Perceptions of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis on Twitter: Examining beliefs and barriers after approval of Descovy • Calabrese, Christopher • Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is an effective strategy to reduce one’s risk of contracting HIV. To examine perceptions of PrEP on Twitter, we conducted a theoretically driven content analysis of relevant tweets from April 2019 to April 2020, six months before and after the approval of Descovy for PrEP. Results reveal a significant decrease in tweets involving barriers, specifically relating to access. Findings will inform health communication interventions for promoting PrEP among vulnerable populations.

Extended Abstract • A triangulated approach for understanding scientists’ perceptions of public engagement with science • Calice, Mikhaila, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Scientists are expected to engage with the public, especially when society faces challenges like COVID-19, but what public engagement means to scientists is not clear. Based on a mixed methods approach combining survey and focus group data, we find that scientists’ understanding of public engagement is as complex and inconsistent as the literature. Our findings also suggest that, regardless of tenure status, scientists believe public engagement with science includes citizen and community involvement in research.

Research Paper • “La Piedra Rosetta” Content Analysis of Health-specific stories on Genetic Testing from Spanish-language News Outlets • Chavez-Yenter, Daniel, University of Utah / Huntsman Cancer Institute • Genetic testing rates, which can inform disease risk and clinical management recommendations, are lower for Latinx populations than White populations. Explanations for this disparity have focused on individuals’ lack of awareness and greater concerns about testing, but how the news media might affect awareness and attitudes remains unexplored. In this project, we characterize health-specific stories (from 2008-2020) relating to genetic testing from the two largest U.S. Spanish-language news outlets, Telemundo and Univision.

Research Paper • Are Emotion-Expressing Messages More Shared on Social Media? A Meta-Analytic Review • Chen, Junhan, University of Maryland • Given that social media have brought significant change in the communication landscape, researchers have explored factors, such as emotion-expressing as a message feature, that can influence users’ information sharing on social media. The present study meta-analytically summarized 19 studies to advance the understanding of the associations between emotion-expressing messages and information sharing on social media in health and crisis communication contexts. Additional moderator analyses took into account study contexts, social media platforms, study design, theory-guided or not, sampling and coding methods, and emotion valences. Our study supported previous studies’ claim that emotion-expressing messages are more likely to be shared on social media in health and crisis contexts (r = 0.11, k = 19, N = 140,987). Moreover, results from our study showed that sampling and coding methods applied in previous studies moderated the main result. Implications for future study of emotion-expressing messages and information sharing in health and crisis communication contexts are discussed.

Research Paper • An Online Experiment Evaluating the Effects of Social Endorsement Cues, Message Source, and Responsibility Attribution on Young Adults’ COVID-19 Vaccination Intentions • Chen, Li, West Texas A&M University • Adopting the theory of planned behavior framework, this online experiment investigated the effects of social endorsement cues, message source, and responsibility attribution on young adults’ perceptions of COVID-19 vaccination and intentions to get vaccinated. Four major findings are identified. First, social endorsement cues positively affect attitude, subjective norms, and vaccination intentions. Second, individuals perceive an expert source as most credible, but a media outlet source results in most positive subjective norms. Third, responsibility attributions do not generate significant effects on dependent variables. Finally, social endorsement cues and message source each has some interaction effects with perceived susceptibility to COVID-19 on message outcomes.

Research Paper • Danger Control and Fear Control during Public Health Emergencies: Considering the Role of Fear and Hope in the EPPM across Different Levels of Trust • Chen, Liang • Public health emergencies post a great threat to global health and safety. The control of these emergencies needs the efforts of healthcare professionals as well as calls for the public to take protective actions. This study not only puts fear back in the EPPM, but also considers another similarly productive emotion: hope to examine the mechanisms behind the effects of four cognitive perceptions on protective actions and information avoidance. A national online survey was conducted with a total of 1,676 participants during the outbreak of COVID-19 in China from February 1 to February 29, 2020. The results revealed that perceived severity and perceived susceptibility could lead to fear, which in turn positively affect protective actions, while perceived self-efficacy and perceived response efficacy induced hope, which was positively associated with protective actions, but negatively associated with information avoidance. Furthermore, the mechanisms behind the relationships among cognitions, emotions and behaviors varied across different levels of trust in healthcare systems.

Research Paper • Examining Attenuated Response to COVID-19 Risk Through Interaction Effects between Increased Communicative Action, Negative Emotion, and Perceived Personal Knowledge • Choi, Minhee • This study examines attenuated risk responses among individuals who do not adhere to preventive COVID-19 measures (e.g., anti-maskers). Guided by the Social Amplification of Risk Model, a survey (N = 373) of non-abiding populations showed that media use positively influenced risk perceptions, information seeking and sharing, and preventive measures adoption. In contrast, negative emotional responses to COVID-19 and perceived knowledge hindered preventive measure adoption from increased information seeking and sharing. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

Research Paper • Light at the end of the tunnel: Implications of COVID-19 vaccine availability and vaccination intention • Chu, Haoran • Due to the inequality in distribution, people in many demographic groups and locations still do not have access to the COVID-19 vaccine. Utilizing a longitudinal survey and a choice-based conjoint analysis, this study examines vaccine availability and vaccination intention’s influence on people’s consideration of the COVID-19 vaccine. Low availability and intention increased attention to global barriers and high-level vaccine attributes such as vaccine safety. High availability articulates practical considerations such as cost and logistics.

Extended Abstract • When Do People Wear a Mask in Pandemic? An Integration of TPB and EPT • Chung, Surin, Ohio University • This study examined how perceptual variables (attitude, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control) are associated with behavioral intention to wear a mask during the COVID-19 pandemic and also how ethical ideologies (relativism, and idealism) moderate the relationship between two perceptual variables (attitude, and subjective norm) and behavioral intention. Using a cross-sectional survey, this study found that the three perceptual variables are positively associated with behavioral intention. Also, this study confirmed that relativism weakens the relationship between the two perceptual variables and behavioral intention.

Research Paper • Air quality just isn’t very sexy”: Audiences, problems, solutions in communicating about wildfire smoke in the Wes • Clotfelter, Susan, Colorado State University • “Environmental and public health professionals increasingly confront wildfire smoke events and the need to communicate air quality information internally and externally. Climate forecasts suggest the next decades will likely bring more frequent and more prolonged heat, drought, and wildfire smoke exposures. We know little, however, about how these professionals conceptualize their communication tasks, challenges, and opportunities. n a time of fragmented, convergent, and sometimes distrusted media. surveys of residents in multiple regions of the U.S. and other nations often show that citizens pay more attention to personal experience of air quality than official measures and alerts.

We conducted semi-structured, in-depth interviews with 17 air quality communicators in Colorado. This state has many of the features common to Western states: a wide variety of terrain and local economies; high- and low-population counties; increasingly congested interstates; and wide income disparity. The interviews yielded insights about how environmental and public health workers think about the residents of the state that they serve and the barriers to communicating air quality issues to those residents. These insights suggest that limited resources and lack of data make it difficult to communicate about air quality and that some state residents are more vulnerable to ill health effects, but less likely to be reached by messaging efforts. Creating more robust monitoring networks and multi-agency partnerships might create the capacity necessary to persuade more Colorado residents to engage in health-protecting actions.”

Research Paper • Facing the Strain: The Persuasive Effects of Conversion Messages on COVID-19 Vaccination Attitudes and Behavioral Intentions • Conlin, Jeff, Penn State University • This study examined two-sided conversion messages in relation to one-sided advocacy messages in reducing vaccine hesitancy related to COVID-19 vaccine uptake. Results demonstrated that, for vaccine-hesitant participants, conversion messages increased pro-COVID-19 vaccination attitudes and behavioral intentions. For high vaccine-hesitant participants, the relationship between conversion messages and attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccinations was mediated through source credibility. For low vaccine-hesitant participants, mediation occurred through counterarguing. Findings have implications for health message tailoring related to COVID-19 vaccine uptake.

Extended Abstract • The Prevalence of Design Features Known to Hinder the Processing of Drug Risks and Side-Effects: A Content Analysis of TV Ads for Prescription Drugs • Dan, Viorela • Given widespread concerns over the strategic use of visuals in ads for prescription drugs (DTCA) to distract from drug risks and side-effects, a content analysis was conducted. We analyzed N = 88 ads shown during prime-time on ABC, CBS, and NBC for one week in autumn 2019. Low modality correspondence was found, as were high pacing and low visual complexity. DTCA seem to be made in a way that hinders processing of risks and side-effects.

Extended Abstract • Extended abstract: White young adults’ motives for COVID-19 information avoidance • Deline, Mary Beth • Research suggests that White young adults’ health actions contribute to inequitable higher risk burdens for Black, Latinx and Indigenous populations during the pandemic. Utilizing semi-structured qualitative interviews and thematic analysis, this study examines the motives driving White young adults’ avoidance intentions and behaviors towards COVID-19 health information, and concomitant individual and collective efficacy. Preliminary findings indicate that perceived inability to act at both individual and collective levels is associated with specific information avoidance motivations.

Research Paper • Systematic Processing of COVID-19 Information: Relevant Channel Beliefs and Perceived Information Gathering Capacity as Moderators • Dong, Xinxia, University at Buffalo • This study applies the risk information seeking and processing (RISP) model to investigate the psychological factors that motivate people to process COVID-19 information in a systematic manner. Data collected from a survey of 519 Chinese respondents indicate that both relevant channel beliefs and perceived information gathering capacity moderate the impact of information insufficiency on systematic processing. These two variables also exert an interactive effect on systematic processing. Among other components of the RISP model, societal-level risk perception, informational subjective norms, and current knowledge are positively related to systematic processing. These findings suggest that science communication surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic needs to pay attention to the target audience’s beliefs about specific information channels, as well as their ability to process relevant information.

Research Paper • “I Had No Idea That Greenwashing Was Even a Thing”: Identifying the Cognitive Mechanisms of Exemplars in Greenwashing Literacy Interventions • Eng, Nicholas, Penn State University • This one factor (base-rate/image/quote/quote and image) between-subjects experiment (N = 476) examined how different presentation styles of a greenwashing literacy intervention influenced psychological processes (i.e., vividness, cognitive load, availability heuristic) and outcomes such as knowledge gain, skepticism, and information seeking. By synthesizing exemplification theory and cognitive theory of multimedia learning, this study finds evidence that vividness was the key mediator that explained the intervention’s effects on the study outcomes. Compared to the base-rate condition, exemplars were significant predictors of vividness, which in turn increased risk perceptions, information seeking, and word-of-mouth intentions. A literacy intervention that embedded both textual quotes and image exemplars had the strongest effect on vividness. No significant relationship was found between the interventions and the availability heuristic or cognitive load. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

Research Paper • Promoting COVID-19 Social Distancing on Social Media: The Persuasive Role of Threat and Controlling Language Representation • Eng, Nicholas, Penn State University • This 2 (threat: high/low) x 2 (language: controlling/noncontrolling) between-subjects factorial experimental design (N = 446) examined how the degree of threat and controlling language used in persuasive health messages on social media, influences psychological reactance, threat and coping appraisals, and intentions to social distance. Combining psychological reactance theory and protection motivation theory, we found that a highly threatening message evokes greater psychological reactance, which in turn was negatively associated with threat and coping appraisals. Threat and coping appraisals were then found to be significant and positive predictors of social distancing intentions. However, we did not find evidence that the use of controlling language, nor its interaction with the degree of threat expressed, to have a significant influence on reactance or threat and coping appraisals. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

Research Paper • Upping the Ante? The Effects of ‘Emergency’ and ‘Crisis’ Framing in Climate Change News • Feldman, Lauren, Rutgers University • This experiment examined how using the term “climate emergency,” “climate crisis,” or “climate change” in Twitter-based news stories influences public engagement with climate change and news perceptions, as well as whether these effects depend on whether the news focuses on climate impacts or climate actions. Terminology had no effect on climate engagement and only small effects on news perceptions. The focus of the news stories had more consistent effects on both engagement and news perceptions.

Research Paper • The Impact of Social Media Use on Protective Behaviors in Global Epidemics: The Mediating Model of Situation Awareness and Crisis Emotions • Feng, Yulei, School of Media and Communication, Shanghai Jiao Tong University • Although there has been increasing attention to the effect of social media use during epidemics and outbreaks, relatively little is known the underlying mechanism by which social media plays a role in people’s cognitive, affective and preventive responses. Based on data collected during the outbreak of COVID-19 in China, the current study investigates the correlations between social media use, situation awareness and public prevention by examining the mediation effect of crisis emotions—anxiety and fear. The results indicate that social media is positively related to situation awareness, anxiety and fear. Furthermore, social media use can predict preventive behaviors via the serial multiple mediation effect of situation awareness and fear. Implications of the findings are discussed.

Research Paper • Examining Antecedents to Accuracy- and Defense-Motivated Information Insufficiency in the COVID-19 Pandemic • Fung, Timothy, Hong Kong Baptist University • This study is to advance the Risk Information Seeking and Processing model by examining (1) the antecedents that induce individuals’ accuracy- and defense-motivated information insufficiency of COVID-19 information and (2) the effect of a broader array of the RISP’s perceived hazard characteristics and affective responses. We collected 960 responses from a probabilistic panel and found that fear and informational subjective norms influenced accuracy- and defense-motivated information sufficiency; risk inequity influenced worry and contentment.

Research Paper • Integrating Psychometric Paradigm of Risk and Issue Attention Cycle: A Study of Risk Information in News Coverage of Avian and Swine Influenza • Fung, Timothy, Hong Kong Baptist University • This study examines how news coverage present risk information of global outbreaks of avian and swine influenza. To that end, we integrated the psychometric paradigm of risk and issue attention cycle into a theoretical framework and conducted a content analysis for 1,626 news articles published in Hong Kong. The finding reveals what risk information and its related risk characteristics emphasized or ignored and how the emphasis differs across the stages within the issue attention cycle.

Research Paper • How Do Food Date Labels Lead to Consumer-level Food Waste? A Mixed-design Experiment • Gong, Ziyang • Waste resulting from consumers’ confusion about foods’ date labels is a multi-billion-dollar problem in the United States. The present study examines the mechanisms underlying such labels’ influence on people’s willingness to consume, and whether exposure to additional information regarding sensory assessment of food products or storage practices could help to reduce food waste. We conducted a mixed-design experiment in which the between-subjects variable comprised five commonly used food date labels (i.e., “Best if Used By”, “Use By”, “Sell By”, “Enjoy By”, and a date without any explanatory phrase), and the within-subjects variable consisted of three information conditions (i.e., basic information, sensory information, and food-storage information). Our data indicate that date labels affected consumers’ willingness to eat yogurt through two mediators, quality concern and safety concern. The direct effects of date-label variation on willingness to consume were non-significant after controlling for the two mediators. Additionally, when the participants were told that the yogurt had a normal color and odor, or were provided with details of how it should have been stored, their intention to eat it rose significantly. These findings enhance our understanding of how food date labels affect consumer-level food waste and provide insights that can aid the development of educational campaigns to reduce it.

Research Paper • Moral hazard or not? The effects of learning about carbon dioxide removal (CDR) on mitigation support. • Hart, P. Sol, University of Michigan • Recent research has yielded mixed results as to whether exposure to information about geoengineering leads to a risk compensation, risk salience, or null effect. Focusing on carbon dioxide removal (CDR), we investigate whether these inconsistent results may be a function of the presence or absence of information about climate change impacts. Through two experimental studies, moderated-mediation analyses reveal that, overall, exposure to CDR information is likely to have a null effect, thus failing to support either risk compensation or risk salience, whereas exposure to climate change risk information can increase perceived threat and, indirectly, policy support.

Extended Abstract • Effectiveness of VR Intervention in Promoting Sustainable Hand Hygiene • Hu, Haohan • Maintaining hand hygiene is one of the most important preventive measures for infectious diseases. However, research finds young adults reported less frequent hand-washing. This study developed an immersive hyperreality intervention in promoting hand hygiene and its effectiveness was tested by 2 (environment: VR vs. 2D video) x 3 (perspective) factorial experiments. Preliminary findings have demonstrated levels of immersion can affect participant’s embodiment and self-efficacy.

Research Paper • How Far into the Future: A Meta-Analysis of the Effects of Temporal Framing on Risk Perception, Attitude, Behavioral Intention, and Behavior • Huang, Guanxiong • Temporal framing is a messaging strategy that highlights either the proximal or distant consequences of a recommended behavior in communication efforts. This meta-analysis investigated the relative persuasiveness of proximal- versus distal-framed messages. The findings supported the overall small advantage of proximal versus distal frames in facilitating persuasion (r = 0.0706). In terms of specific outcomes, proximal frames were more effective than distal frames in increasing risk perception (r = 0.1216) and behavioral intention (r = 0.0776). However, no such effects were found on attitude or actual behavior. Sample type (student vs. nonstudent) and participant age moderated the temporal framing effect.

Research Paper • To Vax or Not to Vax: The Impact of Issue Interpretation and Trust on Vaccination • Huang, Yi-Hui Christine, City University of Hong Kong • We investigate the interaction between public trust and individuals’ COVID-19 vaccination intentions. A total of 6,231 respondents from Hong Kong and Taiwan completed questionnaires. Results demonstrated that trust plays a crucial role in promoting public vaccine uptake through a motivated reasoning process. Additionally, issue interpretation moderated the relationship between trust and vaccination intention, indirectly affecting vaccination intention via trust. Our findings should help relevant agencies better understand public mindsets and formulate communication strategies accordingly.

Research Paper • Promoting COVID-19 Vaccination: The Interplay of Message Framing, Psychological Uncertainty, and Public Agency • Huang, Yan • The study examines how framing, psychological uncertainty, and message source (national versus local health agencies) influence campaign effectiveness in promoting COVID-19 vaccines. A 2 (gain- vs. loss-frame) × 2 (high vs. low uncertainty) × 2 (CDC vs. Houston Health Department) between-subjects experiment was conducted among Houston residents (N = 408) in mid-December, 2020. Findings revealed that a loss frame led to better persuasion outcomes among participants primed with high uncertainty; a gain frame was more persuasive under conditions of low uncertainty because it reduced perceived threat to freedom and psychological reactance. Additionally, the local agency elicited more favorable vaccine beliefs than the national agency when uncertainty is low; the difference disappeared under conditions of high uncertainty. The study offers theoretical implications for framing research and practical implications for campaign message design.

Extended Abstract • Extended Abstract: Beyond Individualized Responsibility Attributions? How Eco Influencers Communicate Sustainability on TikTok • Huber, Brigitte, University of Vienna • Sustainability communication is of increasing importance. While sustainability communication in traditional media has already been researched, less is known about social media in this regard. We investigate how eco influencers communicate sustainability on TikTok. Findings from a content analysis (n = 242) reveal that individual responsibility attributions are dominant in videos posted on the platform. Videos presenting broader perspectives are more likely to refer to empirical evidence. Implications for science and environmental communicators are discussed.

Research Paper • The framing power of Twitter: Examining whether individual tweets are reframing news media frames • Hubner, Austin, The Ohio State University • This study replicates a traditional framing and source analysis by examining how two mainstream news outlets framed climate change in 2018. We extend the traditional analysis by examining whether individuals reframe the original news media frame when sharing news articles to Twitter. Specifically, we computationally examine the extent to which the user-generated tweets (n = 9,558) are similar to the original news media frame and whether the similarity is dependent on the actor type.

Research Paper • Understanding Public Reaction to Celebrity Suicide Cases in Online News Comments • Ittefaq, Muhammad, University of Kansas • Celebrity suicide reporting is worth exploring as it carries an enormous potential to trigger copycat suicidal behavior among vulnerable populations; yet this topic is under-explored in Muslim countries. This study is aimed at analyzing online readers’ comments related to 12 celebrity suicide news stories in Pakistan (N=2,190) to understand their conversation patterns. By applying a text analytics approach, we assess core themes of online discussions about celebrity suicide news stories published between June 1, 2011 and August 30, 2020 in five mainstream Pakistani English newspapers. The findings revealed seven themes, including: 1) stress, depression, and mental health issues; 2) suspicious and controversial investigation reports; 3) need for stronger accountability to address corruption in the country; 4) conspiracy theories and misinformation; 5) criticizing media and security institutions; 6) sympathy for deceased and their families; 7) suicide and religion (Islam). the most frequent words in the data set were: suicide (51), police (34), sad (18), family (17), officer (17), corruption (15), death (15), murder (14), person (14), news (13), investigation (12). Additionally, Web 2.0 opens an avenue in Muslim-majority countries to discuss suicide-related issues, which are becoming a major public health concern but are often neglected due to religious and other stigmas.

Research Paper • When Scientific Literacy Meets Nationalism: Exploring Factors that underlie the Chinese Public’s Belief in COVID-19 Conspiracy Theories • Jia, Hepeng, School of Communication, Soochow University • This paper investigated the Chinese public’s beliefs in COVID-19 conspiracy theories during the current global pandemic, and we explored the factors associated with the belief in conspiracy theories in China. Based on a national sample (N=1000), we categorized widespread COVID-19 conspiracy theories in China into three types: Type Ⅰ that suggested the pandemic’s foreign origin, Type Ⅱ being defined as “China as culprit” conspiracy theories, and Type Ⅲ indicating that the virus was manufactured in the West. Results showed that scientific literacy and nationalism were constant factors associated with the conspiracy beliefs. Scientific literacy was associated with decreased beliefs in all three types of COVID-19 conspiracy theories. Nationalism was related to the increased belief in the type of theories favoring China’s stance while minorly related to decreased belief in “China as culprit” theories. Among other factors, the roles of self-efficacy in science and trust in science varied with the nature of the conspiracy theories. Meanwhile, the role of the media trust depended on the type of conspiracy theories and the kind of media outlets. These findings reminded us of the multi-faceted conspiracy beliefs in China, the complicity of their contributing factors, and the urgency to study them further.

Research Paper • Self-Disclosure as a Coping: How Self-Disclosure Influences Mental Health in Chinese Online Depression Groups • Jiang, Mulin • This study examines how self-disclosure predicts mental health outcomes in the context of online depression groups in China. We investigated whether engagement with different types of self-disclosure can help mitigate depressive symptoms. Results from online survey (N = 205) indicated that the depth, honesty, intent and valence of self-disclosure have positive relationships with perceived social support, and perceived esteem support served as a key mechanism in the effects of self-disclosure.

Extended Abstract • Has COVID-19 Impacted the Risk Perceptions and Cessation Intent of Youth Vapers? • Jun, Jungmi, University of South Carolina • Emerging evidence indicates vapers’ greater exposure to COVID19 risk. Applying the health belief model, we examine how perceived risk of vaping associated with COVID19 and cessation intent have changed for youth during the pandemic. Data come from two waves of online surveys sampling US youth (aged 18-25) collected in 2020 (N = 165) and 2021 (N = 347). We found significant increases of perceived threats of vaping and benefit of cessation between the two waves.

Research Paper • COVID-19 Vaccine Reviews on YouTube: What Do They Say? • Kang, Da-young, University of Alabama • This study uses the social communication framework to explore the frequently viewed COVID-19 vaccine review contents on YouTube. Quantitative content analysis of 78 review videos reveals the unique features of vaccine review videos. Two-thirds of the vaccine videos reviewed were created by medical experts. None of them displays a negative valence toward vaccination; all have a positive or neutral valence toward vaccination. All videos convey their story with narrative, and their topics were pro-vaccine themes.

Extended Abstract • Vaping Flavors and Flavor Representation: A Test of Youth Risk Perceptions and Novelty Perceptions • Katz, Sherri Jean, Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Minnesota • This experiment tests whether vaping flavors (tobacco vs. fruit) and flavor representations on packages (flavor color, flavor image) influence how middle school youth perceive vaping products. While results show no difference in risk perceptions based on condition, novelty perceptions are highest among those who view the fruit-flavored vaping product with flavor color and flavor image. Findings suggest that restricting flavor representation on packaging might reduce how fun and interesting youth perceive these products to be.

Extended Abstract • Extended Abstract: How Self-Disclosure and Gender Influence Perceptions of Scientists’ Credibility and Likeability on Social Media • Kim, Nahyun • A 2 (types of disclosure: personal vs. political) x 3 (amount of disclosure: 20% vs. 50% vs. 80%) x 2 (gender of the scientist: male vs. female) between-subjects experiment (N = 734) showed that people favored scientists more for personal disclosure, rated them as being more competent with political disclosure, and liked female scientists more in general. However, the gender of the scientist did not moderate the effect of disclosure type and gender of participants.

Extended Abstract • How attribution of crisis responsibility affects Covid-19 vaccination intent: The mediating mechanism by institutional trust and emotions • Kim, Ji Won • This study examined how attribution of crisis responsibility affects intention to take Covid-19 vaccines, specifically how institutional trust and emotions may play in this process. Results showed that attribution of crisis responsibility had a negative influence on vaccination intent by lowering institutional trust and eliciting ethics-based emotions. Findings provide implications for risk communicators and policy makers to develop strategies to mitigate vaccine hesitancy.

Research Paper • Conspiracy vs debunking: The role of emotion on public engagement with YouTube • Kim, Sang Jung • Conspiracy theories infamous for their emotional manipulation have challenged science epistemology and democratic discourse. Despite the extensive literature on misinformation and the role of emotion in persuasion, less is understood about how emotion is used differently between conspiracy and debunking messages and the impact of emotional framing on public engagement with science. Our paper fills these gaps by collecting and analyzing emotional frames in YouTube videos that propagate or debunk COVID-19 conspiracy theories.

Research Paper • Emotionally connected: Longitudinal relationships between fear of COVID-19, smartphone online self-disclosure, and psychological health • Koban, Kevin, University of Vienna • In a two-wave panel survey conducted during the first lockdown in spring 2020, this study shows that fear of COVID-19 increased online self-disclosure on social media over time. Online self-disclosure then, in turn, fostered individuals’ happiness over time but did not affect psychological well-being. There was also no over-time relationship between online self-disclosure and fear of COVID-19, suggesting that fear can prompt self-disclosure during the pandemic, but self-disclosure does not help alleviate fear over time.

Research Paper • How Sympathy and Fear Mediate the Interplay between Benefit and Scarcity Appeal Organ Donation Messages • Kong, Sining, Texas A & M University at Corpus Christi • This study examines how sympathy and fear mediate the interplay between benefit appeal and scarcity appeal regarding attitude and intention of organ donation. To examine the moderated mediation effect, this study conducted a 2 (other-benefit appeal vs. self-benefit appeal) X 2 (non-scarcity vs. scarcity appeal) online experiment. The results revealed that as altruistic behavior, an other-benefit appeal would generate more sympathy than a self-benefit appeal message. Additionally, the non-scarcity condition generated more positive attitudes toward organ donation compared with the scarcity condition. Besides, both sympathy and fear positively influenced attitudes and intentions of organ donation. This study also provides theoretical and practical implications.

Extended Abstract • Using Machine Learning and Social Network Analysis to Understand the Motives behind the Spread of “Plandemic” Conspiracy Theory during COVID-19 • Kumble, Sushma, Towson University • Conspiracy theories are often disseminated through disinformation, and individuals are attracted to conspiracy theories to fulfill specific epistemic, existential, and social motives. (Douglas et al., 2019). Utilizing these taxonomies, the present study uses unsupervised machine learning to uncover which of these motives were more prevalent in the spread of the documentary “Plandemic.” Further, utilizing social network analysis, the present study also looks at which prominent actors within the network aided in dissemination of such information.

Research Paper • Amplification of Risk Concerns through Social Media and Beyond for Covid-19: A Cross-Country Comparison • Lai, Chih-Hui, Academia Sinica • Social media has been an important venue of obtaining communication during health or environmental risks. This study investigates the questions of the extent to which public expressive use of social media (liking, commenting, sharing, and posting) amplifies the interpretation of risk and influences the subsequent behavioral responses in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a cross-country and two-wave survey data in the U.S. and Taiwan, results of this study demonstrate that amplification of risk happened because public expressive use of social media increased personal and global risk concerns, which in turn facilitated protective action taking. Moreover, this study revealed country differences in terms of the circumstances under which social media use shapes risk concerns and the situation in which risk concerns influence behavioral responses. In the U.S., the more individuals use social media in a public and expressive way, the more likely they report societal risk concern, and this happened among people who received risk information from different sources beyond social media. In Taiwan, the relationships between personal/societal risk concerns and engagement in protective action varied by discussion network heterogeneity. Discussion networks strengthened the effects of risk concerns on behavioral responses.

Extended Abstract • Beliefs and Practices around Antibiotics Use and Resistance in Singapore using the Protection Motivation Theory • Lee, Si Yu, Nanyang Technological University Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information (WKWSCI) • Misuses of antimicrobials in the community have been identified as a salient contributor to antimicrobial resistance in Singapore. However, little is known about the belief, practices, and socio-psychological factors driving antibiotic misuse in the community. As the first nationally representative study to address these gaps, 967 respondents in Singapore were surveyed on their knowledge, attitudes, and practices about antibiotics antimicrobial use. The protection motivation theory was used as the underlying theoretical framework.

Research Paper • Examining COVID-19 tweet diffusion using an integrated social amplification and risk and issue-attention cycle framework • Lee, Edmund, Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore • Drawing on the social amplification of risk (SARF) and issue-attention cycle frameworks, we examined amplification of 1,641,273 COVID-19 tweets through: (a) topics: key interests of discussion; (b) temperament: emotions of tweets; (c) topography (i.e., location); and (d) temporality (i.e., over time), using computational and manual content analysis. Amplification patterns across the issue-attention cycle highlighted an inherent and insidious politicization of COVID-19, as well as misplaced premature optimism that COVID-19 would be controlled from the get-go.

Research Paper • Is higher Risk Perception Necessarily Worse? Source Credibility in Government Attributed Media Use During the COVID-19 Pandemic • Li, Longfei, School of media and communication, Shanghai Jiao Tong University • Source credibility in authority is important for “infodemic” prevention and social stability during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, current understanding is limited with respect to how media usage of residents from worst-hit area is associated with their risk perception and source credibility in government. This study adopted the questionnaire survey method (N=908) and constructed the model of “media use – risk perception – source credibility in government” based on the social amplification of risk framework (SARF). We found that both traditional media use and social media use have positive effects on source credibility in government, and this effect is partly formed through the mediating effect of risk perception. In addition, higher risk perception was accompanied by higher source credibility, but living area factors significantly positively moderated the relationship between them. Rural residents with higher risk perception did not form higher source credibility perception. We suggest that people should pay more attention to the “infomedic” in the rural areas of the pandemic. In addition, the government should objectively view people’s risk perception, timely release information, conduct effective risk communication, and establish information authority. In-depth study on the influence of politicization and socialization of this health issue and its mechanism of action is of great significance for understanding people’s information behavior and providing certain policy enlightenment for media governance during current COVID-19 pandemic.

Research Paper • Recycling as a Planned Behavior: The Moderating Role of Perceived Behavioral Control • Liu, Zhuling, University at Buffalo • This study examines the effectiveness of a public service announcement (PSA) video designed based on the theory of planned behavior in motivating people to engage in proper recycling. Based on a representative sample of New York State residents (N = 707), survey results show that all three variables of the theory of planned behavior are significant predictors of recycling intention. The PSA video increases recycling intention through attitude, but this mediated relationship is only significant among individuals with low perceived behavioral control. These results suggest that environmental campaigns using a video format may be particularly effective among audiences who perceive low self-efficacy in engaging in recycling behavior.

Research Paper • Narrative and Non-Narrative Strategies in Televised Direct-To-Consumer Advertisements for Prescription Drugs Aired in the U.S. • Liu, Jiawei, Cornell University • This study content analyzed narrativity in televised direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) for prescription drugs aired on television in the United States between 2003 and 2016 for four different health conditions (heart disease, diabetes, depression, and osteoarthritis). Results showed that while televised DTCA for prescription drugs spent more time discussing drug risks than drug benefits, both narratives and factual evidence were more frequently used to communicate drug benefits than drug risks. Implications are discussed.

Research Paper • Seeing from the eyes of suffered peers: Using distance-framed narrative to communicate risks related to e-cigarette use • Liu, Sixiao, University at Buffalo, SUNY • To address the health risks associated with e-cigarette use among young adults, this research examined the effectiveness of distance-framed narratives in shaping e-cigarette user and non-user’s attitude and behavioral intention. Through the mediation of identification, transportation, and distance perception of risks associated with e-cigarette use, narrative messages featuring a socially similar character were more effective in motivating attitudinal and behavioral change, but high and low-certainty plots differently influenced users and non-users’ response to the messages.

Research Paper • The knowledge gap hypothesis in Malaysia: Assessing factors shaping the public’s perceived familiarity of nuclear energy • Looi, Jiemin, University of Texas at Austin • Perceived familiarity plays an important role in helping laypeople make well-informed policy decisions, thereby facilitating technological developments. However, this knowledge component is often overlooked in extant literature. Hence, this study draws upon the knowledge gap hypothesis to investigate predictors for the public’s perceived familiarity with nuclear energy in Malaysia — an under-studied context in nascent phases of nuclear energy development. A nationally representative survey of 1,000 Malaysians attested to the knowledge gap hypothesis. Education served as a better predictor for perceived familiarity than household income. Attention to television news, interpersonal discussion, and news elaboration were positively related to perceived familiarity. Notably, several three-way interactions were found: Increased attention to television news and interpersonal discussion consistently amplified perceived familiarity gaps regardless of laypeople’s education levels. Meanwhile, increased attention to newspapers and interpersonal discussion mitigated perceived familiarity gaps only among highly educated laypeople. The findings extended the knowledge gap hypothesis by incorporating perceived familiarity and news elaboration in the underrepresented context of nuclear energy in Malaysia. Additionally, the findings informed policymakers regarding the impacts of education while notifying newsmakers about the effectiveness of public education across media platforms. Directions for future research are also provided.

Research Paper • Magnifying the infodemic: Identifying opinion leaders in networks of misinformation about COVID-19 on Twitter • Looi, Jiemin, University of Texas at Austin • Considering the proliferation of falsehoods and conspiracy theories about COVID-19 on social media, this study drew upon the multi-step flow model of communication to identify opinion leaders that drive misinformation and the roles they fulfill within Twitter networks — a platform that has amplified misinformation regarding COVID-19 and prior health crises. Using R, this study conducted social network analysis and topic modeling based on 100 unique Twitter users randomly selected from a corpus of 73,808 tweets collected across several time intervals. The findings revealed that laypeople with online clout (e.g., independent activists, self-proclaimed scientific experts, self-proclaimed journalists) and Twitter bots possessed the greatest prominence (in-degree centrality), outreach (out-degree centrality), and social connections (betweenness centrality) within networks of misinformation about COVID-19. Notably, the results provided mixed support for conventional indicators of opinion leadership on Twitter (e.g., follower count, Twitter verification) as predictors of users’ roles within misinformation networks. Congruent with the multi-step flow model of communication, the results also indicated a highly clustered community structure whereby misinformation about COVID-19 on Twitter cascaded from opinion leaders to their social connections. While prior research has predominantly examined the detriments of misinformation propagated by socially prominent individuals (e.g., politicians, newsmakers, celebrities), the results suggested that misinformation disseminated by laypeople and Twitter bots are extremely damaging and should not be overlooked by academic scholars and social media developers. Theoretical contributions, practical implications, and directions for future research are discussed.

Research Paper • COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy: The effects of direct and indirect online opinion cues on psychological reactance toward health campaigns • Lu, Fangcao • The novel affordances on social media have altered the way people digest health information. This study takes the initiative to examine the roles of direct (user comments) and indirect (reaction emojis) opinion cues on a Facebook post promoting COVID-19 vaccines in influencing audiences’ psychological reactance toward the post and their vaccine hesitancy. We conducted a 2 (comments: support vs. oppose vaccines) × 2 (reaction emojis: support vs. oppose vaccines) between-subjects experiment among both supporters and opponents of COVID-19 vaccines (N = 554). Results showed that anti-vaccine comments accompanying a COVID-19 vaccine promotion post provoke audiences’ psychological reactance toward the post via the mediating effects of bandwagon perception and presumed post influence on others. The psychological reactance, in turn, incurs their COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy.

Extended Abstract • Extended Abstract: From “Blue” Planet to “Our” Planet: Nature documentaries demonstrate increasing emphasis on collective identity over time • Lull, Robert, California State University, Fresno • Using the Social Identity Model of Collective Action as theoretical framework, this study examines how nature documentaries use language indicating collective identity. Closed captions from 39 episodes of five series released between 2001-19 were analyzed for words such as “we,” “our,” and “together.” Results demonstrated a consistent trend in increasing collective identity word density over time, culminating with significant differences between the series Blue Planet II (2017) and Our Planet (2019) and their predecessors.

Research Paper • Understanding scientific optimism across 45 countries: Effects of Internet exposure, trust, and their interdependence • Luo, Chen, School of Journalism and Communication, Tsinghua University; School of International Media Education, Communication University of China • Enlightened by the scientific literacy model and the cognitive miser model, this study analyzes determinants of scientific optimism on a global scale. By adopting data from the latest wave of the World Values Survey covering 45 countries (n = 51, 537), the effects of Internet exposure, trust, value predispositions, and their interactions are clarified. Most importantly, results demonstrate displacement relationship and reinforcement relationship between components of the two models. Explanations and implications are further discussed.

Research Paper • Exploring public perceptions of the COVID-19 vaccine online: Semantic network analysis of two social media platforms from the United States and China • Luo, Chen, School of Journalism and Communication, Tsinghua University; School of International Media Education, Communication University of China • This study adopts tweets (n = 756, 118) and Weibo posts (n = 362, 950) to examine how the American and Chinese people perceive the COVID-19 vaccine on social media. Results from semantic network analysis and automatic sentiment analysis demonstrate distinct discussion themes and emotion distributions on the two platforms. The differences are deeply connected with the cultural characteristics of the two countries. Enlightened by the cultural sensitivity approach, we accentuate the critical role of culture in understanding public health issues.

Research Paper • Pandemic in the age of social media: A content analysis of health organizations social media engagement strategies during COVID-19 outbreak • Lyu, Yuanwei, The university of alabama • Taking the approach of strategic health risk communication, this study examined the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) related social media posts by representative public health organizations on Instagram. A content analysis was conducted to identify the types of communication, the use of visual strategies, primary emotion and risk perception in COVID-19 communication. The results suggested that social media messaging may be the best practice of risk communication, when it is based on the strategic use of risk communication principles such as addressing public fears and concerns, incorporating transcendent visual imagery, and providing solution-based information. Furthermore, our findings indicated that Instagram could be a valuable platform for establishing meaningful and interactive communication during the pandemic. The implications for strategic communication professionals are also discussed in the context.

Research Paper • Exploring the Cosmos: The Rhetoric of Successful Science Television • Matthews, Alexandrea • This study investigated how the rhetorical elements of kairos, ethos, and mythos were used in both Cosmos and its remake, Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, to determine the similarities and differences between the two series through a coded qualitative data content analysis. The results showed many examples of rhetoric, which may be used with the intention of creating acceptance of science, improving understanding of complicated concepts, and portraying science in a more relatable way.

Research Paper • The Impact of Emotion and Humor on Support for Global Warming Action • McKasy, Meaghan, Utah Valley University • This study aims to understand the influence of mirth and emotions on support for global warming as elicited by different humor types. It also examines the potential moderating role of individual climate views. The mediating paths through mirth and anger were significant, while hope was not. However, a post hoc analysis found a that climate views significantly moderated the influence of hope on support for global warming actions. The implications of our findings are discussed.

Extended Abstract • Understanding the nature of communication in a smartphone-based peer support group for alcohol use disorder • MOON, TAE-JOON, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio • This study examines the nature of communication (e.g., topics of messages, structure of communication) in a smart-phone based peer support group (PSG) for people with alcohol use disorder. Among the 170 study participants, 126 participated in communication with peers within the PSG at least once during the 12-month intervention period. Using a natural language processing approach and sequential analytic methods, this study identified four main topics of discussion and three distinctive sequences of supportive communication.

Extended Abstract • Hydropower in the news: how journalists do (not) cover the environmental and socioeconomic costs of dams in Brazil • Mourao, Rachel, Michigan State University • Despite massive environmental impact and socioeconomic risk, hydropower dams continue to be widely adopted in developing countries. This study uses qualitative and quantitative content analyses to identify how Brazilian media has portrayed hydropower in the past two decades. We found that news about hydropower relies on official and construction companies’ voices and focuses on economic progress, bureaucracy, corruption, and politics, ignoring the risks posed by the dams and silencing local residents and activists.

Extended Abstract • Extended Abstract: The Role of Felt Responsibility in Climate Change Political Participation • Munson, Sammi, George Mason University • This study investigates the role of felt responsibility to reduce climate change as an antecedent to climate change related political participation in the form of willingness to join a campaign, likelihood of supporting pro-climate presidential candidates, and past contacting of elected officials. Using nationally representative survey data (N = 1,029) we found that felt responsibility has a significant positive relationship with future behavioral intent, but not past behavior. Implications and future research are discussed.

Extended Abstract • Measuring the brand of science: Implications for science communication research and practice • Newman, Todd • Research on branding seeks to uncover the emotional, sensory, and cognitive meanings when a person first encounters an object, person, or idea. This paper will uncover these meanings related to science, and why a branding framework is important for science communication theory and practice. Reporting on survey data collected in March 2021, our results suggest a consistent brand image for science, yet a more nuanced context for how different branding constructs relate to science.

Research Paper • Differential Effects of Mass Media and Social Media on Health Prevention for E-cigarettes Among Young Adults • Oh, Sang-Hwa, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign • Despite the importance of examining the effects of different media platforms in addressing emerging public health risks, relatively little studies have investigated the differential effects on the two levels of health prevention, individual- and policy-levels. Guided by the framework of the influence of presumed media influence (IPMI) and the differential-impact hypothesis, this study explores the underlying mechanism through which traditional media and social media promote the two levels of health prevention for e-cigarettes. Analyzing survey data from 246 young adults, this study found that obtaining e-cigarette messages from social media was more influential than traditional media in shaping e-cigarette cessation efforts and leading to policy support for regulating the selling and buying of e-cigarettes. Exposure to anti e-cigarette messages in social media affected perceived exposure of close others to anti-vaping messages, and in turn, affected perceived influenced of close others on shaping intention to avoid vaping, which resulting in increased two levels of health prevention for e-cigarettes.

Research Paper • Empowering migrant domestic workers during public health crises through integrated connectedness to storytelling networks • Oktavianus, Jeffry, City University of Hong Kong • Learning from the experience of Indonesian migrant domestic workers (MDWs) in Hong Kong during COVID-19 pandemic, this study attempts to examine how the integrated connectedness to storytelling networks (ICSN), comprising interpersonal communication, community organizations, and media outlets, produces empowerment effects amid health emergencies. The findings suggested that while ICSN directly affected interactional health empowerment of MDWs, the influences of ICSN on intrapersonal and behavioral health empowerment were mediated by perceived social support.

Research Paper • Challenging the stigma of a “woman’s illness” and “feminine problem”: A cross-cultural analysis of news stories about eating disorders and men • Parrott, Scott • Eating disorders present serious health consequences for men in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Nevertheless, men may not seek treatment for eating disorders because eating disorders are stigmatized by the lay population as feminine. Indeed, health professionals describe men who experience eating disorders as vulnerable to double stigma because of cultural norms concerning mental illness and masculinity. The mass media represent an important source of information concerning mental illnesses, including eating disorders, and research suggests that mass media exposure carries the potential to mitigate or nurture stigma. Given this background, we examined how news organizations in Canada, the U.K. and the U.S. covered men and eating disorders between 2010 and 2019. Our study found that journalists often provided men a platform through which to communicate their experiences with eating disorders, challenging assumptions concerning so-called “feminine problems.”

Extended Abstract • Beyond a national sample: Contextualizing underserved communities’ vaccine hesitancy during COVID-19 • Paulin, Lisa, North Carolina Central University • By all accounts, ethnic minorities have suffered more during the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. Existing health disparities have been amplified along with an infodemic that has caused widespread confusion and mistrust. The study shares results of a concerted effort to reach communities with persistent health and economic disparities in the U.S. southeast through testing events, in-person paper surveys and targeted, accurate communication. The survey results found relationships between vaccine hesitancy, race, and income/education as well as relationships between information sources and emotional well-being.

Research Paper • How Lay Audiences Evaluate Scientific Uncertainty Disclosure: The Roles of Source and Preference for Communication of Uncertainty • Ratcliff, Chelsea, University of Georgia • Understanding how public audiences evaluate science news, especially portrayals of uncertain science, remains a pressing research goal. Contributing to this understanding, the current study compared U.S. adults’ (N = 502) responses to science news stories depicting either certain or uncertain implications of a study about genomics and depression. The (un)certainty was conveyed by either the scientists responsible for the research (“primary” scientists) or by an unaffiliated scientist. Results of this 2 × 2 factorial design showed no main effect of uncertainty disclosure on news article credibility, scientist trustworthiness, or perceived accuracy of the scientists’ depiction. However, primary scientists’ depictions were perceived as significantly more accurate when statements of either certainty or uncertainty came from the primary scientists rather than an unaffiliated scientist. Individual preference for communication of scientific uncertainty also moderated these effects, such that communicating uncertainty (vs. certainty) produced greater scientist trust and news credibility, but only when preference for disclosure was high—and only when disclosure came from the primary scientist. Intolerance of uncertainty and need for cognition did not moderate the effects.

Extended Abstract • Corporate Responsibility in the Global Village: The Roles of Global Identity, CSR Globality, and Construal Level • Ryoo, Yuhosua, Southern Illinois University • Understanding consumers’ prioritization of corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives is of interest to marketers in the global market. This research showed that consumers with a global (local) identity resonate with global (local) CSR initiatives and this tendency is prevalent when presented with high (low) construal level messages.

Extended Abstract • Scapegoated and Marginalized: European Press Coverage of the Roma During the COVID-19 Pandemic • Schneeweis, Adina, Oakland University • This research evaluates one year of European news during the COVID-19 pandemic to examine the public discourse about the Roma, its largest and most marginalized ethnic community. Drawing from 224 news published in English, French, Italian, and Romanian in 59 outlets, the study finds that much of the coverage highlights how vulnerability and marginalization have been greatly exacerbated by the health crisis, yet with considerable focus on blame and backwardness at the same time.

Research Paper • Beyond Fear Appeals: The Role of Hope in Improving Effectiveness of Health Messages • SEO, YOUNGJI • One of the understudied areas in health communication research is hope. This study examines the effect of efficacy-inducing information on hope and subsequent attitudinal health behaviors. A total of five hundred fifty-three adults in the United States read health promotion social media posts designed to induce perceived self-efficacy (vs. non-efficacy-inducing health information) in fear appeal regarding four different health diseases including melanoma, COVID-19, diabetes, and heart diseases. Results indicated that exposure to efficacy-inducing information enhanced hope, which boosted behavioral intention and intention to seek information. However, the effect was varied by each health topic. Statistical evaluation supported a model where the indirect effect of exposure to efficacy-inducing information on behavioral intention and intention to seek information through feelings of hope. Implications for health communication theory and practice are further discussed.

Research Paper • How Group Identity Polarizes Public Deliberation on Controversial Science • Shao, Anqi • Misinformation and out-group hatred language are two pathologies challenging informed citizenship. This paper examines how identity language is used in misinformation and counter-narratives on controversial science on a Chinese popular Q&A platform and their impact on how the public engage with science. We found that users who debunked misinformation used a similar amount of group identity language as those who propagated misinformation. The use of identity language made public discourse more uncivil and less deliberative.

Extended Abstract • Why Transmedia Edutainment? Exploring Young Adults’ Reception on its Role, Potential, and Limitations for Sustainable Development • Shata, Aya, University of Miami • This paper aims to explore young adults’ attitudes and impressions towards transmedia edutainment (TE-E) to better understand its attributes and role in shaping young adults understanding for social and environmental issues. Using the United Nation’s TE-E to promote the sustainable development goals, a total of five online focus groups discussions were conducted among young adults using photo elicitation to assess participants’ reactions to TE-E. Three dominant themes emerged from the analysis.

Extended Abstract • The medication effects of fear on the relationship between gain/loss message frames and cognitive/conative responses • Shin, Sumin, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater • This study investigates the underlying mechanism of fear appeal effects on behavioral changes applying the emotions-as-frame model and protection motivation theory to the green advertising context. The results indicate that a loss-framed message arises fear increasing severity, vulnerability, response efficacy, and self-efficacy, which in turn affect the intention to purchase a green product. Furthermore, this study results that a gain frame is more effective to lead green behavior than a loss frame.

Research Paper • Effects of substantiation and specificity of social media green messages on audience responses • Shin, Sumin, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater • This study examines the effects of environmental, social media messages on audiences’ responses. An online experiment results that a substantive or specific message increases favorable attitude toward both the message and organization, credibility of the message and organization, and green organization image. The favorable attitude, high credibility, and green image lead to high intention to engage in the organization’s green campaign, purchase its green product, and respond to the social media message.

Extended Abstract • Closing the Barn Door? Fact-checkers as retroactive gatekeepers of the Covid-19 “infodemic” • Singer, Jane B., City, University of London • Based on a study of U.S.-tagged items in a global database of fact-checked statements about the novel coronavirus, this paper explores the nature of fact-checkers’ “retroactive gatekeeping.” This term is introduced here to describe the process of assessing the veracity of information after it has entered the public domain rather than before. Although an overwhelming majority of statements were deemed false, preliminary findings indicate misinformation proved persistent, global, and reflective of an often-bizarrely refracted reality.

Research Paper • Fighting Misinformation on Social Media: The Roles of Evidence Type and Presentation Mode • Song, Celine Yunya, Hong Kong Baptist U • An online experiment was conducted to examine the impact of evidence type (evidence type: statistical vs. non-statistical) and presentation mode (textual-only vs. pictorial-only vs. textual-plus-pictorial) on individuals’ responses to corrective information about COVID-19 on social media. The results indicated that corrective information backed by non-statistical evidence (in contrast to statistical evidence) enhanced message elaboration, which in turn led to greater misperception reduction, higher ratings of message believability, and stronger intention to engage in viral behaviors (e.g., sharing, liking, and commenting on the post). Compared to the textual-only modality and the textual-plus-pictorial modality, the pictorial-only modality induced a significantly lower level of message elaboration, which subsequently resulted in lower message believability and less viral behavioral intention. The theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

Research Paper • How misinformation and its rebuttals in online comments affect people’s intention to receive COVID-19 vaccines: The role of psychological reactance and misperceptions • Sun, Yanqing • This study investigated the mechanisms by which exposure to negative and misleading online comments on COVID-19 vaccination promotional messages and ensuing corrective rebuttals of the comments could affect people’s vaccination attitudes and intentions. An online experiment was performed with 360 adults in the United States. The results show that rebuttals by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), rather than rebuttals from users, indirectly improve people’s attitude and willingness towards the vaccination by reducing their psychological reactance to the persuasive messages and beliefs in the misinformation reflected in the comments, especially among supporters of the vaccination. For the opponents of vaccination, the CDC’s rebuttals seemed to evoke a backfire effect on these people’s misperceptions. By combining the two lines of research on psychological reactance and misinformation, this study deepens the understanding of the theoretical arguments about these two communication phenomena and the relationship between them.

Research Paper • Integrating Self-affirmation and EPPM to Promote Health Experts’ Misinformation Corrective Actions • Tang, Hongjie • Health misinformation is prevalent in the social media domain. Combating “infodemic” has deemed to be a major agenda for health communication in the post covid-19 era. However, the extant literature of how to mobilize individuals to correct online health misinformation is scant. Based on the extended parallel process model (EPPM) and self-affirmation theory, the current research experimentally examined the persuasiveness of fear appeal messages, as well as self-affirmation on health experts’ misinformation correction intention for others. A 2 (threat: high vs. low) × 2 (efficacy: high vs. low) × 2 (self-affirmation: yes vs. no) between- subject factorial experiment was conducted. The results revealed main effects of threat, efficacy and self-affirmation on intention to correct health misinformation for others. In addition, the two-way interactions between threat and efficacy, as well as threat and self- affirmation were documented. The three-way interaction between these three factors was also significant. Theoretical implications and practical implications for health misinformation debunking were discussed.

Extended Abstract • Impact of Science Journalism Experience on Information Selection from Press Releases: A Novel Quasi-Experimental Approach • Tiffany, Leigh Anne, Michigan State University • This quasi-experiment aims to provide evidence for (or against) the impact of science journalism experience on how reporters cover science when using information from press releases. As data collection must be completed to begin analysis, findings declarations would be premature at this time. However, it can be said that this novel approach will provide insight into if there is a measurable difference in how journalists report on science topics based on science journalism experience.

Extended Abstract • Extended Abstract: Truths, Lies, and Compliance with Covid-19 Guidance • Tully, Melissa, University of Iowa • Uncertainty around Covid-19 has created an environment that is swirling with misinformation. Research shows that exposure to Covid-19 misinformation is associated with less compliance with public health guidelines for disease prevention. This study uses a survey to examine perceptions of information about Covid-19 as mis- or disinformation, and explores the relationship between perceptions and compliance with public health guidance. Results suggest that mis- and disinformation perceptions are high and these perceptions differentially affect compliance likelihood.

Research Paper • “BFF: Beer Friends Forever” Close Friends’ Role in Adolescents’ Sharing of Alcohol References on Social Media • Vanherle, Robyn • By conducting go-along interviews among adolescents (N = 26, M age = 16.31, SD = .83), this study is one of the first to provide a profound insight into the specific role of close friends in adolescents’ motives for sharing, and reacting to, moderate and extreme alcohol-related content on social media. As such, we encourage future research and interventions to target these intimate groups of close friends rather than focusing on broader peer groups.

Extended Abstract • Extended Abstract: A message from grandma: A research on the relationship between social media reposting behavior and subjective well-being in the elderly • Wang, Geng, Shanghai Jiaotong University • In the context of deepening population aging and rapid technological development, we explored the impacts of online reposting behavior on subjective well-being (SWB) of the elderly. We found that reposting significantly predicted SWB through a questionnaire survey conducted in 15 districts of Shanghai, and perceived social support and self-esteem played mediation roles. The moderating effect of positive feedback was not verified. We tried to interpret the results on the basis of ‘digital self’ construction.

Extended Abstract • Characterizing Discourses about COVID-19 Vaccines on Twitter: A Topic Modeling and Sentiment Analysis Approach • Wang, Yuan, The University of Maryland, College Park • This study identified seven themes of COVID-19 vaccine related discourses on Twitter (N = 304,292), including vaccine advocacy, recognition for healthcare workers, vaccine rollout, vaccine side effects, vaccine policies, vaccine hesitancy, and vaccine facts. Trust is the most salient emotions associated with COVID-19 vaccine discourses, followed by anticipation, fear, joy, sadness, anger, surprise, and disgust. Among the seven themes, vaccine advocacy tweets were most likely to receive likes and comments, and vaccine fact tweets were most likely to receive shares.

Extended Abstract • Extended Abstract: Previvorship: How individuals with genetic predispositions for breast cancer present their experiences across social media platforms • Wellman, Mariah, University of Utah • Research on previvors, individuals carrying mutations in known cancer risk genes, examines online information gathering and social support to alleviate uncertainty, however, research exploring online content published by previvors themselves is limited. We collected content across YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok to understand how previvorship and the processes within (genetic testing, diagnosis, and preventative measures) are presented. Our findings illustrate how each platform functions as part of a holistic picture of previvorship on social media.

Research Paper • Exploratory Research on Health Knowledge, Negative Emotions, Risk Perceptions, and Intentions to Practice the Preventive Guidance during the COVID-19 Pandemic • WEN, CHIA-HO RYAN, Newhouse School of Public Communications, Syracuse University • This study is dedicated to understanding the roles of cognition (COVID-19 knowledge), affect (fear and anger), and risk perceptions, as intervening variables between information sources and intentions to apply preventive measures for COVID-19 (i.e. facial coverings, social distancing, self-quarantine, and regular sanitization). Through an online survey of 99 participants at Syracuse University, our results reveal that, first, among all ten types of sources we examined, only cable TV and print media were significantly predictive and associated inversely with knowledge and positively with fear. Second, fear was directly related to risk perceptions, whereas anger and knowledge were insignificant predictors. Third, only risk perceptions were predictive and positively related to facial coverings. Fourth and finally, neither knowledge nor negative emotions were associated with any of the preventive measures.

Research Paper • The Distance Between Us: Effects of Inter-Group Similarity on Donation Intention and Emotions during the COVID-19 Pandemic • Wong, Jody Chin Sing • Guided by construal level theory, this research examines the effects of social distance on prosocial behavior by manipulating inter-group similarity. A theoretical model is proposed in which different levels of inter-group similarity prompt Americans to experience varied emotions toward others and report different donation intentions. Aside from close-ended survey questions, we conduct a computerized textual analysis of open-ended responses using the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC). Based on a nationally-representative sample of American adults (N = 1009), results indicate that in the early stage of the COVID-19 pandemic, participants exposed to a far social distance message were more likely to construe this event abstractly and less likely to donate to aid COVID-19 response. Nonetheless, this type of mental construal was associated with an increase in emotional responses. This research contributes to the literature on construal level theory and offers important insights on how communication scholars, media establishments, and members of the issue public can communicate more effectively to the public about public health crises.

Extended Abstract • Trauma-informed Messages in Predicting Domestic Violence Attitudes among Battered Women with Childhood Trauma • Wongphothiphan, Thipkanok • In response to a high prevalence of psychological trauma associated with childhood abuse and domestic violence and a low accessible rate of trauma-informed services, the current study designed and tested the effects of trauma-informed messages (TIM) to persuade battered women with childhood trauma to leave their current abusive partner terminate using a survey (N = 284). Findings revealed TIM’s effectiveness in predicting trauma knowledge, leaving intention, empowerment aspects relative to control messages. The moderating roles of borderline personality traits and attachment styles are discussed.

Research Paper • Community Resilience and the News: Local and National Hurricane Coverage • Xie, Lola, Pennsylvania State University • The term “resilience” has gained traction in recent years to mean the ability of communities and individuals to prepare for, respond to and recover from disruptions such as extreme weather events. The goal of this study is to understand how the language of resilience was constructed by national and local media outlets during and after Hurricane Florence. We discuss in comparative context the nuances in news constructions of resilience during a crisis and how those may change over time.

Research Paper • Risk or Efficacy? How Age and Seniority Influenced the Usage of Hearing Protection Devices: A Cross-Sectional Survey in China • Xu, Peng • Through a paper-pencil survey, this study examined whether age and seniority moderated the effect of perceived severity, response efficacy, and self-efficacy on hearing protection devices (HPD) usage by 449 Chinese workers at noise-exposure positions. We found perceived severity only motivated HPD usage for younger workers, and response efficacy and self-efficacy exhibited a stronger effect on HPD usage among senior workers than junior workers. These findings provide implications on the subsequent campaign which facilitates HPD usage.

Research Paper • Embedded Contexts and Multilayered Interactions: User Comments and Interactions Analysis on YouTube Related to Climate Change • Xu, Sifan, University of Tennessee Knoxville • As misinformation and climate change denial videos abound on YouTube, a platform that has more than 2 billion monthly active users as of 2021, research of climate change on YouTube is limited. More importantly, it is necessary to go beyond examining how climate change has been discussed and focus on how individuals interact with each other regarding their climate change viewpoints in such a mediated context. By examining and content analyzing a representative sample of YouTube comments and videos on climate change, the current study utilizes coordinated management of meaning theory to understand the multilayered interactions of YouTube users on climate change. The results of the study suggest that coordinated management of meaning theory, particularly the notion of embedded contexts, has implications for interactions in socially mediated and digital interactions. The study results also highlight practical implications for users’ interactions on YouTube regarding climate change, where framing effects, echo chambers, and asymmetrical tendencies of users’ challenge to other viewpoints co-exist.

Extended Abstract • Who am I Connected with? Community Detection and Effects in an Online Peer-to-Peer Support Forum • Yang, Ellie F., University of Wisconsin Madison • This study collected digital trace data from an online peer-to-peer forum designed to support substance use disorder (SUD) recovery. We applied social network analysis (SNA) to detect community formation shaped by users’ communicative interactions, and relate community membership to individual characteristics and health outcomes. Preliminary results reveal five communities in this online forum with distinct racial backgrounds or level of education. Compared to users without community affiliation, users in certain communities showed greater health benefits for SUD recovery.

Research Paper • Media Sources in Risk Communication in China: Official Press, Market-oriented Press, and Medical We Media • Yang, Tianyi, Shanghai Jiao Tong University • Using a content analysis and a survey, this study compares the topics and attitudes of media coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic in official press, market-oriented press, and medical We Media in China, and investigates how media sources affected people’s emotions and risk information-consuming behaviors. Findings suggest official press prioritized measures undertaken by governmental and medical departments and held a more optimistic attitude. Market-oriented press and medical We Media paid extra attention to the status of pandemic situation and self-protective behaviors, respectively. Official press was positively associated with people’s optimistic emotion, whereas medical We Media increased anxiety. Market-oriented press was positively associated with information sharing and information avoidance; Medical We Media was only positively related to information sharing. Comparing to the other media sources, official press exerted less impact on people’s information-consuming behaviors.

Research Paper • Social Media Exposure, Interpersonal Communication, and Tampon Use: A Multigroup Comparison Based on Network Structure • Yang, Yin, Pennsylvania State University • Building upon the integrative model of behavioral prediction and network structure theory, this study examines how interpersonal communication influences the effect of social media exposure on Chinese women’s tampon use intention. Through an online survey (N = 763), we found that social media exposure was positively related to the behavioral intention through attitudes, descriptive norm, and self-efficacy. Furthermore, the effect of social media exposure differed among people with different network structures of interpersonal communication.

Extended Abstract • Extended abstract: Risk perceptions link to prevention intentions during Covid-19 pandemic through affection: A Chinese three-generation study • Yao, Yao • In the early stage of the COVID-19 pandemic, three generations showed different epidemic responses in China. This study developed a moderated mediation model from the perspective of intergenerational differences to investigate how risk perceptions affected the prevention intentions of different generations through negative affection and self-efficacy. The study clustered out three types of families with different epidemic coping patterns.

Research Paper • The Differential Effects of Science Humor on Three Scientific Issues: Global Warming, Artificial Intelligence, and Microbiomes • Yeo, Sara, University of Utah • This study aims to understand the conditional nature of the mechanism by which science humor affects people’s social media engagement intentions by eliciting mirth. We replicated a previous experiment with three scientific topics. For two of the three issues, AI and microbiomes, the proposed pathways, moderated by need for humor (NFH), were significant. However, humor did not have the same effect on engagement intentions related to global warming. The implications of our findings are discussed.

Extended Abstract • [Extended Abstract] Mapping risk and benefit perceptions of energy sources: Comparing public and expert mental models • Yu, Peihan • Public support for new energy technologies can vary. Thus, understanding public perceptions towards these technologies is crucial for developing effective risk communication. This study uses the mental models approach to understand risk and benefit perceptions of various energy sources in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore. Public and energy experts’ perceptions were elicited using focus group discussions, enabling the construction and comparison of public and expert mental models, across energy sources and countries. Initial findings are discussed.

Research Paper • Correcting Science Misinformation in an Authoritarian Country: An Experiment from China • Yu, Wenting • In recent years, corrective messages are found to be useful in refuting misconceptions. An increasing number of studies examined the effects of corrective messages. But existing studies mostly focus on correction effect in the Western context. This study aims to compare the effects of different types of corrective messages in an authoritarian country. We focused on the message features that suggest government authoritativeness. Through an online experiment, we compared the impacts of correction sources (official vs. professional vs. layperson) and tones (formal vs. conversational) on the believability of the correction. The results indicated corrections from a government source and delivered in a formal tone were more believable in China. In addition, we examined the moderating role of attitude congruence.

Extended Abstract • Third-person-hypothesis of Climate Change Campaigns in China: the Impact of Disaster Vulnerability and Social Media Use on Conformity Behavior • Zhu, Yicheng, Beijing Normal University • The study focuses on the effect of social media use on public perceptions of climate change campaigns: including their perceived social desirability, presumed media influence (as measure in third-person-hypothesis), and consequent conformity behaviors. The current study also incorporated psychological antecedents including institutional trust and expert trust. With a multi-group structural equation modelling and clustered multiple regressions, this study tends to explore how geographical, political, and economic factors modify how Chinese residents perceive national climate change campaigns and how likely they would conform with governmental recommendations.

<2021 Abstracts

Public Relations Division

Doug Newsom Award for Global Ethics and Diversity
How Do Stakeholders React to Different Levels of LGBTQ-related Diversity and Inclusion CSR in India? Examining Social Acceptance, Perceived Fit, and Value-driven Attribution • Nandini Bhalla, Washington and Lee University; Yeonsoo Kim, James Madison University; Shudan Huang • This study examined stakeholders’ responses toward LGBTQ-related diversity and inclusion CSR practices in India. The study proposed a dual-route model and explored how different degrees of LGBTQ-DI CSR practices (i.e., active, passive and refusal) influence stakeholders’ perception of CSR levels, CSR fit evaluation and CSR attribution and in turn, impact CSR outcomes (i.e., corporate evaluation, supportive communication intent and purchase intent). An online experiment with real stakeholders in India was conducted. The findings suggest an interaction influence between social acceptance and perceived levels of CSR on CSR fit. Also, CSR- induced value-driven motives can strongly influence CSR associations. Practical and theoretical implications are discussed.

Open Competition
Examining Problem Chain Recognition Effect: How Issue Salience and Proximity Impact Environmental Communication Behaviors? • Nandini Bhalla, Washington and Lee University • This study applied the STOPS theory and tested the mechanism of problem chain recognition effect in the realm of environmental communication. Using a 2 (environmental issue salience: salient vs. non-salient) × 2 (environmental issue proximity: local vs. global) experimental design, this study found that if individuals have high motivation for climate change problem, they are more likely to perceive and talk about other related lesser known environmental issues (air pollution/land degradation).

CSA and the OPR: Corporate Attachment and Stakeholder Motivations to the Organization-Public Relationship • Jonathan Borden, Nowhere • As increasing professional and academic interest turns towards corporate social advocacy as a practice, it is crucial we consider theoretical frameworks to understand the mechanisms of CSA’s effects on the organization-public relationship. This study applies the attachment theory of interpersonal relationships to understand how corporate political behaviors can motivate stakeholder attitudes and behavioral intentions.

Towards a Conceptualization of Corporate Accountability • Jonathan Borden; Xiaochen Zhang, University of Oklahoma • Corporate accountability remains a significant construct in normative public relations theory and in applied crisis response, yet it remains ambiguous in practice. This research operationalizes a three-factor accountability scale based on the extant literature and validates this scale among three sample publics. Implications for both theory and practice are discussed.

* Extended Abstract * Effective Social Media Communication for Startups in China: Antecedents and Outcomes of Organization-Public Dialogic Communication • Zifei Chen; Grace Ji, Boston University • This study examines the mechanism through which startups can drive publics’ trust and positive word-of-mouth using effective social media communication. Results from an online survey with 1,061 social media users in Mainland China revealed that startups’ conversational human voice and social presence on social media helped drive organization-public dialogic communication, and startups’ organization-public dialogic communication, in turn, fostered publics’ trust and positive word-of-mouth. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

CEO Activism & Employee Relations: Factors Affecting Employees’ Sense of Belonging in Workplace • Moonhee Cho, University of Tennessee; Sifan Xu, University of Tennessee Knoxville; Brandon Boatwright • Acknowledging the importance of CEO activism in employee relations, this study examined how perceived employee-CEO value fit influences employee’s sense of belonging. Furthermore, using expectancy violation theory (EVT) and the concept of salience, this study explored moderating effects of expectation-reality discrepancy and salience of CEO activism. Conducting an online survey with 429 employees in the U.S., the study provides both theoretical and practical implications for effective CEO activism.

* Extended Abstract * Balancing Between a Global and Local Perspective in the Public Relations Agency Industry • Surin Chung, Ohio University; Suman Lee, UNC-Chapel Hill; Euirang Lee, Ohio University • This study examined the current status of globalization and localization of public relations industry and its market environmental factors by analyzing 101 countries. Using content analysis and the secondary data analysis, this study found that the degree of globalization of public relations industry in a country was influenced by its economic (foreign direct investment inflow), legal (rule of law), cultural (power distance, individualism, masculinity) and media system (press freedom) factors. The degree of localization of public relations industry in a country was also influenced by its economic (trade) and media system (press freedom) factors.

Building the science news agenda: The permeability of science journalism to public relations • Suzannah Comfort; Mike Gruszczynski; Nicholas Browning • The current study examines the relative influence of press releases about scientific studies in terms of their impact on news coverage. Using an innovative approach that allowed for analysis of a large corpus of text and calculation of similarity scores, we were able to trace the influence of press release materials into news media articles. We found that news organization characteristics were a more important indicator of PR success than press release characteristics. News organizations that had a history of producing award-winning science journalism were much less likely to draw on PR materials, reaffirming the importance of news organizations’ dedication to providing resources for science journalism. In some cases, news articles incorporated up to 86% of the material from a press release – a shocking indication of how powerful information subsidies can be. While our results contain some good news for public relations practitioners, they also carry a warning for consumers of journalism and for the public science agenda, which may be left vulnerable to bad actors exploiting the natural trust that the public, and journalists, have in science.

* Extended Abstract * Reconstructing the PR history time machine: Missing women and people of color in introductory textbooks • Tugce Ertem-Eray, University of Oregon; Donnalyn Pompper • This exploratory study offers a critical perspective on reasons for and effects of missing women and people of color across introductory public relations textbooks’ history pages, leading instructors to supplement public relations history lessons with their own pedagogical materials. Viewing survey findings of public relations instructors through feminist and critical race theory lenses yields two important recommendations to include women and people of color in recorded public relations history.

Hot Issue and Enduring Publics on Twitter: A Big Data Analysis of the Charlotte Protest • Tiffany Gallicano; Ryan Wesslen, UNC Charlotte; Jean-Claude Thill, UNC Charlotte; Zhuo Cheng, UNC Charlotte; Samira Shaikh • This study is the first of its kind to contribute to theory regarding hot issue and enduring publics in a naturalistic setting, and it models a way to conceptualize these types of publics based on their Twitter behavior. We applied structural topic modeling to 151,004 tweets to investigate tweet content, the duration of tweeting behavior, and the extent to which a small group of people shoulder the majority of the content generation in hot issue and in enduring publics. We found not only validation for existing theory but also questions for future researchers to explore based on surprising findings. This study also updates the conceptualization of hot issue publics for the social media age.

Saying vs. Doing: Examining the Effects of Corporate Issue Stances and Action • Eve Heffron, University of Florida; Melissa Dodd, University of Central Florida; Jay Hmielowski, University of Florida • This study expands the body of research surrounding corporate social advocacy (CSA). Using an experimental design, participants were exposed to three conditions for Nike’s engagement with the issue of equal pay. Results indicated that taking a stance with action was associated with more positive outcomes than both the stance-only and no-stance conditions; and taking a stance only was associated with more positive outcomes than the non-stance condition. Implications for theory and practice are discussed.

* Extended Abstract * Extended Abstract: Thriving Under the Sun: Stakeholder Relationships of Small Firms in the Emerging Field of Solar • Nell Huang-Horowitz; Aleena Sexton • This paper explores stakeholder relationships of small firms in the emerging field of solar. Interviews were conducted with 29 small firm executives. Results show that executives view customers as their number one priority, employees as family and partners, and government as supporter and opponent. Some challenges faced include the lack of credibility and legitimacy, limitation in resources, widespread misconception, and uncertainty about the future. Solutions on how these challenges can be addressed are also discussed.

Engaging employees in CEO activism: The role of transparent leadership communication in making a social impact • Grace Ji, Boston University; Cheng Hong, California State University, Sacramento • “With a survey of 600 U.S. employees, this study investigated the effect of transparent leadership communication on employee engagement in the context of CEO activism. Employees’ perceived psychological needs (i.e., autonomy, competence, and relatedness) were examined as mediators. Results showed transparent leadership communication was positively associated with employees’ psychological needs. In turn, needs for autonomy and relatedness both positively influenced employees’ information sharing and activism participation intentions. Theoretical and managerial contributions were discussed.”

Mapping CSR Communication Networks on Social Media: The Influence of Communication Tactics on Public Responses • Yangzhi Jiang, Louisiana State University; Hyojung Park • Grounded in the networked stakeholder management theory and two-way communication, this study provides a snapshot of networks between companies and publics on Twitter in a CSR communication context. Results showed that CSR communication activities (i.e., informing, retweeting, and mentioning) empowered a corporation through centralizing its network position and gaining public support (i.e., emotional, influencer, and knowledge support). In addition, degree centrality mediated the relationship between corporate retweets and stakeholders’ knowledge supports.

How controversial businesses look good through CSR communication on Facebook: Insights from the Canadian cannabis industry • Ran Ju, Mount Royal University; Chuqing Dong; Yafei Zhang • This study advances our current understanding of corporate social responsibility (CSR) communication in a controversial industry by analyzing CSR-related Facebook posts from seven Canadian public cannabis companies. Our findings indicated that these companies’ CSR communication was mostly instrumentalist, lacked transparency, and used effective multimedia characteristics. In addition, public reactions (# of likes, comments, and shares) suggested an association between CSR communication efforts and engagement revealing both opportunities and ethical concerns for CSR scholars and practitioners.

Who’s Posting That? Roles and Responsibilities at Civil Rights Organizations • Kate Keib, Oglethorpe University; Katie Hunter; Sarah Taphom • Ethnic Public Relations asserts that organizations focused on particular cultural groups are unique from general organizations. Civil Rights Organizations fall into that category and deserve their own area of study. Messaging on social media is a heavily relied upon tactic by advocacy organizations. Utilizing role theory, as well as two scales aimed at understanding how social media communicators function in organizations, this survey based study examines the communications teams at civil rights organizations, the levels of role conflict and ambiguity, as well as the levels of social media self-development and leadership. Results begin to fill a void in ethnic PR work focused on civil rights organizations, extend role theory and can help such organizations understand how to best structure their teams.

How Strategic Internal Communication Leads to Employee Creativity: The Role of Employees’ Feedback Seeking Behaviors • Yeunjae Lee, University of Miami; Jarim Kim, Yonsei University • “This study examined how organizations’ internal communication affects employee creativity through the lens of the symmetrical communication model in public relations and the theory of creativity, using a survey with 405 full-time employees in the U.S. The results suggested that information flow, supportive supervisory communication, and CEO relational communication positively influence symmetrical internal communication systems. The analysis also indicated symmetrical internal communication caused employees to seek more feedbacks, which in turn enhanced creativity.”

Online Firestorms in Social Media: Comparative Research between China Weibo and USA Twitter • Sora Kim, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Kang Hoon Sung, California State Polytechnic University; Yingru JI; Chen Xing, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Jiayu Qu, The Chinese University of Hong Kong • Through a quantitative content analysis of top trending keywords and associated top tweets in the United States (US) Twitter and China (CN) Weibo, this study offers significant insights into how users in varying countries engage in online firestorms, extending the existing knowledge in cultural aspects of crisis communication. Users on the two platforms showed difference in attribution focus (individuals vs. group/organizations), target scope (government/politics vs. business arena), and prioritized social problems (racism vs. corruption/bribe).

The determinants of support for crowdfunding sites: Understanding internal and external factors from PR’s perspectives • Eunyoung Kim, Auburn University at Montgomery; Sung Eun Park, University of Southern Indiana • “This study aims to examine the factors affecting behavioral intention of online donation and word-of-mouth via crowdfunding sites, so we have conducted an online survey. The results confirm that social identification, relationships with SNS connectors, involvement, and attitudes toward online donation positively predict intention to donate online. Also, attitudes toward helping others, social identification, involvement, and SNS features had predictive power on intention of word-of-mouth. Theoretical and practical implications are presented in discussion and conclusion.”

Is timing everything? : Exploring benefits and drawbacks of stealing thunder in crisis communication • Soo-Yeon Kim, Sogang University; Jeong-Hyeon Lee, Gauri Communication Co.; JIN SUN SUL, SOGANG UNIVERSITY • Qualitative responses from 286 Korean consumers were collected to find their perceptions of the benefits and drawbacks of stealing thunder. Although more consumers evaluated stealing thunder positively, others pointed out its negative consequences. Consumers identified positivity, credibility, consumer behavior, and ethics as benefits, while they considered backfire effects, irrelevant consumer behavior, negativity, and admittance to be drawbacks. Follow-up actions and transparent crisis communication, along with stealing thunder, were also emphasized as positive aspects of crisis communication. For stealing thunder to be acknowledged positively in society, it must fulfill the ethics of justice and care, and consumers must experience it in real world situations.

* Extended Abstract * Extended Abstract: The Impact of Fairness Perception on the Public’s Attitudinal and Emotional Evaluation of an Organization • Nahyun Kim, Pennsylvania State University; Suman Lee, UNC-Chapel Hill • “A 2 (distributive fairness: high vs. low) x 2 (procedural fairness: high vs. low) between-subjects experiment (N = 134) was conducted online to test the impact of (un)fairness perception on trustworthiness, quality of organization-public relationship, and the publics’ anger and attitude toward an organization, and positive/negative word-of-mouth intentions. Procedural fairness had significant impact on all of the dependent variables while distributive fairness had significant impacts on some dimensions of trustworthiness (e.g., competence, integrity) and attitude.”

Diversity-oriented leadership, internal communication, and employee outcomes: A perspective of racial minority employees • Yeunjae Lee, University of Miami; Queenie Li, University of Miami; Wanhsiu Tsai • Through 633 samples of racial minority employees in the United States, the current study examines the effect of diversity-oriented leadership on the excellence of internal communication and employee outcomes. Using the normative model of internal communication and organizational justice theory, this study advances the theoretical links among leadership, communication, and organizational justice, and its resulting effects on employee engagement and behavioral outcome. Results of an online survey showed that diversity-oriented leadership enhances symmetrical internal communication and racial minority employees’ perceived fairness of an organization, thereby increasing employee engagement and advocative behaviors. Theoretical and practical implications for public relations and internal communication are discussed.

Power of Apology: Comparative Analysis of Crisis Response Strategy Effects between China and the United States of America • Moon Lee, University of Florida; Sunny Yufan Qin, University of Florida • The purpose of the study was to investigate differences in how people respond to two distinctive crisis response strategies (i.e. apology vs. bolstering strategy) in comparison with combined strategy (i.e. apology followed by bolstering strategy) and no comment strategy (e.g. strategic silence: the control group). In addition, the publics’ responses between two different countries (USA vs. China) were compared. Two experimental studies were conducted with a total of 629 people (297 in America vs. 332 in China). In both countries, apology strategy works the best in garnering the public’s trust and reputation in an accidental crisis, particularly in comparison with bolstering strategy. Practical/theoretical implications are further discussed in the paper.

* Extended Abstract * Extended Abstract: Exploring the Effects of CSR on Perceived Brand Innovativeness, Brand Identification and Brand Attitude • Yukyung Lee, University of Connecticut; Carolyn A. Lin, University of Connecticut • This experimental study reveals that exposure to a sustainable (vs. generic) fashion ad increases perceived CSR image and brand innovativeness. The relationship between sustainable fashion ad exposure and CSR image is stronger when attitude towards sustainable fashion is more positive. Perceived CSR image is also positively related to perceived brand innovativeness, consumer-brand identification and brand attitude. Moreover, perceived brand innovativeness and consumer-brand identification both significantly mediate the relationship between perceived CSR image and brand attitude.

From tragedy to activism: Publics’ emotions, efficacy, and communicative action on Twitter in the case of the 2017 Las Vegas Mass Shooting • Queenie Li, University of Miami; Taylor Wen, University of South Carolina • Guided by the Anger Activism Model and pain and loss activism literature, this study analyzes public discussion in a particular case of activism on social media (i.e., the 2017 Las Vegas mass shooting) to present a refined activism framework that advances predictions for policy change engagement during pain and loss events. Key insights about the joint effects of emotion and efficacy in activism communication, public segmentation, and communicative action provide direction for future research investigations that can strengthen theoretical arguments and best practices in activism and advocacy. Public relations or activism scholars can use this research as a stepping stone for conceptualizing more comprehensive ways to identify activist publics and motivate inactive publics to take action.

A View from the Margins of the Margins: How a Queer of Color Critique Enriches Understanding of Public Relations • Nneka Logan; Erica Ciszek • This paper examines the public relations field from the perspective transgender communicators of color. It unites queer of color literature with Bourdieu’s conceptualization of habitus to explore issues of race, gender and marginalization within the discipline. Interviews were conducted with 13 transgender communicators of color and revealed several themes with important implications for public relations theory and practice including advocacy, representation and empowerment. Building on anti-racist and queer scholarship, the purpose of this paper is to expand public relations research by offering a more inclusive conceptualization of the discipline through centering marginalized voices.

Image Repair in the #MeToo Movement: An Examination of Kevin Spacey’s Double Crisis • Don Lowe, University of Kentucky • Through examination of the news articles and Tweets that followed the Anthony Rapp Buzz Feed News article and Spacey’s response Tweet, I argue: (1) double crisis exist; (2) proxy communicators often feel the need to speak out for the profession/industry; (3) proxy communications can be positive or negative; (4) proxy communication can cause harm to the individuals who practice the concept often creating a new crisis; and (5) LGBTQ community members are treated differently as well as the same as their heterosexual counterparts during crises. The Spacey case clearly exemplifies and qualifies as a double crisis. While the severity of the initial and following legal proceedings and publication of numerous other sexual assault claims are proving to be detrimental to Spacey, his Tweet conflating sexual orientation with pedophilia coupled with the conflation that being gay is a choice caused considerable harm to his reputation. Harm that could have been avoided with a sincere apology Additionally, proxy communicators often feel the need to speak out in behalf of the industry/profession. Fellow actors both LGBTQ and heterosexual rushed to Twitter and some to the media to distance the industry/profession from Spacey. Social activists and LGBTQ actors also felt the need to defend the LGBTQ community and distance it from Spacey as well. Spacey’s conflation of sexual orientation with pedophilia and his equating being gay with a choice were both widely condemned in Tweets.

Corporate diplomacy and media: How local news contribute to organizational legitimacy in the host country • Sarah Marschlich; Diana Ingenhoff • Applying neo-institutional public relations approaches, this study explored if and how media frames on corporate diplomacy contribute to organizational legitimacy of foreign multinational corporations in the United Arab Emirates. Conducting a quantitative content analysis of local news media coverage (N=385) from 2014 to 2019, we identified three corporate diplomacy frames, of which two enable corporations to build moral or pragmatic legitimacy. Understanding how media frames contribute to organizational legitimacy has several theoretical and practical implications.

Political Issues Management: Framing the Climate Crisis on the Campaign Trail • Meaghan McKasy; Diana Zulli • This mixed-methods analysis examines the way that democratic presidential candidates at CNN’s 2019 climate crisis town hall presented climate change to the public using fact vs. value-based frames, choice frames, and responsibility frames. Results indicate that candidates predominantly used value-based frames, “gains” were presented in the context of the economy, and candidates were more likely to use prognostic frames over diagnostic frames. These findings speak to the value of framing in political issues management.

* Extended Abstract * From Advocacy to Activism: Scale Development of Behavioral Steps • Brooke McKeever; Robert McKeever; Minhee Choi; Shudan Huang • Although advocacy and activism have gained increasing importance in organizational success, conceptual definitions and valid measurement of the concepts are lacking. By searching the literature, seeking expert feedback, and employing two survey data sets (N= 1,300) for scale development, this study advances a new measurement model of behavioral outcomes that can be useful for future research as well as practice. Findings indicate six dimensions of advocacy and activism. Theoretical, methodological, and practical implications are discussed.

Scientific Evolution of Public Relations Research: Past, Present, and Future • Bitt Moon • Public relations, as an independent domain of applied communication research, has developed unique, original theories to describe, explain, and predict public relations practices that range from the organizational environment to organization-public relationships to publics over the last four decades. This study views public relations as a scientific discipline and takes a scientific evolutionary approach to examine how public relations scholarship has evolved since the 1970s. The four evolutionary stages are applied to illustrate the scientific evolution of public relations research from the 1970s to the 2010s. This study also reviews public relations theories to comprehend research trends in the field. This article concludes that public relations research is in the final stage of scientific evolution (synthesizing) with significant theoretical shifts and calls for another new perspective that fosters innovative and insightful public relations research.

* Extended Abstract * Are employees better spokespeople for CSR initiatives? Findings from a cross-national study • Geah Pressgrove, WVU; Carolyn Kim; Cristobal Barra, Universidad de Chile • This study explores the impact of cultural values on perceptions of spokespersons in a corporate social responsibility context in both the United States and Latin America. Findings indicate individuals with masculine cultural values, perceive spokespersons with managerial titles as a more credible source for information. Conversely, people with more feminine cultural values perceive spokespersons with an employee title as more credible. Further, it was found that different dimensions of transparency (openness, integrity, respect) drive results.

Toward an Informed Employer: The Implications of Organizational Internal Listening for Employee Relationship Cultivation • Sunny Yufan Qin, University of Florida; Rita Linjuan Men, University of Florida • This study examined whether and how organizational internal listening (i.e., organizational- level and supervisory-level listening) influences the quality of employee-organization relationships. Informed by the self-determination theory, employees’ psychological need satisfaction for autonomy, competence, and relatedness was examined as a mediating mechanism in this process. An online survey was conducted with 443 employees across various industries in the U.S. Results showed that organizational-level listening positively influenced the quality of employee relationships with the organization both directly and indirectly via satisfying employees’ psychological need for autonomy, competence, and relatedness. The impact of supervisory-level listening on the quality of employee- organization relationships was fully mediated via employees’ psychological need satisfaction. Theoretical and practical implications of the findings are discussed.

* Extended Abstract * A Construal-level Approach to Post-crisis Response Strategies • Soojin Roh, Peking University HSBC Business School; Hyun Jee Oh • Summary: In order to provide guidance for effective post-crisis communication, this study explores under which circumstances differently framed crisis response message is likely to be effective, building on construal level theory of psychological distance (CLT; Liberman & Trope, 2008; Trope & Liberman, 2010). This study demonstrates significant interaction effects of social distance and crisis message framing (e.g., why vs. how vs. why and how) on publics’ anger and trust toward the organization in crisis.

* Extended Abstract * Suffragists as Early PR Pioneers: The Development of the National American Woman Suffrage Association Press Bureau • Arien Rozelle, St. John Fisher College • Through an examination of Susan B. Anthony’s push to create a Press Bureau for the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA), this paper argues that Anthony and fellow suffragist Ida Husted Harper should be recognized as early public relations pioneers. Anthony and Harper employed a strategic approach to public relations at the same time – if not before – Ivy Lee and Edward Bernays, who are often credited as the “founding fathers” of modern public relations. Anthony and Husted worked to advance an activist approach to public relations during the dawn of modern public relations in the United States. The early development of the NAWSA Press Bureau tells the story of a grassroots, strategic, coordinated and women-led integrated press effort for social good beginning in 1897, three years before the establishment of the Publicity Bureau, which is largely credited as the first public relations firm in the U.S. (Cutlip).

Building Consumer Communal Relationships through Cause-Related Marketing: From the Perspective of Persuasion Knowledge • Baobao Song; Weiting Tao; Taylor Wen, University of South Carolina • This study investigates the value of cause-related marketing campaigns in consumer relationship management. Specifically, following the tenets of Persuasive Knowledge Model and Equity Theory, this study proposes that the effect of consumers’ inferences of the companies’ manipulative intent in cause-related marketing campaigns on consumer-brand communal relationships is contingent on their knowledge about the degree to which the company and the social cause respectively benefit from the cause-related marketing campaigns. A panel of 506 consumers was recruited to complete an online survey. Results supported the significant three-way interaction effects among the variables of inferences of manipulative intent, corporate benefit knowledge, and social benefit knowledge on consumer communal relationship. Generally, when consumers believe that non-profit partners benefit more from a cause-related marketing campaign than the company does, inferences of manipulative intent positively affect consumer communal relationships. However, when consumers perceive greater corporate benefits than social benefits, inferences of manipulative intent will negatively affect consumer communal relationships. This study provides significant theoretical and managerial implications for future corporate social responsibility/cause-related marketing research and practice.

Appealing to the Marketplace of Audiences: The Anti-Proposition 112 Public Relations Campaign in Colorado • Burton St. John III, University of Colorado-Boulder; Danielle Quichocho, University of Colorado – Boulder • In the fall of 2018, fracking interests in Colorado initiated a public relations campaign against Proposition 112—a measure that these interests perceived as an emergent threat to their continued viability. This study reviewed the messaging used by the industry and its supporters as it appeared across 1,515 text articles (e.g., news accounts, op-eds, etc.) and 38 Facebook posts. We found that pro-fracking messages, rather than concentrating on the quality of the ideas offered in support of fracking (e.g., facts and data) often chose to emphasize connections to the lived experiences of the audiences. As such, this work offers a model of this phenomena called the marketplace of audiences, which includes the components values, aesthetics, and resonance. This model offers both a theoretical and applied framework for how an organization may affirm alliances with key audiences, especially when detecting an emergent threat to its continued existence.

* Extended Abstract * Scholarly Books, Reviews, and Public Relations: Publicity and the Perception of Value • Meta G Carstarphen, University of Oklahoma; Margarita Tapia, The University of Oklahoma • With the sheer volume of books published, global marketplaces, and technology, the field for academic book publishing is robust—and crowded. Survey data gathered from 150 publicists/marketing staff from the Association of University Presses form the basis of this study. A discussion of the results from this study offers an opportunity to re-examine key theoretical constructs about the role of publicity in public relations—including rhetoric, narrative, third-party endorsements, and relationship-building.

Servant Leadership and Employee Advocacy: The Mediating Role of Psychological Empowerment and Perceived Relationship Investment • Patrick Thelen; April Yue • The current study examines how servant leadership relates with employee advocacy behaviors through the mediating role of psychological empowerment and perceived relationship investment (PRI). Through a quantitative survey with 357 employees who work for a variety of organizations, the study’s results indicated that servant leadership plays a critical role in fostering psychological empowerment and PRI, which in turn, encourage employee advocacy behaviors. Relevant theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

* Extended Abstract * How CSR partnerships affect nonprofit organizations (NPOs): The mediating role of consumer-brand identification, CSR motives, and NPO social objective achievement • Michail Vafeiadis; Virginia Harrison, Penn State University; Pratiti Diddi, Lamar University; Frank Dardis, Penn State University; Christen Buckley • This study examined how CSR partnerships with corporations affect nonprofit organizations (NPOs). A 2 (NPO reputation: low vs. high) x 2 (CSR fit: low vs. high) x 2 (partnership duration: short vs. long) between-subjects experiment showed that CSR partnerships are more effective for high-reputation NPOs. Also, NPOs should partner only with high-fit corporations. Consumer-brand identification, perceived corporate extrinsic motives, and fulfillment of nonprofit social objective can influence stakeholders’ supportive intentions toward the NPO.

Public Relations in the Age of Data: Corporate Perspectives on Social Media Analytics (SMA) • Kathy Fitzpatrick, University of South Florida; Paula L. Weissman, American University • The aim of this study was to understand how public relations leaders view and use social media analytics (SMA) and the impact of SMA on the public relations function. Personal interviews with chief communication officers (CCOs) from leading multinational corporate brands revealed that although CCOs perceive social media analytics as strategically important to the advancement of public relations, the use of social media data is limited, slowed by challenges associated with building SMA capacity.

Responding to Online Hoaxes: The Role of Contextual Priming, Crisis Response Type and Communication Strategy • Anli Xiao; Yang Cheng, North Carolina State University • Hoaxes present detrimental threats to individuals and organizations. This paper examines how companies should respond to hoaxes on social media using different crisis response types and crisis communication strategies. In addition, this paper investigated how contextual priming might influence participants’ judgment on the company’s responses. Results indicated that a narrative response might be more effective, and people’s judgment of the crisis response is partially influenced by the contextual priming. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

Effects of Narratives on Individuals’ Skepticism toward Corporate Social Responsibility Efforts • Sifan Xu, University of Tennessee Knoxville; Anna Kochigina, University of Tennessee Knoxville • Skepticism is prevalent surrounding companies’ corporate social responsibility (CSR) communication. Existing research on narratives suggests that narratives can reduce counterarguing and increase story-consistent beliefs and attitudes. However, research is still in its preliminary stage in understanding how narratives may help alleviate individuals’ skepticism toward companies’ CSR initiatives. The current study first tested multiple videos searched on YouTube depicting a real organization’s CSR initiatives. Four videos (two in narrative format and two in non-narrative format) were eventually selected and used in the experiment, where participants recruited from MTurk (n = 345) were randomly assigned to watch one of the selected videos. Results of the study suggest that narrative significantly reduced almost all of the previously identified dimensions of CSR skepticism and significantly increased perceived extrinsic (public-serving) motive. Furthermore, narrative engagement and perceived CSR motive were significant mediators in the effect of narrative format on CSR skepticism. Considering the growing perspective of using engagement as a framework to unpack public relations theories and practices, the current study provides valuable insights to narrative engagement in public relations research.

Does the Medium Matter? A Meta-analysis on Using Social Media vs. Traditional Media in Crisis Communication • Jie Xu, Villanova University • There has been a growing body of crisis communication research that treats social media as a critical variable, which might alter how people perceive and react to crisis communication messages. The meta-analysis of 8 studies (k = 22, n = 3,209, combined n = 9,703) compared the impact of social media vs. traditional media in crisis communication. Five studies (n = 1,896) contained 8 relevant effect sizes on crisis responsibility, representing 3,294 individuals. Seven studies (n = 3,185) contained 14 relevant effect sizes on persuasiveness, representing 6,409 individuals. Compared to traditional media, using social media significantly lessened consumers’ perceived crisis responsibility (r = -.134, 95% CI -.212– -.054, p = .001). There was no significant difference between using traditional media and social media in crisis communication on persuasiveness (r = -.039, 95% CI -.114– .035, p = .30). The moderator analysis indicated that for both crisis responsibility and persuasiveness, the effect size was more noticeable when an organization communicates with college students vs. non-student publics. The ability of social media in dampening crisis responsibility was more pronounced for fictitious organizations compared to real organizations. Compared to traditional media, social media was significantly more negative for preventable crisis, the influence was weak for accidental crisis. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed, as well as directions for future research.

Publics’ Emotional Reactions and Acceptance of Organizational Crisis Response in the Case of Boeing 737 MAX Crisis • Hao Xu, University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Jisu Huh, University of Minnesota; Smitha Muthya Sudheendra, University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Debarati Das, University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Jaideep Srivastava, University of Minnesota Twin Cities • This study examined publics’ emotional reactions to a crisis, and the impacts of such emotions on their acceptance of organizational crisis response communications, using computational analysis of the real-world example of the Boeing 737 MAX crisis. The results reveal sadness and fear as the two primary emotions among publics, and, for publics in this emotional state, specific and accommodative crisis response strategies seem to be better accepted and generate favorable reactions in certain stakeholder groups.

Understanding the Impact of Brand Feedback to Negative eWOM on Social Media: An Expectation Violation Approach • jing yang, Loyola University Chicago; Juan Mundel, DePaul University • The current study investigated the effects of brand feedback strategies in response to negative eWOM on social media on consumers’ positive and negative expectation violations, as well as the consequences of such expectation violation. Results indicated two routes of mechanisms (i.e., positive and negative), such that positive consumer expectation violation results in higher consumer satisfaction, which leads to brand love. On the other hand, negative consumer expectation violation results in higher consumer dissatisfaction, an antecedent to brand hate. Our study also revealed that it is important for brands to respond to negative eWOM to avoid consumer backlash. Moreover, providing compensation to consumers is also an effective approach to attenuate consumer dissatisfaction, potentially restoring consumer satisfaction.

Do instructing and adjusting information make a difference in crisis responsibility attribution? Merging fear appeal studies with the defensive attribution hypothesis • Xueying Zhang; Ziyuan Zhou, Savannah State University • The research on crisis response strategy has long been a popular topic in crisis communication. Image repair strategies, such as apology, excuse, deny, sympathy, to name a few, have been well documented in the literature. However, empirical evidence on instructing and adjusting information is scarce. Extant research generates inconsistent, sometimes even contradicting conclusions (Kim & Sung, 2014; Park & Avery, 2018). This study joins the discussion of the two types of information and adds empirical evidence on how the two strategies work. A 2 (high vs. low threat) × 2 (high vs. low efficacy for instructing information) × 2 (high vs. low efficacy for adjusting information) factorial experiment was conducted using Qualtrics national research panel to test the effect of instructing and adjusting information on participants’ account acceptance, attribution of crisis responsibility and evaluation of organizational reputation. Overall, the results highlight the role of efficacy in adjusting information in promoting account acceptance, alleviating crisis responsibility, and protecting organizational reputation. The mixed results of threat and efficacy in instructing information encourage managerial considerations when organizations design initial crisis responses. Many interesting directions for future research are also inspired.

Organizational Legitimacy for High-Risk Facilities: Examining the Case of NBAF • Xiaochen Zhang, University of Oklahoma; NANCY MUTURI • Through an online survey of community residents living nearby the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility (NBAF), this study examined how high-risk organizations can communicate organizational legitimacy, and how legitimacy perception may affect public trust and risk perceptions. Results illustrated the importance of transparent and consistent communication in organizational legitimacy-building, as well as the role of legitimacy, especially for high-risk organizations, to garner public trust, to ease public uncertainty, and to increase public preparedness.

Provincial and Municipal Leaders’ Coronavirus Discourse Repairs Local Governments’ Image • Ernest Zhang, University of Missouri School of Journalism; Yitao Liu, Meishi Film Academy of Chongqing University; William Benoit, Department of Communication Studies of University of Alabama College of Arts and Sciences; Fritz Cropp, University of Missouri School of Journalism • “Seventeen years ago, SARS (Severe acute respiratory syndrome) wreaked havoc in China and across the world. Zhang and Benoit (2009) pointed out that the then Chinese health minister failed to defend the image of the Chinese government because he ineffectually used image-repair tactics. Seventeen years later, did the leaders of Hubei province and its capital city Wuhan more effectively protect the image of Hubei and Wuhan? The first case of COVID-19 was believed to originate in Wuhan on December 1, 2019 (Huang et al., 2020). The virus up to April 6 caused 1,331,032 infections and 73,917 deaths across the world (Johns Hopkins CSSE, 2020). Since most of deaths and infections had happened in Hubei and Wuhan before March 28 (Ansari et al., 2020), people in the world for a while considered the province and the city “Wuhan Pneumonia” equivalent to COVID-19. To repair the image of Hubei and Wuhan as liars for covering up the disaster and as equivalent to the virus, Hubei and Wuhan’s leaders held 65 press conferences and were interviewed over 10 times between January 19 and April 6. Using Benoit’s image repair theory (1995, 2015), the authors analyzed the leaders’ discourse at eight selected news conferences and five interviews, concluding that the leaders succeeded in applying seven of Benoit’s (1995) image-repair tactics but failed in the other three ones. The study argues their discourse succeeded in repairing Wuhan’s and Hubei’s images.

Student Papers
Finding an Antidote: Testing the Use of Proactive Crisis Strategies to Protect Organizations from Astroturfing Attacks • Courtney Boman, University of Missouri; Erika Schneider, University of Missori • “Astroturfing, or the orchestration of manipulative propaganda campaigns, has become the center of conversations amid Fake News disputations. Exploring an astroturf attack as a paracrisis, this research investigates the effects of an attack and how proactive communication strategies can protect organizational outcomes (i.e., credibility, crisis responsibility, account acceptance, and organizational reputation). In addition to expanding theoretical crisis response models, this research offers practitioners with advice that emphasizes the use of proactive strategies.

Crisis Communication Strategy in Crisis of Chinese Celebrities with Huge Fan Base • QINXIAN CAI, The Chinese University of Hong Kong • Chinese celebrities with huge fan base have recently attracted much attention, and some of them have some crises within the social media environment. In this study, four cases were chosen and divided into two types, competence-violated and integrity-violated. This article offered a comprehensive angle including celebrities, fans and media to understand the interaction during the crises. The analysis indicated that the different strategies were used in different kinds of crises among different parties and the reasons, and also the suggestions about how to deal with the celebrities’ crises.

Effects of Crisis Severity and Crisis Response Strategies on Post-Crisis Organizational Reputation • Sera Choi • Using SCCT, this study investigates the impact of crisis severity and crisis response strategies on post-crisis organizational reputation. Two (crisis severity: low vs. high) x 2 (crisis response strategy: match vs. mismatch) between-subjects factorial design was employed (N=289). There were main and interaction effects between the variables. A matched response strategy was more effective under high crisis severity, but there was no such interaction effect under low severity condition. Theoretical and practical implications were discussed.

Social Movements and Identification: Examining BLM and MFOL’s Use of Identification Strategies to Build Relationships. • Candice Edrington, North Carolina State University • With the rapid connectivity and mobility provided by the technological affordances of the Internet, individuals and organizations have been able to broaden their reach in terms of sharing information. In particular, social movements have used these affordances to their advantages by creating social media pages/accounts to widely disseminate information regarding their advocacy and activist agendas. Black Lives Matter and March For Our Lives are two such movements. Due to their unique communication and relationship building needs, activist organizations are of particular importance in public relations scholarship (Taylor et al., 2001). Coombs and Holladay called for the reconsideration of activism from a public relations perspective by asserting that activists seek to alter the behaviors and policies of organizations in some fashion, which requires them to utilize power and persuasion, thus noting the similarities between public relations and activism (Coombs & Holladay, 2012). However, advocacy and activism on digital platforms has been examined in public relations scholarship from the perspective of nonprofit organizations. Sommerfeldt (2007) notes that “the study of public relations, the Internet, and activism have rarely converged” (p. 112). Thus, there is a gap in the literature when it comes to analyzing the message strategies that social movements employ on digital platforms. Therefore, the purpose of this project was to bridge the gap through an analysis of the message strategies used by these two social movements in an effort to build relationships through establishing identification with their key publics via their Twitter pages.

Explicating Moral Responsibility in Crisis Communication • Yoorim Hong, University of Missouri, Columbia • Moral responsibility has been widely used by publics and public relations practitioners to imply an organization’s accountability for an incident with negative impact on society. Despite its frequent usage, the concept of moral responsibility has not been sufficiently explicated in the field of public relations. This concept explication paper makes its departure from reflecting on nearby concepts such as blame, causal attributions, and crisis responsibility. By integrating ideas from other fields of study, the theoretical definition of moral responsibility, its dimensions and indicators are proposed. This paper also guides the future empirical analysis, by suggesting possible antecedents and consequences of attributions of moral responsibility in an organizational crisis. The authors believe that investigating how publics attribute moral responsibility to organizations would help public relations researchers and practitioners develop more effective communication strategies in ways that protect the organization’s reputation and its relationships with publics in a crisis.

What Makes Organizational Advocacy More Effective?: The Moderating Effect of the Public’s Perception of Issue Polarization • Ejae Lee, Indiana University • This study focuses on individual publics’ perceptions about the attributes of hot-button issues on which organizations take a stance, in order to better understand the effect of organizational advocacy. This study examined (a) how individuals perceive an organization’s stance and their own stance on a controversial sociopolitical issue, (b) whether the alignment of issue stances is positively related to pro-company support, and (c) how perceived issue polarization could moderate the association between individuals’ perceived issue alignment and their support for companies doing organizational advocacy.

Protecting Intangible Assets on Twitter: The Effects of Crisis Response Strategies on Credibility, Trust, Reputation, and Post-Crisis Behavior • James Ndone, University of Missouri (School of Journalism) • This study investigated the effects of crisis response strategies of stealing thunder, apology, and denial on a hospital’s intangible assets of reputation, credibility, and trust on Twitter using an online survey. Besides, the study investigated social amplification and post-crisis behavior such as purchase intentions and negative word-of-mouth on Twitter. The findings suggest that stakeholders will trust, treat a message as credible, and hold the reputation of an organization at high levels if it posts apologetic tweets and steals thunder during a crisis. When an organization denies its responsibility for a crisis on Twitter, stakeholders are likely to spread negative word-of-mouth and reduce their purchase intentions. Theoretical and practical implications of the study are discussed.

* Extended Abstract * Effects of Inconsistent CSR Information on Customer’s Attitudes: A Mediation Model • Moon Nguyen, Hong Kong Baptist University • The study proposes a model to examine effects of inconsistent CSR information on customer’s attitudes. Using a between-group experiment, results show that corporate hypocrisy is a mediator in this relationship. Corporate hypocrisy is mediated by CSR belief and company reputation. Implications are that companies should be conscious when adopting CSR activities as customers are sensible to information inconsistency, and they should maintain good reputation and enhance CSR belief as these factors can have buffering effects.

Favoring Emotional or Analytical? Exploring Corporate Brand Personality Projected on Twitter • Lewen Wei, Pennsylvania State University; Jinping Wang, Pennsylvania State University • The present study sought to unveil corporate brand personalities that top-ranking brands might project on social media using a machine-learning approach. We collected pertinent data at two time points and examined 99 most valuable brands’ corporate brand personality on Twitter along with how Twitter users engaged with different corporate brand personalities. We found different types of corporate brand personalities were presented on Twitter, and there was a close relationship between projected personality and public engagement.

Stand on Parties or Issues? Comparing the Effects of Different Corporate Social Advocacy (CSA) Strategies • Hao Xu, University of Minnesota Twin Cities • This research project examined the effects of three different CSA strategies – standing on a political party, standing on multiple issues along with one particular ideology, and standing on a single issue – on publics’ attitudes and supportive intentions. The results demonstrate that for both Democratic and Republican publics, the three strategies can generate similar effects, but the effects between Democrats and Republicans can possibly be asymmetrical. Implications for academic research and practices are discussed.

Teaching
* Extended Abstract * Analytics in Public Relations Measurement: Desired Skills for Digital Communicators • Melissa Adams; Nicole Lee, North Carolina State University • This exploratory study examined the analytics education and skills agencies seek in new digital public relations hires and extends recent research on the topic of public relations analytics education. In-depth interviews with 14 senior managers at O’Dwyer’s Top 50 ranked agencies identified the analytic training and tool knowledge most desired in new hires. Results show that basic education in analytic measurement and data analysis is necessary preparation for the digital public relations job market.

* Extended Abstract * Forming and Implementing an Interdisciplinary Public-Interest Course Experience on Emerging Technology Communication and Policy • Julia Fraustino, West Virginia University; Kakan Dey, West Virginia University; Dimitra Pyrialakou, West Virginia University; David Martinelli, West Virginia University; John Deskins, West Virginia University • This study investigates an interdisciplinary public-interest course experience for upper-level undergraduates. Five instructors in public relations, economics, and engineering created and piloted a course with students across multiple disciplines to explore the challenge of an Appalachian state’s potential autonomous vehicle (AV) implementation and policy from an interdisciplinary perspective. Pre- and mid-semester data collected from public relations students along with the instructors’ field observation and reflection memos provide preliminary qualitative insights into the course’s benefits and challenges.

What It Really Takes: Revealing the Shared Challenges in PRSSA Faculty Advising • Amanda J. Weed, Kennesaw State University; Adrienne Wallace, GVSU; Betsy Emmons, Samford University; Kate Keib, Oglethorpe University • PRSSA supplements the traditional public relations curriculum by providing student members with enhanced learning and networking opportunities. PRSSA faculty advisers assume an advanced mentoring role by facilitating experiential learning and networking that connects classroom learning to practical application of knowledge, skills, and understanding of the public relations profession. A two-wave survey of current PRSSA faculty advisers examined the shared challenges that impact the personal and professional satisfaction of those who hold the role.

<2020 Abstracts

Newspaper and Online News Division

Open Competition
* Extended Abstract * Examining Augmented Reality in Journalism: Perceived Usability of AR Visualizations in News Articles • Tanja Aitamurto, University of Illinois at Chicago; Laura Aymerich-Franch, Pompeu Fabra University; Jorge Saldivar, Barcelona Supercomputing Center; Catherine Kircos; Yasamin Sadeghi, University of California in Los Angeles; Sukolsak Sakshuwong, Stanford University • In this study, we examined the usability of augmented reality (AR) visualizations and users’ interest in adopting AR as a storytelling medium in journalism. In a mixed experimental design, 79 participants were randomly assigned to view three New York Times articles in one of three viewing modalities: (1) AR visualizations, (2) interactive (non-AR) visualizations, or (3) non-interactive, static visualizations. There were no statistically significant differences in the perceived usability of the visuals or in the participants’ interest in seeing more visualizations between the viewing modalities. Regardless of the viewing modality, the participants perceived the visualizations as easy, comfortable and desirable to use and as useful ways to learn information. The participants were neither more nor less interested in adopting the technology for their daily use. The findings suggest that usability may not be a major challenge hindering the use of AR in journalism. However, the findings also suggest that the users are not more interested in using AR in their daily lives compared to other, more traditional visual media. These results pose a challenge for news organizations hoping to develop an audience for their AR content: How could they increase the users’ interest in adopting AR as a visual medium for journalistic storytelling?

* Extended Abstract * Statistical numeracy and polling literacy among news readers • Alyssa Appelman, Northern Kentucky University; Mike Schmierbach, Pennsylvania State University • Through an experiment (N = 495), this study tests the effects of errors in polling and statistics on news readers’ perceptions. In all, findings suggest that most readers do not notice these types of errors. Once enough mistakes are included, however, readers do seem to notice, but they do not seem to be bothered by them. This suggests the need for additional media literacy training for readers, as well as additional numeracy training for journalists.

The default motive: Blaming mental illness for violence depicted in news stories • Jessica Roark, Ohio University; Robin Blom, Ball State University • Though the mentally ill are more likely to be the victims of violent crimes than the perpetrators, saturation of negative media images can lead to the belief that the mentally ill are more likely to commit violent acts than others. This study aimed to provide evidence of the degree to which news consumers connected news stories of violent crimes with mental illness as a motive. By examining perceptions of mental illness as a possible motive when presented with composite news stories depicting crimes with different levels of violence, and where mental illness was either included or excluded from the narrative, the researchers were able to demonstrate that news consumers connected mental illness with violent acts, even when mental illness was not part of the narrative.

Truth, Justice, and Sexual Harassment: A comparative analysis of Op-Eds in the Hill-Thomas and Ford-Kavanaugh hearings • Kelli Boling, University of South Carolina; Leigh Moscowitz, University of South Carolina • Using textual analysis to examine Op-Eds during the Hill-Thomas and Ford-Kavanaugh hearings, this paper explores how media can function as an arbiter of public opinion during controversial events. Findings show a shift in Op-Ed contributors, from mostly men in 1991 (60%) to predominantly women in 2018 (70%). Support for women was largely absent in Op-Eds from 1991, replaced by discussions of fairness and justice; while in 2018, Op-Ed authors offered tangible support for Dr. Ford.

Making sources visible: Representation of evidence in news texts, 2007-2019 • Mark Coddington, Washington and Lee University; Logan Molyneux, Temple University • Journalism’s shift toward more aggregative forms of work could be expected to induce a parallel shift in the forms of evidence presented in news texts. A content analysis of news texts from newspapers and digital newsrooms in 2007, 2013, and 2019 shows firsthand evidence is rarely presented. Non-mediated attributed speech was by far the evidence most often presented, but it has become less common over time, with corresponding increases in mediated speech and thirdhand evidence.

Revealing problems, pointing fingers, and creating impact: A survey of investigative reporters/editors regarding journalistic impact • Nicole Dahmen, University of Oregon; Brent Walth, University of Oregon • One measure of success for investigative reporting is impact: Did the story lead to any sort of outcome, from public awareness and dialogue to meaningful policy change? While investigative reporting is historically impact-oriented, there is a dearth of academic scholarship as to what journalists seek and expect when it comes to generating impact. Using data from a national survey of investigative reporters/editors, this research develops a more holistic conceptualization of journalistic impact.

Mapping Peace Journalism: Toward a Shared Understanding of Success • Meagan Doll, University of Washington; Patricia Moy, University of Washington • “Peace journalism has received notable attention in recent decades, though this interest does not necessarily correspond with more peaceful societies around the world. This paper traces three primary domains of peace journalism research—as a concept, as a practice and, by extension, as media content and effects—to demonstrate how uncoordinated metrics for success obscure peace journalism’s normative goals and evaluation. Future work should consider conceptual bridging between research domains alongside mechanisms for cross-institutional assessment.

Same scandal, different standards: The effect of partisanship on expectations of news reports about whistleblowers • Megan Duncan, Virginia Tech; Mallory Perryman, Virginia Commonwealth University; Brittany Shaughnessy, Virginia Tech • The New York Times in 2019 published a story revealing key details about an anonymous whistleblower and included a short quote from the editor defending the decision. The Times did not name the whistleblower, but it revealed enough to ignite a controversy with clear ideological lines. One explanation of Hostile Media Perception is that audiences adjust their standards higher or lower depending on the context of journalism. In this experiment (N=591), we test the different standards explanation on both the perceptions of a story participants just read and their expectations of a follow up story. The experiment manipulates (1) the news brand publishing the news story; (2) the political identification of a politician at the center of a scandal; and (3) the transparency of an editor’s note explaining journalistic process. The results suggest the relationship between an audience member’s ideology and the news story shapes whether the person thinks a whistleblower’s name should be revealed. We find main effects for news brand and politician political identity on current and future journalism. Additionally, the transparent editor’s note improves the perception of the quality of journalism among independents. These results support transparency on the part of news editors to increase perceptions of good reporting. Further, they add to HMP research by suggesting audiences raise and lower the bar of what they consider fair journalism based on who is reporting about whom. In other words, audiences reading about the same scandal have different standards for the details they think should be included.

Constructing city images through local online media: Evidence from 21 major U.S. cities • Lei Guo; Yiyan Zhang • Based on evidence collected from 21 major U.S. cities, this study explores the intermedia agenda setting (IAS) impact of the city-based local online media in transferring the salience of urban issues to the national media agenda. The results suggest a city’s economic power and the scale of its local news industry, especially the traditional media sector, are significantly correlated with its local media’s power to determine how the city is portrayed in the national media.

Varying amounts of information in health news headlines can affect user selection and interactivity • Ronald Yaros, University of Maryland-College Park; Md Mahfuzul Haque, University of Maryland College Park; Md Main Uddin Rony, University of Maryland College Park; Naeemul Hassan, University of Maryland College Park • This experimental study (N = 308) tested if varying the amounts of information in health news headlines significantly affects user selection. Participants exposed to eight headline pairs selected one preferred headline then asked why, and whether they’d like, comment on, or share its content. Results indicate a consistent preference for more informative headlines because they provided more detail. Although fewer low information headlines were selected, the primary reason was they raised curiosity.

* Extended Abstract * Corrections decrease following The New York Times editing consolidation—is this a good thing? • Kirstie Hettinga, California Lutheran University; Elizabeth Smith, Pepperdine University • The New York Times “streamlined” its editing process in 2017 and reduced the editing staff by about half. Through content analysis on corrections (N=1,149), this research examines the effects of these cuts. Preliminary analysis revealed that there were more corrections before the editing process was changed, but that corrections appeared more quickly after the original error occurred following the streamlining of the editing desk. Practical and theoretical implications are discussed.

Ideological Hierarchy in Current China • Yezi Hu, Washington State University; Stacey Hust • Since the Chinese Communist Party(CCP) had to come up with a new ideology to supplement communism in China after the cold war, the complex ideology in China has become a mystery. This study analyzed 200 newspaper articles in Peoples’ Daily to examine and compare the salience of the 12 Socialist Core Values that the CCP is currently promoting in the country. It confirmed the existence of the ideological hierarchy and the five latent themes under the discussion of the values in People’s Daily. This study also found some significant ideological changes after 2018 China’s constitutional amendment, which removed the presidential term limit. It is the first quantitative study of the Socialist Core Values, and it helps the world better understand the ideological foundation behind Chinese behavior and policies.

Transparency in the News • Kirsten Johnson, Elizabethtown College; Burton St. John III, University of Colorado-Boulder • An experimental study was conducted to see what impact varying the level of self-disclosure by a journalist, as well as providing information about why and how a story is being covered, has on the perceived credibility of the journalist, the story, and the organization for which the journalist works. A nationwide study was conducted that included 885 participants. Results indicate the group that saw a picture of the journalist, a low level of disclosure regarding the journalist, and information about why and how the story was being covered rated the journalist, story, and organization highest in terms of perceived credibility. These findings indicate that traditional news organizations, when it comes to building audience credibility, should consider including at least some information about the journalist, and perhaps, more importantly, information about why and how the story is being covered.

* Extended Abstract * Organizational Culture in a Converged Community Radio Station – A Case Study Look at How News Is Made • Angelica Kalika, University of Colorado Boulder • Abstract: As nonprofit community journalism shifts its resources to digital endeavors, this case study examines the organizational culture of a converged community radio station newsroom. Using participant observation and in-depth interviews, the role journalism plays in a nonprofit and independent newsroom is analyzed. Schein’s definition of culture demonstrates how community digital journalistic practices are described and fulfill a community’s information needs. The author makes a case for the professional relevance of the role culture plays in an organization and how news is made in a converged radio newsroom.

A Missed Opportunity? President Trump, the Truth Sandwich, and Journalistic Monitoring of the Executive Office Across Ideological Mainstream Outlets • Linda Jean Kenix, University of Canterbury; Jovita Manickam, University of Canterbury • Journalists have called for a ‘truth sandwich’ in the reporting of President Donald Trump to better ascertain the certitude of his public comments. This paper first reviews the norms of journalism to better understand the present challenges and then attempts to examine journalism in the era of President Trump. It is easier to understand how different contemporary journalism might be if there is a better understanding of the how the practice has evolved. This research then employs quantitative content analysis to examine online articles from four newspapers across the ideological spectrum to uncover sources, tone and presence of the truth sandwich in The United States. Minimal evidence of the truth sandwich was found and coverage of President Trump was largely negative in tone, with differences noted between conservative and liberal media. The stark differences found here have potentially profound implications for democracy and for journalism in America, which are discussed.

Comparative Frame Analysis of a False Ballistic Missile Alert Crisis • Ji Young Kim; Ann Auman, University of Hawaii • News media framing of a community crisis can be studied to better understand the impact of government messages on community reaction. Government is a powerful political actor and source in an emergency for the news media and the public. This study evaluates Hawai’i news media reports and interpretations of state government’s messages about a false missile attack alert. A content analysis was conducted using news frames to evaluate news media’s response to the crisis and compared that to government message frames.

News and Online Public Agenda for the Environmental Health Risk Issues in S. Korea • Ji Young Kim • Grounded in the agenda-setting framework, a total of 587 news and public online messages were analyzed. First, news media articles were collected from the Integrated News Database System where articles were retrieved from nine different daily newspapers in Korea, and then public’s online messages were also collected from an online portal site using the same keywords. Results of this study show some useful communication patterns in terms of sub-issues, stakeholders, and issue frames in the context of environmental health risk. Moreover, this study found some differences between the news and public agendas on the environmental health risk issues.

Audience Engagement with Individual News Organizations and Their News Content, and Influencing Factors • Jisu Kim, Yale Law School; Jisu Huh, University of Minnesota • Using survey data from the audience of six national news organizations in the United States, this article explores the influences of factors for audience engagement with the news organization at the organizational level. The result shows that familiarity with the news organization, frequency of getting news from the news organization, trust in the news in social media, trust in the news organization, and demographics affect audience engagement with news content and the news organization differently.

Third-party candidates, newspaper editorials and political debates • John Kirch, Towson University • This paper examines how newspapers in Virginia covered Sarvis’s campaign and the 2013 gubernatorial election on their editorial pages. In addition to comparing the volume and type of coverage each candidate received, the study analyzed whether newspapers in Virginia supported, opposed, or were indifferent to the Libertarian’s inclusion in the debates. Central questions include: Were newspapers interested in broadening political discourse beyond the confines of the major parties? How did newspaper editorial boards respond once they learned that Sarvis was not invited to the debates? Did any newspaper endorse the Libertarian? And did the news media fulfill its role as a forum of robust discussion, or did it act as an “agent of power,” helping the establishment stifle political discourse rather than enhancing it? The paper finds that third-party candidates receive significantly less coverage than major-party candidates on newspaper editorial pages. Most newspapers also were indifferent to the Libertarian’s exclusion from the debates.

* Extended Abstract * Early Coverage of the Coronavirus Pandemic at US Local Newspapers • Beth Knobel, Fordham University • The outbreak of the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic provides an opportunity to investigate several aspects of the work of local newspapers in the United States, including gatekeeping, the effect of news wires and news syndication services, and the possible effect of political polarization on hard news coverage. To provide insight on these issues, this study examines the early coverage of COVID-19 at a selection of American local newspapers in 28 states—15 Republican-dominated and 13 Democrat-dominated.

* Extended Abstract * 12 years left—how a climate change action deadline influences attitudes • Patrice Kohl; Neil Stenhouse • “Following the release of a 2018 IPCC report, numerous news media announced we have only “12 years” to avoid abrupt, catastrophic climate change. This experiment tested the influence of this climate change “deadline-ism” narrative on participant attitudes and behavioral intentions. A news article presenting the “deadline-ism” narrative increased support for prioritizing climate change and reduced fatalism, compared to a control condition. It also increased a sense of response efficacy in addressing climate change among liberals.”

Anchoring in the past, tweeting from the present: Exploring cognitive bias among reporters in 2016 presidential election coverage • Jihye Lee, Stanford University; James Hamilton • This study explores how cognitive biases influence news coverage by journalists facing uncertainty and time-pressures on the campaign trail. Examining text corpora generated by 81 reporters covering the 2016 presidential election, we found that journalists who had covered previous presidential elections anchor in the past by making more references to previous political events in their 2016 reporting. Comparing text of their articles and broadcasts to language in their tweets, we found journalists used language on Twitter reflecting more emotion, greater certainty, and a focus on the present. These results were consistent with Kahneman’s model of System 1 versus System 2 thinking.

The Synergistic Effects of Solutions Journalism and Corporate Social Responsibility Advertising • Minjie Li, The University of Tampa • This study explores the synergistic effects of solutions journalism and corporate social responsibility advertising. More specifically, it experimentally investigates how news story orientation (i.e. Problem-Oriented, Solution-Oriented) interacts with the relevance of the advertisement (i.e. Irrelevant, Low-Relevance, High-Relevance) displayed alongside the news story to redirect people’s affective and cognitive responses to the news story and advertisement. The findings demonstrated that the solution-oriented story elicited more positive affect, issue interest, self-efficacy, and favorable evaluations of the advertisement.

The Discursive Construction of Forza Nuova in Italy’s Corriere della Sera: Legitimizing the Ultra-Right? • Cinzia Padovani, Scuola Normale Superiore/Loughborough University • “What is the role of mainstream media in the discursive construction of ultra-right political actors? In order to answer this question, I propose a case study in which I draw from critical discourse studies to investigate Italy’s newspaper of record (Corriere della Sera)’s coverage of the ultra-right party Forza Nuova (FN). I argue that Corriere, one of the most important news organizations in the country, has tended to represent this party as a legitimate player in the political and public sphere, rather than providing the reader with the necessary background on its neo-fascist roots and ideology. The findings provide us with insight into the potential dangers and pitfalls of some core principles of ethical journalism (such as impartiality and fairness) when reporting on ultra-right political actors. This case study shows the importance of a journalism that is shaped by the post-WWII core values of anti-fascism and anti-racism, in a more contextualized and historicized practice.

“Setting Your Own Agenda”: Selective Exposure as a Mechanism for Re-Enforcing Issue Importance • George Pearson, The Ohio State University; Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick; Birkan Gokbag • “Classic agenda setting hypotheses suggest audiences take cues from media as to the most important issues in society. However, this is challenged by a high-choice media environment that allows users to choose topics based off pre-existing interests. A selective exposure experiment found pre-exposure issue importance and media emphasis both predict selective exposure which in turn predicts post-exposure importance. However, media emphasis did not directly predict post-exposure importance, implying selective exposure is necessary for agenda setting.

* Extended Abstract * Covering Parkland: How reporters cope with living through a school shooting • Theodore Petersen • When tragedy strikes, journalists are often among those who run toward the danger. This qualitative study explores the lived experience of 10 South Florida journalists who covered the Parkland school shooting. The journalists shared moving stories. For example, one had her Twitter account faked and received death threats; another worried about his brother who taught at the school. By understanding these experiences, newsroom leaders and journalism professors can better prepare journalists to handle these situations.

News Story Aggregation and Perceived Credibility • Chris Roberts, University of Alabama; Stan Diel, Francis Marion University • The practice of aggregating news content—repurposing content created by other news organizations—raises questions about credibility. This experimental study suggests that news organizations can boost credibility of aggregated content by more clearly identifying originating sources than by increasing or decreasing the use of aggregation. Relationships between levels of aggregation and credibility showed little or no significance, while relationships between credibility and receivers’ confidence in identifying originating sources were significant.

* Extended Abstract * A Qualitative Analysis of US Immigration Coverage by Media During the Obama and Trump Presidencies • Jennifer Sadler • This qualitative analysis examines the frequency of immigration-related posts by media organizations and audience reactions on Facebook from the last three years of Barack Obama’s Presidency and the first three years of Donald Trump’s Presidency: January 2014 – December 2019. The results of this analysis indicate that media have significantly increased posting about this topic since 2014 and audiences have also elevated their participation through comments, shares, and reactions.

A Frame Analysis of Climate Change Solutions in Online News and Media • Michelle Seelig; Huixin Deng, University of Miami; Songyi Liang, University of Miami • Even though the public is aware of climate change, deficient is an adequate discussion about real solutions, preventive measures, or necessary actions that may prevent further deterioration or damage to Earth. The present study seeks to know how online news and media discusses (a) actions to address climate change, (b) self, external, and response efficacy of actions that may be taken to address it, and (c) how are climate solutions visually framed in the news.

Partisan Selective Exposure on Social Media: Individual Preference vs. Community Structure • Jieun Shin, University of Florida • This study examined two different levels of selective exposure phenomenon: the individual level (i.e., a tendency to favor like-minded sources) and network level (i.e., partisan community structures). We linked survey responses from a representative sample of twitter users in the U.S. with their digital trace data from Twitter including media following and exposure to news via their friends. We found that selectivity bias was present in all types of data including self-reported media consumption (survey), media following (digital trace), and indirect exposure to media (digital trace). However, individual- level preferences did not translate into macroscopic network structures in which partisan groups are clustered and isolated. A moderate level cross-cutting exposure and a common use of neutral media hindered extreme partisan segregation. Additionally, we observed an asymmetric pattern of selective exposure between conservatives and liberals. The implications of these findings are discussed with reference to the roles of mainstream media, selective avoidance, and incidental exposure.

National Prisms of a Global Phenomenon: A Comparative Study of Press Coverage of Climate Change in the US, UK and China • Yunya Song, Hong Kong Baptist University; Zeping Huang; Jonathon P. Schuldt, Cornell University; Connie Yuan, Cornell University • Although a number of studies have compared media coverage of climate change issues across countries, most focus on comparisons between the European and US contexts. Chinese media, by comparison, has received much less scholarly attention. This study examines the US, UK versus Chinese media coverage of climate change from 2013 to 2018. Our analysis entails a 39.4 million-word corpus of news texts retrieved from six leading national newspapers. A combination of computer-assisted quantitative linguistic analysis with critical discourse analysis was used to identify and compare linguistic elements as well as the moral reasoning that underpins the journalistic positioning across large corpuses. The findings suggested that the US and UK newspapers tended to frame climate change coverage as a domestic issue, while Chinese media tended to frame it as a global issue that the world at large needs to tackle. Moreover, the Chinese media were more likely to adopt one-sided rhetoric than their Western counterpart, and whereas the U.S. and UK newspapers more often adopted the balanced reporting norm to include a wider range of views. Our finding showed mixed support for the contrast between the West and the East in moral reasoning underlying their climate change stance. Even if the media in these three countries shared certain moral values and concerns regarding climate issues, their relative importance nevertheless varied due to their different socio-political systems and cultural repertoires.

Identity Denied: An Examination of News, Affective Responses, and Behavioral Tendencies among Audiences • David Stamps, Louisiana State University • It is well documented that news coverage of racial minorities impacts audiences’ cognitive, affective, and behavioral responses. Yet, our knowledge is limited in understanding the influence of news coverage of whites on white audiences. By applying assumptions for social identity, self-categorization, and the black sheet effect, the current study experimentally examines these relationships. Results indicate that race-focused, versus non-racialized news, provoke heightened, complex affective and behavioral responses based on group identification.

The Strategic Ritual of Emotionality in Trafficking, Immigration, and Asylum News • Allison Steinke, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities; Valerie Belair-Gagnon, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities • Human trafficking, immigration, and asylum are crucial elements of international human rights covered frequently in American news media. A qualitative content analysis of articles published in three leading U.S. newspapers reveals that the strategic ritual of emotionality provides a helpful lens and analytic framework through which scholars can examine news media discourse on these topics that cultivates a sense of cosmopolitan citizenship while at the same time reproducing established norms of journalism.

* Extended Abstract * The competing ‘content studio’ agenda: A large-scale analysis of sponsored content in elite U.S. newspapers and its agenda cutting effect on corporate news • Chris Vargo, University of Colorado Boulder; Michelle Amazeen, Boston University • 2,711 sponsored content articles from 27 major U.S. corporations were analyzed across five years in the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Wall Street Journal. The degree to which sponsored predicted significant changes in news coverage for elite media and 2) the U.S. online media was investigated. Half of the corporations change in salience across the media landscape. Agenda cutting was the most common effect observed, happening both inside of elite media and across the media landscape. Corporate sponsored content mildly suppresses coverage of that corporation in online news. Agenda building, however is very rare, or perhaps nonexistent. In this way we suggest that “content studios” may be acting more like advertisers, which have been known to suppress critical coverage of their corporation from time to time, and less like public relations practitioners who amplify and boost the salience of a company’s good deeds.

Greater Expectations: How the Public Perceives News Bias and Journalistic Routines • Tamar Wilner, University of Texas at Austin; Dominique Montiel Valle, The University of Texas at Austin; Gina M. Masullo, School of Journalism, The University of Texas at Austin • “This study, using the hierarchy of influences model, investigates how individuals conceive of bias in the news and of how journalists do their jobs. We find that focus group participants’ conception of bias is broad, actually penalizing reporters for following journalistic routines. Data also shows participants hold high and possibly unattainable expectations for journalists’ adherence to ethics, such as reporting the truth and holding power to account. Implications for media trust are discussed.

Political Journalism and Democracy: How journalists reflect political viewpoint diversity in their reporting • David Wolfgang, Colorado State University; Tim Vos, Michigan State University; Kimberly Kelling; Soo Young Shin, MSU • Journalists express support for providing a diversity of viewpoints in their reporting, but how is this reflected in their content? This study compared survey results of U.S. political journalists’ statements with a content analysis of their reporting. There was limited support for journalists reflecting a diversity of viewpoints in their reporting, but only for those who support civic or direct models of democracy. Results related to sourcing and trust in institutions are also discussed.

Collective Sensemaking with Big Data: Sentiment Analysis of Tweet Content for Journalistic Inquiry • Yanfang Wu • Twitter is recognized by journalists as a powerful journalistic instrument. However, it consumes a great deal of journalists’ time and effort in order to verify the accuracy of the flood of information and transform raw information from social media to reportable results. Moreover, there is a lack of research on how journalists may classify Twitter content. This study seeks to fill in the knowledge gap by utilizing sentiment analysis and sensemaking theory to differentiate Twitter content from a journalistic perspective. This case study focused on 1,771,785 tweets from August 22 to September 16 in the Hurricane Dorian in 2019. The study found analysis of large-scale user-generated data on Twitter helps journalists in sensemaking in a crisis. The impact of opinion leaders on information diffusion on Twitter is declining. Although both subjectivity and polarity predict retweets, a negative association was recognized between subjectivity of a tweet and retweet counts. Moreover, tweets with negative polarity opinions were retweeted more.

* Extended Abstract * Digital News Work: Skills and Attributes Online-only News Websites Seek in their Employees • Casey Yetter, University of Oklahoma; Asma Khanom; Peter Gade • This research looks at the skills and attributes digital-native news sites look for in their employees. A quantitative content analysis of 246 job advertisements from 37 digital native news websites was conducted. Results reveal that these sites seek previous experience more than any other attribute or skill, and while several digital-based skills are common in the ads, those most related to emerging areas of professionalism are seldom present. Online news sites are more niche-oriented than traditional media, and results show that although core journalism skills remain important, there are some important differences the skills these sites seek.

What’s Wrong with Newspapers’ Digital Readership? An Empirical Analysis of the Top 50 U.S. Newspapers’ Online Metrics with the Multidimensional Web Attention Model • Nan Zheng; Iris Chyi; Yee Man Margaret Ng, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Kelly Kaufhold • This study applies the Multidimensional Web Attention Model to 50 U.S. newspapers’ digital readership using Scarborough and Comscore metrics data, showing a less optimistic view of newspaper online readership across all dimensions. National newspapers outperform local newspapers only in audience size. Mobile users surpass the number of desktop users but lack loyalty and depth. Users age 18-24 are a small group and read fewer pages than those 45 or older. Managerial implications are discussed.

Student Papers
* Extended Abstract * Reporting on Syrian conflict from exile: Examining advocacy journalism in diaspora journalists’ online productions and networks • Rana Arafat, University of Lugano • Searching for an inclusive definition of diaspora journalism and the changing roles of journalists in exile, this paper employs an inductive approach to examine how diaspora journalists build online networks that blur boundaries between journalism, activism, human rights advocacy, social movements, and civil society work. Using digital ethnography, qualitative content analysis, and in-depth interviews, the study further investigates the online textual productions of two Syrian opposition news websites to explore their media advocacy strategies and the main topics their reporting activism agendas involve as well as examining the diaspora journalists’ own perceptions of the changing nature of their profession after fleeing the Syrian repressive political spheres. Preliminary findings demonstrate that diaspora journalism poses various challenges to traditional journalism paradigms as journalists’ roles go beyond merely collecting information and publishing stories to include fundraising, training local citizen journalists, collaborating with civil society organizations and carrying out various forms of institutional work. State intervention, objectivity, cyber threats, funding, and accessibility of sources pose other limitations to diaspora journalists’ advocacy efforts.

Intermedia Attribute Agenda-Setting among Hong Kong, U.S. and Mainland Chinese Media • Yining Fan; Vincent Wong • “This study integrates the Protest Paradigm into the analysis of intermedia agenda-setting among major newspapers in Hong Kong, the U.S., and Mainland China concerning the 2019 anti-extradition bill protests. A total of 9,646 news headlines/headings were analyzed. Granger causality tests revealed that paradigm-related attributes transferred from the more “elite” U.S. media to Hong Kong newspapers, while a bottom-up effect was also identified, with Hong Kong newspapers influencing U.S. ones regarding Chinese authority and international society.

News Grazing in the Era of Information Overload: The Underlying Motivations and Technological Affordances for News Grazing • Li Xuan Hong; Xiang Yuan Brenda Pong; Wan Xin Rachelle Lye; Ngiag Gya Trisha Sng • “Guided by the niche theory, this study explored news grazing — the act of skimming through bite-sized news intermittently, or at regular interstices of time, in a summarised format, underpinned by the prioritisation of efficiency. News grazers are motivated by individuals’ increasing demand for efficiency, information motivation and socialisation needs. News grazing is facilitated by the affordances of customisability, accessibility, aesthetics, and simultaneity within the given app (i.e., Telegram) that this study examined.

* Extended Abstract * It doesn’t flow through the taps for free: Framing of Detroit’s water shutoffs by mainstream newspapers • Kelsey Mesmer, Wayne State University; Scott Burgess, Wayne State University; Darryl Frazier, Wayne State University • This content analysis of news stories about the Detroit water shutoffs seeks to understand how the on-going water crisis is framed in the local news—as a human rights issue, or in relation to the city’s financial burden. Using a deductive framing approach, we pay special attention to the frames used within stories and whether articles contained context related to the water shutoffs, specifically about health implications and the cost of water in Detroit.

Framing Media Disinformation in a Time of Crisis: Social Media’s Response to COVID-19 • Hoa Nguyen; Sara Browning • This study examines traditional mainstream media stories published online (N=107) by domestic and international news outlets in January 2020 to decipher how stories frame disinformation in the media during a crisis event. The study draws on Doris Graber’s crisis journalism concept that focuses on audiences’ perceptions that coverage of hazardous events is insufficient to fulfill audiences’ information needs. To this end, the study explores how mainstream journalists educate audiences concerning disinformation types. We find that traditional mainstream media criticize social media for serving as a conduit for disinformation and that mainstream journalists rely mostly on interest group members to correct disinformation.

Law enforcement “journalism” in the modern age: How does social media erode journalistic authority? • Elizabeth (Beth) Potter, University of Colorado Boulder • “In the age of social media, both journalists and law enforcement personnel have changed their news-gathering and dissemination routines. Specifically, journalist interactions with law enforcement sources have changed, both in number and in timing.

What does this say about eroding journalistic authority, if anything? This study finds that journalists continue to follow industry norms of objectivity and verification – especially verification through multiple sources – while using social media tools to help them find information they need to do their work. Law enforcement public information officers often decide not to talk to journalists. Instead, law enforcement officers post information directly to social media site “followers”. This study poses questions about both journalistic and law enforcement authority. It also examines how social media blurs journalists’ “watchdog role” in a modern democracy. While the study is limited to less than 50 participants because of the small number of people working in this particular area (both journalists and public information officers in one western state), it provides valuable insights into the changing nature of who is considered authoritative in providing public information, which can pave the way for a systematic analysis of this issue across the United States.”

Get engaged: Newsletters as a new habit • Elizabeth (Beth) Potter, University of Colorado Boulder • “This study explores the relationship between news engagement and public participation in the digital age at a time when the number of local news outlets around the country has dropped precipitously. As such, this study appears to be the first to look at how online news newsletter subscribers engage in civic life. Participants (N=315) were recruited through the online-only Colorado Sun newsletter – The Sunriser (www.coloradosun.com) and the legacy newspaper, the Denver Post newsletter – Mile High Roundup (www.denverpost.com). This relationship has been studied many times as it pertains to other news platforms and other forms of public participation – particularly voting. But it rarely has been studied as it pertains to other forms of civic engagement. This theme is particularly pressing now, after more than 2,100 local news outlets have gone out of business in the last 15 years (Abernathy, 2018; Pew Research Center, 2018.) Despite the rapid changes going on in the media industry – including increased financial turmoil for virtually every news outlet – findings show that these particular e-newsletter consumers are more likely to follow the news and are more likely to be engaged in their communities. Specifically, the more time that the e-newsletter subscribers spend with the news, the more likely they are to be engaged in specific types of public participation, including attending community meetings, addressing community issues, and attending rallies or protests. People with higher household incomes who subscribe to online news newsletters also are more likely to be engaged in their communities.”

Defending Credibility in Attacks on Online News • Erika Schneider, University of Missori; Courtney Boman, University of Missouri • In the growth of online news, the industry faces new threats on a polarized landscape, such as online astroturfing attacks, that result in real consequences. This research informs scholarship and practice with how news organizations can raise their credibility while lowering the astroturfer’s credibility. As online news has not been immune to these attacks, it recognizes how organizations can effectively inoculate themselves by warning stakeholders and exposing the nature of ongoing malicious campaigns.

Epidemic arrives in political times: Comparing Hong Kong Newspaper Reporting on SARS and COVID-19 • Cheryl S.Y. SHEA, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Wendy L.Y. LEUNG, The Chinese University of Hong Kong • “This study compares how Hong Kong newspapers with distinctive political affiliations adopt contextual frames in discussing the outbreak of SARS and COVID-19 from a socio-political angle through content analysis (N = 764). We propose a new frame, resistance, to show how the local government’s legitimacy crisis, which arose due to the unresolved Anti-Extradition Law Amendment Movement, is reflected in the presumably unrelated health crisis and how people reacted to the legitimacy crisis through public resistance.”

Ideal Image for News Media: A Typology for Repairing Public Trust • Soo Young Shin, MSU • This study proposes the use of a multidimensional construct of news media—news media image—to better understand the public’s perception and potentially, to repair the public’s trust. Through a multidisciplinary literature review, and qualitative and quantitative analysis, the research identified seven categories of news media image as a heuristic which uncovered: respondents evaluate the public’s perception based on their daily utilities, journalists’ empathetic capabilities, and accessibility to news content, adding to traditional understanding of credibility. The seven categories of news media image were: news usefulness, empathy, news selection bias, personality, credibility, usability, and social responsibility.

Journalism Ethics Shift as Native Advertising Evolves • Ava Sirrah, Columbia • The goal of the study is to see if the creation and dissemination of native advertising shapes the values journalists are asked to uphold and protect. Native advertising is commercial content that is designed to mimic non-advertising content— like stories crafted by journalists— and it is placed alongside non-commercial content. This study examines if a news publisher’s values are challenged when they allow their advertising and marketing departments to produce native ads. The method of inquiry draws upon a series of 35 in-depth interviews with people who sell, help produce, or disseminate native advertising and 10 interviews with people who work in the newsroom. The interviews suggest that a subset of people inside branded content studios are able to shape or influence the work of newsroom journalists and editors.

Mitigating the Negative Bias of the News • Christian Staal Bruun Overgaard, The University of Texas at Austin • An experiment (N = 270) tested the effects of exposure to constructive journalism on social media. Subjects read a series of constructive – or a series of negative – updates made by a fictitious news organization. Compared to those reading negative updates, subjects who read constructive updates perceived the news organization as more credible, expressed stronger intentions to like the updates, felt more efficacy regarding solving societal problems, and experienced more positive – and less negative – affect.

Who Sets the Media Agenda for Nonprofit News Organizations? • Jiehua Zhang, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa; Danielle Deavours, University of Alabama • “Nonprofit news organizations are expected to fill the reporting voids left by traditional news outlets; traditional, commercial media sources have recently experienced extreme financial difficulties, and they’ve had to cut content and laid off staff. Nonprofit news organizations have been able to overcome some of those financial challenges through donations and sponsors. However, their heavy reliance on contributions and donations raises concerns about their objectivity and independence. The present study applies issue ownership theory to examine agenda and regional bias of news coverage from two nonprofit news organizations: ProPublica (N=186) and the Center for Public Integrity (N=141). The results showed that both nonprofit news organizations put more focus on performance issues, such as government functioning, than Democrat- or Republican-owned issues. However, both organizations covered significantly more Democratic issues than Republican issues. The study also examined the partisan preferences of donors for the organizations. While the Republican Index showed that donors for both news organizations donated more money to Democratic than to Republican politicians, further research is still needed to identify whether or not there was relationship between issue coverage and donors’ political predispositions. Implications and limitations are discussed.

Newspapers as propaganda: How Communist Party of China newspapers frame images on the South China Sea disputes for national and international audiences • Runping Zhu • “Using both quantitative and qualitative content analysis, this study offers a comparative analysis of how two Chinese Communist Party newspapers frame the South China Sea disputes to international and national audiences over the period 2014 to 2016. Building on Lee and Lee’s classification of propaganda techniques, the study examines how a Chinese language paper targeting domestic readers and an English language newspaper targeting the international community use different techniques when presenting the same story to different audiences to create positive images of China and negative images of its opponents. Papers for the domestic market adopted news frames that buttressed citizens’ support for the state’s actions on a foundation of nationalism. In contrast, the primary objective of the newspaper aimed at international readers was to undermine foreign governments’ arguments opposing China’s viewpoint. The empirical findings illustrate how propaganda techniques originally developed and applied in Western and democratic countries have been adopted and refined by newspapers in a state-run Communist press environment to create frames that best align with the cultural and political predispositions of domestic and international readers. These textual techniques are augmented by a variety other article features tailored to the two different target audiences to enhance the credibility of articles. The findings indicate Chinese authorities understand Western communication theory and appreciate how that theory can be applied to disseminate propaganda messages to both foreign and domestic audiences.

<2020 Abstracts

Advertising Division

Graduate and Undergraduate Student Research
Exploring the Effect of Control on Playable Ad Effectiveness • Xiaohan Hu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign • The playable ad is a new type of digital advertising that combines interactivity with gamification in brand communication. This study explores the psychological processes and effects of playable ads. Guided by psychological reactance theory, I examine how playable ads influence consumers’ perceptions of control, product attitude and psychological reactance. Findings from an experimental study show that playable ads, compared to video ads, increased consumers’ perceived control, which led to more positive attitudes toward the advertised products. This study also supports psychological reactance theory by revealing that increased perceptions of control diminished perceived freedom threat, and subsequently alleviated consumers’ psychological reactance (both anger and negative cognitions) toward advertising messages. Theoretical and managerial implications of these findings are discussed.

Words Can Tell More than Pictures: Investigating the Role of Presentation Format and Motivation on Consumer Responses to Online Product Information • Xiaohan Hu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Chen Chen, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign • We describe the results of a study exploring the effect of presentation format and motivation on consumer responses to online product information. We compared the effects of visual and textual online product presentation formats, controlling for the message content participants were exposed to in each condition. We also investigated the effect of consumer motivation (utilitarian and hedonic) in this process. Dependent measures included affective, cognitive, and conative (i.e. search and purchase intention) responses toward the product. Results showed that textual presentation led to increased cognitive and affective responses. We also found that cognitive and affective responses mediated the effect of presentation format on consumers’ search and purchase intentions. These results are discussed in the context of online search advertising and consumers’ product information-seeking behavior.

Effectiveness of Social Media Influencer Advertising: Attachment to Social Media as a Key to Positive Consumer Engagement • Haseon Park, University of Alabama • A growing body of advertising research has revealed that sponsoring social media influencers is effective in generating positive consumer attitudes toward advertising and behavioral intentions. In line with the previous influencer advertising research, this study aims to investigate engagement via social media influencers by taking psychological and behavioral aspects into account. Specifically, psychological attachment to social media (ASM) was examined as a predictor of social media influencer advertising effectiveness. An online experiment was conducted among college student samples by measuring attachment to social media, attachment to influencer, attitudes toward the brand and the influencer. Results indicated that attachment to social media, as a psychological personality trait, had significant, positive influence on behavioral intentions to comment on influencer’s sponsored post and purchase the promoted product. In addition, attachment to social media significantly enhanced attachment to influencer as well as brand trust. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

* Extended Abstract * The Illusion of Gender Diversity Among Advertising Practitioners: A Textual Analysis of Award-Winning Agency Websites • Teresa Tackett, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill • Gender disparity continues to permeate the advertising industry, with only 29 percent of women comprising the role of creative directors in advertising agencies. This research in progress used textual analysis to examine how award-winning agency websites are encoded with messages of deep-level diversity ¬– despite visually exemplifying surface-level diversity – by exploring the rhetorical and emblematic meaning-making processes creative agency practitioners use to position their teams on their websites.

Employee Engagement: How Female Advertising Agency Practitioners Avoid Burnout and Maintain Creativity • Teresa Tackett, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill • This study analyzes women’s creativity and job satisfaction in an advertising agency setting as it relates to the agency’s leadership, culture and workplace processes. Exploring Employee Engagement Theory through 10 semi-structured interviews with female advertising practitioners, the results demonstrate the key role communication plays in determining levels of engagement in the workplace, which is imperative for the recruitment and retention of talent in an industry riddled with burnout.

Product qualities perceptions in online an context: An exploratory study of package design elements’ influence • Jacqui Villarreal • Living in the 21st century is synonymous with living in a digital world, including purchasing goods online, with 79% of Americans reporting doing so (Smith & Anderson, 2016). One of the growing online retailing industries is skincare, an industry in which shoppers tend to evaluate their options online before making a purchase either in store or online (Mintel Academic, 2017). An online experiment was deployed to test the perceptions of skincare products, specifically a moisturizer. Participants were exposed to one of three experimental conditions (a seafoam jar, a glass bottom jar, or a silver capped jar) each compared to a control (an all white plastic jar), and the study measured product perceptions including effectiveness, luxuriousness, quality, attractiveness, price, and purchase intent. Results show that there are significant differences between the glass bottom stimulus and the control condition in terms of all outcomes (p=.018 for effectiveness, and p=.000 for all other outcomes), with the mean scores being higher for the glass jar by >1 point for multiple outcomes. The findings from this study implicate that the packaging of a product may influence consumer perceptions of the qualities of that product.

How Skeptical Are You About This Sponsor? Comparing the Effects of Alcohol Industry Sponsored and Nonprofit Organization Sponsored Anti-Drunk Driving Advertisements on Attitude Toward Drunk Driving • Chung In Yun, Stan Richards School of Advertising and Public Relations at the University of Texas at Austin • This study compared the effects of industry-sponsored and nonprofit organization-sponsored anti-drunk driving advertisements on consumers’ skepticism level and their attitude toward drunk driving. The results showed that the alcohol industry’s advertisement engenders higher consumers’ skepticism than the nonprofit organization’s advertisement. Moreover, among the participants who watched the industry’s advertisement, people with a high level of skepticism are more likely to have negative attitude toward drunk driving behavior than those who have a low skepticism level.

Open Research
Superiority, Comfort and Responsiveness: U.S. Car Ads Take on Japanese Competition, 1965-1977 • Khalid Alharbi, University of South Carolina; Jackson Carter, University of South Carolina; Kenneth Campbell, University of South Carolina • This study explores frames used by U.S. automobile companies in advertisements when Japanese cars entered the U.S. market on a full scale in the mid-1960s to late 1970s. Using a grounded theory approach, an analysis of 200 print advertisements suggests that U.S. auto companies used a frames of superiority at home and abroad, which were direct reflections of the political and cultural changes occurring in the country.

Effects of Brand Feedback to Negative eWOM and Moderating Roles of Product Price • Manu Bhandari, Arkansas State University; Kyung Jung Han, California State University – Bakersfield; Po-Lin Pan, Arkansas State University • This 2 X 2 experiment examined effects of brand feedback (a business’ written response to online reviews/eWOM) and product price (monetary cost) on brand attitudes and purchase intentions. Brand feedback improved brand attitudes and indirectly increased purchase intentions. Higher prices, however, led to brand feedback decreasing purchase intentions. Findings further establish brands’ role in eWOM theory, and, consistent with some past research, suggest brand feedback may not be without its risks.

FoMO and Happiness on Instagram: A serial mediation of social media influencer-related activities and the role of authenticity • Jung Ah Lee; Laura Bright, University of Texas at Austin; Matthew Eastin, University of Texas at Austin • Mounting research shows negative psychological effects for social media and recognizes Fear of Missing Out (FoMO) as a key driver of social media use. This article focuses on social media influencers (SMIs) and investigates potentially positive forms of usage on psychological well-being. A serial mediation model using survey data (N = 617) indicates SMI-related activities are positively associated with subjective happiness. Furthermore, SMI-related activities jointly and positively mediate the relationship between FoMO and subjective happiness.

Time, Space and Convergence in Advertising and Public Relations: Contemporary Analysis of Job Market Trends • Andrew Brown, University of Tennessee; Sally McMillan, University of Tennessee; Alexander Carter, University of Tennessee; Nicholas Sarafolean, University of Tennessee • “The purpose of this research is to explore the influence of time, space and convergence on modern advertising and public relations. Using a media ecology lens, this study explored how technology shifts have impacted traditional advertising and public relations disciplines: are the disciplines converging or moving apart? By employing digital scraping and analysis technologies, researchers pulled 2,609 advertising listings and 2,855 public relations job listings in the fall of 2019 and analyzed the full text of those listings for evidence of convergence and/or divergence. Consideration of five research questions revealed a job market that seeks essential communication skills, digital marketing and social media mastery; while also championing traditional and discipline-specific advertising and public relations core competencies.”

The Short- and Long-term Memory of Brands Co-appearing in Television Programs • Fanny Fong Yee Chan, Hang Seng University of Hong Kong • The proliferation of brand integrations has led to a phenomenon of brand co-appearance which appeared to be an increasingly prevalent trend in television programs. However, the cognitive impact of brand co-appearance has yet to be explored. Three experimental studies were conducted to examine the short-term and long-term recall and recognition of brands co-appeared. The results have important theoretical implications to the field and provide practical insights to brand owners and marketers.

Social Media Influencers’ Disclosures of Brand Relationships on Instagram: Characteristics and Engagement Outcomes • Su Yeon Cho; Shiyun Tian, University of Miami; Xiaofeng Jia; Wanhsiu Tsai • This content analysis presents one of the earliest systemic examinations of social media influencers’ brand-related posts on Instagram by assessing the message characteristics and engagement outcomes of posts with and without disclosures of material connections. Additionally, this study compares posts for endorsed, co-branded, and self-branded products, and evaluates to what extent SMIs comply with the FTC disclosure guidelines. Based on the findings, theoretical and strategic implications were provided for marketers, SMIs, and policymakers.

Brand Message Strategies on Instagram • Jung Hwa Choi • The primary goals of this research are to provide an exploratory analysis investigating how global brands currently use social media, especially Instagram, to share brand messages and build relationships with consumers. Specifically, this study analyzes corporate account marketing messages posted by global brands on Instagram to understand how global brands are using Instagram for purposes of interacting with and building relationships with consumers using a content analysis based on the brand associations by Aarker. Consumers’ reactions to each strategy used in photos and captions – “likes” and comments – were analyzed as indicators of consumer engagement. The overall findings of the study indicated that Instagram marketers often are not using the strategies that generate the highest consumer engagement. Practical guidance on how to tap into the brand potential of marketing communication tools, such as Instagram is provided.

Unbranded and Branded Direct-to-Consumer Advertising (DTCA) Using Social Media Influencers and Effects of Disclosure • Ida Darmawan, University of Minnesota; Jisu Huh, University of Minnesota • “This study examined effects of unbranded and branded DTC social media influencer advertising by pharmaceutical companies on attitude toward the ad and behavioral intentions, and the impact of ad disclosure on the ad outcomes. The underlying mechanism was evaluated by applying the Persuasion Knowledge Model. The unbranded message with ad disclosure resulted in higher persuasion knowledge activation, leading to more positive attitude toward the ad and higher behavioral intentions. Additionally, significant interaction effect was found.”

Consumer Responses to Sponsored Posts on Instagram: The Roles of Selfie, Account Verification, and Valence of Caption • Yang Feng, San Diego State University; Chen Lou, Nanyang Technological University • Marketers continually seek ways to enhance social media users’ empathetic reactions toward a brand endorser who uploads a sponsored post. Given this background, this research examines how three elements (i.e., selfie-posting, account verification, and valence of post caption) affect consumers’ empathetic reactions to sponsored posts on Instagram (operationalized as the number of “likes” a sponsored post receives) using social media data. Our results indicate that the negative valence of a caption impairs the two-way interaction effect between account verification and selfie on users’ empathetic responses. However, the positive valence of the caption does not play a significant role. Implications and future research directions are provided.

Visual Cues in Direct-to-Consumer Advertisements for Healthcare Services • Kylie Hill, University of Nevada, Reno; Sung-Ywon Park, University of Nevada, RENO • The visual cues on healthcare service advertisements can influence consumers’ expectations and attitudes towards healthcare services and providers. In this study, a visual content analysis of digital direct-to-consumer healthcare service advertisements was carried out in order to examine identity characteristics of patients and providers, healthcare interactions, and patient motivators depicted in the advertisements. Subsequently, the content analysis results were compared with the actual preferences of healthcare users identified through interviews.

The Moderating Role of Media Multitasking in the Effects of Message Consistency across Multiple Ads • Se-Hoon Jeong • Using two experiments, the present study examined how message consistency (vs. variation) across multiple ads affects cognitive and attitudinal outcomes and whether media multitasking moderate the effect. Results of Experiment 1 and Experiment 2 showed that the effect of message consistency on cognitive outcomes (brand memory) was moderated by media multitasking such that the positive impact of message consistency on brand memory was found when multitasking, but not when single-tasking. In addition, Experiment 2 showed a significant main effect of message consistency on attitudinal outcomes such that the varied message (vs. consistent message) condition induced more favorable attitudes toward the ad and the brand. The results suggest that the message consistency strategy can be effective in the multi-media environment where media users frequently multitask, yet the strategy needs to be used with caution.

Should Stigmatized Companies Use a high-fit or low-fit Cause in Cause-Related Marketing? • Mengtian Jiang, University of Kentucky; Hyun Ju Jeong • This study investigated the effects of organizational core stigma and company-cause fit on consumer responses to the cause-related marketing campaigns. 272 Mturk workers participated in 2 (stigmatized industry: casino vs amusement park) x 2 (company-cause parings) online experiment. Results showed that socially stigmatized companies should use a high-fit cause in CRM to reduce the negative effects of stigma on perceived social responsibility and company attitudes, which increased purchase intention. Contributions, limitations and future research directions are discussed.

The Determinants of Pre-Roll Ad Skipping and Viewership: Evidence from Big Data • Mi Hyun Lee, Northwestern University; Su Jung Kim, University of Southern California; Sungho Park, SNU Business School, Seoul National University; Sang-Hyeak Yoon • Skippable ads are known to provide a better ad experience by giving viewers sense of control with the ability to skip an ad after watching it for a short period of time. Despite the growing interest, few studies have investigated factors that influence skipping or viewership of pre-roll skippable ads. This study examines the determinants of pre-roll ad skipping and viewing behaviors by using clickstream data of 2,078,090 users’ ad and content viewing behaviors on a popular online video content platform in South Korea. We found that ad skipping and viewing behaviors are influenced by ad viewing habit, age, contextual factors such as when and how they watch online video content, and the congruence between program genre and ad brand category. We conclude with the theoretical and practical implications of the findings.

Do Viewers Really Talk about Ads during Commercial Breaks? Findings from a South Korean Social TV Platform • Kyongseok Kim, Towson University; Hyang-Sook Kim, Towson University; Mun-Young Chung; Yeuseung Kim • As live TV has lost viewers to streaming services and digital videos, live TV producers have strived to bring viewers back to TV screens by integrating social features in programming. Meanwhile, social TV has become a prevalent TV viewing pattern. While previous findings indicate that social TV can help increase engagement with TV programs, whether advertisers can benefit from social TV is uncertain. The aim of this study was to shed more light on this idea by investigating what live TV viewers talk about during commercial breaks. A content analysis was conducted using 4,792 live comments posted on a major social TV platform during the commercial breaks in five episodes of a popular South Korean TV drama. Results indicate (a) that a majority of the live comments pertained to the drama episodes (79.7%) rather than commercials (8.9%) and (b) that the comments related to commercials tended to be negative (50.1%). Overall, the findings suggest that social TV viewers might be program-oriented and, thus, either neglect or unfavorably perceive program-irrelevant tasks (e.g., attending to and processing commercials). Theoretical and practical implications for social TV advertising are discussed.

Internet Users Respond to Relevant and Irrelevant Ads Within Online Paginated Stories Differently When the Ads are Presented at Different Proportions: Application to Programmatic Buying and Contextual Advertising • Anastasia Kononova, Michigan State University; Wonkyung Kim, BNU-HKBU United International College; Eunsin Joo, BNU-HKBU United International College; Kristen Lynch, Michigan State University • Applying the ad-context congruence framework, priming theory, and associative network of memory model, an online experimental study (N = 449) investigated the effects of displaying different proportions of thematically relevant and irrelevant ads in online paginated stories on cognitive load, brand recognition memory (sensitivity and criterion bias), ad and brand evaluations, ad clicking intentions, and brand purchase intentions. The results of the study indicated that the brands advertised in context-irrelevant ads were recognized better than the brands advertised in context-relevant ads. Encoding of irrelevant ads was associated with a conservative criterion bias, especially when these ads were presented in the condition with the high proportion of relevant ads. Ratio of relevant to irrelevant ads affected recognition of these ad types differently. Attitudes and behavioral intentions were more positive toward relevant ads than toward irrelevant ads. Theoretical implications of the study are connected to the advancement of the two-dimensional construct of thematic ad-context congruence. Practical implications are discussed in relation to contextual advertising and programmatic buying.

Associations between Tourist Profiles, Destinations, and Electronic Word-of-Mouth (eWOM) Communications: A Study on TripAdvisor • Say Wah Lee; Ke Xue • Despite abundant research on tourists’ eWOM communications, studies on factors related to their actual eWOM communications remain limited. This research investigates associations between tourist profiles, destinations, and eWOM communications. Review data regarding ten destinations in two Chinese cities were mined from TripAdvisor. One-way and two-way analyses of variance were conducted. Results showed significant differences in ratings and numbers of words in reviews across various tourist profiles and destinations. Implications and future research suggestions were provided.

Traditional Ads versus Host-Read Sponsor Ads: Examining Consumer Response to Advertising in Podcasts • Annika Fetzer Graham, The University of Alabama; Nancy Brinson, The University of Alabama; Laura Lemon, The University of Alabama; Coral Bender, The University of Alabama • The purpose of this study is to understand the effects of traditional ads vs. host-read sponsor ads for the same brand in various podcasts. Specifically examined were respondents’ persuasion knowledge, ad skepticism, and parasocial interaction. This 2 (familiar vs. unfamiliar) x 2 (host-read ad vs. traditional ad) online experiment (n=212) found that familiarity with the podcast and its host increased parasocial interaction, leading to higher perceived ad credibility, and a more favorable attitude toward the brand. The ad type impacted ad credibility and attitude toward the brand when controlling for parasocial interaction.

Irritating or enjoyable? Exploring the effects of soft-text native advertising and social-media engagement level • Kang Li; Fuyuan Shen • Given the proliferation of native advertising, and the limited existing research regarding the persuasion path of native advertisements on social media, the present research aimed to compare the effectiveness of native advertising with that of regular social-media advertising. Specifically, this research focused on one type of native advertising, soft-text native advertising, which has rarely been explored in existing research. In addition, we also examined the effects of engagement levels of social-media native advertising. The results showed that, compared to regular social-media advertising, soft-text native advertising is more effective for inducing favorable attitudes toward ads and products, as well as greater purchase intention. This is achieved through inducing higher perceived entertainment, flow experience, ad value as well as lower perceived irritation. In addition, the existing engagement level (e.g., number of views and comments at the time the user views the ad) can significantly affect viewers’ purchase intentions through influencing perceived ad entertainment. Based on these findings, suggestions regarding means of creating more effective social-media advertising are presented.

Choosing Appropriate Colors for Green Advertising: Perceived Greenwashing through Color Choices • Dongjae (Jay) Lim, University of Georgia; Nah Ray Han, University of Georgia • Many studies found that color delivers meaning and influence consumers’ minds and feelings, yet relatively little empirical findings exist on the topic of green advertising. By drawing on the match-up hypothesis, we aimed to shed light on how different types of color affect consumers’ evaluation of green ads. The study involves a 2 (Environmental performance: fit vs. unfit) × 4 (colors: green vs. blue vs. red vs. gray) experiment and reveals that colors associated with nature imagery lead favorable attitudinal outcome through color appropriateness. Moreover, we found that the role of color appropriateness is moderated when consumers perceive a mismatch between color and the brand’s actual environmental performance. When consumers perceived color that is not associated with the actual environmental performance of the brand, even colors associated with nature (green) was deemed to be a less appropriate choice, which further perceived as greenwashing.

Excellence in Ad Agency Leadership: A Mixed Method Multi-Country Study of Attributes and Styles • Padmini Patwardhan; Sabrina Habib, University of South Carolina; Hemant Patwardhan; Gayle Kerr; Louise Kelly; Kathleen Mortimer; Sally Laurie • “Unlike the extensive body of leadership research in related disciplines, research on advertising leadership is almost non-existent. Effective leadership is central to negotiating changes and stimulating creativity in new and different ways. The study examines agency leadership in global contexts. It fills a gap by examining leadership styles and qualities from the perspective of practitioners in the US, UK and Australia. Using GLOBE’s Culturally Endorsed Leadership Theory framework and adopting a mixed method approach – survey and in-depth interviews – data were collected from advertising executives and leaders in the three regions. In all three regions, perceptions of excellent leadership were fairly similar with some nuanced differences. Findings suggest that top desired qualities for agency leadership were integrity, vision, inspiration and collaboration. Overall, Collaborative, Performance oriented and Humane styles were viewed as most effective. Ideal leaders for today’s agencies should be future-focused with the vision and knowledge to re-imagine the nature of the agency business, present-focused and collaborative in implementation and action, and people-focused and empathetic in times of change and churn.”

A History of Content Marketing: The Ancient Origins of Marketing Communication’s Newest Discipline • Brian Petrotta, University of Oklahoma; Fred Beard, University of Oklahoma; Ludwig Dischner, University of Oklahoma • Much like advertising’s practitioners, practitioners of content marketing suggest their discipline is an ancient one, although most trace its origins to custom-published magazines of the late 1800s. This paper reports a systematic synthesis of the many definitions of content marketing and the first scholarly history of its development and practice. Findings support two conclusions: content marketing (1) existed much earlier than previously recognized and (2) objectives, strategies, and tactics have been consistent across the millennia.

* Extended Abstract * Comparing Expectancy Violations Committed by Influencer Advertising Sources on Social Media • Marilyn Primovic, University of Georgia; Joe Phua, University of Georgia • Advertisers select influencer sources to promote brands on widely followed social media accounts. This sponsored content is integrated into the content already being posted by an influencer source, which advertisers do not have control over. This study applies parasocial theory and the source credibility model to examine expectancy violation theory for two types of influencer sources, traditional influencers and celebrities. This study may inform advertisers in the process of selecting an influencer source.

Effects of placing a front-of-pack label on print food advertisements on consumer attitudes • Sumin Shin, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater; SangHee Park, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater • A typical front-of-package nutrition label shows one serving size, calories, saturated fat, sodium, and sugar. This study applies a front-of-package label to the advertising context. The results indicate that the presence of the label increases the ad effectiveness, and healthier nutrient content listed on the label negatively affects the ad effectiveness. The degree of nutrient content influences purchase intention directly and indirectly via perceived healthfulness, ad attitude, brand attitude, and healthy brand image sequentially.

How multitasking during video content decreases ad effectiveness: The roles of task relevance, video involvement, and visual attention • Shuoya Sun; Bartosz Wojdynski, University of Georgia; Matthew Binford, University of Georgia; Charan Ramachandran, University of Georgia • In a 3 (secondary task: none, related, unrelated) x 2 (ad-video congruence: high/low) between-subjects eye-tracking experiment, participants (N = 151) watched a 9-minute video documentary segment containing one mid-roll video ad while their visual attention to the screen was recorded. Participants in two-thirds of the conditions also read two online articles on a mobile device during the video. Results show effects for both multitasking and task relatedness on attention to the ad and attitudes toward the ad, through distinct pathways.

* Extended Abstract * Engagement Effects and Recall: A Multi-Year Analysis of Brand Communication in Social Media • Kristen Sussman, The University of Texas at Austin; Laura Bright, University of Texas at Austin; Gary Wilcox • This study examines single and multimodal effects of social media engagement on recall. Using longitudinal data associated with 46 businesses and over 21,000 ads, the analysis provides empirical findings revealing how various factors associated with online behavioral engagement lead to recall on a social networking site. Through initial modeling, comments and post shares explain about 36% of the variance associated with a person’s ad recall while impressions and engagement explain about 80% of the variance.

* Extended Abstract * Do Graphic Cues on Food Packaging and the Flavor of a Food Product Influence Perceptions of Product Characteristics? Results from an Experiment • Chan Thai, Santa Clara University; Hayley Trillo, Santa Clara University; Jacqui Villarreal • Most regulations on food packaging are focused on text-based package elements (explicit cues) that make claims about the product, while non-verbal package elements (subtle cues) have largely been ignored. This study hypothesizes that subtle cues on food packaging, such as graphics and flavor, influence perceptions of the food product. Utilizing a 4×4 online experiment, we test the influence of two types of subtle cues on the front of food packages, graphics (drawing, photograph, farmland scene, control) and flavor (kale, strawberry, orange, snap pea) of the product, on perceptions of taste, healthfulness, eating intentions, and purchase intentions. Data were gathered from two convenience samples: University students (n=100) and Amazon MTurk workers (n=200). One-way ANOVA tests showed no significant differences for graphic type. For the flavor, kale flavored products scored significantly higher on the perceived healthfulness outcome (5.51) compared to the snap pea (4.85), strawberry (4.81), and orange (4.49) products (p<.001). For eating/purchasing intention, kale flavored products scored significantly lower (3.07/3.39) compared to snap pea (3.83/3.94), strawberry (4.65/4.74), and orange (4.44/4.67; p<.001). For taste, kale flavored items scored lower (2.53) than the other flavors (3.83, 3.88, 3.17, p=0.19). Our results suggest that the flavor of a food product can exert influences on people’s perceptions of how healthy the product is, what the product might taste like, and intentions to eat or purchase these products.

Meaning Transfer in Celebrity Endorsement: Meaning Valence, Association Types, and Brand Awareness • Shiyun Tian, University of Miami; Wanhsiu Tsai; Weiting Tao; Cheng Hong, California State University, Sacramento • This study examined how meaning transfer influences brand image beliefs and brand attitudes. The moderating roles of association types and brand awareness were also investigated. The results confirmed the transfer of meanings. The change in attitudes was consistent with the valence of the celebrity’s meanings, as a function of the post-conditioning brand image belief. Furthermore, the effects increase when less-known brands were associated with celebrities via co-branding. Theoretical and practical implications were discussed.

The Role of Guilt, Shame, and Social Distance in Bystander-Focused Prevention of Campus Sexual Violence: A Construal Level Theory Approach • Shiyun Tian, University of Miami; Queenie Li, University of Miami • Guided by the Appraisal-Tendency Framework and Construal Level Theory, this study investigates how emotional appeals (guilt vs. shame) and social distance frames (distant vs. proximal) influence college students’ attitudes toward bystander action campaign and behavioral intention. The findings indicated a two-way interaction effect between these two message factors on campaign attitude and behavior intention. Additionally, self-efficacy was found to be the mediator that underlying the match-based effects. Theoretical and practical implications were discussed.

Spreading the Tingles: An Investigation into the Use of Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response (ASMR) Triggers in Advertising • Tianjiao Wang, Bradley University; Quan Xie; Rachelle Pavelko • Through the lens of embodied cognition and mental simulation theories, this study examined the use of ASMR triggers in advertising and the mechanism underlying the impact of ASMR experience on ad attitudes. The study conducted an online experiment of 539 participants and adopted an ASMR trigger (3: host-focused, object/task-focused, control) x ASMR trait (2: ASMR group vs non-ASMR group) x brand repetition (4) between-subjects factorial design. Results suggest that ads with ASMR triggers generated more tingling sensations compared to those without ASMR triggers. It also reveals that the tingling experience can directly improve ad attitudes, as well as via increased levels of mental simulation. Moreover, the ASMR group reported more positive ad attitudes compared to the non-ASMR group, regardless of the type of ads watched. Theoretical and marketing implications for ASMR advertising and directions for future research are discussed.

Competent and Warm? Examining Asian Stereotypes in Advertising • Buduo Wang, The University of Texas at Austin; Lucy Atkinson, The University of Texas at Austin; Angeline Scheinbaum; Siyan Li, The University of Texas at Austin • “According to the stereotype content model (SCM), competence and warmth are the two key dimensions of stereotype content (Fiske, Cuddy, Glick, & Xu, 2002). Intelligent but nerdy, Asians and Asian Americans have been stereotyped as high in competence but low in warmth. The purpose of this study is to examine whether consumers perceive Asian endorsers in advertising as more competent but less warm than white endorsers and how endorser’s race interacts with perceived warmth/competence to impact advertising effectiveness. Hypotheses are tested with a 2 × 2 between-subjects experiment (n=136). The findings reveal that Asian endorsers are perceived as both more competent and warmer, regardless of product category. The interaction between endorser’s race and perceived competence/warmth is also observed and discussed. Ads featuring white endorsers are more likely to be affected by perceived warmth/competence than ads with Asian endorsers. Both theoretical implications and managerial implications are provided.”

Carousel Advertising for Public Health: Effects of Narrative and Involvement • Lewen Wei, Pennsylvania State University; Guolan Yang; Heather Shoenberger, The Pennsylvania State University; Fuyuan Shen • An online experiment was conducted to examine the effectiveness of carousel advertising for public health on social media. We found when communicating about health issues, carousel advertising conditionally increased message engagement among highly involved individuals when the content was composed as a narrative instead of statistics. This in turn, fostered more favorable responses towards the advertising practice. Implications for interactive advertising in the carousel format are discussed.

Building Brand Authenticity on Social Media: The Impact of Instagram Ad Model Genuineness and Trustworthiness on Perceived Brand Authenticity and Consumer Responses • jing yang, Loyola University Chicago; Camila Teran, Loyola University Chicago; Ava Francesca Battocchio, Loyola University Chicago; Shannon Wrzesinski, Loyola University Chicago; Ebbe Bertellotti, Loyola University Chicago • This study explores the impact of expressive facial and visual aesthetics of Instagram images on consumers’ evaluation of the source and the brand, using computational image analysis method. Following the theoretical rationale of meaning transfer model, our findings revealed positive effect of perceived source genuineness on the endorsed brands’ perceived authenticity, through the mediation of the perceived source trustworthiness. Moreover, the positive effect of model genuineness also carried over to brand attitude and behavioral intention.

Effects of Transparent Brand Communication on Perceived Brand Authenticity and Consumer Responses • jing yang, Loyola University Chicago; Ava Francesca Battocchio, Loyola University Chicago • This study explores the influence of transparent brand communication on consumers’ perception of brand authenticity, and its further impact on consumers’ attitude, trust, and behavioral intention towards the brand. Through a 2×2 online experiment design, this study examined the variation in consumers’ perception and responses, while connecting the literature of brand transparency and authenticity. Individuals’ difference in moral identity centrality was examined as a moderator in the study.

Why People Watch TikTok Influencer Videos and How They Are Influenced by Social Media Influencers: A National Survey of Chinese College Students • Yang Yang; Louisa Ha, Bowling Green State University • The purpose of this study was to explore TikTok (Douyin) influencers’ persuasion power over their followers. A national survey of 382 college students in China showed that entertainment gratification is the most common motivation in using Douyin. Those who have high parasocial relationship with the influencer have higher purchase intention of the recommended products when they have high persuasion knowledge of the influencers than those who have low persuasion knowledge. Implications on influencer marketing are discussed.

Millennials’ environmental involvement and their responses toward sustainable products and green advertising • Jason Yu • This article conceptualizes two types of environmental involvement, outcome-relevant (OREI) and value-relevant (VREI) environmental involvement, and presents two studies that use survey and experimental data to examine their effects on attitude toward green products and green purchase behavior as well as the two-dimensional Aad, Ab and purchase intention. In short, VREI, rather than OREI, dominates the effects of environmental involvement on green consumerism and consumer response toward green advertising. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

A Cross-Cultural Examination of CSR Advertising: The effects of negative moral emotions on information processing • Wen Zhao, Fairfield University • The goal of this study was to examine the persuasive influences of moral emotions on younger consumers’ judgments and decision-making, and the roles of culture and self-construal in processing Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) advertising. This study employed a between-subjects online experiment where American and Chinese participants viewed one of the two CSR advertisement designed with ego-focused (e.g., an ad-elicited anger emotion), and other-focused appeals (e.g., an ad-elicited guilt emotion). The results indicated that negative moral emotions had significant positive influences on attitudes toward the ads and purchase intention through the peripheral route, for the negative affective responses showed simple cue effects on judgments without influencing validation of the thoughts. In addition, results revealed the interaction effects between guilt emotion and culture values (i.e., country) on attitudes. This study also examined the moderating role of self-construal in the relationship of guilt emotion and attitude formation.

Social and temporal distance and message concreteness: A study of Facebook advertising • Fei Xue; Lijie Zhou • The current study examined the effects of social distance, temporal distance, and message concreteness on Facebook users’ response to News Feed advertising. It was found that social distance moderated the congruency between temporal distance and message concreteness. When the ads were affiliated with close friends (low social distance condition), concrete messages lead to stronger purchase intention for a near future event, while abstract messages generated stronger purchase intention for a distant future event.

Special Topics in Advertising
Effects of Consumers’ Affective States on Ad Attention and Evaluation: A Hybrid Research Approach • Maral Abdollahi, University of Minnesota; Debarati Das, University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Xinyu Lu; Jisu Huh, University of Minnesota; Jaideep Srivastava, University of Minnesota Twin Cities • This study examined the effects of consumers’ affective states on selective attention to different types of ads and evaluation of the ads. Applying an innovative hybrid research approach using survey and computational methods, this study analyzed real-time affective states of TV viewers during the 2020 Super Bowl broadcast, ad-related tweets, and self-reported attention measures. The results demonstrate significant effects of consumers’ affective states on their selective attention to different ads and ad evaluation.

Consumers’ Perception on Artificial Intelligence Applications in Marketing Communication • Huan Chen, University of Florida; Sylvia Chan-Olmsted, University of Florida; Julia Kim; Irene Sanabria • A qualitative study was conducted to examine consumers’ perception of AI and AI marketing communication. Twenty in-depth interviews were conducted to collect data. Findings suggest that 1) consumers’ interpretation of AI is multidimensional and relational focusing on functionality and emotion, as well as comparison and contrast between AI and human being; 2) consumers’ perception of voice assisted AI concentrates on different aspects including function, communication, adaptation, relationship, and privacy; and, 3) consumers consider AI marketing communication is unavoidable and acceptable but limited in its effect on influencing their evaluation of products and brands as well as shaping their consumptive behaviors.

Your Ad Here: The Influence of Mobile Advertising Type and Placement • Yunmi Choi, Indiana University Southeast; Todd Holmes, California State University Northridge • As the market for smartphones grows globally, studying how to utilize mobile pages as an advertising platform is becoming critical. This experimental study was conducted to examine the impact of different ad types (still-image, animated, and video ads) and ad placement (pre-text and mid-text) on smartphone users’ irritation, intrusiveness, attention, memory, and attitudes. The results of the research revealed that mid-text ads receive higher perceived intrusiveness compared to pre-text ads. Also, video ads produced more positive attitude toward the ad and brand than the still image or animated banner ads. In this study, the animated ad received significantly less positive attitude toward the brand compared to the video pre-text ad.

Exploring Factors Influencing Ad Recognition on Social Media • A-Reum Jung, Sejong University; Jun Heo, Louisiana State University • This study aims to examine native ad recognition by disclosure explicitness. Further, this study examined native ad effects in relation to personalization and ad clutter. In order to fulfill these purposes, an eye-tracking experiment with participants’ Facebook page was conducted. Findings indicated that consumers need longer time to figure out native ads, but disclosure has no influence on the ad recognition. Personalized native ads could be a promising solution to break ad clutter.

Investigating the Impact of Immersive Advertising on Attitude toward the Brand: The Mediating Roles of Perceived Novelty, Perceived Interactivity, and Attitude toward the Advertisement • Jihoon (Jay) Kim, University of Alabama; Joe Phua, University of Georgia; Nah Ray Han, University of Georgia; Taeyeon Kim • Although immersive advertising has emerged as a new persuasion tool in digital media environments, unanswered questions about its effectiveness remain. A between-subjects experiment (N = 127) with three levels of immersion (i.e., low, medium, high) tested whether greater levels of immersion led to more favorable attitude toward the advertisement and the brand. The results not only confirmed this hypothesis but also revealed the mediating roles of perceived novelty, perceived interactivity, and attitude toward the ad. Details about the effects of immersive advertising on consumer responses are presented, and theoretical and managerial implications are discussed.

Am I Being Watched? The Role of Perceived Surveillance and Privacy Cynicism in Synced Advertising Effects • Claire M. Segijn, Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Minnesota; Eunah Kim, University of Minnesota • Technological advancements have made it possible to personalize messages across media in real-time (i.e., synced advertising). Our online experiment (N = 527) showed that the more ads were synced, the higher consumers’ unaided recall became. Also, the more ads were synced, the more perceived surveillance, which led to less positive brand attitudes. However, consumers high in privacy cynicism had more positive brand attitudes. These results advance theories on the direct effects, underlying mechanisms, and boundary effects of synced advertising.

* Extended Abstract * CSR Virtual Reality Campaigns by Alcohol Companies: The Role of Self-Value and Prior Drinking Experiences • Yoon-Joo Lee; Wen Zhao, Fairfield University; Huan Chen, University of Florida • This study’s goal is to explore factors influencing immersive experiences in the context of corporate social responsibility (CSR) virtual reality (VR) campaigns. The findings revealed that different types of self-value (social-CSRO) and prior experiences with alcohol products (alcohol consumption levels) interact in immersing into VR video contents and forming more positive attitude toward the video. This study implies that advertising practitioners may need to find important consumer values and prior experiences that are specifically relevant to a CSR VR as campaign.

Synced advertising and chilling effects: change in media diet as a result of corporate surveillance • Joanna Strycharz; Claire M. Segijn, Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Minnesota • Synced advertising is one of the most recent developments in the advertising practice and concerns personalizing messages based on people’s current offline media behavior. While this strategy promises to enhance advertising efforts, it comes with a number of threats as it raises ethical questions and may lead to unintended side-effects for consumers. In particular, data collection techniques used for synced advertising purposes require further attention since they extend the so-called corporate surveillance to consumers’ offline sphere. The current study investigates to what extent data collection for synced advertising causes so-called chilling effects, i.e. a change in consumers’ media diet. To explore the mechanisms behind such chilling effects, the current study builds on personalized advertising theories and psychological ownership theory and focuses on both advertiser- (data collection technique and location) and consumer-controlled (attitude towards personalization and need for self-presentation) factors. The findings show that indeed, data collection technique and need for self-presentation have an impact on chilling effects regarding consumers’ media diets. The findings carry implications for both the advertising industry and the regulators as chilling effects resulting from synced advertising can be seen a threat to consumer identity and autonomy.

Teaching and Pedagogy
* Extended Abstract * Curriculum drives everything: Advertising curriculum in ACEJMC programs • Sheri Broyles, University of North Texas • For those in advertising education the curriculum is the heart of each of our programs. This paper dives into the curricula across 50 advertising programs at U.S. universities and colleges accredited by ACEJMC, looking at both required courses and electives that might be of value to other programs. NOTE: Brief findings will be added here indicating big points made and a closing statement from discussion for why this is important.

* Extended Abstract * Best Practices in Online Course Development and Instruction: Targeting Advertising Students in a Post COVID-19 World • Betsy DeSimone, University of Tennessee; Courtney Carpenter Childers • The global COVID-19 pandemic led to dramatic shifts within higher education. None greater than the transition to remote instruction and online learning. Advertising courses are greatly impacted by this change as most require group work activities and creative challenges. This study highlights best practices for taking classes to an online delivery method via qualitative questionnaire exploring advertising student experiences. Phase 1 of data collection (N=61) took place late 2019, and phase 2 of data collection starts in late April 2020 for comparison.

Diversity and Inclusion in Advertising: What do Students Think? • Pamela Morris • The advertising industry has long been criticized for its lack of diversity. This exploratory investigation surveyed advertising and public relations students for perceptions of diversity in advertising. Students say they are confident in working with diverse teams, value inclusiveness, and want a wider meaning of diversity and for the industry to be more inclusive. Findings suggest incorporating diversity exercises into multiple parts of the advertising process can help motivate student to change the industry.

Incorporating Ethics into Introductory Advertising Courses: Student Perspectives • Pamela Morris • This introductory study reviewed how workshops and assignments built into introduction to advertising could impact students’ perceptions of ethics specific to advertising. The method of investigation was a survey at the semester’s beginning and end after structured engagement with ethics, including creating an ethics statement and incorporating ethics into the campaign process and pitch. Findings indicate that exposure and engagement of ethics made students more aware and articulate for the concept of ethics in advertising.

* Extended Abstract * Prepping (for) the Ad Industry: Understanding Personality and Career Adaptability of First- Generation College Students in Strategic Communication • Katie Olsen, Kansas State University; Alec Tefertiller, Baylor University; Danielle LaGree • Frequently coming from diverse and lower income backgrounds, first-generation college students (FGCS) may be a key demographic capable of improving the general lack of diversity that plagues the advertising industry. As such, understanding and supporting FGCS within collegiate strategic communication programs is increasingly important. Using a mixed method approach through two studies, the current investigation seeks to understand how personality differences, career adaptability, and diverse backgrounds influence career preparedness.

A Survey of Faculty Advisers at Student-Run Agencies • Brooke Borgognoni, University of Arkansas School of Journalism and Strategic Media; Jan Wicks, University of Arkansas School of Journalism and Strategic Media • This survey of faculty advisers examined major variables and findings of past research on student-run agencies using organizational theory. Larger agencies appeared to offer training in more formalized business procedures among a more diverse client base, found in previous research to be helpful to student-run agency graduates now on the job. Hopefully results will help future researchers identify which factors may best facilitate specific student performance outcomes at agencies of all types and sizes.

<2020 Abstracts

Media Ethics 2014 Abstracts

Carol Burnett Award

Bringing an Ethics of Care to Reporting on Suicide • Gemma Richardson, University of Western Ontario • This paper provides an overview of the policies in Canadian newsrooms on covering suicide and concludes that reporting on suicide guided by an ethics of care may prove more effective than prescriptive guidelines stating what journalists can and cannot report. An ethics of care in suicide reporting emphasizes compassion, requiring sensitivity for story sources and subjects. This approach may offer a way to open up the dialogue on suicide in an empathetic and respectful manner.

Their Eyes are Watching: The Ethics of Facebook’s Graphic Content Policy Regarding Violence and Adolescents • Monique Robinson, University of Kansas • In 2013, a video depicting a woman’s beheading was posted to the social media website Facebook in accordance with its then policy. Concern was expressed about adolescent (ages 13-17) exposure to violent graphic content on the website. The following analysis employs the Western ethical concepts of virtue ethics (Aristotle), utilitarianism (Mill), and duty (Kant) to evaluate Facebook’s graphic content policy regarding violence and contemplate if Facebook has an ethical duty to protect adolescent audiences.

Open Competition

A Model of Sectarian News Commenting and Self-Disclosure • Krystin Anderson, University of Florida • Due to controversies about the negative aspects of news commenting sections, this paper proposes a model connecting the reading of sectarian comments to a reader’s decision to self-disclose an ideologically based identity. Drawing on cultivation theory, it suggests that identity reinforcement mediates this relationship, with moderators including extremity of sectarianism expressed, perception of risk and utility, initial identity strength, social identity of the self-disclosure recipient, and the reader’s sense of being in the minority or majority.

Aristotle, Casuistry, and Global Media Ethics • Sandra L. Borden, Western Michigan University • A number of scholars have been working on the project of developing a global media ethics focused on “transnational publics and global problems” (Ward, 2013, p. 2). A virtue approach to ethical issues raised by globalized media has not gotten much attention, however. Yet virtue theory been diffused throughout the globe in a number of ancient and contemporary traditions, resulting in a robust pluralism founded on the centrality of discernment and discretion (Ess, 2013). Virtues provide a culturally sensitive, but non-relativistic, moral foundation that “transcends borders without being historically detached” (Keenan & Shannon, 1995, p. 228). The main purpose of this paper is to propose casuistry as a method for deliberation that complements a broadly Aristotelian framework for media ethics. Casuistry is contextual and dialectical while proceeding incrementally and modestly to yield probable judgments even when there is no agreement on first principles or on a telos. The principal question addressed in this paper is, what are the advantages of casuistry as a deliberative method for a virtue approach to globalized media? A related secondary question is, what are the implications for building a thick global media ethics from the ground up? Briefly, I will argue that casuistry: 1) zeroes in on particulars and reminds us to be cautious about blowing up the scale of ethical reasoning beyond what the situation demands; 2) conceives of moral agents as situated selves and confirms the value of moral expertise; and 3) presses for closure while resisting codification.

Deception by Omission in News Reporting: The Most Harmful Deception in Journalism as an Organizational Behavior • HYUNJEONG CHOI, University of Texas at Austin • Deception in journalism can be defined as any type of verbal or nonverbal practice in journalism that intentionally causes the public to initiate or hold false beliefs. Journalistic deception can be divided into four groups in accordance with acts of commission and omission in two areas of news gathering and news reporting. Among the four types of deception in journalism, I contend that deceptive news reporting by omission is rooted directly in organizational behavior, and it can result in the most serious harm to the public. While three other types of deception are undertaken for the purpose of more convenient access to news sources and journalists’ obligation or their own personal greed such as scoop and promotion, the benefits of deception in news reporting by omission appear to accrue to the organization that hires the journalists rather than to individual journalists who commit the deception. Media companies seek to maximize profits through catering to their partisan audiences by suppressing certain information that is not palatable to their readers/viewers. Selectively omitted information is particularly harmful to society because it can lead to conditions that motivate readers/viewers to initiate or to strengthen biased perspectives disseminated by the media organization that may run counter to the best interests of the audiences. In addition, audiences may be rational and make sense of bias in the media where all the facts are given, but it is virtually impossible for them to fully recover information that is selectively omitted in order to achieve information aggregation.

To Post or Not to Post: Ethical Considerations in Using Gun Permit Data Online • David Craig, University of Oklahoma; Stan Ketterer, Oklahoma State University; Mohammad Yousuf, University of Oklahoma • This study investigates the ethical dimensions of data journalism by examining journalists’ discussion of a controversy over publication of gun permit data. Three discussion threads in the listerv of the National Institute of Computer-Assisted Reporting were analyzed. Frames were freedom versus responsibility, consequences, privacy and verification, and alternatives. The findings highlight the benefits of pooling the practical wisdom of participants in an evolving practice. They also suggest recommendations for evaluating the ethics of data journalism.

“I dunno about Morals, but I do got rules”: Analyzing the moral evaluations of prisoners, law-enforcement agents and civilians of The Sopranos. • Merel van Ommen; Serena Daalmans, Radboud University Nijmegen; Addy Weijers; Rebecca de Leeuw • The current study is based on qualitative interviews (N = 60), that aimed to provide insight in the grounds of moral evaluations of an existential crime drama with morally ambivalent characters by different moral subcultures (i.e. prisoners, law enforcement agents, and civilians). The results reveal that prisoners and law enforcement agents ground their moral evaluations in their personal and professional opinions, while civilians showcase more nuance and reveal a difference between those who were and were not familiar with the show.

‘His Women Problem’: An analysis of gender on The Newsroom • Chad Painter, Eastern New Mexico University; Patrick Ferrucci, Bradley University • This textual analysis focused on the portrayal of female journalists on Aaron Sorkin’s The Newsroom. The researchers argue that the four main female journalists were depicted as being unprofessional in the workplace, being inadequate at their jobs, and being motherly and weak. The researchers conclude that Sorkin and his creative team failed in their ethical obligation to the audience and society because the portrayals could negatively impact the perceptions of real female journalists.

Search Engines and Online Censorship in China: An Ethics Approach • Tao Fu; William Babcock • This paper examines how two search engines in China – Google.com.hk and Baidu.com – are different and attract different audiences, but still are able to fit John Stewart Mill’s utilitarian model. Great use is made of both search engines, and the Chinese government in particular monitors – and censors – one, while the other is generally free of such intervention.

Gratification in journalism practice: An assessment of Kuwaiti journalists’ perspective • Uche Onyebadi, Southern Illinois University Carbondale; Fawaz Alajmi, Southern Illinois University Carbondale • Media ethics generally recommends journalists avoiding gratification in order to maintain objectivity and professional integrity. This study investigated the application of this ethical injunction in Kuwait. It surveyed and interviewed Kuwaiti journalists on their attitude towards gratification. Results indicate a breach of this ethical recommendation. Reasons for this include lack of media ethics education among journalists and the absence of ethical guidance by media owners. In addition, journalism in Kuwait is largely a part-time job.

Media Exemplars and a Model of the Morally Motivated Self • Patrick Plaisance, Colorado State University • Research on journalists and public relations executives known for their ethical leadership has demonstrated a clear moral psychology “profile” of personality traits, moral reasoning abilities and rejection of relativistic thinking. Drawing from this profile, a model of the “morally motivated self” is proposed here to map moral functioning as a way to advance media ethics theorizing. The proposed model comports well with the neo-Aristotelian virtue ethics focus on human flourishing, in contrast with deontological approaches.

The Relationship between Organizational Leaders and Advertising Ethics: An Organizational Ethnography • Erin Schauster, Bradley University • Understanding the complexity of advertising ethics mandates an organizational approach to empirical research. This ethnography examines the relationship between aspects of organizational leadership and advertising ethics through the lens of structuration theory. Forty-five days of fieldwork at a full-service advertising agency and 45 one-on-one interviews gathered perceptions of organizational leadership and ethical problems in advertising. Findings suggest that characteristics of leadership enable ethical awareness, while amoral intentions for starting the agency simultaneously constrain awareness.

Let’s Agree to Disagree: Advertising Ethics and the Consensus View • Erin Schauster, Bradley University • Organizational culture provides a context-specific look into advertising ethics. Through the lens of organizational culture, as both shared and divided, a full-service advertising agency was observed. Forty-five days of fieldwork and 45 one-on-one interviews were conducted to examine the shared perceptions and divided views of ethical problems in advertising. Findings suggest that members’ ethical perceptions fell along a continuum from moral myopia to acute ethical awareness, which supports a divided view of organizational culture.

Out of Bounds: Professional Norms as Boundary Markers • Jane Singer, City University London / University of Iowa • Journalists use norms not only as identity markers of the professional news worker but also as boundary markers between professionals and non-professionals. The distinctions they draw rest on ethical practices such as verification, principles such as independence, and promises such as accountability. After outlining responses to previous “new” media, two still-evolving journalistic forms – social journalism and entrepreneurial journalism – are explored to illustrate how this boundary marking is being enacted today.

The Traditional “Pickup” or “Death Knock” Story: Its Role, Its Value(s) and What’s at Stake for Communities • romayne smith fullerton, university of western ontario; Margaret Patterson, Duquesne University • The Canadian term, ‘pickup,’ or the British version, called ‘the death knock,’ refers to an assignment that strikes terror into the heart of young reporters or would-be journalists. It refers to the practice of sending a journalist to the home of someone who has died in a newsworthy event to ‘pick up’ a photograph of the deceased person, and to garner an interview with a family member to write a tribute story. Working from insights provided through personal interviews or group discussions with journalists and situating these ideas in the larger field of ethics literature, we argue that this often-maligned practice of the pickup plays a key part in journalism’s community function, pulling against the tide of social division. Done correctly, this narrative serves to bind the community in its common humanity. Done carelessly, it can work to expel wrongdoers and non-conformists in a manner that ill serves the democratic process. Its examination, therefore, should hinge not on whether the pickup should be done but how. Sadly the debate may cease to exist because the practice itself is threatened; newsrooms are under growing financial pressure to do more with less. Technology, specifically social media, is being increasingly relied upon to fill the gap.

Crisis Management and Ethics: Moving Beyond the Public-Relations-Person-as-Corporate-Conscience Construct toward Moral Agency • Burton St. John, Old Dominion University; Yvette Pearson, Old Dominion University • When it comes to ethics, public relations scholars have tended to describe the role of the public relations person as the “corporate conscience” of the organization. This paper, however, maintains that such a construct is problematic. Through an examination of two recent crisis case studies, this work offers observations on how the public relations person can reconceptualize the “corporate conscience” construct and focus on the value of promoting the development of moral reasoning skills alongside the acknowledgment of individuals’ fundamental role as moral agents.

“Just Doing His Job”: The James Rosen Warrant and the Ethical Implications of Journalists Circling the Wagons • Bastiaan Vanacker • When James Rosen in June 2009 published a story on Foxnews.com on North Korea and its nuclear program, he potentially jeopardized a valuable intelligence operation. However, his actions did not cause uproar among his colleagues. The consequent leak investigation by the government, however, did. This paper argues that by refusing to engage in a public debate about the ethics of using leaked information and using these types of cases instead to solidify its professional status, the journalistic profession lacks accountability.

Special Call For Sports Media Ethics

The Usage and Consequence of Twitter as a Communication Medium Among Collegiate Student-Athletes • Jacob Dryer; Rocky Dailey • The purpose of this study was to better understand the challenges associated with the social networking site (SNS) Twitter for collegiate student-athletes. Collegiate athletes at South Dakota State University (SDSU) and Central College were surveyed on their Twitter usage, understanding of student-athlete policies regarding SNSs, and their experience with the consequences of a negative Twitter posting. The vast majority of student athletes in this study did not have a Twitter account, and 45% of those with accounts posted daily updates. Only eight percent of respondents indicated getting into trouble for a post, and of those the majority of student-athletes did not feel the punishment was fair. A slight majority of students were unaware of any SNS policy for student athletes at their institution. The results of this study indicate that while student athletes tend to post less on the SNS Twitter than typical college students, there is a need for institutions to create policies regarding SNS posting for student athletes and make certain that those policies are communicated effectively to the students.

Dehumanizing Injured Athletes: The ethics of framing player injuries in fantasy football reporting • Brett Johnson, University of Minnesota • This paper conducts an empirical, a priori framing analysis of coverage of NFL player injuries in the fantasy football news service Rotowire during the 2013 NFL season. Following a literature review that involves framing theory and theories from sports media studies and Kant’s categorical imperative, frames are constructed a priori based on their ethical nature. Ethical frames treat injured players as ends in themselves. Unethical frames cover injuries in terms of their impact on players’ performance in fantasy football. Dual frames contain elements of both ethical and unethical frames. Neutral frames contain neither element. Statistical tests (Chi-squared, paired-sample t-tests and bivariate regression) test hypotheses regarding potential correlations between the ethical level of frames and key categorical (position, severity of injury, week of injury, whether or not the injury was a concussion) and quantitative (average fantasy points scored per week) independent variables. The paper concludes with a discussion on recommendations for how fantasy sports news services like Rotowire should ethically report on player injuries.

2014 Abstracts

Media Ethics 2005 Abstracts

Media Ethics Division

Can Professionalism Protect the Integrity of Journalism Against the Market? • Sandra L. Borden, Western Michigan University • The purpose of this paper is to critically analyze the potential of professionalism to support good work and give journalists some leverage against the power of their employing organizations in the current media market. This essay critically examines the two key functions of professional organization for journalists ethical motivation and occupational power-in terms of both their potential usefulness and their potential problems.

Ideal Journalism. An Analysis of the Idaho Falls Post Register’s Ideologies in Covering the 2002 Gubernatorial Campaign • Kris Boyle, Brigham Young University • Based on the concept of journalism ideology, this study identifies ideologies established by the Idaho Falls Post Register and examines whether these ideologies were reflected in its coverage of the 2002 Idaho gubernatorial race, where one of the candidates was the paper’s publisher/ owner. The author found the paper adapted its guidelines from ideologies generally accepted by many journalists, including objectivity, balance, and facticity, and concludes the paper stuck close to these guidelines in its coverage.

A Failure of Imagination: The 9/11 Commission, Terrorism Coverage, and Media Responsibility • Glen Feighery, University of Utah • Coverage of terrorism provides a compelling context in which to consider whether journalists have ethical duties to be proactive, not just reactive. This paper examines the July 2004 report by the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (9/11 Commission). The report criticized the news media, concluding that journalists shared some of the blame for failing to adequately warn the public of the risk of terrorism before September 11, 2001.

This Little Piggy Went to Press: The Ethics of the American News Media’s Construction of Animals in Agriculture, from 2000-2003 • Carrie Packwood Freeman, University of Oregon • Big corporate operators have taken over the bulk of Iowa’s pork production, with dire results not only for the small farmer but also for those of us who were raised on succulent pork chops and pork roasts. Fat gives pork some of its flavor, but modern hogs are bred to minimize fat; …Raised in close quarters inside enormous metal buildings, the hogs foul the air for miles around, and their meat is bland, dry and tough when cooked.

Murder in our Midst: Expanding Coverage to Include Care and Responsibility • Romayne Smith Fullerton, University of Western Ontario and Maggie Jones Patterson, Duquesne University • Using a U.S. and a Canadian example, this paper argues news reports of murder often employ predetermined formulae that probe intrusively into the lives of those involved in the murder but ultimately come away with only a cheaply sketched, stick-figure portrait.

Black Eye: The Ethics of CBS News and the National Guard Documents • Elizabeth Blanks Hindman, Washington State University • This case study applies ethics theories and codes to the mainstream news media’s response to the CBS News- National Guard forged documents fiasco of 2004. It finds that 177 newspaper editorials applied truth telling, accountability, independence, and stewardship principles in their criticism of CBS, but only in a limited way. While the editorials dealt well with the specific issues of the case, they missed an opportunity to discuss the broader ethical principles involved.

Blood On the Lens ‘Private’ Moments, Public Platforms: Images and Ethics Codes Across Media in an Era of Violence and Tragedy • Susan Keith, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Carol B. Schwalbe, Arizona State University and B. William Silcock, Arizona State University • An analysis of forty-seven journalism ethics codes found that although most consider photography, only ten address a gripping issue: how to treat images of tragedy and violence, such as those produced on the battlefields of Iraq and in the 2004 Madrid bombings. Among codes that consider violent and tragic images, there is agreement on what images are problematic and a move toward “green light” reflection on ethical responsibilities (especially in guidelines produced by RTNDA/RTNDF).

Codes and Codism: SPJ, RTNDA And NPPA Rewrite their Codes of Ethics — Why, How, and to what Effect? • Dan Kozlowski, University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill •Within the past decade, three national journalism organizations – the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), the Radio-Television News Directors Association (RTNDA), and the National Press Photographers Association (NPPA) – have revised their codes of ethics, involving considerable debate and organizational fanfare. This paper examines the code revisions at those three organizations.

Interactivity and Prioritizing the Human: A Code of Blogging Ethics • Martin Kuhn, North Carolina – Chapel Hill• Blogs and blogging continue to gain in popularity. They are being integrated into the mainstream media mix and are attracting advertising dollars. As a new balance between freedom and responsibility is being struck in the blogosphere, the author uses new communication technology ethics scholarship and an exploratory survey of bloggers to propose a new code of blogging ethics to inform blogging decisions.

Succulent Sins, Personalized Politics, and Mainstream Media’s Tabloidization Temptation • Jenn Burleson Mackay, University of Alabama • This paper examines how mainstream journalism’s credibility is threatened by the use of tabloid news techniques. Experiment participants read either four standard news stories or similar stories written in a tabloidized style. Reporter credibility was measured using the Source Credibility Scale. The writers of the tabloid stories were found less competent, trustworthy, and caring than the other reporters. The credibility of tabloidized hard news verses soft news was also studied. Market-orientation and tabloidization are discussed.

Minding The Gap: An Ethical Perspective on the Use of Weblogs in Journalistic Practice • Andrew Morozov, Washington State University • This exploratory study examines the role of online journalism with respect to traditional journalistic practice. The focus of the study is the weblog form of online journalism, and its role in the contemporary media environment, evaluated from the perspective of responsibilities, functions, and practices of the journalistic profession. The analysis surveys the repercussions of the “blogging” phenomenon, and suggests how traditional professional journalistic responsibilities may be reinterpreted in the context of online journalism.

Bloggers Strike a Nerve: Examining the Intersection of Blogging and Journalism • Bryan Murley and Kim Smith • University of South Carolina • Researchers conducted a census after the 2004 presidential election of the authors of the top 100 most-visited, current-events blogs to discover what they thought about politics, their role as bloggers in society, and as citizen journalists. More than 90 % considered blogs an important contributor to democracy; 93 % said fact-checking the traditional news media was an important; and nearly 90 % opposed using an editor to check postings for accuracy.

A “Fool Satisfied?” Journalists and Mill’s Principle of Utility • Lee Anne Peck, University of Northern Colorado • Although J.S. Mill is most often identified in the same breath with utilitarianism in journalism textbooks, a thorough examination of his beliefs about morality is often lacking. Professional journalists and journalism students alike oftentimes read these brief explanations and believe, therefore, that using lies, coercion and manipulation is appropriate behavior in the gathering of information if the consequences will lead to more benefits that harms; they might also believe that breaking the law is allowed.

An Appeal to Newspaper Authority in Television Political Ads: A Case Study • Chris Roberts, University of South Carolina • A textual analysis of two television advertisements, created by a U.S. Senate candidate during the 2004 general election in South Carolina, shows how newspapers are used (and misused) to introduce perceptions of independent authority in partisan political advertising. The functional theory of political discourse is used to examine how the ads use newspapers as a third-party authority to defend against opposing ads, to attack opponents, and to acclaim the candidate’s achievements.

Civic Responsibility: A Casualty of Ethical Principle • John C. Watson, American University • Moral philosophers since Socrates have insisted that citizens have a moral obligation to obey the law. But American journalists since John Peter Zenger have been flouting this civic responsibility even before there was a First Amendment to defend and justify their actions. Like Socrates, journalists often claim an ethical obligation to elucidate the truth that overrides their civic responsibility to comply with the government’s interpretation of the First Amendment.

Communitarian Ethics and the Electronic Village • Alisa White, University of Texas at Arlington • This paper proposes that the broadcast media are eclipsing the local community as the place James Carey’s “looking glass self’ develops. The arguments for the broadcast media arid audience as community are located in Alasdair Maclntyre’s theory of the virtues (1984). Janet Jackson’s breast exposure to a worldwide audience watching the halftime show of the 2004 National Football League Super Bowl and the subsequent outpouring of negativity are discussed.

<< 2005 Abstracts

Visual Communication Division

The Visual Communication Division of AEJMC invites faculty and students to submit competitive papers devoted to theoretically based studies of visual communications and to issues concerning the professional practice of visual media production for presentation at the association’s annual convention. Visual is broadly defined and includes photography, film, television, web design, graphic design, illustration, and digital imaging, as well as other visual phenomena.

The division encourages submission of papers that address a broad spectrum of methodology and application, both qualitative and quantitative, on all types of visual media—advertising, broadcast, digital imaging, film, graphic design, multimedia and web design, photojournalism, propaganda images, visual images and culture, visual literacy, and visual aspects of political campaigns, etc. Research in media history, law, policy, effects, processes, uses and ethics regarding visuals are also welcome. All submissions will be blind refereed by a panel of independent readers. Student papers compete on equal footing with faculty papers. A $100 award will be given to the top student contribution. The top three faculty papers will be recognized in the AEJMC annual convention program.

Papers are accepted for peer review on the understanding that they are not already under review for other conventions and that they have been submitted to only one AEJMC group for evaluation. Papers accepted for the AEJMC Conference should not have been presented to another convention or published in scholarly or trade journals prior to presentation at the convention. Authors may submit more than one paper to the Visual Communication Division.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES: All research papers must be uploaded through AEJMC’s ALL ACADEMIC website. Make sure to upload through the link marked Visual Communication Division. All papers must be uploaded to the server no later than 11:59 p.m. (Central Standard Time) Monday, April 1, 2013.

All papers must be type-written and double-spaced with one-inch margins. Format should be Microsoft Word or a PDF. The page limit is 30-pages, inclusive of all references, notes, tables, illustrations, and appendices. Manuscripts must conform to the APA reference style.

Upload an abstract separately of no more than 75-words. Completely fill out the online submission form with author(s) name, affiliation, mailing address, telephone number, and email address. The title should be printed on the first page of the text and on running heads on each subsequent page of text. Please make sure not to include author name(s) on title page or running heads and confirm that no identifying information is in the File Properties area of the MS Word file.

All authors will be advised whether their paper has been accepted and will receive a copy of the reviewers’ comments by May 22, 2013. At least one author of an accepted paper must attend the conference to present the paper. For more information on submissions to the Visual Communication Division, please contact Mary Bock, Kutztown University at 484-646-4319 or e-mail: .

<<Paper Calls

Newspaper and Online News Division

The Newspaper and Online News Division invites faculty and students to submit original, non-published research papers to be considered for presentation at the AEJMC annual conference, August 8 to 11, 2013, in Washington, D.C. We welcome theoretically-based qualitative or quantitative research papers related to newspaper and online news that investigate topics such as the news coverage of the 2012 election, ethics, law, history, effects, diversity and fairness issues, social media and news, newsgathering norms and routines, economic challenges, etc.

Student papers will be considered for the MacDougall Student Paper Award. Authors should include “MacDougall Student Paper Award” on the title page. Papers submitted with both faculty and student authors will be considered faculty papers and are not eligible for the student competition. A $200 prize and a certificate will be given to the author of the top student paper.

Submission of papers: Papers must be submitted electronically in Word or PDF format no later than 11:59 p.m. (EST) April 1, 2013, using AEJMC’s All Academic system. No hard copies will be accepted. All entries should follow the guidelines of the AEJMC uniform paper competition. Paper length is limited to 25 pages, not including references, tables, or appendices. All submissions will undergo a blind review process by a panel of independent reviewers. Papers are accepted on the understanding that they have not been previously published or presented elsewhere and that they have been submitted to only our division for evaluation.

Paper authors must remove identifying information from their papers or they will be automatically disqualified from the competition. Full instructions on submitting papers are posted on the AEJMC website at http://www.aejmcchicago.org/papers/.

If you have any questions, please contact research co-chairs Raluca Cozma () or Carol Schlagheck ().

<<Paper Call

International Communication Division

Robert L. Stevenson Open Paper Competition & Markham Student Paper Competition

The International Communication Division welcomes original, non-published research papers that focus clearly on international aspects of journalism and mass communication. Papers that merely examine communication phenomena outside of the United States do not necessarily fit in this division, and the research committee reserves the right to transfer papers to other divisions if it determines that the paper would be better suited for another division. Any theoretical and methodological approaches appropriate to communication research are acceptable and encouraged. Papers are submitted either to the Robert L. Stevenson open paper competition (faculty and student-faculty) or the Markham student competition (strictly student-authored papers). All research papers must be uploaded through an online server to the group appropriate to the paper’s topic and author (faculty or student) via a link on the AEJMC website. Detailed information will be sent to authors with notification that their papers have been accepted. In addition to guidelines that apply to all AEJMC paper competitions, please follow ICD’s specific guidelines listed below.

Guidelines: Format should be Word, WordPerfect, or a PDF. Researchers also must upload a paper abstract of no more than 75 words. ICD suggests a paper length of 25-pages, 12-point, double-spaced type, one-inch margins on all sides, (count and format does not include notes, references, figures and/or illustrations). Authors should use the style appropriate for the discipline, E.g. APA, MLA, and Chicago.

Completely fill out the online submission form with author(s) name, affiliation, mailing address, telephone number and email address. The title should be on the first page of the text and on running heads on each page of text, as well as on the title page. Do not include author’s name or other identifying information on running heads, title page or hidden popup options (specifically on material submitted as PDF).

Authors are responsible for following the guidelines for paper submissions outlined in the AEJMC uniform paper call and additional ICD guidelines listed in this call. Papers that do not meet guidelines will not be reviewed (Note: Papers submitted to the wrong competition, papers containing any identifying information, or submissions consisting only of abstracts will be disqualified immediately). Submissions will be blind-reviewed by a panel; selections strictly based on merit.

Awards: ICD awards cash prizes for the top three faculty papers and the top three student papers. Student winners will also receive free conference registration. Both The Asian Journal of Communication and Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies also sponsor a “Best Paper Award” with cash prizes (Cash prizes are forfeited if an author fails to present her or his work).

Asian Journal of Communication Best Paper Award: The AJC Best Paper Award is presented annually by the Asian Journal of Communication (AJC), a refereed international publication of the Asian Media Information and Communication Centre (AMIC) and the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, to an outstanding paper selected from the AEJMC International Communication Division¹s Open Paper Competition. Established in 2003, the award is aimed at promoting mass communication research concerning the Asia-Pacific region. All papers (with a focus on or relevance to mass communication in the Asia-Pacific region or an Asia-Pacific country) submitted to the annual ICD Open Paper Competition are eligible for the AJC Best Paper Award contest and will be reviewed automatically for the
award. All research methodologies are welcome.

Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies Best Paper Award for Journalism Research: The ICD’s “Best Paper Award for Journalism Research” is sponsored annually by Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies for the most outstanding paper selected from the submissions to the AEJMC International Communication Division’s Open Paper Competition. Established in 2003, the award is aimed at promoting research in global journalism which will enhance and enrich our understanding of issues such as international news flow, news theory, media ethics, media education, gender, and race, as well as specific topics, such as the media and AIDS. In line with the division’s international character, the award is also aimed at promoting research that addresses North-South and South-South journalism issues.

If you have questions about the call or the 2012 ICD research competition at any time contact: Robert L. Stevenson Open Paper Competition Chair – Emily Metzgar, Indiana University, , Markham Student Competition Chair – Ammina Kothari, Rochester Institute of Technology, .

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Cultural and Critical Studies Division

The Cultural and Critical Studies Division welcomes faculty and student submission of original research that is interdisciplinary in focus and are theoretically grounded in the study of journalism and media communication.

The division invites research from a variety of research topics and approaches that include, but are not limited to, historical studies, feminist scholarship, news analysis, political economy, literary analysis with a media foundation, philosophy of communication, ethics, and media criticism. CCS also encourages work that challenges conventional approaches to media, examines paradigmatic assumptions, and explores innovative ways of theorizing.

The division presents awards to the authors of the top-ranking faculty and student submissions. Only one paper per author will be accepted for review and submissions must not be under consideration elsewhere for presentation or publication. See the AEJMC Uniform Call for Papers for submission requirements. Preferred paper length is 7,500 words (approx. 25-pages, excluding tables, figures and references). Abstracts must be no more than 75 words. Papers that do not meet the AEJMC Uniform Call for Papers requirements will not be accepted.

Faculty and student submissions will undergo separate blind review processes by faculty-only judges. Student authors – undergraduate and graduate students enrolled during the 2012-2013 school year – should include a cover sheet that clearly states that the paper is a student submission. Papers with faculty co-authors will be reviewed in the faculty competition and should not be designated as student-authored papers.

Please be sure that submissions contain no identifying information, such as name, university affiliation, job title, etc. Any identifying information found on the submission results in an immediate disqualification of the paper.

Questions concerning submissions should be directed to research co-chairs Katie Foss () or Madeleine Esch ().

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