Minorities and Communication Division

2021 Abstracts

Extended Abstract • Student • Faculty Research Competition • Annalise Baines; Hyunjin Seo, University of Kansas; Muhammad Ittefaq, University of Kansas; Ursula Kamanga; Fatemeh Shayesteh, University of Kansas; Yuchen Liu • The COVID-19 pandemic aggravated existing challenges for racial/ethnic minority immigrants in the United States in obtaining health information and seeking health care. Based on in-depth interviews with 52 racial/ethnic minority immigrants in the U.S. Midwest, this study analyzes how they navigated online information related to COVID-19, how their race/ethnicity played a role in online health information seeking during the pandemic, and their perspectives on getting vaccinated against the virus.

Extended Abstract • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Shaniece Bickham, Nicholls State University; Rockia Harris, LSU; Jinx Broussard, Manship School, LSU • This study conducts a qualitative textual analysis of the discourse surrounding former U. S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Vice President Kamala Harris as they achieved major political milestones. Articles from two respected Black and two premiere mainstream newspapers are analyzed, and intersectionality is employed to ascertain the extent to which racial and gender stereotypes were prevalent. Preliminary findings show Clinton received more coverage than Harris, but Harris’s coverage included more race and gender mentions.

Extended Abstract • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Robin Blom, Ball State University; Gabriel B, Tait, Ball State University; Curtis Matthews, Ball State University; Elena Lazoff • Diversity is an intricate subject in educational settings and an important aspect of ACEJMC accreditation. That body has recently announced changes in the wording of the Diversity and Inclusiveness standard after ongoing complaints that the old standard did not facilitate the changes needed. This study focused on the vocabulary of ACEJMC site-visit reports to explore what concepts are (not) discussed in affirming diversity. For instance, terms as belonging and antiracism are absent from the reports.

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Grace Choi, Columbia College Chicago • #Foxeye is a beauty trend that has been under scrutiny on social media, especially on TikTok. Initially created to elongate the look of a person’s eyes, it has been criticized as a racist representation of Asians, mainly because of the signature pose where beauty creators pull back the corners of their eyes to showcase the look. In order to understand how #foxeye has been interpreted by various TikTok video creators, a comparative content analysis of 507 TikTok videos was conducted. Applying framing theory, this exploratory study identified video information, video creators’ identities, video production components and messages. Results indicated that although there were more beauty videos than Asian activism videos, Asian activism videos had more social media engagements that created conversations about racism. Moreover, beauty video creators were mostly White while Asian activism video creators were East Asian. The results highlight the dominant discourse in the beauty industry and complex understanding of self-identity through deconstructing this beauty trend.

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • George Daniels, The University of Alabama; Lillie Fears, Arkansas State University • Using archival materials available to capture research efforts in the early years of the Minorities and Communication Division, this study takes a historical approach in cataloging the scholarship on journalism and mass communication issues for those in racial minority groups presented between 1972 and 2020. Of 661 papers analyzed for this study, 358 or 54% were authored by a female or had research teams with a woman as first author.

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Danielle Deavours, University of Montevallo; Will Heath; Ryan Broussard • Modern American journalism practices rely heavily on the use of expert sources. Traditionally, white, male officials are the primary sources journalists use in traditional media (Humprecht & Esser, 2017). This silences underrepresented voices, leading to symbolic annihilation of minority communities in media coverage. Journalists often cite their inability to reach communities outside of their own perspective as a primary reason for this symbolic annihilation, but what happens when reporters’ networks of power are widened through digital connections? Previous research has explored the role of social media as a tool for newsgathering (Agbo & Okechukwu, 2016), and some studies suggest social media can provide the opportunity for journalists to reach previously inaccessible communities (Van Leuven et al., 2015). Yet, the network theory of power (Castells, 2011) suggests some nodes of these digital networks can create elite sources like officials or influencers that may uphold traditional sourcing practices and hegemonic power structures (Van Leuven & Deprez, 2017). Utilizing qualitative interviews with professional journalists in traditional media outlets, this study seeks to understand whether tapping into broader networks of power through social media helps journalists combat symbolic annihilation of sources or whether hegemonic structures continue despite widened access to multiperspectival resources.

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Jerry Crawford; Joseph Erba, University of Kansas; Amalia Monroe-Gulick, University of Kansas; Pamela Peters, University of Kansas • The financial pressures experienced by many Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) have worsen during the pandemic. The use of open access resources as a substitute to subscription models may assist HBCUs navigate dire budget forecasts. This study investigates access to research resources at HBCUs with a journalism and mass communications program, as well as perceptions of open access among librarians and instructors. Results reveal access disparities among HBCUs and favorable perceptions towards open access.

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Summer Harlow, University of Houston • Based on interviews with 28 journalists following George Floyd’s murder, this study uses #BlackoutTuesday and posts of black squares on social media in support of Black Lives Matter to explore to what extent journalists are redrawing the boundary between journalism and activism when it comes to taking stances for racial justice. Findings reveal journalists of color and young journalists are change agents, pushing traditional journalistic doxa like objectivity from an orthodox to a heterodox status.

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Magda Konieczna; Ellen Santa Maria, Temple University • Journalistic objectivity has long been in flux. This paper examines what we term “journalistic edge cases”: situations in which journalists aim to subvert norms, and managers push back, reprimanding the journalists and removing them from coverage or firing them. We find journalists arguing that objectivity works differently when reporting on minority groups; managers counter that objectivity is universal. This examination offers insight into how journalism is evolving, in particular in this moment of racial reckoning.

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Yeunjae Lee, University of Miami; Weiting Tao; Jo-Yun Li • Grounded in the situational theory of problem solving (STOPS) and social identity model of collective action (SIMCA), this study aims to examine the motivations of minority publics—Asian Americans—in the U.S. engaging in activism against racism and xenophobia during the COVID-19 pandemic. Results of an online survey with Asian Americans in the U.S. suggested that the Asian American publics’ identity enhanced their perceived injustice, efficacy, and situational motivation to counter racism and xenophobia, which in turn facilitated their online activism on social media. Online activism, then, drove their offline activism. Theoretical and practical implications on collective actions from the minority public are discussed.

Extended Abstract • Student • Faculty Research Competition • Victoria Orrego Dunleavy, University of Miami; Ekaterina Malova, University of Miiami; Diane Millette, University of Miiami • In this study, we examined supportive memorable messages received by Black and Hispanic first-generation students from family members and mentors and explored how issues of demographic similarity affect protégé’s perceptions of mentor support and mentor satisfaction. First, results indicate that students may benefit from activating both mentoring and family connections to succeed in college. Second, students find the same-gender mentoring relationships more satisfying. Thus, students, mentors, and families should be educated on the benefits of supportive communication.

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Teresa Mastin, Michigan State University; Alina Freeman, Michigan State University; Susan Reilly • “This paper explores advertising trade publications’ coverage of the 600 & Rising social movement, which was launched to dismantle systemic racism in the advertising industry. The visibility of the Black Lives Matters movement and the murder of George Floyd served as catalysts for two Black advertising professionals to lead an effort to address how the advertising industry perpetuates systemic racism through its portrayals of African Americans and Blacks.

Research Paper • Student • Faculty Research Competition • Christina Myers; Linwan Wu, University of South Carolina • “This study investigates expressions of the African American experience by examining song lyrics published by Black musicians during two critical time periods in civil rights – 1960-1969 and 2010-2020. To determine the predominate narratives that arise from their songs (N=3,302), LDA-based topic modeling as well as a comparative analysis was employed. Findings indicated the presence of seven topic categories – ‘Love/Relationships,’ ‘God/Religion/Spirituality,’ ‘Social/Activities,’ ‘Wealth/Status,’ ‘Sex/Sexual Desire,’ ‘Social/Political Issues’ and ‘Alcohol/Drugs/Substance Use.’

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Jessica Retis, University of Arizona; Amara Aguilar; Laura Castaneda, USC • Preliminary findings of a larger project examine the experiences of Latinas in journalism. Drawing on Latino/a Critical Communication theory, the new Latina Critical Journalism Studies approach places Latina journalists at the center of the analysis and focuses on intersectionality (gender, race, class, age, language, migration status); diversity, equity and inclusion; news media practices; and structural challenges. A recent survey shows Latina journalists face distinct challenges in the workplace ranging from sexism to racism.

Extended Abstract • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Nathian Shae Rodriguez, San Diego State University • This study evidences how the pop culture pedagogical practice of using Selena as a cultural anchor for a media and communication course can be employed as practice that reflects on, and incorporates, methods that critique and respond to hierarchies of power and identity. Students critically analyzed Latinx mediated representations though pop culture media and highlighted connections with politics and cultural identity, particularly in border regions. Students were empowered to combat racism, homophobia, and other oppressions.

Research Paper • Faculty • Faculty Research Competition • Yong VOLZ, University of Missouri; Indah Setiawati, University of Missouri • This study explores how Asian American journalists define and negotiate their collective identities both in panethnic and professional terms. Focusing on the case of the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA), our analysis finds that, instead of problematizing the blanketing panethnic identity, AAJA members tactically and collectively present themselves as a more homogenous racial group in order to maximize their presence and amplify their voices in both newsrooms and the public sphere. They also publicly vocalize their solidarity with other minority groups, especially with their African American colleagues during the “Black Lives Matter” movement, as a way to insert themselves into the broader social justice project. In addition, they capitalize on their ethnic identity to enhance their journalistic authority when covering identity issues. Our findings add to the thin literature on Asian American journalists as they try to position themselves in the social and professional arenas. This study also highlights the impact of the highly racialized moments of 2020, which was compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic and the Black Lives Matters, on the Asian American journalists.

Extended Abstract • Student • Faculty Research Competition • Farrah Youn-Heil, University of Georgia; Yan Jin, University of Georgia • This study proposes a new conceptual model for understanding interracial communication apprehension (IRCA), delineating how people of color use various communication practices (Orbe, 1998) and coping strategies (Lazarus, 1991) to cope with communication apprehension (McCroskey, 1970) triggered by or associated with racial representation in television-entertainment media and public discourse on race-related topics. In-depth interviews are conducted to provide initial examination of the new IRCA model. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

Extended Abstract • Student • Student Paper • Tania Ganguli, University of Minnesota • Stories about deportation, like all pieces of journalism, include background information – that which isn’t explicitly tied to sourcing – which helps identify and reify common knowledge. This study examines that unattributed text to understand how those words construct the reality of deportation of Latinx migrants. By analyzing text from 2014 and 2018 at three newspapers on the U.S./Mexico border, this study illuminates how the construction of Latinx migrants changed as the American political climate shifted.

Research Paper • Student • Student Paper • Farah Harb, Wayne State University • The Arab ethnicity encompasses many countries — from North African nations like Egypt and Tunisia, to Gulf countries like Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, to Mid-East countries like Lebanon and Syria. Although the general language in these countries is Arabic, natives to each country speak different dialects and follow different traditions. For example, although Kuwait and Saudi Arabia (both Gulf countries in the Mid-East) are neighboring countries, their dialects and traditional attire are so different that one can tell them apart just by the way they speak or dress. The same goes for other Arabic-speaking countries. Due to historic influences, some of these Arab countries speak French as their second language (e.g., Lebanon, Syria, Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia), whereas the rest speak English. There are significant differences in the Arabic spoken by a Moroccan person, compared to Arabic spoken by a Lebanese person. While there are similarities between Arabs who come from these different countries, major differences include variations in cultural dialects, religions, traditions, dress codes, liberalism, and so on. Although Arabs come from different backgrounds, Hollywood has long portrayed them as different shades of barbaric (Shaheen, 2003). The term “barbaric” here refers to attributes that have been falsely associated with the Arab image and constantly perpetuated through TV shows, movies, books, paintings, and other forms of art and media.

Extended Abstract • Student • Student Paper • Jaquela Chalise Macklin, The University of Alabama • Many scholars have done research on mental health care, but there are few studies on mental health care in the Black community, particularly how the mass media impacts the stability of Black people’s mental health. This paper focuses on using cultivation theory and conducting qualitative research by way of interviews with the intent to gain first-hand accounts from Black people about the state of their mental health and how mass media possibly impacts it.

Extended Abstract • Student • Student Paper • Ajia Meux, University of Oklahoma; Britney Gilmore, Texas Christian University • This study seeks to explore the relationship between locus of control, online and offline activism and sharing and forwarding behavior of videos of unarmed Black people being murdered by the police. This research is important because it attempts to define the particular sharing and forwarding behavior at the granular level of online activism based on the idea of control for a population who is often marginalized and underrepresented in more formal areas of political power.

Research Paper • Student • Student Paper • Erin Perry, Wayne State University • This visual rhetorical analysis of a viral image from a 2019 interview between CBS journalist Gayle King and singer R. Kelly uses co-cultural theory to make three arguments. First, presumptions are widely held about Black women’s demeanor in the workplace. Second, Black women are members of a co-cultural group that uses various communicative strategies to constantly resist the Angry Black Woman stereotype. Third, Black women and their allies appropriate stereotypes into opportunities for their praise.

Research Paper • Student • Student Paper • Chelsea Peterson-Salahuddin, Northwestern University • In line with the theory of information poverty, one could argue that women of color may face high barriers to news information seeking. However, social and political trends point to the ways women of color are highly informed. Motivated by this tension, this study engaged focus group interviews to examine women of color’s news information seeking habits. Findings suggest holding a woman of color identity does not deter, but motivates news information seeking processes.

Extended Abstract • Student • Student Paper • Madhavi Reddi, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • This paper introduces the concept of shared identity endorsement narratives in political campaigns of minority candidates to provide a framework for researchers to examine celebrity endorsements along the lines of shared racial/ethnic/cultural identity. Using examples of endorsements of Kamala Harris by North American celebrities of Indian descent, I outline four elements of shared identity endorsement narratives in political campaigns – 1) entertainment value, 2) engagement with identity politics, 3) timelessness, 4) solidarity and validation.

Research Paper • Student • Student Paper • Robert Richardson, University of Texas at Austin • A growing number of Black female newscasters are embracing natural hair on television, breaking a long-established requirement for anchors and reporters of all races to have straight hair. This study asks questions about industry pressures to conform to White normative standards and individual issues of identity and expression. Interviews with 25 Black women who work as on-air talent reveal newsrooms are becoming more accepting of natural styles but there is still progress to be made.

Research Paper • Faculty • Student Paper • Tanya Gardner; Wei Sun, Howard University; Carolyn Stroman • “On May 25, 2020, in the midst of the pandemic crisis, an innocent Black man, George Floyd, died as a result of police brutality. This event sparked nationwide protests against racial inequality, led by the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement. While the number of COVID-19 cases continued to increase in many states, and as businesses began to re-open, there were fears that the BLM movement protests contributed to the resurgence of COVID-19 spread (Meyer, June 1, 2020). In a time of political and racial division, people expressed their support for, or opposition to, the claim that there was a connection between the protests and the rising number of cases.

This study aims to investigate how social media users make sense of the relationship between COVID-19 and BLM, and how health disparities of COVID-19 and race have been discussed in Twitter posts. The findings of the research will increase our understanding of how social media impacts knowledge regarding public health crises.”

Extended Abstract • Student • Student Paper • Xue Gong, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Shanshan Jiang; Fangjing Tu, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Since the COVID-19 pandemic, Chinese and the broader Asian communities have become the target of resurgent racism both online and offline. Combining Twitter data, governmental data and COVID case data, this study uses both interrupted time series analysis and traditional time series analysis to investigate how anti-Asian sentiments in social media are systematically enhanced by a series of socioeconomic factors and discursive opportunities provided by demagogue attacks on the Asian communities. The results shed implications on building racial justice during a pandemic like COVID-19.

Research Paper • Student • Student Paper • Kris Vera-Phillips, Arizona State University • This research paper explores the erasure of Filipino nurses from American medical television shows in order to highlight biases in media that lead to a scripted reality that ignores an essential community of workers who are responsible for the daily care of patients. This paper examines the relationship between Filipinos and American power structures. It will also investigate the issue of erasure in television shows through the lens of postcolonial and critical race theories.

Research Paper • Student • Student Paper • Jiehua Zhang • Ethnic media play important roles in constructing or reconstructing ethnic identity, facilitating the acculturation process, and encouraging political participation among ethnic groups. The current study looked at the moderation effects of ethnic news use in the relationships between political ideology and presidential evaluations among Chinese Americans during the Covid-19 pandemic when the virus was called “Chinese virus” by some news media and the former president. Relying on a survey of Chinese Americans conducted between October and December 2020, the study showed that while conservative Chinese Americans were more likely than liberals to approve of the former president Trump, the effects of political ideology on the presidential evaluations were diminishing for people who used ethnic media more frequently to get news.

<2021 Abstracts

Mass Communication and Society Division

2021 Abstracts

Research Paper • Student • Moeller Student Paper Competition • Alexis Fitzsimmons, University of Florida; Yufan “Sunny” Qin, University of Florida; Eve Heffron, University of Florida • Purpose vs. Mission vs. Vision: Persuasive Appeals and Components in Corporate Statements • Purpose statements persuade stakeholders of companies’ reasons for being. However, there is a lack of distinction among purpose, mission, and vision statements. This quantitative content analysis explored the differences among Fortune Global companies’ purpose, mission, and vision statements, adding to a much-needed body of literature on corporate purpose. Results provide implications for communicators who write these statements as well as theoretical implications related to rhetorical and social identification theories and organizational identification.

Research Paper • Student • Moeller Student Paper Competition • Kate Stewart, University of South Carolina • The New Media Normal: Survey-based study of COVID-19 Effects on Motivations to Consume Non-News Media • This large-scale, self-administered Qualtrics survey, based on a representative sample from 2020 United States Census Data, study specifically investigates the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, in a mediating role, on motivations to consume non-news media by having an impact on social escapism, social presence, and coping mechanisms. The scope of this analysis has relevance as a current on-going global pandemic and could be replicated to study how disasters or other pandemics affect non-news media consumption.

Research Paper • • Open Competition • Ivy Ashe; Ryan Wallace, The University of Texas at Austin; Ivan Lacasa-Mas, Universitat Internacional de Catalunya; Q. Elyse Huang, The University of Texas at Austin • News in the Time of Corona: Institutional trust, collective narcissism, and the role of individual experiences in perceptions of COVID-19 coverage • All public health crises have an element of uncertainty to them; however, even in this context, COVID-19 stands out. Trust heuristics such as institutional trust, and trust in media in particular, become more important for people seeking information. In this study, we use a cross-sectional nationally representative study of the American online population to better understand factors impacting overall perceptions of and trust in COVID-19 news. We focus on a subset of people exhibiting traits of collective narcissism, the emotional investment in an in-group such as the nation-state. We show that for core values like institutional trust and perceptions of news media in general, indices for collective narcissism may prove valuable in understanding relationships between audience perceptions and core ideological beliefs. However, in the case of individual news events where uncertainty may be high, individual components of collective narcissism (i.e. anti-elitism, general conspiracy belief, and xenophobia) remain better perception indicators.”

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Seth Ashley, Boise State University; Stephanie Craft, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign; Adam Maksl, Indiana University Southeast; Melissa Tully, University of Iowa; Emily Vraga, University of Minnesota • News literacy, conspiratorial thinking, and political orientation in the 2020 U.S. election • The rapid spread of misinformation in the digital age has increased calls for news literacy to help mitigate endorsement of conspiracy theories and other falsehoods. This study conducted in the week before the 2020 U.S. presidential election shows that individuals with higher levels of news literacy were more likely to reject conspiratorial thinking, but also that news literacy is unevenly distributed across the population and matters more for individuals with liberal views than conservative views.

Research Paper • Student • Open Competition • Kjerstin Thorson, Michigan State University; Ava Francesca Battocchio, Michigan State University • Change is the only constant: Young adults as platform architects and the consequences for news • We examine digital platform repertoires for news among young adults. Through the lens of “digital labor,” we explore the work that young adults’ undertake to design and maintain their personal media systems, and the consequences of those practices for news use. Drawing on 30 in-depth interviews with 18-34-year-olds, including a shared reading of participants’ newsfeeds in their top three social media platforms, we develop the theoretical concept of personal platform architecture. Our findings suggest that young adults architect and maintain platform repertoires for sociality, personal interests, and emotional well-being rather than for information—but with substantial consequences for news.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Porismita Borah; Xizhu Xiao; Yan Su • The interplay of narrative versus statistics messages and misperceptions on COVID-19 vaccine intention • Drawing on exemplification theory, we used a moderated moderated mediation model to test the relationships among message manipulation, perceived expectancies, perceived susceptibility, COVID-19 misperceptions and intention to vaccinate. Findings show that perceived expectancies mediate the relationship between message manipulation and vaccine intention. Findings indicate that among individuals with high misperceptions about COVID-19, statistical messages are more persuasive for individuals with high perceived susceptibility, while narrative messages are more influential for individuals with low perceived susceptibility.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Maria DeMoya, DePaul University; Vanessa Bravo, Elon University • New Cuban-American narratives about the homeland: Moving away from traditional storylines shared by “hardliners” via Twitter • This study analyzed Twitter conversations about Cuba, posted between June 1, 2017, and July 31, 2020, to discover the main themes that “hardliners” and the “new Cuban diaspora” communicated about in relation to Cuba and its future. This is a relevant and timely topic because, without a Castro as the head of the Cuban government for the first time in over six decades, the international community is getting to know a different image of Cuba. In this context, the Cuban diaspora in Florida has also changed and divided into two contrasting groups: the “hardliners,” who completely oppose the Cuban government and do not want any softening in the U.S.-Cuba relationship; and a newer generation whose members do not support the government on the island but prioritize their support for the Cuban people and are in favor of building new relationships on the island. The younger community approves the travel to the island, supporting their relatives at home through remittances, and potentially ending the U.S. embargo imposed on Cuba since 1960. As the analysis of their Tweets showed, this second group is a “new Cuban diaspora” that is changing the way in which the Cuban diaspora performs its public diplomacy roles in the United States.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Erik Bucy, Texas Tech University; Duncan Prettyman, Colorado Technical University • Misinformation and News Verification: Why Users Fact Check Suspect Content • The rise of misinformation has led to a corresponding call for more investigation into the antecedents of news verification, and for improved understanding about who verifies and why. In this study we conduct a thematic analysis of participants’ open-ended responses (N = 2,938 individual thoughts, volunteered by N = 715 participants) to an online questionnaire to explore the factors that may influence individuals’ decisions to verify or not verify information they have reason to believe might be false when they are given the opportunity to do so. We investigate what themes are associated with information verification broadly, then examine the prevalence of themes when associated with several individual difference variables that previous research suggests may be impactful. Specifically, we examine the association of themes with news knowledge (high vs low), news skepticism (high vs low), and individuals’ motivations for media use (surveillance vs entertainment). Descriptive results show significant differences in the characteristics of searchers compared to non-searchers. In addition, news knowledge is a particularly potent individual difference: individuals with high news knowledge had more thoughts about the need to verify information, concerns about manipulative intent, and were far less entertained by the idea of fake news than those with low news knowledge.

Research Paper • Postdoc • Open Competition • Richard Canevez, University of Hawaii at Manoa; Moshe Karabelnik, University of Hawaii at Manoa; Jenifer Sunrise Winter, University of Hawaii at Manoa • Media Mistrust and the Meta-Frame: Collective Framing of Police Brutality Evidence Reporting on YouTube • Social media impacts the news media’s role in police accountability. This convergence produces collective framings of police violence-related evidence that requires further attention. Using a frame analysis of news outlets and content analysis of comments on YouTube, we identify frames, responses, and the collective framing that results from this converging environment. Our findings suggest a triumvirate of competing frames around police brutality, with mistrust of media complicating the role news media plays in accountability.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Stella Chia, City University of Hong Kong; Fangcao Lu; Al Gunther • Who Conducts Fact Checking and Does It Matter?: Examining the Antecedents and Consequences of Fact-checking Behavior in Hong Kong. • This study utilizes a representative survey to examine multiple ways in which people engage in fact checking in a highly divided Hong Kong. The findings showed that stronger partisans who had greater news consumption were more likely to engage in fact-checking behavior. However, frequent fact-checking behavior enhanced, rather than reduced, their beliefs in pro-attitudinal misinformation. A warning of the backfire effects of fact-checking on exacerbating opinion polarization and social division is issued.

Extended Abstract • Research Fellow • Open Competition • Agnes Chuah; Shirley Ho; Edson Tandoc Jr; Peihan Yu • Extended Abstract: Exploring the Information Authentication Acts of Experts, Environmentalists, and the Public in Southeast Asia • Drawing on the Audiences’ Acts of Authentication framework, this study explores how the public, energy experts, and environmentalists in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore authenticate energy related information in a period of energy-related misinformation. The findings showed that the authentication behaviors across the three countries were consistent with the two-step process proposed by the framework. Individuals would turn to external forms of authentication when they were internally unconvinced of the authentication of the information.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Di Cui • What Remains? The Relationship between Counterfactual Thinking, Story Outcome, Enjoyment, and Emotion in Narratives • Counterfactual thinking is a psychological concept. It explains the phenomenon that occurs when individuals reflectively imagine different outcomes for events that have already happened. This paper examines the application of counterfactual thinking in the field of media psychology. It examines if readers can generate counterfactual thinking in a fictional context. It also looks at the relationship between counterfactual thinking, enjoyment, and negative emotions. By conducting two experiments, the author finds readers can generate counterfactual thinking toward narrative pieces. Different story outcomes play an essential role in influencing the generation of counterfactuals. These findings indicate that counterfactual thinking can be a critical factor that impacts audiences’ understanding and reimaging stories in the long-term.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Roxanne Vos, Radboud University Nijmegen; Serena Daalmans, Radboud University, Behavioural Science Institute • Fit Bodies that Inspire? A Qualitative study exploring perceptions of and motivations for interacting with Fitspiration content on social media • The purpose of this qualitative study (N = 34 interviews) was to gain insight into the motives that underlie the interaction with Fitspiration content on social media and the personal meaning making processes surrounding this interactions. Based on the data four motives to post ‘fitspirational’ content and eight to follow the trend on social media were constructed. These give insight into the positive and negative ways participants believe Fitspiration affects them and others.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Lisa Farman, Ithaca College • Political news personalization and the third-person effect: Examining support for restrictions on audience data collection • An online survey (N=561) tested perceptions of the personalization of online political news. A third-person effect emerged: respondents believed others would be more affected by personalized political news than themselves. Those who thought others would be more affected by news personalization were also more likely to support restrictions on websites’ use of audience data to personalize news. Narcissism was a significant moderator of the relationship between perceived effect on self and support for regulation.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Juliana Fernandes, University of Florida; Moritz Cleve, University of Florida • The Labeling Experiment: Examining the Differential Effects of Equivalent Labels on Individuals’ Associations toward Immigrants • Using a mix-methods approach, this study examines the differential effects of equivalent labels (i.e., authorized, documented, legal vs. unauthorized, undocumented, illegal) and the impact of these labels on individuals’ associations toward immigrants. Results of three studies show that those exposed to positive valenced labels produce more favorably associations of immigrants than those exposed to negative valenced labels (Study 1a), that associations tend to be quicker for labels such as illegal and slower for labels such as authorized (Study 1b), and that the interaction of association type (warmth/morality vs. competence) with association valence accounts for more variance in evaluations than labels, especially for negatively valenced associations (Study 2). Overall, the series of studies suggests a stronger influence of associations about warmth and morality compared to associations about an immigrant’s competence.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Débora Martini, University of Colorado Boulder; Harsha Gangadharbatla, University of Colorado Boulder • Pornography Addiction and Social Media: An exploratory study on the impact of social media on the road to porn abstinence. • Pornography addiction is on the rise in our society and excessive use often leads to negative life consequences. Just as other addictions, porn addiction can also be triggered by a number of factors. Of these factors, the role of social media has not been fully studied or understood. The current exploratory study uses a survey method to investigate the role of social media in porn addiction among Brazilian porn addicts. Results suggest that social media content is seen as a trigger by self-identified porn addicts and the factors that influence such perception include age of the addict, gender, and the number of times they have relapsed. And changes in behavior on social media are influenced by individuals’ perceptions of social media as a trigger.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Mugur Geana, University of Kansas; Nathaniel Rabb, The Policy Lab, Brown University; Steven Sloman, The Policy Lab, Brown University • The Growing Influence of Political Ideology in Shaping Health Behavior in the United States • Political polarization is a growing concern in many parts of the world and is particularly acute in the US. This study reinforces previous research on long-term health consequences driven by partisanship by showing that these ideologically-driven differences manifest even more acutely in situations where the possibility of severe illness or death is immediate, and the potential societal impact is significant. The substantial implications for public health research and practice are both methodological and conceptual.

Research Paper • Student • Open Competition • Tong Jee Goh, Nanyang Technological University; Shirley Ho • Public buying behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic: Presumed media influence and the spillover effects of SARS • Testing for a historical spillover effect, this study examined how the influence of presumed media influence (IPMI) processes differed between people with low and high perceived severity of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), when it comes to predicting Singaporeans’ purchasing intention during the COVID-19 pandemic. Results showed that people’s presumptions of media influence on others predicted their intention to buy more. The study also found a historical spillover effect of pre-existing attitude towards SARS.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Gretchen Hoak • Unprecedented Times: How Journalists Coped with the Emotional Impact of Covering the COVID-19 Pandemic • This study explored the stress of covering the COVID-19 pandemic on journalists in the United States. A survey of 222 journalists revealed covering the story was both stressful and emotionally difficult. Females and those who were younger and less experienced perceived higher levels of stress and felt the story was more emotionally difficult than their counterparts. The repetitive nature of the coverage, interacting with victims, and public backlash for their reporting were among the top stressors. Supervisor support was associated with higher levels of work commitment and lower levels of stress. Nearly 60% of participants indicated they received no stress management or coping resources from their news organizations. Of those that did receive support options, most did not take advantage noting the resources were either not feasible or not helpful. Implications for organizational support and its impact on journalist stress are discussed.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Iveta Imre, U Mississippi; Jason Cain • Social Media Use Intensity and Privacy Concerns: The Implications for Social Capital • This study examines how SNS use intensity, specifically social routine integration and social integration and emotional routine, correlate with social capital, as well as how privacy concerns impact the relationship between SNS use intensity and social capital. Findings support that social capital correlates with both factors on the use intensity scale. Only the accuracy factor was a significant predictor of bridging capital while both accuracy and control, and collection proved significant for bonding capital.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Jessica Shaw, Louisiana State University; Soojin Kim, Louisiana State University; Yongick Jeong, Louisiana State University • Determination of the Factors Influencing the Third-Person Effects in Health and Environmental Concerns • This study examines how three personal factors (issue involvement, behavior change intention, and consumption amount) influences the third-person effect in different public issues of health and environment. By employing two measures of the third-person effect (perceived threat of public issues and perceived likelihood of participating in risky behavior), this study found that the influence of the three personal factors vary across issues and measures. Practical implications and suggestions are also discussed.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Shaheen Kanthawala, University of Alabama; Shupei Yuan, Northern Illinois University; Tanya Ott-Fulmore • Science Podcasters and Centering Fairness in Content Creation • “The podcast industry has steadily grown over the last decade and keeps showing promise for further growth. Science and science-related podcasts are a popular genre of podcasts that seem to play a role in science communication. Fundamentally, information provided through science communication is a resource, and there is often disparity in the allocation of most resources. As creators of content that could not only help, but also possibly add to this disparity, science podcasters need to be aware of their audience when developing podcasts.

Therefore, we use the fairness and justice literature to explore how science podcasters think about their audiences when creating content. We further explore how science podcasters view themselves and the role of their podcasts within the science communication space. To do this, we conducted a survey with 147 of the top science podcasters (identified from Apple Podcasts’ top rankings). Our results indicated podcasters view themselves in a connecting role between scientific information lay audiences. They hold ethical values and are mindful of principles of fairness. These findings indicate that they view themselves in the role of science communicators – a role of vital importance today. Their resources should, therefore, be harness in the future to spread science and scientific information to the general public.”

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Danielle Kilgo, University of Minnesota; Rachel Mourao, Michigan State University; Tania Ganguli, University of Minnesota • Media Consumption, Attitudes, and #BlackLivesMatter on the Ground, Court and Field • This work utilizes a nationally representative survey to explore how news media consumption of mainstream, partisan and sports news organizations and the attitudes held by audiences affect recall, negative attitudes towards protest utility, and support for Black Lives Matter. We include considerations for celebrity advocacy efforts in the NBA and NFL. We found ideological and political barriers to support for BLM, indicating conservatism has a stronger impact on protest attitudes, regardless of the tactics employed.

Research Paper • Student • Open Competition • Jisoo Kim, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Gaofei Li, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Xining Liao, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Hernando Rojas • When does the Past Colonial Memory Plug into Nationalism? Information and Media’s Priming of Anti-Japan Nationalism in South Korea and China • Underlining the importance of the respective context of nationalism, this study focuses on anti-Japan nationalism in South Korea and China, which share a similar history of being colonized by Japan. Anti-Japan nationalism has always been alive but explicitly appears in people’s attitudes and behaviors only at certain times. Our study is centered on how information regarding a painful memory of the colonial past may prime individuals to express stronger anti-Japan attitudes and behaviors. Our results suggest that our prime contextually interacts with different types of media in unique ways: in South Korea, those that use social media more often are primed to express increased anti-Japanese nationalism, while in China it is those that consume more mainstream media. Implications of our findings are discussed.

Research Paper • Student • Open Competition • Tom Johnson; Taeyoung Lee; Chenyan Jia, The University of Texas at Austin • Politically Contested Beliefs: Why Do Conservatives Tend to Have More Inaccurate Beliefs About COVID-19? • A fair amount of research showed that politically conservative people are susceptible to false claims about COVID-19. Based on the belief gap hypothesis, this study examines why conservatives have more false beliefs about COVID-19. A representative survey showed that institutional trust was associated with people’s beliefs around COVID-19. Meanwhile, conservative identity indirectly influenced having false beliefs through institutional trust. Also, support for Trump, education, and the use of conservative media predicted having false beliefs.

Research Paper • Student • Open Competition • Lincoln Lu, University of Florida; T. Franklin Waddell, College of Journalism and Communications, University of Florida • The new yellow peril: Priming news context on attitudes towards Asian models, and brands • Recent increase in incidents of violence towards Asian Americans are indicative of underlying animosity often overlooked in discussions of race. Within a news story advertising context, an online experiment (N = 372) found some evidence that consumer ethnocentrism may moderate perceptions of attractiveness for male Asian models, consumer attitudes towards the ad, brand, and purchase intention. These results provide insight into race-based stereotyping at a time of flux surrounding race in America.

Research Paper • Student • Open Competition • Nick Mathews, University of Minnesota; Christopher Ali • Informational, Infrastructural and Emotional Labor: The Extra Work in a News and Broadband Desert • This study offers a systematic qualitative investigation inside a combined news and broadband desert. Despite popular attention to both news and broadband deserts, most recently and acutely during the coronavirus pandemic, there has been no scholarly research into communities where these two deserts intersect. This article confronts this knowledge gap. Built on 19 in-depth interviews with residents of Surry County, Va., we argue that life in a news and broadband desert requires a substantial amount of labor to obtain the information and connectivity so many Americans take for granted. Our findings demonstrate three areas of increased labor for residents: (1) informational, (2) infrastructural and (3) emotional. We conclude with a discussion of life and labor in this desert, specifically, and how it may apply to similar communities across the United States.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Newly Paul, University of North Texas; Gwendelyn Nisbett, University of North Texas • Jessica Jones: Exploring Marvel’s Dark Anti-Hero and the Portrayal of Complex Women Characters • This project uses social construction of gender theory to explore transmedia narratives of Jessica Jones in the graphic novel Alias, and the Netflix television shows Jessica Jones and The Defenders. Transmedia narratives often ascribe new dimensions to characters and narratives, and we aim to compare and contrast the narratives that emerge in these spaces. Using thematic analysis, we find that Jones breaks the sexist tropes often associated with female superheroes, and exemplifies the qualities of a strong, independent woman.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Chang Sup Park; Barbara Kaye • Why and How People Avoid News during the Coronavirus Pandemic: An Analysis of News Repertoire • This study explored how the coronavirus pandemic as a large-scale news event functioned as a catalyst for news avoidance. In-depth interviews with 50 adults in South Korea in May and June 2020 revealed three reasons reconfiguring their media repertoire to ‘coronablock’ news about the pandemic: to tune out, to control information flow, and to seek positive news. The findings contribute to the understanding of news avoidance during a time of global crisis.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Scott Parrott; David L. Albright; Nicholas Eckhart; Kirsten Laha-Walsh • The media affect them, but not me: Veteran and civilian perceptions of news coverage about U.S. military veterans • Informed by theory of the third-person effect, the present study examined civilian and veteran perceptions of news content concerning veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces, including the perceived quality and effects of news content. A national survey of adults in the United States, including veterans and civilians, documented the presence of a third-person effect in which individuals estimate that media exposure affects others more so than themselves. The effect occurred among both civilians and veterans. In addition, when asked to recall news stories about veterans, respondents often recalled stereotypical stories related to victimization/harm, heroism, charity/social support, mental illness, and violence. The results are important for veterans because the third-person effect may lead veterans to assume media content affects public perceptions of veterans, which could in turn affect veterans’ perceptions of interactions with civilians in social, employment, educational, and other settings. Put simply, veterans could act differently when they assume others are thinking they are traumatized heroes, the predominant image conveyed by U.S. news outlets.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Scott Parrott; Hailey Grace Allen • Swapping Insults, Neglecting Policy: How U.S. Presidential Candidates Communicate About Mental Health • Background. Candidates for high office in the United States of America play an important role in determining the political agenda and shaping public and mass media understanding of which issues should receive attention. Critics contend politicians rarely address mental health, despite the importance of the federal government in ensuring Americans access to quality care. Aims. Two studies sought to understand how candidates for the highest office in the U.S. — the presidency — communicated about mental health using formal (mental, depress, anxiety) and informal (crazy, insane) terminology in social media posts and debates. Methods. Two coders examined 1,807 tweets from 41 politicians who competed in the 2016 and 2020 races, plus transcripts from 47 debates during the primaries and General Elections. Results. Politicians often stigmatized mental illness, using mental health-related slang terms to insult opponents. They afforded less attention to policy and calls for action related to mental health. Conclusions. The authors offer recommendations for mental health professionals and advocates to encourage politicians to address mental health policy while avoiding stigmatizing language.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Mallory Perryman, Virginia Commonwealth • My Pandemic News is Better Than Yours: Audience Perceptions of Early News Coverage About Covid-19 • This study focuses on how American audiences perceived news coverage during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic in the United States. Through a survey-experiment of American news consumers (N=767) over a three-day period in mid-March 2020, we show that news consumers had positive attitudes toward their own Covid-19 news sources, but were critical about the news sources others were using to get information about the virus. Our data reveal evidence of presumed media influence, where audiences’ evaluations of pandemic news were linked to their perceptions of how news content was impacting others’ health behaviors.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Jeffrey Riley, Georgia Southern University • When In Doubt, Blame China: A Qualitative Analysis of Conservative Coronavirus Content on Reddit • This is a qualitative content analysis examining the top content posted to the conservative, /r/The_Donald-affiliated subreddit /r/Wuhan_Flu from February 2020 until August 2020. The expectations of health misinformation and widespread downplaying of the virus were not met. Instead, /r/Wuhan_Flu deviated from Donald Trump’s public statements about the pandemic and tended to be far more alarmist than calming. Instead of health misinformation, the subreddit tended to encourage masks and social distancing. However, the results also indicate that geopolitical issues with China were the primary topic, with 217 posts containing negative language or visual images directed at China. Based on literature about radicalized digital spaces, /r/Wuhan_Flu represents the potential for dangerous real-world consequences, especially considering the increase in hate crimes against Asians and Pacific Islanders in the United States since the beginning of the pandemic.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Aysha Vear, University of Maine; Judith Rosenbaum, University of Maine • Identity for Sale: Authenticity, Commodification, and Agency in YouTube Influencers • Focusing on YouTube influencers, this study extends structuration theory into the realm of social media. Interviews, observations, and content analysis were used to explore the relationship between agency, commodification, and authenticity in influencers’ performances. Results show a need to reconceptualize structures as emergent and embodied; that authenticity and agency are inexorably linked and constrained by the commodification inherent in influencers’ performances; and that influencers face a hierarchy of choices that enable and constrain their agency.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Burton Speakman, Kennesaw State University; Marcus Funk • Influencing the agenda: The role of conservative figures in melding media agendas for social media communities • Historically, mainstream news media held significant agenda setting authority. As news and social media evolve, individual actors and digital communities have to meld and filter diverse media agendas into one curated, personal space for their followers. This article examines attempts at far right agendamelding by fringe and conspiracy-affiliated Reps. Lauren Boebert and Majorie Taylor Greene during and after their respective runs for Congress. Results suggest far right politicians can meld agendas from friendly media and their own campaigns, while rejecting mainstream agendas, to influence their Twitter community.

Research Paper • Student • Open Competition • Yan Su; Porismita Borah; Xizhu Xiao • “Infodemic” amid the pandemic: Social media news use, homogeneous discussions, self-perceived media literacy, and misperceptions • Heeding the call to address the “infodemic” in the COVID-19 crisis, this research investigates the associations among social media news use, homogeneous online discussion, self-perceived media literacy, and misinformation perceptions about the COVID-19. We use an online survey and a moderated mediation model. Results show that social media news use is positively associated with misinformation perceptions. Moreover, homogeneous online discussion was a significant mediator, such that social media news use is positively associated with homogeneous discussion, and the latter, in turn, is associated with increased misinformation perceptions. Further, self-perceived media literacy is a significant moderator for both the main and the indirect effects, such that the associations became weaker among those with higher self-perceived media literacy. Findings provide insights into the significance of information sources, discussion network heterogeneity, and media literacy education.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Chris Chao Su, Boston University • Attention Convergence and Narrative Coalescence: The Impact of the US Presidential Election on the Generational Gap in Online News Use • This study revisits the contentious role of the 2016 US presidential election in shaping news and disinformation use by contrasting usage networks of millennials and boomers, two groups with disparate preferences. Theoretically, through bringing the literature on selective exposure thesis into media events, this study advances an analytical framework to approach increased divergence and intensified polarization in the election through a sociological perspective. Empirically, this study compares the generational gap in online news usage in a typical month (Apirl-2015) and the month just before Elections (October-2016), by conducting relational analyses of shared usage for each cohort comprising all major news outlets. The analyses reveal that during the election boomers moved toward a collection of digital-native outlets that produce and disseminate political disinformation – the fake fringe – as well as more toward conservative partisan side of the news landscape. Investigating audience convergence during Donald Trump’s election, this study demonstrates that although the public tends to converge their attention in the event, the systematic divergence in consuming various narratives of the event forcefully steers to audience divergence compared to uneventful periods.

Research Paper • Student • Open Competition • Yuan Sun; Nicholas Eng, Penn State University; Jessica Myrick, Penn State University • Getting Inspired by Fitspiration Posts: Effects of Picture Type, Numbers of Likes and Inspiration Emotions on Workout Intentions • The study investigated the potential positive effects of fitspiration posts for inspiring physical exercises through a 2 (Numbers of likes: High vs. Low) x 2 (Picture type: Body transformation vs. After-only) between-subject experiment. Numbers of likes cued subjective norm, while body transformation posts elicited inspirational emotion, which mediated the effects of picture type on workout intention. Picture type and numbers of likes jointly affected descriptive norm and inspiration emotion, which led to workout intention.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Edson Tandoc Jr; Hye Kyung Kim, Nanyang Technological U • Avoiding real news, believing in fake news? Investigating pathways from fake news exposure to misbelief • This study sought to examine the potential role of news avoidance in the link between exposure to and belief in misinformation. Using two-wave panel survey data in Singapore, we found that exposure to misinformation contributes to information overload, which is subsequently associated with news fatigue as well as with difficulty in analyzing information. News fatigue and analysis paralysis also subsequently led to news avoidance, which made individuals more likely to believe in misinformation.

Extended Abstract • Student • Open Competition • Taylor Voges, UGA; LaShonda Eaddy, Southern Methodist University; Shelley Spector, Museum of Public Relations; Yan Jin, University of Georgia • Effective Health Risk Communications: Lessons Learned about COVID-19 Pandemic through the Lens of Practitioners • The study utilizes semi-structured interviews of health risk communication practitioners in the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic. The contingency theory of strategic conflict management is the guide to understanding the challenges and nuances. Insights gained from interviewing practitioners (projected, n=40) from different sectors with diverse professional backgrounds will help advance the contingency theory’s application in understanding the dynamics observed in times of health risks and crises threatening societal wellbeing.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • T. Franklin Waddell, College of Journalism and Communications, University of Florida; Chelsea Moss • Fake News in the Family: How Family Communication Patterns and Conflict History Affect the Intent to Correct Misinformation among Family Members • Do family communication patterns or family conflict history affect the intention to correct fake news shared by family members? A pre-registered online survey (N = 595) was conducted to answer this question. Results revealed that conversation orientation and conformity orientation positively predicted the intention to correct family members, while family history was negatively related with corrective action intention. Presumed influence, by comparison, was not significantly related to corrective action. Theoretical implications are discussed.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Chuqing Dong, Michigan State University; Yuan (Daniel) Cheng, University of Minnesota – Twin Cities • How do NPOs effectively engage with publics on social media? Examining the effects of interactivity and emotion on Twitter • “Nonprofit organizations (NPOs) are increasingly using social media to engage with publics. However, communication factors associated with effective social media use remain unclear in the nonprofit literature. Drawing from literature on public engagement, interactivity, and emotions, this study employs a computational approach to examine the effects of communication strategies on NPOs’ public engagement on Twitter (i.e., likes and retweets). By analyzing functional interactivity, contingency interactivity, and emotion elements of tweets from the 100 largest U.S. NPOs (n= 301,559), this study finds negative effects of functional interactivity on likes, negative effects of contingency interactivity on likes and retweets, but a positive effect of functional interactivity on retweets. The findings also show negative effects of emotion valence on likes and retweets but positive effects of emotion strength on likes and retweets. Using NPO type as a moderator suggests that there are varying effects of interactivity and emotion on public engagement for service-oriented and other types of NPOs. Practical implications regarding strategic social media use in the nonprofit sector are discussed.

Research Paper • Student • Open Competition • Alexander Moe, SUNY Brockport • Do All Types of Warning Labels Work on Flagging Misinformation? The Effects of Warning Labels on Share Intention of COVID-19 Vaccine Misinformation • Using a survey experiment (N = 403), this study tested the effectiveness of Twitter warning labels flagging misinformation pertaining to COVID-19 vaccines. Results showed that all types of warning labels decreased perceived credibility and share intention compared to no label condition. Moderated mediation analysis showed that vaccine hesitancy moderated the relationship between exposure to warning labels and perceived credibility while perceived credibility served as a mediator on the effects of warning labels on share intention.

Research Paper • Faculty • Open Competition • Xiaochen Zhang, University of Oklahoma; Jonathan Borden • Linguistic Attribution Framing: A Linguistic Category Approach to Framing Crisis • Based on Attribution Theory, this study proposes a linguistic category approach to framing. A 2 (language: concrete/abstract) x 3 (social identity: out-group/in-group/control) experiment in a political crisis context was used to understand linguistic framing’s effects on attribution. Main effects a) of abstract (vs. concrete) language and b) of out-group (vs. in-group) on higher attribution, future crisis occurrence and unethical perceptions of the politician were found. Implications for framing research are discussed.

Research Paper • Student • Student Competition • Wen Xuan Hor, Nanyang Technological University; Rui Yan Leo, Nanyang Technological University; Xin Jie Tan, Nanyang Technological University; Agnes Yeong Shuan Chai, Nanyang Technological University • The Effects of Nudges on Social Media Users in the Context of COVID-19 Fake News • This study examines the applicability of nudging on reducing sharing of fake news. Using a 2 (Nudge Frame – Gain vs. Loss) x 2 (Nudge Frequency – Single vs. Repeated) between-subject experiment (n = 238), results showed gain-frame nudge will lower the likelihood of sharing and confidence of news. We also examined individual-level traits, need for cognition and reactance, but found no evidence to support moderation. Theoretical and practical implications for nudging theory were discussed.

Extended Abstract • Student • Student Competition • Sarah Fisher, University of Florida • Media Parenting Styles: A Typology of Parental Guidance of Electronic Media Use • Parental guidance for children’s electronic media use varies greatly. From parents who carefully limit the content set before their children’s eyes, to parents who allow freedom for their children to explore on electronic devices. This typology provides a useful definition of a range of parental oversight styles of their children’s use of electronic media. The typology categories emerged from in-depth interviews (N=20) with parents regarding their oversight of their children’s use of electronic media.

Research Paper • Student • Student Competition • Niki Fritz • Porn and Consent: The relationship between college students’ pornography consumption, perception of realism, and sexual consent intentions • Despite sexual assault prevention education (SAPE) on college campuses, sexual assault remains a persistent issue on campuses. Student may be learning non-consensual sexual activity scripts from other sources, such as pornography. Additionally, perceived pornography realism may mediate the relationship between pornography consumption and non-consensual behavioral intentions. This national survey of 500 undergraduate students suggests pornography consumption has a strong positive relationship with non-consensual behavioral intentions and perceived pornography realism was found to mediate the relationship.

Research Paper • Student • Student Competition • Si Yu Lee, Nanyang Technological University Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information (WKWSCI); Jasmon Wan Ting Hoh, National University of Singapore • From “OK Boomer” to “Boomer Remover”: A Critical Examination of Ageist Memes by Meme Factories • Memes and meme factories are increasingly the new fronts for ageism online. Guided by the tripartite model of ageism and third and fourth age concepts, this study employed multimodal discourse analysis to analyze 98 memes from five meme factories in Singapore. An ageist portrayal of older adults in memes was found and tropes like fetishization and denigration of the old were identified. The intersectionality of ageism with gender, race, and class was also emphasized.

Research Paper • Student • Student Competition • Xiaofen Ma, National University of Singapore • Predictors of IS Professionals’ Information Security Protective Behaviors in Chinese IT Organizations: The Application of the Organizational Antecedents, Theory of Planned Behavior and Protection Motivation Theory Abstract • “Securing organizational information systems (IS) as pivotal information assets is central to achieving a strategic advantage; this is an organization-wide concern. Recognition by practitioners and researchers of the positive impact of inside work-driven protective behaviors on IS security at the organizational level has led to the establishment of a research stream focused on IS experts’ performance of protective behaviors. To contribute to the research stream, this study employs two theories: protection motivation theory (PMT) and the theory of planned behavior (TPB), and a set of work-related organizational antecedents: organizational commitment and job satisfaction, often cited in information security literature. Therefore, given the varied facets central to work-motivated information security resources, determining the relationships of each distinct PMT, TPB, and organizational aspect with IS experts’ protective behaviors is a significant contribution. Using a survey of 804 representative IS professionals in the Chinese information technology (IT) industry, we find support for several associations: (a) information security attitude and subjective norms as constituents of TPB significantly influenced the information security protective behaviors performed by IS experts; (b) the coping appraisals (self-efficacy and response cost) and threat appraisals (threat susceptibility and threat severity) of PMT were significantly predictive of IS experts’ protective behaviors toward information security; and (c) organizational factors involving organizational commitment positively impacted the protective behaviors. However, job satisfaction, and perceived behavioral control as a construct of the TPB were not associated with information security behaviors. Contributions to theory and implications for practice are discussed.

Research Paper • Student • Student Competition • Yefu Qian, School of Media and Communication, Shanghai Jiao Tong University; Chen Li; Ruimin He • The Mediated Classroom: A Grounded Theory Analysis of Live Streaming Media Affordance and Teaching Context Remodeling from The Perspective of Actor-Network-Theory • The massive and popular application of emerging media technology (such as live streaming, virtual meeting-Zoom & Google Meet) in releasing the tensions of suspended classes during the global pandemic (COVID-19) provides an entry point to visualize the role of mediatization in shaping the traditional human social practice. As the online form of teaching penetrates in college education, it is of practical significance to comprehend the mediated teaching contexts and visualize the optimization of online teaching by exploring the affordance of live streaming media which serving as an “actor” in social networks. In this paper, we apply a qualitative analysis according to the grounded theory, based on detailed interviews with 45 college students in Shanghai, to elaborate on the affordance of live streaming in shaping the online teaching in Actor-Network-Theory. Besides, we target to explore the transformation of the teaching context between media technology and social practice so that we can offer insights for the ongoing or future researches of mediatization.

Extended Abstract • Student • Student Competition • Natasha Strydhorst; Sava Kolev; Philippe Chauveau, Texas Tech University; Eric Milman, Texas Tech University • Learning by doing: The potential effect of interactivity on health literacy • This experimental study investigates the relationship between message interactivity and message comprehension, absorption, and self-reported elaboration of health information as contributors to increased health literacy about COVID-19 and the opioid epidemic. A representative population will be exposed to a stimulus of factsheets, followed by tests measuring perceived comprehension, absorption, elaboration, message processing bias, and political ideology and interest. The authors anticipate a positive correlation between interactivity level and comprehension, absorption, and elaboration scores of participants.

Research Paper • Student • Student Competition • Beverly Tan, Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University; Gabrielle Lee, Nanyang Technological University; Rachel Angeline Chua, Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University; Charlyn Ng, Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University • Cancel Culture and Its Underlying Motivations in Singapore • This mixed-methods study explores Singaporeans’ understanding of cancel culture and motivators of participation. Interviews defined cancel culture as public shaming on a social media platform, carried out or supported by a group of people, which aims to hold people accountable for socially unacceptable behaviour. Our survey found attitude, subjective norms, perceived behavioural control, outcome expectancy, and general Belief in a Just World as significant predictors behaviour through intention, contextualising cancel culture in Singapore’s context.

Research Paper • Student • Student Competition • Sofie Vranken, School for Mass Communication Research, KU Leuven; Sebastian Kurten, Leuven School for Mass Communication Research • A content analysis of alcohol posts from adolescents, brands, influencers, and celebrities in Facebook and Instagram’s persistent and ephemeral messages • “This content analysis examines how peers, celebrities, influencers and brands refer to  alcohol in Facebook and Instagram’s persistent and ephemeral messages. The results show  that: (1) all agents frequently portray alcohol posts, (2) adolescents are the sole agent to  refer to moderate and extreme forms of alcohol use as opposed to celebrities, influencers  and brands whom solely display moderate alcohol posts and (3) some agents  (celebrities/influencers) may have a commercial motive to share alcohol posts.”

Extended Abstract • Student • Student Competition • Shiyu Yang; Nicole Krause; Luye Bao, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Mikhaila Calice, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Todd Newman; Michael Xenos; Dietram A. Scheufele, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Dominique Brossard • Extended Abstract: In AI we trust: The interplay of media attention, trust, and partisanship in shaping emerging attitudes toward artificial intelligence • Artificial intelligence (AI) has changed the way scientists make genetic edits; it has infiltrated our daily lives through the internet of things; and it is being used by law enforcement agencies to fight crime. Many of the societal questions raised in its wake cannot be answered by science. Who or what will govern this technology? How do we prevent inevitable biases in how the technology is developed and applied? In this extended abstract, we report analysis of nationally representative public opinion data and examine what factors, including attention to mass and social media, shape U.S. publics’ trust in various institutions regulating AI development, as well as how trust and political ideology interact to shape public support for AI technology.

Research Paper • Student • Student Competition • Yi Yang, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Yunyi Hu, The Chinese University of Hong Kong • Women on-screen: Exploring the relationship between consumption of female talent shows and sexism, internalization of beauty ideals, and self-objectification in China • Will consumption of female talent shows influence Chinese women’s self-body relationship? With the framework of objectification theory, this study provides empirical evidence to this question. Using data collected from a sample of 584 females in China, this study found that female talent shows consumption indirectly promoted body-surveillance through the mediation effects of benevolent sexism, internalization of beauty ideals, and self-objectification. Implications of the findings for the reflection on female talent shows in China are discussed.

<2021 Abstracts

Graduate Student Interest Group

2021 Abstracts

Research Paper • Student • Julie Aromi, Rutgers University School of Communication and Information • Race on the debate stage: Senators Booker and Harris’s discussions of Blackness in Democratic primary debates • Senators Kamala Harris and Cory Booker both frequently discussed their experiences as Black Americans during the Democratic primary debates throughout 2019. Both Senators acknowledge the ways Black voters are often used as a tool to elect white Democrats, and use their personal experience to establish solidarity with Black audiences. This textual analysis of the Senators’ remarks about race throughout the debates, focuses on how each talks about their own racialized experiences, and the narratives they construct about who they are as Black politicians, advocates, and Americans.

Research Paper • Student Member • Diane Ezeh Aruah, University of Florida • Struggling to fit in: Understanding difficulties faced by African international graduate students in a Predominant White Institution (PWI) in the United States • Every year, thousands of African students apply to graduate programs in the United States with the hope of experiencing quality and standard education unobtainable in their home countries. However, difficulties encountered by African students while settling into the educational system in the United States can impact their pursuit of the “American dream”. This article examines these difficulties using a qualitative phenomenological study of African graduate students in a predominantly white institution in the U.S. In-depth interview was used to collect data from 16 Ph.D. and master’s students. The students encountered inter-personal-based, community-based, and institutional-based difficulties, which often led to feelings of isolation, depression, and low self-esteem. The students managed their difficulties through online and offline support, as well as self-developed skills. Predominantly white institutions in the United States must include the needs of African international students in their recruitment, orientation, and mental health support programs.

Research Paper • Student • Laura Canuelas-Torres • Young Activists or Misguided Children? American Adults’ Perceptions on The March for Our Lives Teen Activists • The efforts of young people to advance gun control measures media coverage from all across the political spectrum. The current project used Q Methodology to further understand American adults’ perception of these activists. Results indicate that three camps emerged: those who recognized the teens as activist, those who see them as mislead and confused and those who see their efforts as the result of adolescent naivety. Relationships with media consumption are discussed.

Research Paper • Student • Sera Choi • The Use of Non-Verbal Cues to Express Apology and User Perception on Influencers’ Apology • This qualitative study examines how YouTube influencers use non-verbal cues in their apology videos and how users perceived these non-verbal cues displayed in the videos. This study utilized facial expressions via different arrangements of upper and lower facial structures, body and hand gestures, and speech rate to analyze how influencers used non-verbal cues. The study observed four different themes of users’ perceptions of non-verbal cues used in apology videos (i.e., sincere, fake, aggressive, and disappointed).

Extended Abstract • Student • Carl Ciccarelli, The University of South Carolina • A critical qualitative analysis of response framing of the COVID-19 pandemic across higher education. • The present study is timely and aims to employ a mixed method research design to extract meaningful insights to inform future practices in higher education through studying responses from a sample of five large public universities located in the southeast United States. This analysis will include in-depth interviews, content analysis of statistical COVID-19 dashboard data for each university, and a textual analysis of the framing and tone of response statements disseminated by each university.

Research Paper • Student • Nina Gayleard • Audience Member Twitter Discussion About Netflix’s Unbelievable (2019) • This research focused on themes amongst audience member discussions of crime entertainment media by examining tweets about Netflix’s Unbelievable (2019). The research aimed to identify major themes amongst audience discussions and see how those themes compared to current themes in crime entertainment media texts. The themes that appeared in the tweets reflected those in Unbelievable (2019) and those currently found within crime entertainment media texts, indicating that audience members actively discerned and discussed relevant themes.

Research Paper • Student • Lingshu Hu • Boosting Texts: Improving Text Classification Performance on Small-Sized, Imbalanced Datasets • Communication scholars, who traditionally focus on text messages, can benefit from adopting recently developed machine learning algorithms on text classification. This study introduced three methods—boosting, SMOTE, and Bert embedding—and tested their performance on small-sized, imbalanced datasets. Results show that SMOTE effectively increases the accuracy of classifying the minority class; Bert embedding can enhance the overall testing accuracy but may not improve minority class recognition; Boosting did not work well with text classification tasks.

Research Paper • Student • Shudan Huang, University of South Carolina; Max Bretscher, University of South Carolina • Motivation to Purchase Organic Foods, Message Clarity, and Information Processing from a Heuristic-Systematic Perspective • This study utilized a construal frame manipulation of an organic product and applied a heuristic-systematic model (HSM) as the theoretical foundation for testing people’s attitude, the brand, and purchase intention of the organic product with different levels of involvement and skepticism. The finding revealed that skepticism will have negative effects on participants’ cognition and acceptance of organic food. And frames were found to be a significant predictor of ad attitude, brand attitude, and purchase intention.

Research Paper • Student • Jeff Hunter, Texas Tech University; Koji Yoshimura • Are there Partisan Differences in the Moral Framing of News? • This study investigated the relationship between moral framing of news media headlines and the political ideology of the source using moral foundations theory and the model of intuitive morality and exemplars (MIME). A content analysis assessed the moral framing of 1,100 news headlines sampled from major news sources. Results indicated that moral foundation framing did not differ according to the political ideology of the news source, but framing was associated with the issues examined.

Research Paper • Student • Yanru Jiang, University of California, Los Angeles • Understanding Triggers of Problematic Internet Uses in Casual Mobile Game Designs • There is evidence that players can become addicted to casual mobile games. This study identified seven elements that are frequently adopted in casual mobile game designs and could trigger game addictions. The study used a seven-item game addiction scale (GAS) to access the addiction level of casual mobile gamers. Adverse effects on addicted players, such as being isolated from social contacts, neglecting important activities, and undermining psychological conditions, were identified through the GAS.

Research Paper • Student • Sarah Johnson • Credibility from the Source: Comparing traditional celebrity endorsers with YouTube endorsers • This study examines the relationship between an endorser’s expertise, trustworthiness, and brand attitude using Source Credibility Theory, by looking at traditional celebrity and YouTube endorsers. A representational survey of the U.S. adult population was used. The research model was analyzed using mediation analysis; the results were determined to have significant direct and indirect effects. Based on the results, there was a slight increase in the strength of the mediator on brand attitude for YouTube endorsers.

Research Paper • Student • URSULA KAMANGA • Assessing the Implications of Cervical Cancer Information Sources and its Barriers Among Latinas • Cervical cancer is preventable, yet screening levels remain low among Latinas, contributing to a 40% mortality rate in the U.S. Health information-seeking behavior among this population remains low. Few studies have assessed channels used while investigating perceived uncertainty for health information-seeking among Latinas. This case study will test the Theory of Planned Behavior through semi-structured interviews to understand the health information-seeking behavior among Latinas and where new channels could be made to assist them.

Research Paper • Student • hakan karaaytu • Independent Journalists Reporting on Political Issues in Turkey, using Traditional and New Media • In this study, while the role and journalistic ideal imputed to the media in contemporary democracies are considered, the changes in the Turkish media sector, which have been structurally transformed since 1980, and the reflections of this change on the identity of the journalists are revealed. As the historical process of the media structure that has been transformed is described, the effects of the experiences in relationship between media and politics on the journalistic profession are illustrated with concrete examples. The research paper consists of interviews with 10 people who are selected from journalism academics and press-journalists in the profession.

Extended Abstract • Student • Yihan Li, School of Journalism and Communication, The Chinese University of Hong Kong • Health code for datafied mobilities in China: Framing of datafication, algorithmic governance and dataism ideology • This research adopts critical discourse analysis to analyze the construction of health code discourse by Chinese governments and its social consequences. This research finds the frame of the health code as an objective tool for orderly mobilities, which is produced by the hierarchical relation between the state and local governments. And this discourse contributes to the emerging of a new mode of algorithmic governance and a dataism ideology with some doubtful assumptions.

Research Paper • Student • Paige Nankey; Rhea Maze • Social Media and Marine Plastic Pollution: A Study of Social Media Messaging on Engagement • This 2 (emotional appeal: hope vs. guilt) x 2 (call-to-action (CTA): presence vs. absence) between-subjects experiment randomly exposed 76 college students to one of four Instagram-type messages about marine plastic pollution: Guilt with no CTA (N = 18), guilt with CTA (N = 20), hope with no CTA (N = 19), or hope with CTA (N = 19). The results were not significant but revealed an interesting interaction pattern when combining hope appeals with CTA’s.

Extended Abstract • Student • Victoria McDermott; Drew T. Ashby-King, University of Maryland • Extended Abstract: Examining Institutional and Instructional Support of Communication Graduate Students Academic and Social Needs During COVID-19 • Rhetorical and relational goal theory posits that students have academic and relational needs in the classroom that need to be met to facilitate student success. By conducting focus groups with communication graduate students, this study explored how institutional/departmental and instructor communication met students’ needs during the COVID-19 pandemic. We suggest that rhetorical and relational goals are intertwined concepts that contribute to supporting students’ academic and relational needs and success.

Research Paper • Student • Adriana Mucedola, Syracuse University • Royal baby boom: How British tabloids covered Kate Middleton and Meghan Markle’s pregnancies • This study used an intersectional approach to understand how media coverage during Kate Middleton and Meghan Markle’s first pregnancies differed from one another. A content analysis that coded 240 British tabloid articles revealed that Markle received a greater amount of press negativity and negative weight-related attitudes, while Middleton’s body was objectified to a greater extent. Findings suggest that media continue to objectify women in different ways depending on their identities, and reinforce the thin ideal.

Research Paper • Student • Christina Myers • Toward a Conceptual Model of Implicit Racial Bias and Representation of African Americans in Media • “The purpose of this paper is to propose a conceptual model to explain how societal, cultural and historical circumstances contribute to the creation of meaning assigned by content creators and its subsequent understanding, particularly as it relates to the media’s portrayal of African Americans. The author suggests implicit racial bias, stereotypes and ideology, which are shaped by the historical, cultural and societal influences of content creators, allow for inherently prejudiced belief systems to be disseminated and reinforced by mass media. To the author’s knowledge, there is a paucity in mass communication literature that seeks to explain the cognitive processes involved in content creation by members of mass media.

Extended Abstract • Student • Nhung Nguyen, University of Kansas • Strangers helping strangers in a strange land: Vietnamese immigrant mothers and expecting mothers in the USA use social media to navigate health acculturation • Drawing from acculturation, this study analyzes 18 in-depth interviews with immigrant Vietnamese mothers and pregnant women in the United States on the role of online social support through Facebook on their pregnancy and motherhood in a strange land. Findings show that immigrant mothers seek out both informational and emotional supports. “Bonding” levels are low and unlikely to transcend into real-life friendships. Social media, however, allows community members to develop and thrive during enculturation.

Extended Abstract • Student • Jeffry Oktavianus, City University of Hong Kong; Yanqing Sun; Fangcao Lu • Extended abstract: The episodes of health crisis information response process among migrant domestic workers during COVID-19 pandemic • Guided by Crisis Response Communication Model (CRCM), this study examined how Indonesian migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong digested and responded to health crisis information amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Through in-depth interviews involving 32 workers, this study discovered that the participants went through four stages of crisis response process, including observation (i.e., information gathering), interpretation (i.e., filtering information and verification), choice (i.e., adopting adaptive and maladaptive preventive measures), and dissemination (i.e., information sharing).

Research Paper • Student • Runlei Ren; Xinyu Dai; Mengyuan Wei • The Impact of Internet on Public Trust in Government: Assessing the Mediating Effect of Subjective Social Justice • Over the past decade, public trust in the government (PTG) in developed countries has continued to decline. At the same time, the rapid development of the Internet has changed people’s perceptions. The decline of PTG will pose a challenge to government governance. Given the coexistence of the decline in PTG and the gradual popularization of the Internet, can the Internet explain or partially explain the fluctuations in PTG among citizens? Previous research pointed out that the negative effects may play a leading role. However, existing literature ignores that the relationship between Internet use and public trust in government (PTG) can be mediated by contextual variables such as perceived social justice. Thus, this study uses the 2018 Chinese Social Survey (CSS 2018) and household survey datasets in 2015 (CGSS 2015) to explore the influence of internet usage on PTG and its mechanism. Multivariate regressions and instrumental variable estimates support that: Besides playing a negative role directly (β=-0.0467, t=-3.0304, p<0.001), the internet can also affect PTG by polluting subjective social justice. Diverse applications of the internet have different effects on PTG. From the perspective of different government levels, it conforms to the characteristics of differential trust in government. This conclusion provides a reference for the governance of Internet public opinion. The department of management could treat the Internet as a platform to carry out effective communication between the government and the public to improve political trust.

Extended Abstract • Student • Zoey Rosen, Colorado State University; Channing Bice, Colorado State University; Stephanie Scott, Colorado State University • Extended Abstract: [Visualizing the Invisible: Visual-Based Design and Efficacy in Air Quality Messaging] • This study examines the effect of efficacy and visual design for messaging for air quality. The following study is a 2 (efficacy: high vs. low) × 2 (message design: visual vs. text) between-subjects experimental design, assessing the effects of these variables on students’ visual comprehension, source credibility, self-efficacy, and protective behavioral intention. Hypotheses were partially supported, finding that there were some statistically significant effects for efficacy and message design on the variables of interest.

Extended Abstract • Student • Andrea Smith, Syracuse University; Adriana Mucedola, Syracuse University; Jian Shi, Syracuse University • Partisan Pride: How Cross-Exposure to Partisan News and Emotions Toward Trump Leads to Civic Engagement • The purpose of this study was to examine the link between consuming either liberal or conservative media, partisans’ emotional reactions to news about Donald Trump, and their level of participation in civic engagement. A sample of U.S. adults (n=813) completed the relevant measures in an online survey. Results indicated that when participants consumed counter-attitudinal media, they experienced negative emotional reactions to news about Donald Trump, which in turn, led them to become more civically engaged.

Research Paper • Student • Courtney Tabor, University of Oregon • “What a 13-year old girl looks like”: A feminist analysis of To Catch a Predator • This paper examines three key episodes of early-2000s sensation To Catch a Predator and situates them within crime media and journalism literature. Based on the analysis, To Catch a Predator represents the apex of crime media as demonstrated by the treatment of women and girls as bait, claims of ownership over women and girls’ bodies, lack of nuance in reporting, and the liberties taken in their journalistic practices.

Research Paper • Student • Jingyue Tao • The Influence of Message and Audio Modalities in Augmented Reality Mobile Advertisements on Consumers’ Purchase Intention • Evidence shows that AR technology is an effective advertising approach to raise a brand’s awareness, so many big brands implement AR into their marketing strategy. However, the effectiveness of AR mobile advertisements on consumers’ purchase intentions remains unclear. To fill this dearth in the literature, this study examined how message and audio modalities of AR mobile advertisements influenced consumers’ purchase intentions through an experiment. Based on the uses and gratifications perspective, this online experiment manipulated the message type (emotional/factual) and audio-verbal appeal (present/absent) of AR advertisements to investigate their impact on consumers’ attitudes towards buying a watch. The results showed that audio-verbal appeal played a salient role in the emotional message to positively influence consumers’ perceived entertaining gratification and intention to buy the watch. However, the audio-verbal emotional message negatively influenced consumers’ purchase intention and did not influence their perceived information gratification. Future research should test other multimedia such as images, video, or animations to better understand the interaction effect between AR mobile advertisements and consumers’ purchase intentions.

Research Paper • Student • Taylor Thompson • Trust in media in the era of fake news • This study explores how political ideologies, media bias, and media credibility affect trust in the media. This research uses an ATP survey from Pew Research Center. The analysis found that people who identify as Democrats have a significantly higher trust in the media, and think the media is doing their job well and effectively. Republicans were less trustful of the media, which suggests a problematic relationship between the media and people who identify as Republicans.

Research Paper • Student • Yue Wang, University of Leuven • Why are smartphones a thief who steals time? An Empirical Study of Smartphone Dependence in China • With the rapid spread of smartphones worldwide, the negative effects of overuse and dependence on smartphones have attracted more and more public attention. To explore how people’s psychological motivations affect smartphone dependence, this research expands the motivation of media-system dependence and adds two psychological characteristics of loneliness and FoMO. The results showed that “recreation”, “orientation”, “loneliness” and “FoMO” had significant impacts on smartphone use, while “understanding” did not have a direct effect on smartphone dependency.This survey provides important information for academicians concerning smartphone dependency, which is still rarely explored in China.

Research Paper • Student • Tian Xinhe • Research on Online Social Support Related to Gender Issues from the Perspective of Communication-An empirical analysis based on Zhihu, an online question-and-answer community in China.docx • Abstract: The COVID-19 outbreak in early 2020 has highlighted the importance of social caring, and the related gender issues have attracted more attention online. This paper studies the posts related to the “sanitary napkins in loose packing” in Zhihu Community, and examines the impact of online social support on gender issues, from the perspective of communication and through social network analysis, content analysis and text analysis. Findings: Users have not developed a tight social network, but the Matthew effect is significant; online social support strengthens connections between users on gender issues; “otherization” for female is found users in agenda setting; intensified online gender contradiction reflects the polarization effect of network. Misogyny is found in China’s male-oriented online society. On this basis, the paper argues that gender inequality is an objective, deep-rooted existence in Chinese society, and that gender antagonism is becoming increasingly prominent in China’s online society. In the long run, however, we should avoid grafting gender contradictions into class contradictions, with efforts made to coordinate gender relations and seek equal rights for men and women.

Research Paper • Student • Wanjiang Zhang; Jiayu Qu; Jingjing Yi, School of Journalism and Communication, Chinese University of Hong Kong • Stripped from society abruptly: Effects of physical social isolation on people’s emotional expression and well-being • The study employed a quasi-experiment with 1,398 users’ 1,376,718 posts on Weibo. Three computational methods (SA, ITS, STM) were used to investigate the influences of physical social isolation on people’s emotional well-being during the quarantine. Results showed that quarantine brought a sharp fall in people’s emotions immediately without sustained effects. STM-generated topics implied social media’s role in fulfilling three psychological needs. Heavy Weibo users expressed more positively, whereas light users expressed negatively.

<2021 Abstracts

Cultural and Critical Studies Division

2021 Abstracts

Extended Abstract • Student • Elinam Amevor • Cultural Sensitivity in Health Crisis Communication: The Case of COVID-19 Pandemic in Africa • This qualitative study examines the discourses surrounding Melinda Gates’ prediction about dead bodies littering the streets of Africa, if the world did not act fast to rescue the continent. The study thematically analyzed reactions from 12 social media influencers from Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana. Drawing on the Cultural Dimensions Theory, preliminary findings describe Gates’ remarks as racist and demeaning to Africans. This reinforces the critical need for cultural sensitivity in global health crisis communication

Research Paper • Faculty • Kelli Boling, University of Nebraska – Lincoln • The Power of a Good Story: Domestic Violence Survivors in True Crime Podcast Audiences • This audience reception study qualitatively examines women who identify as domestic violence survivors and fans of true crime podcasts. Using a feminist, critical cultural lens, this study explores why these women are drawn to these podcasts and how they make meaning of the content. Sixteen interviews revealed five themes: the power of a good story, the appeal of audio media, the educational value of the content, their need for understanding, and creating camaraderie through community.

Extended Abstract • Student • Alejandro Bruna, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile • Extended Abstract- Reading Lumpérica from a cinematographic perspective – A fragmented script about marginality • Lumpérica, by Diamela Eltit, presents an interesting narrative mix: stream of consciousness, realism, dialogue and cinematic elements. This work analyzes the enunciated work, discovering that if read from a audiovisual perspective, it is a true script, fragmented and disjointed, but a script nonetheless, framed within a Chile that suffers the pain of dictatorship and, therefore, presents wounds coupled to a marginality that is dependent of the cinematographic eye to be seen.

Research Paper • Faculty • Jennifer Cox, Salisbury University • Black Lives Matter to Media (Finally): A Content Analysis of News Coverage During Summer 2020 • This study examined 286 stories posted about the Black Lives Matter movement and protests following George Floyd’s death by the six most-viewed U.S. news outlets on their Facebook feeds during summer 2020. These organizations published a significant amount of content, though the frequency declined throughout the summer. Stories mostly framed protesters positively and police negatively. Organizations regularly used law/crime spot news to frame protests. The findings suggest a shift away from the media’s protest paradigm.

Extended Abstract • Student • Katherine Dawson • Extended Abstract: Talking Through the Algorithm: Techno-Institutional Bias and Women’s Voices • This work proposes a theoretical framework for understanding how technologies of vocal recording and manipulation, from ‘good speech’ phonetics to A.I. voice renderings, have operated as ideologically charged algorithms that ‘solve’ women’s voices. The research builds upon existing communication literature surrounding the nature and functionality of algorithms, as well as feminist posthumanist theory, which provides a richer conceptualization of how algorithms of voice enact both a political and material discipline upon women’s speech.

Research Paper • Student • Jeffrey Duncan • Video Game Community Content Creators: A Cultural Intermediary Perspective • Video game content creators act as a ‘cultural intermediary’ between game producers and players. Through an interpretive textual analysis of YouTube videos by content creators of two popular games, this study explicates this mediating role the creators play in negotiating the encoding and decoding of gaming messages and their ability to influence audience opinion and producer decisions, highlighting an underrepresented group of creative workers that mediate messages in the gaming industry.

Research Paper • Faculty • Dawn Gilpin, Arizona State University • Theorizing the mediasphere: NRA media and multimodal dependency • This paper uses NRA media operations to illustrate the phenomenon of the mediasphere, defined as a strategically established subsystem of cultural production entrenched in promotional culture and characterized by hybridity, commodification, epistemic authority, embeddedness, identification, centralized control, and oppositionality to mainstream media. A mediasphere represents an attempt to establish audience dependency through multimodal centrality and thereby exercise social and cultural influence; it thus has implications for evolving understandings of information systems, propaganda and promotional culture.

Research Paper • Faculty • Peter Joseph Gloviczki, Coker University • The Space Between Home and Away: Sixteen Fragments across Communication as Culture • “This paper uses sixteen fragments, linked narratives, to make sense of and bring meaning to the space between home and away. Written in an accessible style and broadly inspired by the feminism of Laura Mulvey and the philosophical poetics of Jacques Derrida, the paper

challenges communication as culture to work toward a more narrative, more poststructuralist conceptualization of health communication in particular and communication as culture in

general.”

Extended Abstract • Student • Efrat Gold; megan boler, University of Toronto • Emotionally charged and politically polarized: An interpretive approach to social media analysis • Meaning is never inherent, nor is it neutral. The social act of interpretation, which gets mapped onto people and events, is deeply embedded within pre-existing cultural traditions. Using data from Twitter, Facebook, and Gab as cultural artefacts, we excavate the ways that meanings are made and conveyed through social media. Entering social media to undertake research can feel like entering a new world with its own history, rules, language, and norms. To the less embedded outsider, this world can feel dis-orienting – it is not immediately obvious where to turn, and even less obvious how to make meaning out of what one finds. The ways that people use social media are not neutral, nor are they static – in recent years, it is increasingly clear that social media is doing something, and that something is very influential. But what exactly is this doing and how is it being done? How do social media expressions and interactions speak to deeper beliefs and understandings that people hold about themselves and the world they inhabit? This paper invites a critical reflection on how the work of making meaning out of people, politics, and events is done. As an artefact that says something about the culture from which it stems, social media can inform understandings of the contemporary reality they reflect. Using case studies of comments and interactions among social media users as an occasion to explore cultural practices and disruptions, we dig deep to reveal the social and interpretive aspects already at play.

Research Paper • Student • Julie Grandjean, Texas Tech University • The spectacle of flags • While news editors tend to still consider images as mere illustrations for what is verbally explained (Geise and Baden, 2015), it is important to consider that the analogical properties of images (Abraham and Messaris, 2001) makes them appear more truthful and representative of reality. However, reality tends to be fluid depending on whose story we listen to. This paper narrates the stories of two realist rivals planting their respective national flags on two yet unexplored territories. While the American flag on the Moon was meant as a way to prove the American technological superiority over the USSR to end the Cold War, the Russian flag in the Arctic can be seen as a political move by President Putin to recreate the lost grandeur of the Soviet Union and reenact the Cold War in order to revive his political support at home. By doing so and recording their exploits, the two actors created national narratives that go beyond the simple performance of erecting a flag; I argue that these images construct an affectual nationalist identity through elites’ performance of flag planting, and mass media’s role in staging these political events as a “spectacle.”

Research Paper • Faculty • Azeta Hatef; Sara Shaban • A reckoning in journalism education: Examining the approach to diversity, equity, and inclusion in journalism syllabi • The 2020 protests in the U.S. prompted a reckoning in newsrooms across the country, presenting a critical moment to reflect upon journalism education and preparing students to report on a diverse world. Through Critical Discourse Analysis, we examine syllabi from American universities, focusing on core principles and values in journalism education, specifically their approach to discussions of race, gender, and marginality. While few engage in critical discussion, most universities continue to utilize a traditional framework.

Research Paper • Faculty • Kristen Heflin, Kennesaw State University • Thatcherism, Trumpism, and the Potential of Organic Ideology • In the 1970’s and 1980’s, Stuart Hall struggled to make sense of Thatcherism, an ideology that was incoherent, brought together seemingly opposed viewpoints, and embraced contradiction. Ultimately, Hall developed the concepts of organic ideology and organic intellectual to help make sense of this ideology full of contradictions. This paper examines the theoretical roots of organic ideology and the role of organic intellectuals. It also discusses the concepts in relation to Trumpism and the MAGA movement.

Research Paper • Student • Minos-Athanasios Karyotakis, School of Communication HKBU • Disinformation and Weaponized Communication: The Spread of Ideological Hate about the Macedonian Name in Greece • The current research examined 38 of the most influential disinformation-fueled news (or “fake news”) stories regarding the Macedonian Name Dispute (MND) and the “Prespes Agreement” in the years of 2018 and 2019 by employing the critical discourse analytical (CDA) method of ideological discourse analysis proposed by Van Dijk. The study’s main objective was to expand the relevant literature regarding disinformation, power relations, and hate campaigns by examining the ideological narratives and constructions disseminated through the disinformation-fueled news stories during that two-years-period. The findings showed that those news stories were successfully weaponized and resulted in empowering identity characteristics and ideological narratives through the distancing method (us versus them), the alienation with elements of dramatization (e.g., territorial loss of the Greek Macedonia due to the “Prespes Agreement”), and the sense of victimization and dehumanization that demanded emergency actions to protect the ingroup (Greece) from the outgroup (North Macedonia and its Greek assistants).

Research Paper • Student • Charli Kerns, University of Tennessee, Knoxville • Interrogating Perceptions of Risk and Responsibility in Sports During the Coronavirus Pandemic • This autoethnography examines whitewater kayakers’ decision to paddle the Big South Fork River in Tennessee to reveal the emerging tensions between individual risks inherent in the sport and the much broader constellations of risks into which its participants are interposing themselves during the pandemic. Pre-pandemic rationalities form the context within which individuals engage in neoliberal approaches toward risk-taking in action sports. In turn, these practices articulate with broader frameworks of responsibility in postmodern society.

Extended Abstract • Faculty • Zhaoxi Liu • Dead and Back to Life: “The Eight Hundred” in the Field of Power • In 2019, the Chinese movie “The Eight Hundred” abruptly cancelled its release while China celebrated the 70th anniversary of the People’s Republic, due to political sensitivity. A year later, as China tried to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, the movie became a market-reviving hero. This case study explains the dramatic experience of the movie by exploring the interrelations among the field of cultural production, the field of power, and the field of broader social context.

Research Paper • Faculty • Jessica Maddox; Brian Creech, Temple University • Leaning In, Pushed Out: Postfeminist Precarity, Pandemic Labor, and Journalistic Discourse • During the COVID-19 pandemic, the postfeminist ideal of “having it all” became more contradictory, as women struggled to juggle work and childcare. This research, using critical discourse analysis, examines how lifestyle and explanatory journalism made sense of this problematic ideal as it became evidently untenable during the pandemic. Here, journalism operates as a discursive structure, obscuring its own complicity in sustaining postfeminist and neoliberal relations around the expectations that surround working mothers.

Research Paper • Student • Lucy March • Genre, the meaning of style?: Categorizing Japanese visual kei • This paper explores the Japanese musical movement visual kei, and how to make ontological sense of it given its sonic and visual inconsistencies. Scholars describe visual kei as a socially-driven act of resistance, and as a commercial product with consistent generic characteristics. Examination of a case study demonstrates how visual kei occupies these contradictory spaces simultaneously, and how terms like genre and subculture capture the visual kei’s hybrid nature when used in the appropriate context.

Extended Abstract • Student • Hayley Markovich, University of Florida • Extended Abstract: Race-conscious public health: A critical discourse analysis of the Release the Pressure Campaign • This study focuses on the Release the Pressure campaign aimed at addressing high blood pressure and heart disease rates among Black women in America. Through a critical discourse analysis guided by critical race theory and intersectionality, the study explores how the campaign centers race and responds to structural racism to address heart health. Analysis of the Release the Pressure campaign and its discourses provides an avenue for scholars and practitioners to create race-conscious campaigns.

Research Paper • Student • Zelly Martin, University of Texas at Austin • “The Day Joy Was Over:” Representation of Pregnancy Loss in the News • Recently, news coverage of miscarriage has exploded, fueled primarily by celebrities discussing their personal experiences. To assess discursive constructions of the miscarriage experience in legacy news and women’s magazines, a corpus of 212 articles about pregnancy loss from the New York Times, the Washington Post, People Magazine, and Us Weekly are analyzed using critical discourse analysis. Findings reveal that pregnancy loss coverage perpetuates heteropatriarchal and postracial ideology in service of the narrative of U.S. exceptionalism.

Research Paper • Faculty • Umana Anjalin, University of Tennessee; Abhijit Mazumdar, Park University • India’s #MeToo Movement in Bollywood: Exposing Cultural & Societal Mores • Against the backdrop of the #MeToo movement, aspiring actresses of the Indian film industry have revealed facing sexual harassment at the hands of male colleagues. Using feminist standpoint theory and theoretical thematic analysis of Bollywood actors’ online interviews about facing sexual harassment, this study uncovered common themes about India’s societal, cultural, and administrative mores. It also suggested a few recommendations to overcome the problem.

Extended Abstract • Faculty • Gigi McNamara, University of Toledo • Extended Abstract The One with the Anniversary, the Friends 25th Anniversary Extravaganza: A political economy approach to a postmodern pseudo-event • American broadcast television continues to redefine and reassess its business model as competition for content from steaming services intensifies. In addition, television executives and producers are awash in what I have identified as a “hyper-nostalgic” era of television with reboots and relaunches dotting the primetime landscape. Paying homage to this hyper-nostalgic moment is the publicity juggernaut surrounding the 25th anniversary of the long-running NBC show, Friends. While there are no current plans to relaunch this program with new scripted content, the anniversary event, I contend is indicative of Boorstin’s theory of the pseudo-event. Moreover, I purport the on-going celebrity status of its cast members has furthered strengthened Friends inclusion in the television canon of timeless classics. In my full paper, I will overview the evolution of this hyper-nostalgic pseudo-event and will also draw on the theories from political economy of communication scholars including Riordan, Douglas and Andrejevic. This event also proves to be the “perfect storm” in terms of integrated marketing. The hyper-nostalgic virtue signaling includes both original viewers of the show and a newer younger audience, too young to have watched in the 1990s. Marking this specific historical intersection of celebrity and commerce, Friends continues to identify a new audience, and new consumer base, in this enduring nod to the past.

Research Paper • Faculty • Ali Mohamed, United Arab Emirates University • Investigative journalism and effects of capitalist “pathologies” on societal integration: Challenging Habermas’s “colonization” thesis • “Abstract

Habermas suggests that his “colonization” thesis applies not only to individuals within organizations, but also to institutions like media. Examples Habermas offers point to the vulnerability of journalism, especially, to “market imperatives” in capitalist societies. We challenge this notion by considering the work of investigative journalists who have adapted to advanced digital information technologies in order to reveal “concealed strategic actions” by capitalist interests that operate largely beyond the democratic will-formation of the lifeworld.”

Extended Abstract • Student • Dominique Montiel Valle; Zelly Martin, University of Texas at Austin • Feigning Indignance, Reinstating Power: Paradigm Repair, Femicide, and the Publishing of Ingrid Escamilla’s Murdered Body • In this study, we shed light on the media controversy surrounding the publishing of photos of Ingrid Escamilla’s murdered body in Mexico. Using a theoretical lens that integrates paradigm repair and decolonial feminism, we interrogate how four of Mexico’s most read news publications attempted to reify their media authority in the midst of high threat. We then probe how this positioning reifies media values and institutional alliances that further and perpetuate the devaluation of women.

Research Paper • Student • Madison Mullis, University of Memphis • That’s Why I Smoke Weed: An Analysis of #StonerMom Discourse on TikTok • This research utilized Manning’s symbolic framework to gain a deeper understanding of the #StonerMom phenomenon. A textual analysis was used to examine 55 videos extracted from the “Discover” page on TikTok. The results found that the symbolic framing of drug use on TikTok draws on discourses of social inequality, subsequently reinforcing historical associations between marijuana and POC. #StonerMoms construct marijuana use as a parent-friendly activity through their social media discourse by utilizing the race-neutral term “cannabis” and by framing marijuana as a stress suppressant that helps them be more patient and attentive towards their children. As a result of privileged normalization, #StonerMoms have become complicit in the gentrification of marijuana.

Research Paper • Student • Christina Myers • Beyond the Lens: Black Professional Athletes on Racism & the Realities of Breathing While Black • “This study investigates how Black professional athletes articulate their lived experiences concerning race and racism in the United States through the online digital platform The Players’ Tribune. To explore these dynamics through Critical Race Theory, a qualitative content analysis of narratives (N=29) were analyzed. Results reveal themes of violence perpetuated by law enforcement, fear for the life of self and loved ones, identity, history of systemic racism, call for allyship, Black empowerment and unity. The researcher suggests the counter-narratives that prevail indicate a response against the predominant images and frames in mainstream mass media.

Keywords: Critical Race Theory, Black identity, Black athletes, race”

Extended Abstract • Student • Sohana Nasrin, University of Maryland • Can Journalists be Activists? A Metajournalistic Discourse analysis of the relationship between Journalism and Activism • The relationship between journalism and activism has been a complicated one (Di Salvo, 2020; Russell, 2018; Beaudoin, 2019; Camaj, 2018). Journalism scholars and practitioners have struggled to understand the purviews of the two concepts—journalism and activism. On the one hand, professional journalists have been too concerned with maintaining professional norms such as objectivity, fairness, balance, and the like and tried not to drift into activism while reporting on different issues (Boykoff & Boykoff, 2007). On the other hand, Journalism scholars have engaged in philosophical debates on whether objectivity is a precept of journalism anymore and suggested new values such as transparency (Ingram, 2020) to take its place. This often-contested relationship between journalism and activism got renewed attention, with journalists adequately and accurately covering social justice issues such as racism and scientifically complicated topics such as climate change. The rise of alternative and citizen journalism challenged traditional news media and the norms they abide by. The renewed interests in the relationship between journalism and activism necessitate scholarly attention to understand how and whether journalism and activism can co-exist as professional journalists seek to inform the public. This study attempts to understand professional journalists’ attitudes toward the relationship between journalism and activism by analyzing the metajouranlistic discourse around the topic in the United States. The metajouranlistic discourse indicated that there emerged a shifting attitude toward how professional journalists define journalism.

Extended Abstract • Student • Míchílín Ní Threasaigh, University of Toronto; Ali Azhar, University of Toronto; megan boler, University of Toronto • Melodramatic Platforms: the emotional theatre of collective political storytelling on social media • “If social media is the new digital town hall, Canadian and American democracies are in trouble. Once a site of promise for democratizing mass communication, the internet has also become a site of problematic information and polarized affect. As meta-narratives about national identity clash across social media platforms, it is urgent that we understand how new media is shaping political polarization. In this paper we seek to understand the roles of social media platforms, emotion, and narrative in shaping online civic discourse. More specifically, we ask,

1) How might we analyse social media expressions as a form of collective storytelling?

2) What is the role of emotion in the production and circulation of these polarized political meta-narratives? and,

3) What roles do social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, Reddit, and Gab play in catalyzing, organizing & circulating these emotionally-charged political meta-narratives?

To answer these questions, we draw upon findings from our three-year, mixed-methods, funded study of affect and narratives of race and national belonging on social media during the 2019 Canadian and 2020 U.S. federal elections; using the January 6th Capitol Riots as a case-study in the melodramatic genre of collective political storytelling on social media.”

Research Paper • Student • Nana Kwame Osei Fordjour, University of New Mexico • Themes, ideology, and social media: A critical analysis of a US Vice President • Considering the paucity of literature in Vice-presidential research, this study analyzes the social media (Facebook) discourse of Vice President Mike Pence, the 48th Vice President of the United States (US). Employing Norman Fairclough’s (2010) three-tier Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) model, I conduct a textual analysis of the Vice President’s social media discourse to analyze the salient themes and ideologies in his Facebook posts. I observed that Vice President Mike Pence portrayed himself like a President in waiting in the wake of President Donald Trump’s impeachment hearings. In addition, findings of this current study indicated that from the ideological standpoint a mediated version of “Trumpism” was performed in the Vice President’s Facebook posts and he indicated his strong Republican values of Conservatism.

Research Paper • Faculty • Jiwoo Park • Witnessing the Power of Digital Activism BTS’ Involvement Brought into the Social Movement: A Case of the Black Lives Matter • “The Black Lives Matter movement erupted after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody during the first six months of the pandemic in the U.S. During the same timeframe, BTS was the most tweeted-about celebrity in the U.S. Through exploring a role BTS’ Twitter activity played for the social movement, this paper reflects on the nature of activism in the social media age and argues for the importance and value of digital activism.

Keywords: ARMY, BLM, BTS, Digital Activism, Slacktivism”

Extended Abstract • Student • Rachel Parker, The University of Alabama • “Extended Abstract: Narrative Formation: Black Women, Writing, and Vogue Magazine” • “Since their circulation beginning in the 18th century, women’s magazines spoke to an audience as varied as their content, including educated women to the housewife (Cramer, 1998). Focusing on subject matter that was important to their readers such as: housekeeping, careers, and marriage, women’s magazines were able to carve out their own niche for this specific market of reader whose interests was being overlooked.

This focus led to an audience showcasing a homogenous group of women in terms of values, education, and race. Focusing on one group as your audience led to the exclusion of others, particularly Black women.

This article will analyze this lack of Black women to be included in these publications as audience members as well as writers through the application of Muted Group Theory (Ardener, 1975).”

Research Paper • Faculty • Katie Place, Quinnipiac University • Toward a Framework for Intersectional Listening In Strategic Communication • This qualitative study explored the intersection of listening theory and intersectional theory to develop a framework for intersectional listening in strategic communication contexts. Interviews with 30 strategic communication professionals and executives were conducted to understand how they embody listening.

Research Paper • Student • Elizabeth Potter, University of Colorado Boulder • Membership negotiation’ flow in CCO model may explain institutional bias at a nonprofit media site • “Scholars can use the “membership negotiation” flow of McPhee & Zaug’s four-flows model of how communication constitutes organization to show how volunteer members of a nonprofit media and news production organization may be included or excluded as members of a local government institution. Aspects of the “membership negotiation” flow also can be used to illustrate how potential members are included or excluded from a volunteer news organization. Finally, the “membership negotiation” flow of the four-flows model of how communication constitutes organization can be used to theorize about how institutional bias may pervade the governmental institution of which this organization is a part.

This case study offers insights into just one way that scholars might think about how to study institutional bias. Because the four-flows model is ontological and because it draws from Giddens’s structuration theory, it has strong explanatory power that can be used to study similar organizations and organizational communication precepts in the future.”

Research Paper • Faculty • Matthew Powers, University of Washington, Seattle; Sandra Vera-Zambrano, Universidad Iberoamericana • Living For—And Maybe Off—Journalism: French and American Journalists’ Career Expectations • Drawing on Bourdieu, this paper explores journalists’ career expectations in France and the United States. Through interviews, we show that highly-resourced journalists in both countries expect to make a living doing work they love. By contrast, lesser-resourced journalists emphasize the sacrifices they make pursuing their careers. While sacrifices vary according to nationally-distinctive labor regulations, journalists in both samples find “virtues in their necessities” (Bourdieu, 1984) by highlighting the possibilities that a journalism career affords.

Research Paper • Faculty • Erica Salkin, Whitworth University Department of Communication Studies; Kevin Grieves, Whitworth University • The “major mea culpa:” Journalistic discourse when professional norms are broken • The “corrections statement” is sufficient for media organizations to address small mistakes. When larger missteps occur, however, more substantive work is needed not only to correct the record, but to protect the organization’s claim to an authentic journalistic identity. This study analyzes a sample of such “major mea culpa” statements to explore how media organizations talk about their significant professional errors and the tools they use to maintain their journalistic identities when such errors occur.

Research Paper • Faculty • Hong-Chi Shiau, Shih-Hsin University • Quenching the Pan-Asian Desire – Thai’s Boys’ Love, Tranculturalism, and Geolinguistic Fusion • “This

study attempt s to unpack the pan Asian Boys’ Love gen re phenomen on by

reading into a Thai BL hit I told Sunset about you , a coming of age story revolving

around two male protagonists in Thai Chinese diaspora. As a result of the real coming

of age drama, this BL has successfully merged two sub genres geikomi (also known as

bara) and Boys Love (BL) manga in the Japanese manga context. T h e use of shared

linguistic repertoire in Asian community is further examined. Its counter flows from

Thailand to China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan and South Korea offer media scholars

an fertile ground to understand East Asian fans’ practices. While this drama is by no

means the first counter flow case, it affords media scholar s to unpack how boys love

(BL) drama can inter penetrate Asian countries rapidly that has paved the way for a

decentering of the Western dominated global mediascape, as guest editor called for

attention in this issue. Thai s producers use of new practice to engage global audiences

has also destabilized the problematic theoretical dichotomy of East/West global/local

cultural imaginary.”

Extended Abstract • Faculty • Brian Snee, University of Scranton • Courage and Conviction: Christopher Columbus and the Rhetorics of Cancel Culture • Courage and Conviction:  The True Story of Christopher Columbus follows the classic formula for apologia: vehement denial, strategic bolstering, differentiation, and a call for transcendence. The short film engages in its act of dissuasion while simultaneously performing complex commemorative work.  It evokes the past not merely to lead its audience in the act of collective remembering, but also to encourage them to forget much of that past. The film urges its audience to move on, and to allow Columbus—his holiday and his effigies—to stand. Textual analysis reveals it as example of amnestic rhetoric.

Extended Abstract • Faculty • Rhon Teruelle, Purdue University Northwest • Social Media as an essential tactical resource for police whistleblowers • This article examines social media and The Lamplighter Project on Twitter as an example of a tactical resource for police whistleblowers. While whistleblowing, the act of exposing and reporting police wrongdoing is still viewed in a negative light by the majority of law enforcement, recent incidents such as the killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor display the need to hold police accountable for their actions. Moreover, reports that some police officers were involved in the attack against America’s capitol clearly exhibits that members of law enforcement are not above committing unlawful acts. The Lamplighter Project plays a key role in providing police whistleblowers a safe space on Twitter, allowing them to report on and expose police misconduct, brutality, and malfeasance.

Extended Abstract • Student • Kris Vera-Phillips, Arizona State University • The Framing of Other: How Framing Can Be A Postcolonial Tool For Institutional Power • Framing is a function of power. This conceptual theory paper investigates how leaders and institutions use the media strategy of framing as a postcolonial tool for obtaining, maintaining, and reinforcing power. Entman (1993) identified four functions of framing: defining problems, diagnosing causes, making moral judgments, and coming up with remedies. I will take each function of framing defined by Entman, apply lessons from postcolonial studies, and show how both are reflected in demonstrations of power.

Research Paper • Faculty • John Vilanova • The Caucasities of Portland: Theorizing White Protests for Black Lives • “This article uses “Caucasity” — a portmanteau of “Caucasian” and “audacity” — to retheorize the 2020 Portland, Oregon #BlackLivesMatter uprisings.

Promoted by the comedians Desus and Mero and proliferated through Black Twitter, Caucasity is best understood as a set of privileged performance practices deployed by white people, even while protesting white supremacy.

I historicize the term and analyze viral figures from the protests, arguing for productive nuance in theorizing white action for racial justice.”

Extended Abstract • Faculty • WeiMing YE; Luming Zhao • “I Know It’s Sensitive”: Internet Filtering, Recoding, and “Sensitive-word Culture” in China • In this article, we develop “sensitive-word culture” as a new lens for understanding Internet filtering and censorship, and online cultural production in China. Using in-depth interviews with 20 Chinese Weibo users, four types of word recoding are summarized and the motivations of users for recoding practices and the power relations are demonstrated. A notable finding suggests that “sensitive-word culture” is becoming a source and hub of slang and Memes production on the Chinese network society.

Extended Abstract • Student • Steven Young, Ph.D. Candidate • Hybrid Media or Mediasport? Exploring Media Portrayal of Esports Culture • Esports are growing in popularity at a rapid pace worldwide. In contemporary society, individuals watch esports broadcasts as part of their normal media consuming practices. Esports media significantly impact audience understandings, and play an integral role in shaping public discourse about esports culture. This study focuses on Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS:GO), which is currently the most recognized first-person shooter esport worldwide and the third most popular game across all esports genres (Irwin & Naweed, 2020). Interested in how the cultural knowledge and experience of esports are represented in media, I explored professional CS:GO esports broadcasts from two prominent professional leagues, ESL Pro League (EPL) and ELEAGUE. EPL is significant because it is longest standing professional Counter-Strike league worldwide. ELEAGUE represents the first regularly aired professional Counter-Strike league in the United States. Together, these leagues serve as active participants in creating, shaping, and molding esports culture worldwide. A thematic analysis of textual and audio-visual data from professional CS:GO broadcasts revealed that esports culture is a novel phenomenon, similar to sport, but situated within video games, and interspersed with a variety of digital media. Using traditional sports metaphors and comparisons, as well as sportscast style match coverage and gameplay reporting, EPL and ELEAGUE illustrate CS:GO as a global media-sport. At the same time, both leagues emphasize technicity and rely on gamer jargon to frame professional CS:GO as a form of hybrid media intrinsically tied to game culture. Together these representations suggest that esports culture is a “hybrid media-sport.”

Extended Abstract • Student • Ali Zain, University of South Carolina • Celebrity Capitol and Social Movements: A Textual Analysis of Bollywood Celebrities’ Tweets on 2020-21 Indian Farmers’ Protest • Building on global trend of celebrity activism and concept of celebrity capital, this study qualitatively examines Twitter posts of Bollywood celebrities about 2020-21 Indian farmers’ protest to to discover the dominant themes of favoring and opposing discourses. It was found pro-farmers celebrities used rhetorical and explanatory support while others employed celebrity capital as political support to government to oppose protesters and their supporters. Some celebrities even engaged in celebrity-shaming and name-calling in their communications.

Research Paper • postdoc • Sheng Zou, University of Michigan • “The Virus May Have Come From…”: COVID-19 Infodemic in China and the Politics of (Mis-)Translation • This article delves into the COVID-19 infodemic on China’s Internet, particularly fake news stories attributing the virus’s roots to the United States. It approaches the false origin stories as transnational and intertextual constructs, which involve practices of (mis)translating and referencing foreign source texts to paradoxically delegitimate the foreign, especially Western, Other. Through a close reading of emblematic cases, this article identifies three mistranslation maneuvers and gestures towards ways to combat fake news in the post-COVID era.

<2021 Abstracts

Communication Technology Division

2021 Abstracts

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • 360VR and Journalism: Investigating cognitive and persuasive effects of virtual reality community news narratives • Atkins, Aaron • The development and exploration of immersive, 360-degree virtual reality video (360VR) and its potential as a viable medium for information dissemination, has been the subject of both speculation and exploration over the last five years. As such, it becomes important to test/examine and investigate the effects the medium itself in different message contexts. This study details an experiment designed to test memory performance, persuasion and counterargument, and mediated influence in a community news context. It will use a political ideology message factor manipulation in a virtual reality, community journalism story and utilize a general public participant pool as the foundation for the study. It will also make use of the limited capacity model for motivated mediated message processing (LC4MP) as its theoretical framework. Findings include differences in memory performance between moderate and liberal participant groups, an increase in spatial presence mediated by sense of community, differences in visual and aural recall, and a ceiling effect in perceptions of journalist and message credibility. Implications and future research directions are discussed.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • What do 5G networks, Bill Gates, Agenda 21, and QAnon have in common? Sources, engagement, and characteristics • Borah, Porismita • In this paper we examine Tweets related to five leading conspiracies regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. Among the 15 conspiracy elements that were coded, content that believed in the conspiracy theories were the highest; followed by malicious purpose; and content about the conspirators. Our findings from the quantitative patterns as well as from qualitative narrative coding showed the interconnections among all five conspiracy theories. Findings showed that malicious purposes and secretive actions received the highest engagement.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Media Multitasking and Mood Management: The Positive and Negative Mediation Effects of Entertainment and Flow on Mood Repair • Chang, Yuhmiin • Recent survey studies have found that media multitasking had a negative effect on mood. This study, however, proposes that media multitasking can have both positive and negative effects on mood depending on the messages in the single medium. The results of the experiment demonstrate that media multitasking lead to greater mood repair through the mediation of perceived entertainment than relevant Website and lesser mood repair through the mediation of flow than Netflix sitcoms on PC.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Immersive Shopping and Consumer Decision-Making: Experiencing Flow via Augmented Reality Affordances of Realness and Fluidity • Chen, Ye • This study examined the effects of augmented realness and technology fluidity of (Augmented Reality)AR applications on consumers’ experience. A posttest-only between-subjects experiment was conducted to test a series of hypotheses. Findings demonstrate that both features positively influenced consumer responses through the immersion experience of flow. Specific effects on cognitive and affective response were discussed. The study contributes to theoretical building in AR marketing research and has implications to AR marketing practitioners.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • The Str(AI)ght Scoop: Artificially Intelligent Journalists Reduce Perceptions of Hostile Media Bias • Cloudy, Joshua • Artificially intelligent (AI) journalists have the potential to lower hostile media bias by activating the machine heuristic—a mental shortcut assuming machines are more unbiased, systematic, and accurate than are humans. An online experiment targeting abortion partisans found support for the prediction: an AI journalist activates the machine heuristic that, in turn, mitigates hostile media bias. This mediation effect was moderated: perceived bias was more strongly reduced as partisanship towards the issue became more extreme.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Build your own web experience: Investigating the effectiveness of web-enabled personalization through an online interactive tailored video • Cortese, Juliann • A randomized controlled, within-subjects experiment was conducted to compare user preferences for receiving information through a tailored video website compared to a generic website. Findings suggested that participants significantly preferred the interactive video format compared to the standard format on all but two direct-comparison variables. The interactive format outperformed the generic site in terms of behavioral intentions, user engagement, user fulfillment and positive affect, with significant order effects for information evaluation and elaboration of content.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • The Logic of Cross-breeding Actions: Roles of Telegrams Channels in the 2019 Hong Kong Social Movement • Fu, KW • This study empirically examines the roles of organizational and crowd activists in social movement’s action repertoires (mobilization, framing, and tactical coordination) by analyzing 4 million Telegram channel messages collected in the Hong Kong’s 2019 Anti-Extradition Law movement. The findings highlight the logic of cross-breeding metaphorically, a hyper-hybrid mode of Bennett & Segerberg’s logics of connective and collective actions, emphasizing a dynamic power-making process of the networked media in shaping contemporary social movement.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Understanding Fake News Corrective Action: A Mixed Method Approach • Gil de Zúñiga, Homero • Recent scholarship has devoted attention to the spread of fake news in social media, suggesting systematic viable ways to slow down the spread of misinformation. Generally, effective documented interventions rely on fake news identification and social peer corrective actions. Based on a cross-cultural, mixed method sequential design, this study further investigates 1) how citizens develop strategies to identify fake news and generate rational motivations to engage in corrective actions (Study 1, based on fifty-one in-depth adults’ interviews in Spain), and tests 2) whether traditional, social media, and fake news exposure predict taking corrective measures, as well as indirect relationships explained through individual’s news cognitive elaboration (Study 2, with US survey data). Qualitative and quantitative results highlight the distinctive news use effects over fake news corrective actions, placing some individual cognitive processes at the center of fake news counteractive behavior.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • ‘Live’ together with you: Livestream views mitigate the effects of loneliness on well-being • Goh, Zhang Hao • Livestreaming has gained traction in recent years, making it a billion-dollar industry. Owing to its success, most social networking sites today have integrated livestreaming functions in their platforms, as an increasing number of users broadcast, and an even bigger number watch, livestreams. What makes people watch livestreams? Studies have acknowledged how social media use (i.e., social networking) can mitigate the effects of loneliness, but due attention has yet to be given to the consumption of livestream content. Using national survey data (N = 1,606), this study demonstrates that livestream viewing has a positive influence on individuals’ well-being. Notably, the frequency of livestream viewing moderates the negative effects of loneliness on the viewers’ psychological, social, and emotional well-being. Implications of the results were discussed.

Extended Abstract • Faculty Paper Competition • Extended Abstract: How social shoppers adopt information: The moderating role of social homophily and content provider motivation • Hsu, Ying-Chia • Guided by Information Acceptance Model, this study examines information adoption in the context of social shopping by integrating two moderators, content provider motivation and social homophily. Results of structural equation modeling verify information acceptance model: As perceived information quality increases, information usefulness would also increase, boosting the likelihood of information adoption. Meanwhile, when social shoppers perceived higher similarities with the social media groups, they would be more likely to view the provided information as useful.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • The Influence of Perceived Value of Social Media Affordances on SNS Usage Loyalty • Hsu, Shihhsien • Based on the affordance approach, this study used surveys to explore the relationship among the multi-dimensional aspects of SNS affordance (symbolic, functional, interactive), users’ perceived value, and usage loyalty. Findings indicated that site affordances contribute to perceived value and usage loyalty. Moreover, trust is a significant moderator through the mediated model of affordance and usage loyalty via perceived value. Results show that participants care about social media platforms’ offering and form value perceptions; thus, influencing their posterior behavior of commitment toward the corresponding SNSs.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Mobile Phone Paradox: A Hypothetical Two-pathway Model Connecting Mobile Phone Use and Loneliness for the Filipino Domestic Workers in Hong Kong • Huang, Vincent • This study explores how mobile technologies provide a communication tool to help Filipino domestic workers in Hong Kong cope with social and emotional loneliness. Findings from a survey suggest that mobile phone use was only negatively associated with social loneliness. Both problematic mobile phone use and social support mediated the negative relationship, while only problematic mobile phone use was found to mediate the positive association between mobile phone use and emotional loneliness.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • The effect of perceived media influence: Factors affect corrective actions on social media • Jiang, Liefu • Through an experiment with 199 participants, this paper tested the causal relationships between perceived media reach, perceived media influence, and different levels of corrective actions on social media. Findings show that only perceived media reach can influence participants’ likelihood of taking low-level corrective actions. This paper contributes to corrective action studies by providing evidence of causality between antecedents and different levels of corrective actions, which helps researchers investigate corrective actions more accurately.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • “It Will Help Build Immunity”: Preventative Remedies, Herbal Cures, and Role of Uncertainty Reduction of Health Issues in WhatsApp • Kanthawala, Shaheen • “WhatsApp is a highly prevalent form of communication among people in India, with India being the app’s largest market. The app has revolutionized communication within people’s day-to-day lives in the country with discussions including a wide spectrum of topics including health. Health content on these closed platforms can have long-term and dangerous ramifications, especially since WhatsApp has often been under fire for the excessive amount of misinformation spread on the platform. In order to explore the kind of health content prevalent on the platform, we conducted 19 semi-structured, in-depth interviews with Indians over the age of 40.

Our findings highlight how most health discussions on the platform predominately involve natural remedies and alternative medication in order to build people’s immunity. However, this content is rarely verified, but people still engage with it in order to reduce feelings of uncertainty that come along with health issues (especially those in light of the COVID-19 pandemic). These ideas also give insights into the folk theories people have surrounding natural health solutions (as compared to Western medication), especially when tied together with historical and cultural narratives, and the role of the government in encouraging these beliefs.”

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Digital Fandom Engagement through Virtual Concert during Covid-19 • Kim, Wonkyung • This study examined the process through which the quality of relationship between fans and a musician influences fans’ experience and engagement of virtual concerts. A structural equation model with the survey data collected from 248 Chinese participants highlights the importance of fan-artist relationship, perceived interactivity, presence, and enjoyment in predicting fans’ eWOM behaviors. Implications are provided on how to utilize virtual platforms and interactivity features to improve audience experience and engagement of the virtual concert.

Extended Abstract • Faculty Paper Competition • Close enough to share? The effect of technology media-system dependency on proximity to the impacts of artificial intelligence, and online information sharing • Kirkpatrick, Alex • We surveyed a sample of US citizens regarding their media habits related to staying informed about artificial intelligence (AI). Results suggest that those dependent on media-systems to stay informed about AI perceive the impacts of AI to be nearer and more likely to affect people similar to them. In turn, this psychological proximity increased the chances that respondents themselves would share AI contents online. Perceived rate of technological change was found to enhance this process. Results are conceptualized in relation to Construal-level of Psychological Distances, and Media-System Dependency Theory.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Parasocial Interactions with Live Streamers, Social Capital, and Political Participation • Lee, Heysung • This research investigates relationships between engagement during live streaming, parasocial interactions (PSI), and the role of PSI as social capital promoting offline political participation, using online survey with 504 respondents in South Korea and 510 respondents in the U.S. Results shows that viewer engagement and perceived attitude homophily with the host is positively related to PSI. PSI promote political participation and political efficacy amplifies the positive effects of PSI on political participation in both countries.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Effects of Negativity Bias and Serial Positioning of Consumer Processing of Online Reviews • Lee, Yukyung • This study tested the effects of serial positioning of online consumer reviews on review information process and evaluation. Results suggested that consumer reviews published in the order of “lowest” to “highest” ratings alongside more positive prior brand attitude led to more systematic information processing, which was positively related to perceived review helpfulness. While perceived review helpfulness is positively associated with perceived website credibility, the latter is positively linked to intentions to shop on the website.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • “Now You See Me”: Self-Representation Affordance Moderates Bandwagon-Cues’ Impacts on Information Exposure • Li, Wenbo • News recommender system and popularity metrics (i.e., bandwagon cues) have changed how users encounter and select information. Hypotheses on resulting information exposure were derived from Sundar et al.’s (2015) TIME and Knobloch-Westerwick’s (2020) UCU frameworks. A computerized lab experiment examined how a self-representation affordance (inducing focus on self vs. others) moderates bandwagon cues’ (low vs. high numbers) impact on exposure to political messages. The results show that creating a private self-representation induced self-focus and led to more exposure to messages with high bandwagon-cues numbers than to messages with low bandwagon-cues numbers. Creating a public self-representation induced other focus and led to more exposure to messages with low bandwagon-cues numbers than to messages with high bandwagon-cues numbers. An online field study followed up and yielded similar, albeit weaker effects on information exposure. The findings underscore how user profiles and recommender systems, as on Twitter or Facebook, interact to affect information exposure.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Whom should I blame? How source identifications of computer-generated imagery influencers affect consumer’s responsibility attribution in brand endorsement • Liu, Fanjue • Computer-generated virtual influencers today have humanlike visual representations and function like human social media influencers. Virtual influencers have been increasingly adopted as brand endorsers in influencer marketing with both successes and failures. However, little is known about how consumers would attribute the success or failure regarding virtual influencers’ endorsements. Through the theoretical lens of mind perception theory and attribution theories, this study examines how people attribute responsibility to virtual influencers when they perceive the influencer as a computer-generated virtual person versus as a human in terms of endorsement failure and success. The results of a 2 x 2 experiment showed that when the endorsement had a positive outcome, people attributed more credit to the human influencers than the virtual influencers. In contrast, when the endorsement had a negative outcome, people attributed similar responsibility levels to the human influencers and the virtual influencers. Mind perception was found to mediate the effect of source identification—virtual human versus human—on the responsibility attribution toward influencers. The findings of this research provides theoretical and practical implications for both influencer marketing and human-robot interaction research.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • A Vaccine for Social Media? Factors Moderating the Negative Impact of Social Media Use on COVID-19 Protective Behaviors • Muturi, Nancy • A nationally representative online survey conducted in the United States during the initial surge of the COVID-19 pandemic examined the moderating role of civic engagement, social capital, and misinformation concerns in the relationship between media use and self-protective health behaviors. Building on the Social Exchange Theory, analyses found that while social media as a whole negatively impacts compliance with recommended health practices, certain affordances and awareness of its potential shortcomings reverse that association. Implications for theory, risk communication via traditional and social media, and public health are discussed.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Uncivil versus Intolerant: Examining Incivility on Social Media Discussions • Oz, Mustafa • “This study is an attempt to further understand uncivil discourse on social media platforms. Instead of solely focusing on incivility, this study distinguishes incivility from intolerance and examines these two concepts in the context of public comments on two social media platforms. More specifically, the study examines whether uncivil and intolerant comments vary based on platforms and topic sensitivity, as well as the relationship between uncivil/intolerant discourse and deliberative attributes.

According to the results, while incivility occurs in both platforms, there is a meaningful difference between Facebook and Twitter in terms of intolerant comments. Also, there is a positive relationship between topic sensitivity and intolerance. Finally, Facebook discussion 46% more likely to contain deliberative comments than Twitter discussion.”

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Fear of Surveillance: Examining Social Media Users’ Perception of Surveillance and Willingness to Express Opinion on Social Media • Oz, Mustafa • Many surveillance studies used the panopticon analogy to understand the impact of government surveillance practices on political participation. In the light of Foucault’s thoughts, this study examined how the perception of government surveillance impacts Turkish social media users’ willingness to express an opinion on social media. Also, we examined whether online privacy skills and perceived majority variables moderate the relationship between perceived surveillance and willingness to speak out on social media. The results suggested that perceived surveillance is negatively related to one’s willingness to speak out. On the other hand, online privacy skills moderate the relationship between perceived surveillance and one’s willingness to speak out.

Extended Abstract • Faculty Paper Competition • Extended Abstract: Resharing Brands on Social Media: Posts and Reposts from Peers, Influencers, and Brands • Rosenbaum, Judith • With social media seen as central to marketing, understanding how the source of a brand-related social media post impacts attitudes is critical. Building on research into electronic word-of-mouth and warranting theory, an experiment was used to compare the impact of content posted and reshared by peers, influencers, and brands on Facebook and Instagram. Results pointed to the value of third-party claims, but also revealed the interaction between the nature of the source and the platform.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Trade-Off Between Layout Congruency and User Experience in Visual Search Behavior on Pinterest Boards • Shabalina, Olga • Layout congruency and user experience are central predictors of visual search on social media feeds. However, our understanding of their effect on users’ online behavior and attitude towards social media platforms is underdeveloped. The present research fills this gap and explores what Pinterest users think about visual search in one-column (congruent) versus two-column (incongruent) conditions of Pinterest board layout, and how their experience primes perceived processing fluency and attitude towards visual search.

Extended Abstract • Faculty Paper Competition • COVID-19 Risk Perceptions among College Students Social Media for Self and Mass Media for Others • Shin, Inyoung • This study explores the roles of mass and social media use and personal networks in the judgment of COVID-related perceived risk among college students. Extending the impersonal hypothesis, we examine how mass media, social media, and personal networks related to college students’ risk perception at two different levels: personal and societal. Our study shows that mass media use can increase societal risk perception, whereas social media and network-related characteristics have the potential to increase both personal and societal risk perceptions.

Extended Abstract • Faculty Paper Competition • Sharing Goodness: Communication Technology Effects and Effectiveness during a Pandemic • Smith, Brian • The COVID-19 pandemic’s effects include extended use of communication technology. This study examines communication technology effects through the lens of missionaries, who faced an unprecedented new normal – the replacement of in-person proselyting with digitally-facilitated interaction. In-depth interviews with 17 participants who served as missionaries during the pandemic reveal both effects and effectiveness of communication technology, including effects on resilience mediated by uncertainty acceptance and integration of personal interest.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Exploring Effects of Gender and Instant Messaging Experience on Organization-Customer Live Chat Communication • Song, Xu • A post-test only 2x2x2 factorial between-subjects experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of gender and instant messaging experience on the organization-customer live chat communication in both schema-resonance and non-schema-resonance conditions. A convenience sample (N=261) was used. Compared to males, females used less live-chat time, demonstrated greater usage intent, and were more satisfied with live chat service, communication approach, and information provided. IM experience had a significant effect on customer intention in schema-resonance live chat.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Correct me if I’m wrong: The role of in-group dynamics in correcting misinformation • Tandoc Jr, Edson • This experimental study investigated the effectiveness of correction message sent by different group members (in-group vs out-group) and through different modes of delivery (group vs interpersonal chat) in reducing participants’ perceived credibility of online fake news. Guided by the social identity theory, this study found that correction messages sent via interpersonal channels were more effective at lowering participants’ perceived credibility of online fake news, but we found no main effect for type of sender.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Integrating Interpersonal Communication Into the Influence of Presumed Media Influence Model: Understanding Intentions to Censor and Correct Misinformation on Social Media • Tsang, Stephanie Jean • We extended the influence of presumed media influence model by taking interpersonal communication into account. Our survey (N = 642) results revealed that individuals’ attention to COVID-19 information on social media and their engagement in interpersonal communication about the disease independently and jointly affected presumed others’ attention. The more that individuals engaged in interpersonal communication, the less that their attention to mediated content factored into how they perceived others’ attention to such content. Presumed others’ attention, in turn, was positively associated with presuming that others were influenced by COVID-19 misinformation and the intention to correct, but not censor, misinformation.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Your Virtue is My Vice: Analyzing Moral Foundations in Pro-Vaping and Anti-Vaping Facebook Communities • Wang, Yunwen • A recent surge of e-cigarette use raised serious public concern. Drawing on Moral Foundations Theory, this study integrated computational and human strategies to disentangle vaping controversies. We conducted time-series analysis, topic modeling, classification, and chi-square tests on 2,669 public Facebook posts. Results revealed pro-vapers cited more Fairness/Cheating and Authority/Subversion than anti-vapers, while anti-vapers cited more Sanctity/Degradation. Referencing to Care/Harm as well as Loyalty/Betrayal in similar sheer volumes, the two opposing communities sometimes contextualized them differently.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • The Status of Social Media Related Public Relations Research: A Systematic Review of Articles Published in 14 Journals from 2006 to 2018 • Wang, Yuan • This study examines the patterns and trends of social media-related public relations (SMPR) research published in 14 journals from 2006 to 2018. It analyzes the theoretical trends (i.e., research topics, theories and theoretical models, hypotheses, and research questions), methodological trends (i.e., sample types, sampling methods, and research methods), and social media platforms used in 357 published journal articles. The results reveal the trends of SMPR articles across journal areas and stages of social media development.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Twitter and Endorsed Misinformation: Retweeting, Bandwagon Cues, and Conspiracy Theory during COVID-19 Pandemic • Wang, Luxuan • Our study examined how the unique social endorsement systems on Twitter indicating who retweets a post and how many like that post, affected perceived credibility of misinformation and sharing intention. By conducting a 2 by 2 survey experiment among 267 Twitter users, we found the relative effects of an acquaintance as a retweeter over a celebrity on misinformation credibility and retweeting intention and the presence of bandwagon cues increases information credibility and retweeting intentions.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • How Do Individuals’ World Views Shape Their Perceptions of AI • WEN, CHIA-HO RYAN • Enhancing public confidence in revolutionary technology is possibly the most consequential job of government when developing novel science, and one of the greatest obstacles is to figure out why the masses hold highly discrepant views on any specific technology. Based on previous literature, this study hypothesizes that the discordant perceptions of science arise from individuals’ intrinsic divergent world views built upon political orientations, content knowledge, perceived knowledge, and habitual consumption of scientific news. Analysing 502 survey participants, our research concludes first that the dichotomous political ideology (liberalism versus conservativism) is a feeble predictor in Taiwan’s social context and not as indicative as it is for the U.S. society. Second, content knowledge of AI predicts positive attitudes towards AI and its regulation, whereas perceived knowledge of AI predicts risk perceptions of AI. Third and finally, in accordance with content knowledge, scientific news consumption has a direct bearing on both the benefit perceptions of AI as well as its regulation support.

Extended Abstract • Faculty Paper Competition • Extended Abstract: Media Trust and Comment Argument Strength’s Effects on Journalist Credibility • Wolfgang, David • Negative online reader comments on news sites can hurt journalists’ credibility but much could depend on how the comments are constructed and presented. This study considers how differences in the argument strength of negative comments and the individual’s level of media trust could influence journalist’s credibility ratings. An experimental study with 122 U.S. participants showed comment argument strength can affect a journalist’s credibility and, more importantly, media trust can influence perceived argument strength effects.

Extended Abstract • Faculty Paper Competition • Extended Abstract: The Link between Online Gaming Behavior and Unethical Decision-Making in Emerging Adults • Wu, Yuehua • Using online survey, this study examines a sample of Chinese college students to assess the relationship between online gaming intensity and real-life unethical decision-making. Results show that gaming intensity has no direct effect on unethical decision-making yet has indirect effect on it via game cheating and serial indirect effect via game cheating and moral disengagement. The relationship between these two variables is positive at low levels of peer cheating and negative at high levels.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Bridging the Academic-Practitioner Divide in AI Advertising: Analysis of Articles in Advertising Trade Publications • Wu, Linwan • In this study, we explored the practitioner perspective of AI advertising by analyzing the articles that mention AI and its related terms from an important advertising trade publication. A computational analysis of natural language processing discovered five salient topics from these articles, including “platform/companies leverage AI in business,” “AI powers content creation,” “AI battles against human wrongdoing,” “using AI for consumer marketing,” and “exhibiting AI-involved work/cases.” We compared these topics with the existing scholarly research of AI advertising and identified the gap between academic and practitioner perspectives. Implications of this study to both researchers and professionals are discussed.

Extended Abstract • Faculty Paper Competition • [EXTENDED ABSTRACT] Consumers’ Responses to Location Privacy Invasive Digital Reality Technologies in Museums: A Self-Determination Theory Perspective • YANG, KENNETH C.C. • “The convergence of mobile technologies and location-aware AR applications in museums has presented an interesting phenomenon for both researchers and practitioners to develop best practices and theoretical exploration. Particularly, the pervasive nature of mobile technologies and the heavy reliance on consumers’ locational information are two major technological advantages that make digital reality applications possible. An important question to explore is how users’ privacy concerns would affect the emerging AR applications in museums that rely on consumers’ locational information to generate location-relevant cultural contents. To better understand these relationships between consumers’ privacy concerns, consumer autonomy, and their privacy management strategies, this employed a questionnaire survey to collect empirical data from conveniently recruited 263 participants. Findings from this study did not support the role of consumer autonomy on concerns over location privacy. However, museum-goers’ own privacy concerns do predict 2 out of 3 privacy management strategies to better protect their location privacy. Theoretical and practical implications will be discussed.

Extended Abstract • Faculty Paper Competition • Exploring Users’ Co-commenting Behaviors on Social Video Platforms: A Network Analysis of Danmaku Comments • Zhang, Xinzhi • By analyzing users’ real-time comments on the video streaming platforms—known as Danmaku comments—the present study advances research on co-commenting and distinguishes co-commenting based on the same time (two users sending comments at the same time) versus co-commenting based on the same timeline point (two users sending comments at the same points of the video’s timeline). Two co-commenting networks based on users’ danmaku commenting on Bilibili are constructed and analyzed.

Research Paper • Faculty Paper Competition • Norms, Attitudes, and Third-Person Effects in VPN Use of Chinese Users Abroad • Zhu, Ying • Internet censorship and VPN restrictions prevail in mainland China. This study investigates factors influencing overseas Chinese VPN users’ attitudes toward censorship and VPN use guided by theories of the third-person effects and social norms. Results show that third-person effects, injunctive norms, and censorship attitudes influence people’s VPN use. Both injunctive and descriptive norms influence censorship attitudes. Chinese social media use impacts people’s injunctive norms while U.S. social media use influences both injunctive and descriptive norms.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • #Scamdemic, #Plandemic, or #Scaredemic: What Parleys Tell Us About COVID-19 Vaccine • Baines, Annalise • Using echo chambers as a framework, we analyzed 400 Parler posts using the hashtag #COVID19Vaccine and #NoCovidVaccine to understand users’ discussions through text analytics approach. Findings reveal five themes: reasons to refuse the COVID-19 vaccine, side effects of the COVID-19 vaccine, population control through the COVID-19 vaccine, children getting vaccinated without parental consent, and comparison of other health issues with COVID-19. Findings suggest users adopted various terms to express their beliefs regarding the COVID-19 vaccine.

Extended Abstract • Student Paper Competition • Extended Abstract: Visually provocative: How visual elements influence IRA Facebook advertisement engagements • Choi, Jaewon Royce • This study examines relatively understudied aspect in disinformation research: affective nature of contents. We investigate the visual elements of images used in the Facebook ads purchased by Russian Internet Research Agency (IRA). Following systemic functional visual semiotic theory, visual elements of gaze, social distance, and efficacy statement were coded for images in IRA Facebook ads. Multiple regression analysis reveals significant joint effects of these visual elements and political leaning of ads on IRA ad engagements.

Extended Abstract • Student Paper Competition • A Study on the Health Information Sharing Behavior of the Chinese Elderly Adults on WeChat • Gan, Lingbo • This study examines the types and motivations of Chinese elderly adults using social media to share health information through in-depth interviews. Chinese elderly adults tend to share health information about healthcare and specific diseases through group and private chats with their strong relationships. This study concludes five motives for Chinese elderly to share information, and categorizes them according to relationships and information appeal. The cultural traits and local psychology behind the behaviors are also discussed.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • “When thousands and thousands are asking for it, it’s hard to put it off:” Wattpad.com’s technological affordances and teens’ experiences writing erotic One Direction fanfiction • Hedrick, Ashley • This paper uses interviews with 15 One Direction fanfiction writers on Wattpad.com to learn more about the interactions between Wattpad’s technological affordances and fans’ erotic writing about “bad boy” characters. Fanfiction bad boys often mistreat women, sometimes escalating to sexual coercion. While the popularity of erotic writing decreased teen girl writers’ internalized stigma regarding sex, some young writers learned to seek out bad boys in real life romantic relationships.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Hyperpersonal communication in social media: Examining the effect of social media affordance in self-disclosure processes by integrating cognitive load perspective • HUANG, WEI • The proposed perception-behavior linkage effect in present study bridges the gap between perceptions of social media affordances and behaviors, shedding new light on how disclosure perceptions may trigger communication behavior in CMC. Based on Hyperpersonal communication model, it was found that asynchronicity indirectly influence the self-disclosure processes through the affordance of editability, whereby the intensified perception of asynchronicity (or anonymity) could lead to stronger perception of editability as well as more amount of disclosure and depth of disclosure. Meanwhile, the relationship between perception of asynchronicity (or anonymity) and perception of editability was contingency depend on the frequency of social media use. More specifically, suggested by cognitive load theory, the working memory would decay the self-disclosure amount as the increase use of social media. The results are critical to understanding the dynamics and opportunities of self-disclosure in social media services that vary levels of identification and types of audience.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Exploratory Study of the Relationship between Privacy Concerns and Online Political Participation on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram • Humayun, Muhammad Fahad • Previous research has concluded that online social network sites (SNS) may be benefiting their users by connecting and communicating with others (Donath & Boyd, 2004; Subrahmanyam & Greenfield, 2008) while there is also a growing body of research focusing on social media and privacy concerns (Bode, 2012). In this study, we aim to demonstrate that privacy concerns might limit political participation online using a convenience based sample. Through previous literature review, we hypothesized that a) Individual privacy concerns will predict lower levels of online political participation, b) Individuals’ privacy concerns will predict lower levels of the political use of Facebook, c) Individuals’ privacy concerns will predict higher levels of the political use of Instagram d) Individuals’ privacy concerns will predict lower levels of the political use of Twitter. Results show that the privacy concerns of citizens predict lower political participation on the Internet in general along with Facebook and Twitter but predict higher participation on Instagram.

Extended Abstract • Student Paper Competition • Alexa as perfect pandemic pals: Contextualizing motivations of anthropomorphizing voice assistants during Covid-19 quarantine • Liu, Fanjue • COVID-19 is fundamentally changing the way people connect, collaborate and socialize. With the ongoing pandemic amplifying people’s feeling of loneliness, technology has been integrated into peoples’ lives and used to solve challenges induced by social distancing and quarantines. Specifically, voice assistants are growing as a pandemic-era staple. Combining the uses and gratification approach and three-factor theory of anthropomorphism, this study investigates the psychological factors underlying the interaction between users and voice assistants that motivate users to anthropomorphize voice assistants, and tests whether the lack of sociality during COVID-19 pandemic motivates people to regain the feeling of connectedness through anthropomorphizing voice assistants.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • What Is Government Content Moderation? • McCammon, Muira • This study examines how government agencies negotiate and navigate what is appropriate for users acting on behalf of the U.S. administrative state to say. It traces the digital labor of government employees tasked with intervening when official government social media accounts amplify inappropriate content. The analytical framework proposed—government content moderation—is meant to extend understandings of how digital workers at government institutions negotiate the continued importance of information technology in promoting organizational identity.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • The Power of a Blue Check: Measuring the Impact of Influencers on Instagram Advertisements • McCaul, Emily • Brands increasingly utilize Instagram influencers as a digital marketing tool, because influencers have shown to be effective in engaging customers by offering them relatability and trustworthiness online via digital communication, as suggested by source credibility theory. This study seeks to explore the questions: How do Instagram users identify an Instagram influence, and what factors communicate to the consumer that a user carries “influence?” In this experiment, a 2×2 factorial design is used to present participants with two visual cues: follower counts and verification badges. Then, participants’ attitudes towards the product, attitudes towards the influencer and purchasing intentions are measured via a questionnaire. The results of this study found no significant interactions between the independent variables (i.e., follower count and verification badge) and the attitude towards the product, attitude towards the influencer’s credibility, or purchasing intention. These results carry implications for source credibility of influencers, as this study suggests, that perhaps follower count and verification badges do not play as big of a role in determining an audience’s trust and relatability to an influencer.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Filtering the I from the ideal: Examining preadolescents’ self-presentation in relation to appearance perceptions. • Meeus, Anneleen • This cross-sectional study examined how preadolescents’ different (i.e.,real and false) online self-presentation strategies are associated with their appearance-related perceptions. Results (n=638;52.4% girls,Mage=10.94,SDage=0.85) showed that when preadolescents engaged in more truthful self-presentations, they also felt more positive about their appearance. A significant moderation effect was found for social feedback, with the association becoming stronger as online popularity (e.g., likes) increased. Conversely, false self-presentation was negatively related to appearance-related perceptions, while no significant interaction effect was found.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Do you know what they are doing with your data? Digital Literacy and Perceived Understanding of Institutional Surveillance • Oden, Ayla • Although the divide in terms of technological access has largely been flattened, there remain large disparities in digital and online privacy literacy. Individuals with lower rates of digital literacy are often more vulnerable to online surveillance and privacy invasion threats. Using 2019 data collected by the Pew Research Center, this study investigates how digital literacy can play a mediating role in the perceived understanding of online institutional threats by the government and private companies.

Extended Abstract • Student Paper Competition • Extended Abstract: The Cost of Flow in Media Use: An Eye-tracking Study • Pham, Giang V. • This study examines the process through which flow absorbs media users’ attentional resources and results in a cost of time and effort for goals outside of the flow-inducing activity. An eye-tracking experiment is conducted to observe how video game players– who were assigned a single goal or multiple goals– allocate their attention to the game vs. to external cues. The findings will enhance the understanding of flow’s negative aspects and technology that alleviates flow costs for users.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Listening In: An Assessment of Uses and Gratifications with Clubhouse Users • Porter, Caleb • Clubhouse is a new anonymous, audio-only, invitation-only communication technology. In the year since its inception it has amassed an enormous following. The current study seeks to build foundational knowledge on Clubhouse user’s motivations for use, in accordance with the Uses and Gratifications theory. A big data, computational content analysis was performed using text mining to evaluate the conversation surrounding Clubhouse on Twitter. Results showed “communication utility” and “exclusivity,” among others, as key motivators for use.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Exploring COVID-19 Disinformation Through the Lens of Modality • Soh, Shi Nan • This study investigates the role of multimodal disinformation and fact-checks on message credibility and the intention to share disinformation online. Using the Heuristic Systematic Model (HSM) to control for variables that could impact credibility perceptions, this study features a 2 x 2 factorial design conducted on a Singapore sample (N = 205). The results show that multimodal fact-checks are more effective than monomodal fact-checks in debunking disinformation, with its impact mediated by message credibility.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Community Building with Discord: Effects of Interface Elements on User Perception and Experiences with Discord Servers • TAN, RYAN • Discord is a videogame-related social platform allowing gamers to join or host and customize chat servers. Customization allows each server to have a unique interface design. With the thousands of servers currently run by players and various corporations, why are some Discord servers more popular than others? We explored these questions through an online experiment (N = 130) coupled with a content analysis of Discord servers’ interface elements at varying levels of popularity. We discovered that players perceived lower community-building opportunities in the presence of automated role assignment and role restricted channels but these perceptions were elevated in the presence of hierarchical roles in the member-list and voice channels. These perceptions of community-building further influenced users’ attitudes and behavioral intention towards the server. These findings have theoretical implications for building an integrated model of new technology adoption as well as practical implications for building better platforms for game communities.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • More Gay Dating Apps Use, More Depressive Symptoms: Exploring How Masculinity Consciousness and Internalized Homophobia Influenced Gay Men in China • Wang, Dongya • The prevalence of masculinity on gay dating apps has negative impacts on gay men’s mental health. When cruising on gay dating apps, gay men often encountered the representation of masculinity from other users, which in turn provoked their own masculinity consciousness. Given masculinity consciousness’ association with internalized homophobia, gay dating apps use may further deteriorate gay men’s mental health. However, few studies have been conducted in the Chinese context. The current study utilized an online survey to examine how gay dating apps use influenced gay men’s depressive symptoms in the Chinese gay community in the neoliberal era. Eventually, 236 eligible participants were recruited via snowball sampling. The results demonstrated the positive relationship between gay dating apps use and users’ depressive symptoms. Moreover, the mediation effect that masculinity consciousness and internalized homophobia respectively had on gay dating apps use and depressive symptoms were demonstrated. Those findings called for attention to the negative impact of heave gay dating apps use, the prevalence of masculinity consciousness and internalized homophobia had on users’ mental health.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Measuring News Verification Behavior: A Scale Development and Cross-cultural Validation Study • Yu, Wenting • The actions that news audiences take to verify news bear great theoretical and practical relevance to journalism and communication studies. In existing literature, there is no standardized scale for measuring news verification behavior. The purpose of this study is to develop and to validate a multidimensional scale of news verification. The model is developed based on U.S participants, and then validated with Sweden samples. The results show that news verification can be considered a hierarchical factor (of second-order), which consists of three lower-order factors: message elements, social cues, and third-party sources. This model is the first news verification behaviour measurement scale developed with validation in communication research.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Using Theory of Planned Behavior, and Operationalization of Political Partisanship and Belief in Misinformation to Predict Individuals’ Intentions to Quit Social Media • Zain, Ali • This study uses the theory of planned behavior to predict individuals’ intentions to quit social media. Attitude, subjective norms and perceived behavioral control significantly predicted intentions to quit social media, accounting for 68 percent of variance among participants (N = 525) representing the US census data. Political partisanship and belief in misinformation were also slightly increasing predictability of the TPB, indicating that they can be used as moderators or antecedents of subjective norms in future.

Research Paper • Student Paper Competition • Competing in Shopping Games: Modelling Gamification Effects of Social Livestreaming Shopping and Chinese Undergraduates’ Impulsive Buying • Zhu, Yicheng • Combining gamified interfaces with popular online influencers, Social Livestream Shopping (SLS) has emerged recently as a powerful format of online marketing in East Asian societies and the West. This paper explores the effect of gamification and influencer perception on Chinese college students’ competitive arousal and impulsive buying tendency. Building on S-O-R model and Competitive Arousal Model, our path analysis found gamification and influencer perception influences competitive arousal through the mediation of immersion.

<2021 Abstracts

IDL Fellows

Universities listed are at the time of graduation from the IDL program.

IDL Jennifer McGill Fellows 2023-24

  1. MASUDUL BISWAS, Loyola University Maryland
  2. BILL CASSIDY, Northern Illinois University
  3. DEBORAH CHUNG, University of Kentucky
  4. SYDNEY DILLARD, DePaul University
  5. NATHANIEL FREDERICK II, Winthrop University
  6. YOUNGAH LEE, Ball State University
  7. REGINA LUTTRELL, Syracuse University
  8. NATHIAN SHAE RODRIGUEZ, San Diego State University

IDL Jennifer McGill Fellows 2022-23

  1. JAN LAUREN BOYLES, Iowa State University
  2. KATIE FOSS, Middle Tennessee State University
  3. HILARY FUSSELL SISCO, Quinnipiac University
  4. CHERYL ANN LAMBERT, Kent State University
  5. HOLLY OVERTON, Penn State University
  6. JESSICA RETIS, University of Arizona
  7. JAE-HWA SHIN, University of Southern Mississippi
  8. GABRIEL B. TAIT, Ball State University

IDL Fellows 2020-21

  1. Mia Long Anderson, Azusa Pacific University
  2. David Brown, Temple University
  3. Tamara Zellars Buck, Southeast Missouri State University
  4. Moonhee Cho, University of Tennessee Knoxville
  5. Celeste Gonzalez de Bustamante, University of Arizona
  6. Miao Guo, Ball State University
  7. Ammina Kothari, Rochester Institute
  8. Gerry Lanosga, Indiana University
  9. Ingrid Sturgis, Howard University
  10. Bruno Takahashi, Michigan State University

IDL Fellows 2019-20

  1. Adedayo (“Dayo”) Abah, Washington and Lee University
  2. Saleem Alhabash, Michigan State University
  3. Vanessa Bravo, Elon University
  4. Rockell Brown Burton, Texas Southern University
  5. Maria De Moya, DePaul University
  6. Felicia McGhee, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
  7. Suman Mishra, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
  8. Jennifer Potter, Towson University
  9. Gi Woong Yun, University of Nevada, Reno

IDL Fellows 2018-19

  1. Margaretha Geertsema-Sligh, Butler University
  2. Herman Howard, Angelo State University
  3. Jeannine E. Relly, University of Arizona
  4. Yong Volz, University of Missouri
  5. Mia Moody-Ramirez, Baylor University
  6. Vera Walker Hawkins, Texas Southern University
  7. Uche Onyebadi, Texas Christian University
  8. Jennifer Vardeman, University of Houston
  9. Weiwu Zhang, Texas Tech University

IDL Fellows 2016-17

  1. Linda Aldoory, University of Maryland
  2. Laura Castaneda, University of Southern California
  3. Jerry Crawford, University of Kansas
  4. Calvin Hall, North Carolina Central University
  5. Karie Hollerbach, Southeast Missouri State University
  6. Maria Len-Rios, University of Georgia
  7. Herb Lowe, University of Florida
  8. Emily Metzgar, Indiana University

IDL Fellows 2015-16

  1. Carolyn Bronstein, DePaul University
  2. Jean Grow, Marquette University
  3. Susan Keith, Rutgers University
  4. Kathleen McElroy, Oklahoma State University
  5. Gwyneth Mellinger, Xavier University
  6. Donica Mensing, University of Nevada Reno
  7. Marquita Smith, John Brown University
  8. Alice Tait, Central Michigan University

Return to IDL

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

Political Communication Division

Main Paper Competition
Affective Polarization and Political Engagement in the United States: What Factors Matter? • Mohammad Ali, S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, Syracuse University; Abdulaziz Altawil • This paper examines the factors that influence affective polarization and political engagement in the United States. Using an original survey dataset (N=606), this study found several insights influencing affective polarization and political engagement. The findings would be helpful to further study affective polarization, which is reportedly affecting democracy and the country’s greater interest as well. Insights found in this paper could also be utilized in devising political communication strategies related to people’s polarized political views. Future research is encouraged to combine survey data and social media data for a more refined outcome.

Role of Traditional Media in Influencing Presidential Election Outcomes in Ghana • Elinam Amevor, University of Oregon • The traditional roles of the media in informing and educating the public are emphasized. But research into other critical functions of the media in a democracy such as public opinion formation and power alternation in presidential elections in Africa are less researched. This paper analyzes the role of the traditional news media in influencing presidential election outcomes in Ghana and makes a case for media effects research in analyzing voting behavior in African elections.

Between authoritarianism and democracy: Rethinking old and new media roles for political re-socialization in forced migration contexts • Rana Arafat, University of Lugano • While political scholars study news media as agents of political learning, the processes of political re-socialization of a conflict-generated diaspora moving from authoritarian to democratic regimes pose significant theoretical challenges that remain insufficiently researched. To this end, this study investigates the importance of traditional and digital media sources from the homeland and host country in fostering refugees’ understanding of the democratic norms and values, and political opportunities offered by the receiving country. Further, it investigates the role of online diaspora communities as agents for political re-socialization and tools for information acquisition about Arabic, Swiss and international politics. 60 semi-structured interviews with Arabs from refugee origins in Switzerland were analyzed. Findings show the influence of the early-life political socialization, received prior to forced migration, on the purposive consumption of media from various sources. As Facebook started to lose its value as a source of political information, participants shift to producing and consuming news distributed by strong ties on private WhatsApp groups as a counter-strategy to acquire trustworthy information. Further insights on the impact of perceived media credibility and individual trust in news on the consumption behavior and political learning are discussed.

The News Expectations Predicament: Comparing and Explaining what Muslims and Members of the Mainstream Society Expect from Journalists’ Roles and Reporting Practices • Philip Baugut; Sebastian Scherr • Media coverage of right-wing extremism pertains to the media’s information and watchdog function in a democratic political system. However, little is known about the audience’s expectations of journalists regarding their role for society and their reporting practices in order to fulfil their democratic function. To bridge this gap, a quota sample representative of the general German population (n = 1314) and an independent sample of Muslims living in Germany (n = 248) demonstrates that Muslims expect from journalists a more active role and accept more controversial reporting practices to combat right-wing extremism. More liberal individuals were found to show heightened expectations; however, these were reduced when more liberal individuals were afraid of right-wing extremism. In a country particularly sensitive toward right-wing terror, we found strong value-oriented views in that fears of right-wing extremism should not make a democratic society give up its core principles–including the professional autonomy of journalists.

* Extended Abstract * “You are a disgrace and traitor to our country”: Uncivil rhetoric against the ‘squad’ on Twitter • Porismita Borah; Itai Himelboim, University of Georgia; Bryan Trude, University of Georgia; Matthew Binford, University of Georgia; Kate Keib, Oglethorpe University • Scholars have highlighted the negative consequences and implications of excessive uncivil discourses. Incivility on twitter is a rising trend. We conducted a content analysis of the replies to the tweets of four congresswomen known as the “squad” and examined the different types of uncivil rhetoric targeted against these congresswomen. Our findings show that name calling, aspersion, and stereotype were the most common types of incivility.

“It’s all yellow journalism now”: How White evangelical Christian women’s contempt of mainstream media contributes to their support of politician Donald J. Trump • Gayle Jansen Brisbane, California State University Fullerton • This paper will examine connections between White evangelical Christian women’s presumably paradoxical allegiance for Donald Trump and their cynicism towards mainstream media. This preliminary qualitative study employed focus groups composed of White women who support Donald J. Trump as president and also identify themselves as evangelical Christian women. Endeavoring to understand the extreme divisiveness in the current political climate between liberal and conservative and between secular and religious citizens should be undertaken often. This paper will present a brief recap of the relationship between Christianity and politics in modern times, then review why the media is regarded as having a “liberal bias” and finally explore the theory of selective processes and how these may be operating among evangelical women as they encounter discordant information about Trump. Through discourse analysis, it will also examine these focus group interviews of White evangelical Christian women’s points of views on politics and the media in order to shed light on their contradictory support of President Donald J. Trump. The research questions endeavor to clarify the participants’ most important political issues, how they justify Trump’s misogynist lifestyle vis-a’-vis their moral standards, their assessment of mainstream media, what news outlets they trust and whether they seek to verify their news consumption.

Indexing, Source Hierarchy, and Cultural Congruence: Op-Ed Coverage of Nuclear Negotiations with Iran • Bill Cassidy, Northern Illinois University; Mehrnaz Khanjani, University of Iowa; Mehdi Semati, Northern Illinois University • This paper utilizes indexing theory to examine op-ed coverage of nuclear negotiations with Iran in the New York Times and Washington Post from August 2013-June 2016. Results show that while U.S. presidential administration sources were most prominent in the 211 articles examined, the official perspective did not control the valence of coverage. Oppositional sources remained prominent and negative statements from op-ed authors significantly increased even after a deal with Iran was reached.

Partisan News Repertoire and Echo Chamber in High-Choice Media Environment • ching chun chen, National Defense University and National Chiao Tung University; Chen-Chao Tao, National Chiao Tung University • Although echo chamber phenomenon has attracted considerable attention, the measurement of echo chambers has been inconsistent and insufficient. Using a nationally representative panel survey from Taiwan (N = 1,926), the current study introduced the Partisan News Repertoire Index to explore the presence of echo chambers in high-choice media environment, and found support for polarization in echo chambers by integrating news repertoire approach and biased assimilation theory. Results showed that two of five news repertoires were mainly driven by political ideology, indicating stronger partisan news repertoire. Moreover, people with strong partisan news repertoires tended to be polarized by self-confirming process when encountering consistent partisan media; and also strengthen their prior attitudes through motivated reasoning when exposed to inconsistent partisan media.

Analysis of Campaign Issue Dynamics: Case Study of Taiwan’s 2020 Presidential Election • Yi-Ning Chen, National Chengchi University; CHIA-HO RYAN WEN • The dynamics of issue emphases is thought of as the key to candidates’ chance of winning or losing an election. By analyzing Taiwan’s presidential election held on January 11 2020, our research goals are to characterize how media attention converged or diverged from the issue attention of the two principal candidates, Tsai Ing-Wen and Han Kuo-Yu, respectively representing the Democratic Progressive Party and the Kuomintang, as well as delineate what strategies were employed between them in response to each other’s campaigns. Separately retrieving 8,531,207 posts from the mass media, 55,080 from Tsai Ing-Wen’s official social media and 132,323 from Han Kuo-Yu’s official social media, we first find that the election day was the foremost factor for the issue emphases by the candidates and the mass media to converge. Second, mass media coverage was more convergent with Tsai’s issue emphases rather than Han’s, in particular on Taiwan’s anti-infiltration bill, although Han’s number of posts was twice that of Tsai’s. Third, as the incumbent candidate, Tsai used a divergence strategy to neglect Han and not share popularity with him despite his intensive posting from November 11 to early December 2019. However, as the election day got closer, Tsai Ing-Wen’s campaign went aggressive and brought public attention to agendas that best embodied her values and performance as the incumbent (e.g. green energy, marriage equality, labor reforms) while continuing to neglect Han’s attacks. Finally, both of them, as well as their supporters, discredited the other side by labelling the counterpart’s speech as fake news.

White Democratic Candidate Outreach and Exposure to Black Voters: A Black Press Analysis • George Daniels, The University of Alabama • In January 2020, Democratic presidential hopeful Michael Bloomberg made a $3.5 million advertising buy with Black-owned newspapers, the largest investment of its kind in the 193-year history of the Black Press. Based on a review of three months of issues of 15 different black-owned newspapers in eight states and exit poll data, this paper assessed the impact of Democratic hopefuls’ financial investments in black press on voters’ decisions in early presidential primaries.

How Do People Learn About Public Affairs When Incidentally Exposed to News? Clarifying Political Knowledge Paradoxical Direct and Indirect Effects • Homero Gil de Zúñiga; Porismita Borah; Manuel Goyanes, Carlos III University • Citizens’ political knowledge is regarded as a vital element for well-functioning democracies. Accordingly, there is a burgeoning literature assessing the link between individuals’ news seeking behavior and learning about public affairs. There are, however, more limited efforts devoted to clarify how incidental news exposure may facilitate political learning. So far, inconclusive research findings have offered positive, null or even negative effects, emphasizing an urge for scholars to further explore this relationship. Drawing upon U.S. representative survey data, this study seeks to explicate and further advance the paradoxical paths that connect citizens’ incidental news exposure and political knowledge, both directly and indirectly. Our analysis first shows either null or mild negative direct associations between incidental news exposure and political knowledge. However, relying on a two serial mediators’ model, when citizens thoroughly engage with and cognitively elaborate on the information they unintentionally stumble upon, incidental news exposure yields positive mediated effects on political learning. This study contributes to a better understanding over the potential direct and indirect mechanisms that both facilitate and hinders political knowledge acquisition through inadvertent news consumption.

Is Facebook-Based Political Talk Associated with Political Knowledge? • Toby Hopp, University of Colorado Boulder; Patrick Ferrucci, U of Colorado-Boulder; Chris Vargo, University of Colorado Boulder; Luna Liu, University of Colorado Boulder • Prior research has shown that talking about politics can help facilitate political knowledge obtainment. However, such research has not addressed the extent to which specifically online political talk—which is often structurally and mechanistically different than offline talk—may or may not be associated with political knowledge. Accordingly, this study explored the association between text-based political commentary on Facebook and performance on a political knowledge quiz. Moreover, we investigated the degree to which a basic indicator of talk-apparent elaborative thinking (the inclusion of a testable proposition) was differentially associated with political knowledge levels. Finally, we assessed the extent to which different patterns of Facebook use moderated the relationship between political talk and knowledge. These questions were addressed using a novel method that paired behavioral Facebook data with self-reported survey data. The results indicated that political talk frequency on Facebook was positively and significantly associated with political knowledge. We observed similar associations between knowledge scores and political talk that featured high and low levels of elaborative thinking. Finally, we found tentative evidence that the relationship between Facebook-based political talk and political knowledge was strongest among those who regularly use Facebook for political learning.

* Extended Abstract * Morally Covering Politics: A Case Study of the New York Times’ Reporting on Clinton and Trump During the 2016 U.S. Election • Qihao Ji, Marist College • Focusing on the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign, this study aims to address how Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump were covered by the country’s leading news outlet—the New York Times. To that end, more 1,000 highly transmitted NYT stories regarding Trump and Clinton were collected before the election and subsequently subjected to computerized textual analysis. Results indicated that highly transmitted stories on Trump were much more morally charged and negatively valenced compared with Clinton’s.

Emotions and Political Participation: The Impacts of Discrete Emotions on Citizens’ Voting Likelihood • Yangzhi Jiang, Louisiana State University • This study investigated the effects of different emotions (i.e., anger, disgust, anxiety, hope, and pride) on Americans’ voting likelihood. The 2016 American National Election Studies (ANES) data were adopted. Results showed that only pride functioned as a significant predictor of citizens’ voting likelihood. However, anger did not influence Americans’ voting willingness in 2016, which was inconsistent with previous studies’ findings. As expected, disgust, hope, and anxiety had little impact on the voting likelihood.

* Extended Abstract * Who’s picking up the tab? The effects of framing taxpayers’ money on citizen oversight • Volha Kananovich, Appalachian State University • This study experimentally tests if various ways to frame government corruption in the news as the misuse of either “government funds” or “taxpayers’ money” can influence motivation for citizen oversight. The findings show that the mere rhetorical changes in describing the funds can encourage people to view the issue of misspending as more personally relevant, which makes them more motivated to hold the government accountable for its spending decisions.

Media Models for Nonviolence: Social media representations of the #womensmarch mass mobilization and Instagram audience engagement • Danielle Kilgo, University of Minnesota – Twin Cities; Samantha Munoz • This research explores the representation of the massive-but-peaceful demonstrations for women’s rights in 2017. Employing the framework provided by the protest paradigm in a content analysis of Instagram posts, results indicate coverage was most often framed with positive emotional behaviors and movement demands and agendas, by mainstream media producers, influencers and other news curators on the site. Findings indicate media account type, rather than content features, may be the most influential engagement factor.

Online keyword activism in political crisis: Moderation roles of like-minded public opinion and proxy control of crisis outcomes • Sora Kim, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Yingru JI; Hyejoon Rim, University of Minnesota • Through a national online-panel survey, this study examines the underlying psychological mechanism of online keyword activism supporting an in-crisis party (pro-activism hereafter) in a recent Korean political crisis. This work finds decisive boundary conditions in determining pro-activism participation. Like-minded opinion mitigates and even nullifies the effects of perceived majority opinion on crisis blame attribution and pro-activism participation when it is extremely valenced (negative) toward the crisis. Government controllability intensifies and even nullifies the effects of crisis blame attribution on pro-activism when it is extremely low. What makes people to more actively participate in pro-activism is driven by perceived like-minded public opinion through external attribution of crisis blame (e.g., blame-media), whereas the decisive driving factor for people to refrain from participating in the pro-activism is low perceived government controllability over crisis outcomes through internal attribution of crisis blame (e.g., blame-in-crisis party).

Representing Minorities in Deliberative Discussions: The Effects of Minority Presence and Group Identity Salience • Nuri Kim; Zijian Lew; Benjamin Detenber • This study examines how different ways of representing minority members in deliberative discussions can affect the content and tone of discussion. The effects of physical presence of minority members (i.e., present versus absent) and the salience of different group identities (i.e., superordinate identity versus subgroup identity) were experimentally examined for zero-history deliberation groups in a lab setting (N = 236, in 46 discussion groups). The discussions were content analyzed to assess the communicative effects. Results showed that the presence of minority members strongly affected the discussion content and tone in the small groups. Priming common identity also had some impact but in different ways, and to a lesser degree.

Revisiting Nasty Effect: How Do Online Incivility and Emotions toward In-group Interact on Cross-cutting Attention and Political Participation? • Jiyoung Lee; Jihyang Choi, Ewha Womans University; Jiwon Kim • Incivility has been a primary concern of healthy discussions especially in the online environment. Realizing the individual and societal impacts of incivility, much research has examined the role of incivility; however, it still has not reached a consensus on how incivility plays a beneficial role in politics. In the current study which used a two-wave longitudinal survey of 933 Americans in the context of 2016 presidential election, we revisited the role of online incivility in cross-cutting attention and online/offline political participation with a focus on anxiety, outrage, and pride toward the candidate respondents support (i.e., emotions toward in-group). Our results revealed that online incivility was positively associated with cross-cutting attention. When encountering incivility online, people who were anxious about in-group’s incivility paid more attention to cross-cutting opinions. Pride showed a reverse pattern, such that those who felt proud toward ingroup did not pay much attention to cross-cutting opinions when facing incivility online. Such cross-cutting attention ultimately led to online/offline political participation. This study advances current understanding of inter-group emotions theory and nasty effect by suggesting the intervening roles of distinct emotions toward in-group.

What’s Fake News to You?: How Divided Epistemologies Shape Perception of Fake News • Taeyoung Lee; Tom Johnson, University of Texas at Austin; Joao Vicente Seno Ozawa, The University of Texas at Austin • Scant attention has been paid to how the public define fake news. This study addresses how different epistemic worldviews – intuitionism and rationalism – lead to different definitions of fake news. Findings demonstrate that intuitionists tend to agree with Donald Trump’s label of fake news: accurate stories that cast a politician in a negative light. Rationalists tend to agree with the scholarly definition that describes fake news as distorting facts. Simultaneously, both epistemic beliefs see poor journalism as fake news.

* Extended Abstract * Extended Abstract: When the Desert Matters: Contextual Differences in Local News Environment and Polarized Perceptions of Local Economy • Jianing Li; Jiyoun Suk; Josephine Lukito, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Ceri Hughes, Brunel University; Jordan Foley; Lewis Friedland; Chris Wells; Dhavan Shah; Michael Wagner, UW-Madison • Despite abundant research about individual-level partisan polarization we know little about the effects of the meso-level information environment on partisan opinion polarization. Our study reveals the importance of contextual differences in the local news environment, represented by the number of local newspapers a county has, in moderating the effects of individual-level media use patterns in contributing to polarization in partisans’ retrospective evaluations of the local economy.

Wall and Sword: Attitudes towards Two Types of Online Censorship in China • Xining Liao, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Focusing on online censorship in China, this study seeks to answer two important questions: what do Chinese people think of online censorship in China and what factors are related to censorship attitudes? We tested two competing theories: reactance theory and balance theory as they may predict attitudes toward online censorship in China. Furthermore, instead of conceptualizing Chinese online censorship as being a homogenous system, we conducted a survey to investigate attitudes towards two separate censorship policies: the Great Firewall and citizen reporting. The former is a technical tool that blocks domestic online access to overseas websites, and the latter a new form of censorship targeting in Chinese domestic online sphere, by which netizens could report any perceived harmful information to online media platforms, and the information will be deleted by professional censors from online platforms once has been confirmed as “bad information”. The results of this study are congruent with balance theory, suggesting that the Chinese express overall positive attitudes towards censorship policies and the attitudes are influenced by their attitudes towards other agents related to censorship.

Fake News and Cloaked Propaganda: Exploring the Pro-China Facebook Groups in Taiwan • Chao Chen(Caroline) Lin, Graduate Institute of Journalism, National Taiwan University • This research analyzes Facebook groups that spread political propaganda but lack clear user profile identities. Based on the ethnography online method, this research studies a dataset leaked from some security bureau in Taiwan, including 18,933 accounts and 130,839 Facebook group posts. This research explores the active users of pro-China Facebook groups who connect with Taiwanese Facebook groups. Analysis results indicated that pro-China group posts were propaganda either campaigning for mainland China, criticizing Taiwan’s ruling party, or spreading fake news. This article argues that propaganda has happened in an increasingly interactive social media environment, especially when user profiles are vague, cloaked and missing.

Online Political Engagement, Fake News Exposure, and Fake News Sharing in Sub-Saharan Africa • Saifuddin Ahmed, Nanyang Technological University; Dani Madrid-Morales, University of Houston; Melissa Tully, University of Iowa • Using an online survey in Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa, this study explores the association between online political engagement, exposure to fake news, need for cognition, and fake news sharing. The findings suggest that online political engagement is positively associated with both fake news exposure and sharing. In contrast, those who have higher need for cognition were less likely to share fake news. Theoretical implications for misinformation and political engagement research are discussed.

Exposure to Personalized Political Advertising Dampens Trust in Democracy but Increases Political Interest: Evidence from a Panel Study • Joerg Matthes, U of Vienna; Melanie Hirsch; Marlis Stubenvoll; Alice Binder; Sanne Kruikemeier; Sophie Lecheler, U of Vienna; Lukas Otto • There are rising concerns that personalized political advertising (PPA) may be harmful for democracy and democratic representation. However, research has largely ignored potential positive democratic outcomes of PPA. This two-wave panel study revealed that the impression of being exposed to PPA led to a decrease of trust in democracy, but also to an increase in political interest. Therefore, the results suggest that PPA can have harmful and beneficial effects for modern democracy.

* Extended Abstract * Partisanship, news outlet use, and COVID-19 misperceptions • Patrick Meirick, University of Oklahoma • A Pew panel survey from March 2020 (N = 8,914) asked about two false beliefs about the pandemic: that a vaccine will be available in a few months and that the novel coronavirus was created in a lab. Republican party ID and Fox News use predicted both misperceptions, although the apparent effect of Fox News use was greater for Democrats. Facebook use was related to the lab misperception, which was spread widely on the platform.

Trump fatigue: Exploring the relationship between perceived media bias and news exhaustion • Adriana Mucedola, Syracuse University; Shengjie Yao • In today’s highly polarized political climate, media consumers are constantly being bombarded with arguments for and against their views, particularly relating to the high- profile presidency of Donald Trump. The present study was conducted to examine how biased news perceptions (or the hostile media phenomenon) can explain how consuming news about President Trump may be a negative emotional and exhausting experience. Data from a web-based survey (N = 1100) were analyzed. Findings showed that the perceived bias of the media and feelings of being “overloaded” explain some of the variance in negative emotions towards and exhaustion from news about President Trump. However, findings also indicate the perception of a biased media is negatively associated with negative affective outcomes, such as anger or sadness. Implications of these findings for future hostile media phenomenon research in the context of Trump’s presidency are discussed.

Judging “them” by my media use: Adapting the IPI model for a polarized media environment • Youran QIN, Hong Kong Bapist U • Adapting the IPI model to a polarized information environment, this study shows that individuals tend to accept retaliation against antagonists if they perceive the antagonists as heavy users of pro-antagonist media. Furthermore, individuals’ estimation of antagonists’ media use is a projection of their own media habit. The findings demonstrate an indirect effect of selective exposure – polarizing us by letting us believe that our antagonists are using and polarized by media on their side.

Factors Influencing Midwest Farmers’ Attitudes Toward China and US-China Trade Dispute • Lulu Rodriguez; Han Guang; Shuyang Qu, Iowa State University • The trade war between the U.S. and China had Midwest farmers reeling as sales of agricultural products to a major market was cut in half. This study examines the factors that significantly influenced their attitudes toward China and the trade dispute. Based survey data, the findings show that mass media use, credibility of mediated sources, and education predicted attitude toward China. Farmers’ attitude toward China, media exposure, media credibility, and years farming predicted attitudes about the trade dispute.

Meaningfully Entertained: Exploring the Relationship between Exposure to Meaningful Media and Political Engagement • Mian Asim; Muhammad Ehab Rasul; Azmat Rasul, Zayed University • The central objective of this paper is to broaden research on meaningful, inspirational, and prosocial media and its effects on political attitudes. Specifically, this research examines the implications of exposure to meaningful media and the feelings of affective elevation on connectedness with humanity and perceived connectedness among those with differing political affiliations Meaningful media content holds much promise of elevating audiences’ affective states and makes salient the common bonds that we share with others. How these perceptions translate into other domains awaits future investigations. This study suggests that exposure to meaningful media may be one avenue to address divisions among political groups, though the path may be much more difficult.

Social Media and Misinformation: The Impact of Education and Political Affiliation on News Sharing Behavior • Sean R Sadri, University of Alabama; John P Kelsey, University of Alabama; Candice D Roberts, St. John’s University • The present study examines demographics and sourcing as ways to potentially combat the dissemination of misinformation. An experiment using a nationwide sample of U.S. adults (N = 324) helps better understand social media sharing habits and political news credibility. The results provide evidence of educational attainment and political affiliation as predictors of tendency to share news information. The findings also suggest that the combined presence of political affiliation and article sourcing will increase share likelihood.

* Extended Abstract * Extended Abstract: Disconnecting Crises: The Refugee Crisis and the Roma Problem in Official State Discourse • Adina Schneeweis, Oakland University • This article is a study of political discourse about Europe’s reaction to refugees in the mid-2010s in the context of its dealing with another migrant population – the Roma (Gypsies). This study examines governmental and state-affiliated committee reports, research summaries, macroeconomic analyses, country reports, and risk analyses, and concludes that the refugee crisis received consistent attention, whereas issues specific to minorities in general, or related to the Roma in particular, garnered little to no interest.

Agenda-Setting Effects of Fake News on the Public’s Issue Agenda • Joao Vicente Seno Ozawa, The University of Texas at Austin; Hong Tien Vu; Dhiraj Murthy; Maxwell McCombs • This study draws upon the tradition of agenda-setting studies to investigate the impact of fake news in setting the public agenda. Although previous findings suggest that a minority of people are exposed to fake news, we found evidence that this type of information may be indeed having an impact on public opinion. The study was based on data extracted out of the complete historical archive of Twitter from 2012 to 2016. The researchers conducted secondary analysis of four million tweets regarding 2,448 news stories, labelled as fake news and verifiable true news according to six fact checking companies. The Twitter issue agenda was compared with the public issue agenda measured by the Gallup Poll’s open-ended question: “What is the most important problem facing this country today?”. We assembled the results of this question for each month of the five years studied, a total of 60 poll results. Correlations at all levels – monthly, quarterly, annual and five-year – show evidence of correspondence between the Twitter agenda based on fake news and the public agenda expressed in responses to the Gallup MIP question. Results were above the average of the baseline established by two meta-analyses of agenda-setting effects, especially in 2015 and 2016. Explanations of why access to fake news could be concentrated, but in the same time have an important effect on the public agenda, are discussed within the well-established framework of agenda-setting theory.

Partisan Ambivalence, Emotions, and Civic Engagement: Hierarchy Regression Analyses on Online and Offline Civic Engagement • Jian SHI, Syracuse University; Laura Canuelas-Torres, Syracuse University; Catherine Annis, Syracuse University Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs; Zanira Ghulamhussain • American public continues to feel ambivalence towards political issues during the Trump administration. Using an online national survey (N=1,100), this research investigates the impact of partisan ambivalence, media exposure, and emotional reactions toward news about President Trump on online and offline civic engagement. Results show ambivalent Americans are more likely to engage in offline civic engagement. Also, negative emotions had a stronger positive correlation than positive emotions with both online and offline civic engagement.

The Mediating Path to Political Consumerism: Do News Consumption and Interpersonal Communication Count? • Jian SHI, Syracuse University; Lars Willnat, Syracuse University • Although past research has shown that news exposure can promote political consumerism, few studies have investigated the mediating effects of social media communication on political consumerism. Drawing on the communication mediation model, we utilize online survey data gathered in 2019 among U.S. adults (N=1,069). This study suggests that both face-to-face and social media communication act as mediators of media consumption on political consumerism. More importantly, this study provides support for conceptualizing political consumerism from a communicative perspective.

How the Left, Center, and Right Covered the #MeToo Movement: Structural Topic Modeling, Thematic Structure and Language Patterns • Min-Hsin Su, UW-Madison; Jiyoun Suk; Shreenita Ghosh, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Kruthika Kamath; Porismita Borah; Teresa Correa; Christine Garlough; Dhavan Shah • This study explores the thematic structures and linguistic patterns of US news coverage surrounding the #MeToo movement across media spectrum. Using a combination of several automated textual analysis techniques, such as structural topic modeling and TF-IDF scores, we examine a random sample of news articles from nine news outlets during the first five-months after the Harvey Weinstein accusation. The results suggest clear partisan differences both in terms of topical prevalence and language patterns.

Am I with Her or with…Him?: Public and Online Participation in the 2016 US Presidential Election • Jiyoun Suk; Doug McLeod; Dhavan Shah • There is no question that the 2016 presidential election was one of the most memorable campaigns in U.S. history. Using national rolling cross-sectional survey data collected daily throughout the 2016 election, we used three-level multilevel modeling to examine how contextual factors such as the neighborhood-level political climate as well as state-level legislative presentation were associated with online and public participation. Our findings generally reveal asymmetrical patterns of participation between Republicans and Democrats.

* Extended Abstract * The Political Use of Search Engines: Differences in the Information Seeking Habits Between Right-leaning and Left-leaning Users • Chau Tong, University of Wisconsin-Madison • This study explores how political ideology influences information-seeking habits and behaviors regarding the use of Internet search engines for political information. Drawing on the literature of selective exposure, political psychology and customization technologies, this study employs secondary analysis to survey datasets of six democracies. Findings in the US sample show that political liberals and conservatives statistically differ in knowledge of search engine algorithms and attitudes towards human editorial or algorithmic curation of political news.

Politics and Politeness: Analysis of incivility on Twitter during the 2020 Democratic presidential primary • Briana Trifiro, Boston University; Sejin Paik; Zhixin Fang, Boston University; Alexander Rochefort, Boston University; Li Zhang, Boston University • This large-scale computational content analysis examines the amount of uncivil Twitter conversation about Democratic presidential primary candidates. Using the online disinhibition effect as the theoretical basis, this article expands on the prevalence of incivility in tweets in regards to the candidates’ gender, bot accounts, and anonymous users.

Framing COVID-19: A case study of the Chinese translated news behind the U.S.-China blame game • Shiqi Wang, Hong Kong Baptist University • With a framing analysis of the Chinese translations of English news concerning the coronavirus dispute between the largest two superpowers in the world, this paper attempts to show how China is trying to self-present as a responsible leader who triumphed over the coronavirus while the U.S., ex-leader of the world, has stumbled. With the theory of self-presentation, one can see how foreign news is translated to work as an ideological “vaccine” for its people.

Effects of Soft and Hard News Consumption on 2012 and 2016 Presidential Candidate Evaluations • Lewen Wei, Pennsylvania State University; Jinping Wang, Pennsylvania State University • Through an automated content analysis, the present study examined effects of soft news and hard news consumption over both broadcast and digital media on people’s presidential candidate evaluations in 2012 and 2016 election cycles. We found issue-focused evaluations slightly outnumbered character-focused ones, and soft news consumption over different media impacted on the distribution of and affectiveness in candidate evaluations in a different manner compared to hard news consumption.

How sea-level rise is communicated by governments, news media, and social media: An examination of realities shaped by partisan and regional influences and intermedia agenda-setting • Denis Wu; Yiyan Zhang • This study investigates the issue of sea-level rise presented by governmental public announcements, news coverage, and tweets generated in all 50 states of the United States during 2014-2017. Both human and machine codings were conducted to detect the pattern of sea-level rise communication across states with sea shore and landlocked states and between liberal and conservative states. Intermedia agenda-setting among the three distinct sources of information was also executed. Results indicate that patterns of sea-level rise content differ significantly between the groups of states with regard to their geographic location and political inclination. The sea-level rise content generated from the three sources are related significantly. Implications of these findings were provided in the paper.

A Linkage of Traditional and Social Media Use with Political Knowledge and Participation • Masahiro Yamamoto, University at Albany; Fan Yang • This study examines news media use in relation to political knowledge and political participation. Data from a two-wave panel survey indicate that social media use for news is related to increases in subjective political knowledge, whereas traditional news use is related to increases in factual political knowledge. Data also show that factual political knowledge has a negative cross-lagged association with political participation, whereas the influence of subjective political knowledge is positive. Implications are discussed for the role of news consumption in the political process.

Predicting perceived media bias of the mass shooting coverage and intention to participate in discursive activities: Examining the effects of personal involvement and social identities • Xueying Zhang; Mei-Chen Lin • Americans are seeing the most devastating era of mass shootings in modern history. Following each gruesome mass shooting is heated and polarizing political debates in the media, and among the policy makers and the public. News audiences of mass shooting do not passively accept message from the media, but rather make active judgement by relating it to their own lives or interpret it from the lens of their important values and identity. This study examined how predispositions of news audience predict perceived media bias in mass shooting coverage and intention to participate in discursive activities concerning gun issues. A survey among 300 participants recruited from Qualtrics’ research panels highlighted the role of social identity and individuals’ outcome-relevant involvement. The results extend the theoretical discussion of biased media perception and increase understanding of public’s sentiment regarding gun policy discussions.

Muting Opposing Political Opinions on Facebook: The Mediating Role of Emotions on Facebook Muting Behaviors • Bingbing Zhang, Pennsylvania State University; Heather Shoenberger, The Pennsylvania State University • Selective exposure theory posits that individuals prefer information aligned with pre-existing ideologies while avoiding opposing opinions. Using a nationally representative sample of Facebook users recruited via a Qualtrics panel (N = 505), this study explores the ideology strength, political disagreement and adds the context of negative emotions felt when viewing opposing viewpoints on Facebook on three different types of muting those with opposing political opinions. The three muting behaviors examined include “taking a break”, unfollowing, and unfriending others. Results offer insights into the idea that exposure to incongruent opinions are positively related to political muting behaviors. Additionally, the emotions of anger and dread mediate the relationship between exposure to incongruent views on social media and unfriending others with different opinions. Results are discussed through the lens of selective exposure and selective avoidance in understanding social media users’ online behaviors. This study indicates the important role of emotions in the formation of echo chambers on social media.

Investigating the Effects of Pro-attitudinal and Counter-attitudinal Media Exposure on General Political Talks and Cross-cutting Political Talks: Evidence from 2014 and 2018 U • Li Zhang, Boston University; Jacob Groshek • Everyday political talks play an important role in deliberative democracy and should be considered as gateway political behavior. This study examines the effects of selective exposure to pro-attitudinal and counter-attitudinal media on two types of political talks, general political talks and cross-cutting political talks. Drawing on a three-wave panel data during the 2014 U.S. midterm election and a cross-sectional dataset during the 2018 U.S. midterm election, mixed results were reported: in 2014, selective exposure to pro-attitudinal media is positively associated with both types of political talks, while exposure to counter-attitudinal media has no significant effect. However, in 2018, the effects of pro-attitudinal media disappeared and exposure to counter-attitudinal media is shown to be positively associated with cross-cutting political talks. In addition, a possible mediating mechanism proposed by recent literature is tested and found no support. Finally, discussion and explanation is offered.

Special Call for Preregistered Papers – Election 2020
Headline news: A theoretic model to explore the believability and selection of political news • Robin Blom, Ball State University; Tim Huang, Ball State University • Misperceptions could cause people to take positions on political issues that they otherwise would not take. Therefore, it is important that they believe news content that is true and ignore news content that is false. But in reality, many people are skeptical about factual news from distrusted source and much more accepting of misleading news from trusted sources. This study further develops a news believability model and extends it with a news selection model to better predict why people make certain news selections based on content and the context in which the news is presented, namely a combination of news source trust and news content expectancy. Evidence from this overall model could aid attempts to create media literacy modules to teach people about roles of their own cognitive biases and perceptions of expectancy violations in news selection, which could help them avoid misperceptions in the future.

<2020 Abstracts

Media Management, Economics, and Entrepreneurship Division

* Extended Abstract * We are the people – audience engagement as catalyst for newsroom unionization? • Karin Assmann, University of Georgia • This study explores the tension between management, journalists and their audience around audience engagement with a focus on the role of newsroom unionization. Ethnographic work in three U.S. newsrooms and interviews with 131 journalists, newsroom managers and editors in four newsrooms, shows that audience engagement work encourages unionization and that journalists in already unionized newsrooms regard the relationships with their audience as more collaborative than combative.

Drivers of merger and acquisition activity: A quantitative investigation of the telecommunications industry • Yang Bai, Pennsylvania State University; Ryan Wang, Penn State University; Rachel Peng, Penn State University; Krishna Jayakar, Penn State Bellisario College of Communications • Over the last decade, merger and acquisition activity has significantly changed the landscape of the telecommunications industry. While a few mega-mergers have attracted a lot of media attention and public interest, the vast majority of M&A transactions are small mergers. The objective of this paper is to investigate the differences if any, between large and small mergers in terms of merger type, mode of financing and deal valuations. Data on 1725 mergers occurring between 2000-2019 involving at least one U.S.-based company in the SIC code 48 was collected from the Zephyr database. Significant differences were noted based on merger type, mode of financing, and the influence of factors such as interest rates and stock market performance.

Exploring the Dimensions of Media Brand Trust: A Contemporary Integrative Approach • Sylvia Chan-Olmsted, University of Florida • As brands become more media-like and news and information platforms gravitate toward infotainment, this project aims at developing a reliable and valid media brand trust scale that reflects the reality of today’s mediated lives. As the first phase of the process, this study integrated deductive and inductive methods, using literature review to offer a conceptual basis and exploring the identified trust dimensions through the qualitative method of personal interviews. Eight key dimensions were uncovered for further investigations.

The Effect of Emotional vs. Informational Message Appeals on Crowdfunding Campaign Success: Testing Product Type as a Moderator • Ying Cheng, California State University, San Bernardino; Yongseok Jang, California State University, San Bernardino • This study examined the effect of emotional vs. informational appeals and their interaction effect with product types (i.e., hedonic vs. utilitarian product) on crowdfunding campaign performance. Using a sample of 249 Kickstarter messages and an online survey (N = 1892), the study revealed when a product was perceived containing higher (vs. lower) utilitarian values, messages perceived to be informational (vs. emotional) led to more positive campaign outcomes. No main effect of message appeals was observed.

Crowdfunding & Cryptocurrency – A New Conduit to Film Finance • J. Christopher Hamilton, Syracuse University • Raising financing for a film with cryptocurrency through blockchain is bound to change every aspect of not only film finance but our content ecosystem. As we witness COVID-19 ravage our economy and force us into a new version of normalcy, the strain on our content ecosystem will lean heavily on technology in the coming years to survive. The increased fragmentation of viewing audiences, the shrinking theatrical windows and the exploitation of the indie film market by streaming services like Netflix, has gutted the indie film business for filmmakers and over-leveraged the major studios. These global economic factors create a unique opportunity for the use of crypto to finance film content. There are still lots of regulatory, technological and credibility hurdles to surmount before crowdfunding with cryptocurrency becomes a viable or practical industry-wide solution for raising capital. But there’s strong evidence that the latter might be a real possibility sooner than we think. Equity crowdfunding coupled with cryptocurrency through blockchain will be the key to unlocking future capital. So, whether crypto through blockchain helps connect unbanked communities to the global economy, supplant Byzantine bureaucracies in bank and presales financing or just guarantees fair dealing in a business transaction with potentially dubious investors, it will certainly live up to its moniker as the internet 2.0 for Hollywood.

Public Service Mandate Versus Profit-Making Motive: A Study of the Daily Graphic Newspaper in Ghana • Paul Koomson, University of Oregon; S. Senyo Ofori-Parku, University of Oregon • This study examines the extent to which the Daily Graphic as a public newspaper operating as a limited liability company balances its public service mandate with its economic rationality. This case study is based on interviews with the newspaper’s editorial team members, managers, and executives of three top advertising media agencies and study of official documents. The content of the newspaper is also analyzed to determine the news – advertisement ratio. The study shows that despite its clearly stated public service mandate, the Daily Graphic’s organizational and individual-level economic logic (coupled with its advertiser client relations) informs its operations, news practices, and to some extent, content. The newspaper allocated more space to advertisements than news content. These processes are aided by advertiser clients and their collaborators within and outside the news organization. We offer some recommendations for addressing this challenge.

Media Repertoires of Chinese Young Users: An Exploratory Study Based on 2010-2015 Chinese General Social Survey • Weijia Li • This study adopts a repertoire approach to explore Chinese young users’ media usage patterns based on an analysis of Chinese General Social Survey (CGSS) data from 2010-2015. The author used latent class analysis and multilevel multinomial logistic regression to demonstrate the patterns, changes and predictors of Chinese young people media repertoires.  Results show that during 2010-2013, Chinese young users’ media repertoire remains stable, including four types: people who only watch TV; people who make a combination use of TV and Newspaper; people who make a combination use of TV and Internet and people who tend to use multiple media platforms including TV, Newspaper, Magazine and Internet. However, in 2015, a new media repertoire featured by the combination usage of TV, Internet and Mobile phone emerged while the previous media repertoire ‘TV + Newspaper’ is not existing anymore, indicating that new media has a growing influence on younger generation.  Besides, the author integrated individual factors and structural factors to predict the media repertoire formation based on CGSS 2015. The study finds that age, education level, number of computers owned by individual, province mobile phone penetration rate and number of books per capita are the relatively powerful predictors of user’s media choice. This means that demographic variables, media access ability and regional media environment can shape audience media consumption pattern and influence their media choice.

Revisiting on news objectivity and its portrait of history: From the perspective of transaction costs • Lu Liu • The American news industry is arguably run by its laws of news values and business logic. This paper aims to explore the principle of news objectivity in American commercial newspapers from a theoretical perspective of transaction costs. Previous studies on professional ideology have overlooked its origin that rooted in American commercial environment and developed along with commercial newspapers. This study indicates that the principle of objectivity is not only an editorial policy for commercial newspapers, but also a business strategy and governance mechanism, which reduces both the internal and external transaction costs of news production and improves the use of resources. Furthermore, news efficiency can increase the profit margin, and this is the core reason for the emergence and maintenance of the principle of news objectivity.

Concentration of Journalistic Output Across Media Outlets and Outlet Types: An Analysis of 100 Communities • Jessica Mahone, Duke University; Qun Wang; Philip Napoli; Matthew Weber, University of Minnesota; Kathleen McCullough, Augustana University • This study provides a quantitative examination of the concentration of journalistic output in 100 U.S. communities. The primary objective is to determine the extent to which various types of journalistic output are concentrated within few outlets, or outlet types, within a community. The results indicate that in most communities one type of outlet produces most content; and that, in many cases, only one or two outlets are responsible for the bulk of journalistic output.

* Extended Abstract * “No One Knows What I Do”: Strategic Hires and Emerging Professions in the Context of Organizational Absorptive Capacity • Renee Mitson • Absorptive capacity theory posits organizations gain external knowledge primarily through research and development conducted to acquire external knowledge and apply that knowledge inside the organization. This study hypothesizes that until new hires and emerging job roles are fully absorbed into an organization, they remain sources of outside knowledge, even internally. Semi-structured interviews (n=18) were conducted in order to explore how the role of strategic hires and organizational readiness may impact a firm’s absorptive capacity.

* Extended Abstract * Alternative and Mainstream Local News Competition and the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Computational Content Analysis • Angela Powers, Iowa State University; Yuxi He • The COVID-19 outbreak is having severe health, economic and political effects on society, as well as on the way media is reporting these issues. This study analyzes news coverage of COVID-19 in a computational content analysis of two local media outlets during the early outbreak. Variables including frequencies of themes, stories, issues and sources are analyzed. The purpose of the analysis is to reveal how alternative and mainstream local news media compete by differentiating products and finding market niches in times of crisis.

Who Cut the Cord?: Factors Which Predict Cord-Cutting Behavior Across Generations • Ashley Spiker, Kent State University • The existing literature in the field of television consumption utilizing new media  platforms examines what streaming media service options exist and some possible motivations for adopting streaming media services. While research has examined technological adoption to predict and describe behavioral intentions and self-reported behavior, few have examined why individuals make the decision to stop using certain technologies or media services. This study aimed to examine the differences in cording-cutting behaviors across three Generations (Millennials, Gen Xers, Baby Boomers) and to identify predictors of cord-cutting behavior. Of 734 participants surveyed, Results indicated that five factors significantly predicted cord-cutting behavior among all generations, including: income (β =.173, p =.004), owning a tablet (β =.171, p =.004), preference of religious programming (β =.125, p =.036), preference of sports programming (β =.122, p =.039), and time spent watching television (β =.120, p =.042). These factors explained 12.8% of variance in cord cutting behavior.

Predicting the Consumption Behaviors of Foreign Broadcast Programming in the Age of Global Over-the-Top (OTT) Video Streaming Market • Kenneth C. C. Yang, The University of Texas At El Paso; Yowei Kang, National Taiwan Ocean University • The rise of over-the-top (OTT) video streaming services (such as Amazon Prime, Hulu, and Netflix) have enabled broadcasters to distribute their programming all over the world in a cost-effective manner. However, factors affecting the consumption of foreign broadcasting programming are yet to be investigated. This study employs the country animosity dimensions to study Taiwanese audience’s consumption of broadcast programming from Japan. This study uses a survey to collect data from Taiwanese participants. Linear regression analyses find that both contemporary/economic and historical/social animosity against Japan could predict Taiwanese viewers’ judgment of Japanese television dramas. As expected, a favorable judgment also generates a higher intention to watch Japanese television dramas. However, long-term social, but not temporary economic, animosity dimension predicts viewers’ intention to watch Japanese television dramas. The predictive power of social animosity against Japanese people is robust and stable, after taking into consideration viewers’ demographics, in the hierarchical regression model. This study concludes with theoretical implications and managerial recommendations to promote cultural products to foreign audiences.

Working Together in Global Media Markets: The Sustainability of Western-China International Joint Ventures • Qian Yu; Peter Gade • This study explores economic, resource and cultural factors that executives of Chinese-Western media joint ventures consider essential to the ventures’ sustainability. In-depth interviews with Chinese and Western executives from two magazine joint ventures (Harvard Business Review China and GRAZIA China) found managing cultural factors, including ideological and media policy differences, essential to the ventures. Differing economic and resource commitments to the ventures were largely attributed to products in different niche markets with different market conditions.

<2020 Abstracts

Cultural and Critical Studies Division

Mental Health as a Burden: Journalistic Representations of Mental Illness on Family, Society, and the Individual • Elise Assaf, California State University, Fullerton • This research study explores representations of mental illness in three mainstream, national, online publications. Individuals with disabilities make up the largest minority group in the U.S., and the language used to construct representations of these individuals have the ability to perpetuate or diminish stereotypes about these individuals. Critical discourse analysis (CDA) was used to analyze 197 articles. Of the six themes that emerged, mental illness as a burden will be the focus of this paper.

* Extended Abstract * Journalistic Power: Constructing the ‘Truth’ and the Economics of Objectivity • Gino Canella, Emerson College • Through 30 in-depth interviews with journalists, this article explores how journalists construct ‘the truth.’ Relying on theories of journalistic cultures, media power, and objectivity, I examine how some journalists seek to uphold long-standing professional norms, while others eschew these norms and position their work as adversarial. This article has implications for defining the journalistic field, understanding how grassroots media-makers challenge journalistic practices, and why a power-structure analysis is essential at all stages of news production.

Capital and legitimacy: Trans* communicators as cultural intermediaries • Erica Ciszek; Richard Mocarski, University of Nebraska at Kearney; Elaine Almeida • Through in-depth interviews with trans* communication communicators, this paper represents a turning point in communication toward a more intentional and reflexive orientation to gender identity and transgender lives. Findings demonstrate trans* communicators construct and disseminate discourses designed to counter the historical narratives surrounding gender minorities to reshape these stories for themselves (as part of their own identity work), for trans* communities, and for mainstream audiences. This article employs the Bourdieuian concept of cultural intermediation to explicate the lived experiences of trans* individuals working in fields of communication. Drawing on Bourdieu’s notions of habitus, capital, and fields, this manuscript sheds light on strategic communication to understand how trans* individuals leverage cultural and social capital to construct legitimacy. This study contributes to a broader sociological understanding of strategic communication and opens new avenues for research in considering how publicity might translate into broader socio-political impacts. It specifically asks how trans* communicators create and maintain cultural intelligibility and negotiate social meaning of transgender representations, considering transgender communicators as cultural intermediaries at the center of the struggle for symbolic and material power.

A “Gentlemen’s Agreement:” How news discourse helps to perpetuate segregation • Lourdes Mirian Cueva Chacón, University of Texas at Austin • The media are a place where influential ideas about race and its hierarchies are presented. This study focused on the analysis of news coverage of an alleged agreement that limited minority representation in Austin’s city council seeking to answer the question of how journalistic discourse reproduces inequality. CDA suggests that the agreement was a racial project perpetuated in the journalistic discourse through the use of linguistic constructions of narratives and relationships with race and power structures.

* Extended Abstract * Promotional prosumers: Advertorial labor process on mommy social media • Wan-Wen Day, National Chung-Cheng University • An Apple consumer shares his authentic experience of using the new iPhone with his friends on Facebook. Some of them do purchase the same product he promotes later on. Does it mean that the digital labor of this consumer is exploited due to creating exchange value for Apple? Now, millions of micro-influencers partner with advertisers to sell branded products to their followers by demonstrating products’ use-values. This marketing phenomenon indicates the new mode of labor exploitation in prosumer capitalism. This study unveils how mom-influencers promote parenting commodities to their followers and analyzes the political economy of the advertising industry under the new realities of social media. In his 2015 article, George Ritzer predicts the rise of a new class, prosumers. He further argues that unpaid prosumers have a higher chance of replacing paid workers partially. This study presents the stories of the mommy prosumers and their followers to address the issue of prosumer capitalism. This study investigated the triangle relation among the MCNs, the brands, and micro-influencers through the advertorial campaigns. Fifteen semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted from September 2019 to March 2020. Each interview lasted more than an hour. The interviewees included six micro-influencers of the online mommy communities, four brand managers, and five executives from the MCNs.

Mexicanidad on the screen: perceptions about the national identity portrayed in contemporary Mexican cinema • Gabriel Dominguez Partida, Texas Tech University • Defining the individual’s identity in times of globalization requires acknowledging the contextual factors that surround them. One of the many positionalities that converge to build that identity is the national one. Although borders are fading away in the current global context, in the case of the Mexican one, people continue relying on specific traits that help them to define Mexicanidad. Cinema plays a vital role as the audience tends to select and support particular representations over others. This study focuses on the analysis of how the audience perceives the traits that define Mexicanidad and their relationship with contemporary Mexican cinema. Participants of various focus groups relate particular reminiscences of the Golden Age period, as traditions and history, but also recognize that Mexican characters from that period serve as stereotypes that currently are not true. Finally, participants do not identify with current Mexican narratives because these films do not appeal to their real-life problems. Hence, even with the increase in Mexican cinema consumption, there is a lack of representation of what Mexicans identify as ordinary people.

EULAs as Unbalanced Contractual Power Between an Organization and its (Unannounced and Underage) Users: A Mobile Game Textual Analysis • Jeffrey Duncan; Taylor Voges, University of Georgia • This study explores how End-User License Agreements found in mobile game applications (e.g., Apple) put the player or user at a contractual power disadvantage. A thematic textual analysis was conducted of the top five film studio organizations’ mobile game applications: Disney; Warner Brothers; Universal; Sony; and Paramount. Three themes were found: producer domination, producer ownership, and the parental consent loophole. The implications of each theme as related to legal and ethical principles are discussed.

* Extended Abstract * Extended abstract: Diverging data in a Canadian media bailout • Marc Edge, University of Malta • Sharply contrasting portrayals of news media fortunes in Canada preceded a Cdn$595 million (US$450 million) government bailout announced in late 2018. Critical scholars claimed reform was required to reduce levels of ownership concentration and foreign ownership. Data offered by others, however, portrayed media as unprofitable and near collapse, with hundreds of newspapers closed and thousands of journalism jobs lost. This paper examines secondary sources of data to test the latter contentions and finds them unsupported.

Women on Fire: YouTuber Burnout and Renegotiation with the Platform • Alyssa Fisher, Miami University • This project uses a critical cultural methodology and qualitative visual analysis to examine two creators who took a hiatus from the YouTube platform in the fall of 2018. Included in the analysis are videos announcing their hiatus, chronicling previously queued videos that uploaded during the hiatus, and videos announcing their return and eventual changes to their channels’ content. Findings include themes of reflexivity, creative fulfillment, and the pressure to appeal to the mysterious YouTube algorithm.

* Extended Abstract * Assessing the Critical Political Economic Implications of Environmental NGO Funding on Meat Reduction Messaging • Christopher Garcia, Florida State University • This study expands on prior research conducted on food-based suggestions and meat reduction messages on environmental NGO websites. Utilizing a critical political economic lens, two in- depth case studies of the meat-related dietary messaging and policy suggestions of The Nature Conservancy and Greenpeace International are featured as illustrative examples of organizational contrasts – one which finds itself heavily indebted to corporate stakeholders and the other rooted in civil society as opposed to business.

“Female Empowerment Sells” or Does It? Always’ #LIKEAGIRL Campaigns’ Contribution to Feminism and “Culture-change” • Tamar Gregorian • When did doing something “like a girl” become an insult? That’s the question that Always, a Proctor & Gamble company, one of the largest makers of feminine care products, in partnership with its advertising agency Leo Burnett proposed and answered in their 360-degree take on feminine hygiene advertising spots “Like A Girl,” “Unstoppable” and “Emojis.” This textual analysis of the three campaigns “Like A Girl,” “Unstoppable” and “Emojis” was conducted to determine the value the campaigns provide in adding to the conversation about the misrepresentation of females in society, not just advertising. The three campaigns were analyzed using Stuart Hall’s encoding/decoding model and the commercials were evaluated based on their preferred, negotiated and oppositional readings (Hall, 1980). To aid in the analysis of the campaigns, an interview was conducted with Shaina Holtz, an account executive at Leo Burnett who worked on the Always team during two of the three campaigns. On the preferred level or the denotative level, Always’ goal was to break down the barriers young girls faced in society. The spots featured questions and copy that suggested that these stereotypes existed among young girls and boys, as well as adult men and, most surprisingly, women. Ultimately, the textual analysis concluded that Always was able to position itself as a company that cares about more than “hawking” its products, and more about contributing to the conversation about the misrepresentation of females in society and even taking it a step further – offering a solution.

The Sacking of Kaeplanta: Who’s Voice is Valued in the Built Environment • Adrianne Grubic, The University of Texas at Austin • As former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick dominated the headlines before Super Bowl LIII in Atlanta, a mural bearing his image was demolished near Morehouse College. The artist who painted it soon became a story but how the local media covered it also told a story about who is given a voice in a community. Using a multimodal discourse analysis, this qualitative study analyzed how the news media online reported on the demolition of the mural.

Ethical Consumption as Fetishism • Nah Ray Han, University of Georgia • Although consumers live in an era of consumer sovereignty, people often consume without being aware of how products are produced and sold. This paper criticized that emphasizing consumer sovereignty and morality, ethical consumption fetishizes the act of consuming by falsely suggesting that individual consumers can solve the environmental problems of the earth. The current papers concluded that the ethical consumption movement needs to become more self-aware so that it can truly help society develop.

Documentary Maker as Worker: Precarity in the Chinese Television Documentary Industry • Jiachun Hong • Documentary filmmakers have been considered artists, authors, or intellectuals, but rarely laborers. This study investigates the changing nature of documentary work in the expanding area of TV documentary in China, in the midst of China’s shift towards a market-based economy. Based on data gathered through the interviews with 40 practitioners from January 2014 to August 2017, this paper outlines the particularity and complexity of the creative work in China. It finds that short-time contracts, moonlighting, low payments and long working hours, freelancing, internship, and obligatory networking have become normal working conditions for Chinese TV documentary workers. Without copyright over their intellectual creations, the cultural workers are constrained to make a living as waged labor and compelled to sell their physical and mental labor in hours or in pieces. The Chinese television documentary workers struggled to resist the pressures of neoliberalism to survive in increasingly competitive local and global markets.

* Extended Abstract * Virtual Reality and Celebrity Humanitarianism • Bimbisar Irom, WSU, Pullman • The paper analyzes the interactions between the emergent technology of virtual reality (VR) and celebrity humanitarianism. Marketed as “the ultimate empathy machine”, VR has been enthusiastically appropriated by humanitarian communicators. Through the textual analysis of a VR experience featuring Rashida Jones, the project seeks to understand VR’s role in the production of celebrity performances of authenticity. How does VR balance the demands of stardom, highlighting distant suffering, and endorsing the work of humanitarian agencies?

Globalization, social media and cultural change: Instagram and family traditions in Russia • Regina Marchi, Rutgers University; Maria Zhigalina, Rutgers University • This paper examines how Russian traditions around marriage and pregnancy are being transformed by Instagram. Through a visual semiotic analysis of representations of US-style wedding ceremonies and gender reveal parties on Russian Instagram accounts, it notes that these rituals, formerly not part of Russian marriage or pregnancy traditions, are fast becoming the norm. Economic and social implications of the adoption of these practices, related to spending and debt, social class and gender ideologies are discussed.

Dangerous Professors: How Public Scholars Pioneer Practices that Reconcile Intellect with Journalism • Michael McDevitt, University of Colorado • The academic-media nexus can seem like a kaleidoscopic space for public intellectuals. Rules of engagement are, at best, implicit and contingent. Interviews with faculty targeted by vigilante watchlists probe how they pioneer practices that allow them to navigate uncertainty and populist blowback. A multiplicity of epistemic communities interacting with journalism implies a faint centrifugal coherence, but the disorientation of a hybrid field induces a productive reflexivity in efforts to reconcile intellect with journalism.

“Barbie is Not Muslim”: Consumer Racism in Hijab Wearing Barbie Doll on Twitter • Suman Mishra; Amal Bakry • This paper explores consumer reaction on Twitter surrounding the launch of the first hijab wearing Barbie doll of Olympic fencer Ibtihaj Muhammed in the United States. Using the theoretical framework of consumer racism and qualitative content analysis, the study reveals four major aspects of consumer racism: 1) Antipathy towards the ethnic group’s culture and religion, which in this case is Muslims and Islam 2) (Negative) product evaluation, 3) Skepticism towards the dominant corporation producing multiethnic goods, and 4) Consumer (un)willingness to buy the product. The study highlights that multicultural products produced by a dominant corporation associated with ethnic majority can be subject to similar consumer racism as products produced and sold by ethnic minorities. Theoretical and other implications with regards to consumer racism are discussed.

Public (Re)construction of War Memory in Japan: Examining Audience Reception of the Documentary Film Shusenjo • Junki Nakahara, American University • This paper explores how general publics participate in war memory construction through their consumption of a documentary film. Documentary film Shusenjo: The Main Battleground of The Comfort Women Issue (2019), created by Japanese-American producer Miki Dezaki, deals with one of the most contentious historical controversies in Japan—wartime sexual exploitation of women in Asian countries under the control of the Empire of Japan. In recent decades, Japan’s effort to whitewash the memory about war crimes has often caused frequent diplomatic conflicts with its neighboring countries such as South Korea. The film juxtaposes conflicting historical views to show the process of domestic and international campaigns led by right-wing/conservative leaders and various counter-arguments against their campaigns. Diverse audience comments on the documentary film can be found on online film review websites. Those comments indicate that the audience actively interpreted the film text and discussed their thoughts online. By applying the approach of critical discourse analysis, this research examines if audience evaluation of the film reflects their political opinions regarding its subject and what prospective views of Japanese national identity shape the retrospective war memory about the “comfort women.” The film offers a space for the Japanese audience to reconstruct their prospective and retrospective idea concerning the war memory of their country by questioning the widely accepted consensus.

A Critical Discourse Analysis of The Washington Post’s DACA Coverage: An American Dream Mythology • Daleana Phillips • The Trump Administration’s rhetoric on immigration reflects a shift toward nationalistic and xenophobic political discourses, which has negative consequences for legal and illegal immigrants. News coverage on illegal immigration and undocumented immigrants has overwhelmingly been portrayed using threat narratives and metaphors. This study employs a Critical Discourse Analysis using Barthes Mythology to analyze fifty-two articles from the newspaper, The Washington Post, on the Trump Administration’s decision to rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival (DACA) Program. The findings reveal that the American Dream ideology prevails in the U.S. national imaginary. Journalists covered DACA participants much differently than traditional threat frames used for covering undocumented immigrants in the media. Journalists portrayed Dreamers as industrious adherents to the American Dream and productive members of society brought into the country illegally as children, through no fault of their own. While this narrative supports DACA participants, it reinforces white middle-class assimilation and contrasts them against undocumented immigrants who are “to blame” for being in the U.S. illegally. The consequences of this rhetoric are important because it leaves white privilege unchallenged and justifies racialized “law and order” discourses that criminalize people who appear “foreign” or carry a “figurative border” with them.

Decoding Versus Discovering: The Social Roots of Two Visions of Journalistic Excellence • Matthew Powers, University of Washington • Drawing on Bourdieu, this paper explores how one’s social position—i.e., their social origins and trajectories—shapes definitions of journalistic excellence. Through interviews, it shows that journalists from lower positions (e.g., working class families, less education) generally articulate a “decoding” view of excellence, while those from higher positions (e.g., professional families, prestigious education) describe a “discovery” view. These two socially-rooted visions differ in their assumptions of a power struggle between journalists and other power holders.

We’ll never let the past die: Five years of Disney Star Wars and the struggle to sustain a creative franchise in the digital era • Abigail Reed • This article examines and critiques the five Disney-produced Star Wars films from a critical political economic perspective. There are three primary themes that help untangle the story of the production of the first five Disney Star Wars films: diversity, production disturbances, and audience feedback. Disney’s intrinsic profit motive and the diversity it claims to value have conflicted with each other, resulting in troubled productions, upset audiences, and confusing film narratives.

This Was America: The Limitations of an Enduring Vision of American Photography • Alex Scott, University of Texas at Austin • This study explores the political implications of a reliance on the approved canon of American photographers by examining the 2018 photo exhibition, “A New Vision: American Photography After the War.” Employing a historiographic examination, the study illuminates how institutions and market obfuscate the historical reality of images. A process of de-politicization is then explicated using a multi-modal analysis of the exhibition images. The images contribute to an American myth drawn upon by contemporary political practices.

Critical Embellishment: Rolling Stone and Pitchfork Pans as Journalistic Signaling • John Vilanova • This research explores the idea of criticism—and specifically the negative review—as a useful and important means of signaling journalistic impartiality for fledgling journalistic enterprises. It historicizes negativity in criticism in relation to the foundations of journalistic practice and analyzes reviews written in the early years of two music publications, Rolling Stone magazine and the website Pitchfork. It theorizes their negativity as performances of what it calls critical expertise and critical authority.

Modern Mourning: The Violence and Potentialities of Public Grief Online • Alyvia Walters, Rutgers University • After nineteen-year-old Mollie Tibbetts was allegedly murdered by an undocumented immigrant in her Iowan hometown in July 2018, her family faced two violent mourning processes: not only were they processing their undue loss, but they were also compelled to enter the public spotlight in order to counter hostile ideologies concerning her undocumented alleged murderer. As this study shows, from the moment his citizenship status was released, the story of importance was no longer that of the loss of Mollie, it was rather the “illegality” of her alleged killer. This article thus investigates the unique mechanisms of modern media which both provide and force space for public expressions of grief: outlets which can both damage and heal. In a mixed methods approach, I performed a Twitter-based events-sequence analysis paired with content and ideological analyses to identify how the local, tragic story of Mollie became a national story of immigration policy—one with such force that the President of the United States commented on it—which led to the Tibbetts’ difficult positionality in the media spotlight. Though social media and its rapid information sharing had caused their daughter’s erasure, the Tibbetts family was also able to use social media to re-center Mollie’s life and values: a violent necessity with empowering ends.

Food, exoticism, and spectacle: Commodifying African otherness in Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern • Tewodros Workneh, Kent State University • The marked reluctance to incorporate African agency in African image-making in the West quite predictably brought about flat and simplistic caricatures of the continent and its peoples. With the aim of interrogating continuity and change in the representation of Africa, this paper explores African exoticism in Travel Channel’s Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern. Framed within a critical cultural/postcolonial perspective that anchors discourses of exoticism in Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern, the study identifies the spectacular representational modes of the “crude” native, poverty, and primitivism as evidences of African otherness. Key findings of the study indicate that food in many African destinations is portrayed as mere materiality, and that African foodways are unsophisticated and lack any perceptible aesthetics or influence. Furthermore, the show stubbornly insists on Africa’s “primitiveness” as a binary condition to be contrasted with Western modernity, which, like the spectacle of poverty, marks the salience of African alterity.

“So F***ing Glad We Got Osuna!”: Feminist world building in sports journalism • Kate Yanchulis, University of Maryland • Sports Illustrated reporter Stephanie Apstein turned a Houston Astros executive’s “offensive and frightening” outburst toward women reporters from a closed-door act of aggression into a public discussion of Major League Baseball’s dismissive attitude toward women. This paper takes coverage of that same incident as an opportunity to consider sports journalism as a potential space for feminist world building, drawing particularly on the work of black feminists.

Post-feminism in China: a discourse analytic examination of the sell of successful intimated relationships advice in Ayawawa’s book • hanlei YANG, Chongqing University • The intimate relationship advice industry in modern China reveals insights about neoliberalism, self-surveillance, emphasis on choice and empowerment, individualism, market-oriented principles, the science of successful sex and relationship, and the revitalization of Confucian conservatism and patriarchy. But it has long been neglected by previous scholars conducting studies on reconceptualization and reconstruction of emotional experiences and subjectivities in China context. Ayawawa is regarded as one of the renowned writers of bestsellers in mainland China for the intimate relationship advice industry. This paper will use her anthology “The cultivation of Love” as the research object by adopting Fairclough’s Critical discourse analysis method and regard postfeminism as a sensibility or a critical subject instead of as an analytic viewpoint. Specifically, this research aims to answer: (1) how she mobilized rhetorical devices and cultural resources to present a seemingly scientific method of managing intimate relationships; (2) what kind of intimate relationship and sexual subjectivity are established. By way of conclusion, females could take advantage of their sexy bodies, seeking financial and emotional support from others in an intimate relationship. successful intimacy is embodied in dramatically increasing the intensity of self-surveillance as a form of regulation for women. The extensiveness of surveillance over an entirely new life and intimacies includes the focus on psychology, and the requirements to transform oneself and reshape one’s deeper inner life. Women are constantly monitoring their looks and reproduction capability when they encounter unequal treatment in the intimate relationship, they first think of monitoring themselves and self-adjustment, instead of paying attention to the fact that men and women are unequal in the intimate relationship.

<2020 Abstracts