Download Conference Program (PDF-Adobe Acrobat files)

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
1121
Wednesday
08:30-18:00
Kafka
Mediating Global Citizenship
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Ingrid Volkmer, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Participants
Toby Miller, U of California - Riverside, USA
Swantje Lingenberg, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Andrew Calabrese, U of Colorado, USA
Robert Hassan, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Agnieszka Magdalena Stepinska, Adam Mickiewicz U, POLAND
Elfriede Fuersich, Boston College, USA
Mehpare Selcan Kaynak, Bogazici U, TURKEY
Esra Ayse Ozcan, Jacobs U - Bremen, GERMANY
Karen Walker, U of Maryland, USA
Saskia Witteborn, Chinese U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Aysha Mawani, McGill U, CANADA
Florian Deffner, U of Otago, NEW ZEALAND
Gajevic Slavko, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Vivian B. Martin, Central Connecticut State U, USA
John P Pollock, The College of New Jersey, USA
Charu Uppal, U of South Pacific, FIJI
Diana Iulia Nastasia, U of North Dakota, USA
Adonica Schultz Aune, U of North Dakota, USA
Alya Naumova, Westwood College, USA
Shazia Usman, U of South Pacific, USA
Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA
Martina Schuegraf, Film and Television Academy, GERMANY
Akiba A. Cohen, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL
Christopher D. Karadjov, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Andreas Hepp, U of Bremen - IMKI, GERMANY
Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Katherine Sender, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Valentina Cardo, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Fabienne Darling-Wolf, Temple U, USA
Marc Raboy, McGill U, CANADA
Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Bowling Green State U, USA
Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA
Monroe E. Price, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Christina Slade, Macquarie U, AUSTRALIA
Kristina Maj Riegert, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN
Respondent
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Cosponsored by Philosophy of Communication, Global Communication / Social Change, Political Communication,
and The Center for Global Communication Studies, Annenberg School for Communication, U of Pennsylvania. As
media deliver not only images of 'the world' but epistemological and ontological notions of world construction in new
fragmented highly individualized spaces of mediation, it is timely to debate and critically assess not only 'cultures of
difference' but reflect these in the perspective of an integrative conceptual framework of global citizenship. The
preconference will discuss these approaches and attempt to identify parameters of global citizenship as a mediated
form.
1200
Wednesday
09:00-17:00
HEC Montréal
What is an Organization? Materiality, Agency, and Discourse
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA
Participants
Barbara Czarniawska, U of Goteborg, SWEDEN
Bruno Latour, Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris, FRANCE
Haridimos Tsoukas, Athens Laboratory of Business Administration, GREECE
Linda L. Putnam, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA
James R. Taylor, U de Montreal, CANADA
Leading international scholars from various disciplines will gather in Montreal, Canada, to discuss and debate central
issues of contemporary organization theory. Obviously, the concept of an organization as primarily a social and
economic reality has been challenged from many sides in the past 20 years. Critics coming from various fields of the
social sciences (sociology of science, anthropology, discourse analysis, and semiotics, among others) have offered
new metaphors and constructs to recast the reality of contemporary organizations in very different realms: culture and
meaning, interaction and discourse, and materiality and artifacts, among others. The work of James R. Taylor is an
outstanding example of an attempt at synthesizing these various trends in a conception of organization that gives new
meaning to basic concepts of organizational studies such as agency, conversation, text, and materiality. With a view
to advance the discussion on the fundamental issues of the nature of organizing, agency, and text, this conference
brings together the contributions of leaders in the fields of communication and organization studies in a debate
convened around Taylor's work and extends it in several new directions.
1524
Wednesday
13:30-19:00
Joyce
The Global and Globalizing Dimensions of Mobile Communication: Developing or Developed?
Sponsored Sessions
This preconference has the intention of examining the global dimensions of mobile communication. Mobile
communication (both via traditional mobile telephony and via other wireless systems) is being felt on a global basis.
There are, for example, currently more mobile telephones in the developing world than in the traditional industrialized
countries. Thus while mobile communication has become a relatively normal part of daily life in industrialized
countries, it is also becoming increasingly common in the developing world. The preconference is a joint effort by the
University of Michigan, Temple University & Telenor.
2123
Thursday
08:00-17:00
Jarry
Remapping Public Media: Imagining Public Media in an Open, Digital Environment
Sponsored Sessions
Participants
Seeta Pena Gangadharan, Stanford U, USA
Muneo Kaigo, U of Tsukuba, JAPAN
Anne Dunn, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA
John McMurria, DePaul U, USA
Lisa Horner, Global Partners and Associates, UNITED KINGDOM
Andrew T. Kenyon, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA
Suda Ishida, Hamline U, USA
Chad Raphael, Santa Clara U, USA
Christine Bachen, Santa Clara U, USA
Lewis A. Friedland, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Kathryn C. Montgomery, American U, USA
Ellen Goodman, Rutgers U, USA
Jessica Clark, American U, USA
Yoram Peri, Tel-Aviv U, ISRAEL
Olivier Sylvain, Columbia U
Tarleton L. Gillespie, Cornell U, USA
Sherri Culver, Temple U, USA
Yaron Katz, Holon Institute of Technology, ISRAEL
Amber Melissa Korbl Smallwood, Bridgewater College, USA
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Robert B. Horwitz, U of California - San Diego, USA
Kevin G. Barnhurst, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
Katja Wittke, American U, USA
Respondents
Ying Li, U of Macau, MACAO
John Bracken, McArthur Foundation, USA
Sameer Padania, American U, USA
What makes media public in an open, digital environment? How can scholars and audiences recognize public media
that is generated neither by legacy outlets nor traditional media producers? What does a new "map" of public media
look like? What new behaviors, phenomena, connections emerge? How can effectiveness be understood, measured,
depicted? What kinds of organizations, policies, and resources are needed to create not only incidents and projects but
habits and archives in emerging public media? What kinds of research are needed to analyze and imagine emerging
public media? Over the past decade, public service broadcasting, public access cable, and newspapers of record are
seeing business models shaken, traditional funder bases decaying, and policies changing. New distribution
possibilities (broadband, peer-to-peer media sharing, satellite networks, digital cable, handheld devices and more) are
decoupling content from its original context and creators. So-called Web 2.0 tools emphasize user participation above
all other features, and the explosion of blogs, user-driven digital video sites, social networking sites and
collaboratively authored texts like Wikipedia testify to the power of these new models. What can public media—
public media in the Deweyan sense of media for public knowledge and action, in the sense that Yochai Benkler
imagines it in Wealth of Networks--mean given these new possibilities and challenges? This pre-conference will build
upon the Center for Social Media's Mapping Public Media project (centerforsocialmedia.org/mpm), and forms part of
the Future of Public Media project, funded by the Ford Foundation.
2140
Thursday
08:00-12:00
Drummond West
International Communication Association Executive Committee Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
Ronald E. Rice, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Jon F. Nussbaum, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Wolfgang Donsbach, Technical U - Dresden, GERMANY
Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA
2124
Thursday
08:30-17:00
Joyce
2125
Thursday
08:30-17:00
Musset
The Global and Globalizing Dimensions of Mobile Communication: Developing or Developed?
Sponsored Sessions
This preconference has the intention of examining the global dimensions of mobile communication. Mobile
communication (both via traditional mobile telephony and via other wireless systems) is being felt on a global basis.
There are, for example, currently more mobile telephones in the developing world than in the traditional industrialized
countries. Thus while mobile communication has become a relatively normal part of daily life in industrialized
countries, it is also becoming increasingly common in the developing world. The preconference is a joint effort by the
University of Michigan, Temple University & Telenor.
Analysing Media Industries and Media Production: An Emerging Key Area for Communication Research
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Traditions of Theory and Research
Amanda D. Lotz, U of Michigan, USA
John T. Caldwell, U of California - Los Angeles, USA
Graham Murdock, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM
Joseph Turow, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Methods
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
Georgina E. M. Born, U of Cambridge, UNITED KINGDOM
Laura Anne Grindstaff, U of California - Davis, USA
Lisa M. McLaughlin, Miami U - Ohio, USA
Transnational Industries and Production
David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Michael Curtin, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Jyotsna Kapur, Southern Illinois U, USA
Serra Tinic, U of Alberta, CANADA
Directions
Amanda D. Lotz, U of Michigan, USA
Jonathan Burston, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
Timothy Havens, U of Iowa, USA
Organised by the Popular Communication and Feminist Scholarship Divisions, this preconference brings together
established and up and coming scholars who are examining the fundamental question of how popular communication
artefacts come to take the form they do. This question involves re-examining questions of cultural production, the
status of cultural industries, and their organization in light of new approaches drawn from cultural studies, feminist
and critical race studies, and global studies. This is a vibrant and interdisciplinary area, drawing on sociology, cultural
studies, organisational and management studies, political economy, economics, social history, cultural geography and
social theory, to name just a few. Which theories and methods are most likely to consolidate the recent success of this
field of analysis? What tensions exist between the various disciplines contributing to the field and how might they
best be addressed? The preconference addresses these questions in four panels, consisting of leading speakers that
represent disciplinary and geographic diversity. Each group of presentations will be followed by open round-table
discussion from all participants. The preconference is meant as an inclusive dialogue, a chance to search for points of
agreement as well as clarify differences. Position papers will be posted to all participants before the conference and
we will establish a blog for participants to post questions and challenges that we may address during the course of the
day. Following the preconference, we expect to look to participants for next steps in considering production or
industrial studies as part of the communication discipline.
2230
Thursday
09:00-18:00
Salon 1
Communication and Social Change: Theory, ICTS, Media, and Francophone Spheres
Sponsored Sessions
For several decades, global communication theories and practices have presented various strategies targeted towards
change in various countries Through radio, television, satellite, or other traditional tools, politicians, journalists,
researchers, partners of development, etc. favoured communication as a means to social change. The examples of
Asia (India, Japan, etc) show their achievement in taking advantage of local traditions as an inner force enabling
development. Others (Brazil, Argentina) made emphasis on communication networks whilst the increasing number of
cybercafés and the use of mobile telephony show the inventiveness of Africans in the use of Information and
Communication Technologies (ICTs). However, people tend to forget that global communication also include the role
of media in industrialized countries. Indeed, media concentration as seen in USA, Canada, UK or France for example
has consequences on social level. At the same time, immigration and the diversity of cultures in different countries
has an impact on the way media treats diversity. But media and technologies are not the only means for change.
Social aspects of communication are also used for the sake of change. Hence, participation and empowerment have
been developed as social means for change. Whilst in Latin America the propositions made by Paulo Freire have been
very useful for the liberation theology and for the education of people from Brazil, Chile or Argentina, in Africa, the
Ujamaa project of President of Tanzania (Julius Nyerere) has been very influential as regards to the role of peasants in
the development of their country. Various regions of the world follow different ways to path their road to social
change. This preconference aims at questioning diverse aspects of change through social practices of communication,
theories, ICTs, media and franchophonie. The pre-conference seeks to: i.identify the ways through which
communication theory by itself can have an impact on human action and help change local situation; ii. map out the
diverse aspects of social change through some geographical examples; iii.reflect on the role and the impact of ICTs in
society; iv.question media as regards to globalization and hybridity.
2200
Thursday
09:00-17:00
HEC Montréal
What is an Organization? Materiality, Agency, and Discourse
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA
Participants
Barbara Czarniawska, U of Goteborg, SWEDEN
Bruno Latour, Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris, FRANCE
Haridimos Tsoukas, Athens Laboratory of Business Administration, GREECE
Linda L. Putnam, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA
James R. Taylor, U de Montreal, CANADA
Leading international scholars from various disciplines will gather in Montreal, Canada, to discuss and debate central
issues of contemporary organization theory. Obviously, the concept of an organization as primarily a social and
economic reality has been challenged from many sides in the past 20 years. Critics coming from various fields of the
social sciences (sociology of science, anthropology, discourse analysis, and semiotics, among others) have offered
new metaphors and constructs to recast the reality of contemporary organizations in very different realms: culture and
meaning, interaction and discourse, and materiality and artifacts, among others. The work of James R. Taylor is an
outstanding example of an attempt at synthesizing these various trends in a conception of organization that gives new
meaning to basic concepts of organizational studies such as agency, conversation, text, and materiality. With a view
to advance the discussion on the fundamental issues of the nature of organizing, agency, and text, this conference
brings together the contributions of leaders in the fields of communication and organization studies in a debate
convened around Taylor's work and extends it in several new directions.
2200
Thursday
09:00-17:00
The Arts Building,
room W-215
The Long History of New Media: Contemporary and Future Developments Contextualized
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA
Participants
Eric W. Rothenbuhler, Texas A&M U, USA
Michele Rosenthal, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Rivka Ribak, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
L Suzanne Suggs, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND
Chris McIntyre, Institute of Communication and Health, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND
Joan E Cowdery, Eastern Michigan U, USA
James Hay, U of Illinois, USA
Dmitry Epstein, Cornell U, USA
Paul Skalski, Cleveland State U, USA
Michael Zimmer, Yale Law School, USA
Ingrid Erickson, Stanford U, USA
Fernando Bermejo, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN
Teresa Marie Harrison, SUNY - Albany, USA
Sabryna Cornish, Northern Illinois U, USA
Carolyn Marvin, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Jonathan Sterne, McGill U, CANADA
Frederick C. Turner, Stanford U, USA
Benjamin John Paulsen Peters, Columbia U, USA
Carolyn Lee Kane, New York U, USA
Hiesun C. Suhr, Rutgers U, USA
Stephen Coleman, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM
David E. Morrison, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Simeon John Yates, Sheffield Hallam U, UNITED KINGDOM
Niels Brugger, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
Marianne Franklin, U for Humanistics, THE NETHERLANDS
Zizi A. Papacharissi, Temple U, USA
John Carey, Fordham U, USA
Carl Therrien, U de Quebec a Montreal, CANADA
Noah Arceneaux, San Diego State U, USA
Merav Katz-Kimchi, U of California - Berkeley, USA
Lisa Gitelman, Catholic U, BELGIUM
Melanie Chan, Leeds Metropolitan U, UNITED KINGDOM
Kelli Burns, U of South Florida, USA
Gado Alzouma, American U of Nigeria, NIGERIA
Brian O'Neill, Dublin Institute of Technology, IRELAND
Martin Elton, Ben Gurion U, ISRAEL
Lonny Brooks, California State U - East Bay, USA
This ICA preconference explores the historical dimension of new media with regard to theoretical foundations,
methodological approaches, and contemporary developments. The historical dimension of these facets of new media
scholarship is all too often inadequately addressed. The purpose of this preconference, then, is to bring together
scholars with a common interest in exploring the historical contextualization of new media. This purpose is situated
within a wider celebration of the 10th anniversary of New Media & Society as a leading journal for scholarly
exploration of new forms of mediated communication. This anniversary will culminate in a special issue of the
journal drawing from papers submitted to this preconference. The preconference is a joint initiative by the
Communication History Interest Group of the ICA and New Media & Society.
2221
Thursday
09:30-15:00
Kafka
Mediating Global Citizenship
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Ingrid Volkmer, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Participants
Toby Miller, U of California - Riverside, USA
Swantje Lingenberg, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Andrew Calabrese, U of Colorado, USA
Robert Hassan, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Agnieszka Magdalena Stepinska, Adam Mickiewicz U, POLAND
Elfriede Fuersich, Boston College, USA
Mehpare Selcan Kaynak, Bogazici U, TURKEY
Esra Ayse Ozcan, Jacobs U - Bremen, GERMANY
Karen Walker, U of Maryland, USA
Saskia Witteborn, Chinese U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Aysha Mawani, McGill U, CANADA
Florian Deffner, U of Otago, NEW ZEALAND
Gajevic Slavko, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Vivian B. Martin, Central Connecticut State U, USA
John P Pollock, The College of New Jersey, USA
Charu Uppal, U of South Pacific, FIJI
Diana Iulia Nastasia, U of North Dakota, USA
Adonica Schultz Aune, U of North Dakota, USA
Alya Naumova, Westwood College, USA
Shazia Usman, U of South Pacific, USA
Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA
Martina Schuegraf, Film and Television Academy, GERMANY
Akiba A. Cohen, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL
Christopher D. Karadjov, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Andreas Hepp, U of Bremen - IMKI, GERMANY
Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Katherine Sender, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Valentina Cardo, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Fabienne Darling-Wolf, Temple U, USA
Marc Raboy, McGill U, CANADA
Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Bowling Green State U, USA
Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA
Monroe E. Price, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Christina Slade, Macquarie U, AUSTRALIA
Kristina Maj Riegert, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN
Respondent
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Cosponsored by Philosophy of Communication, Global Communication / Social Change, Political Communication,
and The Center for Global Communication Studies, Annenberg School for Communication, U of Pennsylvania. As
media deliver not only images of 'the world' but epistemological and ontological notions of world construction in new
fragmented highly individualized spaces of mediation, it is timely to debate and critically assess not only 'cultures of
difference' but reflect these in the perspective of an integrative conceptual framework of global citizenship. The
preconference will discuss these approaches and attempt to identify parameters of global citizenship as a mediated
form.
2420
Thursday
13:00-17:00
Lamartine
Bridging Scholar/Activist Divides in the Field of Communications
Sponsored Sessions
Chairs
R. G. Lentz, New York U, USA
Milton L. Mueller, Syracuse U, USA
Participant
Joe Karaganis, Social Science Research Council, USA
"Communicating social impacts" requires deliberate attention to the role that scholarship plays in affecting social
change. This pre-conference addresses divides between research and advocacy in the field of communications in issue
areas such as public health, media diversity, communications policy, global communications and Internet governance,
journalism, technology usage and diffusion, and political communication. The tentative plan is for this pre-conference
to be organized along three tracks: Track 1: Bridging Organizational Cultures Track 2: Mapping Research Needed for
Social Impacts Track 3: Engaging in Public Scholarship: Communicating Social Impacts.
2440
Thursday
13:00-17:00
Drummond West
International Communication Association Annual Board of Directors Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
Ronald E. Rice, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Jon F. Nussbaum, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Wolfgang Donsbach, Technical U - Dresden, GERMANY
Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA
Sherry Lynn Ferguson, U of Ottawa, CANADA
Yu-li Liu, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN
Gianpietro Mazzoleni, U of Milan, ITALY
Elena E. Pernia, U of the Philippines - Diliman, PHILIPPINES
Juliet P. Roper, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Rebecca C. Hains, Salem State College, USA
Mikaela L. Marlow, U of Idaho, USA
Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Pamela J. Kalbfleisch, U of North Dakota, USA
Robin Nabi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
James W. Neuliep, St. Norbert College, USA
Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA
Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA
Douglas Storey, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg, USA
Ingrid Volkmer, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Lynn Schofield Clark, U of Denver, USA
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
Sharon Strover, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Mark Aakhus, Rutgers U, USA
Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U – Bremen, GERMANY
John E. Newhagen, U of Maryland, USA
Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Bowling Green State U, USA
Lynn A. Comella, U Nevada - Las Vegas, USA
David J. Phillips, U of Toronto, CANADA
Bernadette Maria Watson, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Kumarini Silva, Northeastern U, USA
John L. Sherry, Michigan State U, USA
David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Craig E. Carroll, U of North Carolina, USA
Annual Meeting of the Board of Directors. This meeting is open to any member of the association.
2850
Thursday
18:00-19:30
Ballroom East
International Communication Association Opening Plenary: Filmmaker-in-Residence
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
André H. Caron, U of Montreal, CANADA
Participants
Tom Perlmutter, National Film Board of Canada, CANADA
Gerry Flahive, Filmmaker-In-Residence Producer, CANADA
The Filmmaker-in-Residence is an award-winning experimental, immersive, online, interactive documentary and
experimental website that has been described as "engrossing" as well as "refreshing, engaging, and political!" Put
simply, it is an absolutely amazing experience that will pull you into the lives and struggles of ordinary people.
Filmmaker-in-Residence is a compelling,noisy,and visually appealing interactive media with filmmakers' blogs, news
reports, films, photos, and total immersion. More importantly for our conference theme of "Communicating for Social
Impact," this National Film Board initiative provides us with opportunities to see and hear what happens when
governmental initiatives fund creative opportunities for community members to portray their lives via media artistry
and to advocate on their own behalf. I find that the concept and design implementation are inspiring and thoughtprovoking. This session also provides a preview of some miniplenary, theme, and Divisional or Special Interest
Group panels sprinkled throughout our conference program.
2941
Thursday
19:30-21:30
Drummond Centre
ICA's 58th Annual Conference Opening Welcome Reception
Sponsored Sessions
Welcoming Reception is open to all conference attendees
3210
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon A
Framing News Content
Mass Communication
Chair
Paul D'Angelo, College of New Jersey, USA
Participants
A Comparative Analysis of Climate Change in the Alternative and Mainstream Press of New Zealand and the United
States
Linda Jean Kenix, U of Canterbury, NEW ZEALAND
Market Influences on Climate Change Frames in CNN and Fox News Channel Broadcasts
Philip Solomon Hart, Cornell U, USA
Framing in News coverage of the Korea Act to Guarantee Freedom and Functions of Newspapers (2004~2006)
Yejin Hong, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
Salience of National Identity in News and Public Framing: Comparative Analysis of the U.S. and Korean Newspapers
and Blogs About Virginia Campus Shooting
Kyounghee Kwon, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Shinil Moon, SUNY Buffalo, USA
3211
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon B
Gender Issues in the Media
Mass Communication
Chair
Diana I. Rios, U of Connecticut, USA
Participants
Assessing Gender-Related Portrayals in Top-Grossing G-Rated Films
Stacy Smith, U of Southern California, USA
Katherine M. Pieper, U of Southern California, USA
Amy Granados, U of Southern California, USA
Marc Choueiti, U of Southern California, USA
Female Body Image as a Function of Themes in Rap Music Videos: A Content Analysis
Yuanyuan Zhang, U of Illinois - Urbana Champaign, USA
Travis L. Dixon, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Katie Maureen Conrad, U of Illinois, USA
A Growing Concern: U.S. Newspaper Coverage of "Early Puberty" in Girls
Sharon R. Mazzarella, Clemson U, USA
From Self-Effacement to Self-Enhancement: Gender and the Construction of Character Selves
Martha M. Lauzen, San Diego State U, USA
Douglas Martin Deiss Jr., San Diego State U, USA
Television and Sex Roles 30 Years Hence: A Retrospective and Current Look From a Cultural Indicators Perspective
James Shanahan, Fairfield U, USA
Nancy Signorielli, U of Delaware, USA
Michael Morgan, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
3212
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon C
Reflecting on Public Broadcasting and Community Journalism
Mass Communication
Chair
Gregory D. Newton, Ohio U, USA
Participants
Scheduling Power in the PBS System: Negotiating Localism and Centralization
Amber Melissa Korbl Smallwood, Bridgewater College, USA
Would We Create It If It Did Not Exist? The Evolution of Public Broadcasting in Jamaica
Cinzia Padovani, Southern Illinois U, USA
Serving the Community While Staying Afloat: Diving Into the World of Community Nonprofit Newspapers
E.Jordan Storm, Syracuse U, USA
A View From Outside: What Other Social Science Disciplines Can Teach Us About Community Journalism
John A. Hatcher, U Minnesota Duluth, USA
3220
Friday
09:00-10:15
Lamartine
Chinese Perspectives in Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Ling Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Participants
Cultural Models of Interpersonal Communication in the U.S. and China
Yanrong Chang, U of Texas - Pan American, USA
Does China Have Alternative Modernity? An Examination on Chinese Modernization Discourse
Pi-Chun Chang, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Perceived Face Threat in Classroom Participation: A Comparison of Chinese and U.S. Americans
Zheng An, The U of New Mexico, USA
The Effect of Loneliness on Internet Use Motivation, Internet Use, and Cross-Cultural Adaptation Among Chinese
Students in the U.S.
Ying Wang, Youngstown State U, USA
Shaojing Sun, Weber State U, USA
Respondent
Ling Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
3221
Friday
09:00-10:15
Kafka
Public Relations Campaigns and Frames within Business, Politics, and the Media
Public Relations
Political Communication
Chair
Bruce K. Berger, U of Alabama, USA
Participants
Competing for Attention: Comparing Information Subsidy Influence in Agenda-Building During Election Campaigns
Spiro K. Kiousis, U of Florida, USA
Sooyeon Kim, U of Florida, USA
Ally Ostrowski, U of Colorado, USA
Michael J. McDevitt, U of Colorado, USA
Frame Building of Prescription Drug Imports From Canada: An Analysis of Policy Actors' Message Frames in News
Stories
Youngmin Yoon, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Suman Lee, Iowa State U, USA
Media Framing in Corporate Social Responsibility: A Korea-U.S. Comparative Study
Yoon-Joo Lee, U of Tennessee, USA
Sora Kim, U of Tennessee, USA
Eric Haley, U of Tennessee, USA
Short- and Long-Term Campaign Effects on News Stories' Semantic Networks: Priming or Framing?
James A. Danowski, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
3222
Friday
09:00-10:15
Hemon
Multiple Perspectives on Organizational Crisis and Change
Organizational Communication
Chair
Mark Aakhus, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
A Communication Model of Employee Cynicism Toward Organizational Change
Yuxia Qian, Ohio State U, USA
A Mindful Approach to Organizational Learning Theory in Crisis Communication Literature
Shari Veil, U of Oklahoma, USA
Fixing the Meaning of Change: Analysis of Change Management Meeting Excerpts
Guowei Jian, Cleveland State U, USA
Resolving Resistance: The Role of Commitment to Change in Public Organizations
Martine Hartkamp, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Claartje ter Hoeven, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Willem Jan Pieterson, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Respondent
Jennifer L. Gibbs, Rutgers U, USA
3223
Friday
09:00-10:15
Jarry
Social Factors and Susceptibility in Health Communication
Health Communication
Chair
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Participants
Social Barriers to Safer Food Preparation and Storage Practices Among Consumers
Norman Adrian Porticella, Cornell U, USA
Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA
Robert B. Gravani, Cornell U, USA
The Interplay of the Integrative Model and Communication with Friends in the Formation of Intentions to Initiate Sex
Peter Busse, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Martin Fishbein, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Amy Bleakley, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Michael Hennessy, U of Pennsylvania, USA
The Roles of Theory of Planned Behavior, Social Capital, and Collective Efficacy: An Application to Sexual
Violence
Bumsub Jin, U of Florida, USA
Soyoon Kim, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
The Influence of Problem Recognition and Involvement On Perceived Susceptibility to Skin Cancer
Paula L. Weissman, U of Maryland, USA
3224
Friday
09:00-10:15
Joyce
Information Seeking for Shared Decision Making in Medical Encounters
Health Communication
Chair
Pamela Z. Poe, Pennsylvania State - Abington, USA
Participants
Doctors vs. Laypersons on Blogs vs. Bulletin Boards vs. Websites vs. Homepages: The Effects of Online Health
Sources on Credibility and Behavioral Intentions
Yifeng Hu, The College of New Jersey, USA
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Naming and Claiming Cancer, Fears, and Fatalism Among African-American Women: An Application of
Problematic Integration (PI) Theory
Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA
Examining Cross-Source Engagement With Cancer-Related Information and its Impact on Doctor-Patient Relations
Nehama Lewis, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Stacy Gray, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Parental Information Seeking Following a Positive Newborn Screening for Cystic Fibrosis
James Price Dillard, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Lijiang Shen, U of Georgia, USA
Jeffrey David Robinson, Rutgers U, USA
Philip M Farrell, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
3225
Friday
09:00-10:15
Musset
Measurement, Methods, and Interpersonal Communication Research
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Anita L. Herold, U of North Dakota, USA
Participants
Development and Validation of Emotional Quality of Life (EQL) Scales for Communication Research
C. Arthur VanLear, U of Connecticut, USA
Chelsea C. Hammond, U of Connecticut, USA
Christopher Kowal, U of Connecticut, USA
Individual Differences in the Communication of Romantic Interest:Development of the Flirting Styles Questionnaire
Jeffrey A. Hall, U of Kansas, USA
Michael J. Cody, U of Southern California, USA
Symbolic Interdependence, Imagined Interaction, and Relationship Quality
James M. Honeycutt, Louisiana State U, USA
Expanding the Sociometric Process
David C. DeAndrea, Michigan State U, USA
Christopher John Carpenter, Michigan State U, USA
Factor Analysis of Rules in Friendship: Relations With Personality Traits and Friendship Quality
Goran Bubas, U of Zagreb, CROATIA
Denis Bratko, U of Zagreb, CROATIA
3230
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon 1
Entertainment, Comedy, and Politics
Political Communication
Chair
Hartmut Wessler, U Mannheim, GERMANY
Participants
Exposure to News, Political Comedy, and Entertainment Talk Shows; Concern About Security; and Political Mistrust
Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Riva Tukachinsky, U of Arizona, USA
Yoram Peri, Tel-Aviv U, ISRAEL
Do Not Expect Too Much!: An Analysis of the Relationship Between Learning Effects of Late-Night Comedy
Watching and Knowledge Item Difficulty
Young Min Min Baek, U of Pennsylvannia, USA
Magdalena Elzbieta Wojcieszak, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Learning From Jon Stewart: How Soft News Programs Inform Infrequent Consumers of Traditional News
Xiaoxia Cao, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Moments of Zen: "The Daily Show," Information Seeking, and Partisan Heuristics
Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Amy B. Becker, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
3232
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon 3
Comparing Media Systems: Beyond Western Europe and North America
Political Communication
Chair
Daniel C. Hallin, U of California - San Diego, USA
Participants
Media System in Turkey from a Comparative Perspective
Mine Gencel Bek, Ankara U, TURKEY
Italianization (or Mediterraneanization) of the Polish Media Systems: The Reality and Perspective
Boguslawa Dobek-Ostrowska, U of Wroclaw, POLAND
Changes and Challenges: The Case of Modern Egyptian Media
Sahar Khamis, U of Maryland, USA
Comparing Media Systems: a Brazilian Perspective
Afonso de Albuquerque, U Federal Fluminense, Niteroi, BRAZIL
The Constraints of Protracted Conflict on the Development of a Liberal Model of Media System
Yoram Peri, Tel-Aviv U, ISRAEL
Respondents
Thomas E. Patterson, Harvard U, USA
Paolo Mancini, U di Perugia, ITALY
Hallin and Mancini's Comparing Media Systems: Three Models of Media and Politics has been an important focus in
a growing field of comparative research on media systems. Hallin and Mancini's book, however, is based on a most
similar systems design, and deals with a narrow range of cases all of which are Western democracies with advanced
capitalist economies. This panel brings together scholars who study a number of cases outside the group of contiries
covered by Hallin and Mancini to explore the question of how the framework of their book does and does not apply to
other kinds of systems, and to consider what other variables and media system models might need to be developed to
extend the kind of comparative analysis proposed in their book beyond Western Europe and North America.
3233
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon 4
The Gender Politics of Emotion Management in Contemporary Media and Performance
Feminist Scholarship
Popular Communication
Chair
Louise Woodstock, Ursinus College, USA
Participants
Tattoo Therapy: Gender and Healing on Reality TV
Louise Woodstock, Ursinus College, USA
The Money Shot in Makeover Television: Gender, Class, and Routines of Emotion
Katherine Sender, U of Pennsylvania, USA
"Hands on Hips, Smiles on Lips!": Emotion and Identity in Cheerleading's Performance of Spirit
Emily West, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Laura Anne Grindstaff, U of California - Davis, USA
Respondent
Carolyn Marvin, U of Pennsylvania, USA
It has long been acknowledged in popular culture and academic discourse that women are often charged with
demonstrating emotion as well as with caring for the emotional health of others. This panel revisits gendered
emotional labor and expressivity with a relational approach, exploring sites where emotional performance demands
for both men and women are on display. Exploring mediated and non-mediated ritualized contexts, we analyze and
critique the performativity of affect, including those situations in which the demonstration of affect, even if forced or
contrived, either delivers the social goods of cohesion, community and caring, or fails to because the emotion is
deemed false. By contrasting the cultivation, demonstration and explanation of emotion by culturally distinct actors among reality TV participants, tattoo artists, and cheerleaders - we are able to chart the boundaries of socially
acceptable affect.
3234
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon 5
Media and Sport: On the Consequences a Modern Popular Symbiosis
Popular Communication
Chair
Matthew P. McAllister, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Participants
Mega-Events and Social Theory: The Case of the Modern Olympic Games
Michael R. Real, Royal Roads U, CANADA
Whose Truth, Whose Power? Olympic Finances and the Media
Garry Whannel, U of Bedfordshire, UNITED KINGDOM
The Other Melting Pot: Sports Stardom and Identity in Liquid Modernity
Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM
The World Cup 2006 and the Globalization of Football
Lothar Mikos, U of Film and Television, GERMANY
Sport, Gender & Digital Gaming
Garry Crawford, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM
Victoria K. Gosling, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM
As mediated sport permeates most forms of popular communication from print and broadcast media via niche media
such as fanzines, to web based communities and computer gaming, this panel traces and analyzes the interplay
between (professional) spectator sports and popular culture across the spectrum of popular communication. Spectator
sports has both reflected and reinforced fundamental social and cultural change throughout its evolution and continues
to constitute an insightful vehicle in the investigation of contemporary popular communication from its industries via
its performers (athletes) to is fans and audiences. If early modern spectator sport reflected with standardization,
formal rationalization and Taylorization the paramount forces of high modernity, contemporary media sports is
equally shaped by - and a valuable tool in exploring - cultural transformations from globalization and convergence to
liquid or postmodernity. Individual papers thus focus on mediated sport as central to the formation of mediated mega
events (Real), the mediated representation of the financial costs of such mega events (Whannel), the interplay
between globalization and migration of professional athletes reflecting wider global economic inequalities deepened
in a global economy of signs (Mikos), the blurring boundaries between spectatorship and participation in sports
gaming (Crawford and Gosling) and the rise of sports stardom and its impact on changing social, cultural and political
discourses in mediated sport (Sandvoss).
3240
Friday
09:00-10:15
Drummond West
Processing Fear and Risk in Health Messages
Information Systems
Chair
Narine S. Yegiyan, Indiana U, USA
Participants
Effects of Emotional Tone and Visual Complexity on Processing Health Risk Information and Benefits in
Prescription Drug Ads
Rebecca Norris, U of Missouri, USA
Rachel L. Bailey, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Jennifer Malle, U of Missouri, USA
Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Brain Activation During Risk: The Influence of Trait Motivation on ACC Activation During Choice and
Consequence
Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA
Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA
Joshua W. Brown, Indiana U, USA
Rena Fukunaga, Indiana U, USA
Adam Krawitz, Indiana U, USA
How Threat Proximity Affects the Cognitive Processing of Health-Related News
Kevin Wise, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Petya Dimitrova Eckler, U of Missouri, USA
Anastasia Kononova, U of Missouri, USA
Jeremy Littau, U of Missouri, USA
Information Processing: Fear Message and H5N1
Wanda Luen Wun Siu, Chinese U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
"Meth Madness?" Continuous and Postexposure Judgments of Effects of Fear Messages on Self and Others
Tamara Makana Chock, Syracuse U, USA
Daniel Schackman, Syracuse U, USA
3241
Friday
09:00-10:15
Drummond Centre
Preparing Students to Communicate for Social Impact in Jesuit Education
Theme Sessions
Participants
Preparing Faculty to Educate Students Toward Communicating for Social Impact
M. Chad McBride, Creighton U, USA
Erika Kirby, Creighton U, USA
Sarah Bonewits Feldner, Marquette U, USA
James L. Leighter, U of Washington, USA
Designing Curriculum to Prepare Students to Communicate for Social Impact
Erika Kirby, Creighton U, USA
Bren Ortega Murphy, Loyola U - Chicago, USA
Adapting Courses to Prepare Students to Communicate for Social Impact
James L. Leighter, U of Washington, USA
Bren Ortega Murphy, Loyola U - Chicago, USA
Creating Assignments to Prepare Students to Communicate for Social Impact
Lynn H. Turner, Marquette U, USA
Sarah Bonewits Feldner, Marquette U, USA
Stacy Tye-Willaims, Creighton U, USA
The conference theme of communication having "consequences for…more equitable…social landscapes," parallels
Jesuit educational principles; consequently, panelists from several Jesuit institutions explore how faculty can prepare
themselves and students to communicate for social impact. After introducing faculty preparation mechanisms that
assisted them in educating on communication and social justice, panelists articulate ways curriculum in Jesuit
communication departments are designed toward social impact. Panelists illustrate how to infuse communication for
social impact into entire courses and conclude with concrete assignments.
3242
Friday
09:00-10:15
Drummond East
Technology and Privacy
Communication and Technology
Chair
Michael Zimmer, Yale Law School, USA
Participants
Feeding the Privacy Debate: An Examination of Facebook
Ryan L. Lange, Michigan State U, USA
Cliff Lampe, Michigan State U, USA
Reconceptualizing Privacy in Technological Realms: Theoretical Frameworks for Communication
Lorraine G. Kisselburgh, Purdue U, USA
Who's Watching Whom? A Fieldstudy of Interactive Technology and Surveillance
Lee M. Humphreys, U of Pennsylvania, USA
White Cyberlies: The Use of Deceptive Instant Messaging Statuses as a Social Norm
Mariek Magdalena Petra Vanden Abeele, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, BELGIUM
Keith Roe, Catholic U – Leuven, BELGIUM
Predicting User Concerns About Online Privacy in Hong Kong
Mike Z. Yao, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Jinguang Zhang, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
3243
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon 6
Community Media: An Active Means of Social Impact
Global Communication and Social Change
Participants
A Television to Save a Language and a Culture: The Basque Case
Carmelo Garitaonandia, U of the Basque Country, SPAIN
Miguel Angel Casado, U of the Basque Country, SPAIN
Media as Constructor of Ethnic Minority Identity: A Native American Case Study
Ritva Levo-Henriksson, U of Helsinki, FINLAND
Vox Pupuli or Lonely Voices in the Wasteland of the Ionosphere: The Case of Israeli Community Television
Hillel Nossek, College of Management Academic Studies, ISRAEL
(Re) Colouring the Public Broadcasting System in Canada: A Case Study of the Aboriginal Peoples Television
Network
Lorna Roth, Corcordia U-Loyola Campus, USA
Based on our book "Community Media: International Perspectives" (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), edited by Linda K.
Fuller, contributors from Spain, Finland, Israel, and Canada present their research on community media for social
change. Drawing on both theoretical and practical case studies—including aboriginal/indigenous experiences, current
case studies, and virtual community visions, we move from developing attempts at local media to case studies and
cyber-examples. Historically, it has been argued that, ever since the Bible was translated into the vernacular, a clamor
began for access to message-making; now, in our current era of revolutionary information changes throughout the
world—when we are dealing with bloggers, map-makers, iPoders, text message senders and receivers, and any
number of cyber-dissidents, it is critical to consider the role of community media toward that process. Following
definitions and a brief literature review, we describe how community communications/media can refer to how
individuals and organizations involve publics in participatory means of airing issues. Owing a debt to the "Our Media,
Not Theirs" group that first met at ICA/Washington in 2001, we continue their tradition. Public service broadcasting,
we contend, should be an institutional guarantor; it is why we fear and fight against the trend toward media ownership
by a handful of moguls who want to mediate our messages. As growing disappointment and disillusionment with
commercial media and its centralization by key multinational corporations combines with increasing concern over
conglomeration and hyper-commercialism, it behooves us to understand, appreciate, delineate, and be involved in our
own local means of communication.
3244
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon 7
Bollywood, Cultural Identity, and Globalization
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Andy Kavoori, U of Georgia, USA
Participants
The Globalization of Bollywood: The Hype and the Hope
Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
The Muslim "Other" in Bollywood Cinema
Kalyani Chadha, U of Maryland, USA
Andy Kavoori, U of Georgia, USA
Deewar/Wall (1975)—Fact, Fiction, and the Making of a Superstar
Jyotika Virdi, U of Windsor, CANADA
Imagining the NRI Audience: Bollywood, Overseas Markets, and Dot-com Companies
Aswin Punathambekar, U of Michigan, USA
This panel examines an important contra-flow in global communication today—the Bombay based Hindi film
industry known as Bollywood. It brings together scholars in the field of film studies, international communication and
digital communication as it provides a sustained accounting of the cultural logic of media contra flows using
bollywood as a case study.
3250
Friday
09:00-10:15
Ballroom East
New Member and Graduate Student Orientation to ICA and the Conference
Sponsored Sessions
Chairs
Rebecca C. Hains, Salem State College, USA
Mikaela L. Marlow, U of Idaho, USA
Participants
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA
This session is designed for newcomers to ICA, though all members interested in learning more about the
organization are welcome. The session will include: (a) a general overview of ICA as an organization; (b) an
overview of the conference; and (c) opportunities for participation in ICA. Questions and discussion are encouraged
throughout the session.
3251
Friday
09:00-10:15
Salon 8
ICA-CCA 2008 Panel: Representing Chinese: An Cross-Cultural Approach
Sponsored Sessions
Participants
Words and Life: A Moralistic and Philosophical Account of Chinese Humbleness
Hui-Ching Chang, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
An Empirical Study of Acculturation of Mainland Chinese in Hong Kong
Du Juana, Hong Kong Baptist U, Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Engaging and Empowering News Audiences Online: The Case of China
Xiaoge Xu, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Asian Images Portrayed in the Web Sites of U.S. Higher Education Institutions
Xiaopeng Paul Wang, U of South Florida, USA
Ann Copper Chen, Ohio U, USA
The Impact of Media Reliance on the Framing of Chen Liangyu Scandal by Chinese Audience
Huailin Chen, Chinese U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
I Learn About STDs Through the Internet- A Comparison Study Among Students in Taiwan, Singapore, and China
Leanne Li-Yuan Chang, National U - Singapore, SINGAPORE
There are many approaches to examine how Chinese communicate, behave, use media in different cultural contexts.
This panel will deal with Chinese humbleness, acculturation, and representations on the web, media reliance by
scholars from the U.S., Hong Kong, Singapore and Marco. Some papers use empirical data to test their hypotheses
while others use content analysis, web research and philosophical approaches to look at how Chinese have been
represented at different communicative and media environments.
3260
Friday
09:00-10:15
701
Comparing Newswork Across Borders
Journalism Studies
Chair
Sandra Vera Zambrano, Institut D'Etudes Politiques, FRANCE
Participants
Look Who's Talking: Use of Sources in Newspaper Coverage in Sweden and the United States
Daniela V. Dimitrova, Iowa State U, USA
Jesper Stromback, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
Terrorism Coverage in the American and Russian Newsweeks
Amanda Hinnant, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Yulia Medvedeva, U of Missouri-Columbia, USA
Framing the Nuke: How News Media in Six-Party-Talk Countries Framed North Korea's Nuclear Test
Mun-Young Chung, Kansas State U, USA
Justin R Lessman, Kansas State U, USA
Meijing Fan, Kansas State U, USA
Journalists' Perceptions of Source Credibility and the Media's Source Use: A Study on Media Coverage of the SixParty Nuclear Talks
Hyunjin Seo, Syracuse U, USA
Jeongsub Lim, Austin Peay State U, USA
Respondent
Akiba A. Cohen, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL
This session compares journalism practice across wide geographic and topical boundaries. The first paper looks at the
use of sources in U.S. and Swedish newspapers covering a number of important news events. The second paper
compares word use differences in covering terrorism in U.S. and Russian news magazines. The last two presentations
are on cross-national differences in news coverage of North Korea's 2006 nuclear test.
3261
Friday
09:00-10:15
705
A Century of Struggle: The Tug of War Between Social Activism and Corporate Public Relations
Communication History
Chair
Deepa Kumar, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
Advertising, Consumer Activism, and PR in the 1930s
Inger Lisbeth Stole, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Explaining Away Contested Terrain: The News Industry's Public Relations Campaign Against Craft Unionism
James F. Tracy, Florida Atlantic U, USA
"What's Good for UPS is Good For America": Corporate Propaganda and Network Television News Coverage of the
UPS Strike
Deepa Kumar, Rutgers U, USA
The Broadcast…er, Media… Reform Movement: This is Then and That was Now
Robert W. McChesney, U of Illinois, USA
From the early twentieth century the extension of popular democracy in America has been offset by the development
of monopoly capitalism. The rise of propaganda and public relations closely paralleled the development of citizen
enfranchisement. These communication strategies became essential for beating back public opposition and criticism
to corporate hegemony without engaging in the open violence that traditionally accompanied class conflict. Following
the First World War, the commercial mass media became a central battleground in this conflict. In the 1930s
progressive forces and the labor movement lead the formation of the Congress of Industrial Organizations and a
"laboring" of communication that resumed in the mid 1940s with the great strike wave following the Second World
War. Corporate America responded with the Taft Hartley Act and a broad corporate propaganda campaign that would
retake the initiative and reframe politics in ways suited to its objectives. This panel examines the rise of public
relations and corporate propaganda as ideological tools, exploring its relevance to contemporary social struggles
through four historical cases studies that extend from the consumer and broadcast reform movements of the 1930s,
through the struggle of craft unionism in the postwar 1940s, to the UPS workers' strike of 1997 and the media reform
movement of the twenty-first century. Our purpose is not to mourn the battles lost and opportunities defeated but,
rather, to link past struggles with modern possibilities and to draw out lessons for the present historical moment.
3262
Friday
09:00-10:15
716
Agency, Epistemology, and Ethics
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Rereading Transcendental Individualism Into Contemporary Communication Ethics: In Defense of Abstraction
Melba Leonor Velez, U of Illinois, USA
The Ambivalence of Autoethnography: Imaging Queer Kinship
Julianne Pidduck, Université de Montréal, CANADA
Thinking Relationality: Keeping the Conceptual Framework and the Fieldwork Flowing
Dominique Meunier, U of Montreal, CANADA
Gender Constitution, Discourse, and Assertions: A Heideggerian Inquiry Into Gender Performativity and Ontological
Gender Neutrality
Brian Christopher Kanouse, Purdue U, USA
Respondent
John Nguyet Erni, Lingnan U - Hong Kong
What are the relations between agency (being counted as an agent), knowledge, and the ethics of knowledgegathering? This panel explores these questions through reflections on philosophical history and methodological issues
in the contemporary social sciences.
3263
Friday
09:00-10:15
720
Media Spectacles of Race
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Mass Communication
Chair
Che Baysinger, Kaplan U, USA
Participants
Between Racism and Rape: Discursive Gridlock in Newspaper Coverage of the Marcus Dixon Trial
Amy Adele Hasinoff, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Ethnic Minorities in the Mass Media: Always the Same and Always Negative
Joachim Trebbe, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND
Philomen Schoenhagen, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND
Hope and Despair: Representations of Europe and Africa in News Coverage of "Migration Crisis"
Karina Horsti, U of Helsinki, FINLAND
Minority Programming: Still at the Back of the Bus
Adam Lynn, Free Press, USA
Mark N. Cooper, McGannon Center for Communications Research, USA
Nonnative Speaker of English Representation in U.S. Media: A Case Study of Language Learner Identity
Carla Rae Chamberlin-Quinlisk, Pennsylvania State U, USA
3264
Friday
09:00-10:15
728
Special Topics in Instructional Communication: From Apprehension to Service Learning
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Jerry L. Allen, U of New Haven, USA
Participants
Assessing the Impact of the Interpersonal Communication Course
John W. Haas, U of Tennessee, USA
Informational Reception Apprehension-Information Technology, Faculty Technology Use, and Faculty Training
Raymond Preiss, U of Puget Sound, USA
Renee Houston, U of Puget Sound, USA
Barbara Mae Gayle, St. Martin’s U, USA
Help Me? Communication Resource Center Usage, Help-Seeking Behaviors, and Student Motives for
Communicating with Instructors
Toni Selena Whitfield, James Madison U, USA
C. Leigh Nelson, James Madison U, USA
Video Production as a Bridge Between the University and the Community: Going Beyond a Client-Based Model
Jiwon Yoon, Temple U, USA
Service-Learning in an International Community of Practice: An Arab World-U.S. Partnership
Laura B. Lengel, Bowling Green State U, USA
Catherine Cassara, Bowling Green State U, USA
Hamida El Bour, U de la Manouba, TUNISIA
Respondent
Jerry L. Allen, U of New Haven, USA
3266
Friday
09:00-10:15
820
Games and Culture
Game Studies
Chair
Mia L. Consalvo, Ohio U, USA
Participants
The Development of Game Modifications: Creators of Games Content Explored
Katharina-Maria Behr, Hamburg Media School, GERMANY
Video Game Culture as Popular Culture? The Productive Leisure of Video Game Workers of Montreal
Damien Charrieras, Université de Montréal, FRANCE
Myrtille Roy-Valex, Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique, CANADA
Putting the Gay in Games: Cultural Production and GLBT Content in Video Games
Adrienne Shaw, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Call of Duty, Medal of Honor, and the Ideology of the Military
Joel Penney, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Student papers from the Game Studies SIG, exploring various aspects of games and culture.
3310
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon A
Advertising, Children, and Adolescents: Content and Concerns
Mass Communication
Chair
Roger Desmond, U of Hartford, USA
Participants
Quantity and Nutritional Quality of Food Advertising During Children's Television Programming in the U.S.
Dale Kunkel, U of Arizona, USA
Christopher Joseph McKinley, U of Arizona, USA
Carmen R. Stitt, U of Arizona, USA
All Part of a Child's Balanced Television Diet? Emotional Appeals, Production Values, and the Presence of
Disclaimers in Food and Beverage Advertising
Jan LeBlanc Wicks, U of Arkansas, USA
Ron Warren, U of Arizona, USA
Robert Wicks, U of Arkansas, USA
Ignatius Fosu, U of Arkansas, USA
Objectionable Content on Mainstream TV advertising: A Comparison of the Representation of Sex and Violence in
American and Israeli Commercials
Amir Hetsroni, Yezreel Valley College, ISRAEL
"Mom! I've Seen That on a Commercial!": U.S. Preschoolers' Recognition of Brand Logos
Emily S. Kinsky, Texas State U, USA
Shannon Bichard, Texas State U, USA
How Social Influence Mediates the Effects of Advertising on Adolescents' Materialism
Stella C. Chia, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
3311
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon B
Investigations of Chinese Media
Mass Communication
Chair
Zhongdang Pan, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Participants
Online News Reports and Newsworthiness: A Study of the Electronic Bulletin Board System (BBS) in China
Suman Lee, Iowa State U, USA
Xinru Cheng, U of Southern California, USA
Eric Abbott, Iowa State U, USA
News Media Use, Perception, and Efficacy: A Multilevel Analysis of Media Participation in China
Fei Chris Shen, Ohio State U, USA
Ye Lu, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Zhongshi Guo, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Baohua Zhou, Journalism School of Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Chinese Citizens' Attitudes Towards Globalization: A Study of Media Influence
Francis L. F. Lee, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Zhou He, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Chin-Chuan Lee, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Wan-Ying Lin, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Mike Z. Yao, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Shaping Nation-Building Discourse Through Entertainment: A Content Analysis of CCTV's Annual Gala Show
Zhan Li, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
The Challenging Potential of Local Media: Lessons From China
Yik Chan Chin, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM
3312
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon C
Public Relations Unplugged: Crisis, Reputation, and CSR
Public Relations
Chair
Craig E. Carroll, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
Towards a General Theory of Reputation Constitution
Mark Eisenegger, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Kurt Imhof, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Framing Corporate Social Responsibility for Capital Market Communications
Johannes Christian Fieseler, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND
Christian Pieter Hoffmann, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND
Miriam Meckel, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND
Seeking Reliability in Chaos: The Crisis Adaptive Public Information Model
Suzanne Horsley, U of Utah, USA
The Interrelationships Between Corporate Reputation, Trust and Behavioral Intentions: A Multistakeholder Approach
Diana Ingenhoff, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND
Katharina Sommer, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND
Developing a Publics-Driven, Emotion-Based Conceptualization in Crisis Communication: Second-Stage Testing of
the Integrated Crisis Mapping (ICM) Model
Yan Jin, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA
Augustine Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Glen T. Cameron, U of Missouri, USA
The Strategic Value of Corporate Social Responsibility: A Relationship Management Framework for Public Relations
Practice
Kevin Jones, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Jennifer L. Bartlett, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
The Organization-Public Relationship and Crisis Communication: The Effect of the Organization-Public Relationship
on Publics' Perceptions of Crisis and Attitudes Toward the Organization
Hyojung Park, U of Georgia, USA
Bryan H. Reber, U of Georgia, USA
Corporate Social Responsibility: Decision Support System
Nadine A Yehya, Purdue U, USA
Mohan Jyoti Dutta, Purdue U, USA
Cultural Issues in Crisis Communication: A Comparative Study Crisis Messages Chosen by South Korean and U.S.
Print Media
Emma Kathleen Wright, U of Tennessee, USA
Sora Kim, U of Tennessee, USA
3320
Friday
10:30-11:45
Lamartine
Beyond the Classroom: The Social Impact of Intercultural Learning in Higher Education
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Nanda Dimitrov, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
Participants
Developing Intercultural Sensitivity in International Graduate Students
Nadine L. LeGros, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
Graduate Education as Culture Learning: A Research Agenda
Nanda Dimitrov, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
Internationalizing On-Campus Courses: Lessons Learned
Shelley Smith, U of Minnesota Duluth, USA
Novel Forms of Intercultural Contact and Their Effects on Attitudes Towards the Other's Culture: An Exploratory
Study With French and American University Students
Rosita D. Albert, U of Minnesota, USA
Grace Coggio, U of Minnesota, USA
Celine Godet, U de Nantes, FRANCE
Presenters of the panel explore how intercultural learning takes place and what social impact it has beyond the
classroom in higher education settings in Canada, France and the United States. Using developmental approaches and
longitudinal studies, the panel examines challenges to innovation in culture learning and teaching, discusses strategies
for measuring the outcomes of culture learning, and details a research agenda on the development of intercultural and
disciplinary communication competence. The social impact of culture learning is examined in the context of
internationalizing the curriculum at a North American university, introducing international graduate students to
teaching practices in Canada, establishing a collaborative learning project between university students in France and
the United States, and in the context of developing new graduate students' disciplinary communication competence at
a Canadian university.
3321
Friday
10:30-11:45
Kafka
Understanding Personal Cognitions in the Framing Process
Mass Communication
Chair
Paul D'Angelo, College of New Jersey, USA
Participants
Semantic Association and Weighted Consideration: How Framing Shifts People's Information Bases in Opinion
Formation
Christian Baden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Powerful News Frames? The Role of Prior Judgments as a Moderator of Framing Effects
Joerg Matthes, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
The Interaction Between Framing and Priming in the Context of an Alcohol Related TV Series
Baldwin Van Gorp, Radboud U - Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS
Hildegarde D. Y. Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Simons Nele, U of Antwerpen, BELGIUM
Thinking About Frames: A Cognitive Response Model of Framing Effects
Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington U, USA
Paul R Brewer, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Respondent
Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
One of the main contingencies in the framing process stems from the interaction with people's personal cognitions.
How well frames link to prior understandings determines people's ability to use, resist or counter-argue offered
interpretations. This panel investigates the nexus between frame and cognitive response. The papers address the main
steps of the underlying process (activation of knowledge, engagement of prior attitudes, and resonance with personal
beliefs) and integrate these into a broad theoretical framework.
3322
Friday
10:30-11:45
Hemon
Researching Organizational Socialization, Idenitification, and Commitment
Organizational Communication
Chair
Rebecca J. Meisenbach, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Participants
Anticipatory Socialization in Family Businesses: (Co-)Constructions of Career and Choice Among Successors
Suchitra Shenoy, Purdue U, USA
Elizabeth Williams, Purdue U, USA
Jennifer S. Linvill, Purdue U, USA
Organizational Identification (OI) with a Japanese Multinational Manufacturer in the United States
Sachiyo Morinaga Shearman, East Carolina U, USA
Kumi Ishii, Western Kentucky U, USA
Reducing Attrition After Downsizing: Effects of Customer Service Orientation, Equity, and Organizational Tenure on
Commitment
Robin Adair Erickson, Deloitte Consulting, USA
Michael E. Roloff, Northwestern U, USA
Telecommuting and Organizational Identification: The Role of Informal Communication
Martha J. Fay, U of Wisconsin - Eau Claire, USA
Susan Lee Kline, Ohio State U, USA
Respondent
Philip Salem, Texas State U, USA
3323
Friday
10:30-11:45
Jarry
Communicating With Healthcare Consumers in Organizational Contexts
Health Communication
Chair
Tyler R. Harrison, Purdue U, USA
Participants
Understanding Privacy Concerns in Accessing Reproductive Healthcare: Intersections of Organizational and Social
Identities for Low-Income African American Women in a Small-Town Setting
Annis G. Golden, U at Albany, USA
Cultural Competency: Patient Perspectives Within a Hospital Network
Jay Baglia, Lehigh Valley Hospital and Health Network, USA
The Personal Health Record as a Contemporary Setting for Connecting Patients With Health Care Organizations
Kim M. Nazi, Department of Veterans Affairs, USA
Hospice Volunteers: Communicating in Relationships Between Patients, Family Members, Providers, and the Larger
Community
Elissa Foster, Lehigh Valley Hospital, USA
Countering Health Messages: Pro-Anorexia Websites
Kathleen Custers, Katholieke U - Leuven, BELGIUM
Jan Van den Bulck, Catholic U – Leuven, BELGIUM
Respondent
Tyler R. Harrison, Purdue U, USA
Understanding Privacy Concerns in Accessing Reproductive Healthcare: Intersections of Organizational and Social
Identities for Low-Income African American Women in a Small-Town Setting Cultural Competency: Patient
Perspectives within a Hospital Network The Personal Health Record as a Contemporary Setting for Connecting
Patients with Health Care Organizations Hospice Volunteers: Communicating in Relationships between Patients,
Family Members, Providers, and the Larger Community. Countering Health Messages: Pro-Anorexia Websites
3324
Friday
10:30-11:45
Joyce
Building Blocks, Missteps and Successes in Health Campaigns
Health Communication
Chair
Rachel A. Smith, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Participants
A Conceptual Comparison of the Theoretical Approaches in Health Campaigns: Focusing on SET, TRA, TPB, HBM,
and EPPM
Seon-Kyoung An, U of Alabama, USA
Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA
Ignoring the Evidence: Newspaper Coverage of Strategies to Address College Binge Drinking
Michelle "Shelley" Campo, U of Iowa, USA
Natoshia Marie Askelson, U of Iowa, USA
Teresa Mastin, Michigan State U, USA
Mary Slonske, Michigan State U, USA
Testing a Theory-Based Health Communication Program: A Replication of Go Sun Smart in Outdoor Winter
Recreation
Peter A. Andersen, San Diego State U, USA
David B. Buller, Klein Buendel, Inc., USA
Barbara J. Walkosz, U of Colorado - Denver, USA
Julie Maloy, Klein Buendel, Inc., USA
Gary R Cutter, U of Alabama, USA
Michael D. Scott, California State U - Chico, USA
Mark B Dignan, U of Kentucky, USA
Impact of Televised Mass-Media Campaigns and Tobacco Control Policies on Monthly Adult Smoking Prevalence
Melanie A. Wakefield, The Cancer Council Victoria, AUSTRALIA
Sarah Jane Durkin, The Cancer Council Victoria, AUSTRALIA
Matt Spittal, The Cancer Council Victoria, AUSTRALIA
Mohammad Siahpush, U of Nebraska, USA
Michelle Scollo, The Cancer Council Victoria, AUSTRALIA
Julie Simpson, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Simon Chapman, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Vicki White, The Cancer Councl Victoria, AUSTRALIA
David Hill, The Cancer Council Victoria, AUSTRALIA
3325
Friday
10:30-11:45
Musset
Communicating for Impact Internationally: Understanding the Deception Judgments of Real World
Practitioners.
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Mark G. Frank, U at Buffalo, USA
Participants
International Comparison of Accurate Deception Detection: Australian Magistrates and Circuit Judges
Ryan Scott Kozey, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Factors Effecting Deception Detection in British Law Enforcement
Carolyn Marie Hurley, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Training to Detect Microexpressions of Emotion Internationally
Sinuk Kang, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Anastacia D Kurylo, Marymount Manhattan College, USA
Spotting People With Bad Intentions From Nonverbal Communication
David Thomas Aragona, U at Buffalo, USA
Respondent
Mark G. Frank, U at Buffalo, USA
This panel will present recent research on a number of professional groups in and outside the USA to examine their
abilities to spot deception or hidden emotion, to ask a few more questions of them to determine why they are doing
better or worse. The first presentation will examine why Magistrate Judges outperform Circuit Court judges in
Australia when spotting deception,. The second presentation will examine 4 different groups of British Police officers
to show that the detective groups outperform the patrol group, and that those who were good at detecting micro
expressions of emotion were better at spotting deception. The next presentation showed that one could increase this
micro expression of emotion detection by 50%, for both Caucasian and Asian faces, through training by using a
classic pre-post test design with Japanese, Hong Kong, Australian and US participants The final presentation will look
at lay people and law enforcement officers' abilities to judge intentions for malfeasance based upon body reactions of
individuals who have committed to performing a mock theft, and the factors that influence the accuracy of those
judgments - made all the more pertinent given the recent news stories on Airport Security officers judging travelers on
their hostile intent based solely upon their behavior. The Chair/Discussant will tie the results of the presented work
into his 17 years of experience interacting closely with law enforcement, customs, immigration, intelligence/military,
and judicial communities, and how they can framed best influence real world practitioners.
3330
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon 1
Iraq War
Political Communication
Chair
Holley A. Wilkin, Georgia State U, USA
Participants
Public Opinion on the Web: Iraq War Framing in the Political Blogosphere
Nan Zheng, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Mark Tremayne, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Jae Kook Lee, U of Texas, USA
Jaekwan Jeong, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Uploading Dissonance: YouTube and the US Occupation of Iraq
Christian Christensen, Karlstad U, SWEDEN
News Framing and the "War on Terror": Securitization as a Media Effect
Frederick E. Vultee, Wayne State U, USA
Tidings of Battle: Polarizing Media and Public Support for the Iraq War
Tim Groeling, U of California - Los Angeles, USA
Matthew Aaron Baum, U of California - Los Angeles, USA
3332
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon 3
Partisanship
Political Communication
Chair
Jocelyn Ilana Landau, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Participants
Reducible Complexity and Spontaneous Generation: The Aesthetics of Common Senses Challenges to Evolution in
Evangelical Discourse
Chad J Vollrath, U of Iowa, USA
Looking the Other Way: Selective Exposure to Attitude-Consistent and Counterattitudinal Political Information
Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA
Jingbo Meng, Ohio State U, USA
Conversation, Contrariness, Confrontation
Michael J. McDevitt, U of Colorado, USA
Ally Ostrowski, U of Colorado, USA
Right Behind "Left Behind": The Conservative Geopolitics of Christian Apocalyptic Entertainment
Michael James Serazio, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Bruce William Hardy, U of Pennsylvania, USA
3333
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon 4
Women and Work: Navigating Contextual and Personal Terrains
Feminist Scholarship
Chair
Ainara Miguel Sáez de Urabain, U de Burgos, SPAIN
Participants
Equity in the Academy: Toward a Feminine Speech Community
Marian J. Meyers, Georgia State U, USA
How Academic Women Talk About Their Success and Accomplishments
Martina H. Myers, U of New Mexico / New Mexico State U, USA
Flexibility and Feminism: Attack on the Powersuited Woman
Kathryn A. Cady, Northern Illinois U, USA
MPs with Skirts: Or How the Popular Press in Bulgaria Portrays Women Politicians
Elza Nistorova Ibroscheva, Southern Illinois U - Edwardsville, USA
Maria Raicheva-Stover, Washburn U, USA
3334
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon 5
Globalisation: The Next Generation
Popular Communication
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Lynn Schofield Clark, U of Denver, USA
Participants
Introduction: Untold Stories of Children's Media Engagement Around the World
Kirsten Drotner, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Mobile Me: Regional Networks in a Multiethnic Society
Stephanie Hemelryk Donald, The Institute for International Studies, U of Technology Sydney, AUSTRALIA
The African Reception of Global Media
Larry Strelitz, Rhodes U, SOUTH AFRICA
Media and Girls' Issues in China: Media as a strategy for Gender Equality
Bu Wei, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Youth Engaged by ICTs for Social Change and Development: Participation as Empowerment and Manipulation
Norbert Wildermuth, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK
This panel presents four studies of children's media culture as it unfolds at the intersection of global media stuctures
and local contexts of use. The guiding principle of the studies is this: rather than asking straightforward but often
disconnected questions about the impacts of particular media on particular children, research should instead analyse
the complex and changing cultural environment within which children live, contextualising specific research
questions of media appropriations within a broad account of children and young people's life worlds. The panel will
address the cultural diversities and commonalities characterising children's mediated culture around the world paying
particular attention to the following issues: the interplay between content production and reception, the assumed
vanguardism of children's media uses, enablers and constraints in children's rights of expression.
3340
Friday
10:30-11:45
Drummond West
High Density Session: Information Systems Issues in Motivation, Emotion, Mood & Affect
Information Systems
Chair
Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Participants
Approach? Avoid? Both? Processing Coactive Motivational Media Messages
Narine S. Yegiyan, Indiana U, USA
Brian D. Wilson, Indiana U, USA
Ya Gao, Indiana U, USA
Sharon Mayell, Indiana U, USA
Zheng Joyce Wang, Ohio State U, USA
Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA
A Typology of Empathic Communication: Reviewing Empathy as a Communicative Act
Bing Han, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
Development of Hedonic and Eudaimonic Measures of Entertainment Motivations: The Role of Affective and
Cognitive Gratifications
Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Arthur A. Raney, Florida State U, USA
Examining the Effects of Emotional Arousal on Decisional Confidence: A Heuristic Systematic Model Perspective
Robin Nabi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Abigail Leigh Prestin, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Ryan Bradley Medders, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Lyudmila Popova, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Happy, But Confused: The Role of Mood in the Dilution of Established Association Networks
Ivar Vermeulen, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Intermodulation of Rational and Experiential Processing Systems: Effects of Probative Salience and Emotionality on
Apprehension
Charles R. Berger, U of California - Davis, USA
Key Jung Lee, U of California - Davis, USA
Syng Pom Choy, U of California - Davis, USA
Motivational System Activation and Information Processing: Using a Video Game to Compare Emotional Responses
and Cognitive Processing During Appetitive, Aversive, and Coactive States
Byungho Park, National U - Singapore, SINGAPORE
Stepping Beyond Message Specificity in the Study of Affect as Mediator and Interaffective Associations: Fahrenheit
9/11, Candidate Aversion, and Perceptions of Debate Superiority
R. Lance Holbert, Ohio State U, USA
Glenn J. Hansen, U of Oklahoma, USA
3341
Friday
10:30-11:45
Drummond Centre
Internet Appropriation Among University Students: A Global and Contextual Approach
Communication and Technology
Chair
Elisa Lugo Villasenor, U Autonoma de Morelos, MEXICO
Participants
Internet Appropriation Among Students in Quebec
Micheline Frenette, U de Montréal, CANADA
Internet Appropriation Among Students in Sweden
Ebba H. Sundin, Jonkoping U - School of Education and Communication, SWEDEN
Ulrika Sjöberg, Halmstad U, SWEDEN
Internet Appropriation Among Students in France
Magali Moisy, Université de Rennes 2, FRANCE
Internet Appropriation Among Students in Mexico
Teresa Yurèn, U Autonoma de Morelos, MEXICO
Cony Saenger y Pedrero, U Autonoma de Morelos, MEXICO
Guillermo Orozco-Gomez, U of Guadalajara, MEXICO
Respondents
Francisco Hernandèz Lomeli, U de Guadalajara, MEXICO
Pascal Plantard, Université de Rennes 2, FRANCE
This panel will present results from an international comparative study on university students' appropriation of the
Internet in four different societies: France, Mexico, Quebec (Canada) and Sweden. Findings were obtained from a
common survey conducted with 1,000 undergraduate students in each country following a framework that relates
three dimensions: 1) life context (personal, social, cultural and technical resources); 2) information and
communication practices in three spheres of life (personal, professional and public); 3) personal evaluations students
develop about their own practices.
3342
Friday
10:30-11:45
Drummond East
Online vs. Offline
Communication and Technology
Chair
Sonja Utz, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
Online Communication and Adolescents' Social Ties: Who Benefits More From Internet Use?
Sook-Jung Lee, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Elizabeth A. Vandewater, RTI International, USA
World 2.0: Public and Private Spheres in Second Life *** (TOP 3 STUDENT PAPER IN CAT)
Daniel Schackman, Syracuse U, USA
The Language of Trust Establishment in Face-to-Face and Video-Mediated Communication
Alastair Gill, Northwestern U, USA
Darren R. Gergle, Northwestern U, USA
Longitudinal Trends in Media Uses and Media Substitutions in Korea: 1980 to 2005
Yoonjae Nam, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
George A. Barnett, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
3343
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon 6
Theory and Research in Organizational Leadership Studies
Organizational Communication
Chair
Daniel J. Lair, U of Denver, USA
Participants
Communicating Charisma: Developing the Charismatic Leadership Communication Scale
Kenneth J. Levine, U of Tennessee, USA
Embracing Actionable Uncertainty: Communication in Well-Led Organizations
M. Lee Williams, Texas State U, USA
Phillip G. Clampitt, U of Wisconsin - Green Bay, USA
Leading Organizational Change: On the Role of Top Management and Supervisors in Communicating Organizational
Change
Wim J. L. Elving, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Lindy Hansma, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
The Communicative Constitution of Leadership: A Case Study of Leadership Change and Influences on Member
Identification
Elizabeth Williams, Purdue U, USA
Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA
Respondent
Gail Fairhurst, U of Cincinnati, USA
3344
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon 7
Media Technology for Development, Old and New
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Viviana C. Rojas, U of Texas - San Antonio, USA
Participants
China's Pursuit for Indigenous Innovations and Technological Developments: Hopes, Follies, and Uncertainties
Yuezhi Zhao, Simon Fraser U, CANADA
Framing the Loom in Rural South Indian Economies: Questioning Epistemologies of Innovation, Technology and
Development
Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA
Seemanthini Niranjana, Dastkar Andhra, INDIA
B. Syamasundari, Dastkar Andhra, INDIA
Responsible Consumers or Consuming Responsibility?
Anne Ellerup Nielsen, Aarhus School of Business, DENMARK
Britta Thym Knudsen, Scandinavian Institute, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
Trine Susanne Johansen, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
Sophie Esmann Andersen, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
Carsten Stage, Scandinavian Institute, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
Dorhte Refslund Christensen, Information- and Media Studies, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
Urban Entrepreneurs, ICTs, and Emerging Theories: New Directions for Development Communication
Mark Levy, Michigan State U, USA
Indrajit Banerjee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Respondent
Viviana C. Rojas, U of Texas - San Antonio, USA
3350
Friday
10:30-11:45
Ballroom East
Leading Communication Associations for Social Impact: CCA Address the Future of the Field
Theme Sessions
Participants
Linda L. Putnam, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Charles Self, U of Oklahoma, USA
Betsy W. Bach, U of Montana, USA
Dawn O. Braithwaite, U of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
The Council of Communication Associations (CCA) is an umbrella organization whose participants include top
officers and executive directors of several communication associations, including ICA, American Journalism
Historians Association, Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication, Association of Schools of
Journalism & Mass Communication, Black College Communication Association, Broadcast Education Association,
and National Communication Association (see http://www.councilcomm.org/). Its mission is to "enhance the mission
and facilitate the activities of its member associations, and to promote understanding and advancement of
communication as an academic discipline." In this discussion panel, some of its representatives address how the
different CCA organizations, specifically AEJMC, ICA, NCA, CCA, and the CCA Task Force on NRC Recognition
and ISI Liaison, are working collectively and individually in ways that speak to the 2007 ICA convention theme,
"Communicating for Social Impact" and, more broadly, to issues of communication associations' responsibilities to
better quality of life and global social change.
3351
Friday
10:30-11:45
Salon 8
Conceptual and Methodological Approaches to Studying Health Communication: Symposium from the
International Association of Language and Social Psychology
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Liz Jones, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA
Participants
The Ethics of Reflexive Listening in Health Care: How Clinicians Disclose Adverse Events to Patients and Families
Rick Iedema, U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Christine Jorm, Australian Commission for Safety and Quality in Health Care
John Wakefield, Patient Safety Centre, Queensland Health, AUSTRALIA
Cherie Ryan, Patient Safety Centre, Queensland Health, AUSTRALIA
A Communication Model for the Competent Delivery of Geriatric Medicine
Jon F. Nussbaum, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Carla Fisher, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Effective Health Communication in Native Populations in North American and Hawaii
Pamela J. Kalbfleisch, U of North Dakota, USA
Hospitals as Intergroup Contexts: The Impact of Intergroup Communication on Quality of Care and Patient Safety
David George Hewett, U of Queensland - School of Medicine, AUSTRALIA
Bernadette Maria Watson, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Michael Ward, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Barbara Leggett, Dept of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, RBWH, AUSTRALIA
Respondent
Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
This task force focuses on the importance of a social psychological approach to understanding communication in the
health context in terms of policy, practice and health outcomes. It takes a multidisciplinary approach to explore how
communication matters in the health context. The papers presented here emphasize the value of using different
conceptual and methodological approaches to studying health communication that are informed broadly by social
psychology.
3360
Friday
10:30-11:45
701
Journalism and Transition
Journalism Studies
Chair
Matthew A. Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA
Participants
Transcending Borders, Facing Challenges: Journalists and Identity in the SaarLorLux Region
Kevin M. Grieves, Indiana U, USA
The New Mass Media In-Between USA-Mexico Border
Roberto Valero, U de Baja California, MEXICO
Guadalupe Villasenor, BINACOM - Binational Assoc. of Schls of Comm of the Californias, MEXICO
David Roman Galvez, BINACOM - Binational Assoc. of Schls of Comm of the Californias, MEXICO
Media and Conflict Resolution
Eytan Gilboa, Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL
War or Peace Journalism in Elite U.S. Newspapers: Exploring News Framing on Pakistan-India Conflict
Syed Abdul Siraj, Allama Iqbal Open U, PAKISTAN
Respondent
Linda C. Steiner, U of Maryland, USA
Two papers in this session emphasize the role of journalism in shaping emerging national identities in communities
along the borders between France/Germany and the U.S./Mexico. Another two papers examine the idea of journalism
as an agent of change in international conflict resolution.
3361
Friday
10:30-11:45
705
Who Uses Local News and Why
Journalism Studies
Chair
Daniela V. Dimitrova, Iowa State U, USA
Participants
Prediction of Print and Online Newspaper Readership From Indices of News Quality
Esther Thorson, U of Missouri, USA
Hans Karl Meyer, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Frank Denton, Morris Publishing Group, USA
Jim Smith, Morris Publishing Group, USA
Sensation versus Information: The Surprising Role of Beliefs About Local TV News
Brian Southwell, U of Minnesota, USA
Vanessa Boudewyns, U of Minnesota, USA
Yoori Hwang, U of Minnesota, USA
Marco C. Yzer, U of Minnesota, USA
Who Decides? Journalists, News Censors, Readers, and News Content
Shujun Jiang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Traditional Content Is Still King as the Source of Local News and Information
Adam Lynn, Free Press, USA
Mark N. Cooper, McGannon Center for Communications Research, USA
Respondent
Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
The four papers of this session employed survey methodologies to examine underlying patterns in news media use.
Findings show correlations between cell phone and broadband internet use and local print newspaper readership, the
importance of informativeness versus sensationalism in local TV news viewership, the role of audiences in shaping
news content, and the dominance of traditional media outlets (Broadcast TV, newspapers, and radio) as sources of
local news information.
3362
Friday
10:30-11:45
716
Race, Territory, Politics
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Participants
Almost Under the Same Sky: Reclaiming Urbanity Beyond an Epidemic
John Nguyet Erni, Lingnan U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
After Tiananmen: Political Semiotics of Olympic Public Space in Beijing
Carolyn Marvin, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Antiracist and Multicultural Discourses in European Public Broadcasting
Karina Horsti, U of Helsinki, FINLAND
Populist Rhetoric of a Hegemonic Intervention
Ferruh Yilmaz, U of California - San Diego, USA
This panel explores the hidden and not so hidden links between the conditions of politics and territory, including often
problematic links that are articulated through race and ethnicity, and exploring four contrasting cases from China and
Europe.
3363
Friday
10:30-11:45
720
Doing Critical Multicultural Media Literacy: A Roundtable Discussion
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Participants
Rhonda Hammer, U of California - Los Angeles, USA
Douglas M. Kellner, U of California - Los Angeles, USA
Joe L. Kincheloe, McGill U, CANADA
Christine Quail, SUNY Oneonta, USA
Shirley Steinberg, McGill U, CANADA
Leading scholars in the fields of Medial Literacy and Critical Pedagogy discuss the means and potential of critical
media literacy projects to serve multicultural education. Critical media literacy focuses on ideology critique and the
politics of representation of gender, race, class and sexuality. It incorporates alternative, democratic media production
with critical analysis of mainstream media, in order to foster independent and meaningful media making. As an
academic project, a media literacy of critical multiculturalism specifically interrogates the production, circulation,
regulation, and consumption of media texts (and contexts) made by and/or about race, ethnicity, and "otherness." This
roundtable will function as a conversation between the panelists and audience about the potential of critical
multicultural media literacy. Emphasis will be on sharing strategies and experiences of media literacy pedagogy in the
classroom and the community, in order to facilitate the collaborative efforts of media literacy practitioners. Special
attention will be given to the issues of race/ethnicity with globalization and new technologies. These socio-cultural
and political economic processes present new possibilities for critical multicultural media literacy.
3364
Friday
10:30-11:45
728
Media Literacy and the Health and Well-Being of Children
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Participants
Critical and Creative Education for 21st Century Learning
Elana Yonah Rosen, Just Think, USA
MediaSmart School: Media Literacy as Health Intervention
David Stephen Bickham, Children's Hospital Boston/Harvard Medical School, USA
Ronald Slaby, Education Development Center, USA
Michael O. Rich, Center on Media and Child Health, USA
Using Media Literacy to Improve Young Children's Understanding of Food Advertising
Cynthia L. Scheibe, Ithaca College, USA
The Relationship between Children's Knowledge of Persuasive Intent and Persuasion: Experimental Evidence
Ariel R. Chernin, Center on Media and Child Health, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Respondent
Renee Hobbs, Temple U, USA
Media literacy is a potential resource in mitigating the negative consequences associated with exposure to media
misrepresentations of health behaviors including violence, smoking, and nutrition. This panel features research
evaluating the effectiveness of media literacy curricula to teach a deeper understanding of health-related media
messages as well as the techniques and persuasive intent of advertising. Presenters also explore the potential for this
knowledge to serve as a protective barrier against the influential messages of advertisements.
3366
Friday
10:30-11:45
820
LSI Studies Interrogating Interviews
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Theresa R. Castor, U of Wisconsin - Parkside, USA
Participants
Resisting Questions: A Case Study of Three Sets of Research Interviews
Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA
Jessica Sarah Robles, U of Colorado, USA
Physicians' Use of "Minimized" Queries During Comprehensive History Taking: A Strategy for Avoiding
Presuppositions
Paul M. Denvir, SUNY - Albany, USA
Behind the Scenes of a TV Interview: Off-Camera Interactions Between Journalists and Politicians
Asa Kroon, Orebro U, SWEDEN
Women and the Wisdom of the Body: When Discourse Creates Identity
Mary-Jeanette Smythe, U of Missouri, USA
3440
Friday
12:00-13:15
Drummond West
Projections for the Future From Reflections on the Past: A New ICA Fellows Forum on Communication - I
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
Drawn and Halved: Torn Between Entertainment Theory and Media Effects Research
Jennings Bryant, U of Alabama, USA
What Hath all our Ferment Wrought: Vinegar, or Wine, or Naught?
Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA
The Notion of Theory
James R. Taylor, U de Montreal, CANADA
Respondent
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
ICA honors its New Fellows each year with a special program that focuses on their life work and contributions to the
field of communication. This year the New ICA Fellows will offer their insights, expectations, and concerns about the
future of communication based upon their past involvement in our collective efforts to make us the discipline we are
today.
3441
Friday
12:00-13:15
Drummond Centre
Narrating Our Health: A Discussion With Arthur Frank
Theme Sessions
Chair
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
Participant
Arthur Frank, U of Calgary, CANADA
The lecture portion of this session focuses on the question of what needs to be said—what is worth saying—about
stories in which people witness experiences of suffering. Why not let these stories speak for themselves; what can
scholars add? This question takes me back to two issues that are fundamental to communications: is there a distinction
between stories and narratives (I argue there is), and how does the phenomenon of entropy resurface in different
guises. Arthur W. Frank is professor of sociology at the University of Calgary. He is the author of At the Will of the
Body: Reflections on Illness (1991, new edition 2002) and The Wounded Storyteller: Body, Illness, and Ethics
(1995), and The Renewal of Generosity: Illness, Medicine, and How to Live (2004). His current book project has the
working title, Stories Make Up People While People Tell Stories: A Storyteller's Book About Narrative (under
contract to University of Chicago Press). Dr. Frank serves on the editorial boards of numerous scholarly journals,
including being a contributing editor of Literature and Medicine and book review editor for health: an
interdisciplinary journal. He is an elected fellow of The Royal Society of Canada and lectures internationally on
narrative, illness experience, healthcare, and ethics.
3442
Friday
12:00-13:15
Drummond East
Regional Communication Scholarship for Social Change
Theme Sessions
Chair
Donal Carbaugh, U of Massachusetts, USA
Participants
Guoliang Zhang, Shanghai Jiao Tong U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Zhengrong Hu, The National Center for Radio & TV Studies, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Olga Leontovich, Volgograd State Pedagogical U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Irina Nickolaevna Rozina, RCA - Russian Communication Association, RUSSIA
Claudio Cardosa, U Federal de Bahia, BRAZIL
Adriana Machado Casali, U Federal do Parana, BRAZIL
Maria do Carmo Reis, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, BRAZIL
In this panel we showcase both ICA's continued progress towards greater internationalization and research conducted
in particular regions of the world that result in social change.
3510
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon A
Conceptual Concerns With Cultivation Theory
Mass Communication
Chair
Rick W. Busselle, Washington State U, USA
Participants
How to Measure Television Exposure From a Contents-Received Point of View?
Jan Van Mierlo, U of Hasselt, BELGIUM
A Framework for First-Order Cultivation, or Small Effects Research With Vague 100-Point Scales
Dorien Dossche, Catholic U - Leuven, BELGIUM
Jan Van den Bulck, Catholic U – Leuven, BELGIUM
Always on my Mind: Exploring How Frequent, Recent, and Vivid Television Portrayals are Used in the Formation of
Social Reality Judgments
Karyn E. Riddle, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Overrepresented Topics, Underrepresented Topics, and the Cultivation Effect
Amir Hetsroni, Yezreel Valley College, ISRAEL
Television Exposure and Core Values
John C. Besley, U of South Carolina, USA
3511
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon B
New Insights Into Framing Effect Processes
Mass Communication
Chair
Sumana Chattopadhyay, Marquette U, USA
Participants
The Effects of Episodic and Thematic Framing Revisited: Exploring the Role of Attributional Styles
Joerg Matthes, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Moderating Effect of Group Cue on Processing News Frames on Immigration
Juan Jose Igartua, U de Salamanca, SPAIN
Lifen Cheng, U of Salamanca, SPAIN
The Mediating Effect of Processing Fluency Between Message Framing and Persuasion
Hui-Fei Lin, Pennsylvania State U, USA
News and Immigration Attitudes in an Over-Time Perspective, Germany 1993-2005
Hajo Boomgaarden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Rens Vliegenthart, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
3512
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon C
Visuals From an Artistic Perspective (High Density Session)
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Robert L. Craig, U of St. Thomas, USA
Participants
Media Houses: The Mediated Centre as Architecture
Staffan Ericson, Södertörn U College, SWEDEN
Patrik Aker, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN
Balancing Perception: Electronic Color in Experimental Video Art
Carolyn Lee Kane, New York U, USA
Asian Arthouse Ethnographies: Cross-Cultural Understanding Or Privileged Culture Collecting?
Matthew P. Ferrari, U of Massachusetts, USA
Visual Technologies and the Slumming Gaze: Jacob Riis's Magic Lantern
Mark Nimkoff, U of Illinois, USA
"To Save Comics, I Had to Destroy It": Developing Visual Language in Response to Marginalization
Jason Tocci, U of Pennsylvania, USA
This session unites aesthetic and artistic approaches towards visuals - from global media house architecture to visual
language in comics to electronic color in video art, also including two papers that add an anthropological perspective.
3520
Friday
13:30-14:45
Lamartine
Message Styles in Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Stephen Michael Croucher, Bowling Green State U, USA
Participants
Cross-Cultural Differences in Perceiving Sexual Harassment: The Impact on Job Satisfaction
Rebecca Merkin, Baruch College - CUNY, USA
The Discursive Styles of Chinese Malaysians' Everyday Talk About Dissatisfaction
Ee Lin Lee, Western Washington U, USA
The Impact of Cultural Difference in Communication Style on Deception
Kitae Kim, SUNY at Buffalo, USA
Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA
Why Japanesr Are More Likely to Favor "Apology," While Americans Are More Likely to Favor "Thank You"
Hye Eun Lee, U of Hawaii - Manoa, USA
Hee Sun Park, Michigan State U, USA
Tatsuya Imai, Michigan State U, USA
Respondent
Stephen Michael Croucher, Bowling Green State U, USA
3521
Friday
13:30-14:45
Kafka
Public Relations, Organizational Learning and Renewal: Emerging Perspectives in Risk Communication
Public Relations
Chair
Matthew Seeger, Wayne State U, USA
Participants
Learning From a Hoax: The Case of the 2004 New Zealand Foot and Mouth Disease
Steven James Venette, U of Southern Mississippi, USA
Robert R. Ulmer, U of Arkansas - Little Rock, USA
A Case Study of the Red Lake, MN School Shooting: Intercultural Leaning in the Renewal Process
Robert Littlefield, North Dakota State U, USA
Cheryl Long Feather, United Tribes Technical College, USA
Kimberly Cowden, North Dakota State U, USA
Jennifer Reierson, North Dakota State U, USA
Learning From Anthrax: Developing a New Crisis Communication Capacity at the CDC
Julie M Novak, Wayne State University, USA
Elizabeth Prebbles, Wayne State U, USA
Matthew Seeger, Wayne State U, USA
Genre and Post-Emergency Contexts: The Nexus of Strategic Communications
Peter M. Smudde, U of Wisconsin - Whitewater, USA
Jeffrey L. Courtright, Illinois State U, USA
Respondent
Timothy L. Sellnow, U of Kentucky, USA
Image restoration models have dominated most efforts to understand post crisis communication (Benoit, 1997, 1995;
Hearit, 1999; Coombs, 1998; 2007). In general, this body of work has sought to articulate a range of strategic
messages available to organizations as they seek to manage the public impressions that emerge following a crisis.
Efforts have also been made to match specific strategies to specific crisis conditions. In general, the impressions
targeted by image restoration concern culpability and responsibility for the harm created by a crisis. Recently, some
research has sought to expand the scope of analysis regarding post crisis discourse by offering alterative theoretical
frameworks. In general, these approaches examine communication unrelated to accusations of wrongdoing and focus
instead on how organizations learn and recover from crisis. One approach, known as discourse of renewal, is
grounded in the larger organizational discourse paradigm. This framework explores how crisis can create a rhetorical
space for an optimistic discussion of rebuilding, growth and regeneration (Seeger & Ulmer, Seeger, Sellnow &
Ulmer, 2003; Ulmer, Sellnow & Seeger, 2006; Seeger, Ulmer, Sellnow & Novak, 2003). In addition, research has
also employed the organizational learning paradigm to explore the ways in which crisis may precipitate learning
either directly or vicariously (Nathan & Koovoor-Misra, 2002; Stern, 1997). In these cases a crisis may create
important insights into organizational operations, clarify risks, or demonstrate the importance of stakeholder
relationships. This panel explores these emerging post crisis communication perspectives both from the perspective of
learning and renewal.
3522
Friday
13:30-14:45
Hemon
Why Institutions Matter: Considering Macro Phenomena in Organizational Communication Research
Organizational Communication
Chair
John C. Lammers, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Participants
Metaphors of the Field: Capturing Institutions, Fields, and Industries
Linda L. Putnam, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Institutional Articulations and Discursive Struggles in Workplace Settings
Stanley A. Deetz, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
Institutions, Organizations, Communicative Constitution, and Distanciation
Robert D. McPhee, Arizona State U, USA
While the Species Evolve, the Predators Eat
Charles Conrad, Texas A&M U, USA
Respondent
John C. Lammers, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
This panel discussion seeks to address the concern that organizational communication research has concentrated on
individuals and interaction (microphenomena) while neglecting larger forms of social structure (macrophenomena). A
panel of distinguished scholars will offer insights into how institutions arise through discourse, how organizations
actively shape institutions, and how institutions in turn constrain and direct organizational communication. The panel
echoes the conference theme of the wider impact that organized discourse has in shaping social institutions.
3523
Friday
13:30-14:45
Jarry
Updates on Physician Communication
Health Communication
Chair
Dale E. Brashers, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Participants
Partner Involvement in Cancer Treatment Decision-Making
Daena Goldsmith, Lewis and Clarke College, USA
Cortney M. Moriarty, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Physician Adoption Of Personal Digital Assistants (Pda): Testing Its Determinants Within A Structural Equation
Model
Arun Vishwanath, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Development and Validation of Scales to Assess Patients' Perception of Physicians' Cultural Competence in Health
Care Interactions
Rukhsana Ahmed, U of Ottawa, CANADA
Benjamin R. Bates, Ohio U, USA
Physician Perceptions of Third-, Second-, and First-Person Effects of DTC Prescription Drug Advertising and
Behavioral Consequences
Jisu Huh, U of Minnesota, USA
3524
Friday
13:30-14:45
Joyce
Overcoming Barriers to Effective Health Communication
Health Communication
Chair
Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
The Invisible Man: Examining AIDS and Men at Risk in India
Sangeeta Fernandes, U of Southern California, USA
Ute Ritterfeld, U of Southern California, USA
How Media Environments Shape Marijuana Attitudes: A U.S.-Dutch Comparison
Marco C. Yzer, U of Minnesota, USA
What Works Best? Anecdotal Evidence Increases Risk Perception of Hepatitis B Infection Among MSM
Enny Henrica Das, Free U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
John De Wit, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS
Don't Derogate this Message! Self-Affirmation Promotes Online Type 2 Diabetes Risk Test Taking
Guido M. van Koningsbruggen, Free U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Enny Henrica Das, Free U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Perceiving a personal risk is one of the key determinants of health behavior change. However, increasing perceptions
of personal health risk has proven notoriously difficult. Mass-mediated health education efforts often fail because they
ignore (1) socio-cultural factors that drive risk perceptions and health behaviors in specific target audiences, and (2)
individual, defensive responses to health education messages that hinder the acceptance of health messages. This
panel integrates findings from four studies that tested the impact of these two main barriers, and strategies to
overcome them, on effective health education efforts across health risks (Hepatitis B, diabetes, AIDS, and marijuana
use) and cultures (US, Europe, and Asia), using a multi-method, theory-based approach. The findings show how risk
perceptions and health behaviors are shaped by media environment and culture, and how defensive responses to
health risk information can be overcome by using anecdotal rather than statistical evidence, or by providing receivers
with the opportunity to affirm the self.
3525
Friday
13:30-14:45
Musset
Communicating Power, Navagating Conflict, and Communicating Irony
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Michael R. Kotowski, U of Tennessee, USA
Participants
Observations of Dyadic Power in Interpersonal Interaction
Norah E. Dunbar, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Gordon John Abra, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Power Moves: Cross-Cultural Perceptions of Status-Related Nonverbal Behavior in Germany, USA, and UAE
Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Sibylle Pennig, U zu Koln, GERMANY
Maria Nikolaeva Senokozlieva, U to Cologne, GERMANY
Felix Eschenburg, U of Cologne, GERMANY
The Language of Topical Conflict in Everyday Relationships: A Micro-Macro Analysis
Kelby Kenneth Halone, West Virginia U, USA
Marian Houser, Texas State U, USA
Loretta L. Pecchioni, Louisiana State U, USA
Ironic Message Production: How and Why We Produce Ironic Messages
Joshua M. Averbeck, U of Oklahoma, USA
Dale Hample, U of Maryland, USA
Respondent
Michael R. Kotowski, U of Tennessee, USA
3530
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon 1
Media Effects on Elections
Political Communication
Chair
Uche Titus Onyebadi, U of Missouri, USA
Participants
A Theory of Political Campaign Media Connectedness
R. Lance Holbert, Ohio State U, USA
William L. Benoit, U of Missouri, USA
Agreement and Disagreement in Focus: Cultural Perspective on Televised Election Debates
Pekka Isotalus, U of Tampere, FINLAND
Do Perceptions of Media Bias Undermine Citizenship? An Examination Across Elections and Issues
Shirley S. Ho, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Amy B. Becker, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Andrew R. Binder, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Dominique Brossard, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Albert C. Gunther, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
The Impact of Media Systems on the Making of Informed Election Outcomes
Marina Popescu, U of Essex, UNITED KINGDOM
Gabor Andras Toka, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM
3532
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon 3
When Music Goes Online: Dissemination, Acquisition, Meaning, and Place
Popular Communication
Chair
Nancy Baym, U of Kansas, USA
Participants
Constructing an International Collaborative Music Network: Swedish Indie Fans and the Internet
Nancy Baym, U of Kansas, USA
Robert Burnett, Karlstad U, SWEDEN
Local Identity and Independent Music Scenes in the Internet Age
Holly Kruse, U of Tulsa, USA
Distribution, Digitalisation, and Beyond
Henrik Bødker, Aarhus U, DENMARK
Music Acquisition, Technology, and Subjectivity
Marj Kibby, Newcastle U, AUSTRALIA
Digitized music can be distributed through means its producers and copyright owners may neither know of nor
approve. This makes its acquisition easier than ever, yet raises wide-ranging questions concerning filtering, listening
habits, place, meaning and the relative roles of music producers, listeners fans and third party intermediaries in this
new sonic landscape. How do people make their choices? Who are the tastemakers? How are listening habits
changed? Do music scenes lose their connections to space? These are some of the questions that will be raised in this
panel, which brings together scholars from four countries (Australia, Denmark, Sweden, the United States) to
examine these issues at multiple levels.
3533
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon 4
Queer Feminist Video Works: Practices of Looking
Feminist Scholarship
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies
Chair
Kumarini Silva, Northeastern U, USA
Participants
Teen Sex and the Politics of Panic
Amy Adele Hasinoff, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
T con T: Lesbian Lives in Contemporary Havana
Celiany Rivera-Velazquez, U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Hokum
Kortney Ryan Ziegler, Northwestern U, USA
This panel examines how queer, feminist videographic practices interrupt traditional practices of looking. Drawing on
feminist, critical race, and queer studies, these short videos attempt to dismantle sexist, racist, and heteronormative
forms of representation and to re/fashion the ways that we image culture. These short videos explore the tensions and
the complexities of representations both of representing others and representing ourselves. In doing so, these videos
aim to bring a renewed critical attention to the material corporeality of bodies. Deliberately paying attention to the
body as marked by intersecting social categories, including race, gender, sexuality, class, age, ethnicity, and
ability/disability, these artists consider how, and under what conditions, stories and images of identity enter into
representation.
3534
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon 5
Unboxing Television: TV and TV Studies in 2008
Popular Communication
Participants
"The Television Will Be Revolutionized"
Amanda D. Lotz, U of Michigan, USA
"Whither Viewers? Imagining the Unbound Television Audience"
Joshua Green, Massachusetts Insititute of Technology, USA
"A Transmedia Television Studies for a Transmediated Television"
Jonathan Alan Gray, Fordham U, USA
"Remaking Citizens in the New Television Culture"
Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA
"What Brown Can (not) Do For You: MTV-Desi and the Limits of Diasporic Programming"
Aswin Punathambekar, U of Michigan, USA
"From Public Trustees to the Networked Commons: Cultural Citizenship and Competing Frameworks for the Future
of Television Regulation"
John McMurria, DePaul U, USA
"Putting Television Studies On the Assembly Line: Why Manufacturing Matters"
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
"Disciplinarity Unboxed: Television Studies for the Convergence Era"
Jason Mittell, Middlebury College, USA
In recent years, television has experienced multiple profound developments, as an industry, as an object, and as a
cultural practice. We have seen an expansion of delivery technologies, changing cultures of production, storytelling,
and of reception, a proliferation of fan creativity, and a shifting of some industrial norms just as other aspects of
television remain business as usual. This roundtable's goal is to create a forum for the discussion, brainstorming, and
interrogation of contemporary trends in television, and of the evolution of television studies in light of the increasing
expansion of television. Already online and increasingly connected intimately with other media, technological
platforms, places, spaces, and cultural practices, the object of the field of television studies is morphing. What, then,
we ask, is television today, what is it becoming, and how should television and media studies adapt to keep up with
this evolving entity?
3540
Friday
13:30-14:45
Drummond West
Instructional Communication: Advances in Theory and Practice
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Katie Neary Dunleavy, LaSalle U, USA
Participants
Testing the General Theory of Instructional Communication Model
James Katt, U of Central Florida, USA
James C. McCroskey, U of Alabama at Birmingham, USA
Stephen Sivo, U of Central Florida, USA
Virginia Peck Richmond, West Virginia U, USA
Kristin Marie Valencic, U of Miami, USA
The Development and Testing of the Instructional Interaction Theory
Keith Weber, West Virginia U, USA
Matthew M. Martin, West Virginia U, USA
Scott A. Myers, West Virginia U, USA
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Listening Instruction in Introductory Communication Courses
Danette Ifert Johnson, Ithaca College, USA
Kathleen M. Long, West Virginia Wesleyan College, USA
Testing the Effectiveness of a Service Learning Experience on Student Outcomes in a Communication Campaign
Class
Kami J. Silk, Michigan State U, USA
Lauren Hamel, Michigan State U, USA
Erin K. Maloney, Michigan State U, USA
David Keith Westerman, West Virginia U, USA
For the Students, By the Students: Redirecting Civic Education Through the American Trustees Project
Sharon E. Jarvis, U of Texas, USA
Soo-Hye Han, U of Texas, USA
Respondent
Katie Neary Dunleavy, LaSalle U, USA
3541
Friday
13:30-14:45
Drummond Centre
Online Self-Disclosure
Communication and Technology
Chair
Joseph B. Walther, Michigan State U, USA
Participants
Self-Disclosure in Online Groups: Predisposition, Disclosing Style, and Relational Development ** (TOP 2
STUDENT PAPER IN CAT)
Li Jiang, Cornell U, USA
Misery Doesn't Love Company: An Exploration of Emotional Bandwidth on Online Social Networks
Saraswathi Bellur, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Anne Oeldorf-Hirsch, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Andrew High, The Pennsylvania State U, USA
Gender, Culture and Self-Disclosure in Cyberspace: A Study of Korean and American Social Network Websites
Jinsuk Kim, Michigan State U, USA
Kathryn Dindia, U of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA
Cultivating Celebrity: How Reality Television Influences Blogging and Photo and Video Sharing
Derek J. Lackaff, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Michael A. Stefanone, U at Buffalo, USA
3542
Friday
13:30-14:45
Drummond East
Learning Effects of Interactive Media
Communication and Technology
Chair
Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
Effects of Interactivity in Serious Educational Games
Eui Jun Jeong, Michigan State U, USA
Namkee Park, U of Oklahoma, USA
SeoungHo Ryu, Kangwon National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Kwan Min Lee, U of Southern California, USA
The Effect of Interactivity on Learning Physical Actions in Virtual Reality *** (TOP 3 FACULTY PAPER IN CAT)
Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA
Kayur Patel, U of Washington, USA
Alexia Nielsen, Stanford U, USA
Ruzena Bajcsy, U of California, USA
Gregorij Kurillo, U of California, USA
Effects of Role Enactment on the Management of Self-Concept and Physical Distance in Virtual Reality
Environments
Younbo Jung, Nanyang Techological U, USA
Margaret L. McLaughlin, U of Southern California, USA
Virtual Exercise in the Third Person: Identification, Physical Similarity, and Behavioral Modeling
Jesse A. Fox, Stanford U, USA
Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA
Virtually True: Children's Acquisition of False Memories in Virtual Reality
Kathryn Rickertsen, Stanford U, USA
Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA
3543
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon 6
Online Media in China
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Jianxun Chu, U of Science and Technology of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Participants
Multiple Modernities and Multiple Proximities: American Internet Companies' Predicament in China
Jia Lu, Texas A&M U, USA
Resistance in Dreaming: A Study of Chinese Online Boy's Love Fandom
Wei Wei, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, USA
State Requirement and Media Behavior: The Institutional Isomorphism of Google in China
Yuening Jiang, U of Minnesota, USA
Tsan-Kuo Chang, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
Respondent
Jianxun Chu, U of Science and Technology of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
3544
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon 7
Theory for Activism and Social Change
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Approaching Social Change as a Complex Problem in a World That Treats it as a Complicated One: The Case of
Puntos de Encuentro, Nicaragua
Virginia Lacayo, Ohio U, USA
Rafael Obregon, Ohio U, USA
Arvind Singhal, The U of Texas at El Paso, USA
Communicating for Social Impact: Performances for Community Friendships and Social Change in India and USA
Devendra Sharma, California State U - Fresno, USA
De-Westernizing Theory and Practice of New Social Movements: The Indigenous Production of Transnational Media
Activism in Oaxaca, Mexico
Nancy Louise Nusser, James Madison U, USA
James Hamilton, U of Georgia, USA
Measuring Citizen Voice in Public Spheres: A Communicative Action Model for Media Development
Thomas L. Jacobson, Temple U, USA
Lingling Pan, Temple U, USA
Social Movement Phenomena Past and Present: Are Activists, and Academics, Seeking to Transcend or Replicate
Hegemonic Structures?
Robert Hershorn, Simon Fraser U, CANADA
Respondent
Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
3550
Friday
13:30-14:45
Ballroom East
Re-Envisioning Research Methods to Communicate for Social Impact
Theme Sessions
Participants
Stephanie Norander, Ohio U, USA
Robyn Virginia Remke, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK
Mohan Jyoti Dutta, Purdue U, USA
Ambar Basu, Purdue U, USA
Simon Ellis, UNESCO, USA
The panel brings together researchers from academic and private sectors to explore various methods and their use in
communicating for social impact. Panelists will discuss the use of quantitive, qualitative, and rhetorical methods in
exploring topics including media effects, transnational organizing in post-conflict regions, and the work of NGOs in
development initiatives.
3551
Friday
13:30-14:45
Salon 8
ICA Section Officers Online Management Orientation and Training
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Sam Luna, International Communication Association, USA
Participants
Dennis K. Mumby, U of North Carolina, USA
Margaret J. Pitts, Old Dominion U, USA
Walid Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Indiana U, USA
Craig E. Carroll, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Pamela J. Kalbfleisch, U of North Dakota, USA
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
Kristen Harrison, U of Illinois, USA
Rebecca M. Chory, West Virginia U, USA
Laramie D. Taylor, U of California - Davis, USA
Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA
Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Bowling Green State U, USA
Robert Huesca, Trinity U, USA
Richard Buttny, Syracuse U, USA
James W. Neuliep, St. Norbert College, USA
David B. Buller, Klein Buendel, Inc., USA
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Veena V. Raman, U of California - Berkeley, USA
Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM
Diana I. Rios, U of Connecticut, USA
Stephen D. McDowell, Florida State U, USA
Lynn A. Comella, U Nevada - Las Vegas, USA
Myria Georgiou, Leeds U, UNITED KINGDOM
Katherine Currie Isbister, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA
Jefferson D. Pooley, Muhlenberg College, USA
Ingrid Volkmer, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Kumarini Silva, Northeastern U, USA
Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA
Micky Lee, Suffolk U, USA
Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY
New Chairs, Vice-chairs and Secretaries should attend this session. Become acquainted with the web-based utility
features available to you as division and interest group leaders. Explore ICA web-site-based utilities that allow you to
communicate to your section members easily, and Content Management Systems that let you to update your section
web sites easily and with no knowledge of pesky web-code! Come see how we can make your tenure as officers
MUCH EASIER!
3560
Friday
13:30-14:45
701
Approaches to Participatory Journalism: How to Make Sense of the Consequences of a New Object of Study
Journalism Studies
Chair
David Domingo, U of Iowa, USA
Participants
Research Challenges for an International Comparison of Participatory Journalism Practices
Thorsten Quandt, Free U - Berlin, GERMANY
Jane B. Singer, U of Central Lancashire, UNITED KINGDOM
Steve Paulussen, Ghent U, BELGIUM
David Domingo, U of Iowa, USA
Marina Vujnovic, U of Iowa, USA
Ari Heinonen, U of Tampere, FINLAND
Citizen Journalists: What Practice Tells Us
Zvi Reich, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL
Finding the Intersections of Participatory and Public Journalism
Risto Kunelius, U of Tampere, FINLAND
Laura Ruusunoksa, U of Tampere, FINLAND
Researching the Attitudes of Online News Editors towards Participatory Journalism
Alfred Hermida, U of British Columbia, CANADA
Neil Thurman, City U - London, UNITED KINGDOM
This panel will bring together pioneers in participatory journalism research with different approaches to discuss new
research strategies and evaluate how the heritage of research in areas such as public journalism or community media
can be used to benefit participatory journalism research. The panel will explore which are the most fruitful research
questions, objects, context and methodologies to assess the development of participatory journalism, the strategies
that make it successful and the circumstances that make it a relevant contribution to improve journalism and
democracy. Participatory journalism has been presented by its proponents as a new opportunity to bridge the
historical gap between professional journalists and their audiences. Potentially this may have implications in the
professionals' routines, self-definitions and their role in democracy. However, the (still scarce) empirical evidence
available on this object of study suggests that journalists resist to change their established values and redefine their
role and the one of the audience, and so-called user-generated content only has relevant journalistic quality in very
exceptional moments. The panel will offer practical insights on the research strategies to move beyond this
preliminary evidence.
3561
Friday
13:30-14:45
705
Comparative Research on the Cultures of Journalism: New Studies, Approaches, and Evidence
Journalism Studies
Chair
Holli A. Semetko, Emory U, USA
Participants
Political Communication Cultures in Western Europe
Barbara Pfetsch, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY
Eva Mayerhoeffer, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY
Peter Maurer, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY
Political Journalism in Transitional Democracies: A Comparative Perspective
Katrin Voltmer, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Global Redefinition of Journalism?: The Influence of Commercialization on Journalists' Role Perceptions
Wolfgang Donsbach, Technical U - Dresden, GERMANY
Thomas E. Patterson, Harvard U, USA
Mapping Journalism Cultures Across Nations, Organizations, and Professional Milieus
Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Respondent
Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Comparative research in the field of journalism studies is increasingly proliferating. Many scholars have recently
embarked on multi-national comparative research projects involving a considerably broad range of countries. The
panel therefore presents new approaches and latest evidence from current and ongoing comparative studies. By doing
so, the session endeavors to further "extent the frontier" (Blumler, McLeod, & Rosengren, 1992) of journalism studies
and provide directions for future comparative research in the field. The four studies introduced in this panel cohere in
terms of their interest in the notion of professional and journalistic culture. By using different and multiple methods of
inquiry, from quantitative content analysis to qualitative interviewing, these studies seek to tap into the similarities
and differences in cultural expressions of journalism across the world. The studies' focus is on news content,
organizational structures of newsrooms, systemic determinants, as well as values and attitudes of journalists, while
research designs range between the assessment of most similar systems (e.g. western countries or transitional
democracies) and comparisons of culturally very diverse contexts.
3562
Friday
13:30-14:45
716
Culture, Media, and New Ethnography
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Lorna Roth, Corcordia U-Loyola Campus, USA
Participants
What Is a Zine and What Do You Do With It?
Janice A Radway, Duke U, USA
From Media Response to Mediated Practices: The Challenges to Ethnographic Methodology
Elizabeth Bird, U of South Florida, USA
Ethnographic Relay
Lisa Henderson, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Ontology, Complexity and Defamiliarisation: What Media Anthropology Does That Other Media Studies Disciplines
Don't
Georgina E. M. Born, U of Cambridge, UNITED KINGDOM
The ethnographers gathered here speak through grounded observation and engagement to scenes, networks,
institutions and transnational circuits in media and cultural production. We challenge media ethnography to (1) extend
its historical signifigance beyond particular times and places, (2) upend its ethnocentric rootedness in Euro-American
media theory, (3) re-conceive relations between media insiders and outsiders, and (4) shift from a focus on audience
response to a new substantive and methodological emphasis on mediated practices.
3563
Friday
13:30-14:45
720
Media Industry, Content, and Concentration
Communication Law & Policy
Chair
Philip M. Napoli, Fordham U, USA
Participants
Measuring Media Concentration and Diversity: New Approaches and Instruments in Europe and the USA
Natascha Just, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA
A Longitudinal Analysis of Vertical Integration and Ownership Diversity in Broadcast TV Programming, 1993-2006
Heejung Kim, U of Florida, USA
Junk Science And Administrative Abuse in the Effort of the FCC to Eliminate Limits on Media Concentration
Mark N. Cooper, McGannon Center for Communications Research, USA
The FCC's Outlet Diversity Policy: A Finger on the Balance Scale of Viewpoint Diversity
Christopher R Terry, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Respondent
Philip M. Napoli, Fordham U, USA
These papers examine issues such as vertical integration, concentration and diversity.
3564
Friday
13:30-14:45
728
Public Technology/Communicative Practice: Rethinking Utilities for Media Histories
Communication History
Chair
Jonathan Sterne, McGill U, CANADA
Participants
Free Parking: Parking Lots, Modernity, and the Invisibility of Necessity
Daniel Munksgaard, The U of Iowa, USA
Safety in Numbers: Elevators as a Communication Technology
Peter D. Schaefer, U of Iowa, USA
A Short History of Chinese Public Baths: Liquid, Nudity & Communication
Xinghua Li, The U of Iowa, USA
Water Towers and the Public Sphere
Kristin Anderson Terpstra, The U of Iowa, USA
This panel offers ways to reposition utilities as a part of the history of communication. Examining such seemingly
disparate elements as parking lots, Chinese public baths, elevators, and water towers, the papers demonstrate the close
connection of communication and infrastructure. The spaces through which modern notions of communication
developed reveal patterns of connection that persist through time.
3566
Friday
13:30-14:45
820
Queer Intimacies and Public Space
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
David J. Phillips, U of Toronto, CANADA
Participants
Non/monogamy and Intimate Privilege: Notes on the Relation of Sex, Ethics, Space and Bodies
Nathan Rambukkana, Concordia U, CANADA
The Demise of the Gay Enclave, Communication Infrastructure Theory, and the Reconstitution of Gay Public Space
Nicole B. Usher, U of Southern California, USA
Eleanor Morrison, U of Southern California, USA
Support From Cyber Brokeback Mountain
Cheng-Nan Hou, I-Shou U, TAIWAN
Tying the Knot?: Couples' Deliberations Regarding Legally Recognized Same-Sex Marriage
Pamela Jane Lannutti, Boston College, USA
3610
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon A
Spotlight Panel: The Future of Media Effects Theory - Setting a Course for the 21st Century
Mass Communication
Chair
Robin Nabi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Participants
Jennings Bryant, U of Alabama, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
W. James Potter, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Ellen Wartella, U of California - Riverside, USA
3611
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon B
Communication and the Postwar Experience
Communication History
Chair
Tamar Ashuri, Ben-Gurion U, Sapir Academic C., ISRAEL
Participants
Writing Figures in the Field: The Parts Played by Women in the Making of Communications Research, 1941-1949
Peter Simonson, U of Colorado, USA
Severed Voice: The Radiophonic Effect of the Eichmann Trial
Amit Pinchevski, Hebrew U, ISRAEL
Tamar Liebes, Hebrew U, ISRAEL
Dreams of Global Dialogue: Solving Problems of Communication at the Jewish Theological Seminary and UNESCO,
circa. 1947
Ira Wagman, Carleton U, USA
A Theory of Everything: Probing the Public Life of Cybernetics
Sheryl Hamilton, Carleton U, USA
Respondent
John Durham Peters, U of Iowa, USA
This panel is concerned with a significant period in the history of communication—the years following the end of
World War II. Participants will take up a series of intellectual, institutional and technological issues from this period
as they emerged in different contexts and settings. Among the case studies to be presented: the part played by women
in postwar communication research, the impact of radio transmissions from the Eichmann trial in Israel, the early
explorations into communication theory at the Jewish Theological Seminary, and the impact of cybernetics as a
cultural ethos in postwar culture and society. Together, they address some unexplored episodes of a period that was to
shape the practice and conception of communication.
3612
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon C
The Impact of Visual Communication: Networking the Power of the Visual
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U – Bremen, GERMANY
Participants
Michael Griffin, Carleton College, USA
Julianne H. Newton, U of Oregon, USA
Luc Pauwels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Paul Martin Lester, California State U - Fullerton, USA
Edgar S Huang, U of South Florida, USA
Darren Newbury, U of Central England, UNITED KINGDOM
Brian Rusted, U of Calgary, CANADA
Mary Strong, Arizona State U, USA
Herb Zetti, San Francisco State U, USA
Drawing together international visual scholars, journal editors and organizational leaders from an array of disciplines,
this roundtable discussion focuses on finding synergy in a field that impacts every aspect of life. The discussion will
seek ways to integrate disciplinary approaches to address social agendas in a global context. What are points on which
we agree, and what are points that make each field distinctive? What can we learn from one another? How can we
move the study of "the visual" forward as an overall field? Most important: how can we harness the power of the
visual to meet the social challenges of our time?
3620
Friday
15:00-16:15
Lamartine
Game Studies Top Papers
Game Studies
Chair
Peter Vorderer, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
Wee Wii: Preschoolers and Motion-Based Game Play
J. Alison Bryant, Nickelodeon/MTV Networks, USA
Anna Akerman, Adelphi U, USA
Jordana Drell, Nickelodeon/MTV Networks, USA
A Cognitive Model for Understanding Online Gaming Addiction: A Preliminary Test in China
Ming Liu, Michigan State U, USA
Wei Peng, Michigan State U, USA
Can Video Games Enhance Creativity? An Experimental Investigation of Emotion Generated by Dance Dance
Revolution
Elizabeth Hutton, Pennsylvania State U, USA
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
The Independent Production of Culture: A Digital Games Case Study
Chase Bowen Martin, Indiana U, USA
Mark Deuze, Indiana U, USA
Respondent
John L. Sherry, Michigan State U, USA
The three highest-ranked faculty papers, and the top-ranked student paper from this year's submissions.
3621
Friday
15:00-16:15
Kafka
Communication, Activism, and Social Change
Public Relations
Organizational Communication
Chair
Derina R. Holtzhausen, U of South Florida, USA
Participants
How Environmental Activists Built a Media Agenda and Its Attributes: The Case of the Saemangeum Project in
Korea
Soo Jung Moon, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Jae C. Shim, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Communicating for Social Change: An Experimental Analysis of Activist Message Strategy Effect on Receiver
Variables
Kelly Page Werder, U of South Florida, USA
Andrea Schuch, U of South Florida, USA
Citizen's Action Network
Andre Billeaudeaux, United States Coast Guard, USA
Money and People Change the World: Internet Resource Mobilization in Activist Public Relations
Erich James Sommerfeldt, Western Michigan U, USA
3622
Friday
15:00-16:15
Hemon
Top Three Papers in Organizational Communication
Organizational Communication
Chair
Dennis K. Mumby, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
The Communication Structure of Recovery: Post-Katrina New Orleans Interorganizational Networks
Marya L. Doerfel, Rutgers U, USA
Chih-Hui Lai, Rutgers U, USA
Amanda J. Kolling, Rutgers U, USA
Teresa Luetjen Keeler, Rutgers U, USA
Diana Barbu, Rutgers U, USA
The Mediation of Policy Knowledge: An Interpretive Analysis of Intersecting Activity Systems
Heather Elaine Canary, Arizona State U, USA
Robert D. McPhee, Arizona State U, USA
The Organized Self: Managing Time, Space, Work, and Life in the Ever-Present
Margaret Patricia Peters, U of South Australia, AUSTRALIA
Respondent
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
3623
Friday
15:00-16:15
Jarry
Predictors of Sexual Risk Behaviors and Screening: Implications for Health Communication
Health Communication
Chair
David Andrew Moskowitz, Medical College of Wisconsin, USA
Participants
An Empirical Test of the EPPM While Promoting HIV Tests: Does Trait Reactance and Sensation Seeking Moderate
the Model's Predictions?
Brian L. Quick, University of Illinois- Urbana-Champaign, USA
Cortney M. Moriarty, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Michele Battle-Fisher, Ohio U, USA
Understanding Partner Characteristics and Personality Factors as Predictors of HIV: Implications for Message Design
Purnima Mehrotra, U of Kentucky, USA
Seth M. Noar, U of Kentucky, USA
Rick S. Zimmerman, U of Kentucky, USA
Philip Palmgreen, U of Kentucky, USA
Alcohol, Psychosocial Correlates, and Risky Sexual Behavior for a High-Risk African-American Female Population
Carolyn Brooks, U of Georgia, USA
Jennifer Monahan, U of Georgia, USA
Jessica Sales, Emory U, USA
Ralph DiClemente, Emory U, USA
Gina Wingood, Emory U, USA
Jennifer A. Samp, U of Georgia, USA
Eve Rose, Emory U, USA
Applying the Attitude-Social Influence-Efficacy Model to Condom Use Among African-American STD Clinic
Patients: Implications for Tailored Health Communication
Seth M. Noar, U of Kentucky, USA
Christina Benac, U of Kentucky, USA
Richard Crosby, U of Kentucky, USA
Greg Snow, Louisville Metro Department of Health and Wellness, USA
Adewale Troutman, Louisville Metro Department of Health and Wellness, USA
3624
Friday
15:00-16:15
Joyce
What's the Norm: Examining Social Influences in Health Behavior
Health Communication
Chair
Michael R. Kotowski, U of Tennessee, USA
Participants
Communication and Normative Influence Over Contraceptive Use in Egypt, 1995-2005
Douglas Storey, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg, USA
Esther B. Kaggwa, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Effects of High-Risk Drinking Norms Among College Students
Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA
Is Thin Really In? A Longitudinal Analysis of Disordered Eating and College Peer and Media Norms
Steven Michael Giles, Wake Forest U, USA
Marina Krcmar, Wake Forest U, USA
Donald W. Helme, Wake Forest U, USA
Tanning, Skin Cancer Risk, and Prevention: A Content Analysis of Articles in Eight Popular Women's Magazines,
1997-2006
Jennifer Gibb Hall, Purdue U, USA
Carin Kosmoski, Purdue U, USA
Rebekah Le Fox, Purdue U, USA
Teresa Mastin, Michigan State U, USA
Hyunyi Cho, Purdue U, USA
3625
Friday
15:00-16:15
Musset
Deception and Trustworthiness
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Michael J. Cody, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
A Brunswikian Lens Model Approach for Automatic, Multimodal Deception Detection
Judee K. Burgoon, U of Arizona, USA
Matthew Jensen, U of Arizona, USA
Thomas Meservy, U of Arizona, USA
Understanding Relational Uncertainty, Communication Efficacy, and Avoidance Following Relational Partner's
Deception: The Mediating Role of Communication Efficacy
Su Ahn Jang, U of Missouri - St. Louis, USA
Anita L. Vangelisti, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Is the Second Language Speaker Gazing Like the First? Toward Gaze Aversion in Deception
Daejoong Kim, State U of New York at Buffalo, USA
Sinuk Kang, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Mark G. Frank, U at Buffalo, USA
What Do We Think of Gossipers? The Impact of Gossip Valence and Relationship Type on Liking and
Trustworthiness
Sejal R. Patel, U of Maryland, USA
Monique Mitchell Turner, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
Respondent
Michael J. Cody, U of Southern California, USA
3630
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon 1
Public Discourse
Political Communication
Chairs
Charu Uppal, U of South Pacific, FIJI
Sandhya Bhattacharya, Randolph College, USA
Participants
The Success of Right-Wing Populism in Danish Public Discourse
Ferruh Yilmaz, U of California - San Diego, USA
Agreement and Disagreement in Group Deliberation: Effects on Deliberation Satisfaction, Future Engagement, and
Decision Legitimacy
Jennifer Stromer-Galley, SUNY - Albany, USA
Peter J. Muhlberger, Carnegie Mellon U, USA
No Silence - No Spiral? Public Expression of Opinion Tested in a Realistic Setting
Helmut Scherer, Hanover U of Music and Drama, GERMANY
Annekaryn Tiele, IJK Hannover, GERMANY
Hearts in the Highlands, Fingers on the Keys: Online Discourse and the 2007 Scottish Elections
Jane B. Singer, U of Central Lancashire, UNITED KINGDOM
3632
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon 3
Blockbuster Architecture
Popular Communication
Chair
Elizabeth Anna Prommer, Hochschule fur Film und Fernsehen, GERMANY
Participants
Film Culture, Media Convergence and the Blockbuster Experience
Michael Wedel, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Massively played Games -Videogames as Blockbusters
Susanne Eichner, HFF Konrad Wolf, GERMANY
Marketing the Franchise-Blockbuster
Elizabeth Anna Prommer, Hochschule fur Film und Fernsehen, GERMANY
The Global Appeal of Visual Attraction - VFX and SFX as Blockbuster Strategies
Lothar Mikos, U of Film and Television, GERMANY
Claudia Toepper, Film and Television Academy, GERMANY
Respondent
Janet Wasko, U of Oregon, USA
The panel discusses blockbusters from an interdisciplinary point of view. Looking at movie and video game
blockbusters, we want to focus on the role of the text, the audience as well as the role of marketing in a converging
world. Not only marketing efforts of media conglomerates create blockbusters, there has to be a text with a
dramaturgic setting or aesthetic quality, that appeals to many people to go to the cinemas or to buy the games. The
concept of blockbusters has been widely discussed so far, but this panel wants to ad new perspectives: the media
convergence and the importance of the international market for US-films.
3633
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon 4
An Eclectic Mix of Topics in Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Young-ok Yum, Kansas State U, USA
Participants
A Roles Approach: Modeling Individual and Cultural Differences in Conflict Strategies
Xiaoying Xie, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
Deborah A. Cai, U of Maryland, USA
Attributions and Emotions of Americans, Korean Americans, and Koreans Concerning Virginia Shooting Incidence in
April 2007
Doshik Yun, Michigan State U, USA
Hee Sun Park, Michigan State U, USA
Hye Jeong Choi, Michigan State U, USA
Hye Eun Lee, U of Hawaii - Manoa, USA
Dong Wook Lee, Cheju National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Ji Young Ahn, Chung-Ang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
International Students' Predispositions Toward Communication and Learning
Jerry L. Allen, U of New Haven, USA
Joan O'Mara, Hillyer College/U of Hartford, USA
Kathleen M. Long, West Virginia Wesleyan College, USA
Ben Judd, U of New Haven, USA
Interpersonal Communication in the Context of Cross-Cultural Adaptation
Young Yun Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA
Satoko Izumi, U of Oklahoma, USA
Kelly Lynn McKay-Semmler, U of Oklahoma, USA
Respondent
Young-ok Yum, Kansas State U, USA
3634
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon 5
Connecting with Generation Y-ired: Global Perspectives on New Media and Youth Cultures
Popular Communication
Participants
Cultivating Citizenship in Everyday Life: The Internet and Subactivism
Maria Bakardjieva, U of Calgary. CANADA
Young People's Use of Mobile Phones: A British Perspective
Leslie George Haddon, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
On Avatars, Buddy Buddy And CyWorld - New Media in Korean Youths' Everyday Lives
Sun Lim, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Connecting and Downloading: Communication, Culture and the Younger Generation's Use of the Internet
Hugh MacKay, Open U, UNITED KINGDOM
This panel will highlight salient trends in youths' engagement with new media including the mobile phone and the
Internet from a multi-country perspective. Presentations of empirical research on youths' media engagement in Asia,
Europe and North America will contextualise our discussion of the links between new media and youth culture. These
include the influence of new media on youths' relationships with their families and communities, and the role of new
media in youths' social and civic engagement.
3640
Friday
15:00-16:15
Drummond West
High Density Session: Information Systems Issues in Entertainment Processing
Information Systems
Chair
Johnny V. Sparks, U of Alabama, USA
Participants
Exploring Dimensions of Movie Enjoyment and Appreciation
Anne Christiane Bartsch, Martin-Luther-U - Halle, GERMANY
Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA
I've Changed My Mind: A Longitudinal Study of Viewers' Impressions of Fictional Characters
Meghan Shara Sanders, Louisiana State U, USA
Namyoung Kim, Louisiana State U, USA
Science Information in Fictional Movies: Effects of Context and Gender
Claudia Alejandra Barriga, Cornell U, USA
Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA
Marissa Lindsey Fernandez, Cornell U, USA
Media Enjoyment as Experience: Segmentation, Cohesion, and Empathy
Daniel G. McDonald, Ohio State U, USA
Jingbo Meng, Ohio State U, USA
Shu-Fang Lin, National Chung Cheng U, TAIWAN
Not All People With Negative Feelings Watch Comedy: Predicting Media Choice as a Function of Discrete Affective
States
Jinhee Kim, Kent State U, USA
Physiological Responses to Manipulation of Violence in a Primetime Drama
Andrew J. Weaver, Indiana U, USA
Soyoung Bae, Indiana U, USA
Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA
The Role of Mere Exposure and Contextual Narrative Cues on Affective Dispositions Towards Mediated Characters
John J. Davies, U of North Florida, USA
Barry P. Smith, Mississippi U for Women, USA
Brian Brantley, U of Texas - Permian Basin, USA
Sports Spectatorship and Emotional Arousal: The Role of Camera Angle
R. Glenn Cummins, Texas Tech U, USA
3641
Friday
15:00-16:15
Drummond Centre
Choice, Customization, and Control
Communication and Technology
Chair
Darren R. Gergle, Northwestern U, USA
Participants
The Portal Effect: The Impact of Customized Content on News Exposure
Michael Beam, Ohio State U, USA
The Psychological Appeal of "MyNews.com:" The Interplay Between Customization and Recommendation Sources
in News Websites
Jean Beier, Sachs Insight, USA
Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
The Effect of Voice Agent Choice on Users' Experiences in Business and Entertainment VUI Contexts
Rabindra A. Ratan, U of Southern California, USA
Alejandro Diaz, Stanford U, USA
Clifford Ivar Nass, Stanford U, USA
The Psychology of Consumer Control Contextualized Within DVR Technologies
Laura Frances Bright, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Matthew S. Eastin, U of Texas at Austin, USA
Terry Daugherty, U of Texas at Austin, USA
Harsha Gangadharbatla, Texas Tech U, USA
3642
Friday
15:00-16:15
Drummond East
Flowing Information, Cascading Viewership
Communication and Technology
Chair
George A. Barnett, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Participants
Would You Share? Predicting the Potential Use of a New Technology
Lidwien van de Wijngaert, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS
Harry Bouwman, Technische Bestuurskunde, THE NETHERLANDS
Riding the "Hits" Wave: Informational Cascade in Viewership of Online Videos
Clarice Sim, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Wayne Fu, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Determinants of the Use of Video-Sharing Websites: An Exploration of Perceptions, Substitutability, and Service
Evaluation Factors
Jiyoung Cha, U of Florida, USA
The Flow of Digital News in a Network of Authorities, Hubs, and Providers
Matthew Scott Weber, U of Southern California, USA
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
Fast Forward into the Future: Trends in the Interactivity of Online News Publications
Deborah S. Chung, U of Kentucky, USA
Jennifer L. Robinette, U of Kentucky, USA
3643
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon 6
Media Climate and Government Restrictions
Communication Law & Policy
Chair
Patrick Burkart, Texas A and M U, USA
Participants
Fruit of the Poisonous Tree: A Comparative Analysis of Reporting Illegal Wiretapping in South Korea and the United
States TOP THREE PAPER
Ahran Park, U of Oregon, USA
One Step Back From Democracy: Adoption of Online Identification System in Korea
Namsu Park, U of Texas, USA
Passive Restrictions and All-Out Attacks: The Troubled Media Climate in Australia
Jane Louise Johnston, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA
Mark Pearson, Bond U, AUSTRALIA
Saving the World from Microsoft's DOC Format: How Governments Can Transition to Open Formats for Documents
Rajiv Shah, U of Illinois, USA
Jay P. Kesan, U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Andrew C. Kennis, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Respondent
Patrick Burkart, Texas A&M U, USA
3644
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon 7
Global Communication and Social Change Top Papers: Education and Entertainment Media in Development
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Bella Mody, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
Participants
Afghan Women's Hour: Understanding the Impact of Radio on Psychological Empowerment
Emily LeRoux-Rutledge, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Where is the Entertainment? A Thematic Macroanalysis of Entertainment-Education Campaign Research
Seon-Kyoung An, U of Alabama, USA
Towards a Conceptual Framework for Participation and Empowerment in Digital Storytelling and Participatory Video
Ying Li, U of Macau, MACAO
How Entertainment-Education Programs Promote Dialogue in Support of Social Change
Michael J. Papa, Central Michigan U, USA
Arvind Singhal, The U of Texas at El Paso, USA
Respondent
Bella Mody, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
3650
Friday
15:00-16:15
Ballroom East
LSI Studies on Interaction Online
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA
Participants
Repair as a Resource for Norm Development in Computer-Mediated Team Meetings
Kris M. Markman, U of Memphis, USA
The Language of Coalition Formation in Multiparty Online Negotiations
David A Huffaker, Northwestern U, USA
Roderick Swaab, Northwestern U, USA
Daniel Diermeier, Northwestern U, USA
The Interactive Online Romance Community: Contests and 'Covers Gone Wild'
Miriam Greenfeld Benovitz, Rutgers U, USA
Linguistic Indicators of Social Dynamics in Small Groups
Amy L Gonzales, Cornell U, USA
James W Pennebaker, U of Texas, USA
3651
Friday
15:00-16:15
Salon 8
Small, Mobile, and Intelligent: Emerging Technological Communication Practices
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Rita Kirk, ACA - American Communication Association, USA
Participants
CNN & the "You Tube" Debates: Choosing America's Voice
Rita Kirk, ACA - American Communication Association, USA
Dan K Schill, Southern Methodist U, USA
The Launching of an e-Book
Tyrone L. Adams, U of Lousiana - Lafayette, USA
Cutting Edge Public Relations Practices in Latin America
Jesús Meza Lueza, Tecnológico de Monterrey - Mexico City, MEXICO
Organizing for Online Organizations
Ming Cheung, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Robert Fripp's phrase "small, mobile and intelligent" appropriately describes successful technological communication
practices. Each of the presenters will provide an example of best practices in the innovative use of technology to
improve communication. The panel will then discuss the importance of the small-mobile-intelligent model to the
implementation, correction, and success of online communication strategies.
3660
Friday
15:00-16:15
701
High Density Session: News Framing Around the Globe
Journalism Studies
Chair
Don Heider, U of Maryland - College of Journalism, USA
Participants
News Framing Heads vs. Tails: An Empirical Study on Immigration Information Treatment In Spanish Press
Lifen Cheng, U of Salamanca, SPAIN
Juan Jose Igartua, U de Salamanca, SPAIN
Elena Palacios, Observatory of Audiovisual Content, Univ. of Salamanca, SPAIN
Jose Antonio Otero, Observatory of Audiovisual Content, Univ. of Salamanca, SPAIN
Tania Acosta, Observatory of Audiovisual Content, Univ. of Salamanca, SPAIN
Reporting on the Iraq War: How the Evening News Told the Story of the War's Third Year
Andrew D. Kaplan, U of Maryland, USA
News and the Formation of Public Dissent: Coverage of the Iraq Antiwar Movement
Adam Gordon Klein, Howard U, USA
Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA
Tony M. McEachern, Howard U, USA
Battle at the "Fortress": The Israel-Jenin Conflict in U.S. News
Amani E. Ismail, California State U - Northridge, USA
Framing and Reform Implementation
Wanda Luen Wun Siu, Chinese U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Framing the Classroom Debate: Bilingual Education Coverage in California's Largest Newspapers
Vikki Sara Katz, U of Southern California, USA
Carmen Gonzalez, U of Southern California, USA
When Do Women Get a Voice? Explaining the Presence of Female News Sources in Belgian TV News
Knut De Swert, U Antwerp, BELGIUM
Marc Hooghe, K.U. Leuven, BELGIUM
Framing China: A Comparative Study of U.S. Elite Newspaper's Coverage of Nixon's Visit to China and the Chinese
President's Visit to the U.S.
Wenjing Xie, U of Maryland, USA
This session reflects the international character of the Journalism Studies Division. News framing scholarship related
to Spain, Israel, Iraq, Hong Kong, United States, Belgium, and China will be featured in this session.
3661
Friday
15:00-16:15
705
Reimagining Structure and Agency
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Natalie Fenton, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
New Media and the News: Understanding Contemporary Journalism
Natalie Fenton, Goldsmiths College, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
Researching Contradiction in the Media
Des Freedman, Goldsmiths College, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
Taking Communication Rights Seriously
Andrew Calabrese, U of Colorado, USA
The Cultural Embedding and Disembedding of Political Elite Networks
Aeron Davis, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Respondent
David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Communication and media studies scholars have long since debated the best analytical tools with which to understand
their subject. In particular, theorists keep returning to the relationship between individual autonomy and rational
action on the one hand and the social construction of identity and behaviour on the other. This panel brings together a
group of scholars who are trying to shed light on the 'old' debate of structure versus agency in order to understand and
interrogate our contemporary mediated world.
3662
Friday
15:00-16:15
716
Ethics of Perception, Ethics of Communication
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Having Ears in Order Not to Hear: Psychoanalysis and the Wager of Communication
Garnet C. Butchart, U of South Florida, USA
Listening Otherwise: The Voice of Ethics
Lisbeth Lipari, Denison U, USA
Exploring the Ethical Possibilities and Limits of Visual Culture: Levinas' Face of the Other and the Minnesota
Science Museum's Race Exhibit
Emanuelle Wessels, U of Minnesota, USA
Visible Objects vs. Videnda: Remarks on What is Seen and What is Shown
Lars Gunnar Lundsten, Arcada, FINLAND
Respondent
Christina Slade, Macquarie U, AUSTRALIA
Difference senses raise contrasting issues within the ethics of communication, and this panel's papers explore vision
and listening, including the top student paper for Philosophy of Communication division.
3663
Friday
15:00-16:15
720
Changing Networks: New Methodologies in Media and Cultural Diversity Research
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Myria Georgiou, Leeds U, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Communicative Mobility and Networks of Diaspora - or: How Far Make Digital Media New Methodologies of Media
and Minority Research Necessary?
Andreas Hepp, U of Bremen - IMKI, GERMANY
Diasporic Connections: Reclaiming Cross-national Research
Myria Georgiou, Leeds U, UNITED KINGDOM
Wanted: Methodologies that Accurately Measure the Role of Media in the Real Lives of Migrants in their
Communities
Christine L. Ogan, Indiana U, USA
Remediations of Transnationalism: Diasporic Communities and Online Social Networking
Miyase Christensen, Karlstad U, SWEDEN
This panel addresses some of the major methodological challenges that emerge as diasporic and migrant populations
engage with digital technologies and networking possibilities in specific local and national spaces, but also across
geographical and political boundaries. Taking innovative empirical studies conducted in different cultural contexts as
a starting point, the panel discusses methods that draw from social networks analysis, actor network theories, crossnational research and transnational and intercultural research paradigms.
3664
Friday
15:00-16:15
728
Television in the Home: Moral Reasoning and Parenting Dynamics
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
Television and Children's Moral Reasoning: Development of a Standardized Measure of Moral Reasoning on
Interpersonal Violence
Marijke Lemal, Katholieke U - Leuven, BELGIUM
Jan Van den Bulck, Catholic U – Leuven, BELGIUM
Be Kind to Three-Legged Dogs: Children's Literal Interpretations of TV's Moral Lessons
Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Emily Acosta, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
The Home Ecology of Adolescents and its Impact on Television Access and Television Viewing Time
Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Amy Bleakley, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Jennifer A. Manganello, SUNY - Albany, USA
Robin Stanback Stevens, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Michael Hennessy, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Martin Fishbein, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Disengaged Parenting: A Common Cause of the Relationships Among Television Viewing, Academic Performance,
and Childhood Obesity?
Elizabeth A. Vandewater, RTI International, USA
Seoung Eun Park, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Sook-Jung Lee, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Herim Erin Lee, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Parental Mediation of Adolescents' Television Viewing in the Context of Changing Parent-Child Relationships.
Steven Eggermont, Catholic U - Leuven, BELGIUM
Michael Opgenhaffen, Lessius U College, BELGIUM
Respondent
Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA
3666
Friday
15:00-16:15
820
Top Papers in Intergroup Communication
Intergroup Communication
Chair
Bernadette Maria Watson, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Participants
Women Are Sort of More Tentative Than Men, Aren't They? How Men and Women Use Tentative Language
Differently, Similarly, and Counterstereotypically as a Function of Gender Salience
Nicholas A. Palomares, U of California - Davis, USA
Culture, Communication Challenges, and Social Impacts in Virtual Workspaces
Bolanle A. Olaniran, Texas State U, USA
A New Proposal for Breaking the Glass-Ceiling: A Self-Categorization Perspective on Gender, Language, and Social
Influence
Scott A. Reid, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Nicholas A. Palomares, U of California - Davis, USA
Grace Leigh Anderson, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Beverly A. Bondad-Brown, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
The Influence of Race in Police-Civilian Interactions: An Analysis of Actual Intergroup Interactions
Travis L. Dixon, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Terry Schell, RAND Corporation, USA
Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Kristin L. Drogos, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
This session is devoted to the top-ranked papers in the Intergroup Communication Interest Group. These papers were
competitively selected from a group of very strong submissions and reflect current trends and theoretical grounding in
intergroup communication.
3710
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon A
3711
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon B
3712
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon C
Mass Communication Business Meeting
Mass Communication
Participants
Robin Nabi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
Dana Mastro, U of Arizona, USA
Communication History Business Meeting
Communication History
.
Analyzing YouTube: Multidisciplinary Approaches
Visual Communication Studies
Participants
Common Misconceptions About YouTube: An Anthropological Analysis of Video Sharing and Commenting
Practices
Patricia G. Lange, U of Southern California, USA
Stealth Practices for Health Promotion on YouTube
Linda Duffett-Leger, U of New Brunswick, CANADA
A Critical Theory Analysis of the YouTube Video "North America's Next Top Indian Model"
Sonja Perley, U of New Brunswick, CANADA
Identifying Web-Spheres for YouTube Videos by Exploring Comment Network Mapping
Fenwick McKelvey, Ryerson U, CANADA
YouTube Vlogs and Gender
Heather Molyneaux, National Research Council of Canada, CANADA
YouTube and an Atlantic Canadian Public Sphere
Mary Milliken, National Research Council of Canada, CANADA
Reacting to YouTube Videos: Exploring Differences Among User Groups
Susan O'Donnell, National Research Council, CANADA
This roundtable discusses new research on YouTube, incorporating multidisciplinary approaches to analyzing the
production, content, interpretation, reception, and critical consequences of the new visual media of user-generated
online video. Panellists will focus discussion of their YouTube research on their theoretical frameworks,
methodologies used, and some key findings. The presentations from each panellist will be short to allow an
interactive discussion afterward about the different dimensions of research on user-generated online video and video
sharing websites, and the benefits and shortcomings of different analytical approaches.
3720
Friday
16:30-17:45
Lamartine
3721
Friday
16:30-17:45
Kafka
Game Studies Business Meeting
Game Studies
Antecedents and Consequences of Corporate Social Responsibility in Public Relations
Public Relations
Chair
Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Participants
The Influence of Cultural Values on Perceptions of Corporate Social Responsibility: Application of the Hofstede's
Dimensions to Korean Public Relations Practitioners
Yungwook Kim, Ewha Woman's U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Sooyeon Kim, U of Florida, USA
Advertising Corporate Social Responsibility Initiatives: Linking Third-Person Perceptions with Behavioral Intentions
Anita G Day, Loyola U - New Orleans, USA
Michael A. Mitrook, U of Florida, USA
Paul S. Lieber, U of South Carolina, USA
Third-Person Effects and Favorable Behavioral Consequences on Different Formats of Corporate Philanthropy News
and Involvement
Jinae Kang, U of Alabama, USA
Bruce K. Berger, U of Alabama, USA
Impact of Crisis on Corporate Social Responsibility and Organization-Public Relationships
Michel M. Haigh, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Frank E. Dardis, Pennsylvania State U, USA
3722
Friday
16:30-17:45
Hemon
3723
Friday
16:30-17:45
Jarry
Organizational Communication Division Business Meeting
Organizational Communication
Plague, Pandemic, and Catastrophe: Preparation and Response
Health Communication
Chair
Brian L. Quick, University of Illinois- Urbana-Champaign, USA
Participants
Individual and Community Influences on Adherence to Directives in the Event of a Plague Attack
Ricardo J. Wray, Saint Louis U, USA
Neil Henderson, U of Oklahoma, USA
Richard Tardif, Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, USA
Elizabeth Mitchell, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, USA
Keri Jupka, Saint Louis U School of Public Health, USA
Santosh Vijaykumar, Saint Louis U School of Public Health, USA
Carson Henderson, U of Oklahoma, USA
Susan Dimmick, Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, USA
Jessica Elton, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, USA
William Pollard, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, USA
Emily Zielinski-Gutierrez, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, USA
Dori Reissman, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, USA
Rosemary Thackeray, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, USA
Preparing for Pandemic While Managing Uncertainty: An Analysis of the Construction of Fear and Uncertainty in
Press Releases of Major Health Agencies
Elizabeth Johnson Avery, U of Tennessee, USA
Sora Kim, U of Tennessee, USA
Support for Government Actions in a Probable Pandemic Flu Outbreak: Exploring Roles of Social Structure, Trust,
Risk Perceptions, Media, and Knowledge
Hye-Jin Paek, U of Georgia, USA
Karen Hilyard, U of Georgia, USA
Vicki Freimuth, U of Georgia, USA
Kevin J Barge, Texas A&M U, USA
Michele Mindlin, Georgia Department of Human Resources-Division of Public Health, USA
Media Effects on Public Safety in the Context of a Catastrophe
Christopher E. Beaudoin, Tulane U, USA
3724
Friday
16:30-17:45
Joyce
Research Methods on the Fly: Graduate Student Researchers From "Here" Doing Research "Over There"
Health Communication
Chair
Rajiv N. Rimal, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Participants
From the University to the Village: Bringing the Experimental Design to Malawi
Alisha Heather Creel, Johns Hopkins U, USA
The Delhi Snowball: Sampling Escapades in Urban India
Devaki Nambiar, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Surveying the Landscape: On the Ground and on the Fly in Rural Northern Zambia
Joshua Garoon, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Establishing Solidarity With the Marginalized Public Through Research
Induk Kim, Purdue U, USA
Respondent
Rajiv N. Rimal, Johns Hopkins U, USA
This student panel will focus on the surprises that arise while doing research in international settings and the
adjustments that have to be made to keep up with changing situations. Research reported in this panel comes from
work done in four countries - Malawi, Zambia, India, and South Korea - using a variety of methods, including
experimental manipulations, surveys, informant interviews, and ethnography. The overall goal of the panel is to
illuminate nuances of research from the field that often get glossed over in methods sections of manuscripts, helping
new researchers approach projects in internaitonal settings with a greater understanding of the joys and challenges
involved.
3725
Friday
16:30-17:45
Musset
Hurtful Communication and Violence
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Amy Janan Johnson, U of Oklahoma, USA
Participants
"It's Not My Fault": Male Abuser's Perspectives of Recent Violent Episodes
Sharon Snyder-Suhy, Cleveland State U, USA
Jill E. Rudd, Cleveland State U, USA
Kimberly Neuendorf, Cleveland State U, USA
Jenny Jakulin, Cleveland State U, USA
A Relational Turbulence Model of Experiences of Hurt in Premarital Romantic Relationships
Rachel McLaren, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Denise H. Solomon, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Jennifer Priem, The Pennsylvania State U, USA
Sender-Recipient Perspectives of Honest but Hurtful Evaluative Messages in Romantic Relationships
Shuangyue Zhang, Sam Houston State U, USA
Mothers' Hurtful Messages and Affirming Communicator Style: Extrapolating Interaction Adaptation Theory
Carrie Delane Kennedy-Lightsey, West Virginia U, USA
Megan R. Dillow, West Virginia U, USA
Respondent
Amy Janan Johnson, U of Oklahoma, USA
3730
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon 1
European Politics
Political Communication
Chair
Risto Kunelius, U of Tampere, FINLAND
Participants
The Fourth Estate as Superpower? An Empirical Study on Perceptions of Media Power in Belgium and the
Netherlands
Peter Van Aelst, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Kees Brants, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Philip Van Praag, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
The Usage of Online Vote Aids by Young People in the Netherlands
Fadi Hirzalla, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
J. A. De Ridder, Amsterdam School of Communications Research, THE NETHERLANDS
Liesbet van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
"Dark Areas of Ignorance" Revisited: Comparing International Affairs Knowledge in Switzerland and the US
Shanto Iyengar, Stanford U, USA
Kyu S. Hahn, Yonsei U, USA
Heinz Bonfadelli, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Mirko Marr, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
News Media Representations of a Common EU Foreign and Security Policy: A Cross-National Content Analysis of
National Quality Newspapers
Anna Kandyla, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
3732
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon 3
Identity/Diversity
Political Communication
Chair
Susan Dente Ross, Washington State U, USA
Participants
Universal Inclusion in the Islamic Textual Sources?: Toward a Comparative Understanding of Islam and Habermasian
Public Sphere
Mohamad Hamas Elmasry, U of Iowa, USA
Pick-and-Choose Democracy: The Volatile Electorate and Party Selectors on the Internet
Susan L. Holmberg, Mid-Sweden U, SWEDEN
Lars W. Nord, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
Realizing "Unity in Diversity": E-Mail Lists and Face-to-Face Contact in the "Movement for Alternative
Globalization"
Anastasia Kavada, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
Newspaper Form and Multivocal Content: A Comparison of the French and U.S. Journalistic Fields
Rodney D. Benson, New York U, USA
3733
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon 4
Girls, Children, and Media Power
Feminist Scholarship
Popular Communication
Chair
Larissa J. Faulkner, Brock U, CANADA
Participants
Girl Game Designers: Girls' Participation in a Game Design Workshop
Carolyn Michelle Cunningham, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Power Feminism, Mediated: Girl Power and the Commercial Politics of Change
Rebecca C. Hains, Salem State College, USA
The Discreet Charm of the Petite Celebrity: Gender and Lifestyle on "My Super Sweet 16"
Robin Johnson, U of Iowa, USA
Gender Depictions in Children's Magazines
Melissa Martinson, U of Missouri-Columbia, USA
Amanda Hinnant, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
3734
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon 5
Satire's Second Dimension: Political Critique in Animated TV Comedy
Popular Communication
Political Communication
Participants
The Punk-Rock Presidency of Lil' Bush
Jeffrey P. Jones, Old Dominion U, USA
Real (and) Funny: Animated TV Comedy's Political Voice
Jonathan Alan Gray, Fordham U, USA
Functional Form: The Aesthetics of Animated Satire
Jason Mittell, Middlebury College, USA
The Boondocks and Differentiated Black American Politics
Avi Santo, Old Dominion U, USA
Respondent
Marc Leverette, Colorado State U, USA
Since The Simpsons' premiere in 1989, televised animation has continually honed its political voice. While television
entertainment often shies away from being explicitly political, The Simpsons, South Park, The Boondocks, L'il Bush,
and other animated comedies have developed their satiric and parodic voices, showing themselves willing to take on
controversial topics, sometimes in bold and uncompromising fashion, and becoming important sites for the production
and practice of politics and citizenship. This panel examines issues that surround this new class of animated
television. How might they contribute to politics? What possibilities and limitations are imposed by their form and
context? How are audiences invited to use and make sense of their political critique? And what do they tell us about
the prospects for political programming in a post-network era?
3740
Friday
16:30-17:45
Drummond West
Communication Theory Applied to Health Campaigns
Information Systems
Chair
Francesca Renee Dillman Carpentier, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
Effects of Discrete Emotions on Health-Related Attitude Change: The Mediating Role of Perceived Susceptibility and
Response Efficacy
Xiaoli Nan, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Identification, Realism, and Ideal-Self in Interpreting Media Characters
Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA
Norman Adrian Porticella, Cornell U, USA
Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA
Addiction and Eyes on Screen: How Smokers Process Smoking-Related PSAs
Ashley Nicole Sanders-Jackson, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Deborah L. Linebarger, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Moira O'Keeffe, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Andrew Strasser, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Caryn Lerman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Stories of Feeling and Courage: The Effect of Narrative and Emotional Tone on Processing Cancer Survivor Stories
Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Glenn M. Leshner, U of Missouri, USA
Jensen Joann Moore, U of Missouri, USA
Elizabeth Gardner, U of Missouri, USA
Rachel L. Bailey, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Anastasia Kononova, U of Missouri, USA
Sara Peters, U of Missouri, USA
Kevin Wise, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Using Theory in the Interest of Public Health: Creating Health Messages to Target Diabetes Among Rural Hispanics
Wendy A. Maxian, Texas Tech U, USA
Wes Wise, Texas Tech U, USA
E. N. Siegrist, Texas State U, USA
Samuel D. Bradley, Texas Tech U, USA
Kenton T. Wilkinson, Texas Tech U, USA
L. Todd Chambers, Texas State U, USA
Alex Ortiz, Texas State U, USA
Robert Anthony Galvez, Texas State U, USA
3741
Friday
16:30-17:45
Drummond Centre
Good Technology for Better Health
Communication and Technology
Chair
Bart J. van den Hooff, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
Title: Is RFID Feared? Consumer Sentiments towards RFID-Like Healthcare Communication Technology
James E. Katz, Rutgers U, USA
Ronald E. Rice, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Promoting Teenage Online Safety With an i-Safety Intervention: Enhancing Self-efficacy and Protective Behaviors
Christina Bernice Wirth, Michigan State U, USA
Nora J. Rifon, Michigan State U, USA
Robert Larose, Michigan State U, USA
Melissa Lynn Lewis, Michigan State U, USA
Internet Engagement and SES-Based Health Knowledge Gap
Chul-joo Lee, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Comparing Internet Health Seeking About Sexually Transmitted Infections by Adolescents in South Africa, the
Netherlands, and the United States
Donna Rouner, Colorado State U, USA
Hans Hoeken, Radboud U - Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS
Iris Nieuwboer, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS
Barbara Puts, Tilburg U,, THE NETHERLANDS
Alfons A Maes, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS
3742
Friday
16:30-17:45
Drummond East
(Tele)Presence and Communication
Communication and Technology
Chair
Cheryl Campanella Bracken, Cleveland State U, USA
Participants
Matthew Lombard, Temple U, USA
Frank Biocca, Michigan State U, USA
Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA
Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA
Paul Skalski, Cleveland State U, USA
Wijnand A. Ijsselsteijn, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
The concept of presence, variously defined as a sense of 'being there,' a 'sensation of reality,' and more generally as
'an illusion of nonmediation,' is being examined by a growing international community of scholars in diverse fields
from computer science to philosophy, but the concept has particular relevance to Communication. This panel, cosponsored by the International Society for Presence Research (ISPR), features presentations by and discussions
among scholars at the forefront of work in this area. Each presenter will make a brief presentation (under 10 minutes),
to allow time for questions and discussion. The round table will begin with a brief overview of the concept of
presence. The other presenters will discuss areas of Communication where presence has been investigated. These
areas include research on video games and online communities, interactions with avatars, video conferencing,
future/new media, and impact of Internet on health communication. Each panelist has been directed to discuss how
presence has informed their area of research, and the current status, and potential future of presence research and
theory within Communication. Further, the panel will outline opportunities for Communication scholars to get more
information about developments related to presence research and the presence community.
3743
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon 6
3744
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon 7
Communication Law and Policy Business Meeting
Communication Law & Policy
Global Communication and Social Change Business Meeting
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Bowling Green State U, USA
3750
Friday
16:30-17:45
Ballroom East
When the Internet Reaches the Villages
Theme Sessions
Chair
Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Participants
Social Consequences of Innovative Low-Cost Connectivity in Africa
Chris Morris, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, SOUTH AFRICA
Taking the Telecenter to the Village and School in Brazil
Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Jeremiah P. Spence, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Carlos Seabra, Instituto De Pesquisas e Projetos Socias e Tecnlogicos, São Paulo, BRAZIL
Internet Kiosks in Rural China: What Influences Success?
Jinqiu Zhao, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Xiaoming Hao, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Indrajit Banerjee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Post-Tsunami Rehabilitation for Rural Areas in India Using ICTs
Arul Chib, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Paramita Dasgupta Mazumdar, Centre for Media Studies (CMS), INDIA
Respondent
Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Rural telecenters, an initial way to harness information and communication technologies (ICTs) for development,
have been marked by high enthusiasm but low (3%) success. More careful and research-based approaches have
recently yielded a 10-fold increase to 30% success. This panel pulls together researchers from China, India, Brazil and
Kenya with the aim of offering insights and theories to improve on that increased success rate and to examine the
impact of such telecenters on villages.
3751
Friday
16:30-17:45
Salon 8
Social Media, New Influencers, and A New Paradigm for Communicators
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Jen McClure, Society for New Communcations Research, USA
Participants
Paul Gillin, Society for New Communcations Research, USA
Joseph Carrabis, NextStage Evolution, USA
Greg Peverill-Conti, Society for New Communication Research, USA
John Cass, Society for New Communication Research, USA
New communications tools and technologies such as blogs, podcasts, online video, RSS, social networks and virtual
worlds, and the corresponding emergence of citizen-generated media are redefining our conception of media and
influence. This panel, based on research conducted by the Society for New Communications Research, will explore
the significance of these changes to the media and communications landscape and will address: The current media
and communications landscape - trends and forecasts; How organizations are defining and addressing this
phenomenon of "new influencers"; How organizations are wielding their own influence using these new tools and
technologies.
3760
Friday
16:30-17:45
701
The Consequences of Bottom-Line Journalism
Journalism Studies
Chair
Sandrine Boudana, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL
Participants
Journalism Between Commercialization and Adaptation in a Today's View
Harald Rau, U of Leipzig, GERMANY
Constrained Authors: Bylines and Authorship in American News Reporting
Zvi Reich, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL
Newspaper-TV Conglomeration Reduces Local News Production
S. Dereck Turner, Director of Resarch, Free Press, USA
Mark N. Cooper, McGannon Center for Communications Research, USA
Cultural Diversity in the News Media: A Democratic or a Commercial Need?
Isabel Awad, U of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Respondent
Robert W. McChesney, U of Illinois, USA
The first paper of this session tests assumptions about the way open news markets work by using game theory. The
second paper proposes that the recent proliferation of bylines in news reports opens the way toward journalistic
stardom and alters power relations within the news industry. The third paper employs datasets compiled by the
Federal Communications Commission on the production of local news broadcasts to test the effects of restrictions on
cross ownership of a newspaper and television station in a single market. The final paper distinguishes between
laissez-faire and interventionist economic models to help understand the implementation of cultural diversity policies
in the news media.
3761
Friday
16:30-17:45
705
LSI Studies on the Relation of Parents, Children, and Media
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Hartmut B. Mokros, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
When the Adults Just Don't Understand: Practical Consequences of Children's Peer Culture Research
Christine Iacobucci, Wells College
West Meets East: A Discourse Analysis of News About Adopted Chinese Children in American Families
Baohuan Li, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
Parents' Moral Reflections on Children's Media Use
Elisa Pigeron, U of California - Los Angeles, USA
Talk-in-Interaction and Everyday Construction of Culture: The Case of Mobile Phone Communication Between
Parents and Children
Letizia Caronia, U of Bologna, ITALY
3762
Friday
16:30-17:45
716
3763
Friday
16:30-17:45
720
3764
Friday
16:30-17:45
728
Philosophy of Communication Business Meeting
Philosophy of Communication
Ethnicity and Race in Communication Business Meeting
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Child and Adolescent Development in the Context of New Media Technologies
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Dina L. G. Borzekowski, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Participants
Forbidden Fruit Effects of Warning Labels on the Attractiveness of Video Games
Marije Nije Bijvank, VU U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Brad J. Bushman, U of Michigan, USA
Peter Roelofsma, Vrije U - U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Emerging Computer Skills: Influences of Young Children's Executive Functioning Abilities and Parental Scaffolding
Techniques
Alexis Lauricella, Georgetown U, USA
Rachel Barr, Georgetown Univeristy, USA
Sandra L. Calvert, Georgetown U, USA
Risky Experiences for European Children Online: Charting Research Strengths and Research Gaps
Leslie George Haddon, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
The Effects of Instant Messaging on the Quality of Adolescents' Existing Friendships: A Longitudinal Study
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Respondent
Dina L. G. Borzekowski, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
3766
Friday
16:30-17:45
820
3810
Friday
18:00-19:15
Salon A
3811
Friday
18:00-19:15
Salon B
3822
Friday
18:00-19:15
Hemon
3832
Friday
18:00-19:15
Salon 3
Intergroup Communication Interest Group Business Meeting
Intergroup Communication
Mass Communication Division Reception
Mass Communication
Reception for the Communication History Interest Group
Communication History
This reception, which will be held immediately after the Communication History Interest Group business meeting,
will feature as a centerpiece a screening of The Road to Decatur, a documentary created by Peter Simonson, Glenda
Balas, and Jason Balas. The Road to Decatur tells the story of Elihu Katz and Paul Lazarsfeld's touchstone opus
Personal Influence. The Road to Decatur recreates the intellectual and institutional milieu that informed the creation
of Personal Influence. This meticulously-constructed work of documentary film builds on interviews with significant
figures at Columbia University and the Bureau of Applied Social Research, including (but not limited to): David Sills,
Thelma McCormack, Gertrude Robinson, Charles Wright, Rolf Meyersoh, and Elihu Katz himself. Food and
beverages will be provided.
Organizational Communication Division Reception
Organizational Communication
Colleagues Remember Michael Gurevitch
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Edward L. Fink, U of Maryland, USA
Michael Gurevitch, Professor of Journalism and Affiliate Professor of Communication at Maryland, was an incredible
scholar. His humor, intelligence, insight, and care for others made him a model of what it means to be a colleague.
Colleagues are invited to bring their recollections and stories to share in remembering him.
3862
Friday
18:00-19:15
716
Philosophy of Communication Division Reception
Philosophy of Communication
3868
Friday
18:00-19:00
3304
3951
Friday
19:15-20:00
Salon 8
3950
Friday
21:00-23:00
Ballroom East
Reception Honoring Miniplenary Speakers
Sponsored Sessions
Reception Hosted by the Society for New Communications Research
Sponsored Sessions
Please join us to relax, enjoy a drink and some light hors d'oeuvres; meet the Fellows of the Society for New
Communications Research and find out more about our organization and the opportunities to get involved.
Graduate Student Reception (Off Site)
Sponsored Sessions
Club La Boom, 1254 Rue Stanley Ouest
The executive board and membership of Ethnicity and Race in Communication are proud
to announce that we are now a division of the International Communication Association.
We sincerely thank the ICA Board of Directors for its support.
The Ethnicity and Race in Communication Division
also would like to thank the following programs and individuals
for their commitment to intellectual diversity and social justice.
Leeds University Institute of Communication Studies, UK
Northeastern University Department of Communication, USA
Su≠olk University Department of Communication and Journalism
and the College of Arts and Sciences, USA
&
Dr. Isabel Molina Guzmán, associate professor, Institute of Communications Research,
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
EXECUTIVE BOARD
Kumarini Silva (Northeastern University), Division Chair � Myria Georgiou (Leeds University),
Vice Chair � Kevin Dolan (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), Interim Secretary
Micky Lee (Su≠olk University), member-at-large � Travis Dixon (University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign), member-at-large � Isabel Molina (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), ex-o∞cio
4167
Saturday
07:30-09:00
3224
4210
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon A
ICA Fellows' Breakfast
Sponsored Sessions
Conversation Effects: The Impact of Interpersonal Communication on Mass-Media Effects
Mass Communication
Chair
Katrin Christiane Doveling, Free U Berlin, GERMANY
Participants
Communication Effects: How Conversation Changes Media Effects
Volker Gehrau, Westfaelische Wilhelms-U of Muenster, GERMANY
Interpersonal Communication and the Emotional Effects of Media Entertainment: A Cross-Cultural Study (US and
Germany)
Katrin Christiane Doveling, Free U Berlin, GERMANY
Helen Ho, U of Michigan, USA
Cognitive Effects: The Impact of Interpersonal Communication About News on Memory and Knowledge
Denise Sommer, U of Jena, GERMANY
Talking About Mass Media Campaigns: Interpersonal Discussion, Intentions, and Behavior Change
Sally Margaret Dunlop, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Respondent
Brian Southwell, U of Minnesota, USA
In order to understand media effects, we need to comprehend that humans talk about media messages in their social
environment. This phenomenon needs to be regarded as a crucial variable within emotional, cognitive and behavioral
media effects. Thus, the aim of the panel is to explore how interpersonal communication influences and possibly
changes the effects of mass media. Over time, conversations may diffuse, reinforce, change or suppress media effects
under certain conditions. In its examination of the specific influence of interpersonal communication on different
dimensions of media effects, the panel - following the conference theme - furthers knowledge about the social impact
of different communication modes and their interplay. It offers a better insight into how media messages are
processed and ultimately retained and remembered. After a theoretical overview, three empirical studies are presented
which specify the impact of conversations in media effects on (a) emotional, (b) cognitive and (c) behavioral media
effects.
4211
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon B
Film, Culture, and Meaning
Mass Communication
Chair
Kekeli Kwabla Nuviadenu, Bethune-Cookman U, USA
Participants
"The Man From New Line Knocked on the Door": Hobbiton/Matamata and the Engagement With the Global Popular
Robert Moses Peaslee, Center for Media, Religion and Culture, USA
Good Will Hiding: Dual Reading and Films About Higher Education
Richard Holt, Northern Illinois U, USA
Hui-Ching Chang, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
A Tale of Four Cities: Lifestyles and Foreign Drama Favorability in Beijing, Hong Kong, Seoul, and Tokyo
June Woong Rhee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Jin Woo Kim, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Heung Chul Lee, NI in Korea, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Negotiating Distances: The Cultural Economy of Television Documentaries
Tamar Ashuri, Ben-Gurion U, Sapir Academic C., ISRAEL
4212
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon C
Violence, Aggression, and Empathy
Mass Communication
Chair
Chad Mahood, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
Televised Social Models and Verbal Aggression
Kristen Eis Cvancara, Minnesota State U - Mankato, USA
Terry Kinney, U Of Minnesota, USA
Media Exposure and Sensitivity to Violence in News Reports: Evidence of Desensitization?
Erica L. Scharrer, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Aggressive Outcomes and Videogame Play: The Role of Length of Play and the Mechanisms at Work
Marina Krcmar, Wake Forest U, USA
Kenneth Alan Lachlan, Boston College, USA
Playing a Flash-Based Social Activism Game: Role-Taking and Empathic Reactions
Wei Peng, Michigan State U, USA
Mira Lee, Michigan State U, USA
Carrie Heeter, Michigan State U, USA
4220
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Lamartine
Visual Sign and Design
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Luc Pauwels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Participants
Seeing Beyond the Frame: Exploring the Shift to Boundless Ways of Knowing
Julianne H. Newton, U of Oregon, USA
Placing Subway Signs: Pragmatical Properties of Signs at Work
Jerome Denis, Telecom Paris, FRANCE
David Pontille, CNRS, FRANCE
The Appearance of Diversity: Visual Design and the Public Communication of EU Identity
Giorgia Aiello, U of Washington, USA
The Metaphor of 'Bread is Life': A Semiotic Analysis of Visual Representation in Print Advertisement Designs
Ming Cheung, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Cherla Cheung, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
This panel combines papers with a semiotic or semiological approach with papers focusing on the aspect of visual
design. How do signs and designs interact and what impact does the visual have in the communication process?
4221
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Kafka
Disappointment, Despair, and Image Repair: Crisis Communication in Public Relations
Public Relations
Chair
Bryan H. Reber, U of Georgia, USA
Participants
Expressions of Disappointment: Duke University's Response to the Men's Lacrosse Team Crisis
Maria E. Len-Rios, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Prescribing Versus Describing: An Original Test of All Image-Restoration Strategies Within a Single Crisis Situation
Frank E. Dardis, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Michel M. Haigh, Pennsylvania State U, USA
The Interplay of Organization Type, Organization Size, and Practitioner Role on Perceived Crisis Preparedness: A
Cognitive Appraisal Approach
Yan Jin, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA
An Investigation Into the Role of Image Repair Theory in Strategic Conflict Management.
Derina R. Holtzhausen, U of South Florida, USA
4222
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Hemon
Organizational Communication in China: On a Society in Transition and Rapid Development
Organizational Communication
Chair
Ling Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Participants
The Enduring Influence of Confucianism in Modern Chinese National, Government-Owned and Hybrid Corporations
Lili Zhao, U of Waikato, New Zealand, NEW ZEALAND
Juliet P. Roper, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Democratic Centralism and Organizational Decision Making
Canchu Lin, Bowling Green State U, USA
Between Conversation and Text: Communication in Organizational Networks in the PRC
Marco Adria, U of Alberta, CANADA
Communication Issues in Transitional Forms of Organizing & Organizing for Social Change in China
Kathleen J. Krone, U of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA
Respondent
Ling Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Business corporations are a recent phenomenon in China with dramatic growth in private enterprises alongside their
state-own counterparts. Social changes have also opened up space for increasingly diverse social needs in and
community interests outside of the traditional structural framework requiring new or hybrid forms of organization in
their service. To understand the role of organization communication in such a context: organizational change amidst a
social transition, panelists will discuss the broad topic from different angles.
4223
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Jarry
A Potpourri of International and Border Issues in Health Communication
Health Communication
Chair
Maria Elena Figueroa, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Participants
Understanding Transformation Perspective Among Recently Diagnosed Cancer Patients in Western India
Avinash Thombre, U of Arkansas - Little Rock, USA
Allen C Sherman, U of Arkansas, USA
Communication Pathways to Health Competence: Testing a Model in Egypt and South Africa
Douglas Storey, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg, USA
Esther B. Kaggwa, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Catherine Harbour, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
Involving Vulnerable Populations in Message Design/Implementation: Participatory Community Theater to Address
HIV in Honduras
Alisha Heather Creel, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Ana Claudia Franca-Koh, Johns Hopkins, USA
Entertainment-Education in a Radio Spot Campaign: Hispanics and Childhood Obesity in El Regalo de Salud
Frank G. Perez, U of Texas - El Paso, USA
Samantha Dena, U of Texas - El Paso, USA
Patricia D. Witherspoon, U of Texas - El Paso, USA
Martha Archuleta, New Mexico State U, USA
Katherine Bachman, New Mexico State U, USA
Ellen Alderton, Self-Reliance Foundation, USA
4224
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Joyce
Up in Smoke: Models of Influence in Smoking and Marijuana Use
Health Communication
Chair
Judith A. McDivitt, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA
Participants
Adolescent Cigarette Smoking: An Application of Problem Behavior Theory to Examine Systems of Influence
Smita C. Banerjee, U of Lincoln, USA
Kathryn Greene, Rutgers U, USA
Ambivalence Amplifies College Smokers' Negative Emotional Responses to Antismoking Information
Xiaoquan Zhao, George Mason U, USA
Xiaomei Cai, George Mason U, USA
Prior Smoking Experience and Association With Deviant Peers Influencing Smoking Intentions of Early Adolescents
Kathryn Greene, Rutgers U, USA
Smita C. Banerjee, U of Lincoln, USA
Examining Self-Concepts and Prototypes as Formative Research for Marijuana Prevention Campaigns
Maria Leonora ('Nori') G. Comello, Ohio State U, USA
Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA
4225
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Musset
Interpersonal Communication in Family Relationships
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Pamela J. Kalbfleisch, U of North Dakota, USA
Participants
Clustering Effect Within Families and the Role of Power in Family Communication: A Revised Analysis on Sillars et
al.'s (2005) Article
Eunsoon Lee, U of Minnesota, USA
Ascan F. Koerner, U of Minnesota, USA
Dialectical Tensions and Praxis Underpinning Family Farm Succession Planning
Margaret J. Pitts, Old Dominion U, USA
Craig Fowler, California State U - Fresno, USA
Matt Kaplan, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Jon F. Nussbaum, Pennsylvania State U, USA
John Becker, Pennsylvania State U, USA
The Socialization of Young Adults' Love Attitudes Through Family Communication and Parents' Love Attitudes
Naomi Bell O'Neil, Duquesne U, USA
Martha J. Fay, U of Wisconsin - Eau Claire, USA
Susan Lee Kline, Ohio State U, USA
Why Can't We Just Talk About It?: An Observational Study of Parents' and Adolescents' Conversations About Sex
Tamara D. Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Andrea Lynn Joseph, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Desiree Aldeis, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Linking Familial Typologies: An Investigation of the Relationship Between Parenting Styles and Family
Communication Patterns
Alyssa Isaacs, U of Minnesota, USA
Ascan F. Koerner, U of Minnesota, USA
Respondent
Pamela J. Kalbfleisch, U of North Dakota, USA
4226
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Dickens
Masculinities
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies
Popular Communication
Chair
Lynn A. Comella, U Nevada - Las Vegas, USA
Participants
Contested Kicks: Sneakers and Gay Masculinity, 1964-2007
Travers Scott, U of Southern California, USA
"Have You Got Game?" Hegemonic Masculinity and Neo-Homophobia in Sports Coverage of John Amaechi
Marie Hardin, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Kathleen Kuehn, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Hillary Jones, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Murali Balaji, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Jason Genovese, Pennsylvania State U, USA
"Gay or…?": Interrogating the Discursive Constructions of Gayness in Details Magazine
Jimmy Draper, U of Michigan, USA
Reading GAM in Craigslist Personals: Constructing Gay Asian Males During the Negotiation of Anal Intercourse
Byron Lee, Temple U, USA
4230
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon 1
Public Opinion
Political Communication
Chair
Rodney A. Reynolds, Azusa Pacific U, USA
Participants
Spinning Elections: Spin Doctors, Public Opinion, and the Media in the 2006 Israeli Elections
Atara Frenkel-Faran, Sapir Academic College and Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL
Sam N. Lehman-Wilzig, Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL
Of Attitudes and Engagement: Clarifying the Reciprocal Relationship Between Civic Attitudes and Political
Participation
John Gastil, U of Washington, USA
Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Public Opinion in Context: A Multilevel Model of Media Effects on Perceptions of Public Opinion
Lindsay H. Hoffman, U of Delaware, USA
Public Support for Referendums and the Role of the Campaign
Andreas Schuck, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
4232
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon 3
North Korea/South Korea
Political Communication
Chair
Ewa Musialowska, U of Dresden and U of Wroclaw, POLAND
Participants
News as Propaganda in North Korea: An Analysis of News Editorials of the Six-Party Talks, 2003-2007
Won Yong Jang, U of Wisconsin - Eau Claire, USA
Apology or Apologia?: An Analysis of President George W. Bush's Speech to the Korean Public in 2002
Ji Hoon Lee, U of Florida, USA
The Media-Government Relations: Comparative Analysis of Newspaper Reporting of Foreign Policy Between the
United States and South Korea
Wha In Kang, Rutgers U, USA
4233
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon 4
Beauty Ideals and Gendered Frames Around the World
Feminist Scholarship
Intercultural Communication
Popular Communication
Chair
Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA
Participants
Sex and the City the Western Beauty Ideal and Consumption Practices in Women
Alison Denise Brzenchek, U of Masachusetts, USA
(Re-)Inventing "Home Affairs": Feminist Solidarity and the South African Nation
Shelley-Jean Bradfield, Indiana U, USA
Depictions of Women and Men in Advertisements Featured in Japanese Fashion Magazines
Catherine A. Luther, U of Tennessee, USA
Carolynn McMahan, U of North Florida, USA
Tiffany Shoop, Shenandoah U, USA
4234
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon 5
Flow, Intertextuality, and Overflow: The Changing Nature of Mediated Textuality
Popular Communication
Chair
Jonathan Alan Gray, Fordham U, USA
Participants
Putting Martha Stewart Back in Martha Stewart Living: How The Martha Stewart Newsletter Replaces the
Magazine's Missing Ingredient
Melissa A. Click, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Search and the Realm of the Intertext.
Virginia Anne Nightingale, U of Western Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Everything I Know About the War, I Learned from Video Games
Nina B. Huntemann, Suffolk U, USA
From Flow to Overflow: Texts and Textual Fields in Television and Personal Media Consumption
Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM
Media synergy is ever on the increase, providing numerous instances of the text existing across multiple platforms, as
movie, television show, computer game, website, toy, clothing line, CD, food item, and so on: what Robert Allen
(1999) dubs "the movie on the lunchbox." As this happens, though, it becomes important for us to study this network
of textuality, meaning and production. Whereas much work on media texts diligently focuses on their production,
ownership, reception, and/or semiotics, synergy and convergence have caused many texts to "overflow" (Brooker,
2001), and it is therefore imperative that we examine how the expansion and overflow of contemporary media texts
affects the very nature, ontology, and phenomenology of the text, and how it contributes to the production of
meaning. What does the product line do to the text? How does the existence of spinoff movies or computer games
change the audience's understanding of that text? What role does the official website play in constructing meaning?
How are texts being interpreted "outside" of their traditional boundaries, and how are they being engaged with? Or
what reverberations does such a system of expansion and overflow have on the processes of production? This panel
asks these questions, studying the outer limits of the modern media text.
4240
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Drummond West
High Density Session: Information Processing of Media I
Information Systems
Chair
Zheng Joyce Wang, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
Attention and Narrative Engagement: Divergences in Secondary Task Reaction Times and Self-Reports of Narrative
Engagement
Helena Bilandzic, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Rick W. Busselle, Washington State U, USA
Exploring the Effect of Audience Laughter on Information Processing
Brian D. Wilson, Indiana U, USA
Julia Fox, Indiana U, USA
Sounding Out Small Screens and Presence: The Impact of Screen Size, Pace, and Sound
Cheryl Campanella Bracken, Cleveland State U, USA
Gary R. Pettey, Cleveland State U, USA
Bridget E Rubenking, Cleveland State U, USA
Trupti Guha, Cleveland State U, USA
Multitasking Effects on Visual Working Memory, Working Memory and Executive Control
Vanessa Vega, Stanford U, USA
Kristle McCracken, Stanford U, USA
Clifford Ivar Nass, Stanford U, USA
Lumos Labs, Lumos Labs, Inc., USA
Effects of Morbid Curiosity on Perception, Attention, and Reaction to Bad News
Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA
Kevin Pinkerton, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Jie Xu, U of Alabama, USA
Po-Lin Pan, U of Alabama, USA
Mass Media and Stigma: How Portrayals of Mental Illness Impact Social Stigma
P. Gayle Nadorff, U of Connecticut, USA
Sungkyoung Lee, Indiana U, USA
Brian D. Wilson, Indiana U, USA
Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA
Bernice A. Pescosolido, Indiana U, USA
Jack Martin, Indiana U, USA
Is Television's Mean World Mean Only for Conservatives? The Interactive Effects of Political Affiliation and
Processing Strategy
Wendy A. Maxian, Texas Tech U, USA
Wes Wise, Texas Tech U, USA
E. N. Siegrist, Texas State U, USA
Brandon H. Nutting, Texas State U, USA
Samuel D. Bradley, Texas Tech U, USA
When My Favorite Candidate Opposes My Favorite Position on an Issue: The Effect of Incongruent Messages on
Attitude Change Toward the Issue and Toward the Source
Sungeun Chung, Western Illinois U, USA
Leah Waks, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
Michael F. Meffert, U Mannheim, GERMANY
Ana Inclán Velazquez, Western Illinois U, USA
Moniza Waheed, Western Illinois U, USA
4241
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Drummond Centre
Using User-Driven Technology
Communication and Technology
Chair
Seth Finn, Robert Morris U, USA
Participants
The Emergence of User-Generated Media: Understanding Their Appeal From a Uses and Gratifications Perspective
Guosong Shao, U of Alabama, USA
Media Habits: Driven By Goals, Not Circumstance
Ryan L. Lange, Michigan State U, USA
Problematic Instant Messaging Use Among University Students
Rachel Lijie Neo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Marko M. Skoric, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
MySpace or Mixi?: Japanese Young People's Engagement With Social Networking Sites in Everyday Life
Toshie Takahashi, Rikkyo U, JAPAN
Understanding Content Consumers and Content Creators in the Web 2.0 Era: A Case Study of YouTube Users
Hsuan-Ting Chen, U of Texas - Austin, USA
4242
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Drummond East
Assessing Online Health Literacy: From Implementation to Evaluation
Communication and Technology
Participants
Health-Literacy Related Challenges Associated with the Implementation of an Internet-Mediated Physical Activity
Intervention
Lorraine R. Buis, Veterans Affairs HSR and D, USA
e-Health Interventions for Low Health Literate Audiences: Reaching a Broader Audience
Michael S. Mackert, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Pamela S. Whitten, Michigan State U, USA
Adriana Garcia, The U of Texas at Austin, USA
Designing Usable Healthcare Web Applications
David J. Cook, U of Kansas Medical Center, USA
Bree Holtz, Michigan State U, USA
Entering the "Healthy Child Door": Measuring Parents' Knowledge Retention of Information Provided on a Pediatric
Website
Pamela S. Whitten, Michigan State U, USA
Emily M. Meyer, Michigan State U, USA
Low health literacy, or the degree to which individuals obtain, process, and understand basic health information and
services needed to make appropriate health decisions, has numerous consequences for individuals as they navigate
through the health care system. It is estimated that approximately 50% of Americans experience limited literacy,
which impedes their ability to navigate tasks that require problem-solving and higher reading skills; both of which are
necessary in medical encounters. People with low health literacy tend to have limited knowledge of medical
treatments and instructions (i.e. taking correct dosages of medications or appropriately treating a medical condition),
and may be less aware of how to self-manage a disease or seek out treatment when needed. With the introduction of
sophisticated information and communication technologies (ICTs), including online health applications and
interactive computer programs, the potential to access and utilize information increases exponentially, as does the risk
of misunderstanding and improperly executing the material provided. As a result, panelists will discuss four topics
related to facilitating higher "online health literacy": website implementation, knowledge retention, interface usability,
and overall impact (outcome evaluation). Two major health topics will also be highlighted: obesity and pediatric
health. Because the role of health literacy within the context of ICTs is largely unexplored, those who attend this
session will be encouraged to share insights and provide recommendations for future research and health interventions
that observe the potential barrier of low online health literacy.
4243
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon 6
Frontiers in Free Expression
Communication Law & Policy
Chair
Miyase Christensen, Karlstad U, Sweden
Participants
Access to the News Media: Right of Reply in Comparative Law
Kyu Ho Youm, U of Oregon, USA
From Armbands to Web Sites: Student Rights of Free Expression on Facebook
Jessica Smith, U of North Carolina, USA
To Punish or Not to Punish Blasphemy, That is Not Out of the Question: The Mohammed Cartoons Controversy and
Free Speech in Denmark and France
Lyombe S. Eko, U of Iowa, USA
The Dragon's Digital Dilemma: Investigating the Interrelationship of the Internet, Free Trade, and Free Expression in
China
Jeffrey Soplop, U of North Carolina, USA
Respondent
Miyase Christensen, Karlstad U, SWEDEN
Societies are always pushing the boundaries of "acceptable" speech, even as governments and policymakers struggle
to contain them. These papers investigate sites ranging from cartoons to Facebook to national-level Internet
restrictions to explore new problems and new opportunities for expression.
4244
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon 7
Approaches to Transnational Media
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Divya C. McMillin, U of Washington - Tacoma, USA
Participants
Nollywood: A Multilevel Analysis of the International Flow of Nigerian Video Films
Enyonam Osei-Hwere, Ohio U, USA
Patrick Victor Osei-Hwere, Indiana U, USA
Reevaluate the "Alternative" Role of Ethnic Media in the U.S.: The Case of Chinese-Language Press and WorkingClass Women Readers
Yu Shi, Pennsylvania State U - Harrisburg, USA
Rethinking Global Media: Creative Diversity and Media Dispersal
Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Linage [I] and II: The Adventure of Local Online Games Towards Globalization
Dal Yong Jin, Simon Fraser U, CANADA
Theoretical Approaches and Methodological Strategies in Latin American Empirical Research on Television
Audiences: 1992-2007
Jose Carlos Lozano, Tecnologico de Monterrey, Campus Monterrey, MEXICO
Lorena Frankenberg, ITESM, MEXICO
In a Pickle: How Latino Newspapers Helped Fight the South's Antiunion Discourse and Won
Lisa M. Paulin, North Carolina Central U, USA
Respondent
Divya C. McMillin, U of Washington - Tacoma, USA
4250
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Ballroom East
Communications Scholars as Public Intellectuals: Challenges and Responsibilities
Theme Sessions
Chair
Kathryn C. Montgomery, American U, USA
Participants
Ellen Wartella, U of California - Riverside, USA
Yoram Peri, Tel-Aviv U, ISRAEL
Luiz Fernando Santoro, U de São Paulo/Memória Magnética Comunicações, BRAZIL
Patricia A. Aufderheide, American U, USA
Robert W. McChesney, U of Illinois, USA
Respondent
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Communication scholars have, potentially, a powerful role in making communication research relevant to policy
debates and public discussion of issues in both mainstream media and in the emerging open digital environment. The
public intellectual, an important figure in all academic disciplines, is someone who assumes the responsibility of
interacting with a wider public, not necessarily only to publicize or make popular core research knowledge but also to
negotiate the implementation of such knowledge. Communications is a discipline that has had, historically, many
public intellectuals. But in a heated media environment where strategists treat all interventions as political, what is the
responsible and ethical role they should play in the big issues of the day? Communications scholars need both
resources and access to do their research, and often negotiate with stakeholders to get them. They may also work
closely with stakeholders to define research that has utility in current debates. What is the appropriate relationship of
communications scholars, stakeholders and advocates in policy debates? Communications scholars' work and research
obligations rarely are timed to the needs of a heated public argument or a political or regulatory process. How do
communication scholars balance their multiple obligations and audiences? How do they define, sustain and delimit
their work as public intellectuals? The panelists are all communication scholars who have assumed the role of public
intellectuals, and who assess the coming challenges for public intellectuals in the communications field.
4251
Saturday
09:00-10:15
Salon 8
The Study of Communication in Russia: State and Perspectives
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Michael David Hazen, Wake Forest U, USA
Participants
The Discipline of Communication in US and Russia: Field Notes
Galina V. Sinekopova, Eastern Washington U, USA
Controversial Issues in Russian Communication Study
Olga Leontovich, Volgograd State Pedagogical U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Communicating Worldviews: Linguistic, Cultural, and Social Interaction
Irina Privalova, Saratov State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Authority in Communication
Viatcheslav B. Kashkin, Voronezh State U, RUSSIA
Social and Cultural Contexts of Internet-Based Research Communities
Irina Nickolaevna Rozina, RCA - Russian Communication Association, RUSSIA
Victoria I. Tuzlukova, Sultan Qaboos University, OMAN
Confronting Difficult Choices: Health Communication in Russia
John Parrish Sprowl, Indiana U-Purdue U Indianapolis, USA
Russia and the European Union: Intersubjective (Dis)Connections
Andrey Makarychev, Nizhny Novgorod Linguistic U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Respondent
Igor Klyukanov, Eastern Washington U, USA
This panel provides a picture of the current state of communication studies in Russia. The papers that are part of this
program reflect multiple perspectives on research and thinking about communication in Russia. The first paper, by
Sinekopova, provides a broad overview of the nature of the communication discipline by comparing its state in the
United States and Russia. Leontovich follows with a paper focusing on the issues facing the study of communication
in Russia with an introduction to various perspectives taken by Russian scholars. The third paper by Privalova
provides a theoretical perspective on the study of communication in Russia by exploring the work of various Russian
and western thinkers concerning the linguistic, cultural and social issues involved in communication studies. The
fourth paper by Kashkin explores the role of authority in Russian communication with a discussion of its various
forms and functions. The fifth and sixth papers focus on specific contextual areas of communication in Russia. Rozina
and Tuzlukova look at internet-based research communities and their relationship to the social and cultural contexts of
technology and its applications. The sixth paper by Parrish Sprowl examines the state and current practices of health
communication in Russia. And the final paper by Makarychev looks at interaction between Russia and the European
Union exploring zones of inter-subjective interaction. The sweep of the papers in this program provide a broad-based
snapshot of the state of communication research in Russia at the disciplinary, theoretical, message variable,
contextual, and international levels.
4260
Saturday
09:00-10:15
701
News Work Routines
Journalism Studies
Chair
Karin Puehringer, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Participants
Citizen Journalism: Access to Writers Versus Access to Sources?
Zvi Reich, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL
The Adversarial Moment: A Study of Short-Form Interviews in the News
Goran Bertil Eriksson, Orebro U, SWEDEN
Professional Imagination in Newspaper Newsrooms
Risto Kunelius, U of Tampere, FINLAND
Laura Ruusunoksa, U of Tampere, FINLAND
Privacy Reconsidered: A Conceptual Redefinition in the Context of Journalism Practice
Patrick Plaisance, Colorado State U, USA
Respondent
Natalie Fenton, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
This collection of papers re-examines professional routines and practices that shape journalism during an era of rapid
change in the culture of news gathering. In particular, presenters will offer insight into how the emergence of citizenjournalists, political correspondents as interpreters, and journalistic (re)definition of privacy disrupt old news routines.
4261
Saturday
09:00-10:15
705
Communication and Space: New Perspectives in Media Studies
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Amanda Elin Lagerkvist, Uppsala U, SWEDEN
Participants
Where does it take place? Communication Studies and Space
Inka Salovaara-Moring, U of Helsinki, FINLAND
Media Spatiality and the Spaces of Democracy
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Media, Space, Politics
Jenny Sunden, Royal Institute of Technology, SWEDEN
Researching Between the Air and the Ground: Footprint Analysis
Lisa Parks, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Texturation: A Cultural Materialist View of Media Space
André Jansson, professor, Department of Media and Communication, Karlstad U, SWEDEN
Building Community across the Rural-to-Urban-to-Virtual Transect
Susan Drucker, Hofstra U, USA
Gary Gumpert, Urban Communication Foundation, USA
Due to recent developments in our media cultures it is often alleged that we live in "spatial times" and that our global
media age is one of "time-space compression" or "de-territorialization". In challenging this fundamental myth about
placelessness, this roundtable discussion aims at showing the manifold, material, emplaced, embodied and power-
laden dimensions of how communication and space are co-implicated. Yet, incremental mediatization of everyday
life, society and urban culture does generate altered experiences of space and place dependent upon media. This
results in transformed appropriations and expanded notions of space in social life, including new experiences of
movement and distance. The panel will shed light on the burgeoning discussions on Communication Geography and
MediaSpace and bring out what a spatial turn implies - conceptually, theoretically and empirically - for media and
communication studies. How may a spatial analysis advance our understanding of media and communication and how
may we conceive of its future potential? How can we understand communication in terms of spatial production and
how can space itself be conceived of as communicative, heterogenous and processual? Leading scholars in this field
will address this through a range of astute short talks about how to study media infrastructures, the communicative
fabric of space itself, spatiotemporal perspectives on political communication geographies and local regional
identities in Eastern Europe, media spaces of democracy, feminist intersectional analyses of digital geographies, and
altered senses of community in urban communication cultures.
4262
Saturday
09:00-10:15
716
Mediation and Proper Distance
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Television, Proper Distance and the Face of Humanity
Paul Frosh, Hebrew U, ISRAEL
Suffering in Corporate Communication: Visibility and Agency in Aid Appeals
Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Proper Distance From Ourselves: Global Media and the Potential of 'New Visibility'
Shani Orgad, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Questioning the Desirability of Proximity
Daniel Dayan, C N R S - Paris, FRANCE
Respondent
John Durham Peters, U of Iowa, USA
"The unfamiliar is either pushed to a point beyond strangeness, beyond humanity; or it is drawn so close as to become
indistinguishable from ourselves… Proper distance preserves the other through difference as well as through shared
identity" (Roger Silverstone, Media and Morality, 2007, 172, 47) Silverstone's proper distance highlights the
importance of accounting for the problem of distance and proximity in our mediated interrelationships as moral
beings. How can we use the concept of proper distance to account for the media's role in the complex moral fabric of
the contemporary world? This panel will present four approaches addressing this question.
4263
Saturday
09:00-10:15
720
Modern Transnationalisms/Modern Citizenships
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Federico Subervi, Texas State U, USA
Participants
Constructed Global Space, Constructed Citizenship
Micky Lee, Suffolk U, USA
Intersectionality of Identity: The Case of Young Muslim American Women in Western Massachusetts
Liliya Valeryevna Karimova, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Multicultural and Transnational: Channel 4 and "Celebrity Big Brother 2007" in the UK
Shehina Fazal, London Metropolitian U, UNITED KINGDOM
Transnational and Domesticated Use of Racial Hierarchy: Representations of Blacks in Japan
Atsushi Tajima, SUNY - Geneseo, USA
Transnationalism: A Modern-Day Challenge to Canadian Multiculturalism
Aysha Mawani, McGill U, CANADA
4264
Saturday
09:00-10:15
728
A World of Learning: The Educational Impact of Sesame Street in Bangladesh, Kosovo, and the United States
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Charlotte Cole, Sesame Workshop, USA
Participants
The Positive Relations between Exposure to Sisimpur and Children's Outcomes over Time
June Lee, Sesame Workshop, USA
Teaching Tolerance in Post-Conflict Zones: The Educational Impact of Rruga Sesam/Ulica Sezam in Kosovo
Ilana Umansky, Sesame Workshop, USA
The Word on Sesame Street is Vocabulary!
Jennifer Anne Kotler, Sesame Workshop, USA
Jennifer Schiffman, Sesame Workshop, USA
Rosemarie T. Truglio, Sesame Workshop, USA
Sesame Street has been entertaining and educating children all over the world. In many countries, Sesame Street
exists as an adaptation that features locally created content, such as Sisimpur in Bangladesh and Rruga Sesam/Ulica
Sezam in Kosovo. This panel reviews recent research on the educational impact of Sesame Street in Bangladesh,
Kosovo, and the United States across a variety of domains. The studies show that television programming that is
educationally sound and culturally relevant can positively affect children's learning.
4266
Saturday
09:00-10:15
820
Meet the Editors of ICA Publications
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Mohan Jyoti Dutta, Purdue U, USA
Participants
Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA
Jake Harwood, U of Arizona, USA
Michael J. Cody, U of Southern California, USA
Kevin B. Wright, U of Oklahoma, USA
Karen Ross, Liverpool U, UNITED KINGDOM
Charles Salmon, Michigan State U, USA
Mike West, International Communication Association, USA
This panel provides the membership with the opportunity to meet the editors of ICA's journals and the
Communication Yearbook. This session is devoted to answering and addressing issues that the membership may have
about specific publications.
4310
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon A
Activating the Public Voice Through the Press and New Media
Mass Communication
Chair
Roger Cooper, Ohio U, USA
Participants
Collective Voice in Letters of the Alternative Press
Curt Yowell, U of Houston, USA
Public Deliberation on the Web: Readers' Comments in the Iraq War Blogosphere
Nan Zheng, U of Texas, USA
Mark Tremayne, U of Texas, USA
Jae Kook Lee, U of Texas, USA
Jaekwan Jeong, U of Texas, USA
Globalization of Gendered Public Interests: Political, Socioeconomic, and Cultural Determination of Gendered
Worldwide Internet Queries
Reaz Mahmood, U of North Carolina, USA
Yongick Jeong, Louisiana State U, USA
From the "Anonymous Audience" to the "Informed Citizen": The Future of Media Society and the Debate on Digital
Television in Italy
Cinzia Padovani, Southern Illinois U, USA
The Effect Seekers: A Case Study on Hungarian Audiences' Response to Excessively Partisan Media
Peter Csigo, Budapest U of Technology, HUNGARY
4311
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon B
Persuasion, Attitude Change, and Mediated Messages
Mass Communication
Information Systems
Chair
Jakob D. Jensen, Purdue U, USA
Participants
Changing Health Behaviours: Rational and Experiential Responses to Persuasive Mass Media Messages
Sally Margaret Dunlop, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Yoshihisa Kashima, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Melanie A. Wakefield, The Cancer Council Victoria, AUSTRALIA
How People Process Divisive Media Messages: Testing the Multiple-Motive Heuristic-Systematic Model
Jooyoung Kim, U of Georgia, USA
Hye-Jin Paek, U of Georgia, USA
What's Relevance Got To Do With It? A Moderated Mediation Exploration of the Appeal of Personalization in
Websites
Namyoung Kim, Louisiana State U, USA
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
How Mass Media Communication About Natural Disasters Facilitates Helping Behavior: A Structural Equation
Modeling Analysis
Lyudmila Popova, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Donation to Disaster Relief Media Campaigns: Underlying Social Cognitive Factors Exposed
Ard Heuvelman, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Oscar Peters, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
4312
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon C
The Social Impact of Online Games
Game Studies
Chair
Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Participants
Online Gaming's Impact on Real Life: Findings From Qualitative and Quantitative Studies on Online Gaming
Thorsten Quandt, Free U - Berlin, GERMANY
Jeffrey Wimmer, Institute for Communication Science, GERMANY
Becoming a Virtual Tycoon: Motivations for Economic Activity in Virtual Worlds
Sven Joeckel, TU Ilmenau, GERMANY
Daniel Schultheiss, TU Ilmenau, GERMANY
"That Dude is Good!" Gender Bias in Online Video Games
Allison L. Eden, Michigan State U, USA
Nicholas David Bowman, Michigan State U, USA
Erin K. Maloney, Michigan State U, USA
Value Orientations in Virtual Online Communities? An Empirical Study Among Adolescents
Jens Wolling, Ludwig-Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY
Christina Schumann, TU Ilmenau, GERMANY
Online gaming is not only an entertainment option for a growing number of gamers but through the potential different
forms of online gaming offer to connect users on a world wide basis, online gaming has developed into a
communication activity that has a serious impact on social life. This panel addresses different areas where online
gaming may impinge on the way we see the world (economy, value systems, gender roles) Combining different
theoretical and methodological approaches this panel scrutinizes in how far real life is shaped by different forms of
online gaming. Focusing on the question how online gaming is embedded in the user's everyday life, inclusion
patterns are shown and possible, negative outcomes for extreme users are discussed. The relationship between virtual
and real life economies is analysed and motivations for becoming economically active in virtual worlds are deduced.
The influence one's performance in different forms of online games on the perception of gender roles is interrogated
in the light of the perceived 'boyness' of online gaming as a leisure activity. The way social values are reflected in
virtual worlds is analysed on a cross-cultural basis, asking the question in how far online gaming has developed into a
laboratory for identity work. The aim of the panel is to illustrate possible positive and negative outcomes of online
gaming for real life societies.
4320
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Lamartine
Highly Ranked Competitive Papers in Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Steve T. Mortenson, U of Delaware, USA
Participants
An Investigation of the Mediating Role of Superior-Subordinate Communication Practices on Relations Between
LMX and Commitment to Workgroup in a Malaysian Organization
Hassan Abu Bakar, U of Utara, MALAYSIA
Che Su Mustaffa, U of Utara, MALAYSIA
The Social Impact of Ethnocentrism: A Cross-Cultural Comparison
Margaret Miller Butcher, Fort Hays State U, USA
Carrol Haggard, Fort Hays State U, USA
Use of Native American Names and Imagery in Sports: A Cross-Cultural Survey of Offensiveness
Fraser Leveay, Texas State U, USA
Coy Callison, Texas State U, USA
Ann Rodriguez, Texas State U, USA
"Why Are You Shoving This Stuff Down Our Throats?": Preparing Intercultural Educators to Challenge Racism
Julia R. Johnson, Southwestern U, USA
Marc Rich, CSU Long Beach, USA
Aaron Castelan Cargile, California State U, USA
Respondent
Steve T. Mortenson, U of Delaware, USA
4321
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Kafka
Top Student Papers in Public Relations
Public Relations
Chair
Julie Lellis, Emerson College, USA
Participants
Increasing a Nation's Diplomatic Capabilities Through Relationship Management: Public Relations Contributions to
Middle Power Diplomacies
Baiba Petersone, U of Georgia, USA
Image Repair in a Food Health Crisis
Sunyoung Lee, U of North Carolina, USA
Ruth Ann Weaver Lariscy, U of Georgia, USA
The State of Strategic Communications in Small Advocacy Groups: Best Practices, Challenges, and Trends
Katja Wittke, American U, USA
Creating Recognition for Employee Recognition: A Case Study on Marketing Persuasion, Public Relations, and
Branding
Brian G. Smith, U of Maryland, USA
4322
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Hemon
The Use of Complexity Science in Applied Organizational Settings
Organizational Communication
Chair
Larry D. Browning, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Participants
The Role of Large Group Methods in Facilitating Communication Between Agents in Conditions of Complexity
Mary Boone, Mary, Boone Associates, USA
Innovation Management as Emerging Communicative Processes: Experiences From the Statoil SIOR R&D Program
Tone Merethe Berg Aasen, Norwegian U of Science and Technology (NTNU), NORWAY
Stig Johannessen, Norwegian U of Science and Technology (NTNU), NORWAY
Living with Complexity: The Emergence of Leader Identity and the Paradox of Detached Involvement in a Hospital
Merger
John H. Tobin, The Waterbury Hospital, USA
What if High North Energy Exploitation Fails? A Complexity Analysis of What Can Go Wrong
Jan-Oddvar Sørnes, Bodø U, NORWAY
Larry D. Browning, U of Texas, USA
Stig Johannessen, Norwegian U of Science and Technology, NORWAY
Respondent
James R. Taylor, U de Montreal, CANADA
One of the fastest growing interest areas in the study of organizations is the study of complexity. The relevance of
complexity concepts in organizational communication studies has in recent time taken two main courses, one
exploring the meaning of complexity in terms of complex adaptive systems and one in terms of complex responsive
processes. Both views depart significantly from mainstream ideas of how the evolution of organizations can be
understood, but they also develop different ideas between them concerning how to formulate our understanding of
such evolution. The papers for this session make use of these perspectives and vary from the study of hospital
mergers, oil and gas exploration near the North Pole, leadership education fore executives, and the culture of a Stateowned petroleum company in Norway.
4323
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Jarry
High-Density Paper Session: Histories of Broadcasting
Communication History
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA
Participants
Compromising the Idea of National Broadcasting: Canadian and Finnish Communications Policy in the Late 1990s
Johanna Jaasaari, U of Helsinki, FINLAND
Mixing Nationality and Language: Montreal Radio in the 1930s
Anne Frances MacLennan, York U, CANADA
More Than a Supporting Role: Marion Keisker, Gender, Radio History
Melissa D. Meade, Colby-Sawyer College, USA
The Last Yet Also The First Creative Act In Television? An Historical Analysis of PSB Scheduling Strategies and
Tactics: The Case of Flemish Television
Hildegarde D. Y. Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
The Merchandizable TV Text and the Failures of Institutional Memory: The Green Hornet (1965)
Avi Santo, Old Dominion U, USA
The Radiola and the Radiotron: Localising Global Products in Early Radio Broadcasting
Jock Given, Institute for Social Research, Swinburne U, AUSTRALIA
4324
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Joyce
Scanning and Seeking Cancer Information
Health Communication
Chair
Steven Michael Giles, Wake Forest U, USA
Participants
The Effects of Seeking and Scanning on Behavioral Intention:
Chul-joo Lee, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Shawnika Jeanine Hull, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Cancer Information Scanning and Seeking in the General Population
Bridget J. Kelly, RTI International, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Anca Romantan, U of Pennsylvania, USA
J. Sanford Schwartz, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Katrina Armstrong, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Angela DeMichele, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Martin Fishbein, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Stacy Gray, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Shawnika Jeanine Hull, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Annice Kim, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Rebekah Nagler, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Jeff Niederdeppe, U of Wisconsin, USA
A Susana Ramirez, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Aaron Smith-McCallen, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Norman C. H. Wong, U of Oklahoma, USA
Use of the Risk Perception Attitude (RPA) Framework to Understand Information Seeking and Breast-Cancer
Prevention Behaviors
Rajiv N. Rimal, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Hee-Soon Juon, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Meena Somanchi, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Validating Measures of Scanned Information Exposure in the Context of Cancer Prevention and Screening Behaviors
Bridget J. Kelly, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Jeff Niederdeppe, U of Wisconsin, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
4325
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Musset
Accomodation and Attraction
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Nicholas A. Palomares, U of California - Davis, USA
Participants
Attraction in Context: How Contextual Differences in Personal and Social Attraction Affect Communication
Accommodation Behavior
Carmen M. Lee, Michigan State U, USA
Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Beauty and the Flirt: Attractiveness and Approaches to Relationship Initiation
Jeffrey A. Hall, U of Kansas, USA
Michael J. Cody, U of Southern California, USA
Grace Jackson, U of Southern California, USA
Jacqueline O Flesh, U of Southern California, USA
The Contribution of Different Socializing Agents to Emerging Adults' Sexuality: The Role of Parents, Best Friends,
Romantic Partners, and Television Personalities
Rene M. Dailey, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Keren Eyal, The Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya, ISRAEL
Responses to Jealousy Situations That Evoke Uncertainty in Married and Dating Relationships
Carrie Delane Kennedy-Lightsey, West Virginia U, USA
Melanie Booth-Butterfield, West Virginia U, USA
Respondent
Nicholas A. Palomares, U of California - Davis, USA
4326
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Dickens
Business Meeting: Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgendered Studies Interest Group
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies
Chairs
David J. Phillips, U of Toronto, CANADA
Lynn A. Comella, U Nevada - Las Vegas, USA
4330
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon 1
Understanding the Impact of Media Exposure on the Effectiveness of International Public Diplomacy
Political Communication
Chair
Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Participants
Anti-Americanism as a Communication Problem? Media Effects, Public Opinion, and Public Diplomacy in Europe
and the Middle East
Erik C. Nisbet, Cornell U, USA
James Shanahan, Fairfield U, USA
The Relation of Ethnic-Political Violence in the News Media to Hostile Worldviews and Prejudicial Beliefs: The
Importance of Identifying with Real-World Actors
Paul Boxer, Rutgers U and U of Michigan, USA
Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA
Dubow Eric, Bowling Green State U and U of Michigan, USA
Jeremy Ginges, New School for Social Research, USA
Adrienne McFaul, Rutgers U, USA
What Shapes the US Image in the world? Deviance, Personal Experience, Mass Media
Pamela J. Shoemaker, Syracuse U, USA
Xiuli Wang, Syracuse U, USA
Hyunjin Seo, Syracuse U, USA
Philip Johnson, Syracuse U, USA
Modeling the Schema of Muslim Populations with Respect to the U.S.-Led War on Terror: Media Images as
Important Schema Building Blocks.
Michael G. Elasmar, Boston U, USA
Respondent
Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA
There was a time when much of international public diplomacy took place among diplomats and opinion leaders of
various countries. Today, international public diplomacy entails explicit and implicit messages sent by a government
in one country to members of a general public in another country for the purpose of shaping their attitudes toward
some aspect of the sending country. What are the factors that affect international attitudes and what role, if any, do the
international media networks play in this context? This panel consists of four paper presentation, each of which
explores a different angle and sheds additional light on this same problem.
4332
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon 3
Voting and Deliberation
Political Communication
Chair
Anne-Katrin Arnold, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Participants
More Than Wishful Thinking: Causes and Consequences of Voters' Expectations About Election Outcomes
Michael F. Meffert, U Mannheim, GERMANY
Sascha Huber, U Mannheim, GERMANY
Thomas Gschwend, U Mannheim, GERMANY
Franz Urban Pappi, U Mannheim, GERMANY
The Disenchanted Voter: Emotional Appeals, Class Polarization, and Voter Turnout in Mexico
Sallie L. Hughes, U of Miami, USA
Manuel Alejandro Guerrero Martinez, Universidad Iberoamericana, MEXICO
The Readjustment of E-Campaign Practices: A Case Study of the Korean Presidential Election of 2007
Yeon-ok Lee, Royal Holloway, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
Han Woo Park, YeungNam U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Deliberation, Constraint, and Complexity
Vincent Price, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Anne-Katrin Arnold, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Young Min Min Baek, U of Pennsylvannia, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
4333
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon 4
Gender and Technology in Contemporary Popular and Experimental Musics
Feminist Scholarship
Popular Communication
Participants
Let's Pretend We're Married: The Love-Hate Relationship With Gender and Technology in Prince's Music
Dana Baitz, York U, CANADA
"What for me constitutes life in a sound?": Encounters of Gender, Nature, and Technology in Synthesized Sound
Tara S Rodgers, McGill U, CANADA
Reluctant Warrior(s)?: Reflections on Indigenity, Gender, and Technology in Canadian Hip Hop
Charity Marsh, U of Regina, CANADA
Performing Revolution: Discourses of Race, Gender and Transnational Identity in M.I.A's Arular and Kaya
Jane C. Park, U of Oklahoma, USA
Respondent
Andra McCartney, Concordia U, CANADA
This panel addresses the ICA 2008 theme of "Communicating for Social Impact" by examining the politics of gender
and technology in contemporary music practices. It assembles scholars working across disciplinary methods and
theoretical approaches, including feminist and queer theory, postcolonial studies, ethnography, popular musicology,
and communication and cultural studies. Several panelists also have experience in music performance and/or audio
technology, and thus bring practical insights to the discussion. Some questions to be explored include the following.
How have music technologies historically been articulated to cultural constructions of masculinity and femininity? In
what ways do musicians challenge traditionally gendered understandings of music technology? And how do gendered
aspects of music technologies intersect with politics of race, nation, class, and sexuality? Dana Baitz begins by
examining the interplay between gender and technology in the songs of pop music artist Prince. Tara Rodgers
continues the thread of gender and technology in her discussion of electronic music by female artists Christina
Kubisch, Annea Lockwood, Chantal Passamonte and Jessica Rylan. Likwise Charity Marsh focuses on the work of
female indigenous Canadian hip-hop artists, Eekwol and Kinnie Star, looking at how both artists position themselves
as racialized and gendered subjects within the hip hop industry and culture. And Jane Park ends with readings of
British Sri Lankan pop star M.I.A's songs and performances, focusing on how they draw on a variety of musical
forms, including hip hop, dancehall, reggae and pop to create a distinctive musical style used to critique racism,
sexism and imperialism.
4334
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon 5
Media and Morality: The Ethics of Contemporary Media Production and Consumption
Popular Communication
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Lynn Schofield Clark, U of Denver, USA
Participants
Engaging the Moral Imagination by Watching Television: Transcending the Gendered Conceptions of Television and
Morality
Tonny Krijnen, Erasmus U - Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Imaginary User Modes and the Moral of Everyday Life
Stina Bengtsson, Södertörn U College, SWEDEN
From a Distance: Marginalization of the Poor in Television Ads for Goodwill Industries
Ronald C. Bishop, III, Drexel U, USA
What's the Point of this Film? What's the Point of this Genre? Analyzing Moral Messages of Genre Films
Helena Bilandzic, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Freya Sukalla, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Fabian Herrmann, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Susanne Kinnebrock, U of Vienna, GERMANY
Ethics Remixed: How Today's Media Consumers Evaluate the Role of Creative Reappropriation
Aram A. Sinnreich, New York U, USA
Mark Latonero, California State U - Fullerton, USA
Marissa Gluck, Radar Research, USA
4340
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Drummond West
High Density Session: Information Processing of Media II
Information Systems
Chair
Samuel D. Bradley, Texas Tech U, USA
Participants
I Ran in for Toothpaste But I Spent $200: Using the Galileo Model to Understand Consumer Spending Attitudes and
Produce Effective Debt Counseling Messages
Leslie D Dinauer, U of Maryland U College, USA
Exploring Anger as a Mediator of the Hostile Media Effect
Laura M. Arpan, Florida State U, USA
Robin Nabi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Nuances About the Role and Impact of Affect in Inoculation
Michael Pfau, U of Oklahoma, USA
Shane Michael Semmler, U of Oklahoma, USA
Leslie M. Deatrick, University of Oklahoma, USA
Alicia Mason, U of Oklahoma, USA
Gwen Nisbett, U of Oklahoma, USA
Lindsay T. Lane, U of Oklahoma, USA
Elizabeth Ann Craig, U of Oklahoma, USA
Jill Corneilius, U of Maryland, USA
John A. Banas, U of Oklahoma, USA
Selective Reading of Business Reports: Effects of Graphic and Verbal Advance Organizers
Luuk Lagerwerf, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Responses to Organizational Mandates: Psychological Reactance, Dissent, Voice, and Negative Information
Processing
Willona Olison, DePaul U, USA
Michael E. Roloff, Northwestern U
Reconceptualizing Dependence: Finding a Place for Psychophysiological Correlates Within Media Systems
Dependency Theory
Wendy A. Maxian, Texas Tech U, USA
How Much Is Too Much? Media Structure, Content, and Cognitive Load, and Overload
Satoko Kurita, Indiana U - Bloomington, USA
Sungkyoung Lee, Indiana U, USA
Zheng Joyce Wang, Ohio State U, USA
Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA
That's Just Typical: A Psychophysiological Investigation of Cognitive Processing Along the Perceived Reality
Continuum
Wes Wise, Texas Tech U, USA
E. N. Siegrist, Texas State U, USA
Jessica D. Freeman, Texas State U, USA
Wendy A. Maxian, Texas Tech U, USA
Samuel D. Bradley, Texas Tech U, USA
4341
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Drummond Centre
Charting, Tracking, and Mapping: The Use of New Information Technologies in the Professions
Communication and Technology
Chair
Richard Maxwell, CUNY - Queens College, USA
Participants
"Real-time Patient Tracking and Work Flow in Hospital Emergency Departments"
Daniel Edward McGee, Virginia Commonwealth U Medical Center, USA
"Visual Information Overload and the Labor of Surveillance"
Kelly Gates, U of California - San Diego, USA
"Crime and the Politics of Mapping"
Aurora Wallace, New York U, USA
"Journalist or Panderer? Investigating Underage Web Cam Sites"
Gretchen Soderlund, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA
Respondent
Richard Maxwell, CUNY - Queens College, USA
The rapid advances in information technologies over the last two decades has offered the promise of revolutionizing
the workplace by expanding the capabilities of individuals working in various professions and allowing for the
seemingly infinite catchment and infinitesimal account of human actions. This panel explores how new information
technologies used in medicine, journalism, criminal justice, and surveillance workplaces not only create unanticipated
problems of a surprising magnitude, but also alter the social and spatial dimensions of these professions.
4342
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Drummond East
Online Self-Presentation and Impression Management
Communication and Technology
Chair
Eun-Ju Lee, Seoul National U, USA
Participants
Self-Generated vs. Other-Generated Statements and Impressions in Computer-Mediated Communication: A Facebook
Test of Warranting Theory
Joseph B. Walther, Michigan State U, USA
Brandon Lee Van Der Heide, Michigan State U, USA
Lauren Hamel, Michigan State U, USA
Hillary Shulman, Michigan State U, USA
Putting Your Best Face Forward: The Accuracy of Online Dating Photographs
Catalina Laura Toma, Cornell U, USA
Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA
"The Wurst" Meets "Fatless" in MySpace: The Relationship Between Self-Esteem, Personality, and Self-Presentation
in an Online Community
Barbara Banczyk, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Nicole C. Krämer, U of Duisburg - Essen, GERMANY
Maria Nikolaeva Senokozlieva, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Chronemic Nonverbal Expectancy Violations in Written Computer-Mediated Communication
Yoram M. Kalman, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Sheizaf Rafaeli, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
4343
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon 6
Limiting Speech: Defamation, Libel, Hate Speech, and Government Speech
Communication Law & Policy
Chair
Laura Stein, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Participants
Government Speech in Ireland, Australia, and the U.S.A.
Edward L. Carter, Brigham Young U, USA
Kevin Ray Kemper, U of Arizona, USA
James Phillips, Brigham Young U, USA
That's Enough 'Nigger': An Argument for Regulating Hate Speech
Lanier Frush Holt, Indiana U, USA
Defining Defamation: Community in the Age of the Internet
Amy Kristin Sanders, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
Sex, Lies, and Internet: The Unexplored Landscape of Criminal Libel in an American State
David Pritchard, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA
Andrew Pease, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Respondent
Laura Stein, U of Texas - Austin, USA
These four papers investigate different dimensions of public speech, ranging across some of the ways that the Internet
produces new dilemmas for libel and defamation, how hate speech might be regulated, and how different
governments approach speech.
4344
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon 7
Mobile Phones, Social Spaces, and Technology Appropriation in Low-Income Communities and the
Developing World
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Adriana A. de Souza e Silva, North Carolina State U, USA
Participants
Mobile Technology Appropriation and Innovation: Learning From the Edges
Francois Bar, U of Southern California, USA
Mind the Gap: Mobile Phone Adoption and Appropriation in Ghana
Araba B. Sey, U of Southern California, USA
(Im)mobile Mobility: Mobile Phones and Rural-to Urban Migrant Workers in Beijing
Cara J. Wallis, U of Southern California, USA
Mobile Technologies in Low-Income Communities: Rethinking the Digital Divide From the Favelas of Rio de Janeiro
Adriana A. de Souza e Silva, North Carolina State U, USA
Fernando Salis, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, BRAZIL
Respondent
Sarah Banet-Weiser, U of Southern California, USA
This panel focuses on issues of use, identity, and cultural appropriation of mobile phones as social technologies. With
an international and transcultural approach, the papers explore different local contexts, with the ultimate goal of
achieving a global view that encompasses the use and appropriation of mobile technologies by low-income
communities in distinctive parts of the world. Papers propose a theoretical framework to analyze appropriation and
review cases of mobile technology appropriation in the developing world, and at the margins of the developed world,
to explore their profoundly innovative character; examine the deployment and cultural appropriation of mobile phone
services in Ghana; explore how young rural-to-urban migrants working in the low-level service sector in Beijing
(China) engage with mobile phones to navigate their identity and autonomy in the city; and analyze mobile
technology uses and appropriation as collective technologies in the low-income favelas of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil).
4350
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Ballroom East
Communication Innovation in Conflict, Collaboration, Deliberation, and Dialogue
Theme Sessions
Chair
Mark Aakhus, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
Linda Stamato, Rutgers U, USA
Linda L. Putnam, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Tim Kuhn, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
Sandy Jaffe, Rutgers U, USA
Stanley A. Deetz, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA
This roundtable explores opportunities for innovation in communication practice by considering the work
practitioners perform at the nexus of policy, business, and non-governmental action and the meaning of this work for
communication research. These practitioners work in the space where governance happens as they make choices
about how individuals, groups, organizations, and communities will be involved in managing collective risks and in
shaping shared opportunities. What do these practitioners know that is of interest to communication researchers and
what do they want/need to know from communication research?
4351
Saturday
10:30-11:45
Salon 8
Defining Quality in Communication Research and Education: Panel Convened by ECREA
Sponsored Sessions
Chairs
Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles ULB, BELGIUM
Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA
Participants
Kirsten Drotner, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK
Arnaud Mercier, U Paul Verlaine, FRANCE
Karen Ross, Liverpool U, UNITED KINGDOM
Jan Servaes, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Cees J. Hamelink, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
At a time of scarce resources for education and research, institutions, teams and individuals are ever more subject to a
diversity of evaluation procedures. Be it to publish, present in a conference, obtain a grant or fund a project, be it to
maintain or amend an academic curriculum or harmonise higher education, the processes, criteria and actors
mobilised to evaluate the quality of research and education are feeding fierce debates. Communication research and
education is no exception. This panel will reflect on the very notion of "quality" in the area of communication
research and education. Based on experience and considerations from front line actors in fours key areas where
evaluation is crucial and challenging.
4360
Saturday
10:30-11:45
701
Processing the News: Experimental Research Findings
Journalism Studies
Information Systems
Chair
Henrik Ornebring, Oxford U, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
"Do You Believe This Story?!"
Kjerstin Thorson, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Emily K. Vraga, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Brian Ekdale, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
The Persuasion Power of Numbers in News Articles
Willem M. Koetsenruijter, U of Leiden, THE NETHERLANDS
The Media in the Spotlight: Effects of Strategic Metacoverage on Political Cynicism and Participation
Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Matthijs Elenbaas, U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Respondent
Esther Thorson, U of Missouri, USA
Four studies report on the impact of several news message characteristics on cognition. One paper examines how
evaluations of news stories are affected by evaluations of adjacent messages. Another reports that disruptive
advertisements, while rated as annoying, did not interfere with comprehension of news articles. A third one addresses
the use of numbers and statistics in news. Although research shows they are often misunderstood, poorly
remembered, and do little to influence opinion, this study found that numbers do increase ethos and enhance news
credibility. The final presentation is about the influence of strategic and publicity news exposure on political
cynicism.
4361
Saturday
10:30-11:45
705
Journalism Ethics
Journalism Studies
Chair
Steffen Burkhardt, Hamburg Media School, GERMANY
Participants
In the Interest of Full Disclosure: Transparency at The New York Times
Kyle Heim, U of Missouri, USA
Stephanie L. Craft, U of Missouri, USA
"Memory-Work": Communitarian Ethics and Newspaper Coverage of the Fifth Anniversary of September 11
Theresa Rose Crapanzano, U of Colorado, USA
YouTube and Mainstream Journalism: Strange Bedfellows?
Jacques DM Gimeno, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Ethics Gaps and Ethics Gains: Differences and Similarities in Journalism Students' Perceptions of Plagiarism and
Fabrication
Michael Conway, Indiana U, USA
Jacob Jacob Groshek, Indiana U, USA
Respondent
Theodore L. Glasser, Stanford U, USA
This session offers evidence and ideas related to the challenges for journalism ethics in a converging news media age
and beyond. Presenters will report results from news content analyses, a survey of future journalists, and a textual
analysis of conversations between news consumers and online news editors.
4362
Saturday
10:30-11:45
716
Communication Warfare as Social Impact: Residual and Emergent Models
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Jack Zeljko Bratich, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
The Rumor Bomb, Convergence Culture and American Post-politics
Jayson Harsin, American U of Paris, FRANCE
When Collective Intelligence Agencies Collide: Public vs. Popular Intelligence, the Secret Sphere, and Network
Antagonisms
Jack Zeljko Bratich, Rutgers U, USA
Towers as Targets: Communication Ruins in Afghanistan and Iraq
Lisa Parks, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
"TV Freedom" and other Experiments for "Advancing" Liberal Democracy in Iraq
James Hay, U of Illinois, USA
Respondent
Tiziana Terranova, U of Essex, UNITED KINGDOM
This panel theorizes the changing relation between communication and warfare by examining a range of governing
strategies, social actors and technologies that comprise contemporary communication warfare. Panelists discuss the
physical destruction of communication infrastructure, developments in interactive rumor diffusion, the clash of
collective intelligence agencies, and the export of US media models. The panel highlights the concept of the "public"
in, as well as the material dimension of, communication warfare.
4363
Saturday
10:30-11:45
720
Contemporary Orientalisms: Engaging Islam
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Larissa J. Faulkner, Brock U, CANADA
Participants
Ethnic Identification and Religiosity: An Analysis of Muslims and Non-Muslims in France and Britain
Stephen Michael Croucher, Bowling Green State U, USA
Jacob Stephen Turner, Bowling Green State U, USA
Samara Anarbaeva, Bowling Green State U, USA
Deepa Oommen, Bowling Green State U, USA
Ian M Borton, Bowling Green State U, USA
Framing Islam: Media Constructions of the Middle East Post-9/11 (Top Paper)
Deepa Kumar, Rutgers U, USA
Global City, Diverse Wealth: A Discursive Analysis of 'Muslims in London'
Christopher Finlay, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Legitimating the Ban on the Muslim Headscarf in French Public Schools
Shazia Iftkhar, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
The Veil, the Sun, and the Politics of Islamophobia
Gholam Khiabany, London Metropolitan U, UNITED KINGDOM
Milly Williamson, Brunel U, UNITED KINGDOM
4364
Saturday
10:30-11:45
728
4366
Saturday
10:30-11:45
820
Children, Adolescents, and the Media: Organizational Kick-Off Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
The aim of this organizational meeting of the interest group Children, Adolescents and the Media (CAM) is to elect
temporary officers, to outline some important future plans of CAM, and, more importantly, to celebrate the kick-off
of CAM! The children and media group at ICA has been scattered over many other divisions for a long time. The new
interest group CAM will provide this group of researchers with many new possibilities for collaboration and growth.
Please join our organizational kick-off meeting and join interest group # 24: Children, Adolescents, and the Media at
ICA!
Communication, Culture, & Critique Editorial Board Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Karen Ross, Liverpool U, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Alina Bernstein, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL
Angharad N. Valdivia, U of Illinois, USA
Anita Ruth Biressi, Roehampton U, UNITED KINGDOM
Annabelle Sreberny-Mohammadi, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM
Annette Hill, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
Arnold S. De Beer, Potchefstroom U, SOUTH AFRICA
Robert W. McChesney, U of Illinois, USA
Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA
Christina Slade, Macquarie U, AUSTRALIA
Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM
Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM
Dafna Lemish, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL
Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
Denis McQuail, U of Southampton, UNITED KINGDOM
Donald R. Browne, U of Minnesota, USA
Douglas Storey, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg, USA
Elizabeth Bird, U of South Florida, USA
Ellen Riordan, Gustavus Adolphus College, USA
Eric Louw, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Gertrude J. Robinson, McGill U, CANADA
Isabel Molina Guzman, U of Illinois, USA
Jacqueline Bobo, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
James Curran, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
Jane Anne Arthurs, U of the West of England, UNITED KINGDOM
Jenny Kitzinger, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM
Justin Lewis, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM
Katharine Sarikakis, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Katherine Sender, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Kevin G. Barnhurst, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA
Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA
Leslie Steeves, U of Oregon, USA
Linda C. Steiner, U of Maryland, USA
Lisa M. McLaughlin, Miami U - Ohio, USA
Marian J. Meyers, Georgia State U, USA
Margaret Gallagher, , UNITED KINGDOM
Michael X. Delli Carpini, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Min-Sun Kim, U of Hawaii - Manoa, USA
Natalie Fenton, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Nico Carpentier, Vrije U Brussel, BELGIUM
Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Bowling Green State U, USA
Radha S. Hegde, New York U, USA
Raymond Boyle, U of Glasgow, UNITED KINGDOM
Robin Mansell, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Romy Froehlich, U of Munich, GERMANY
Shelton A. Gunaratne, Minnesota State U - Moorhead, USA
Sherry Lynn Ferguson, U of Ottawa, CANADA
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Stuart Allan, U of the West of England – Bristol, UNITED KINGDOM
Stephen Coleman, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM
Sujata Moorti, Middlebury College, USA
Thomas Tufte, Roskilde U, DENMARK
Todd Joseph Miles Holden, Tohoku U, JAPAN
Ulla Carlsson, Goteborg U - Nordicom, SWEDEN
Ullamaija Kivikuru, U of Helsinki, FINLAND
Virginia Anne Nightingale, U of Western Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Yoo Jae Song, Ewha Woman's U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
4440
Saturday
12:00-13:15
Drummond West
Projections for the Future From Reflections on the Past: A New ICA Fellows Forum on Communication - II
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
Making Communication Count
John Daly, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Hard Problems in Health Communication and Identity: Issues for the Future
Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
From Cultivation to Participation: Rethinking Media and Culture
Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
ICA honors its New Fellows each year with a special program that focuses on their life work and contributions to the
field of communication. This year the New ICA Fellows will offer their insights, expectations, and concerns about the
future of communication based upon their past involvement in our collective efforts to make us the discipline we are
today.
4441
Saturday
12:00-13:15
Drummond Centre
Linking Scholars to Communication Policymaking: The COMPASS Experience
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Robert W. McChesney, U of Illinois, USA
Participants
Michael X. Delli Carpini, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Hope Maylene Cummings, U of Michigan, USA
Russell A. Newman, U of Southern California, USA
Bernie Sanders, U.S. Senate, USA
In 2006 four leading research universities launched a program, COMPASS, to place PhD students in Congressional
offices to work on communication policy issues. The purpose is to improve policy scholarship and to bring academic
research to communication policymaking. This session will discuss the program and its vision for the future.
4442
Saturday
12:00-13:15
Drummond East
Beyond Moore: Considering the Resurgence of Political Documentary Films
Theme Sessions
Chair
Christian Christensen, Karlstad U, SWEDEN
Participants
Emily Russo, Co-Founder & Co-President, Zeitgeist Films, USA
Sean Farnel, Director of Programming, Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, CANADA
Respondents
Christian Christensen, Karlstad U, SWEDEN
Jeffrey P. Jones, Old Dominion U, USA
After a number of years in the popular culture wilderness, the political documentary has made a comeback with films
such as Fahrenheit 9/11, Control Room, Taxi to the Dark Side, The Corporation and Outfoxed. In this panel,
representatives of the film industry and academia will consider this resurgence in relation to the conference theme.
Invited panelists include Emily Russo, co-President and co-founder of Zeitgeist Films (the US distribution arm for
award-winning documentaries such as The Corporation, Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media, Mr.
Conservative - Goldwater on Goldwater, and My Country, My Country), and Sean Farnel, the Director of
Programming for Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, North America's largest documentary film
festival.
4450
Saturday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Engaged, Digital, Unique - Models for Community Media Initiatives
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Katherine Baulu, National Film Board of Canada, CANADA
Participants
Susan Nosov, National Film Board of Canada, CANADA
Daniel Cross, Executive Producer, Homelessnation.org, CANADA
Reisa Levine, CitizenShift, CANADA
The National Film Board of Canada is a leader in creating and distributing social issue documentaries. Under the
theme 'Whose media is it, anyway?' the panelists discuss their experiences using media to enlighten, spark dialogue
and ultimately inspire change. Creators of several innovative community driven projects made for various mediums
will present their projects, processes and outcomes.
4510
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon A
Top 4 Student Papers in Mass Communication
Mass Communication
Chair
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
Participants
Differential Effects Model of Agenda Setting in Local Contexts:
Kideuk Hyun, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Soo Jung Moon, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Of Ghosts and Gangsters: Capitalist Cultural Production and the Hong Kong Film Industry
Sylvia Janet Martin, U of California - Irvine, USA
The Role of Issue Capacity in Agenda Setting
Kideuk Hyun, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Ja-Yeon Lee, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Issue Importance as a Moderator of Framing Effects
Sophie Katharina Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Rune Slothuus, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
Respondent
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
4511
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon B
News Coverage of Cancer and Science: Content and Effects
Mass Communication
Health Communication
Chair
Xiaoli Nan, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Participants
Questions of Accuracy and Balance: The Autism-Vaccine Controversy in the U.S. and British Elite Press
Christopher Clarke, Cornell U, USA
A Content Analysis of Frequently Cited Sources in Cancer News Coverage: Examining the Relationship Between
Cancer News Content and Source Citation
Cortney M. Moriarty, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Jakob D. Jensen, Purdue U, USA
Jo Ellen Stryker, Emory U, USA
Lost in Translation? A Comparison of Cancer-Genetics Reporting in the Press Release and its Subsequent Coverage
in Lay Press
Jean Brechman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Chul-joo Lee, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Information Processing, Trust, and Perception of Environmental Cancer Risk
Craig Trumbo, Colorado State U, USA
Katherine A. McComas, Cornell U, USA
Science TV News Exposure Predicts Science Beliefs: Real World Effects Among a National Sample
Yoori Hwang, U of Minnesota, USA
Brian Southwell, U of Minnesota, USA
4512
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon C
Visual Communication Top Paper Session
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U – Bremen, GERMANY
Participants
The Effect of Image Features on the Activation of Archetypes
Svetlana S. Kalnova, U of Connecticut, USA
Mark A. Hamilton, U of Connecticut, USA
A Visual Framing Analysis of British Press Photography During the 2006 Israel-Lebanon Conflict
Katy Jane Parry, U of Liverpool, UNITED KINGDOM
Nothing to See: The Emptiness of the Image
Dora E. Martinez, U of Monterrey, MEXICO
This session presents the three top ranked papers of the Visual Communication Studies Division and gives a glimpse
into the diverse but innovative topics covered in visual research.
4520
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Lamartine
Contemporary Issues in Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Jeffrey T. Child, Kent State U, USA
Participants
Kaho'olawe: A Case Study of a Movement and the Media in Reclaiming a Hawaiian Island
Danielle J Pedro, U of Central Florida, USA
Steven Jeffery Collins, U of Central Florida, USA
Portrayals of the Mature Market in Taiwanese Advertising
Cynthia R. Morton, U of Florida, USA
Tzu-Yin Chen, U of Florida, USA
Sociocultural Influences on Adolescents' Environmental Behavior in Hong Kong
Kaman Lee, Chinese U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
"Commitment for Life and Beyond": Persuasive Discourses Employed in a Body Donation Campaign in Taiwan
Hao-Chieh Chang, Hong Kong Baptist U, HONG KONG
Respondent
Jeffrey T. Child, Kent State U, USA
4521
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Kafka
Public Relations and Rhetorical Criticism
Public Relations
Chair
Craig E. Carroll, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
Explaining the Origins of Public Relations: Functionalist, Institutional, and Cultural Logics of Historical Explanation
Timothy P. Vos, Seton Hall U, USA
The Ideology of Choice: The Worldview of Tobacco Industry Issues Management in the 1990s
Priscilla Murphy, Temple U, USA
Maria de Fatima Oliveira, Temple U, USA
Satarupa Dasgupta, Temple U, USA
Talking Green: The Rhetoric of "Good Corporate Environmental Citizens"
Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Public Relations and the Strategic Use of Transparency: Consistency, Hypocrisy, and Corporate Change
Lars Thoger Christensen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK
Roy Langer, Roskilde U - CBIT, DENMARK
4522
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Hemon
Organizational Communication and Work-Life Issues
Organizational Communication
Chair
James Olumide Olufowote, Boston College, USA
Participants
How Doing Masculinity at Home is Undoing the Dual Career Family
Owen Hanley Lynch, Southern Methodist U, USA
Perceived Effects of Information and Communication Technology Adoption on Quality of Work Life: An Exploratory
Study
Ted Zorn, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Chris Hector, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
John Gibson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Sense(s) of Self: Working Toward Personal and Professional Lives and Identities in Fund Raising
Rebecca J. Meisenbach, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
The Social Construction of Occupational Health and Safety: Barriers to Environmental-Labor Health Coalitions
Heather Zoller, U of Cincinnati, USA
Respondent
Robyn Virginia Remke, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK
4523
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Jarry
Who's Your Audience: Approaches to Audience Segmentation
Health Communication
Chair
Francesca Renee Dillman Carpentier, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
Hip-Hop Imagery on Cigarette Packages and Their Effects on Audiences' Smoking-Related Attitudes: Ethnic Identity
as a Defense Against Tobacco Marketing
Osei Appiah, Ohio State U, USA
Catherine Elise Goodall, Ohio State U, USA
Reaching At Risk Populations: The Inconsistency of Communication Channels Among Native American Tribes in
Oklahoma
Jilane Rodgers, U of Oklahoma, USA
Shari Veil, U of Oklahoma, USA
Using A Psychographic Consumer Audience Segmentation Tool to Explain Fruit and Vegetable Consumption
Behavior
Lindsay J Della, U of Louisville, USA
David M. DeJoy, U of Georgia, USA
Charles E. Lance, U of Georgia, USA
What and Where: A Theory-Based Segmentation Analysis of Marijuana Use
Jacob Bjorn Depue, U of Minnesota, USA
Clelia Anna Mannino, U of Minnesota, USA
Marco C. Yzer, U of Minnesota, USA
Alex Rothman, U of Minnesota, USA
4524
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Joyce
High Density: Media Influences on Health
Health Communication
Mass Communication
Chair
Seth M. Noar, U of Kentucky, USA
Participants
Prenatal Testing, Disability, and Termination: An Examination of Newspaper Frames
Carol Bishop Mills, U of Alabama, USA
Elina V. Erzikova, U of Alabama, USA
Types and Sources of Memorable Breast Cancer Messages: Their Impact on Prevention and Detection Behaviors
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Samantha A Munday, Michigan State U, USA
Carolyn Kay LaPlante, Michigan State U, USA
Michael R. Kotowski, U of Tennessee, USA
Charles Atkin, Michigan State U, USA
Christine Skubisz, U of Maryland, USA
Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
The Media's Role in Shaping Public Opinion Surrounding Prescription Drug Use to Treat Depression and Anxiety
Among Youth
Nehama Lewis, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Lourdes Martinez, U of Pennsylvania, USA
TV Use and Snacking Behaviors Among Children and Adolescents in China
Sarah Parvanta, U of North Carolina, USA
Jane D. Brown, U of North Carolina, USA
Shufa Du, U of North Carolina, USA
Xinshu Zhao, U of North Carolina, USA
Zhai Fengying, Institute of Nutrition and Food Safety, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Media and Interpersonal Predictors of Healthy Eating Behavior
Christopher Joseph McKinley, U of Arizona, USA
The Role of Exposure to and Trust in Media in Determining Health Beliefs and Behaviors
Lauren B. Frank, U of Southern California, USA
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA
Happy Deal With Fatty Meal: Targeting Strategies in Food Advertisement for Children
Simone K. Keller, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND
Peter J. Schulz, U Della Svizzera Italiana, ITALY
Using Public Relations to Promote Health: A Framing Analysis of Public Relations Strategies Among Health
Associations
Hyojung Park, U of Georgia, USA
Bryan H. Reber, U of Georgia, USA
Influence of Presumed Influence of Television on Perceived Benefits of a Tan
Hyunyi Cho, Purdue U, USA
Jounghwa Choi, Michigan State U, USA
Teresa Mastin, Michigan State U, USA
Media Interventions to Promote Smoking Cessation Among Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Populations: What Do
We Know, What Do We Need to Learn, and What Should We Do Now?
Jeff Niederdeppe, U of Wisconsin, USA
Xiaodong Kuang, U of Wisconsin, USA
Brittney Crock, U of Minnesota, USA
Ashley Skelton, U of Wisconsin, USA
4525
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Musset
Computer-Mediated Communication and the Use of Media in Interpersonal Communication
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Steven Wilson, Purdue U, USA
Participants
Social Anxiety and Computer-Mediated Communication During Initial Interactions: Implications for the
Hyperpersonal Perspective
Andrew High, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Scott E. Caplan, Purdue U, USA
Interpersonal Media Use in Face-Threatening Situations and the Construct of Information Control
John Christian Feaster, Ohio State U, USA
Gender Effects on the Evaluation of Self-Presentation Styles of Personal Websites
Yunmi Lee, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Hyeyoung Yang, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Mina Lee, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Reward Distribution in Anonymous Computer-Supported Task Groups: The Effects of Social Comparison
Poppy L. McLeod, Cornell U, USA
Nicole G. Kravec, Cornell U, USA
Respondent
Steven Wilson, Purdue U, USA
4526
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Dickens
LSI Studies on Race, Identity, and Nationality
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz, U of Wisconsin - Parkside, USA
Participants
National Origin, Language, and Perceptions of "Foreignness" Among U.S. American Listeners
Aaron Castelan Cargile, California State U, USA
Eriko Maeda, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Jose I. Rodriguez, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Marc Rich, California State U Long Beach, USA
Border Crossings: A Semiotic Analysis of the United States-Mexico Border
Larry A. Erbert, Cleveland State U, USA
Michael Lechuga, U of Texas - El Paso, USA
Jeannette Monsivais, U of Texas - El Paso, USA
Negotiation of Tatar Ethnic Identity Through an Online Discourse on Islam
Liliya Valeryevna Karimova, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Talk About Race in the Undergraduate Classroom: Student Strategies and Struggles
Sheryl Baratz Goodman, Ursinus College, USA
Sarah Weddle, American U, USA
4530
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 1
Alternative Media: Policy, Politics, and Practice
Political Communication
Participants
Sustaining Alternative Media
David Skinner, York U, CANADA
Educational Public Service TV in Canada: From the Mainstream to the Alternative Margins
Kirsten Kozolanka, Carleton U, CANADA
Politically Incorrect and Proud of It! An Overview of Regressive Alternative Media in Canada
Patricia Mazepa, York U, CANADA
The Electromagnetic Spectrum: Foundation of a (R)evolutionary Democracy
Evan Light, Université du Québec à Montréal, CANADA
In the face of escalating concentration of media ownership and control, cutbacks to public broadcasting, and heavy
corporate influence on the production and dissemination of news, "alternatives" to corporate media such as
independent and not-for-profit publications, community broadcasting, and web-based media increasingly can provide
key venues for political debate, community expression, and development of social identities. This panel explores
some of the dimensions of this poorly understood field in Canada, examining its shifting character, the conditions
under which it operates, and considering the social forces and institutions that animate it.
4532
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 3
The Changing Spaces of Popular Media Production: Transformations and Trajectories
Popular Communication
Chair
David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Nonprofessional Activity on Television in a Time of Digitalisation
Espen Ytreberg, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Trine Syvertsen, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Faltin Karlsen, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Vilde Schanke Sundet, U of Oslo, NORWAY
The Archies, the Synthespian, and the Profitable Evacuation of Performer Agency
Matt Stahl, Muhlenberg College, USA
Hypercommercialism, Televisuality, and the Changing Nature of College Sports Sponsorship
Matthew P. McAllister, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Producing Film Knowledge, Producing Films: Festivals in a New World
Cindy Hing-Yuk Wong, College of Staten Island - CUNY, USA
Digitizing the DJ: Does the Digital Record Simulation Technology Serato ScratchLIVE Affect the Authenticity of the
Hip-Hop DJ?
Andre Gilman Sirois, U of Oregon, USA
4533
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 4
Sexual Violence, Sexuality, Gender, Race, and Media
Feminist Scholarship
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Petra Guerra, U of Texas - Pan American, USA
Participants
Sports Talk: How the News Media Framed the Duke University Lacrosse Case
Barbara Ann Barnett, U of Kansas, USA
Of Conspiracies and Kangas: "Mail" and "Guardian" Online Coverage of the Jacob Zuma Rape Trial
Nancy E. Worthington, Quinnipiac U, USA
The Invisible Damsel: Differences in How National Media Outlets Framed the Coverage of Missing Black and White
Women in the Mid-2000s
Mia N. Moody, Baylor U, USA
Bruce Dorries, Mary Baldwin College, USA
Harriet Blackwell, Mary Baldwin College, USA
Communicating Change: Ideology of Gender and Female Sexuality in HIV/AIDS Messages
Wanjiru Mbure, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
4534
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 5
Faith in the Media: Religion and Popular Communication
Popular Communication
Chair
Stewart M. Hoover, U of Colorado, USA
Participants
Sustaining the Mystery, Developing Cross-Religious Understandings: Religion, Philosophy, and Convergence Culture
Online in ABC's "Lost"
Lynn Schofield Clark, U of Denver, USA
Atheism and Theology Not Welcome Here: Faith and Mainstream Television Drama
Elizabeth Bird, U of South Florida, USA
Visual Culture, Religious Memory, and Iconoclasm in Focus on the Family's Citizen Magazine
Richard K. Popp, Temple U, USA
An Analysis of Religious Identity Presentation on Facebook
Piotr Bobkowski, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
4540
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Drummond West
High Density Session: Information Systems Issues in Advertising
Information Systems
Chair
Sela Sar, Iowa State U, USA
Participants
A Literature Review of Factors Influencing Reactions to Brand Placement
Eva van Reijmersdal, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Peter Neijens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Alternative Rock Music in Radio Advertising: The Effects of Familiarity on Message Recognition, Purchase Intent,
and Attitudes Toward the Ad
Wes Wise, Texas Tech U, USA
Coy Callison, Texas State U, USA
Samuel D. Bradley, Texas Tech U, USA
Every Word Matters: Correlating Word Information Value in Persuasive Messages with Physiological Arousal
Responses
Seth Finn, Robert Morris U, USA
Sungkyoung Lee, Indiana U, USA
Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA
Evaluating Consumer Attitudes and Intended Purchasing Behaviors Towards Macintosh's "Get a Mac" Advertising
Campaign
Rory Peter McGloin, U of Connecticut, USA
Matthew Gallicchio, U of Connecticut, USA
Getting a Line on Commercial Advertising: A Bio-Informational Approach to Study Pleasure and Arousal Reactions
to Ads
Karolien Poels, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Siegfried Dewitte, Catholic U - Leuven, BELGIUM
Resolving the Role of Web Site Pragmatic Value in the Hierarchy of Advertising Effects
James H. Watt, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Amanda Rotondo, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Sasi Kanth Ala, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Kaitlyn TeBordo Wood, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Yaakov Kimelfeld, VP, Digital Research and Analytics, MediaVest
Priya Nambison, U at Albany, SUNY
Greenwashing: Perceived Information Manipulation in Print Advertisements
Marie Rienzo, Michigan State U, USA
Maria Knight Lapinski, Michigan State U, USA
Sexuality Differences and Sexually Oriented Advertising: Interaction Effects on Personal Involvement With the
Advertised Products
Po-Lin Pan, U of Alabama, USA
Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA
4541
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Drummond Centre
To Blog or Not to Blog
Communication and Technology
Chair
Carmen Stavrositu, U of Colorado - Colorado Springs, USA
Participants
Corporate Blogging Beyond Publicity: A Multiple Case Study of Early Adopters in TV Context
Trisha Tsui-Chuan Lin, Nanyang Technological U
Vicki Chi-Hsuan Chiu, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Entering the Blogosphere: Motives for Reading, Writing, and Commenting
Nina Haferkamp, U Duisburg – Essen, GERMANY
Nicole C. Krämer, U of Duisburg - Essen, GERMANY
How 'The Media' Began to Blog
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Columbia U, USA
Revived and Refreshed: Selective Exposure to Blogs and Political Websites
Thomas Johnson, Texas Tech U, USA
Weiwu Zhang, Texas Tech U, USA
Shannon Bichard, Texas State U, USA
Does Civility Matter in the Blogosphere?
Hyunseo Hwang, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Porismita Borah, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Kang Namkoong, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Aaron S. Veenstra, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
4542
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Drummond East
Methodological Advances in Communication Technology Research
Communication and Technology
Chair
Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
A Position Paper on the Use of a Case-Scenario Approach for Understanding Diffusion of Innovations
Lidwien van de Wijngaert, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS
Harry Bouwman, Technische Bestuurskunde, THE NETHERLANDS
Facial Expressions as Predictors of Online Buying Intention
Sun Joo Ahn, Stanford U, USA
Maria Jabon, Stanford U, USA
Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA
Measuring Digital Skills: Performance Tests of Operational, Formal, Information, and Strategic Internet Skills
Among the Dutch Population
Alexander van Deursen, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente / Cubicus / GW / CW, THE NETHERLANDS
Methodologies for Exploring the Political Spaces on the Internet: The Role of Mailing Lists Within Political
Communities
Andrea Calderaro, European U Institute, ITALY
Searching the News: Using an Ontology With Timebound Roles to Search Through Annotated Newspaper Archives
Wouter Van Atteveldt, Free U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Nel Ruigrok, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Stefan Schlobach, Department of Artificial Intelligence Free U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Frank van Harmelen, Free U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
4543
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 6
Comparative Copyright: Classrooms, Pornography, and Treaties
Communication Law & Policy
Chair
Duncan H. Brown, Ohio U, USA
Participants
Adventures in the Copyright Zone: The Puzzling Absence of Independent First Amendment Defenses in
Contemporary Copyright Disputes
Matthew D. Bunker, U of Alabama, USA
Characterizing Copyright in the Classroom TOP THREE PAPER
Tarleton L. Gillespie, Cornell U, USA
Copyright Protection of Pornography in a Global Context
Seong Choul Hong, Indiana U, USA
Unplanned Obsolescence: U.S. Participation in Redundant Multilateral Copyright Agreements
Benjamin W. Cramer, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Respondent
Duncan H. Brown, Ohio U, USA
4544
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 7
Media, Identity and Use
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Nurcay Turkoglu, Marmara U, TURKEY
Participants
A Study on the Relationships Among Hallyu (Korean Wave), National Image, and Corporate Brand Equity
Eun Kyoung Han, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Woo Sung Chang, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Gabshin Hwang, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Critical Development Communication in the Era of Globalization: Immigrant Media Activists and Social Changes in
Korea
Young-Gil Chae, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Dalit Identity Formation and Media Use in India
P. Thirumal, U of Hyderabad, INDIA
Melinda B. Robins, Emerson College, USA
The Influence of Religiosity and Ethnic Identification on Media Use Among Muslims and Non-Muslims in France
and Britain
Stephen Michael Croucher, Bowling Green State U, USA
Deepa Oommen, Bowling Green State U, USA
Ian M Borton, Bowling Green State U, USA
Samara Anarbaeva, Bowling Green State U, USA
Jacob Stephen Turner, Bowling Green State U, USA
Top-Down and Bottom-Up Views of Ideological Diversity: Comparing U.S. and Chinese Media
Chin-Chuan Lee, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Respondent
Nurcay Turkoglu, Marmara U, TURKEY
4550
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Ballroom East
Top Papers Related to the ICA Conference Theme: Communicating for Social Impact
Theme Sessions
Chair
Lynn Marie Harter, Ohio U, USA
Participants
Negotiating Post-Conflict Communication: A Case of Ethnic Conflict in Indonesia
Rudi Sukandar, Marietta College, USA
Claudia L. Hale, Ohio U, USA
Experiential Learning and Social Impact: The Communication Effects of the One Homeless Night Event on
Participants' Attitudes and Perceptions of Homelessness
Sarah Neff, Liberty U, USA
Gina Barker, Liberty U, USA
Terri Cornwell, Liberty U, USA
Public Intellectualism and Critical Communication Research
Seeta Pena Gangadharan, Stanford U, USA
Respondent
Mohan Jyoti Dutta, Purdue U, USA
4551
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 8
Communication Research in the U.S./Mexican Border Region
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Daniel C. Hallin, U of California - San Diego, USA
Participants
Approaching Immigration Debates Through the Lens of Race
Esteban Del Rio, U of San Diego, USA
Television Consumption in Tijuana
David González, Autonomous U of Baja California, Tijuana, MEXICO
Media Representations of Water, Climate and Electrical Energy in Arid Zones: The Case of Mexicali
Hugo Edgardo Mendez, Binational Assoc. of Schools of Communication of the Californias, MEXICO
Cross-Border Citizens: Communication and Citizenship Practices Among Immigrants From Mexico in the United
States
Antonieta Mercado-Anaya, U of California - San Diego, USA
Respondent
Mari Castaneda, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
This panel presents research from members of the Binational Association of Schools of Communication of the
Californias, an association of Colleges and Universities primarily in the San Diego/Baja California border region that
promotes scholarly cooperation and exchange between the U.S. and Mexico and research on the border region.
4560
Saturday
13:30-14:45
701
The Ethics and Aesthetics of Authenticity in News Images
Journalism Studies
Chair
Kristina Widestedt, Stockholm U, SWEDEN
Participants
Back to the Future?
Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Unknown Knowns: Soldier Photography and the War on Terror
Liam Kennedy, U College Dublin, IRELAND
The Fear of Normality - The Swedish press use of surveillance images in the reports on "The London bombings" in
July 2005.
Eric Carlsson, Umeå U, SWEDEN
Blurry Pictures, Big Emotions: Ordinary citizens' contribution to Dutch news
Piet Bakker, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Mervi Pantti, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Authenticity and Alternative News Images
Kari Anden-Papadopoulos, Stockholm U, SWEDEN
Respondent
Karin E. Becker, Stockholm U, SWEDEN
Increased competition for exclusive images, spurred by alternative news sources and new technologies for making
and distributing pictures are having an impact on the visualization of news events. This panel examines the influence
of these vernacular images on journalism, drawing examples from private and public media in different national
contexts. Together the papers trace a shift in the representation of authenticity that is altering traditional forms and
standards for the visual coverage of news.
4561
Saturday
13:30-14:45
705
Digital Mediations of Personal Narratives
Philosophy of Communication
Popular Communication
Chair
Knut Lundby, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Participants
Mediatization or Mediation? Alternative Understandings of the Emergent Space of Digital Storytelling
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Narrative Strategies in a Digital Age: Authorship and Authority
Larry Friedlander, Stanford U, USA
The Question of the Digital in Mediated Self-Representations
Nancy Thumim, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Problems of Expertise and Scalability in Self-Made Media: Lessons From Digital Storytelling in Australia
John Hartley, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Respondent
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Self-representations in digital storytelling are proliferating. This new media practice emerged in the first half of the
1990s when people made short, personal stories, supported by resource-intensive, usually publicly funded workshops.
Since then, a variety of initiatives world wide sprung up, in all of which 'ordinary people' were encouraged to develop
the necessary competences or literacies to tell their own stories with new digital tools. Today this root form, that
could be termed Digital Storytelling with capital D and capital S, is complemented with 'user-generated' personal
stories and profiles in weblogs and on social networking sites as MySpace, YouTube and Facebook. This panel asks
the 'so what' question - what is the significance of this new social practice? Why should we attend to it? And,
especially important for communication scholars, does it make a difference that it is digital - that digital tools and
literacies increasingly underpin the telling of personal stories? The contributors to this panel consider, through
theoretical, critical and empirical explorations, the possible contribution of digital storytelling to democratic processes
of deliberation and publicity and the potential of digital storytelling to alter or even transform notions of authority and
authorship. They also consider, as communication scholars, the challenge posed by digital storytelling to the longdominant history of mass communication, as these stories, and the digital literacies they engender, appear to lay claim
to a more open, plural and networked sphere for the expression of diverse voices.
4562
Saturday
13:30-14:45
716
Public Relations and the Ontology of the Public Sphere
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
James Curran, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
The Road Not Taken: Dewey, Mills, Habermas, and the Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere
Andreas Koller, New York U, USA
Public Relations in the Public Sphere: Habermas, Bourdieu, and the Question of Power
Rodney D. Benson, New York U, USA
The Rise of Social Marketing as a Neoliberal Communication Technology
Roddey Reid, U of California - San Diego, USA
Open Source as Public Sphere
D. Lucas Graves, Columbia U, USA
Respondent
James Curran, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
The idea of the public sphere is frequently debated but less attention is given to the social preconditions for the
emergence and maintenance of anything like a public sphere. The papers in this session discuss this either in general
terms or through the related question of the role of public relations in public discourse.
4563
Saturday
13:30-14:45
720
Bridging Divides to Develop Community: Investigating Intergroup Relations Among Urban Residents
Intergroup Communication
Chair
Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
Catholic Parishes as Agents of Integration and Isolation
Christopher Anthony Chavez, U of Southern California, USA
An Active Education: Classroom Participation as an Influence on Intergroup Relations among Parents
Vikki Sara Katz, U of Southern California, USA
Working Together for a Shared Community: Community-Based Organizations as Sites of Intergroup Interaction
Carmen Gonzalez, U of Southern California, USA
Evelyn Moreno, U of Southern California, USA
Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA
Community on the Walls: How Public Murals Can Affect Intergroup Relations in a Shared Neighborhood
Charlotte Lapsansky, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Young Yun Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA
This panel presents findings from the Immigration and Integration projects the authors conducted this past year under
the auspices of the Metamorphosis Project at the USC Annenberg School for Communication. These four papers
focus on intergroup relations between new Latino and African American residents in Greater Crenshaw, a community
located in South Los Angeles. For several decades, Crenshaw has been a largely African American neighborhood, but
a recent influx of Latino immigrants from Mexico and Central America is in the process of transforming the
neighborhood. While much of the literature on African American-Latino intergroup relations does take this conflictoriented approach, there is also considerable research to document that close proximity can reduce racial stereotyping.
Employing a communication infrastructure perspective directed us to ask if neighborhood communication practices of
these two populations are bounded by race/ethnicity. Our approach goes beyond identifying group divisions. In the
research presented here, we explore churches, schools, community organizations, and public art as community
contexts that act as potential locations for intergroup communication between Latinos and African Americans that can
build a shared sense of community.
4564
Saturday
13:30-14:45
728
Top Papers in Instructional & Developmental Communication
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Kristen Harrison, U of Illinois, USA
Participants
Age Differences in Adults' Emotional Motivations for Exposure to Films
Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Joanne Cantor, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
The Effect of Teacher Confirmation on Student Communication and Learning Outcomes.
Alan K. Goodboy, Bloomsburg U, USA
Scott A. Myers, West Virginia U, USA
Student Nagging Behavior in the College Classroom
Katie Neary Dunleavy, LaSalle U, USA
Matthew M. Martin, West Virginia U, USA
Maria Brann, West Virginia U, USA
Melanie Booth-Butterfield, West Virginia U, USA
Scott A. Myers, West Virginia U, USA
Keith Weber, West Virginia U, USA
Incidental Language Acquisition From Television, Video Games, and Music: An Empirical Study With Flemish
Youngsters
An Helene Kuppens, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Respondent
Kristen Harrison, U of Illinois, USA
In this session the Instructional & Developmental Division proudly showcases its top three faculty papers and top
student paper.
4566
Saturday
13:30-14:45
820
International Encyclopedia Editorial Board Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Wolfgang Donsbach, Technical U - Dresden, GERMANY
Participants
Jennings Bryant, U of Alabama, USA
Klaus Bruhn Jensen, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK
Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
Hans-Bernd Brosius, Ludwig-Maximilians U – Munich, GERMANY
Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA
Charles R. Berger, U of California - Davis, USA
Robert N. Gaines, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
John O. Greene, Purdue U, USA
Michael Griffin, Carleton College, USA
Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Kevin G. Barnhurst, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
Peter Vorderer, VU University Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Hans Mathias Kepplinger, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY
Carroll J. Glynn, Ohio State U, USA
Winfried Schulz, U of Nuremberg, GERMANY
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Rebecca B. Rubin, Kent State U, USA
Katherine Miller, Texas A&M U, USA
K. Viswanath, Harvard School of Public Health, USA
Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM
Debra L. Merskin, U of Oregon, USA
John Downing, Southern Illinois U-Garbondale, USA
Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Juergen Wilke, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY
Janet Wasko, U of Oregon, USA
Stuart Allan, U of the West of England – Bristol, UNITED KINGDOM
Kyu Ho Youm, U of Oregon, USA
Robin Mansell, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Robert L. Heath, U of Houston, USA
Elizabeth P. Swayze, Blackwell Publishing, USA
Ken Provencher, Blackwell Publishing, USA
Update on online version for the editorial board
4610
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon A
Demystifying Journalists' Decision-Making
Mass Communication
Journalism Studies
Chair
Kimberly Meltzer, Lehigh U, USA
Participants
*What Influences Media Coverage of North Korea?: A Study of Journalists and News Reports on the Six-Nation
Nuclear Talks (Top 4 Paper)
Hyunjin Seo, Syracuse U, USA
The Virginia Tech Tragedy: The South Korean Press as an Agent of Cultural Repair
Mohamad Hamas Elmasry, U of Iowa, USA
Vidhi Chaudhri, Purdue U, USA
Elinathan Ohiomoba, U of Iowa, USA
Thinking Along the Cultural Line: An Inquiry of Ethical Decision-Making Among U.S. and Chinese Journalism
Students
Bu Zhong, Pennsylvania State U, USA
The Effect of Journalistic Co-Orientation on Press Coverage: A Time Series Analysis
Benjamin Krämer, Ludwig-Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY
Thorsten Schroll, Johannes Gutenberg U – Mainz, GERMANY
Gregor Daschmann, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY
The Choice Gap: The Softening of News and the Divergent Preferences of Journalists and Consumers
Pablo J. Boczkowski, Northwestern U, USA
Limor Peer, Northwestern U, USA
4611
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon B
Long-term Relations Between Different Types of Exposure to Media Violence, Emotional Reactions, and
Aggressive Behavior
Mass Communication
Chair
Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA
Participants
Predicting Aggression in Middle-Adulthood from Prior Exposure To Media Violence
Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA
Paul Boxer, Rutgers U and U of Michigan, USA
Eric F. Dubow, U of Michigan and Bowling Green State U, USA
The Relation between Children's Preferences for Passive and Interactive Violent Media and their Parents' Media
Preferences
Grace Yang, U of Michigan, USA
Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA
Violent Media Consumption Predicts Diminished Negative Arousal and Proactive Aggression in Young Adults
Lucyna Aniela Kirwil, Warsaw School of Social Psychology, POLAND
The Relation between Exposure to Video Violence in Childhood and Serious Youth Violence and Delinquency
Paul Boxer, Rutgers U and U of Michigan, USA
Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA
Brad J. Bushman, U of Michigan, USA
This symposium investigates the relations between the use of different kinds of violent media (video games, TV
programs, videos and films) and the relation of their use to different levels and types of aggressive, violent, and
delinquent behavior. In the first presentation Rowell Huesmann, using data from a 40-year longitudinal study, shows
that, although childhood exposure to TV violence does not correlate directly with adult aggressive behavior 40 years
later, it does relate to it when other contextual and personal factors are controlled for statistically. In the second
presentation, Grace Yang uses data from the same longitudinal study to show that children who play more violent
video games also watch more violent television. In addition, she shows that violent television viewing by parents in
one generation predicts violent television viewing and video game use by their children in the next generation.
Lucyna Kirwil, in the third paper, examines how differing characteristic emotional reactions to media violence
mediate the type of aggression that is stimulated by exposure to media violence. She demonstrates that those who
consume media violence regularly tend to display diminished anxious arousal and tend to behave "proactively
aggressively," but not "reactively aggressively". In the final paper, Paul Boxer, using data from 400 incarcerated
delinquents, shows that both current use of media violence and prior childhood use of media violence are correlated
with engaging in serious violent and delinquent acts in adolescence and predict these acts independently of a variety
of personality, social-contextual, and demographic factors.
4612
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon C
4620
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Lamartine
Visual Communication Studies Business Meeting
Visual Communication Studies
Top Three Student Papers in Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Jerry L. Allen, U of New Haven, USA
Participants
Face Goals in Conflict Avoidance: A Cross-Cultural Analysis
Bing Han, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
The U.S. Military Ghetto and Modern Soundscape in Postwar Korea (1950s-1960s); Audible Memories of
Postcolonial Melancholia
Yongwoo Lee, McGill U, CANADA
Sticks and Stones: The Effects of Self-Construals on Assessing Appraisals, Attributions, and Consequences of Hurt
Feelings
Robert Shota Tokunaga, U of Arizona, USA
Respondent
Jerry L. Allen, U of New Haven, USA
These are the top ranked student papers in intercultural communication.
4621
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Kafka
Theoretical Developments in Public Relations
Public Relations
Chair
Kirk Hallahan, Colorado State U, USA
Participants
On Feminist Theory of Public Relations: An Example From Dorothy E. Smith
Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA
Diana Iulia Nastasia, U of North Dakota, USA
Evolutionary Theory: The Missing Link for Public Relations
Cary Greenwood, U of Oregon, USA
Toward an Integrated Model: Linking Employee Communication, P-O Fit, Sensemaking, Organizational
Identification, and EOR Outcomes
Hua Jiang, U of Maryland, USA
Yi Luo, U of Maryland, College Park, USA
The Dark Sides of Public Relations
Greg B. Leichty, U of Louisville, USA
Respondent
Kirk Hallahan, Colorado State U, USA
4622
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Hemon
Sense-Making and Organizing: Multiple Perspectives
Organizational Communication
Chair
Robyn Virginia Remke, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK
Participants
Making Sense of Experiences: Sensemaking Processes Following Critical Communication Events
Karen Heleen Koning, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Menno de Jong, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Why Technology Implementations Often Disappoint
James R. Taylor, U de Montreal, CANADA
Work Messages: How African American Women in Administrative Support Roles Navigate Their Careers Through
Cultural Messages
Trina Janell Wright, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Writing a Wikipedia Article: Data Mining and Organizational Communication to Explain the Practices By Which
Contributors Maintain the Article's Coherence
Nicolas Bencherki, U of Montreal, CANADA
Jeanne d'Arc Uwatowenimana, U of Montreal, CANADA
Respondent
Daniel Robichaud, U de Montréal, CANADA
4623
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Jarry
Risk Perceptions and Fatalism in Health
Health Communication
Chair
Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA
Participants
A Multilevel Analysis of Cancer Risk Perception
Craig Trumbo, Colorado State U, USA
Katherine A. McComas, Cornell U, USA
John C. Besley, U of South Carolina, USA
Determinants of Anabolic-Androgenic Steroid Risk Perceptions: A Study in Social Cognitive Theory
Bryan E. Denham, Clemson U, USA
Correlates of Fatalistic Beliefs Regarding Cancer Prevention
Derek Freres, U of Pennsylvania, USA
The Psychometric Property and Validation of a Fatalism Scale
Lijiang Shen, U of Georgia, USA
Celeste M. Condit, U of Georgia, USA
Lanelle Wright, U of Georgia, USA
4624
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Joyce
High Density: Message Design Research
Health Communication
Chair
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
Participants
Effective or Ineffective? Attribute Framing and HPV Vaccine Efficacy
Cabral A Bigman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Exploring Causal Mechanisms of Other-Oriented Framing in the Context of the Avian Flu Context
Bridget J. Kelly, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Factors Associated With Consumer's Trust of DTC Advertising
Jennifer Gerard Ball, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Patricia A. Stout, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Improving Antismoking Message Effectiveness: Death Appeals, Argument Strength, and Message Sensation Value
Norman C. H. Wong, U of Oklahoma, USA
Angel Ho, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Andrew Strasser, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Caryn Lerman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Investigating the Impact of Breast Cancer Messages on Women's Perceptions: Results of a Message Testing Pilot
Study
Kami J. Silk, Michigan State U, USA
Doshik Yun, Michigan State U, USA
Nicholas David Bowman, Michigan State U, USA
Lindsay Beth Neuberger, Michigan State U, USA
Charles Atkin, Michigan State U, USA
Message Impact via Automatically Activated Attitudes: A Study of Alcohol Advertisements and
Counteradvertisements
Catherine Elise Goodall, Ohio State U, USA
Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA
Revising a Measure of Interpersonal Communication Within the Context of Mass Media Health Communication
Campaigns
Vanessa Boudewyns, U of Minnesota, USA
John G. Wirtz, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
The Effect of Smoking Cues in Antismoking Public Service Announcements on Smoking Urge and
Psychophysiological Reactions
Yahui Kang, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Andrew Strasser, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Caryn Lerman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Unintended Effects of Public Health Communication Campaign Branding
Lela S. Jacobsohn, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Using Targeting and Tailoring to Enhance Prevention Messages for Hispanics
Anthony J. Roberto, Ohio State U, USA
Janice Lee Raup Krieger, Ohio State U, USA
Michael Beam, Ohio State U, USA
4625
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Musset
Interpersonal Influence and Motivation
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Rodney A. Reynolds, Azusa Pacific U, USA
Participants
The Reasons Why Persuasion Messages Fail
Sang-Yeon Kim, Michigan State U, USA
Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA
Using the Emotion-in-Relationships Model to Predict Features of Interpersonal Influence Attempts
Leanne Knobloch, U of Illinois, USA
Bethany Schmelzer, U of Illinois, USA
Argument Engagement, Argumentativeness, Verbal Aggressiveness, Topic Type, and Argument Realism: Their
Effects on Editorial Choices
Bejamin Warner, Western Illinois U, USA
Dale Hample, U of Maryland, USA
It's How You Think About It: Effects of Ability and Motivation on Recipient Processing of and Responses to
Comforting Messages
Brant R. Burleson, Purdue U, USA
Jennifer McCullough, Purdue U, USA
Graham Douglas Bodie, Purdue U, USA
Jessica J. Rack, Purdue U, USA
Amanda J. Holmstrom, Michigan State U, USA
Lisa K Hanasono, Purdue U, USA
Jennifer N Gill, Purdue U, USA
Respondent
Rodney A. Reynolds, Azusa Pacific U, USA
4626
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Dickens
Practical Uses of Language and Social Interaction Scholarship
Language & Social Interaction
Participants
On The Emerging Basis of Therapeutic Expertise: Collaborative Therapists as Conversation Governors
G. H. Morris, California State U - San Marcos, USA
Do Conversation Analytic studies have practical uses?
Anita Pomerantz, SUNY - Albany, USA
Storytelling, Narrative, and Narrative Theorizing—From research in subjectivity to transformational research?
Michael Bamberg, Clark U, USA
Practical Applications of an LSI-oriented research: The Case of Médecins sans frontiers
Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA
Frederik Matte, Montreal U, CANADA
Reflecting on Grounded Practical Theory
Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
In recent years various scholars have called for more theory and research which have practical uses and applications
(Craig, 1999; Flyvbjerg, 2001). This call is heard under different rubrics: theory into practice, scholarship in action,
phronesis, and so on. Given this interest in the practical realm, how successful has language and social interaction
research been in achieving a practical uses and results? Various scholars working from different LSI perspectives
(conversation analysis, discursive analysis, ethnography) and in different practical contexts (medical, therapy, public
hearings) address these issues of revolving around the practical import of scholarship.
4630
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 1
Political Decision-Making
Political Communication
Chair
Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA
Participants
Cognitive Appraisal of Primary Polls and Emotional Responses
Hyun Joo Song, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Hyunsuk Kim, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
June Woong Rhee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Competition and Consensus in Social Networks: Does Disagreement Discourage Voter Turnout?
Lilach Nir, Hebrew U, ISRAEL
Strength of Convictions: Policy Debates in the Mass Media and Political Action
Lauren Guggenheim, U of Michigan, USA
Combining Multiple Considerations: Voters' Uses of Campaign Cues, Schematic Knowledge, and Heuristic
Reasoning in the Dutch EU Constitutional Referendum
Christian Baden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
4632
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 3
Media Policy
Political Communication
Chair
Wolfgang Donsbach, Technical U - Dresden, GERMANY
Participants
The Primacy of Local Interests and Press Freedom: A Survey Study of Hong Kong Journalists
Joseph M. Chan, Chinese U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Francis L. F. Lee, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
How Powerful is the President's Bully Pulpit? Evaluating the President's Capacity to Set the Agenda for the Press
Through His State of the Union Address
Andrew D. Kaplan, U of Maryland, USA
Imagining Soviet Journalism
Natalia Roudakova, U of California - San Diego, USA
The Policies on Media Diversity: Establishing Public Interest Criteria and Monitoring the Effectiveness of Diversity
Policies
Kim McCann, Bowling Green State U, USA
4633
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 4
Feminist Theoretical Approaches: Gender/Ethnicity/Race in TV and News
Feminist Scholarship
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Angharad N. Valdivia, U of Illinois, USA
Participants
Reception Studies as a Multidimensional Model: Negotiating Ethnicity and Gender
Claudia Alvares, Lusofona U, Portugal
Mothering Ideologies in the News: A Discourse Analysis of the Contested Terrain of Contemporary U.S. Motherhood
Dustin M. Harp, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Ingrid Bachmann, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Toward Accuracy and Authenticity: Using Feminist Theory to Construct Journalistic Narratives of Maternal Violence
Barbara Ann Barnett, U of Kansas, USA
She TV?: Gendered Spatial Practices and Television in the Arab World
Briar Rose Smith, U of Pennsylvania, USA
4634
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 5
Engaging With YouTube: Methodologies, Practices, Publics
Popular Communication
Communication and Technology
Participants
The Uses of YouTube
Jean Burgess, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Joshua Green, Massachusetts Insititute of Technology, USA
Video Politics: Typologies of User-generated Content
Greg F. Elmer, Ryerson U, CANADA
Fenwick McKelvey, Ryerson U, CANADA
Brady Curlew, York U, CANADA
Beyond Viral Video: Using YouTube to Maintain Social Networks
Patricia G. Lange, U of Southern California, USA
Paying Attention to YouTube Consumers' Communal Consumption: In/Sights from Audiovisual Netnography
Robert Kozinets, York U, CANADA
Ashlee Humphreys, Northwestern U, USA
This panel brings together a range of disciplinary perspectives and methodological approaches to address the question
of YouTube's uses and implications. Each of the papers provides new insights into the dynamics of YouTube as part
of the emerging cultural public sphere. While focusing on YouTube as a particularly rich case study, the panel
contributes new ideas to the broader issue of how communication research might most productively engage with the
scale and diversity of participatory popular culture online.
4640
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Drummond West
High Density Session: The Web 1.0, 2.0, and Beyond
Information Systems
Chair
Byungho Park, National U - Singapore, SINGAPORE
Participants
When Words Collide Online: How Writing Style and Video Intensity Affect Cognitive Processing of Online News
Kevin Wise, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Justin Myers, U of Missouri-Columbia, USA
Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
"My Brain Is Full!" Storage Limit and Serial Position Effects During Web Search
Chen-Chao Tao, National Chiao Tung U, TAIWAN
Sophistication of Internet Usage: Application of Confirmatory Factor Analysis to the Measurement of Internet Usage
Taiquan Peng, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Jonathan J.H. Zhu, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Customers Who Bought This Also Bought That: Factors Affecting Online Impulsive Purchase
Julian Lin, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Chan Hock Chuan, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Dang_Thi_Mai Thu, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Relevance to the Rescue: Can "Smart Ads" Reduce Negative Response to Online Ad Clutter?
Namyoung Kim, Louisiana State U, USA
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Applying the Technology Acceptance Model and Flow Theory to Cyworld User Behavior: Implication of the Web2.0
User Acceptance
Don-Hee Shin, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Effects of a Spokes-Avatar on Apple iPhone Advertising in the Second Life Virtual Environment
Seung-A Annie Jin, Boston College, USA
Justin Bolebruch, Boston College, USA
A Virtual World Experimental Test of the Law of Demand
Edward Castronova, Indiana U, USA
4641
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Drummond Centre
Technology in the Workplace
Communication and Technology
Chair
Kumi Ishii, Western Kentucky U, USA
Participants
Gratification and Disaffection: Understanding Personal Internet Use During Work
R. Kelly Garrett, Ohio State U, USA
James N. Danziger, U of California - Irvine, USA
Self-Concealment and Anonymity in the Workplace
Kate Magsamen Conrad, Rutgers, USA
Maria G Checton, Rutgers, USA
Maria Koskan Venetis, Rutgers U, USA
Error and Coupling: Extending Common Ground to Improve the Provision of Visual Information for Collaborative
Tasks
Jeremy Birnholtz, Cornell U, USA
Abhishek Ranjan, U of Toronto, CANADA
Ravin Balakrishnan, U of Toronto, CANADA
Integrative Technologies in the Workplace: Using Distributed Cognition to Frame the Challenges Associated With
Their Implementation
Carole Groleau, U de Montréal, CANADA
4642
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Drummond East
Managing Online Acquaintances
Communication and Technology
Chair
Irina A. Shklovski, U of California - Irvine, USA
Participants
Getting Acquainted Through Social Networking Sites: Testing a Model of Online Uncertainty Reduction and Social
Attraction ** (TOP 2 FACULTY PAPER IN CAT)
Marjolijn L. Antheunis, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Uncertainty Reduction Over Time in Initial Stranger Interactions: A Social Information Processing Theory Approach
David Keith Westerman, West Virginia U, USA
Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA
Blogging and Online Friendships: The Role of Self-Disclosure and Perceived Reciprocity
Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Mindawati Wijaya, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Hui Yi Goh, ACNielsen Singapore, SINGAPORE
Patterns of Media Use and Multiplexity: Associations with Sex, Geographic Distance, and Friendship
Interdependence
Andrew Michael Ledbetter, Ohio U, USA
4643
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 6
Media Terror, Conflict, and Resolution
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Laura B. Lengel, Bowling Green State U, USA
Participants
Agency and Distance in the Representation of Suffering
Shani Orgad, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Naming Suspects in Terrorist Attacks: An Inquiry of Journalistic Stereotypes in Newspaper Coverage of the 2005
London Bombings
Bu Zhong, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Paul Mihailidis, U of Maryland, USA
Revisiting Media in Conflict: In Search of Peacebuilding Media
Vladimir Bratic, Hollins U, USA
Television, History, and Terrorism
Tarik Ahmed Elseewi, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Us and Them: Competing Interpretations of Terrorism and Political Violence
Laura Robinson, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Bowling Green State U, USA
4644
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 7
A Global Dialogue on Climate Change?
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Constructing Rights and Duties Towards Climate Change: Citizenship and Governance in Mediated Discourses
around the World
Anabela Carvalho, U do Minho, PORTUGAL
IPCC Reports 1991-2007 in The Media: A Case Study on the Dialectic Between Journalism and Natural Sciences
Irene Neverla, U of Hamburg, GERMANY
Climate Action and Environmental Activism: How NGOs and Grassroots Movements are Shaping the Politics of
Climate Change
Julie Doyle, U of Brighton, UNITED KINGDOM
Moral Authority and Climate Change Policy: The Role of Faith Organizations in a Global Dialogue on Climate
Change
Judith Marie Ford, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Respondent
Environmental Policy Lawyer, United Nations Conference for Climate Change, THE NETHERLANDS
Climate change poses an immediate and universal challenge to mankind's fragile relationship to the natural world.
While the ability to detect the problem and recommend steps to mitigate its effects falls primarily within natural
science disciplines, the sense of urgency and responsibility needed to heed their call for action in our societies will
likely be determined through communication within and between various groups. This panel will analyze the extent to
which mediated political and scientific discourse, as well as faith-based and activist organizations feed into 'A Global
Dialogue on Climate Change'. Papers will address a number of key questions: How are issues such as historical
differentiation in greenhouse gas emissions, rights to development, moral obligation and equity being framed? How
are the roles of governments, business and individuals being discursively constructed? What barriers exist to more
concerted action and greater fairness? To what extent are communication practices part of the problem? How can they
be part of the solution?
4650
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Ballroom East
Documenting and Disrupting (Dis)ability Through Film: Communicating for Social Impact
Theme Sessions
Chair
Mohan Jyoti Dutta, Purdue U, USA
Participants
Casey Hayward, Ohio U, USA
Courtney E. Cole, Ohio U, USA
John W. Smith, Ohio U, USA
Margaret Mary Quinlan, Ohio U, USA
Rod Michalko, St. Francis Xavier U, CANADA
Dawn O. Braithwaite, U of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA
Plan F, a documentary directed and produced by Casey Hayward and co-produced by Courtney Cole, is the story of
Ed Marko. This narrative of an occupational-therapist turned auto-mechanic would be unremarkable except that, at
the age of 20, Marko lost his eyesight to a degenerative disease. Ed lost sight of "plan A." Documenting Ed navigating
piles of parts, uncooperative employees, and customers' unruly cars, Plan F is a visual demonstration of the power of
reinvention when life changes the plan. Documentaries are often lauded for their ability to bring visibility to pressing
social issues and educate viewers about them. However, many issue-driven films have focused on activism at the
expense of aesthetics. In Plan F, the aesthetic rendering of Ed re-visions the work of a man living without sight. Ed's
story is told with the very sense that the film's subject lacks. The cinematography forces viewers to inhabit a world
where seeing is no longer taken for granted, where the field of vision is dark, cramped, and often unclear. The film
literally re-visions the act of viewing, moving beyond "thinking about" disability to "thinking with" a person living
and working without his sight. Join the director and producers for a viewing of Plan F to be followed by dialogue led
by disability studies scholars.
4651
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 8
The Bias of Digital Communication
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Thom Gencarelli, Manhattan College, USA
Participants
"It Ain't Heavy: The Bias of Digital Communication"
Thom Gencarelli, Manhattan College, USA
"Plato on the Break Boundary: Implications for the Digital Revolution"
Twyla Gail Gibson, U of Toronto, USA
"Just-in-time Democracy? Promises and Perils of the Digital Public Sphere"
Joshua Meyrowitz, U of New Hampshire, USA
"Time, Memory, and Media Ecology"
Lance A. Strate, Fordham U, USA
"A Digital Bias"
Gary Gumpert, Urban Communication Foundation, USA
Susan Drucker, Hofstra U, USA
In 1951, one year after he published his ground-breaking work on the history of our media of human communication,
Empire and Communication (1950), Harold Adams Innis published The Bias of Communication. In honor of the fact
that this year's ICA Conference is being held in the great Canadian city of Montreal, and in honor of the Canadian
contribution to communication scholarship that begin with Innis, this panel seeks to extend and expand Innis'
perspective on media bias to examine the frontier of digital media.
4660
Saturday
15:00-16:15
701
Digital News
Journalism Studies
Chair
Bill Reader, Ohio U, USA
Participants
Blogs and Big Media: A Comparative Study of Agendas
Gerry Lanosga, Indiana U, USA
Increasingly Interactive: Swedish Online News 2005-2007
Michael B. Karlsson, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
The Discursive Practices of Media Convergence: When Old Media Meets New Media
Sabryna Cornish, Northern Illinois U, USA
Visibility of Journalistic Processes and the Undermining of Objectivity
Michael B. Karlsson, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
Redefining Multimedia: The (Dis)integrated Use of Multiple Media and Modalities in Convergent Journalism
Michael Opgenhaffen, Lessius U College, BELGIUM
Respondent
Jane B. Singer, U of Central Lancashire, UNITED KINGDOM
The news industry is in the process of cultivating and professionalizing digital journalism, sharing some key
components with off-line journalism, but embracing some new characteristics of its own. The papers in this session
offer an in-depth look at how these more or less new hallmarks of online professionalism plays out in different
countries and across different platforms.
4661
Saturday
15:00-16:15
705
Avatars, Characters, Narrative
Game Studies
Chair
Katherine Currie Isbister, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Participants
The Priming Effects of Avatars in Virtual Settings
Jorge F. Pena, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA
Computer Science and Communication Perspectives on Character Believability in Games
Sangyeob Lee, Michigan State U, USA
Carrie Heeter, Michigan State U, USA
Procedural Rhetoric in Persona 3: Mechanics and Narrative as Ideological Signifier
Todd L. Harper, Ohio U, USA
4662
Saturday
15:00-16:15
716
Theorizing Labor in the New Cultural Economy
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA
Participants
Risky Business? Understanding The Barriers to Work in Creative Industries
Gina Neff, U of Washington, USA
Does Immaterial Labour Work?
David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Branded Living in Promotional Skin: Reality Television and the Limits of Affective and Immaterial Labour
Alison Hearn, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
Women's Work: Affective Labor, Media Convergence and the Dr. Phil Brand
Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA
Julie Ann Wilson, U of Minnesota, USA
Respondent
Justin Lewis, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM
This panel examines labor's changing relationship to the media and culture industries at a juncture marked by
increased risk and social insecurity on the one hand, and new technologies on the other. The papers analyze changes
in the organization of paid cultural/creative labor, and new forms of unwaged affective and immaterial labor
associated with the media and culture industries that are often not considered work at all.
4663
Saturday
15:00-16:15
720
From Science to Society: Discourses of Difference
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Micky Lee, Suffolk U, USA
Participants
Could It Be Me?: The Interplay Between HIV/AIDS Messages and African-American Women's Risk for Infection
Janeane Nicole Anderson, The Dallas Weekly, USA
Discourses of Difference in Human Genomics and the HapMap Project ( 3rd Top Paper)
Peter Chow-White, Simon Fraser U, CANADA
Discursive Phobias: Unpacking the Fear of the 'Third World' in New Zealand (2nd Top Paper)
Debashish Munshi, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Priya Kurian, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
The Dialectics of Immigration Debate: A Historical Perspective of Public Discourse Framing in Hazleton, PA
Juraj Kittler, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Jorge Reina Schement, Pernnsylvania State U, USA
West Indians and a Culture of Dissent in Liberian Journalism
C. Patrick Burrowes, Pennsylvania State U, USA
4664
Saturday
15:00-16:15
728
Instructional & Developmental Communication Business Meeting
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
Kristen Harrison, U of Illinois, USA
Lynn Gregory, U of Vermont, USA
4666
Saturday
15:00-16:15
820
Diverse Contexts for Intergroup Communication: Culture, Peer Groups, Health, and Sports
Intergroup Communication
Chair
Margaret J. Pitts, Old Dominion U, USA
Participants
Attitudes Toward Americans: Exploring the Influences of Japanese Sojourners' Communication Experiences With
Their Most Frequent American Contact
Makiko Imamura, U of Kansas, USA
Yan Bing Zhang, U of Kansas, USA
Overcoming Ethnocentrism Through Developing Intercultural Communication Sensitivity and Multiculturalism
Qingwen Dong, U of the Pacific, USA
Kenneth D. Day, U of the Pacific, USA
Christine M Collaco, U of the Pacific, USA
Roommate Conflict: Does Race Matter?
Mary Jiang Bresnahan, Michigan State U, USA
Xiaowen Guan, Michigan State U, USA
Sachiyo Morinaga Shearman, East Carolina U, USA
William A. Donohue, Michigan State U, USA
Ayako Tsuchiya, Michigan State U, USA
Peer Listening Line: An Ethnographic Approach to Studying a Peer Health Education Group
Rebekah Nagler, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Consumption of Sports team-related Media: Its Influence on Sports Fan Identity Salience and Self-Esteem
Joe Jin Phua, U of Southern California, USA
This session represents diverse approaches toward intergroup communication and the many contexts in which
intergroup communication is at the forefront.
4750
Saturday
16:30-17:45
Ballroom East
4841
Saturday
18:00-20:00
Drummond Centre
International Communication Association Annual Members' Meeting, Annual Awards, and Presidential
Address
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Wiley-Blackwell's Publications Reception
Sponsored Sessions
Please join ICA and Wiley-Blackwell for an evening of celebration at the 2008 Publications Reception. All
conference attendees are invited to toast exciting new launches, including the first-ever ICA Encyclopedia of
Communication, the new journal Communication, Culture & Critique, journal abstracts posted online in six
languages, and a new ICA book series, Communication in the Public Interest. Come raise a glass, enjoy fine
refreshments and entertainment, and meet the many people whose hard work has made these achievements possible.
Hope to see you there!
5167
Sunday
07:30-09:00
3224
5210
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon A
ICA Past Presidents' Breakfast
Sponsored Sessions
Emotion, Mood, and Media
Mass Communication
Chair
Francesca Renee Dillman Carpentier, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
Behavioral Activation/Inhibition Systems and Discrete Emotions: A Test of Valence vs. Action Tendency Hypotheses
Lijiang Shen, U of Georgia, USA
Elisabeth Bigsby, U of Georgia, USA
Effects of Mood on Responses to Preventive Health Advertising
Sela Sar, Iowa State U, USA
George Anghelcev, U of Minnesota, USA
The Interaction Between Efficacy and Emotion in Predicting Civic Engagement
Myiah Hutchens Hively, Ohio State U, USA
Kristen Dawn Landreville, Ohio State U, USA
Do We Improve, Disrupt, or Embrace Sadness? Exploring Sadness-Based Media Choice and Its Anticipated Effects
on Coping
Jinhee Kim, Kent State U, USA
Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Sports Spectators' Suspense: Affect and Uncertainty in Sports Entertainment
Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA
Prabu David, Ohio State U, USA
Matthew S. Eastin, Department of Advertising, U of Texas at Austin, USA
Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA
Dara Natalie Greenwood, U of Michigan, USA
5211
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon B
Maximizing Opportunities and Mitigating Threats to Success in a Large-Scale Antidrug Media Campaign for
Youth
Mass Communication
Health Communication
Participants
Above the Influence: Development of a Brand to Reach Youth at the Moment of Decision About Drug Use
Robert W. Denniston, Office of National Drug Control Policy, USA
Threats to Success and Empirical Safeguards: Evaluation Within the National Youth Antidrug Media Campaign
Kristen D. Holtz, KDH Research and Communication, USA
Innovative Analytic Approaches to Measure the Impact of a Drug Prevention Social Marketing Campaign
Tanya White, Draft FCB, USA
Among the largest social marketing efforts of its kind, the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign (NYADMC)
is conducted by the Office of National Drug Control Policy under congressional mandate. This campaign uses "best
practices" of the advertising industry to reach youth ages nine through 18 with information about drugs of abuse,
specifically marijuana. Since its inception in 1998, the efficacy of the NYADMC has been closely scrutinized.
National surveys such as Monitoring the Future have shown continued declines in youth drug use, and various peerreviewed evaluations have reported evidence of campaign effectiveness. But other reports have suggested that the
NYADMC caused no favorable changes in youth drug use and that there may be a "norming" effect associated with
campaign ads, whereby youth exposed to more advertising show more positive attitudes to drug use overall. Working
from this background, the purpose of this panel is twofold. First, authors will present information on the evolution of
the campaign, with a specific emphasis on the Above the Influence (ATI) brand and its focus on reaching youth
within their developmental context. Second, authors will discuss threats to success of the campaign, which include
norming, within the context of the extensive empirical methods utilized by the campaign to continuously evaluate the
impact of the advertising. Taken as a whole, this symposium will present new information about the NYADMC, with
a particular emphasis on the context in which advertising is delivered and recent evaluation outcomes that
demonstrate campaign effectiveness with the target audience.
5212
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon C
The Impact of Rationality, Veracity, Shame, and Regret on Message Processing
Information Systems
Chair
Julia Fox, Indiana U, USA
Participants
Rationality, Experientiality, and Media Behavior: A Dual-Process Approach to Media Use and Appreciation
Matthias R. Hastall, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Effects of Rationality and Story Attributes on Risk Perceptions and Responses: The Case of Local Sexual Crime
News
Chia-Hsin Pan, Chinese Culture U, TAIWAN
The Moderating Role of Experiential and Rational Thinking Styles in Responses to Supportive Messages
Key Jung Lee, U of California - Davis, USA
Bo Feng, U of California, Davis, USA
People Lie for a Reason II: A Second Test of the Principle of Veracity
Rachel K. Kim, Michigan State U, USA
Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA
Communication of Moral Emotions During an Organizational Crisis: Differential Effects of an Ashamed CEO and a
Regretful CEO
Yoka Marije Wesseling, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
5220
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Lamartine
Challenges of Teaching Intercultural Communication in Response to Global Changes
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Ming-Yi Wu, Western Illinois U, USA
Participants
Teaching Intercultural Communication in Polish - German Cross - Border Academic Institution: Opportunities and
Challenges
Agnieszka Magdalena Stepinska, Adam Mickiewicz U, POLAND
Teaching Intercultural Communication in an Institute with Predominantly Hispanic Student Population: Challenges
and Strategies
Yanrong Chang, U of Texas - Pan American, USA
"Who am I?": Teaching Cultural Identity in a Multicultural Urban College
Pei-Wen Lee, LaGuardia Community College, USA
"But we are all equals…": The Impact of Globalization in Intercultural Communication Classes
Maria Beatriz Torres, Keene State College, USA
Challenges and Promises for Intercultural Communication Education in Japan: A Holistic Approach
Masayuki Nakanishi, Tsuda College, JAPAN
"Active" Approach to Global Communication Education
Yulia Tolstikova-Mast, Butler U, USA
The panelists will discuss the challenges that instructors encounter in teaching intercultural communication due to, for
example, globalization, war, technology, student population, etc. Topics in relation to cultural identity development,
intercultural practice, historical conflict among students, the change of student population, and power dynamics will
be explored. The panelists will also offer their advanced pedagogies in response to the impact of global changes on
classroom practice and student learning.
5221
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Kafka
Digital Public Relations
Public Relations
Participants
Organizational Contingencies, Organizational Blogs, and Public Relations Practitioner Stance Toward Publics
Tom Kelleher, U of Hawaii, USA
RIWAM (Responsible Identity Web Analysis Method): A Social Model Towards Corporate 'Website Order'
Samuel Martín-Barbero, IE-Business School, SPAIN
Francesco Domenico Sandulli, IE-Business School, SPAIN
A Content Analysis of Avian Influenza Communication on 31 Chinese E-Governmental Websites
Heng Xu, Purdue U, USA
Risk Communication Strategies Through the Internet in the Chemical Industry in Spain
Paul Capriotti, U Rovira i Virgili, SPAIN
Respondent
Lance Porter, Lousiana State U, USA
5222
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Hemon
The Social Impact of Strategies and Tactics in Activist Organizing
Organizational Communication
Chair
Juliet P. Roper, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Participants
Health Activism, Stakeholder Participation, and Governmental Regulation: A Comparative Analysis of Approaches to
Corporate Change
Heather Zoller, U of Cincinnati, USA
Organizing Through Fools and Rules: An Activist Group's Attempt to Combine Emotive Carnivalesque and Rational
Bureaucratic Protest Strategies
C. Kay Weaver, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Understanding Diversity in Global Social Justice Activism in Aotearoa/New Zealand
Shiv Ganesh, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Food as a Social Justice Issue? Comparing Local Food Activism Across Three Regions
Sarah E Dempsey, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Respondent
Graham K. Knight, McMaster U, CANADA
Recent scholarship on activism has begun to emphasize the importance of understanding the relationship between the
overall social impact of activism with specific organizational strategies and tactics. However, much empirical work
remains to be done to illustrate the extremely wide range of strategies and tactics that activists communicatively
construct. Accordingly, this panel features four empirical studies of activist organizing. Panelists will deliver ten
minute presentations of key findings, followed by a brief response, and an interactive discussion with the audience.
5223
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Jarry
Influencing Decisions About Organ Donation
Health Communication
Chair
Eric Albert Zimmer, Georgetown U, USA
Participants
Promoting Organ and Tissue Donation Using the Two-Step Flow of Communication Model
Shinil Moon, SUNY Buffalo, USA
Ashley Anker, U at Buffalo, SUNY, USA
Thomas H. Feeley, U of Buffalo, USA
"My Loss is Your Gain": Examining the Role of Message Frame, Perceived Risk, and Ambivalence in the Decision to
Become an Organ Donor
Elizabeth L. Cohen, Georgia State U, USA
A Mass-Mediated Intervention on Hispanic Live Kidney Donation
Eusebio Martins Alvaro, Claremont Graduate U, USA
Jason T Siegel, Claremont Graduate U, USA
William D. Crano, Claremont Graduate U, USA
Ethnic Differences in Intention to Enroll in a State Organ Donor Registry and Intention to Talk With Family About
Organ Donation
Hee Sun Park, Michigan State U, USA
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Doshik Yun, Michigan State U, USA
5224
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Joyce
Progress and Perspectives in Communicating About HIV/AIDS
Health Communication
Chair
Jae-Hwa Shin, U of Southern Mississippi, USA
Participants
A 10-Year Systematic Review of HIV/AIDS Mass Communication Campaigns: Have We Made Progress?
Seth M. Noar, U of Kentucky, USA
Philip Palmgreen, U of Kentucky, USA
Melissa Chabot, U of Kentucky, USA
Rick S. Zimmerman, U of Kentucky, USA
Nicole Dobransky, U of Kentucky, USA
Explication of Barriers to Effective HIV Prevention: Using Counterarguments as Indicators of Barriers to Behavior
Change in Malawi
Rajiv N. Rimal, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Sarah L Gibson, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Katherine Clegg Smith, Johns Hopkins U, USA
African Coverage of Progress and Responsibility in Fighting AIDS: A Community Structure Approach
John C. Pollock, College of New Jersey, USA
Paul D'Angelo, College of New Jersey, USA
Genevieve Faust, The College of New Jersey, USA
Brian Keefe, The College of New Jersey, USA
Meghan Higgins, The College of New Jersey, USA
Dominique Sauro, The College of New Jersey, USA
Rowena Briones, The College of New Jersey, USA
Danielle Catona, The College of New Jersey, USA
Adapting AND Applying a Western-Developed Model of Condom Use to Chinese College Students
Zhiwen Xiao, U of Houston, USA
5225
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Musset
Love, Rituals, Commitment, and Conversations
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Kathryn Greene, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
When Work and Love Mix: Perceptions of Peers in Workplace Romances
Sean Michael Horan, West Virginia U, USA
Rebecca M. Chory, West Virginia U, USA
Rituals in Dating Relationships: The Development and Validation of a Measure
Judy C. Pearson, North Dakota State U, USA
Jeffrey T. Child, Kent State U, USA
Anna Carmon, North Dakota State U, USA
Relational Trajectories: Mate Value, Baggage, Attachment, and Their Impact on Commitment in Relationships Over
Time
Robert John Sidelinger, West Virginia U, USA
Melanie Booth-Butterfield, West Virginia U, USA
Geographic Distance and Communication During Courtship: Examining Knowledge-Enhancing Talk
Laura Stafford, Ohio State U, USA
Andy J. Merolla, Colorado State U, USA
Respondent
Kathryn Greene, Rutgers U, USA
5230
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 1
Political Advertising
Political Communication
Chair
Elizabeth Johnson Avery, U of Tennessee, USA
Participants
Impacts of Chinese Government Public Relations: PR Expertise, Legitimacy, and News
Di Zhang, Syracuse U, USA
Jueman Zhang, Syracuse U, USA
Measuring the Professionalization of Political Campaign Communication
Rachel Gibson, U of Manchester, UNITED KINGDOM
Andrea Rommele, International U in Germany, Bruchsal, GERMANY
The Role and Effects of Emotion in Negative Political Advertising
Jill Cornelius Underhill, U of Maryland, USA
Because I Said So: A Functional Theory Analysis of the 2002 Midterm Elections and Uses of Supporting Evidence
Jayne R. Henson, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
William L. Benoit, U of Missouri, USA
5232
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 3
Exploring Governments' Communication Strategies and Their Implications for Social Impact
Political Communication
Chairs
Karen Sanders, San Pablo U, SPAIN
Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN
Participants
Looking for News Space or Thinking Strategically? The Case of the Spanish Governments' Communication
Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN
Professionalization at Two Speeds? Can Government Communication Learn From Electoral Communication?
Christina Holtz-Bacha, U of Erlangen - Nuernberg, GERMANY
From Campaigning to Governing: French President Nicolas Sarkozy's Innovative Political Communication
Philippe J. Maarek, U Paris 12, FRANCE
Government Communication in Fragile Democracies
Carla Montemayor, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM
The Blair Years 1997-2007: Lessons for Government Communication?
Karen Sanders, San Pablo U, SPAIN
This panel explores key issues related to Government communication and their implications for social impact,
addressing issues like the professionalization of communication, the "global" model for Government communication,
the relationship between persuasive communication and information, and ultimately, the aim of governments
communication strategies and their implications for social impact.
5233
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 4
LSI Approaches to Analyzing Media and Controversy
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Alena L. Vasilyeva, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
Contentless Content Analysis: Flaws in a New Methodology for Analyzing Media Bias
Mark N. Cooper, McGannon Center for Communications Research, USA
A Framework for Sentiment Analysis of Political News Articles
Armineh Nourbakhsh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Christopher S. G. Khoo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Jin-Cheon Na, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Socioscientific Controversies: A Theoretical and Methodological Framework
Craig O. Stewart, Old Dominion U, USA
Communities of Interpretation: Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide
Wanda Luen Wun Siu, Chinese U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
5234
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 5
Changing Social Landscapes: Negotiating Religion, Sex, and Politics in Popular Culture
Popular Communication
Participants
Dog as God
Mara Einstein, Queens College--City U of New York, USA
Power and Politics in the Religious Mediascape
Stewart M. Hoover, U of Colorado, USA
Little Mosque on the CBC
Joyce Smith, Ryerson U, CANADA
Sex, Science and Religion: Mediating the Kinsey Reports
Rebecca Alice Sullivan, U of Calgary, CANADA
This panel explores various religious representations in popular culture with the objective of demonstrating the
changing landscape of religious communications - from direct interaction to more mediated forms of communication and how religion is negotiated in the broader culture. While traditional religious practice declines, the myths of
religion continue to be presented in the popular culture. These representations have lead to altered understandings of
religion itself as well as social issues from sex to politics.
5240
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Drummond West
Communication in Action: Scholarly Intervention at Local and National Levels
Theme Sessions
Chair
Susan Ericsson, Northwestern U, USA
Participants
Caught in the Frame: Immigration Marches and the Public Screen
Esteban Del Rio, U of San Diego, USA
Free-Market Discourse and Public Dialogue: Alternatives to Free-Market Approaches in Rebuilding New Orleans
Post-Katrina.
Janice Haynes, Xavier U, USA
Communication Studies, Activism, and Rebuilding During the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans
David J. Park, Xavier U, USA
This panel examines communication as social action in a variety of contexts. The papers use an interdisciplinary
approach to examining communication at sites in New Orleans and Los Angeles. The research focuses on
communication in influencing public policies, alternative pedagogies and community action. The papers address: (1)
Analysis of civic activism and the framing power of the news utilizing Public Screen theory to assess the implications
of the 2007 Immigration March that occurred in McArthur Park; (3) Structuring of public dialogue through freemarket discourse surrounding rebuilding of New Orleans after Katrina; and (4) Examining the potential of
communication departments as agents of change using a case study of community activism and experimental
pedagogies involving Xavier University of Louisiana Communications Department faculty and students, and nonprofits in the aftermath of Katrina.
5241
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Drummond Centre
Mobile Media
Communication and Technology
Chair
James E. Katz, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
A Comparison of Five Functions in the PDA: Importance, Ease of Use, Usefulness and Intention to Use
Julian Lin, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Chan Hock Chuan, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Milagros Rivera, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Communicating Through Mobile TV Among Young College Students and Its Potential Social Impact
Seung-Hyun Lee, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Emotions in Mobile Media-Assisted Tourist Experiences
Timo Seppo Saari, Temple U, USA
Youngjin Yoo, Temple U, USA
Iis P. Tussyadiah, Temple U, USA
A Preliminary Study of the Interfirm Network of Wireless Mobile Media Business in the U.S.
Li Xiong, U of Southern California, USA
5242
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Drummond East
Do ICTs Foster Social Connectivity or Social Isolation? Evaluating Cross-National Evidence
Communication and Technology
Chair
Barry Wellman, U of Toronto, CANADA
Participants
The Internet and the Increasingly Connected American Life: Trend Spotting Through a Year-to-Year Comparison,
2002-2007
Hua Wang, U of Southern California, USA
Barry Wellman, U of Toronto, CANADA
Does Distance Still Matter in Connected Lives? A Pre- and Post-Internet Comparison
Diana Mok, Dept of Geography, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
Longitudinal Effects of Internet Use on Social Networks
Kakuko Miyata, Meiji Gakuin U, JAPAN
Social Accessibility and Instant Messaging: University Students' Negotiation of Public and Private Time
Jessica Collins, Dept of Sociology, U of Toronto, CANADA
Anabel Quan-Haase, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
The Use of Communication Technologiesand Perceived Family Support
Gustavo S Mesch, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Ilan Talmud, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Respondent
Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Is the heavy use of the internet (and other ICTs) socially isolating? Evidence from Canada, Israel, Japan and the
United States show that this concern is ill-founded. People are intertwining a differentiated battery of ICTs with faceto-face and telephone communication to communicate often, with large networks stretching over long distances and
time zones. The triple revolution of ICTs, always-available mobile access, and social networking is enhancing and
transforming relationships.
5243
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 6
Perspectives on Communication Technology and Organizing
Organizational Communication
Chair
Michelle D. Shumate, U of Illinois, USA
Participants
Organizational Norm Congruency and Interpersonal Familiarity in Email: Examining Messages From Two Different
Perspectives
Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Renee Cowan, Texas A&M U, USA
Marian Houser, Texas State U, USA
Reclaiming Materiality: Explaining Interpretations of Technology and Resistance to Organizational Change
Paul Leonardi, Northwestern U, USA
The Destructive Potential of Electronic Communication Technologies in Organizations
Andrew Flanagin, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Beverly A. Bondad-Brown, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
The Role of Utility Values, Organizational Subcultures, and Critical Mass in Organizational Use of Communication
Information Technology
Canchu Lin, Bowling Green State U, USA
Louisa Ha, Bowling Green State U, USA
Respondent
Steven R. Corman, Arizona State U, USA
5244
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 7
Reassessing NAFTA and the Cultural Industries
Global Communication and Social Change
Participants
Television and Cultural Integrity: Historical Perspective on Technology
Emile G. McAnany, Santa Clara U, USA
The Uninvited Guest: Indians in the Free Trade Mediascape
Eduardo Barrera, U of Texas - El Paso, USA
Television Flows Rather Than Trades
Roger De La Garde, Laval U, CANADA
The Supply of Audiovisual Content in México, Canada and the United States in the NAFTA Era
Jose Carlos Lozano, Tecnologico de Monterrey, Campus Monterrey, MEXICO
Francisco Javier Martinez, Tecnologico de Monterrey, Campus Monterrey, MEXICO
Respondent
Line Grenier, U de Montréal, CANADA
This panel features scholars who participated in a 1994 conference in Austin which resulted in the book, "Mass Media
and Free Trade: NAFTA and the Cultural Industries" (Texas Press, 1996). Each panelist and the respondent will
consider free trade's subsequent impact on mass communication texts, phenomena, processes, etc. observed 14 years
earlier as the NAFTA was being implemented. A variety of theoretical concerns and research orientations will be
represented by panelists and a respondent from the three nations of North America.
5251
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 8
Is Entertainment Better Information? Wrapping Health Messages With a Smile: The Potential of
Entertainment-Education Programs for Children and Adolescents
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Michael J. Cody, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
The Influence of Parental Mediation on Children's Usage of Entertaining Television Programs
Saskia Bocking, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
The Epilogue: A Secret Ingredient for the Entertainment-Education Strategy?
Kathleen Arendt, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Commercials and Entertainment-Education: Distracting From or Supporting the Message?
Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, SWITZERLAND
Entertainment-Education in the Context of AIDS and HIV in Germany. A Prolonged-Exposure Experiment
Constanze Felicitas Rossmann, Ludwig-Maximilians U – Munich, SWITZERLAND
Sibylle Endres, U of Munich, GERMANY
Entertainment-Education has become a catch phrase for a new and supposedly more effective information strategy.
Extensively applied in the health information sector, it aims at improving knowledge, attitudes and ultimately
behavior towards a certain health issue. Based on data from Germany and Switzerland this panel introduces
experimental data that focuses on the potential of Entertainment-Education formats targeting special audiences at risk
and covering a diverse pool of health topics (e.g. nutrition, HIV/Aids). Survey data on parents' influence of children's
usage of entertaining television programs complements the experimental data.
5260
Sunday
09:00-10:15
701
The Future of Journalism Research: Theories, Methods, Challenges
Journalism Studies
Chair
Martin Loffelholz, Ilmenau U of Technology, GERMANY
Participants
The Future of Theories of Journalism Research
Martin Loffelholz, Ilmenau U of Technology, GERMANY
The Future of Journalism Research Methods
David H. Weaver, Indiana U, USA
The Future of Comparative Journalism Research
Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Andreas Schwarz, TU - Ilmenau, GERMANY
The Future of Globalized Journalism Research
Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas - Austin, USA
The Future of Interdisciplinary Journalism Research
Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA
The panel session on the future of journalism research aims to discuss the theoretical and methodological perspectives
of journalism research at the beginning of the 21st century. The main objective of this session is to suggest a new
orientation for journalism research, which needs to take into account that both national and disciplinary boundaries
have to be overcome in an era of globalization. All in all, the proposed session on the future of journalism research is
meant to stimulate and refine our thinking about theoretical approaches and research methods that will be most
fruitful in studying journalism in this decade and beyond.
5261
Sunday
09:00-10:15
705
Visual Framing and Politics
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Mary Angela Bock, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Participants
The Levels of Visual Framing
Lulu Rodriguez, Iowa State U, USA
Daniela V. Dimitrova, Iowa State U, USA
The Struggle for Control: Visual Framing, News Coverage, and Image Handling of Presidential Candidates, 19922004
Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Indiana U, USA
Erik P. Bucy, Indiana U, USA
U.S. Presidential Campaign 2008: A Fantasy Theme Analysis of Visual Stories Spun on the Web
Janis Teruggi Page, U of Florida, USA
Margaret Ellen Duffy, U of Missouri, USA
Gay Marriage in Iowa: The Visual Framing of a Controversial Social Issue
Joel Geske, Iowa State U, USA
Patti Brown, Iowa State U, USA
5262
Sunday
09:00-10:15
716
Transvaluing Media and Communication Research
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Digitally Not Yours: Spatial Discourses and Discursive Spaces for Brazilian Digital Television Policy in Manaus
(Joint Top Paper)
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
Toward an Ecological Historiography of Media Technology
Richard Maxwell, CUNY - Queens College, USA
Toby Miller, U of California - Riverside, USA
Hello Kitty: The Work of Nature in the Age of Digital Reproduction
Jody Berland, York U, CANADA
Doxa and Paradox About Communication
Diana Iulia Nastasia, U of North Dakota, USA
Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA
Media and communication reserach from time to time needs to reassess its paradigms, maybe even to transvalue (in
Nietzsche's term) the terms on which it is based. This panel brings together papers which interrogate the norms of
media research and seek to reorientate it towards new issues and new horizons of critical engagement, and includes
the joint top and the third-placed papers in the Division. Chair: Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, University of London
5263
Sunday
09:00-10:15
720
Dialogues in Black and White
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
David Monje, Northeastern U, USA
Participants
"The Wannabe, The Man, and Whitebread": Portrayals of Whiteness in the Black Context
Omotayo Banjo, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Todd A. Fraley, East Carolina U, USA
Modern Antiblack Racism in Postcivil-Rights Citizen Discourse
Michael G. Lacy, Monmouth U, USA
Patrolling Whiteness: Framing the Minuteman Project on the Evening News
Joshua Grimm, U of Iowa, USA
Re/Deconstruction of Whiteness? Racial Consciousness vs. Racial Abolition
Kim McCann, Bowling Green State U, USA
From Sun Ra to the Black Panthers: Consciousness and African American Technological Appropriation, 1952-1973
Daniel Kreiss, Stanford U, USA
5264
Sunday
09:00-10:15
728
Media Effects on Children: Spotlight on Literacy and Advertising
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Participants
The Impact of Television Narratives on the Early Literacy Skills of Preschoolers
Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Deborah L. Linebarger, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Spokescharacter Appearance vs. Behavior: What's More Important When Advertising Food Products to Kids in
Different Developmental Stages?
Courtney Carpenter Childers, U of Tennessee, USA
Children's Comprehension of Advertising: The Relationship Between Knowledge of Persuasive Intent and Age
Ariel R. Chernin, Center on Media and Child Health, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Comparing Children's and Adults' Recognition and Understanding of Television Advertising
Esther Rozendaal, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Moniek Buijzen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Mitigating the Unintended Effects of Advertising on Young Children: The Effectiveness of Parent-Administered
Active Mediation
Jennifer L. Chakroff, Lasell College, USA
Respondent
Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
5266
Sunday
09:00-10:15
820
ICA Publications Committee
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Mohan Jyoti Dutta, Purdue U, USA
Participants
Krishnamurthy Sriramesh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Ingrid Volkmer, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Mike West, International Communication Association, USA
ICA members are invited to share issues and concerns with the publications committee.
5310
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon A
Advances in Media Involvement, Identification, and Engagement
Mass Communication
Chair
Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
Understanding Audience Involvement: Conceptualizing and Manipulating Identification and Transportation
Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Nurit Talor, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Involvement with Celebrities: Examining the Relationships between Similarity Identification, Wishful Identification,
and Parasocial Interaction
Janel S. Schuh, U of Southern California, USA
Does Everybody Love Raymond? Audience Identification With Favorite Sitcom Characters
Shu-Fang Lin, National Chung Cheng U, TAIWAN
Emotion and Cognition in Filmic Narrative Comprehension and Engagement
Rick W. Busselle, Washington State U, USA
Helena Bilandzic, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Documentary and Historical Reenactment Film: A Comparison of Transportation, Emotion, Interest, and Learning
Kristen Dawn Landreville, Ohio State U, USA
Heather LaMarre, Ohio State U, USA
5311
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon B
Media Trust and Media Credibility: Shaping Our Understanding of Two Key Concepts
Mass Communication
Chair
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Participants
Conceptualizing Audience Trust in Media as General Trust.
Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Understanding the Consequences of Trust. The Effects of Trust in News Media on Trust in Politics.
Joerg Matthes, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Werner Wirth, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Christian Schemer, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Trust in Public Internet Communication
Matthias Kohring, U Munster, GERMANY
Christoph Neuberger, U of Muenster, GERMANY
New Challenges to Media Credibility in the Digital Environment.
Miriam Metzger, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Andrew Flanagin, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Ryan Bradley Medders, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Elisia Eunha Sim, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Justin Lipp, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Respondent
Matthias Kohring, U Munster, GERMANY
Issues of media trust and media credibility have been a major part of mass communication scholarship since the field's
earliest days. Despite this long tradition, trust and credibility research is characterized by a proliferation of empirical
findings and a heterogeneity of conceptual ideas. This panel demonstrates recent developments in theory and research
from an international perspective. By approaching trust and credibility from different angles, the panel aims at
advancing a common understanding of these key concepts.
5312
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon C
Reporting on Natural Disasters in Mass Media: A Historical and International Perspective
Mass Communication
Participants
The Role of News Media in Natural Disaster Risk and Recovery
Brian Miles, U of Vermont, USA
Confusing Terminology: How Mass Media, Administration Authorities and the Public Work With Different Symbols,
Terms, and Definitions
Maria Hagemeier-Klose, Technical U of Munich, Germany, GERMANY
Natural Disasters From 1910 to 2005 in Newspapers Reporting Once and Today
Helena Zemp, IPMZ U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND
Disaster Reporting in Differing Media Cultures
Lucie Hribal, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Almost every day the media report on disasters somewhere in the world. The media are essential, for example, for
warnings to those who may be affected but also for the images we have about natural disasters. Because the frequency
of reporting on natural disasters has increased in the last years, the public has become more interested in them. At the
same time natural disasters have become global concerns, but little is known about how mass media in different
countries reports on causes, effects or responses to disaster. In the same vein, little is known about the selection
processes which determine which events come to public attention. Making these processes explicit is crucial for a
better understanding of the factors in human perception governing the interpretation of catastrophes. In the following
panel four aspects of construction of reality in the case of catastrophes will be presented: firstly the social construction
of risk which results from media coverage of natural disasters like Hurricanes Katrina and Rita of 2005, focusing on
the US Media. Secondly, research findings from Germany will illustrate how mass media, administration and the
public work with different symbols, terms and definitions. Third, a content analysis of Swiss newspapers reporting on
nine flood disasters (1910 to 2005) identifies how social change and changes in media practices influence what we
call a natural disaster.The influence of the media market appears to be an important and increasing part of the growing
attention to the issue of natural disasters around the world.
5320
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Lamartine
Visual Competence: A New Paradigm?
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U – Bremen, GERMANY
Participants
Visual Competence and Media Literacy: Can One Exist Without the Other?
Michael Griffin, Carleton College, USA
Sisters, Cousins, Competitors or Friends? Visual Competence and Media Literacy
Renee Hobbs, Temple U, USA
Visual Studies Revisited: Notes on Developing More Integrated and Encompassing Forms of Visual Expertise
Luc Pauwels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
The Concept of Visual Competence as Seen From the Perspective of the Psychological and Brain Sciences
Arvid Kappas, Jacobs U - Bremen, GERMANY
Bettina Olk, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY
Respondent
Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U – Bremen, GERMANY
The panel contrasts already established paradigms like "visual culture", "visual studies", "visual expertise", "visual
literacy and media literacy" with the relatively new concept of "visual competence" in the light of sociological,
psychological and communication approaches. The following key question to be discussed is, whether the concept
"Visual Competence" is useful/necessary by comparison to the already established concept of "Visual Literacy/Media
Literacy", and how the concept of Visual Competence can be implemented.
5321
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Kafka
Intercultural and International Public Relations
Public Relations
Chair
Bey-Ling Sha, San Diego State U, USA
Participants
Anxiety and Uncertainty Management in an Intercultural Setting
Lan Ni, U of Houston, USA
Qi Wang, Villanova U, USA
An Exploratory Study of International Ethics: A Chinese Perspective
Ai Zhang, U of Maryland, USA
An Examination of International Tourism Public Relations Websites Using Hofstede's Cultural Dimensions
Doo Syen Kang, Michigan State U, USA
Teresa Mastin, Michigan State U, USA
Factoring Culture Into Relationship Management Theory: Traditional Chinese Value Orientations and Cultivation
Strategies
Chun-ju Flora Hung, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Yi-Ru Regina Chen, U of Macau, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
5322
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Hemon
Problems and Possibilities in Group-Based Organizing
Organizational Communication
Chair
Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Participants
A Model of Deviance in Small Groups
Saulnier Martine, Université du Québec à Montréal, CANADA
Johanne Saint-Charles, U of Quebec - Montreal, CANADA
Collaborating Groups and Orientations to Technology in Crisis: Creating Connections or Enabling Divides?
Amanda J. Porter, U of Colorado, USA
Communication That Damages Teamwork: The Dark Side of Teams
David R. Seibold, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Paul Kang, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Bernadette M. Gailliard, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Jody Jahn, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Simple Heuristics and Information Sharing in Groups: How Naïve Groups Can Solve the Hidden-Profile Task
Torsten Reimer, U of Maryland, USA
Andrea Reimer, U of Maryland, USA
Ulrich Hoffrage, U of Lausanne, SWITZERLAND
Respondent
Tim Kuhn, U of Colorado, USA
5323
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Jarry
Communicating Policies and Procedures in Health Delivery
Health Communication
Chair
Barbara J. Walkosz, U of Colorado - Denver, USA
Participants
A Structurational Analysis of Informed Consent to Treatment: (Re)productions of Contradictory Sociohistorical
Structures in Practitioners' Interpretive Schemes
James Olumide Olufowote, Boston College, USA
Measuring Cancer Clinical Trial Understanding
Jon D Miller, Michigan State U, USA
Michael R. Kotowski, U of Tennessee, USA
Robert Comis, Coalition of Cooperative Cancer Groups, USA
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Kami J. Silk, Michigan State U, USA
Diane Colaizzi, Coalition of Cooperative Cancer Groups. USA
Talking to Doctors About Clinical Trials
Katherine A. McComas, Cornell U, USA
Zheng Yang, Cornell U, USA
Geri Gay, Cornell U, USA
John P. Leonard, Weill Cornell Medical College, Cornell U, USA
Andrew J. Dannenberg, Weill Cornell Medical College, Cornell U, USA
Hildy Dillon, Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, USA
Robin Kornhaber, Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, USA
Reflection and Analysis of How Pharmacy Students Learn to Communicate About Medication Errors
Carey Marie Noland, Northeastern U, USA
Nathaniel M Rickles, Northeastern U, USA
5324
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Joyce
WebWorks: Interactive Health Communication
Health Communication
Chair
Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Participants
Usability Testing of a Computer-Mediated Health Communication Program
Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA
eHealth Intervention Outcome Research: Will it Benefit Underserved Rural and Ethnic Minority Populations?
Robert L Glueckauf, College of Medicine, Florida State U, USA
Mia Liza A. Lustria, Florida State U, USA
Dissecting Computer-Tailored Health Interventions Delivered Over the Web
Mia Liza A. Lustria, Florida State U, USA
Juliann Cortese, Florida State U, USA
Linda Lockett Brown, Florida State U, USA
Richard Davis, Florida State U, USA
Victoria Mahabi, Florida State U, USA
Beom Jun Bae, Florida State U, USA
Mediating Processes and Effects of Two Communication Interventions for Breast Cancer Patients
Robert P. Hawkins, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Suzanne Pingree, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Bret Shaw, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Ronald C. Serlin, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Chris Swoboda, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Jeong Yeob Han, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Cindy Carmack-Taylor, U of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, USA
Andrew Salner, Hartford Hospital, USA
5325
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Musset
Continuous Measurement of Digital Game Experiences
Game Studies
Participants
Mapping Real-Time Game Experience Using Behavioral Indicators
Wouter Van den Hoogen, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Wijnand A. Ijsselsteijn, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Yvonne de Kort, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Psychophysiology of Digital Game Playing: Effects of Opposition Versus Collaboration in the Laboratory and in Real
Life
Niklas Ravaja, Helsinki School of Economics, FINLAND
Matias Kivikangas, Helsinki School of Economics, FINLAND
Social Cues in Social Games: Measures of Player Experience as Game Elements
Johannes Breuer, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Felix Eschenburg, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Lisa Aelker, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Observational Coding of Players' Behavior as a Continuous Measure of Digital Game Experience
Karolien Poels, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Yvonne de Kort, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Wijnand A. Ijsselsteijn, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
In recent years, the game industry has developed a wide array of games and gaming devices, targeted to different age
and gender groups and to gamers with various play styles. As such, playing digital games has become a highly
popular leisure activity. Over recent years, academic research on digital gaming has been growing in interest. Part of
research is focused on how to measure what people feel and experience when they engage in playing digital games.
Being able to validly and reliably measure these experiences is a prerequisite for sound research and theory building
in this domain. In this panel, we focus on the evaluation of game experiences, and in particular on those approaches
that allow for a continuous or time-variant measurement of the digital game experience. Most of the empirical
research on game experience to date has employed retrospective self-report measures, either qualitative (i.e., in-depth
interviews, focus groups) or quantitative (i.e., questionnaires) in character. This panel takes a different perspective by
focusing on measuring game experiences continuously during game play. We present four papers that advance the
state-of-the-art in continuous measurement of digital game experiences, including real-time behavior tracking,
observational coding, and psychophysiological approaches. The papers will address a number of questions regarding
continuous measures, such as: what indicators of players' experience can be recorded during game play; how are they
related to (components of) game experience; what methods can be employed to analyze game experience per se, and
in relation to specific game events or episodes.
5330
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 1
Framing
Political Communication
Chairs
Natalie Jomini Stroud, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Anna Kandyla, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
Where Do Frames Come From? Cross-Cultural Variance in the Framing of the Enron Debacle
Roei Davidson, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL
Defining the Democrats: Mainstream Online Media and the Early Framing of the 2008 Democratic Primary
Campaign
Bartosz Wojtek Wojdynski, U of North Carolina, USA
Who Says What? Competition Over News Frames in the U.S. Press Coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Kuang-Kuo Chang, Michigan State U, USA
The Influence of Press Releases on the Use of Strategic and Issue Frames
Anita M. J. van Hoof, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Liesbeth E.A.H.M. Hermans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS
Baldwin Van Gorp, Radboud U - Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS
5332
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 3
Symbolic Battles: Reality TV and Class, Gender, and Geopolitical Conflict
Popular Communication
Chair
Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA
Participants
Make Me Beautiful: Citizenship, Democratization, and Instruction on Makeover Television
Shana Heinricy, Xavier U, USA
No Adults Left Behind: Reality TV Shows as Educational Tools in the Neoliberal Society
Hye Jin Lee, U of Iowa, USA
Reality TV, Nationalism, and Gender: Superstar and the Lebanon-Syria Media War
Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA
The Performance of Scandal: The Jacko Eisenberg Affair and Israeli Military Discourse
Oren Livio, U of Pennsylvania, USA
5333
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 4
Politics & Gender in the Age of Interactive Mass Media
Feminist Scholarship
Political Communication
Chair
Beate Gersch, Trinity U, USA
Participants
Embodiment of Gender and Different Politics: Hillary Rodham Clinton Self-Representation and Iowa Media's
Responses
Betty Houchin Winfield, U of Missouri, USA
Is Anybody Out There? Women's Political Commentary in Traditional and New Media Spaces
Anne Johnston, U of North Carolina, USA
Barbara G. Friedman, U of North Carolina, USA
Women and Political Socialization: The Interaction of Gender and Media on Political Attitudes and Behavior
Kathleen Schmermund, Congressional Staff, USA
Anne Johnston, U of North Carolina, USA
Women and Technology - From Satellites to the Second Self
Danna L. Walker, American U, USA
As women rise to power in American politics, the internet has become a strategic site of political communication with the potential to be a watershed for women's political participation or a continuation of the "social annihilation"
that minimizes and trivializes their issues and opinions. How do women candidates and opinion leaders use the new
technology to foster political participation and promote debate on key policy issues, and how might a gender divide
persist in cyberspace?
5334
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 5
Popular Culture, the Nation, and Globalization
Popular Communication
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Usha Zacharias, Westfield State College, USA
Participants
Indian Middle Classes, Politics, and Popular Culture: Antipathies of the 'Second Democratic Resurgence'
Madhavi Murty, U of Washington, USA
Accommodating the Nations: Cultural Citizenship in Monsoon Wedding
Sreela Sarkar, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
The Commodifying Culture:Nationalism in the Korean Wave TV Dramas
Hyejung Ju, U of Oklahoma, USA
Two Phonographic Realities;Continual Colonial Submission and Interstitial Voices of Colonial Specters (1937-1950)
Yongwoo Lee, McGill U, CANADA
The Redemption of the Popular: Culture, Difference, and Race in the Age of Empire
Mehdi Semati, Eastern Illinois U, USA
5340
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Drummond West
Convergence and Collaboration: Communication Research, Activism, and Education for the Common Good
Theme Sessions
Chair
Lynn Schofield Clark, U of Denver, USA
Participants
Allison Butler, New York U, USA
Lisa Marie Tripp, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
Redefining Online Citizenship and the Public Sphere
Megan Boler, U of Toronto, CANADA
Media Education for Citizenship in a Digital Age
Mark Lipton, U of Guelph, CANADA
Lessons in Media Activism From Post-Katrina New Orleans
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
Learning, Activism, and Globalization
Divya C. McMillin, U of Washington - Tacoma, USA
Respondents
Robin R. Means Coleman, U of Michigan, USA
Bill Tally, Center for Children and Technology, Education Development Center, USA
K-C Nat Turner, U of California at Berkeley, USA
Kathleen Tyner, U of Texas - Austin, USA
This interactive, inter-disciplinary roundtable discussion will bring together media and communication scholars,
educators, and creators whose research, teaching, production, and community activities aim to create necessary
changes based on principles of a common good in democracy. Roundtable participants will draw on their own
perspectives, knowledge, and experience, and invite audience participation as well, to address the following
questions: What concerns are shared across these areas of interest? What insights into creating change for the
democratic common good have participants gained from their particular experiences? What practices in these areas of
interest best contribute to intended changes? How can people in these different areas work together to create positive,
long-lasting, and wide-reaching social impacts in their own communities, as well as the world at-large?
Documentation of the ensuing discussion will be coordinated by the organizer, revised in collaboration retrospectively
with participants for clarity, relevance, and importance, and ultimately, disseminated through online networks and
journals suggested by all in attendance. Thus the outcome of the session's proceedings are intended to further ongoing
discussions, collaborations, reflections, and creations; in other words, to continue "communicating for social impact.
5341
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Drummond Centre
Online Persuasion
Communication and Technology
Chair
Nokon Heo, U of Central Arkansas, USA
Participants
Persuasion on the 'Net: A Synthetic Propositional Framework
Brandon Lee Van Der Heide, Michigan State U, USA
Are Pop-Ups Always Annoying? The Moderating Effect of Ad Relevance on Consumers' Attitude Toward Ads and
Websites
Youjeong Kim, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Heeseok Kim, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Nam Young Kim, Louisiana State U, USA
Bricks vs. Clicks: Affective Responses and Impulse Buying Intent
Guda van Noort, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Peter Kerkhof, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Bob M. Fennis, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Factors Affecting Attitude Toward Shopping for Real and Virtual Items on Social Networking Websites
Jiyoung Cha, U of Florida, USA
SMS Motives Predicting SMS Use and Attitudes toward SMS Advertising: The Evidence from Thailand
Nuchada Dumrongsiri, Assumption U, THAILAND
Vikanda Pornsakulvanich, Assumption U, THAILAND
5342
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Drummond East
Technology and Social Capital
Communication and Technology
Chair
Satomi Sugiyama, Franklin College - Switzerland, SWITZERLAND
Participants
Net Worth: Facebook Use and Changes in Social Capital Over Time
Charles Steinfield, Michigan State U, USA
Nicole Ellison, Michigan State U, USA
Cliff Lampe, Michigan State U, USA
Are Facebook Friends Like Face-to-Face Friends: Investigating Relations Between the Use of Social Networking
Websites and Social Capital
Jennifer Stevens Aubrey, U of Missouri, USA
Sumana Chattopadhyay, Marquette U, USA
Lesile A. Rill, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Networked Communities: A Case of the Electronic Community Information Commons in the U.S.
Seungahn Nah, U of Kentucky, USA
Will Samson, U of Kentucky, USA
Lewis A. Friedland, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Social Capital and Control in Online Networks
Lee Keenan Farquhar, U of Iowa, USA
The Phantom Professor: Weblogs, Social Capital, and the Politics of Institutional Disclosure.
J. Richard Stevens, Southern Methodist U, USA
5343
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 6
Reconfiguring the Public
Communication Law & Policy
Participants
Defining Media Publics
Jessica Clark, American U, USA
New Politics, New Publics?
Natalie Fenton, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
The Public as New News Sources and News Intermediaries
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
A New Expression of the Public Interest? The Case of the Public Service Publisher
Des Freedman, U of London, Goldsmiths College, UNITED KINGDOM
Respondent
James Curran, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
For many years, the public has been conceptualized as the 'object' of media activity. Digital developments are now
complicating the status of the public, rendering members of the public more visible as active participants in the media
field. This panel explores new definitions of the public and its changing place in relation to mediated activity. It
focuses on the different ways that the public both influences and is configured in the contemporary media
environment.
5344
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 7
Media Globalization, Hybridity, and Culture
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Xin Xin, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
'I Need an Indian Touch': Glocalization & Bollywood Films
Shakuntala Rao, SUNY - Plattsburgh, USA
Globalization in the Eyes of the People's Daily
Jing Song, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Rethinking Cultural Proximity: Multiple Television Flows for Multilayered Cultural Identities
Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA
The Globalization/Fragmentation Dialectic of 'Media Superpowers.' Nickelodeon in New Zealand and the South
Pacific
Katalin Lustyik, Ithaca College, USA
Institutional Environment and Organizational Practice: International Advertising Strategy and Cross-National
Research, 1997-2006
Wonsun Shin, U of Minnesota, USA
Tsan-Kuo Chang, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
Respondent
Xin Xin, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
5351
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 8
Communication and Information: Critical Perspectives on IAMCR's Research Agenda for UNESCO
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Robin Mansell, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Cees J. Hamelink, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Linje Manyozo, U of Fort Hare, SOUTH AFRICA
Divina Frau-Meigs, U of Paris, FRANCE
Indrajit Banerjee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
In December 2007, IAMCR was invited to develop a prospective research agenda for UNESCO. A research agenda
was developed emphasizing the need to strengthen and re-orient research in ways that might enable a rethinking of
sustainable development in the context of knowledge societies. Focusing on governance, cultural diversity and media
education, strong themes that emerged include human rights; access and literacies; participatory communication;
representation and attention to a repertoire of research methodologies and methods. This panel will examine both the
strengths and the weaknesses of the new agenda from a scholarly point of view as the agenda was developed to
respond to the policy and practice-oriented interests of UNESCO. It will ask, what is the gap between scholarly
interest in these issues and more policy/practice oriented research? Participants on the panel will include those who
participated in a small brainstorming workshop to develop the agenda as well as those who are members of IAMCR
but did not have the change to participate directly.
5360
Sunday
10:30-11:45
701
Journalism, Citizens, and the State
Journalism Studies
Chair
Celeste Gonzalez De Bustamante, U of Arizona, USA
Participants
Honing the Tools of Journalism Research: Herman and Chomsky Versus Bourdieu at Naspers
Gabriel Johannes Botma, Stellenbosch U, SOUTH AFRICA
Political Reporting in Poland: What Has Changed Over the Last Decade?
Ewa Musialowska, U of Dresden and U of Wroclaw, POLAND
Radio Utopia: Promoting Public Interest in a 1940s Radio Documentary
Matthew Ehrlich, University of Illinois, USA
Institutional Legitimacy and Russian News: Case Studies of Four Regional Newspapers
Elina V. Erzikova, U of Alabama, USA
Wilson Hugh Lowrey, U of Alabama, USA
Respondent
Owen Johnson, Indiana U, USA
Poland, Russia, South Africa, and the United States are examined in four papers that are positioned at the intersection
of politics, ideology, news media, and the flow of information to citizens.
5361
Sunday
10:30-11:45
705
LSI Studies on Impressing Audiences
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Kathleen C. Haspel, Fairleigh Dickinson U, USA
Participants
'Click Here': The Impact of New Media on the Encoding of Persuasive Messages in Direct Marketing
Ming Cheung, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
The Construction of Success: A Multimethod Study of CEO Profiles on Corporate Websites
Irene Pollach, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
The Effects of Language Choice and the Role of Ethnocentricity: An Experiment About the Effects of News Source
Language on Audience Opinions
Volkan Uce, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Knut De Swert, U Antwerp, BELGIUM
Metaphorical Communication: The Effects of Figurative Language on Impression Formation
Randall A. Renstrom, Loyola U - Chicago, USA
Nathaniel D. Krumdick, Loyola U - Chicago, USA
Victor C. Ottati, Loyola U - Chicago, USA
5362
Sunday
10:30-11:45
716
Whiteness Research in Mass Communication: Origins, Problems, Possibilities
Philosophy of Communication
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA
Participants
Origins, Assumptions & Critiques of Whiteness Theory
Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA
Evolution of the Concept of Whiteness From an African-American Perspective
Imani Cheers, Howard U, USA
Measuring Whiteness in Communications Research: New Approaches to White Racial Opinion and Policy
Preferences
Catherine R. Squires, U of Minnesota, USA
Debra Burns Melican, U of Michigan, USA
Interrogating Diversity: The Outside Looking In
Kevin M. Dolan, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
In the Master's Voice: Media and Capitalist Productions
Pavithra Narayanan, Washington State U, USA
Connecting Postcolonial Perspectives of Whiteness to Contemporary Culture
Kumarini Silva, Northeastern U, USA
This session recognizes the foundational contributions in theorizing whiteness, i.e., the social construction of
whiteness, by the late Ruth Frankenberg, and explores both the problems and possibilities associated with whiteness
research within the field of mass communication. Frankenberg, a British sociologist who died in March 2007 at the
age of 46 from cancer, was among the first in recent times to examine the connections between race and gender with
respect to white identity, and to examine power structures based on that identity. White identity was problematized in
the 1800s by DuBois (1989), and many scholars through the years have focused on white racial identity and its
relationship to white privilege. However, the emergence of a theory of whiteness dates to the 1980s and the work of
sociologists like Frankenberg, and to critical race scholars like Dyer, Delgado, and hooks. Postcolonial scholars, such
as Osuri and Banerjee (2004), have also placed whiteness central to their investigations of racial domination as an
aspect of colonization. Mass communication scholars have been slower to consider the ways that Euro-centric values,
lifestyles, language, racial representations and other aspects of white identity might be located in media industries or
content, or the ways in which these shape race and economic relations in the larger society. This panel of diverse
communication scholars aims to generate an active debate about whiteness in communications research, and to inspire
research along new lines by addressing: 1) The origins, assumptions and critiques of whiteness theory, 2) What can be
learned from existing communications research, and 3) Possible directions for whiteness studies, particularly in the
field of mass communication.
5363
Sunday
10:30-11:45
720
Reading Popular Media from the Margins: Emerging Directions in Women of Color Audience Studies
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Feminist Scholarship
Chair
Jillian M. Baez, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Participants
Latina, Chicana, Boricua: Processes of Identification, Acculturation and Cultural Maintenance in Popular Media
Usage
Diana I. Rios, U of Connecticut, USA
Muted Voices: A 15-Year Review of Black Female Audiences in Communication Studies on Hip Hop
Aisha S. Durham, U of Georgia, USA
Watching Betty: Latina Reception of Shifting Constructions of the Latina Body in U.S. Popular Culture
Jillian M. Baez, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Screening Chicago Boricua Pride for a National Latina/o Audience: Contemporary Latina Film and its Panethnic
Audience
Katynka Martinez, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Jacqueline Bobo, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
This panel explores how women of color audiences, often relegated to the margins by transnational media
corporations and communication scholarship, interpret and use popular media in the United States. Taking seriously
that women of color are what Jacqueline Bobo terms "cultural readers," the panelists argue that women of color are
central to further understanding processes of mediation and reception with Communication Studies. The panelists
consider how the intersection of differences such as race, nation, gender, class, and sexuality might inform these
women's readings of media and (re)produce their subjectivities. From a variety of methodological and theoretical
perspectives, this panel offers a multi-dimensional investigation into how women of color experience both pleasure
and frustration in their usage and interpretations of popular media. It demonstrates how they talk back to, resist, and
sometimes embody mediated representations of women of color. The panelists also discuss how these women's
engagements with media texts have tangible impacts on their everyday life experiences and intervene in public
debates. Focusing on Black and Latina women's interpretations of various media such as television, film, and music,
the panelists offer comparative approaches to understanding difference and identity formation in reception studies.
The panel tracks the trajectory of the sub-field of women of color audience studies, current trends, and offers new
directions for how this work might further develop in future scholarship. Overall, the panelists consider how popular
media shapes women of color audiences in their identity formation and cultivates interpretive, imagined, and real
communities across differences.
5364
Sunday
10:30-11:45
728
Information Technology In (and Out of) the Classroom
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Katherine E. Rowan, George Mason U, USA
Shelton A. Gunaratne, Minnesota State U - Moorhead, USA
Sherry Lynn Ferguson, U of Ottawa, CANADA
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Stuart Allan, U of the West of England – Bristol, UNITED KINGDOM
Stephen Coleman, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM
Sujata Moorti, Middlebury College, USA
Thomas Tufte, Roskilde U, DENMARK
Todd Joseph Miles Holden, Tohoku U, JAPAN
Ulla Carlsson, Goteborg U - Nordicom, SWEDEN
Ullamaija Kivikuru, U of Helsinki, FINLAND
Virginia Anne Nightingale, U of Western Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Yoo Jae Song, Ewha Woman's U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
4440
Saturday
12:00-13:15
Drummond West
Projections for the Future From Reflections on the Past: A New ICA Fellows Forum on Communication - II
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
Making Communication Count
John Daly, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Hard Problems in Health Communication and Identity: Issues for the Future
Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
From Cultivation to Participation: Rethinking Media and Culture
Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
ICA honors its New Fellows each year with a special program that focuses on their life work and contributions to the
field of communication. This year the New ICA Fellows will offer their insights, expectations, and concerns about the
future of communication based upon their past involvement in our collective efforts to make us the discipline we are
today.
4441
Saturday
12:00-13:15
Drummond Centre
Linking Scholars to Communication Policymaking: The COMPASS Experience
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Robert W. McChesney, U of Illinois, USA
Participants
Michael X. Delli Carpini, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Hope Maylene Cummings, U of Michigan, USA
Russell A. Newman, U of Southern California, USA
Bernie Sanders, U.S. Senate, USA
In 2006 four leading research universities launched a program, COMPASS, to place PhD students in Congressional
offices to work on communication policy issues. The purpose is to improve policy scholarship and to bring academic
research to communication policymaking. This session will discuss the program and its vision for the future.
4442
Saturday
12:00-13:15
Drummond East
Beyond Moore: Considering the Resurgence of Political Documentary Films
Theme Sessions
Chair
Christian Christensen, Karlstad U, SWEDEN
Participants
Emily Russo, Co-Founder & Co-President, Zeitgeist Films, USA
Sean Farnel, Director of Programming, Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, CANADA
Respondents
Christian Christensen, Karlstad U, SWEDEN
Jeffrey P. Jones, Old Dominion U, USA
After a number of years in the popular culture wilderness, the political documentary has made a comeback with films
such as Fahrenheit 9/11, Control Room, Taxi to the Dark Side, The Corporation and Outfoxed. In this panel,
representatives of the film industry and academia will consider this resurgence in relation to the conference theme.
Invited panelists include Emily Russo, co-President and co-founder of Zeitgeist Films (the US distribution arm for
award-winning documentaries such as The Corporation, Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media, Mr.
Conservative - Goldwater on Goldwater, and My Country, My Country), and Sean Farnel, the Director of
Programming for Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, North America's largest documentary film
festival.
4450
Saturday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Engaged, Digital, Unique - Models for Community Media Initiatives
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Katherine Baulu, National Film Board of Canada, CANADA
Participants
Susan Nosov, National Film Board of Canada, CANADA
Daniel Cross, Executive Producer, Homelessnation.org, CANADA
Reisa Levine, CitizenShift, CANADA
The National Film Board of Canada is a leader in creating and distributing social issue documentaries. Under the
theme 'Whose media is it, anyway?' the panelists discuss their experiences using media to enlighten, spark dialogue
and ultimately inspire change. Creators of several innovative community driven projects made for various mediums
will present their projects, processes and outcomes.
4510
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon A
Top 4 Student Papers in Mass Communication
Mass Communication
Chair
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
Participants
Differential Effects Model of Agenda Setting in Local Contexts:
Kideuk Hyun, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Soo Jung Moon, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Of Ghosts and Gangsters: Capitalist Cultural Production and the Hong Kong Film Industry
Sylvia Janet Martin, U of California - Irvine, USA
The Role of Issue Capacity in Agenda Setting
Kideuk Hyun, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Ja-Yeon Lee, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Issue Importance as a Moderator of Framing Effects
Sophie Katharina Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Rune Slothuus, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
Respondent
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
4511
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon B
News Coverage of Cancer and Science: Content and Effects
Mass Communication
Health Communication
Chair
Xiaoli Nan, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Participants
Questions of Accuracy and Balance: The Autism-Vaccine Controversy in the U.S. and British Elite Press
Christopher Clarke, Cornell U, USA
A Content Analysis of Frequently Cited Sources in Cancer News Coverage: Examining the Relationship Between
Cancer News Content and Source Citation
Cortney M. Moriarty, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Jakob D. Jensen, Purdue U, USA
Jo Ellen Stryker, Emory U, USA
Lost in Translation? A Comparison of Cancer-Genetics Reporting in the Press Release and its Subsequent Coverage
in Lay Press
Jean Brechman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Chul-joo Lee, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Information Processing, Trust, and Perception of Environmental Cancer Risk
Craig Trumbo, Colorado State U, USA
Katherine A. McComas, Cornell U, USA
Science TV News Exposure Predicts Science Beliefs: Real World Effects Among a National Sample
Yoori Hwang, U of Minnesota, USA
Brian Southwell, U of Minnesota, USA
4512
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon C
Visual Communication Top Paper Session
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U – Bremen, GERMANY
Participants
The Effect of Image Features on the Activation of Archetypes
Svetlana S. Kalnova, U of Connecticut, USA
Mark A. Hamilton, U of Connecticut, USA
A Visual Framing Analysis of British Press Photography During the 2006 Israel-Lebanon Conflict
Katy Jane Parry, U of Liverpool, UNITED KINGDOM
Nothing to See: The Emptiness of the Image
Dora E. Martinez, U of Monterrey, MEXICO
This session presents the three top ranked papers of the Visual Communication Studies Division and gives a glimpse
into the diverse but innovative topics covered in visual research.
4520
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Lamartine
Contemporary Issues in Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Jeffrey T. Child, Kent State U, USA
Participants
Kaho'olawe: A Case Study of a Movement and the Media in Reclaiming a Hawaiian Island
Danielle J Pedro, U of Central Florida, USA
Steven Jeffery Collins, U of Central Florida, USA
Portrayals of the Mature Market in Taiwanese Advertising
Cynthia R. Morton, U of Florida, USA
Tzu-Yin Chen, U of Florida, USA
Sociocultural Influences on Adolescents' Environmental Behavior in Hong Kong
Kaman Lee, Chinese U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
"Commitment for Life and Beyond": Persuasive Discourses Employed in a Body Donation Campaign in Taiwan
Hao-Chieh Chang, Hong Kong Baptist U, HONG KONG
Respondent
Jeffrey T. Child, Kent State U, USA
4521
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Kafka
Public Relations and Rhetorical Criticism
Public Relations
Chair
Craig E. Carroll, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
Explaining the Origins of Public Relations: Functionalist, Institutional, and Cultural Logics of Historical Explanation
Timothy P. Vos, Seton Hall U, USA
The Ideology of Choice: The Worldview of Tobacco Industry Issues Management in the 1990s
Priscilla Murphy, Temple U, USA
Maria de Fatima Oliveira, Temple U, USA
Satarupa Dasgupta, Temple U, USA
Talking Green: The Rhetoric of "Good Corporate Environmental Citizens"
Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Public Relations and the Strategic Use of Transparency: Consistency, Hypocrisy, and Corporate Change
Lars Thoger Christensen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK
Roy Langer, Roskilde U - CBIT, DENMARK
4522
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Hemon
Organizational Communication and Work-Life Issues
Organizational Communication
Chair
James Olumide Olufowote, Boston College, USA
Participants
How Doing Masculinity at Home is Undoing the Dual Career Family
Owen Hanley Lynch, Southern Methodist U, USA
Perceived Effects of Information and Communication Technology Adoption on Quality of Work Life: An Exploratory
Study
Ted Zorn, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Chris Hector, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
John Gibson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Sense(s) of Self: Working Toward Personal and Professional Lives and Identities in Fund Raising
Rebecca J. Meisenbach, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
The Social Construction of Occupational Health and Safety: Barriers to Environmental-Labor Health Coalitions
Heather Zoller, U of Cincinnati, USA
Respondent
Robyn Virginia Remke, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK
4523
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Jarry
Who's Your Audience: Approaches to Audience Segmentation
Health Communication
Chair
Francesca Renee Dillman Carpentier, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
Hip-Hop Imagery on Cigarette Packages and Their Effects on Audiences' Smoking-Related Attitudes: Ethnic Identity
as a Defense Against Tobacco Marketing
Osei Appiah, Ohio State U, USA
Catherine Elise Goodall, Ohio State U, USA
Reaching At Risk Populations: The Inconsistency of Communication Channels Among Native American Tribes in
Oklahoma
Jilane Rodgers, U of Oklahoma, USA
Shari Veil, U of Oklahoma, USA
Using A Psychographic Consumer Audience Segmentation Tool to Explain Fruit and Vegetable Consumption
Behavior
Lindsay J Della, U of Louisville, USA
David M. DeJoy, U of Georgia, USA
Charles E. Lance, U of Georgia, USA
What and Where: A Theory-Based Segmentation Analysis of Marijuana Use
Jacob Bjorn Depue, U of Minnesota, USA
Clelia Anna Mannino, U of Minnesota, USA
Marco C. Yzer, U of Minnesota, USA
Alex Rothman, U of Minnesota, USA
4524
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Joyce
High Density: Media Influences on Health
Health Communication
Mass Communication
Chair
Seth M. Noar, U of Kentucky, USA
Participants
Prenatal Testing, Disability, and Termination: An Examination of Newspaper Frames
Carol Bishop Mills, U of Alabama, USA
Elina V. Erzikova, U of Alabama, USA
Types and Sources of Memorable Breast Cancer Messages: Their Impact on Prevention and Detection Behaviors
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Samantha A Munday, Michigan State U, USA
Carolyn Kay LaPlante, Michigan State U, USA
Michael R. Kotowski, U of Tennessee, USA
Charles Atkin, Michigan State U, USA
Christine Skubisz, U of Maryland, USA
Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
The Media's Role in Shaping Public Opinion Surrounding Prescription Drug Use to Treat Depression and Anxiety
Among Youth
Nehama Lewis, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Lourdes Martinez, U of Pennsylvania, USA
TV Use and Snacking Behaviors Among Children and Adolescents in China
Sarah Parvanta, U of North Carolina, USA
Jane D. Brown, U of North Carolina, USA
Shufa Du, U of North Carolina, USA
Xinshu Zhao, U of North Carolina, USA
Zhai Fengying, Institute of Nutrition and Food Safety, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Media and Interpersonal Predictors of Healthy Eating Behavior
Christopher Joseph McKinley, U of Arizona, USA
The Role of Exposure to and Trust in Media in Determining Health Beliefs and Behaviors
Lauren B. Frank, U of Southern California, USA
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA
Happy Deal With Fatty Meal: Targeting Strategies in Food Advertisement for Children
Simone K. Keller, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND
Peter J. Schulz, U Della Svizzera Italiana, ITALY
Using Public Relations to Promote Health: A Framing Analysis of Public Relations Strategies Among Health
Associations
Hyojung Park, U of Georgia, USA
Bryan H. Reber, U of Georgia, USA
Influence of Presumed Influence of Television on Perceived Benefits of a Tan
Hyunyi Cho, Purdue U, USA
Jounghwa Choi, Michigan State U, USA
Teresa Mastin, Michigan State U, USA
Media Interventions to Promote Smoking Cessation Among Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Populations: What Do
We Know, What Do We Need to Learn, and What Should We Do Now?
Jeff Niederdeppe, U of Wisconsin, USA
Xiaodong Kuang, U of Wisconsin, USA
Brittney Crock, U of Minnesota, USA
Ashley Skelton, U of Wisconsin, USA
4525
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Musset
Computer-Mediated Communication and the Use of Media in Interpersonal Communication
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Steven Wilson, Purdue U, USA
Participants
Social Anxiety and Computer-Mediated Communication During Initial Interactions: Implications for the
Hyperpersonal Perspective
Andrew High, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Scott E. Caplan, Purdue U, USA
Interpersonal Media Use in Face-Threatening Situations and the Construct of Information Control
John Christian Feaster, Ohio State U, USA
Gender Effects on the Evaluation of Self-Presentation Styles of Personal Websites
Yunmi Lee, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Hyeyoung Yang, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Mina Lee, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Reward Distribution in Anonymous Computer-Supported Task Groups: The Effects of Social Comparison
Poppy L. McLeod, Cornell U, USA
Nicole G. Kravec, Cornell U, USA
Respondent
Steven Wilson, Purdue U, USA
4526
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Dickens
LSI Studies on Race, Identity, and Nationality
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz, U of Wisconsin - Parkside, USA
Participants
National Origin, Language, and Perceptions of "Foreignness" Among U.S. American Listeners
Aaron Castelan Cargile, California State U, USA
Eriko Maeda, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Jose I. Rodriguez, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Marc Rich, California State U Long Beach, USA
Border Crossings: A Semiotic Analysis of the United States-Mexico Border
Larry A. Erbert, Cleveland State U, USA
Michael Lechuga, U of Texas - El Paso, USA
Jeannette Monsivais, U of Texas - El Paso, USA
Negotiation of Tatar Ethnic Identity Through an Online Discourse on Islam
Liliya Valeryevna Karimova, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Talk About Race in the Undergraduate Classroom: Student Strategies and Struggles
Sheryl Baratz Goodman, Ursinus College, USA
Sarah Weddle, American U, USA
4530
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 1
Alternative Media: Policy, Politics, and Practice
Political Communication
Participants
Sustaining Alternative Media
David Skinner, York U, CANADA
Educational Public Service TV in Canada: From the Mainstream to the Alternative Margins
Kirsten Kozolanka, Carleton U, CANADA
Politically Incorrect and Proud of It! An Overview of Regressive Alternative Media in Canada
Patricia Mazepa, York U, CANADA
The Electromagnetic Spectrum: Foundation of a (R)evolutionary Democracy
Evan Light, Université du Québec à Montréal, CANADA
In the face of escalating concentration of media ownership and control, cutbacks to public broadcasting, and heavy
corporate influence on the production and dissemination of news, "alternatives" to corporate media such as
independent and not-for-profit publications, community broadcasting, and web-based media increasingly can provide
key venues for political debate, community expression, and development of social identities. This panel explores
some of the dimensions of this poorly understood field in Canada, examining its shifting character, the conditions
under which it operates, and considering the social forces and institutions that animate it.
4532
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 3
The Changing Spaces of Popular Media Production: Transformations and Trajectories
Popular Communication
Chair
David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Nonprofessional Activity on Television in a Time of Digitalisation
Espen Ytreberg, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Trine Syvertsen, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Faltin Karlsen, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Vilde Schanke Sundet, U of Oslo, NORWAY
The Archies, the Synthespian, and the Profitable Evacuation of Performer Agency
Matt Stahl, Muhlenberg College, USA
Hypercommercialism, Televisuality, and the Changing Nature of College Sports Sponsorship
Matthew P. McAllister, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Producing Film Knowledge, Producing Films: Festivals in a New World
Cindy Hing-Yuk Wong, College of Staten Island - CUNY, USA
Digitizing the DJ: Does the Digital Record Simulation Technology Serato ScratchLIVE Affect the Authenticity of the
Hip-Hop DJ?
Andre Gilman Sirois, U of Oregon, USA
4533
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 4
Sexual Violence, Sexuality, Gender, Race, and Media
Feminist Scholarship
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Petra Guerra, U of Texas - Pan American, USA
Participants
Sports Talk: How the News Media Framed the Duke University Lacrosse Case
Barbara Ann Barnett, U of Kansas, USA
Of Conspiracies and Kangas: "Mail" and "Guardian" Online Coverage of the Jacob Zuma Rape Trial
Nancy E. Worthington, Quinnipiac U, USA
The Invisible Damsel: Differences in How National Media Outlets Framed the Coverage of Missing Black and White
Women in the Mid-2000s
Mia N. Moody, Baylor U, USA
Bruce Dorries, Mary Baldwin College, USA
Harriet Blackwell, Mary Baldwin College, USA
Communicating Change: Ideology of Gender and Female Sexuality in HIV/AIDS Messages
Wanjiru Mbure, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
4534
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 5
Faith in the Media: Religion and Popular Communication
Popular Communication
Chair
Stewart M. Hoover, U of Colorado, USA
Participants
Sustaining the Mystery, Developing Cross-Religious Understandings: Religion, Philosophy, and Convergence Culture
Online in ABC's "Lost"
Lynn Schofield Clark, U of Denver, USA
Atheism and Theology Not Welcome Here: Faith and Mainstream Television Drama
Elizabeth Bird, U of South Florida, USA
Visual Culture, Religious Memory, and Iconoclasm in Focus on the Family's Citizen Magazine
Richard K. Popp, Temple U, USA
An Analysis of Religious Identity Presentation on Facebook
Piotr Bobkowski, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
4540
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Drummond West
High Density Session: Information Systems Issues in Advertising
Information Systems
Chair
Sela Sar, Iowa State U, USA
Participants
A Literature Review of Factors Influencing Reactions to Brand Placement
Eva van Reijmersdal, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Peter Neijens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Alternative Rock Music in Radio Advertising: The Effects of Familiarity on Message Recognition, Purchase Intent,
and Attitudes Toward the Ad
Wes Wise, Texas Tech U, USA
Coy Callison, Texas State U, USA
Samuel D. Bradley, Texas Tech U, USA
Every Word Matters: Correlating Word Information Value in Persuasive Messages with Physiological Arousal
Responses
Seth Finn, Robert Morris U, USA
Sungkyoung Lee, Indiana U, USA
Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA
Evaluating Consumer Attitudes and Intended Purchasing Behaviors Towards Macintosh's "Get a Mac" Advertising
Campaign
Rory Peter McGloin, U of Connecticut, USA
Matthew Gallicchio, U of Connecticut, USA
Getting a Line on Commercial Advertising: A Bio-Informational Approach to Study Pleasure and Arousal Reactions
to Ads
Karolien Poels, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Siegfried Dewitte, Catholic U - Leuven, BELGIUM
Resolving the Role of Web Site Pragmatic Value in the Hierarchy of Advertising Effects
James H. Watt, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Amanda Rotondo, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Sasi Kanth Ala, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Kaitlyn TeBordo Wood, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Yaakov Kimelfeld, VP, Digital Research and Analytics, MediaVest
Priya Nambison, U at Albany, SUNY
Greenwashing: Perceived Information Manipulation in Print Advertisements
Marie Rienzo, Michigan State U, USA
Maria Knight Lapinski, Michigan State U, USA
Sexuality Differences and Sexually Oriented Advertising: Interaction Effects on Personal Involvement With the
Advertised Products
Po-Lin Pan, U of Alabama, USA
Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA
4541
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Drummond Centre
To Blog or Not to Blog
Communication and Technology
Chair
Carmen Stavrositu, U of Colorado - Colorado Springs, USA
Participants
Corporate Blogging Beyond Publicity: A Multiple Case Study of Early Adopters in TV Context
Trisha Tsui-Chuan Lin, Nanyang Technological U
Vicki Chi-Hsuan Chiu, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Entering the Blogosphere: Motives for Reading, Writing, and Commenting
Nina Haferkamp, U Duisburg – Essen, GERMANY
Nicole C. Krämer, U of Duisburg - Essen, GERMANY
How 'The Media' Began to Blog
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Columbia U, USA
Revived and Refreshed: Selective Exposure to Blogs and Political Websites
Thomas Johnson, Texas Tech U, USA
Weiwu Zhang, Texas Tech U, USA
Shannon Bichard, Texas State U, USA
Does Civility Matter in the Blogosphere?
Hyunseo Hwang, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Porismita Borah, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Kang Namkoong, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Aaron S. Veenstra, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
4542
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Drummond East
Methodological Advances in Communication Technology Research
Communication and Technology
Chair
Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
A Position Paper on the Use of a Case-Scenario Approach for Understanding Diffusion of Innovations
Lidwien van de Wijngaert, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS
Harry Bouwman, Technische Bestuurskunde, THE NETHERLANDS
Facial Expressions as Predictors of Online Buying Intention
Sun Joo Ahn, Stanford U, USA
Maria Jabon, Stanford U, USA
Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA
Measuring Digital Skills: Performance Tests of Operational, Formal, Information, and Strategic Internet Skills
Among the Dutch Population
Alexander van Deursen, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente / Cubicus / GW / CW, THE NETHERLANDS
Methodologies for Exploring the Political Spaces on the Internet: The Role of Mailing Lists Within Political
Communities
Andrea Calderaro, European U Institute, ITALY
Searching the News: Using an Ontology With Timebound Roles to Search Through Annotated Newspaper Archives
Wouter Van Atteveldt, Free U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Nel Ruigrok, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Stefan Schlobach, Department of Artificial Intelligence Free U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Frank van Harmelen, Free U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
4543
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 6
Comparative Copyright: Classrooms, Pornography, and Treaties
Communication Law & Policy
Chair
Duncan H. Brown, Ohio U, USA
Participants
Adventures in the Copyright Zone: The Puzzling Absence of Independent First Amendment Defenses in
Contemporary Copyright Disputes
Matthew D. Bunker, U of Alabama, USA
Characterizing Copyright in the Classroom TOP THREE PAPER
Tarleton L. Gillespie, Cornell U, USA
Copyright Protection of Pornography in a Global Context
Seong Choul Hong, Indiana U, USA
Unplanned Obsolescence: U.S. Participation in Redundant Multilateral Copyright Agreements
Benjamin W. Cramer, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Respondent
Duncan H. Brown, Ohio U, USA
4544
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 7
Media, Identity and Use
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Nurcay Turkoglu, Marmara U, TURKEY
Participants
A Study on the Relationships Among Hallyu (Korean Wave), National Image, and Corporate Brand Equity
Eun Kyoung Han, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Woo Sung Chang, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Gabshin Hwang, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Critical Development Communication in the Era of Globalization: Immigrant Media Activists and Social Changes in
Korea
Young-Gil Chae, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Dalit Identity Formation and Media Use in India
P. Thirumal, U of Hyderabad, INDIA
Melinda B. Robins, Emerson College, USA
The Influence of Religiosity and Ethnic Identification on Media Use Among Muslims and Non-Muslims in France
and Britain
Stephen Michael Croucher, Bowling Green State U, USA
Deepa Oommen, Bowling Green State U, USA
Ian M Borton, Bowling Green State U, USA
Samara Anarbaeva, Bowling Green State U, USA
Jacob Stephen Turner, Bowling Green State U, USA
Top-Down and Bottom-Up Views of Ideological Diversity: Comparing U.S. and Chinese Media
Chin-Chuan Lee, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Respondent
Nurcay Turkoglu, Marmara U, TURKEY
4550
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Ballroom East
Top Papers Related to the ICA Conference Theme: Communicating for Social Impact
Theme Sessions
Chair
Lynn Marie Harter, Ohio U, USA
Participants
Negotiating Post-Conflict Communication: A Case of Ethnic Conflict in Indonesia
Rudi Sukandar, Marietta College, USA
Claudia L. Hale, Ohio U, USA
Experiential Learning and Social Impact: The Communication Effects of the One Homeless Night Event on
Participants' Attitudes and Perceptions of Homelessness
Sarah Neff, Liberty U, USA
Gina Barker, Liberty U, USA
Terri Cornwell, Liberty U, USA
Public Intellectualism and Critical Communication Research
Seeta Pena Gangadharan, Stanford U, USA
Respondent
Mohan Jyoti Dutta, Purdue U, USA
4551
Saturday
13:30-14:45
Salon 8
Communication Research in the U.S./Mexican Border Region
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Daniel C. Hallin, U of California - San Diego, USA
Participants
Approaching Immigration Debates Through the Lens of Race
Esteban Del Rio, U of San Diego, USA
Television Consumption in Tijuana
David González, Autonomous U of Baja California, Tijuana, MEXICO
Media Representations of Water, Climate and Electrical Energy in Arid Zones: The Case of Mexicali
Hugo Edgardo Mendez, Binational Assoc. of Schools of Communication of the Californias, MEXICO
Cross-Border Citizens: Communication and Citizenship Practices Among Immigrants From Mexico in the United
States
Antonieta Mercado-Anaya, U of California - San Diego, USA
Respondent
Mari Castaneda, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
This panel presents research from members of the Binational Association of Schools of Communication of the
Californias, an association of Colleges and Universities primarily in the San Diego/Baja California border region that
promotes scholarly cooperation and exchange between the U.S. and Mexico and research on the border region.
4560
Saturday
13:30-14:45
701
The Ethics and Aesthetics of Authenticity in News Images
Journalism Studies
Chair
Kristina Widestedt, Stockholm U, SWEDEN
Participants
Back to the Future?
Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Unknown Knowns: Soldier Photography and the War on Terror
Liam Kennedy, U College Dublin, IRELAND
The Fear of Normality - The Swedish press use of surveillance images in the reports on "The London bombings" in
July 2005.
Eric Carlsson, Umeå U, SWEDEN
Blurry Pictures, Big Emotions: Ordinary citizens' contribution to Dutch news
Piet Bakker, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Mervi Pantti, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Authenticity and Alternative News Images
Kari Anden-Papadopoulos, Stockholm U, SWEDEN
Respondent
Karin E. Becker, Stockholm U, SWEDEN
Increased competition for exclusive images, spurred by alternative news sources and new technologies for making
and distributing pictures are having an impact on the visualization of news events. This panel examines the influence
of these vernacular images on journalism, drawing examples from private and public media in different national
contexts. Together the papers trace a shift in the representation of authenticity that is altering traditional forms and
standards for the visual coverage of news.
4561
Saturday
13:30-14:45
705
Digital Mediations of Personal Narratives
Philosophy of Communication
Popular Communication
Chair
Knut Lundby, U of Oslo, NORWAY
Participants
Mediatization or Mediation? Alternative Understandings of the Emergent Space of Digital Storytelling
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Narrative Strategies in a Digital Age: Authorship and Authority
Larry Friedlander, Stanford U, USA
The Question of the Digital in Mediated Self-Representations
Nancy Thumim, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Problems of Expertise and Scalability in Self-Made Media: Lessons From Digital Storytelling in Australia
John Hartley, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Respondent
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Self-representations in digital storytelling are proliferating. This new media practice emerged in the first half of the
1990s when people made short, personal stories, supported by resource-intensive, usually publicly funded workshops.
Since then, a variety of initiatives world wide sprung up, in all of which 'ordinary people' were encouraged to develop
the necessary competences or literacies to tell their own stories with new digital tools. Today this root form, that
could be termed Digital Storytelling with capital D and capital S, is complemented with 'user-generated' personal
stories and profiles in weblogs and on social networking sites as MySpace, YouTube and Facebook. This panel asks
the 'so what' question - what is the significance of this new social practice? Why should we attend to it? And,
especially important for communication scholars, does it make a difference that it is digital - that digital tools and
literacies increasingly underpin the telling of personal stories? The contributors to this panel consider, through
theoretical, critical and empirical explorations, the possible contribution of digital storytelling to democratic processes
of deliberation and publicity and the potential of digital storytelling to alter or even transform notions of authority and
authorship. They also consider, as communication scholars, the challenge posed by digital storytelling to the longdominant history of mass communication, as these stories, and the digital literacies they engender, appear to lay claim
to a more open, plural and networked sphere for the expression of diverse voices.
4562
Saturday
13:30-14:45
716
Public Relations and the Ontology of the Public Sphere
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
James Curran, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
The Road Not Taken: Dewey, Mills, Habermas, and the Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere
Andreas Koller, New York U, USA
Public Relations in the Public Sphere: Habermas, Bourdieu, and the Question of Power
Rodney D. Benson, New York U, USA
The Rise of Social Marketing as a Neoliberal Communication Technology
Roddey Reid, U of California - San Diego, USA
Open Source as Public Sphere
D. Lucas Graves, Columbia U, USA
Respondent
James Curran, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
The idea of the public sphere is frequently debated but less attention is given to the social preconditions for the
emergence and maintenance of anything like a public sphere. The papers in this session discuss this either in general
terms or through the related question of the role of public relations in public discourse.
4563
Saturday
13:30-14:45
720
Bridging Divides to Develop Community: Investigating Intergroup Relations Among Urban Residents
Intergroup Communication
Chair
Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
Catholic Parishes as Agents of Integration and Isolation
Christopher Anthony Chavez, U of Southern California, USA
An Active Education: Classroom Participation as an Influence on Intergroup Relations among Parents
Vikki Sara Katz, U of Southern California, USA
Working Together for a Shared Community: Community-Based Organizations as Sites of Intergroup Interaction
Carmen Gonzalez, U of Southern California, USA
Evelyn Moreno, U of Southern California, USA
Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA
Community on the Walls: How Public Murals Can Affect Intergroup Relations in a Shared Neighborhood
Charlotte Lapsansky, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Young Yun Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA
This panel presents findings from the Immigration and Integration projects the authors conducted this past year under
the auspices of the Metamorphosis Project at the USC Annenberg School for Communication. These four papers
focus on intergroup relations between new Latino and African American residents in Greater Crenshaw, a community
located in South Los Angeles. For several decades, Crenshaw has been a largely African American neighborhood, but
a recent influx of Latino immigrants from Mexico and Central America is in the process of transforming the
neighborhood. While much of the literature on African American-Latino intergroup relations does take this conflictoriented approach, there is also considerable research to document that close proximity can reduce racial stereotyping.
Employing a communication infrastructure perspective directed us to ask if neighborhood communication practices of
these two populations are bounded by race/ethnicity. Our approach goes beyond identifying group divisions. In the
research presented here, we explore churches, schools, community organizations, and public art as community
contexts that act as potential locations for intergroup communication between Latinos and African Americans that can
build a shared sense of community.
4564
Saturday
13:30-14:45
728
Top Papers in Instructional & Developmental Communication
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Kristen Harrison, U of Illinois, USA
Participants
Age Differences in Adults' Emotional Motivations for Exposure to Films
Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Joanne Cantor, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
The Effect of Teacher Confirmation on Student Communication and Learning Outcomes.
Alan K. Goodboy, Bloomsburg U, USA
Scott A. Myers, West Virginia U, USA
Student Nagging Behavior in the College Classroom
Katie Neary Dunleavy, LaSalle U, USA
Matthew M. Martin, West Virginia U, USA
Maria Brann, West Virginia U, USA
Melanie Booth-Butterfield, West Virginia U, USA
Scott A. Myers, West Virginia U, USA
Keith Weber, West Virginia U, USA
Incidental Language Acquisition From Television, Video Games, and Music: An Empirical Study With Flemish
Youngsters
An Helene Kuppens, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Respondent
Kristen Harrison, U of Illinois, USA
In this session the Instructional & Developmental Division proudly showcases its top three faculty papers and top
student paper.
4566
Saturday
13:30-14:45
820
International Encyclopedia Editorial Board Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Wolfgang Donsbach, Technical U - Dresden, GERMANY
Participants
Jennings Bryant, U of Alabama, USA
Klaus Bruhn Jensen, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK
Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
Hans-Bernd Brosius, Ludwig-Maximilians U – Munich, GERMANY
Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA
Charles R. Berger, U of California - Davis, USA
Robert N. Gaines, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
John O. Greene, Purdue U, USA
Michael Griffin, Carleton College, USA
Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Kevin G. Barnhurst, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
Peter Vorderer, VU University Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Hans Mathias Kepplinger, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY
Carroll J. Glynn, Ohio State U, USA
Winfried Schulz, U of Nuremberg, GERMANY
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Rebecca B. Rubin, Kent State U, USA
Katherine Miller, Texas A&M U, USA
K. Viswanath, Harvard School of Public Health, USA
Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM
Debra L. Merskin, U of Oregon, USA
John Downing, Southern Illinois U-Garbondale, USA
Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Juergen Wilke, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY
Janet Wasko, U of Oregon, USA
Stuart Allan, U of the West of England – Bristol, UNITED KINGDOM
Kyu Ho Youm, U of Oregon, USA
Robin Mansell, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Robert L. Heath, U of Houston, USA
Elizabeth P. Swayze, Blackwell Publishing, USA
Ken Provencher, Blackwell Publishing, USA
Update on online version for the editorial board
4610
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon A
Demystifying Journalists' Decision-Making
Mass Communication
Journalism Studies
Chair
Kimberly Meltzer, Lehigh U, USA
Participants
*What Influences Media Coverage of North Korea?: A Study of Journalists and News Reports on the Six-Nation
Nuclear Talks (Top 4 Paper)
Hyunjin Seo, Syracuse U, USA
The Virginia Tech Tragedy: The South Korean Press as an Agent of Cultural Repair
Mohamad Hamas Elmasry, U of Iowa, USA
Vidhi Chaudhri, Purdue U, USA
Elinathan Ohiomoba, U of Iowa, USA
Thinking Along the Cultural Line: An Inquiry of Ethical Decision-Making Among U.S. and Chinese Journalism
Students
Bu Zhong, Pennsylvania State U, USA
The Effect of Journalistic Co-Orientation on Press Coverage: A Time Series Analysis
Benjamin Krämer, Ludwig-Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY
Thorsten Schroll, Johannes Gutenberg U – Mainz, GERMANY
Gregor Daschmann, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY
The Choice Gap: The Softening of News and the Divergent Preferences of Journalists and Consumers
Pablo J. Boczkowski, Northwestern U, USA
Limor Peer, Northwestern U, USA
4611
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon B
Long-term Relations Between Different Types of Exposure to Media Violence, Emotional Reactions, and
Aggressive Behavior
Mass Communication
Chair
Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA
Participants
Predicting Aggression in Middle-Adulthood from Prior Exposure To Media Violence
Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA
Paul Boxer, Rutgers U and U of Michigan, USA
Eric F. Dubow, U of Michigan and Bowling Green State U, USA
The Relation between Children's Preferences for Passive and Interactive Violent Media and their Parents' Media
Preferences
Grace Yang, U of Michigan, USA
Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA
Violent Media Consumption Predicts Diminished Negative Arousal and Proactive Aggression in Young Adults
Lucyna Aniela Kirwil, Warsaw School of Social Psychology, POLAND
The Relation between Exposure to Video Violence in Childhood and Serious Youth Violence and Delinquency
Paul Boxer, Rutgers U and U of Michigan, USA
Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA
Brad J. Bushman, U of Michigan, USA
This symposium investigates the relations between the use of different kinds of violent media (video games, TV
programs, videos and films) and the relation of their use to different levels and types of aggressive, violent, and
delinquent behavior. In the first presentation Rowell Huesmann, using data from a 40-year longitudinal study, shows
that, although childhood exposure to TV violence does not correlate directly with adult aggressive behavior 40 years
later, it does relate to it when other contextual and personal factors are controlled for statistically. In the second
presentation, Grace Yang uses data from the same longitudinal study to show that children who play more violent
video games also watch more violent television. In addition, she shows that violent television viewing by parents in
one generation predicts violent television viewing and video game use by their children in the next generation.
Lucyna Kirwil, in the third paper, examines how differing characteristic emotional reactions to media violence
mediate the type of aggression that is stimulated by exposure to media violence. She demonstrates that those who
consume media violence regularly tend to display diminished anxious arousal and tend to behave "proactively
aggressively," but not "reactively aggressively". In the final paper, Paul Boxer, using data from 400 incarcerated
delinquents, shows that both current use of media violence and prior childhood use of media violence are correlated
with engaging in serious violent and delinquent acts in adolescence and predict these acts independently of a variety
of personality, social-contextual, and demographic factors.
4612
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon C
4620
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Lamartine
Visual Communication Studies Business Meeting
Visual Communication Studies
Top Three Student Papers in Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Jerry L. Allen, U of New Haven, USA
Participants
Face Goals in Conflict Avoidance: A Cross-Cultural Analysis
Bing Han, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
The U.S. Military Ghetto and Modern Soundscape in Postwar Korea (1950s-1960s); Audible Memories of
Postcolonial Melancholia
Yongwoo Lee, McGill U, CANADA
Sticks and Stones: The Effects of Self-Construals on Assessing Appraisals, Attributions, and Consequences of Hurt
Feelings
Robert Shota Tokunaga, U of Arizona, USA
Respondent
Jerry L. Allen, U of New Haven, USA
These are the top ranked student papers in intercultural communication.
4621
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Kafka
Theoretical Developments in Public Relations
Public Relations
Chair
Kirk Hallahan, Colorado State U, USA
Participants
On Feminist Theory of Public Relations: An Example From Dorothy E. Smith
Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA
Diana Iulia Nastasia, U of North Dakota, USA
Evolutionary Theory: The Missing Link for Public Relations
Cary Greenwood, U of Oregon, USA
Toward an Integrated Model: Linking Employee Communication, P-O Fit, Sensemaking, Organizational
Identification, and EOR Outcomes
Hua Jiang, U of Maryland, USA
Yi Luo, U of Maryland, College Park, USA
The Dark Sides of Public Relations
Greg B. Leichty, U of Louisville, USA
Respondent
Kirk Hallahan, Colorado State U, USA
4622
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Hemon
Sense-Making and Organizing: Multiple Perspectives
Organizational Communication
Chair
Robyn Virginia Remke, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK
Participants
Making Sense of Experiences: Sensemaking Processes Following Critical Communication Events
Karen Heleen Koning, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Menno de Jong, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Why Technology Implementations Often Disappoint
James R. Taylor, U de Montreal, CANADA
Work Messages: How African American Women in Administrative Support Roles Navigate Their Careers Through
Cultural Messages
Trina Janell Wright, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Writing a Wikipedia Article: Data Mining and Organizational Communication to Explain the Practices By Which
Contributors Maintain the Article's Coherence
Nicolas Bencherki, U of Montreal, CANADA
Jeanne d'Arc Uwatowenimana, U of Montreal, CANADA
Respondent
Daniel Robichaud, U de Montréal, CANADA
4623
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Jarry
Risk Perceptions and Fatalism in Health
Health Communication
Chair
Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA
Participants
A Multilevel Analysis of Cancer Risk Perception
Craig Trumbo, Colorado State U, USA
Katherine A. McComas, Cornell U, USA
John C. Besley, U of South Carolina, USA
Determinants of Anabolic-Androgenic Steroid Risk Perceptions: A Study in Social Cognitive Theory
Bryan E. Denham, Clemson U, USA
Correlates of Fatalistic Beliefs Regarding Cancer Prevention
Derek Freres, U of Pennsylvania, USA
The Psychometric Property and Validation of a Fatalism Scale
Lijiang Shen, U of Georgia, USA
Celeste M. Condit, U of Georgia, USA
Lanelle Wright, U of Georgia, USA
4624
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Joyce
High Density: Message Design Research
Health Communication
Chair
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
Participants
Effective or Ineffective? Attribute Framing and HPV Vaccine Efficacy
Cabral A Bigman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Exploring Causal Mechanisms of Other-Oriented Framing in the Context of the Avian Flu Context
Bridget J. Kelly, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Factors Associated With Consumer's Trust of DTC Advertising
Jennifer Gerard Ball, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Patricia A. Stout, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Improving Antismoking Message Effectiveness: Death Appeals, Argument Strength, and Message Sensation Value
Norman C. H. Wong, U of Oklahoma, USA
Angel Ho, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Andrew Strasser, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Caryn Lerman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Investigating the Impact of Breast Cancer Messages on Women's Perceptions: Results of a Message Testing Pilot
Study
Kami J. Silk, Michigan State U, USA
Doshik Yun, Michigan State U, USA
Nicholas David Bowman, Michigan State U, USA
Lindsay Beth Neuberger, Michigan State U, USA
Charles Atkin, Michigan State U, USA
Message Impact via Automatically Activated Attitudes: A Study of Alcohol Advertisements and
Counteradvertisements
Catherine Elise Goodall, Ohio State U, USA
Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA
Revising a Measure of Interpersonal Communication Within the Context of Mass Media Health Communication
Campaigns
Vanessa Boudewyns, U of Minnesota, USA
John G. Wirtz, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
The Effect of Smoking Cues in Antismoking Public Service Announcements on Smoking Urge and
Psychophysiological Reactions
Yahui Kang, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Andrew Strasser, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Caryn Lerman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Unintended Effects of Public Health Communication Campaign Branding
Lela S. Jacobsohn, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Using Targeting and Tailoring to Enhance Prevention Messages for Hispanics
Anthony J. Roberto, Ohio State U, USA
Janice Lee Raup Krieger, Ohio State U, USA
Michael Beam, Ohio State U, USA
4625
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Musset
Interpersonal Influence and Motivation
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Rodney A. Reynolds, Azusa Pacific U, USA
Participants
The Reasons Why Persuasion Messages Fail
Sang-Yeon Kim, Michigan State U, USA
Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA
Using the Emotion-in-Relationships Model to Predict Features of Interpersonal Influence Attempts
Leanne Knobloch, U of Illinois, USA
Bethany Schmelzer, U of Illinois, USA
Argument Engagement, Argumentativeness, Verbal Aggressiveness, Topic Type, and Argument Realism: Their
Effects on Editorial Choices
Bejamin Warner, Western Illinois U, USA
Dale Hample, U of Maryland, USA
It's How You Think About It: Effects of Ability and Motivation on Recipient Processing of and Responses to
Comforting Messages
Brant R. Burleson, Purdue U, USA
Jennifer McCullough, Purdue U, USA
Graham Douglas Bodie, Purdue U, USA
Jessica J. Rack, Purdue U, USA
Amanda J. Holmstrom, Michigan State U, USA
Lisa K Hanasono, Purdue U, USA
Jennifer N Gill, Purdue U, USA
Respondent
Rodney A. Reynolds, Azusa Pacific U, USA
4626
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Dickens
Practical Uses of Language and Social Interaction Scholarship
Language & Social Interaction
Participants
On The Emerging Basis of Therapeutic Expertise: Collaborative Therapists as Conversation Governors
G. H. Morris, California State U - San Marcos, USA
Do Conversation Analytic studies have practical uses?
Anita Pomerantz, SUNY - Albany, USA
Storytelling, Narrative, and Narrative Theorizing—From research in subjectivity to transformational research?
Michael Bamberg, Clark U, USA
Practical Applications of an LSI-oriented research: The Case of Médecins sans frontiers
Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA
Frederik Matte, Montreal U, CANADA
Reflecting on Grounded Practical Theory
Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
In recent years various scholars have called for more theory and research which have practical uses and applications
(Craig, 1999; Flyvbjerg, 2001). This call is heard under different rubrics: theory into practice, scholarship in action,
phronesis, and so on. Given this interest in the practical realm, how successful has language and social interaction
research been in achieving a practical uses and results? Various scholars working from different LSI perspectives
(conversation analysis, discursive analysis, ethnography) and in different practical contexts (medical, therapy, public
hearings) address these issues of revolving around the practical import of scholarship.
4630
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 1
Political Decision-Making
Political Communication
Chair
Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA
Participants
Cognitive Appraisal of Primary Polls and Emotional Responses
Hyun Joo Song, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Hyunsuk Kim, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
June Woong Rhee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Competition and Consensus in Social Networks: Does Disagreement Discourage Voter Turnout?
Lilach Nir, Hebrew U, ISRAEL
Strength of Convictions: Policy Debates in the Mass Media and Political Action
Lauren Guggenheim, U of Michigan, USA
Combining Multiple Considerations: Voters' Uses of Campaign Cues, Schematic Knowledge, and Heuristic
Reasoning in the Dutch EU Constitutional Referendum
Christian Baden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
4632
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 3
Media Policy
Political Communication
Chair
Wolfgang Donsbach, Technical U - Dresden, GERMANY
Participants
The Primacy of Local Interests and Press Freedom: A Survey Study of Hong Kong Journalists
Joseph M. Chan, Chinese U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Francis L. F. Lee, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
How Powerful is the President's Bully Pulpit? Evaluating the President's Capacity to Set the Agenda for the Press
Through His State of the Union Address
Andrew D. Kaplan, U of Maryland, USA
Imagining Soviet Journalism
Natalia Roudakova, U of California - San Diego, USA
The Policies on Media Diversity: Establishing Public Interest Criteria and Monitoring the Effectiveness of Diversity
Policies
Kim McCann, Bowling Green State U, USA
4633
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 4
Feminist Theoretical Approaches: Gender/Ethnicity/Race in TV and News
Feminist Scholarship
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Angharad N. Valdivia, U of Illinois, USA
Participants
Reception Studies as a Multidimensional Model: Negotiating Ethnicity and Gender
Claudia Alvares, Lusofona U, Portugal
Mothering Ideologies in the News: A Discourse Analysis of the Contested Terrain of Contemporary U.S. Motherhood
Dustin M. Harp, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Ingrid Bachmann, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Toward Accuracy and Authenticity: Using Feminist Theory to Construct Journalistic Narratives of Maternal Violence
Barbara Ann Barnett, U of Kansas, USA
She TV?: Gendered Spatial Practices and Television in the Arab World
Briar Rose Smith, U of Pennsylvania, USA
4634
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 5
Engaging With YouTube: Methodologies, Practices, Publics
Popular Communication
Communication and Technology
Participants
The Uses of YouTube
Jean Burgess, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Joshua Green, Massachusetts Insititute of Technology, USA
Video Politics: Typologies of User-generated Content
Greg F. Elmer, Ryerson U, CANADA
Fenwick McKelvey, Ryerson U, CANADA
Brady Curlew, York U, CANADA
Beyond Viral Video: Using YouTube to Maintain Social Networks
Patricia G. Lange, U of Southern California, USA
Paying Attention to YouTube Consumers' Communal Consumption: In/Sights from Audiovisual Netnography
Robert Kozinets, York U, CANADA
Ashlee Humphreys, Northwestern U, USA
This panel brings together a range of disciplinary perspectives and methodological approaches to address the question
of YouTube's uses and implications. Each of the papers provides new insights into the dynamics of YouTube as part
of the emerging cultural public sphere. While focusing on YouTube as a particularly rich case study, the panel
contributes new ideas to the broader issue of how communication research might most productively engage with the
scale and diversity of participatory popular culture online.
4640
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Drummond West
High Density Session: The Web 1.0, 2.0, and Beyond
Information Systems
Chair
Byungho Park, National U - Singapore, SINGAPORE
Participants
When Words Collide Online: How Writing Style and Video Intensity Affect Cognitive Processing of Online News
Kevin Wise, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Justin Myers, U of Missouri-Columbia, USA
Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
"My Brain Is Full!" Storage Limit and Serial Position Effects During Web Search
Chen-Chao Tao, National Chiao Tung U, TAIWAN
Sophistication of Internet Usage: Application of Confirmatory Factor Analysis to the Measurement of Internet Usage
Taiquan Peng, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Jonathan J.H. Zhu, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Customers Who Bought This Also Bought That: Factors Affecting Online Impulsive Purchase
Julian Lin, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Chan Hock Chuan, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Dang_Thi_Mai Thu, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Relevance to the Rescue: Can "Smart Ads" Reduce Negative Response to Online Ad Clutter?
Namyoung Kim, Louisiana State U, USA
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Applying the Technology Acceptance Model and Flow Theory to Cyworld User Behavior: Implication of the Web2.0
User Acceptance
Don-Hee Shin, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Effects of a Spokes-Avatar on Apple iPhone Advertising in the Second Life Virtual Environment
Seung-A Annie Jin, Boston College, USA
Justin Bolebruch, Boston College, USA
A Virtual World Experimental Test of the Law of Demand
Edward Castronova, Indiana U, USA
4641
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Drummond Centre
Technology in the Workplace
Communication and Technology
Chair
Kumi Ishii, Western Kentucky U, USA
Participants
Gratification and Disaffection: Understanding Personal Internet Use During Work
R. Kelly Garrett, Ohio State U, USA
James N. Danziger, U of California - Irvine, USA
Self-Concealment and Anonymity in the Workplace
Kate Magsamen Conrad, Rutgers, USA
Maria G Checton, Rutgers, USA
Maria Koskan Venetis, Rutgers U, USA
Error and Coupling: Extending Common Ground to Improve the Provision of Visual Information for Collaborative
Tasks
Jeremy Birnholtz, Cornell U, USA
Abhishek Ranjan, U of Toronto, CANADA
Ravin Balakrishnan, U of Toronto, CANADA
Integrative Technologies in the Workplace: Using Distributed Cognition to Frame the Challenges Associated With
Their Implementation
Carole Groleau, U de Montréal, CANADA
4642
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Drummond East
Managing Online Acquaintances
Communication and Technology
Chair
Irina A. Shklovski, U of California - Irvine, USA
Participants
Getting Acquainted Through Social Networking Sites: Testing a Model of Online Uncertainty Reduction and Social
Attraction ** (TOP 2 FACULTY PAPER IN CAT)
Marjolijn L. Antheunis, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Uncertainty Reduction Over Time in Initial Stranger Interactions: A Social Information Processing Theory Approach
David Keith Westerman, West Virginia U, USA
Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA
Blogging and Online Friendships: The Role of Self-Disclosure and Perceived Reciprocity
Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Mindawati Wijaya, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Hui Yi Goh, ACNielsen Singapore, SINGAPORE
Patterns of Media Use and Multiplexity: Associations with Sex, Geographic Distance, and Friendship
Interdependence
Andrew Michael Ledbetter, Ohio U, USA
4643
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 6
Media Terror, Conflict, and Resolution
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Laura B. Lengel, Bowling Green State U, USA
Participants
Agency and Distance in the Representation of Suffering
Shani Orgad, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Naming Suspects in Terrorist Attacks: An Inquiry of Journalistic Stereotypes in Newspaper Coverage of the 2005
London Bombings
Bu Zhong, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Paul Mihailidis, U of Maryland, USA
Revisiting Media in Conflict: In Search of Peacebuilding Media
Vladimir Bratic, Hollins U, USA
Television, History, and Terrorism
Tarik Ahmed Elseewi, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Us and Them: Competing Interpretations of Terrorism and Political Violence
Laura Robinson, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Bowling Green State U, USA
4644
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 7
A Global Dialogue on Climate Change?
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Constructing Rights and Duties Towards Climate Change: Citizenship and Governance in Mediated Discourses
around the World
Anabela Carvalho, U do Minho, PORTUGAL
IPCC Reports 1991-2007 in The Media: A Case Study on the Dialectic Between Journalism and Natural Sciences
Irene Neverla, U of Hamburg, GERMANY
Climate Action and Environmental Activism: How NGOs and Grassroots Movements are Shaping the Politics of
Climate Change
Julie Doyle, U of Brighton, UNITED KINGDOM
Moral Authority and Climate Change Policy: The Role of Faith Organizations in a Global Dialogue on Climate
Change
Judith Marie Ford, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Respondent
Environmental Policy Lawyer, United Nations Conference for Climate Change, THE NETHERLANDS
Climate change poses an immediate and universal challenge to mankind's fragile relationship to the natural world.
While the ability to detect the problem and recommend steps to mitigate its effects falls primarily within natural
science disciplines, the sense of urgency and responsibility needed to heed their call for action in our societies will
likely be determined through communication within and between various groups. This panel will analyze the extent to
which mediated political and scientific discourse, as well as faith-based and activist organizations feed into 'A Global
Dialogue on Climate Change'. Papers will address a number of key questions: How are issues such as historical
differentiation in greenhouse gas emissions, rights to development, moral obligation and equity being framed? How
are the roles of governments, business and individuals being discursively constructed? What barriers exist to more
concerted action and greater fairness? To what extent are communication practices part of the problem? How can they
be part of the solution?
4650
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Ballroom East
Documenting and Disrupting (Dis)ability Through Film: Communicating for Social Impact
Theme Sessions
Chair
Mohan Jyoti Dutta, Purdue U, USA
Participants
Casey Hayward, Ohio U, USA
Courtney E. Cole, Ohio U, USA
John W. Smith, Ohio U, USA
Margaret Mary Quinlan, Ohio U, USA
Rod Michalko, St. Francis Xavier U, CANADA
Dawn O. Braithwaite, U of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA
Plan F, a documentary directed and produced by Casey Hayward and co-produced by Courtney Cole, is the story of
Ed Marko. This narrative of an occupational-therapist turned auto-mechanic would be unremarkable except that, at
the age of 20, Marko lost his eyesight to a degenerative disease. Ed lost sight of "plan A." Documenting Ed navigating
piles of parts, uncooperative employees, and customers' unruly cars, Plan F is a visual demonstration of the power of
reinvention when life changes the plan. Documentaries are often lauded for their ability to bring visibility to pressing
social issues and educate viewers about them. However, many issue-driven films have focused on activism at the
expense of aesthetics. In Plan F, the aesthetic rendering of Ed re-visions the work of a man living without sight. Ed's
story is told with the very sense that the film's subject lacks. The cinematography forces viewers to inhabit a world
where seeing is no longer taken for granted, where the field of vision is dark, cramped, and often unclear. The film
literally re-visions the act of viewing, moving beyond "thinking about" disability to "thinking with" a person living
and working without his sight. Join the director and producers for a viewing of Plan F to be followed by dialogue led
by disability studies scholars.
4651
Saturday
15:00-16:15
Salon 8
The Bias of Digital Communication
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Thom Gencarelli, Manhattan College, USA
Participants
"It Ain't Heavy: The Bias of Digital Communication"
Thom Gencarelli, Manhattan College, USA
"Plato on the Break Boundary: Implications for the Digital Revolution"
Twyla Gail Gibson, U of Toronto, USA
"Just-in-time Democracy? Promises and Perils of the Digital Public Sphere"
Joshua Meyrowitz, U of New Hampshire, USA
"Time, Memory, and Media Ecology"
Lance A. Strate, Fordham U, USA
"A Digital Bias"
Gary Gumpert, Urban Communication Foundation, USA
Susan Drucker, Hofstra U, USA
In 1951, one year after he published his ground-breaking work on the history of our media of human communication,
Empire and Communication (1950), Harold Adams Innis published The Bias of Communication. In honor of the fact
that this year's ICA Conference is being held in the great Canadian city of Montreal, and in honor of the Canadian
contribution to communication scholarship that begin with Innis, this panel seeks to extend and expand Innis'
perspective on media bias to examine the frontier of digital media.
4660
Saturday
15:00-16:15
701
Digital News
Journalism Studies
Chair
Bill Reader, Ohio U, USA
Participants
Blogs and Big Media: A Comparative Study of Agendas
Gerry Lanosga, Indiana U, USA
Increasingly Interactive: Swedish Online News 2005-2007
Michael B. Karlsson, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
The Discursive Practices of Media Convergence: When Old Media Meets New Media
Sabryna Cornish, Northern Illinois U, USA
Visibility of Journalistic Processes and the Undermining of Objectivity
Michael B. Karlsson, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
Redefining Multimedia: The (Dis)integrated Use of Multiple Media and Modalities in Convergent Journalism
Michael Opgenhaffen, Lessius U College, BELGIUM
Respondent
Jane B. Singer, U of Central Lancashire, UNITED KINGDOM
The news industry is in the process of cultivating and professionalizing digital journalism, sharing some key
components with off-line journalism, but embracing some new characteristics of its own. The papers in this session
offer an in-depth look at how these more or less new hallmarks of online professionalism plays out in different
countries and across different platforms.
4661
Saturday
15:00-16:15
705
Avatars, Characters, Narrative
Game Studies
Chair
Katherine Currie Isbister, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Participants
The Priming Effects of Avatars in Virtual Settings
Jorge F. Pena, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA
Computer Science and Communication Perspectives on Character Believability in Games
Sangyeob Lee, Michigan State U, USA
Carrie Heeter, Michigan State U, USA
Procedural Rhetoric in Persona 3: Mechanics and Narrative as Ideological Signifier
Todd L. Harper, Ohio U, USA
4662
Saturday
15:00-16:15
716
Theorizing Labor in the New Cultural Economy
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA
Participants
Risky Business? Understanding The Barriers to Work in Creative Industries
Gina Neff, U of Washington, USA
Does Immaterial Labour Work?
David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Branded Living in Promotional Skin: Reality Television and the Limits of Affective and Immaterial Labour
Alison Hearn, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
Women's Work: Affective Labor, Media Convergence and the Dr. Phil Brand
Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA
Julie Ann Wilson, U of Minnesota, USA
Respondent
Justin Lewis, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM
This panel examines labor's changing relationship to the media and culture industries at a juncture marked by
increased risk and social insecurity on the one hand, and new technologies on the other. The papers analyze changes
in the organization of paid cultural/creative labor, and new forms of unwaged affective and immaterial labor
associated with the media and culture industries that are often not considered work at all.
4663
Saturday
15:00-16:15
720
From Science to Society: Discourses of Difference
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Micky Lee, Suffolk U, USA
Participants
Could It Be Me?: The Interplay Between HIV/AIDS Messages and African-American Women's Risk for Infection
Janeane Nicole Anderson, The Dallas Weekly, USA
Discourses of Difference in Human Genomics and the HapMap Project ( 3rd Top Paper)
Peter Chow-White, Simon Fraser U, CANADA
Discursive Phobias: Unpacking the Fear of the 'Third World' in New Zealand (2nd Top Paper)
Debashish Munshi, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Priya Kurian, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
The Dialectics of Immigration Debate: A Historical Perspective of Public Discourse Framing in Hazleton, PA
Juraj Kittler, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Jorge Reina Schement, Pernnsylvania State U, USA
West Indians and a Culture of Dissent in Liberian Journalism
C. Patrick Burrowes, Pennsylvania State U, USA
4664
Saturday
15:00-16:15
728
Instructional & Developmental Communication Business Meeting
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
Kristen Harrison, U of Illinois, USA
Lynn Gregory, U of Vermont, USA
4666
Saturday
15:00-16:15
820
Diverse Contexts for Intergroup Communication: Culture, Peer Groups, Health, and Sports
Intergroup Communication
Chair
Margaret J. Pitts, Old Dominion U, USA
Participants
Attitudes Toward Americans: Exploring the Influences of Japanese Sojourners' Communication Experiences With
Their Most Frequent American Contact
Makiko Imamura, U of Kansas, USA
Yan Bing Zhang, U of Kansas, USA
Overcoming Ethnocentrism Through Developing Intercultural Communication Sensitivity and Multiculturalism
Qingwen Dong, U of the Pacific, USA
Kenneth D. Day, U of the Pacific, USA
Christine M Collaco, U of the Pacific, USA
Roommate Conflict: Does Race Matter?
Mary Jiang Bresnahan, Michigan State U, USA
Xiaowen Guan, Michigan State U, USA
Sachiyo Morinaga Shearman, East Carolina U, USA
William A. Donohue, Michigan State U, USA
Ayako Tsuchiya, Michigan State U, USA
Peer Listening Line: An Ethnographic Approach to Studying a Peer Health Education Group
Rebekah Nagler, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Consumption of Sports team-related Media: Its Influence on Sports Fan Identity Salience and Self-Esteem
Joe Jin Phua, U of Southern California, USA
This session represents diverse approaches toward intergroup communication and the many contexts in which
intergroup communication is at the forefront.
4750
Saturday
16:30-17:45
Ballroom East
4841
Saturday
18:00-20:00
Drummond Centre
International Communication Association Annual Members' Meeting, Annual Awards, and Presidential
Address
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Wiley-Blackwell's Publications Reception
Sponsored Sessions
Please join ICA and Wiley-Blackwell for an evening of celebration at the 2008 Publications Reception. All
conference attendees are invited to toast exciting new launches, including the first-ever ICA Encyclopedia of
Communication, the new journal Communication, Culture & Critique, journal abstracts posted online in six
languages, and a new ICA book series, Communication in the Public Interest. Come raise a glass, enjoy fine
refreshments and entertainment, and meet the many people whose hard work has made these achievements possible.
Hope to see you there!
5167
Sunday
07:30-09:00
3224
5210
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon A
ICA Past Presidents' Breakfast
Sponsored Sessions
Emotion, Mood, and Media
Mass Communication
Chair
Francesca Renee Dillman Carpentier, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Participants
Behavioral Activation/Inhibition Systems and Discrete Emotions: A Test of Valence vs. Action Tendency Hypotheses
Lijiang Shen, U of Georgia, USA
Elisabeth Bigsby, U of Georgia, USA
Effects of Mood on Responses to Preventive Health Advertising
Sela Sar, Iowa State U, USA
George Anghelcev, U of Minnesota, USA
The Interaction Between Efficacy and Emotion in Predicting Civic Engagement
Myiah Hutchens Hively, Ohio State U, USA
Kristen Dawn Landreville, Ohio State U, USA
Do We Improve, Disrupt, or Embrace Sadness? Exploring Sadness-Based Media Choice and Its Anticipated Effects
on Coping
Jinhee Kim, Kent State U, USA
Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Sports Spectators' Suspense: Affect and Uncertainty in Sports Entertainment
Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA
Prabu David, Ohio State U, USA
Matthew S. Eastin, Department of Advertising, U of Texas at Austin, USA
Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA
Dara Natalie Greenwood, U of Michigan, USA
5211
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon B
Maximizing Opportunities and Mitigating Threats to Success in a Large-Scale Antidrug Media Campaign for
Youth
Mass Communication
Health Communication
Participants
Above the Influence: Development of a Brand to Reach Youth at the Moment of Decision About Drug Use
Robert W. Denniston, Office of National Drug Control Policy, USA
Threats to Success and Empirical Safeguards: Evaluation Within the National Youth Antidrug Media Campaign
Kristen D. Holtz, KDH Research and Communication, USA
Innovative Analytic Approaches to Measure the Impact of a Drug Prevention Social Marketing Campaign
Tanya White, Draft FCB, USA
Among the largest social marketing efforts of its kind, the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign (NYADMC)
is conducted by the Office of National Drug Control Policy under congressional mandate. This campaign uses "best
practices" of the advertising industry to reach youth ages nine through 18 with information about drugs of abuse,
specifically marijuana. Since its inception in 1998, the efficacy of the NYADMC has been closely scrutinized.
National surveys such as Monitoring the Future have shown continued declines in youth drug use, and various peerreviewed evaluations have reported evidence of campaign effectiveness. But other reports have suggested that the
NYADMC caused no favorable changes in youth drug use and that there may be a "norming" effect associated with
campaign ads, whereby youth exposed to more advertising show more positive attitudes to drug use overall. Working
from this background, the purpose of this panel is twofold. First, authors will present information on the evolution of
the campaign, with a specific emphasis on the Above the Influence (ATI) brand and its focus on reaching youth
within their developmental context. Second, authors will discuss threats to success of the campaign, which include
norming, within the context of the extensive empirical methods utilized by the campaign to continuously evaluate the
impact of the advertising. Taken as a whole, this symposium will present new information about the NYADMC, with
a particular emphasis on the context in which advertising is delivered and recent evaluation outcomes that
demonstrate campaign effectiveness with the target audience.
5212
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon C
The Impact of Rationality, Veracity, Shame, and Regret on Message Processing
Information Systems
Chair
Julia Fox, Indiana U, USA
Participants
Rationality, Experientiality, and Media Behavior: A Dual-Process Approach to Media Use and Appreciation
Matthias R. Hastall, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Effects of Rationality and Story Attributes on Risk Perceptions and Responses: The Case of Local Sexual Crime
News
Chia-Hsin Pan, Chinese Culture U, TAIWAN
The Moderating Role of Experiential and Rational Thinking Styles in Responses to Supportive Messages
Key Jung Lee, U of California - Davis, USA
Bo Feng, U of California, Davis, USA
People Lie for a Reason II: A Second Test of the Principle of Veracity
Rachel K. Kim, Michigan State U, USA
Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA
Communication of Moral Emotions During an Organizational Crisis: Differential Effects of an Ashamed CEO and a
Regretful CEO
Yoka Marije Wesseling, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
5220
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Lamartine
Challenges of Teaching Intercultural Communication in Response to Global Changes
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Ming-Yi Wu, Western Illinois U, USA
Participants
Teaching Intercultural Communication in Polish - German Cross - Border Academic Institution: Opportunities and
Challenges
Agnieszka Magdalena Stepinska, Adam Mickiewicz U, POLAND
Teaching Intercultural Communication in an Institute with Predominantly Hispanic Student Population: Challenges
and Strategies
Yanrong Chang, U of Texas - Pan American, USA
"Who am I?": Teaching Cultural Identity in a Multicultural Urban College
Pei-Wen Lee, LaGuardia Community College, USA
"But we are all equals…": The Impact of Globalization in Intercultural Communication Classes
Maria Beatriz Torres, Keene State College, USA
Challenges and Promises for Intercultural Communication Education in Japan: A Holistic Approach
Masayuki Nakanishi, Tsuda College, JAPAN
"Active" Approach to Global Communication Education
Yulia Tolstikova-Mast, Butler U, USA
The panelists will discuss the challenges that instructors encounter in teaching intercultural communication due to, for
example, globalization, war, technology, student population, etc. Topics in relation to cultural identity development,
intercultural practice, historical conflict among students, the change of student population, and power dynamics will
be explored. The panelists will also offer their advanced pedagogies in response to the impact of global changes on
classroom practice and student learning.
5221
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Kafka
Digital Public Relations
Public Relations
Participants
Organizational Contingencies, Organizational Blogs, and Public Relations Practitioner Stance Toward Publics
Tom Kelleher, U of Hawaii, USA
RIWAM (Responsible Identity Web Analysis Method): A Social Model Towards Corporate 'Website Order'
Samuel Martín-Barbero, IE-Business School, SPAIN
Francesco Domenico Sandulli, IE-Business School, SPAIN
A Content Analysis of Avian Influenza Communication on 31 Chinese E-Governmental Websites
Heng Xu, Purdue U, USA
Risk Communication Strategies Through the Internet in the Chemical Industry in Spain
Paul Capriotti, U Rovira i Virgili, SPAIN
Respondent
Lance Porter, Lousiana State U, USA
5222
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Hemon
The Social Impact of Strategies and Tactics in Activist Organizing
Organizational Communication
Chair
Juliet P. Roper, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Participants
Health Activism, Stakeholder Participation, and Governmental Regulation: A Comparative Analysis of Approaches to
Corporate Change
Heather Zoller, U of Cincinnati, USA
Organizing Through Fools and Rules: An Activist Group's Attempt to Combine Emotive Carnivalesque and Rational
Bureaucratic Protest Strategies
C. Kay Weaver, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Understanding Diversity in Global Social Justice Activism in Aotearoa/New Zealand
Shiv Ganesh, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Food as a Social Justice Issue? Comparing Local Food Activism Across Three Regions
Sarah E Dempsey, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Respondent
Graham K. Knight, McMaster U, CANADA
Recent scholarship on activism has begun to emphasize the importance of understanding the relationship between the
overall social impact of activism with specific organizational strategies and tactics. However, much empirical work
remains to be done to illustrate the extremely wide range of strategies and tactics that activists communicatively
construct. Accordingly, this panel features four empirical studies of activist organizing. Panelists will deliver ten
minute presentations of key findings, followed by a brief response, and an interactive discussion with the audience.
5223
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Jarry
Influencing Decisions About Organ Donation
Health Communication
Chair
Eric Albert Zimmer, Georgetown U, USA
Participants
Promoting Organ and Tissue Donation Using the Two-Step Flow of Communication Model
Shinil Moon, SUNY Buffalo, USA
Ashley Anker, U at Buffalo, SUNY, USA
Thomas H. Feeley, U of Buffalo, USA
"My Loss is Your Gain": Examining the Role of Message Frame, Perceived Risk, and Ambivalence in the Decision to
Become an Organ Donor
Elizabeth L. Cohen, Georgia State U, USA
A Mass-Mediated Intervention on Hispanic Live Kidney Donation
Eusebio Martins Alvaro, Claremont Graduate U, USA
Jason T Siegel, Claremont Graduate U, USA
William D. Crano, Claremont Graduate U, USA
Ethnic Differences in Intention to Enroll in a State Organ Donor Registry and Intention to Talk With Family About
Organ Donation
Hee Sun Park, Michigan State U, USA
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Doshik Yun, Michigan State U, USA
5224
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Joyce
Progress and Perspectives in Communicating About HIV/AIDS
Health Communication
Chair
Jae-Hwa Shin, U of Southern Mississippi, USA
Participants
A 10-Year Systematic Review of HIV/AIDS Mass Communication Campaigns: Have We Made Progress?
Seth M. Noar, U of Kentucky, USA
Philip Palmgreen, U of Kentucky, USA
Melissa Chabot, U of Kentucky, USA
Rick S. Zimmerman, U of Kentucky, USA
Nicole Dobransky, U of Kentucky, USA
Explication of Barriers to Effective HIV Prevention: Using Counterarguments as Indicators of Barriers to Behavior
Change in Malawi
Rajiv N. Rimal, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Sarah L Gibson, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Katherine Clegg Smith, Johns Hopkins U, USA
African Coverage of Progress and Responsibility in Fighting AIDS: A Community Structure Approach
John C. Pollock, College of New Jersey, USA
Paul D'Angelo, College of New Jersey, USA
Genevieve Faust, The College of New Jersey, USA
Brian Keefe, The College of New Jersey, USA
Meghan Higgins, The College of New Jersey, USA
Dominique Sauro, The College of New Jersey, USA
Rowena Briones, The College of New Jersey, USA
Danielle Catona, The College of New Jersey, USA
Adapting AND Applying a Western-Developed Model of Condom Use to Chinese College Students
Zhiwen Xiao, U of Houston, USA
5225
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Musset
Love, Rituals, Commitment, and Conversations
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Kathryn Greene, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
When Work and Love Mix: Perceptions of Peers in Workplace Romances
Sean Michael Horan, West Virginia U, USA
Rebecca M. Chory, West Virginia U, USA
Rituals in Dating Relationships: The Development and Validation of a Measure
Judy C. Pearson, North Dakota State U, USA
Jeffrey T. Child, Kent State U, USA
Anna Carmon, North Dakota State U, USA
Relational Trajectories: Mate Value, Baggage, Attachment, and Their Impact on Commitment in Relationships Over
Time
Robert John Sidelinger, West Virginia U, USA
Melanie Booth-Butterfield, West Virginia U, USA
Geographic Distance and Communication During Courtship: Examining Knowledge-Enhancing Talk
Laura Stafford, Ohio State U, USA
Andy J. Merolla, Colorado State U, USA
Respondent
Kathryn Greene, Rutgers U, USA
5230
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 1
Political Advertising
Political Communication
Chair
Elizabeth Johnson Avery, U of Tennessee, USA
Participants
Impacts of Chinese Government Public Relations: PR Expertise, Legitimacy, and News
Di Zhang, Syracuse U, USA
Jueman Zhang, Syracuse U, USA
Measuring the Professionalization of Political Campaign Communication
Rachel Gibson, U of Manchester, UNITED KINGDOM
Andrea Rommele, International U in Germany, Bruchsal, GERMANY
The Role and Effects of Emotion in Negative Political Advertising
Jill Cornelius Underhill, U of Maryland, USA
Because I Said So: A Functional Theory Analysis of the 2002 Midterm Elections and Uses of Supporting Evidence
Jayne R. Henson, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
William L. Benoit, U of Missouri, USA
5232
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 3
Exploring Governments' Communication Strategies and Their Implications for Social Impact
Political Communication
Chairs
Karen Sanders, San Pablo U, SPAIN
Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN
Participants
Looking for News Space or Thinking Strategically? The Case of the Spanish Governments' Communication
Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN
Professionalization at Two Speeds? Can Government Communication Learn From Electoral Communication?
Christina Holtz-Bacha, U of Erlangen - Nuernberg, GERMANY
From Campaigning to Governing: French President Nicolas Sarkozy's Innovative Political Communication
Philippe J. Maarek, U Paris 12, FRANCE
Government Communication in Fragile Democracies
Carla Montemayor, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM
The Blair Years 1997-2007: Lessons for Government Communication?
Karen Sanders, San Pablo U, SPAIN
This panel explores key issues related to Government communication and their implications for social impact,
addressing issues like the professionalization of communication, the "global" model for Government communication,
the relationship between persuasive communication and information, and ultimately, the aim of governments
communication strategies and their implications for social impact.
5233
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 4
LSI Approaches to Analyzing Media and Controversy
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Alena L. Vasilyeva, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
Contentless Content Analysis: Flaws in a New Methodology for Analyzing Media Bias
Mark N. Cooper, McGannon Center for Communications Research, USA
A Framework for Sentiment Analysis of Political News Articles
Armineh Nourbakhsh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Christopher S. G. Khoo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Jin-Cheon Na, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Socioscientific Controversies: A Theoretical and Methodological Framework
Craig O. Stewart, Old Dominion U, USA
Communities of Interpretation: Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide
Wanda Luen Wun Siu, Chinese U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
5234
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 5
Changing Social Landscapes: Negotiating Religion, Sex, and Politics in Popular Culture
Popular Communication
Participants
Dog as God
Mara Einstein, Queens College--City U of New York, USA
Power and Politics in the Religious Mediascape
Stewart M. Hoover, U of Colorado, USA
Little Mosque on the CBC
Joyce Smith, Ryerson U, CANADA
Sex, Science and Religion: Mediating the Kinsey Reports
Rebecca Alice Sullivan, U of Calgary, CANADA
This panel explores various religious representations in popular culture with the objective of demonstrating the
changing landscape of religious communications - from direct interaction to more mediated forms of communication and how religion is negotiated in the broader culture. While traditional religious practice declines, the myths of
religion continue to be presented in the popular culture. These representations have lead to altered understandings of
religion itself as well as social issues from sex to politics.
5240
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Drummond West
Communication in Action: Scholarly Intervention at Local and National Levels
Theme Sessions
Chair
Susan Ericsson, Northwestern U, USA
Participants
Caught in the Frame: Immigration Marches and the Public Screen
Esteban Del Rio, U of San Diego, USA
Free-Market Discourse and Public Dialogue: Alternatives to Free-Market Approaches in Rebuilding New Orleans
Post-Katrina.
Janice Haynes, Xavier U, USA
Communication Studies, Activism, and Rebuilding During the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans
David J. Park, Xavier U, USA
This panel examines communication as social action in a variety of contexts. The papers use an interdisciplinary
approach to examining communication at sites in New Orleans and Los Angeles. The research focuses on
communication in influencing public policies, alternative pedagogies and community action. The papers address: (1)
Analysis of civic activism and the framing power of the news utilizing Public Screen theory to assess the implications
of the 2007 Immigration March that occurred in McArthur Park; (3) Structuring of public dialogue through freemarket discourse surrounding rebuilding of New Orleans after Katrina; and (4) Examining the potential of
communication departments as agents of change using a case study of community activism and experimental
pedagogies involving Xavier University of Louisiana Communications Department faculty and students, and nonprofits in the aftermath of Katrina.
5241
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Drummond Centre
Mobile Media
Communication and Technology
Chair
James E. Katz, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
A Comparison of Five Functions in the PDA: Importance, Ease of Use, Usefulness and Intention to Use
Julian Lin, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Chan Hock Chuan, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Milagros Rivera, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Communicating Through Mobile TV Among Young College Students and Its Potential Social Impact
Seung-Hyun Lee, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Emotions in Mobile Media-Assisted Tourist Experiences
Timo Seppo Saari, Temple U, USA
Youngjin Yoo, Temple U, USA
Iis P. Tussyadiah, Temple U, USA
A Preliminary Study of the Interfirm Network of Wireless Mobile Media Business in the U.S.
Li Xiong, U of Southern California, USA
5242
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Drummond East
Do ICTs Foster Social Connectivity or Social Isolation? Evaluating Cross-National Evidence
Communication and Technology
Chair
Barry Wellman, U of Toronto, CANADA
Participants
The Internet and the Increasingly Connected American Life: Trend Spotting Through a Year-to-Year Comparison,
2002-2007
Hua Wang, U of Southern California, USA
Barry Wellman, U of Toronto, CANADA
Does Distance Still Matter in Connected Lives? A Pre- and Post-Internet Comparison
Diana Mok, Dept of Geography, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
Longitudinal Effects of Internet Use on Social Networks
Kakuko Miyata, Meiji Gakuin U, JAPAN
Social Accessibility and Instant Messaging: University Students' Negotiation of Public and Private Time
Jessica Collins, Dept of Sociology, U of Toronto, CANADA
Anabel Quan-Haase, U of Western Ontario, CANADA
The Use of Communication Technologiesand Perceived Family Support
Gustavo S Mesch, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Ilan Talmud, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Respondent
Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Is the heavy use of the internet (and other ICTs) socially isolating? Evidence from Canada, Israel, Japan and the
United States show that this concern is ill-founded. People are intertwining a differentiated battery of ICTs with faceto-face and telephone communication to communicate often, with large networks stretching over long distances and
time zones. The triple revolution of ICTs, always-available mobile access, and social networking is enhancing and
transforming relationships.
5243
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 6
Perspectives on Communication Technology and Organizing
Organizational Communication
Chair
Michelle D. Shumate, U of Illinois, USA
Participants
Organizational Norm Congruency and Interpersonal Familiarity in Email: Examining Messages From Two Different
Perspectives
Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Renee Cowan, Texas A&M U, USA
Marian Houser, Texas State U, USA
Reclaiming Materiality: Explaining Interpretations of Technology and Resistance to Organizational Change
Paul Leonardi, Northwestern U, USA
The Destructive Potential of Electronic Communication Technologies in Organizations
Andrew Flanagin, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Beverly A. Bondad-Brown, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
The Role of Utility Values, Organizational Subcultures, and Critical Mass in Organizational Use of Communication
Information Technology
Canchu Lin, Bowling Green State U, USA
Louisa Ha, Bowling Green State U, USA
Respondent
Steven R. Corman, Arizona State U, USA
5244
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 7
Reassessing NAFTA and the Cultural Industries
Global Communication and Social Change
Participants
Television and Cultural Integrity: Historical Perspective on Technology
Emile G. McAnany, Santa Clara U, USA
The Uninvited Guest: Indians in the Free Trade Mediascape
Eduardo Barrera, U of Texas - El Paso, USA
Television Flows Rather Than Trades
Roger De La Garde, Laval U, CANADA
The Supply of Audiovisual Content in México, Canada and the United States in the NAFTA Era
Jose Carlos Lozano, Tecnologico de Monterrey, Campus Monterrey, MEXICO
Francisco Javier Martinez, Tecnologico de Monterrey, Campus Monterrey, MEXICO
Respondent
Line Grenier, U de Montréal, CANADA
This panel features scholars who participated in a 1994 conference in Austin which resulted in the book, "Mass Media
and Free Trade: NAFTA and the Cultural Industries" (Texas Press, 1996). Each panelist and the respondent will
consider free trade's subsequent impact on mass communication texts, phenomena, processes, etc. observed 14 years
earlier as the NAFTA was being implemented. A variety of theoretical concerns and research orientations will be
represented by panelists and a respondent from the three nations of North America.
5251
Sunday
09:00-10:15
Salon 8
Is Entertainment Better Information? Wrapping Health Messages With a Smile: The Potential of
Entertainment-Education Programs for Children and Adolescents
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Michael J. Cody, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
The Influence of Parental Mediation on Children's Usage of Entertaining Television Programs
Saskia Bocking, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
The Epilogue: A Secret Ingredient for the Entertainment-Education Strategy?
Kathleen Arendt, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Commercials and Entertainment-Education: Distracting From or Supporting the Message?
Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, SWITZERLAND
Entertainment-Education in the Context of AIDS and HIV in Germany. A Prolonged-Exposure Experiment
Constanze Felicitas Rossmann, Ludwig-Maximilians U – Munich, SWITZERLAND
Sibylle Endres, U of Munich, GERMANY
Entertainment-Education has become a catch phrase for a new and supposedly more effective information strategy.
Extensively applied in the health information sector, it aims at improving knowledge, attitudes and ultimately
behavior towards a certain health issue. Based on data from Germany and Switzerland this panel introduces
experimental data that focuses on the potential of Entertainment-Education formats targeting special audiences at risk
and covering a diverse pool of health topics (e.g. nutrition, HIV/Aids). Survey data on parents' influence of children's
usage of entertaining television programs complements the experimental data.
5260
Sunday
09:00-10:15
701
The Future of Journalism Research: Theories, Methods, Challenges
Journalism Studies
Chair
Martin Loffelholz, Ilmenau U of Technology, GERMANY
Participants
The Future of Theories of Journalism Research
Martin Loffelholz, Ilmenau U of Technology, GERMANY
The Future of Journalism Research Methods
David H. Weaver, Indiana U, USA
The Future of Comparative Journalism Research
Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Andreas Schwarz, TU - Ilmenau, GERMANY
The Future of Globalized Journalism Research
Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas - Austin, USA
The Future of Interdisciplinary Journalism Research
Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA
The panel session on the future of journalism research aims to discuss the theoretical and methodological perspectives
of journalism research at the beginning of the 21st century. The main objective of this session is to suggest a new
orientation for journalism research, which needs to take into account that both national and disciplinary boundaries
have to be overcome in an era of globalization. All in all, the proposed session on the future of journalism research is
meant to stimulate and refine our thinking about theoretical approaches and research methods that will be most
fruitful in studying journalism in this decade and beyond.
5261
Sunday
09:00-10:15
705
Visual Framing and Politics
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Mary Angela Bock, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Participants
The Levels of Visual Framing
Lulu Rodriguez, Iowa State U, USA
Daniela V. Dimitrova, Iowa State U, USA
The Struggle for Control: Visual Framing, News Coverage, and Image Handling of Presidential Candidates, 19922004
Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Indiana U, USA
Erik P. Bucy, Indiana U, USA
U.S. Presidential Campaign 2008: A Fantasy Theme Analysis of Visual Stories Spun on the Web
Janis Teruggi Page, U of Florida, USA
Margaret Ellen Duffy, U of Missouri, USA
Gay Marriage in Iowa: The Visual Framing of a Controversial Social Issue
Joel Geske, Iowa State U, USA
Patti Brown, Iowa State U, USA
5262
Sunday
09:00-10:15
716
Transvaluing Media and Communication Research
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Digitally Not Yours: Spatial Discourses and Discursive Spaces for Brazilian Digital Television Policy in Manaus
(Joint Top Paper)
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
Toward an Ecological Historiography of Media Technology
Richard Maxwell, CUNY - Queens College, USA
Toby Miller, U of California - Riverside, USA
Hello Kitty: The Work of Nature in the Age of Digital Reproduction
Jody Berland, York U, CANADA
Doxa and Paradox About Communication
Diana Iulia Nastasia, U of North Dakota, USA
Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA
Media and communication reserach from time to time needs to reassess its paradigms, maybe even to transvalue (in
Nietzsche's term) the terms on which it is based. This panel brings together papers which interrogate the norms of
media research and seek to reorientate it towards new issues and new horizons of critical engagement, and includes
the joint top and the third-placed papers in the Division. Chair: Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, University of London
5263
Sunday
09:00-10:15
720
Dialogues in Black and White
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
David Monje, Northeastern U, USA
Participants
"The Wannabe, The Man, and Whitebread": Portrayals of Whiteness in the Black Context
Omotayo Banjo, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Todd A. Fraley, East Carolina U, USA
Modern Antiblack Racism in Postcivil-Rights Citizen Discourse
Michael G. Lacy, Monmouth U, USA
Patrolling Whiteness: Framing the Minuteman Project on the Evening News
Joshua Grimm, U of Iowa, USA
Re/Deconstruction of Whiteness? Racial Consciousness vs. Racial Abolition
Kim McCann, Bowling Green State U, USA
From Sun Ra to the Black Panthers: Consciousness and African American Technological Appropriation, 1952-1973
Daniel Kreiss, Stanford U, USA
5264
Sunday
09:00-10:15
728
Media Effects on Children: Spotlight on Literacy and Advertising
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Participants
The Impact of Television Narratives on the Early Literacy Skills of Preschoolers
Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Deborah L. Linebarger, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Spokescharacter Appearance vs. Behavior: What's More Important When Advertising Food Products to Kids in
Different Developmental Stages?
Courtney Carpenter Childers, U of Tennessee, USA
Children's Comprehension of Advertising: The Relationship Between Knowledge of Persuasive Intent and Age
Ariel R. Chernin, Center on Media and Child Health, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Comparing Children's and Adults' Recognition and Understanding of Television Advertising
Esther Rozendaal, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Moniek Buijzen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Mitigating the Unintended Effects of Advertising on Young Children: The Effectiveness of Parent-Administered
Active Mediation
Jennifer L. Chakroff, Lasell College, USA
Respondent
Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
5266
Sunday
09:00-10:15
820
ICA Publications Committee
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Mohan Jyoti Dutta, Purdue U, USA
Participants
Krishnamurthy Sriramesh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Ingrid Volkmer, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Mike West, International Communication Association, USA
ICA members are invited to share issues and concerns with the publications committee.
5310
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon A
Advances in Media Involvement, Identification, and Engagement
Mass Communication
Chair
Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
Understanding Audience Involvement: Conceptualizing and Manipulating Identification and Transportation
Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Nurit Talor, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Involvement with Celebrities: Examining the Relationships between Similarity Identification, Wishful Identification,
and Parasocial Interaction
Janel S. Schuh, U of Southern California, USA
Does Everybody Love Raymond? Audience Identification With Favorite Sitcom Characters
Shu-Fang Lin, National Chung Cheng U, TAIWAN
Emotion and Cognition in Filmic Narrative Comprehension and Engagement
Rick W. Busselle, Washington State U, USA
Helena Bilandzic, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Documentary and Historical Reenactment Film: A Comparison of Transportation, Emotion, Interest, and Learning
Kristen Dawn Landreville, Ohio State U, USA
Heather LaMarre, Ohio State U, USA
5311
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon B
Media Trust and Media Credibility: Shaping Our Understanding of Two Key Concepts
Mass Communication
Chair
Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Participants
Conceptualizing Audience Trust in Media as General Trust.
Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Understanding the Consequences of Trust. The Effects of Trust in News Media on Trust in Politics.
Joerg Matthes, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Werner Wirth, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Christian Schemer, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Trust in Public Internet Communication
Matthias Kohring, U Munster, GERMANY
Christoph Neuberger, U of Muenster, GERMANY
New Challenges to Media Credibility in the Digital Environment.
Miriam Metzger, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Andrew Flanagin, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Ryan Bradley Medders, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Elisia Eunha Sim, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Justin Lipp, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Respondent
Matthias Kohring, U Munster, GERMANY
Issues of media trust and media credibility have been a major part of mass communication scholarship since the field's
earliest days. Despite this long tradition, trust and credibility research is characterized by a proliferation of empirical
findings and a heterogeneity of conceptual ideas. This panel demonstrates recent developments in theory and research
from an international perspective. By approaching trust and credibility from different angles, the panel aims at
advancing a common understanding of these key concepts.
5312
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon C
Reporting on Natural Disasters in Mass Media: A Historical and International Perspective
Mass Communication
Participants
The Role of News Media in Natural Disaster Risk and Recovery
Brian Miles, U of Vermont, USA
Confusing Terminology: How Mass Media, Administration Authorities and the Public Work With Different Symbols,
Terms, and Definitions
Maria Hagemeier-Klose, Technical U of Munich, Germany, GERMANY
Natural Disasters From 1910 to 2005 in Newspapers Reporting Once and Today
Helena Zemp, IPMZ U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND
Disaster Reporting in Differing Media Cultures
Lucie Hribal, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Almost every day the media report on disasters somewhere in the world. The media are essential, for example, for
warnings to those who may be affected but also for the images we have about natural disasters. Because the frequency
of reporting on natural disasters has increased in the last years, the public has become more interested in them. At the
same time natural disasters have become global concerns, but little is known about how mass media in different
countries reports on causes, effects or responses to disaster. In the same vein, little is known about the selection
processes which determine which events come to public attention. Making these processes explicit is crucial for a
better understanding of the factors in human perception governing the interpretation of catastrophes. In the following
panel four aspects of construction of reality in the case of catastrophes will be presented: firstly the social construction
of risk which results from media coverage of natural disasters like Hurricanes Katrina and Rita of 2005, focusing on
the US Media. Secondly, research findings from Germany will illustrate how mass media, administration and the
public work with different symbols, terms and definitions. Third, a content analysis of Swiss newspapers reporting on
nine flood disasters (1910 to 2005) identifies how social change and changes in media practices influence what we
call a natural disaster.The influence of the media market appears to be an important and increasing part of the growing
attention to the issue of natural disasters around the world.
5320
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Lamartine
Visual Competence: A New Paradigm?
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U – Bremen, GERMANY
Participants
Visual Competence and Media Literacy: Can One Exist Without the Other?
Michael Griffin, Carleton College, USA
Sisters, Cousins, Competitors or Friends? Visual Competence and Media Literacy
Renee Hobbs, Temple U, USA
Visual Studies Revisited: Notes on Developing More Integrated and Encompassing Forms of Visual Expertise
Luc Pauwels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
The Concept of Visual Competence as Seen From the Perspective of the Psychological and Brain Sciences
Arvid Kappas, Jacobs U - Bremen, GERMANY
Bettina Olk, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY
Respondent
Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U – Bremen, GERMANY
The panel contrasts already established paradigms like "visual culture", "visual studies", "visual expertise", "visual
literacy and media literacy" with the relatively new concept of "visual competence" in the light of sociological,
psychological and communication approaches. The following key question to be discussed is, whether the concept
"Visual Competence" is useful/necessary by comparison to the already established concept of "Visual Literacy/Media
Literacy", and how the concept of Visual Competence can be implemented.
5321
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Kafka
Intercultural and International Public Relations
Public Relations
Chair
Bey-Ling Sha, San Diego State U, USA
Participants
Anxiety and Uncertainty Management in an Intercultural Setting
Lan Ni, U of Houston, USA
Qi Wang, Villanova U, USA
An Exploratory Study of International Ethics: A Chinese Perspective
Ai Zhang, U of Maryland, USA
An Examination of International Tourism Public Relations Websites Using Hofstede's Cultural Dimensions
Doo Syen Kang, Michigan State U, USA
Teresa Mastin, Michigan State U, USA
Factoring Culture Into Relationship Management Theory: Traditional Chinese Value Orientations and Cultivation
Strategies
Chun-ju Flora Hung, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Yi-Ru Regina Chen, U of Macau, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
5322
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Hemon
Problems and Possibilities in Group-Based Organizing
Organizational Communication
Chair
Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Participants
A Model of Deviance in Small Groups
Saulnier Martine, Université du Québec à Montréal, CANADA
Johanne Saint-Charles, U of Quebec - Montreal, CANADA
Collaborating Groups and Orientations to Technology in Crisis: Creating Connections or Enabling Divides?
Amanda J. Porter, U of Colorado, USA
Communication That Damages Teamwork: The Dark Side of Teams
David R. Seibold, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Paul Kang, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Bernadette M. Gailliard, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Jody Jahn, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Simple Heuristics and Information Sharing in Groups: How Naïve Groups Can Solve the Hidden-Profile Task
Torsten Reimer, U of Maryland, USA
Andrea Reimer, U of Maryland, USA
Ulrich Hoffrage, U of Lausanne, SWITZERLAND
Respondent
Tim Kuhn, U of Colorado, USA
5323
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Jarry
Communicating Policies and Procedures in Health Delivery
Health Communication
Chair
Barbara J. Walkosz, U of Colorado - Denver, USA
Participants
A Structurational Analysis of Informed Consent to Treatment: (Re)productions of Contradictory Sociohistorical
Structures in Practitioners' Interpretive Schemes
James Olumide Olufowote, Boston College, USA
Measuring Cancer Clinical Trial Understanding
Jon D Miller, Michigan State U, USA
Michael R. Kotowski, U of Tennessee, USA
Robert Comis, Coalition of Cooperative Cancer Groups, USA
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Kami J. Silk, Michigan State U, USA
Diane Colaizzi, Coalition of Cooperative Cancer Groups. USA
Talking to Doctors About Clinical Trials
Katherine A. McComas, Cornell U, USA
Zheng Yang, Cornell U, USA
Geri Gay, Cornell U, USA
John P. Leonard, Weill Cornell Medical College, Cornell U, USA
Andrew J. Dannenberg, Weill Cornell Medical College, Cornell U, USA
Hildy Dillon, Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, USA
Robin Kornhaber, Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, USA
Reflection and Analysis of How Pharmacy Students Learn to Communicate About Medication Errors
Carey Marie Noland, Northeastern U, USA
Nathaniel M Rickles, Northeastern U, USA
5324
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Joyce
WebWorks: Interactive Health Communication
Health Communication
Chair
Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Participants
Usability Testing of a Computer-Mediated Health Communication Program
Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA
eHealth Intervention Outcome Research: Will it Benefit Underserved Rural and Ethnic Minority Populations?
Robert L Glueckauf, College of Medicine, Florida State U, USA
Mia Liza A. Lustria, Florida State U, USA
Dissecting Computer-Tailored Health Interventions Delivered Over the Web
Mia Liza A. Lustria, Florida State U, USA
Juliann Cortese, Florida State U, USA
Linda Lockett Brown, Florida State U, USA
Richard Davis, Florida State U, USA
Victoria Mahabi, Florida State U, USA
Beom Jun Bae, Florida State U, USA
Mediating Processes and Effects of Two Communication Interventions for Breast Cancer Patients
Robert P. Hawkins, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Suzanne Pingree, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Bret Shaw, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Ronald C. Serlin, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Chris Swoboda, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Jeong Yeob Han, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Cindy Carmack-Taylor, U of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, USA
Andrew Salner, Hartford Hospital, USA
5325
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Musset
Continuous Measurement of Digital Game Experiences
Game Studies
Participants
Mapping Real-Time Game Experience Using Behavioral Indicators
Wouter Van den Hoogen, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Wijnand A. Ijsselsteijn, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Yvonne de Kort, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Psychophysiology of Digital Game Playing: Effects of Opposition Versus Collaboration in the Laboratory and in Real
Life
Niklas Ravaja, Helsinki School of Economics, FINLAND
Matias Kivikangas, Helsinki School of Economics, FINLAND
Social Cues in Social Games: Measures of Player Experience as Game Elements
Johannes Breuer, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Felix Eschenburg, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Lisa Aelker, U of Cologne, GERMANY
Observational Coding of Players' Behavior as a Continuous Measure of Digital Game Experience
Karolien Poels, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Yvonne de Kort, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
Wijnand A. Ijsselsteijn, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS
In recent years, the game industry has developed a wide array of games and gaming devices, targeted to different age
and gender groups and to gamers with various play styles. As such, playing digital games has become a highly
popular leisure activity. Over recent years, academic research on digital gaming has been growing in interest. Part of
research is focused on how to measure what people feel and experience when they engage in playing digital games.
Being able to validly and reliably measure these experiences is a prerequisite for sound research and theory building
in this domain. In this panel, we focus on the evaluation of game experiences, and in particular on those approaches
that allow for a continuous or time-variant measurement of the digital game experience. Most of the empirical
research on game experience to date has employed retrospective self-report measures, either qualitative (i.e., in-depth
interviews, focus groups) or quantitative (i.e., questionnaires) in character. This panel takes a different perspective by
focusing on measuring game experiences continuously during game play. We present four papers that advance the
state-of-the-art in continuous measurement of digital game experiences, including real-time behavior tracking,
observational coding, and psychophysiological approaches. The papers will address a number of questions regarding
continuous measures, such as: what indicators of players' experience can be recorded during game play; how are they
related to (components of) game experience; what methods can be employed to analyze game experience per se, and
in relation to specific game events or episodes.
5330
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 1
Framing
Political Communication
Chairs
Natalie Jomini Stroud, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Anna Kandyla, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
Where Do Frames Come From? Cross-Cultural Variance in the Framing of the Enron Debacle
Roei Davidson, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL
Defining the Democrats: Mainstream Online Media and the Early Framing of the 2008 Democratic Primary
Campaign
Bartosz Wojtek Wojdynski, U of North Carolina, USA
Who Says What? Competition Over News Frames in the U.S. Press Coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Kuang-Kuo Chang, Michigan State U, USA
The Influence of Press Releases on the Use of Strategic and Issue Frames
Anita M. J. van Hoof, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Liesbeth E.A.H.M. Hermans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS
Baldwin Van Gorp, Radboud U - Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS
5332
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 3
Symbolic Battles: Reality TV and Class, Gender, and Geopolitical Conflict
Popular Communication
Chair
Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA
Participants
Make Me Beautiful: Citizenship, Democratization, and Instruction on Makeover Television
Shana Heinricy, Xavier U, USA
No Adults Left Behind: Reality TV Shows as Educational Tools in the Neoliberal Society
Hye Jin Lee, U of Iowa, USA
Reality TV, Nationalism, and Gender: Superstar and the Lebanon-Syria Media War
Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA
The Performance of Scandal: The Jacko Eisenberg Affair and Israeli Military Discourse
Oren Livio, U of Pennsylvania, USA
5333
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 4
Politics & Gender in the Age of Interactive Mass Media
Feminist Scholarship
Political Communication
Chair
Beate Gersch, Trinity U, USA
Participants
Embodiment of Gender and Different Politics: Hillary Rodham Clinton Self-Representation and Iowa Media's
Responses
Betty Houchin Winfield, U of Missouri, USA
Is Anybody Out There? Women's Political Commentary in Traditional and New Media Spaces
Anne Johnston, U of North Carolina, USA
Barbara G. Friedman, U of North Carolina, USA
Women and Political Socialization: The Interaction of Gender and Media on Political Attitudes and Behavior
Kathleen Schmermund, Congressional Staff, USA
Anne Johnston, U of North Carolina, USA
Women and Technology - From Satellites to the Second Self
Danna L. Walker, American U, USA
As women rise to power in American politics, the internet has become a strategic site of political communication with the potential to be a watershed for women's political participation or a continuation of the "social annihilation"
that minimizes and trivializes their issues and opinions. How do women candidates and opinion leaders use the new
technology to foster political participation and promote debate on key policy issues, and how might a gender divide
persist in cyberspace?
5334
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 5
Popular Culture, the Nation, and Globalization
Popular Communication
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Usha Zacharias, Westfield State College, USA
Participants
Indian Middle Classes, Politics, and Popular Culture: Antipathies of the 'Second Democratic Resurgence'
Madhavi Murty, U of Washington, USA
Accommodating the Nations: Cultural Citizenship in Monsoon Wedding
Sreela Sarkar, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
The Commodifying Culture:Nationalism in the Korean Wave TV Dramas
Hyejung Ju, U of Oklahoma, USA
Two Phonographic Realities;Continual Colonial Submission and Interstitial Voices of Colonial Specters (1937-1950)
Yongwoo Lee, McGill U, CANADA
The Redemption of the Popular: Culture, Difference, and Race in the Age of Empire
Mehdi Semati, Eastern Illinois U, USA
5340
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Drummond West
Convergence and Collaboration: Communication Research, Activism, and Education for the Common Good
Theme Sessions
Chair
Lynn Schofield Clark, U of Denver, USA
Participants
Allison Butler, New York U, USA
Lisa Marie Tripp, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
Redefining Online Citizenship and the Public Sphere
Megan Boler, U of Toronto, CANADA
Media Education for Citizenship in a Digital Age
Mark Lipton, U of Guelph, CANADA
Lessons in Media Activism From Post-Katrina New Orleans
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
Learning, Activism, and Globalization
Divya C. McMillin, U of Washington - Tacoma, USA
Respondents
Robin R. Means Coleman, U of Michigan, USA
Bill Tally, Center for Children and Technology, Education Development Center, USA
K-C Nat Turner, U of California at Berkeley, USA
Kathleen Tyner, U of Texas - Austin, USA
This interactive, inter-disciplinary roundtable discussion will bring together media and communication scholars,
educators, and creators whose research, teaching, production, and community activities aim to create necessary
changes based on principles of a common good in democracy. Roundtable participants will draw on their own
perspectives, knowledge, and experience, and invite audience participation as well, to address the following
questions: What concerns are shared across these areas of interest? What insights into creating change for the
democratic common good have participants gained from their particular experiences? What practices in these areas of
interest best contribute to intended changes? How can people in these different areas work together to create positive,
long-lasting, and wide-reaching social impacts in their own communities, as well as the world at-large?
Documentation of the ensuing discussion will be coordinated by the organizer, revised in collaboration retrospectively
with participants for clarity, relevance, and importance, and ultimately, disseminated through online networks and
journals suggested by all in attendance. Thus the outcome of the session's proceedings are intended to further ongoing
discussions, collaborations, reflections, and creations; in other words, to continue "communicating for social impact.
5341
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Drummond Centre
Online Persuasion
Communication and Technology
Chair
Nokon Heo, U of Central Arkansas, USA
Participants
Persuasion on the 'Net: A Synthetic Propositional Framework
Brandon Lee Van Der Heide, Michigan State U, USA
Are Pop-Ups Always Annoying? The Moderating Effect of Ad Relevance on Consumers' Attitude Toward Ads and
Websites
Youjeong Kim, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Heeseok Kim, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Nam Young Kim, Louisiana State U, USA
Bricks vs. Clicks: Affective Responses and Impulse Buying Intent
Guda van Noort, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Peter Kerkhof, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Bob M. Fennis, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Factors Affecting Attitude Toward Shopping for Real and Virtual Items on Social Networking Websites
Jiyoung Cha, U of Florida, USA
SMS Motives Predicting SMS Use and Attitudes toward SMS Advertising: The Evidence from Thailand
Nuchada Dumrongsiri, Assumption U, THAILAND
Vikanda Pornsakulvanich, Assumption U, THAILAND
5342
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Drummond East
Technology and Social Capital
Communication and Technology
Chair
Satomi Sugiyama, Franklin College - Switzerland, SWITZERLAND
Participants
Net Worth: Facebook Use and Changes in Social Capital Over Time
Charles Steinfield, Michigan State U, USA
Nicole Ellison, Michigan State U, USA
Cliff Lampe, Michigan State U, USA
Are Facebook Friends Like Face-to-Face Friends: Investigating Relations Between the Use of Social Networking
Websites and Social Capital
Jennifer Stevens Aubrey, U of Missouri, USA
Sumana Chattopadhyay, Marquette U, USA
Lesile A. Rill, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Networked Communities: A Case of the Electronic Community Information Commons in the U.S.
Seungahn Nah, U of Kentucky, USA
Will Samson, U of Kentucky, USA
Lewis A. Friedland, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Social Capital and Control in Online Networks
Lee Keenan Farquhar, U of Iowa, USA
The Phantom Professor: Weblogs, Social Capital, and the Politics of Institutional Disclosure.
J. Richard Stevens, Southern Methodist U, USA
5343
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 6
Reconfiguring the Public
Communication Law & Policy
Participants
Defining Media Publics
Jessica Clark, American U, USA
New Politics, New Publics?
Natalie Fenton, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
The Public as New News Sources and News Intermediaries
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
A New Expression of the Public Interest? The Case of the Public Service Publisher
Des Freedman, U of London, Goldsmiths College, UNITED KINGDOM
Respondent
James Curran, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM
For many years, the public has been conceptualized as the 'object' of media activity. Digital developments are now
complicating the status of the public, rendering members of the public more visible as active participants in the media
field. This panel explores new definitions of the public and its changing place in relation to mediated activity. It
focuses on the different ways that the public both influences and is configured in the contemporary media
environment.
5344
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 7
Media Globalization, Hybridity, and Culture
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Xin Xin, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
'I Need an Indian Touch': Glocalization & Bollywood Films
Shakuntala Rao, SUNY - Plattsburgh, USA
Globalization in the Eyes of the People's Daily
Jing Song, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Rethinking Cultural Proximity: Multiple Television Flows for Multilayered Cultural Identities
Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA
The Globalization/Fragmentation Dialectic of 'Media Superpowers.' Nickelodeon in New Zealand and the South
Pacific
Katalin Lustyik, Ithaca College, USA
Institutional Environment and Organizational Practice: International Advertising Strategy and Cross-National
Research, 1997-2006
Wonsun Shin, U of Minnesota, USA
Tsan-Kuo Chang, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
Respondent
Xin Xin, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
5351
Sunday
10:30-11:45
Salon 8
Communication and Information: Critical Perspectives on IAMCR's Research Agenda for UNESCO
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Robin Mansell, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Cees J. Hamelink, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Linje Manyozo, U of Fort Hare, SOUTH AFRICA
Divina Frau-Meigs, U of Paris, FRANCE
Indrajit Banerjee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
In December 2007, IAMCR was invited to develop a prospective research agenda for UNESCO. A research agenda
was developed emphasizing the need to strengthen and re-orient research in ways that might enable a rethinking of
sustainable development in the context of knowledge societies. Focusing on governance, cultural diversity and media
education, strong themes that emerged include human rights; access and literacies; participatory communication;
representation and attention to a repertoire of research methodologies and methods. This panel will examine both the
strengths and the weaknesses of the new agenda from a scholarly point of view as the agenda was developed to
respond to the policy and practice-oriented interests of UNESCO. It will ask, what is the gap between scholarly
interest in these issues and more policy/practice oriented research? Participants on the panel will include those who
participated in a small brainstorming workshop to develop the agenda as well as those who are members of IAMCR
but did not have the change to participate directly.
5360
Sunday
10:30-11:45
701
Journalism, Citizens, and the State
Journalism Studies
Chair
Celeste Gonzalez De Bustamante, U of Arizona, USA
Participants
Honing the Tools of Journalism Research: Herman and Chomsky Versus Bourdieu at Naspers
Gabriel Johannes Botma, Stellenbosch U, SOUTH AFRICA
Political Reporting in Poland: What Has Changed Over the Last Decade?
Ewa Musialowska, U of Dresden and U of Wroclaw, POLAND
Radio Utopia: Promoting Public Interest in a 1940s Radio Documentary
Matthew Ehrlich, University of Illinois, USA
Institutional Legitimacy and Russian News: Case Studies of Four Regional Newspapers
Elina V. Erzikova, U of Alabama, USA
Wilson Hugh Lowrey, U of Alabama, USA
Respondent
Owen Johnson, Indiana U, USA
Poland, Russia, South Africa, and the United States are examined in four papers that are positioned at the intersection
of politics, ideology, news media, and the flow of information to citizens.
5361
Sunday
10:30-11:45
705
LSI Studies on Impressing Audiences
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Kathleen C. Haspel, Fairleigh Dickinson U, USA
Participants
'Click Here': The Impact of New Media on the Encoding of Persuasive Messages in Direct Marketing
Ming Cheung, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
The Construction of Success: A Multimethod Study of CEO Profiles on Corporate Websites
Irene Pollach, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
The Effects of Language Choice and the Role of Ethnocentricity: An Experiment About the Effects of News Source
Language on Audience Opinions
Volkan Uce, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Knut De Swert, U Antwerp, BELGIUM
Metaphorical Communication: The Effects of Figurative Language on Impression Formation
Randall A. Renstrom, Loyola U - Chicago, USA
Nathaniel D. Krumdick, Loyola U - Chicago, USA
Victor C. Ottati, Loyola U - Chicago, USA
5362
Sunday
10:30-11:45
716
Whiteness Research in Mass Communication: Origins, Problems, Possibilities
Philosophy of Communication
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA
Participants
Origins, Assumptions & Critiques of Whiteness Theory
Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA
Evolution of the Concept of Whiteness From an African-American Perspective
Imani Cheers, Howard U, USA
Measuring Whiteness in Communications Research: New Approaches to White Racial Opinion and Policy
Preferences
Catherine R. Squires, U of Minnesota, USA
Debra Burns Melican, U of Michigan, USA
Interrogating Diversity: The Outside Looking In
Kevin M. Dolan, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
In the Master's Voice: Media and Capitalist Productions
Pavithra Narayanan, Washington State U, USA
Connecting Postcolonial Perspectives of Whiteness to Contemporary Culture
Kumarini Silva, Northeastern U, USA
This session recognizes the foundational contributions in theorizing whiteness, i.e., the social construction of
whiteness, by the late Ruth Frankenberg, and explores both the problems and possibilities associated with whiteness
research within the field of mass communication. Frankenberg, a British sociologist who died in March 2007 at the
age of 46 from cancer, was among the first in recent times to examine the connections between race and gender with
respect to white identity, and to examine power structures based on that identity. White identity was problematized in
the 1800s by DuBois (1989), and many scholars through the years have focused on white racial identity and its
relationship to white privilege. However, the emergence of a theory of whiteness dates to the 1980s and the work of
sociologists like Frankenberg, and to critical race scholars like Dyer, Delgado, and hooks. Postcolonial scholars, such
as Osuri and Banerjee (2004), have also placed whiteness central to their investigations of racial domination as an
aspect of colonization. Mass communication scholars have been slower to consider the ways that Euro-centric values,
lifestyles, language, racial representations and other aspects of white identity might be located in media industries or
content, or the ways in which these shape race and economic relations in the larger society. This panel of diverse
communication scholars aims to generate an active debate about whiteness in communications research, and to inspire
research along new lines by addressing: 1) The origins, assumptions and critiques of whiteness theory, 2) What can be
learned from existing communications research, and 3) Possible directions for whiteness studies, particularly in the
field of mass communication.
5363
Sunday
10:30-11:45
720
Reading Popular Media from the Margins: Emerging Directions in Women of Color Audience Studies
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Feminist Scholarship
Chair
Jillian M. Baez, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Participants
Latina, Chicana, Boricua: Processes of Identification, Acculturation and Cultural Maintenance in Popular Media
Usage
Diana I. Rios, U of Connecticut, USA
Muted Voices: A 15-Year Review of Black Female Audiences in Communication Studies on Hip Hop
Aisha S. Durham, U of Georgia, USA
Watching Betty: Latina Reception of Shifting Constructions of the Latina Body in U.S. Popular Culture
Jillian M. Baez, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Screening Chicago Boricua Pride for a National Latina/o Audience: Contemporary Latina Film and its Panethnic
Audience
Katynka Martinez, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Jacqueline Bobo, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
This panel explores how women of color audiences, often relegated to the margins by transnational media
corporations and communication scholarship, interpret and use popular media in the United States. Taking seriously
that women of color are what Jacqueline Bobo terms "cultural readers," the panelists argue that women of color are
central to further understanding processes of mediation and reception with Communication Studies. The panelists
consider how the intersection of differences such as race, nation, gender, class, and sexuality might inform these
women's readings of media and (re)produce their subjectivities. From a variety of methodological and theoretical
perspectives, this panel offers a multi-dimensional investigation into how women of color experience both pleasure
and frustration in their usage and interpretations of popular media. It demonstrates how they talk back to, resist, and
sometimes embody mediated representations of women of color. The panelists also discuss how these women's
engagements with media texts have tangible impacts on their everyday life experiences and intervene in public
debates. Focusing on Black and Latina women's interpretations of various media such as television, film, and music,
the panelists offer comparative approaches to understanding difference and identity formation in reception studies.
The panel tracks the trajectory of the sub-field of women of color audience studies, current trends, and offers new
directions for how this work might further develop in future scholarship. Overall, the panelists consider how popular
media shapes women of color audiences in their identity formation and cultivates interpretive, imagined, and real
communities across differences.
5364
Sunday
10:30-11:45
728
Information Technology In (and Out of) the Classroom
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Katherine E. Rowan, George Mason U, USA
Participants
Testing Roger's Diffusion of Innovation Concepts: Faculty Adoption of Information Technology for Teaching
Don Zimmerman, Colorado State U, USA
Teresa Yohon, Colorado State U, USA
An Empirical Study Investigating Instant Messaging as an Enabling Tool for Education
Yin-Leng Theng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Jimmy Jeah Leong Chong, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Stanley Boon Yeow See, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Mobile Instruction Technologies and the Culture of Education: An Empirical Study on the Adoption of iPods in
Higher Education Programs
André H. Caron, U of Montreal, CANADA
Letizia Caronia, U of Bologna, ITALY
Time Saving and Time Consuming: Faculty's Temporal Experience with Blackboard Cyberinfrastructure Adoption
and Implementation
Kerk Fong Kee, U of Texas - Austin, USA
The Effects of Instructor Facebook Participation on Student Perceptions of Teacher Credibility and Teacher
Attractiveness
Laurie Barber, Bryant U, USA
Kevin Pearce, Bryant U, USA
Respondent
Katherine E. Rowan, George Mason U, USA
5366
Sunday
10:30-11:45
820
ICA Internationalization Committee Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Sherry Lynn Ferguson, U of Ottawa, CANADA
Participants
James A. Anderson, U of Utah, USA
Jianxun Chu, U of Science and Technology of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Wim J. L. Elving, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Yu-li Liu, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN
Elena E. Pernia, U of the Philippines - Diliman, PHILIPPINES
Juliet P. Roper, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Communication and Technology Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Communication and Technology
Chair
Corina Daniela Constantin, Didit.com, USA
Participants
1. Ambient Intelligence Designers and How Their Assumptions Shape Our Future
Somaya Ben Allouch, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente / Cubicus / GW / CW, THE NETHERLANDS
2. Contesting the Digital Economy: The Digitalization of Music in Korea
Jungyup Lee, U of Massachusetts, USA
3. Exploring the State of Educational Technology in Canada
Rocci Luppicini, U of Ottawa, CANADA
4. Power Asymmetry and Network Structure in Open Source Community
Cuihua Shen, U of Southern California, USA
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
5. Rocking the Vote and More: An Experimental Study of the Impact of Youth Political Portals
Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Kyurim Kyoung, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
6. The Repertoire Niches of Interpersonal Media: Competition and Coexistence at the Level of the Individual
John Christian Feaster, Ohio State U, USA
7. Vanishing Act: The Continued Erosion of Online Footnotes in Communication Journals
Daniela V. Dimitrova, Iowa State U, USA
Michael Bugeja, Iowa State U, USA
8. What is Cyber Bullying? A Qualitative Research Into the Perceptions of Youngsters
Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Katrien Van Cleemput, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
9. User Adapted Emotional Mobile Multimedia Messaging
Timo Seppo Saari, Temple U, USA
Marko Turpeinen, Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan, Helsinki Institute for Information Technology, FINLAND
10. An Empirical Study of the Control Mechanism of China's Internet Censorship
Guangchao Feng, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Ethnicity and Race in Communication Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chairs
Kumarini Silva, Northeastern U, USA
Myria Georgiou, Leeds U, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
11. Biracial Identity in the Media
Iliana Perla Rucker, U of New Mexico, USA
12. Missing Pretty Girl Syndrome: How Mainstream and Black Press Framed the Phenomena of Missing Women in
the Mid-2000s
Mia N. Moody, Baylor U, USA
Bruce Dorries, Mary Baldwin College, USA
Harriet Blackwell, Mary Baldwin College, USA
April Sutton, Baylor U, USA
13. Sikh Identity in the Post-9/11 Period
Raman Kaur Deol, U of the Pacific, USA
14. Toward an Ethnic Media Theory: Incorporating Self-Categorization Theory Into an Ethnic Media Model
Melissa A. Johnson, North Carolina State U, USA
15. Virtual Ethnicity in MySpace
Alina D Padilla-Miller, U of Oregon, USA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Game Studies Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper Session
Game Studies
Participants
16. Cognitive Skill as a Predictor of Flow and Presence in Naturally Mapped Video Games
Nicholas David Bowman, Michigan State U, USA
Andy C. Boyan, Michigan State U, USA
17. Control and Agency in Customizable Video Games: A Theoretical Approach to Learning Outcomes
Sampada Sameer Marathe, Pennsylvania State U, USA
18. Helping Behavior in the Context of Video Game Play
Brandon Boggs, U of Alabama, USA
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
Nancy Rhodes, U of Alabama, USA
19. Imagining the Medium of the Mobile Game: Technical, Commercial, and Social Issues
Li Xiong, U of Southern California, USA
Global Communication and Social Change Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Global Communication and Social Change
Participants
20. Beirut, Cairo, and Dubai: The Arab Regional Media Cities a Nexus for Saudi Media Investments
Joe F. Khalil, Southern Illinois U, USA
21. Building Europe's Image: Corporatization and Visual Branding in Contemporary EU Communication Policy
Giorgia Aiello, U of Washington, USA
22. Communicating Community Capital: A Framework for Evaluating Community Television's Impact on Cultural,
Social, and Economic Outcomes
Michael Andrew Lithgow, Carleton U, USA
23. Growing Heterogeneity in Urban Space: The Case of Panorama City
Paul Mason Fotsch, California State U - Northridge, USA
24. Hedonic Processing of Narrative Persuasion: An Examination of Dae Jang Geum for Social Change
Hua Wang, U of Southern California, USA
25. Hurricane Katrina: U.S. Media Professionalism and Polarization of Attitudes Among International Journalists
Petya Dimitrova Eckler, U of Missouri, USA
Yusuf Kalyango, Jr., U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
26. World Fusion? Global Communication About Music Videos on YouTube
Daniel Schackman, Syracuse U, USA
27. Fremde: Notes from a German Traveler
Martina H. Myers, U of New Mexico / New Mexico State U, USA
28. Nations, Cultures, and Corporate Social Responsibility: Communication Advocacy in a Diverse, Devolving U. K.
Rachel Kovacs, Yeshiva U - Stern College for Women, USA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Information Systems Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Information Systems
Participants
29. "Why Do We Laugh at Idols?": Self-Evaluation and Schadenfreude Following Another's Misfortune in the Media
Jaap W. Ouwerkerk, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Wilco W Van Dijk, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
30. Arguing with Emotion: A Closer Look at Affect and the Inoculation Process
Shelley Lynn Wigley, Texas Tech U, USA
Michael Pfau, U of Oklahoma, USA
31. From Theory To Practice: An Evaluation of Software Websites From a Diffusion Theoretic Perspective
Arun Vishwanath, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
32. Graphic Television News and Memory in the U.S. War Against Terrorism
David Andrew Hutchinson, Northeastern U, USA
Samuel D. Bradley, Texas Tech U, USA
33. Individualistic and Cooperative Affect Systems as Determinants of Usage of Hawaiian Pidgin
Mark A. Hamilton, U of Connecticut, USA
Linda Ann Patrylak, U of Connecticut, USA
Instructional & Developmental Communication Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Participants
34. In Their Own Words: Student Characterizations of Protective Behaviors to Prevent Alcohol Harm
Katherine Ann Klein, Michigan State U, USA
Charles Atkin, Michigan State U, USA
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Edward Lawrence Glazer, Michigan State U, USA
35. Media Exposure, Sports Participation, and Self Esteem on Attractiveness Estimations Among Adolescent Girls
Kim Bissell, U of Alabama, USA
Hal Hays, U of Alabama, USA
36. Blowing the Whistle on Teacher Misconduct: Effects of Severity and Peer Type
Carrie Delane Kennedy-Lightsey, West Virginia U
Rebecca M. Chory, West Virginia U, USA
37. Media Literacy in Singapore : Assessing Student Awareness in the Age of Globalisation
Anna Phang, Singapore Polytechnic, SINGAPORE
David J. Schaefer, Franciscan U - Steubenville, USA
38. On Whose Authority: Examining Internet Credibility Assessments Among College Students
Derek J. Lackaff, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Pauline Cheong, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Intercultural Communication Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Intercultural Communication
Participants
39. Culture, Values, and Cultural Variability: Reviews of Hofstede, Inglehart, and Schwartz Universal Value
Frameworks
Sachiyo Morinaga Shearman, East Carolina U, USA
40. Familiarity Breeds …What, Exactly? Tracing the Assumed Links Between Interpersonal Contact and Intercultural
Tolerance
Floris Mueller, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
41. Language Learner and Native Speaker Self-Perceptions of Communicative Adaptability: Implications for
Intercultural Interactions
Carla Rae Chamberlin-Quinlisk, Pennsylvania State U, USA
42. When Mulan Meets Romeo: A Cross-Cultural Dating Study
Chin-Chung Chao, Bowling Green State U, USA
Interpersonal Communication Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Interpersonal Communication
Participants
43. "I Didn't Do Anything Important": A Pragmatist Analysis of the Oral History Interview
Kathleen M. Ryan, U of Oregon, USA
44. Wife Speaks: The Social Construction of Wifehood Among Selected Muslim and Christian Wives in Quiapo,
Philippines
Reggy Capacio Figer, U of Tsukuba, PHILIPPINES
45. The Foundations of Artistic Communication: An Analysis of Sex and Gender
Samantha Bok-kai Gomes, U of Connecticut, USA
Stephen Stifano, U of Connecticut, USA
46. The Association Between Satisfaction and Commitment Differs Across Marital Couple Types
Michelle Dora Givertz, California State U - Chico, USA
Chris Segrin, U of Arizona, USA
Alesia Diane Hanzal, U of Arizona, USA
47. The Relative Effect of Positive and Negative Humorous Gossip on Perceptions of the Gossiper and the Target of
the Gossip
Monique Mitchell Turner, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
David A Payne, U of Maryland, USA
Bing Han, U of Maryland - College Park, USA
48. The Development and Application of a Classification Scheme of Advice Seekers' Expectations
Sunkyung Kim, U of Alabama, USA
Carol Bishop Mills, U of Alabama, USA
Language & Social Interaction Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Language & Social Interaction
Participants
49. Argumentation-Theoretical Concepts in Persuasion: A Review of Persuasion Effects Experiments from a PragmaDialectical Perspective
Leon Vincent Laureij, Rutgers U, USA
50. Globalization and Localization of Persuasive Marketing Communication: A Cross-Linguistic Sociocultural
Analysis
Ming Cheung, City U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
51. Parliamentary Discourse and Discourse About Parliament: Aspects of Sociopolitical Life in Northern Ireland
Karyn Stapleton, U of Ulster, UNITED KINGDOM
John Wilson, U of Ulster, UNITED KINGDOM
52. The Generative Power of Issue Framing in a Sociotechnical Controversy: How Framing Practices Contributed to
Hydro-Québec's New Green Energy Policy
James McDonald, U de Montréal, CANADA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Mass Communication Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Mass Communication
Participants
53. Analysis of Spectacularization as Social Interaction in YouTube: Broadcast Yourself
Jacob Banuelos, Tecnológico de Monterrey-Campus Ciudad de México, MEXICO
54. Examining the Industrial Construction of Age: Age Discourse in Advertising Age, 1965-2005
Nadine Gabbadon, U of Pennsylvania, USA
55. Experimental Evidence of the Knowledge Gap: Message Arousal, Motivation, and Time Delay
Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Indiana U, USA
Narine S. Yegiyan, Indiana U, USA
Rasha Kamhawi, U of Florida, USA
56. Exploring the Effects of Editorial Cartoons on Attitude Change: An Experimental Analysis
Lindsay Beth Neuberger, Michigan State U, USA
Marina Krcmar, Wake Forest U, USA
57. International Crisis News and the Evaluation of Threat: Viewer Responses to News Coverage of the North Korean
Nuclear Test
Sojung Claire Kim, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Erik P. Bucy, Indiana U, USA
58. Moderation of Media Issue Salience: Retesting the Agenda Setting Effect Within the Elaboration Likelihood
Model
Xudong Liu, Southern Illinois U – Carbondale, USA
59. Nationwide Newspaper Coverage of Warrantless Wiretapping in the 2006 Election Year: A Community Structure
Approach
Joshua Benton Wright, The College of New Jersey, USA
John P Pollock, The College of New Jersey, USA
Andrew Sigwart, The College of New Jersey, USA
60. News Information Seeking, Perceived Channel Efficiency, and Media Dependency
Xigen Li, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
61. The Influence of Internet Consultants
Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Anita M. J. van Hoof, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
62. Medium Is Not the (Only) Message
Tiki Balas, Bar Ilan U, ISRAEL
63. “Our Country. Our Truck.": A Critical Examination of the Patriotic Appeal and American Values in a Chevrolet
Silverado Advertising Campaign.
Andre Gilman Sirois, U of Oregon, USA
64. What are the Relationships Between Televised Sports Viewing Habits and Conformity to Masculine Norms?
Thomas C. Johnson, U of Minnesota, USA
Organizational Communication Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Organizational Communication
Participants
65. Motivation to Cooperate in Transactive Memory Systems: The Role of Communication Ties and Task
Interdependence
Y. Connie Yuan, Cornell U, USA
Janet Fulk, U of Southern California, USA
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
Noshir S. Contractor, Northwestern U, USA
66. Organizational Communication and Public Relations: A Conceptual Framework for a Common Ground
Anna M. Theis-Berglmair, U of Bamberg, GERMANY
67. Project-ing Action: Caught in a Dance of Agency
Consuelo Vasquez, U de Montréal, CANADA
68. Retirement Planning: Cognitive and Communicative Processes
Daisy R Lemus, California State U - Northridge, USA
69. Risky Business or Managed Event? Power and Deception in the Workplace
Lisa Lindsey, Michigan State U, USA
Norah E. Dunbar, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Jessica Russell, California State U - Sacramento, USA
70. The Role of Brain Dominance in the Communication Feedback Process
Astrid Sheil, The Polaris Team, USA
Michelle T. Violanti, U of Tennessee, USA
71. Thinking Out-of-the-Box and in Other Boxes: Team Creativity From a Different Perspective and in Context
Terrie Siang-Ting Wong, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Hsueh-Hua Vivian Chen, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
72. Us and Them: A Knowledge-Sharing Perspective on the Relationship Between Business and IT
Bart J. van den Hooff, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Maarten de Winter, Accenture, USA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Philosophy of Communication Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Philosophy of Communication
Participants
73. The Korean War as Magical Realism: Memory and Healing in "Welcome to Dongmakgol"
Kyoung-Lae Kang, U of Rochester, USA
74. Defoe's London: The Emerging Bourgeois Public Sphere and the Changing World of an English Merchant
Juraj Kittler, Pennsylvania State U, USA
75. Crime Scene as Augmented Reality On Screen, Offline, and Online
Kjetil Sandvik, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK
Anne Marit Waade, U of Aarhus, DENMARK
76. Rethinking Michael and Terri: Fraught Paradigms in Agamben's Biopolitics
Scott Selberg, New York U, USA
77. Communicative Media and Zoning of Public Interaction
Yong Jun Shin, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
78. Eclectic Method and Communication Theory: The Jam Session as the New Symposium
Stephen Edward Stockwell, Griffith U, CANADA
79. "Dam" the Irony for Greater Common Good: Why Arundhati Roy's Rhetoric Missed Its Mark
Tabassum Khan, Ohio U, USA
Public Relations Scholar to Scholar Interactive Poster Session
Public Relations
Chair
Sung-Un Yang, Syracuse U, USA
Participants
80. Rethinking the Organization-Public Relationship: Comparing Students' Relationships With Religious and
University-Sponsored Organizations
Denise L. Bortree, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Richard D. Waters, U of Georgia, USA
81. Dimensions of Leadership in Public Relations: Exploring an Organization-Wide Perspective
Jounghwa Choi, Michigan State U, USA
Yoonhyeung Choi, Michigan State U, USA
82 Product, Nonproduct, and Relationship Attributes in Brand Attitudes and Customer Activity: Implications for
Public Relations
Jee Young Chung, U of Alabama, USA
Jaesub Lee, U of Houston, USA
Robert L. Heath, U of Houston, USA
83. South Korean Public Relations Practitioners' and Journalists' Perceptions on Their Relationships: A Gap Analysis
Hyunjin Kang, Pennsylvania State U, USA
84. "Keep Your Laws Off My Body" (Remix): An Analysis of Message Framing in Current Planned Parenthood
Abortion Discourse
Melissa Miller, Georgia State U, USA
85. Coercive Isomorphic Pressures of the Socioeconomic and Political Environment on Public Relations Practices in
Nigeria
Juan-Carlos Molleda, U of Florida, USA
86. Perceived Gender Preference and Physical Attractiveness For Corporate Public Communicators in Romania
Antoaneta Miorita Vanc, U of Tennessee, USA
Roxanne Hovland, U of Tennessee, USA
87. New Zealand and Chinese Managers' Reflections on Marketing Strategies Used in Sales Promotion Letters
Yunxia Zhu, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper Session - Communication Law and Policy
Communication Law & Policy
Participants
88. Oral Trials in the Mexican Legal System
Daniel E Mangis, U of Maryland-U Campus, USA
Susan J. Szmania, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA
89. The Economics of Foreign Language Media in the U.S.: An Empirical Study of Radio Markets
Xiaofei Wang, Indiana U, USA
David Waterman, Indiana U, USA
90. The FCC'S Report On Regulating Broadcast Violence: Is the Medium the Message?
Faith Sparr, U of Michigan, USA
91. The North, the South and the Market. A Comparative Analysis Between Public Television in Spain and Sweden
1995-2005.
Lars W. Nord, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
Karen Arriaza Ibarra, U of Complutence, Madrid, SPAIN
92. The United Nations and Access to Information as a Human Right
Cheryl Ann Bishop, Quinnipiac U, USA
Respondents
Sharon Strover, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Stephen D. McDowell, Florida State U, USA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Scholar to Scholar: Health Communication Division Interactive Paper Poster Session
Health Communication
Chair
David B. Buller, Klein Buendel, Inc., USA
Participants
93. A Linguistic Ideology of Spirituality: Examining Spiritual Discourse in U.S. Acupuncture Settings
Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA
94. Attributions About Obesity and Opinions About Health Policies
Se-Hoon Jeong, U of Pennsylvania, USA
95. Effects of Psychosocial Problems on Alcohol Use Disorder Among Females and Males
Mingyu Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Joohan Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
96. HIV/AIDS Stigma, Risk Perception, and Religiosity Among African-American Women
Nancy W. Muturi, Kansas State U, USA
Soontae An, Kansas State U, USA
97. Mass Media Exposure, Trust, Social Networks, and Online Health Information Seeking Among Internet Users
Shirley S. Ho, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Jeff Niederdeppe, U of Wisconsin, USA
98. Motivating Women to Perform Healthy Breast Cancer Behaviors: An Evaluation of Breast Cancer Websites
Pamela S. Whitten, Michigan State U, USA
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Samantha A Munday, Michigan State U, USA
Carolyn Kay LaPlante, Michigan State U, USA
99. Naive Realism in the Cochlear Implantation Debate
Darrin J. Griffin, The U of Texas at Austin, USA
Matthew S. McGlone, U of Texas - Austin, USA
100. Testing an Asthma Tool for Schools: The Outcome Evaluation of the Michigan Asthma Schools Packet
Ryan Christopher Goei, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA
Aaron R Boyson, U of Minnesota Duluth, USA
Sarah Lyon-Callo, Michigan Department of Community Health, USA
Cheryl Schott, Michigan Public Health Institute, USA
Elizabeth Wasilevich, Michigan Department of Community Health, USA
Shawn Cannarile, Michigan Public Health Institute, USA
101. The Causes and Consequence of Body Dissatisfaction
Hsin-Ya Hou, National Chung Cheng U, TAIWAN
Hung-Yi Lu, National Chung Cheng U - TAIWAN
102. Designing Tailored Health Interventions: How Do Cultural Value Priorities Impact Compliance With Cancer
Screening Messages?
Ganna Yuryivna Kostygina, U of Southern California, USA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Scholar to Scholar: Communication History Interest Group Interactive Paper Poster Session
Communication History
Participants
103. "That Photo": Police and the Power of Representation
Nicole Maurantonio, U of Pennsylvania, USA
104. Playbills, Promotions, and the Great Audience in 19th-Century American Theatre
Christopher Francis White, Sam Houston State U, USA
105. Three Aspects of Scottish Advertising
Sheila Lodge, UHI Millenium Institute, UNITED KINGDOM
Scholar to Scholar: Feminist Scholarship Division Interactive Paper Poster Session
Feminist Scholarship
Popular Communication
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Participants
106. Between Feminism and Fun(ny)mism: Analyzing Gender in Popular Internet Humor
Limor Shifman, Hebrew U – Jerusalem, ISRAEL
Dafna Lemish, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL
107. Gender and Race Portrayed in the Web Sites of U.S. Higher Education Institutions: Stereotypical Status and
Power Positions
Xiaopeng Paul Wang, U of South Florida, USA
Anne M. Cooper, Ohio U, USA
108. The Framed Female Image: A Pictorial Semiotic Analysis of Classic Shanghai Calendar Posters of the 1910's1930's
Hsiu-Hui Sun, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN
I-fen Chen, Independent Researcher, TAIWAN
109. You are What You (Don't) Eat? Food, Identity, and Resistance
Leda Marie Cooks, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
110. What to Watch? Choosing a Gendered Sports Broadcast
James Reynolds Angelini, U of Delaware, USA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Scholar to Scholar: Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgendered Studies Interest Group Interactive Paper
Poster Session
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies
Participants
111. The Rise and Repercussions of Bisexual Chic: Examining Female-Female Sexual Activity in the Heterosexual
Dating Context
Amanda Denes, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
112. Investigating Differences in Public Support for Gay Rights Issues
Joseph Schwartz, U of Iowa, USA
113. Real Men Don't Have Manicure Kits: The Perpetuation of Homosexual Stereotypes on Gay, Straight, or Taken?
Kelsey MacGregor Wallace, Gonzaga U, USA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Scholar to Scholar: Intergroup Communication Interest Group Interactive Paper Poster Session
Intergroup Communication
Participants
114. An Automated Approach to Measuring Linguistic Intergroup Bias on the Web
Ivar Vermeulen, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
115. Measuring Subjective Vitality: A Look at the Validity of the Subjective Vitality Questionnaire
Jessica R. Abrams, California State U - Long Beach, USA
116. Subgroup Identification in Global Virtual Teams
Biyun Pan, National U Singapore, SINGAPORE
Hichang Cho, National U - Singapore, SINGAPORE
Scholar to Scholar: Journalism Studies Division Interactive Paper Poster Session
Journalism Studies
Participants
117. Comedian, Fake Journalist, or the New Walter Lippmann?: Recognition Processes of Jon Stewart by the U.S.
Journalistic Community
Keren Tenenboim Weinblatt, U of Pennsylvania, USA
118. Subversion of Censorship in Soviet Journalism: Komsomolskaya Pravda's Contribution in Preparation for
Gorbachev's Perestroika and its Implications for the Contemporary Russian Media
Elina V. Erzikova, U of Alabama, USA
119. Journalism by the Book: The Epistemological Significance of News Forms
Timothy P. Vos, Seton Hall U, USA
120. "Women We Love" in Esquire, 1987-2006
Hong Ji, Project for Excellence in Journalism, USA
Michael W. Sheehy, U of Cincinnati, USA
121. Questions or Quotes: Uses of the News Interview on NPR's "Morning Edition" and BBC's "Newshour"
D. Lucas Graves, Columbia U, USA
122. The Magnitude of Agenda Setting Effects: A Meta-Analysis of Pearson Correlations
Xin Chen, U of Texas, USA
Dominic Louis Lasorsa, U of Texas, USA
123. Sourcing Hugo Chávez: Newspaper Coverage and the Public Sphere
Juliet Gill Pinto, Florida International U, USA
Gonzalo Soruco, U of Miami, USA
124. Information Subsidies and Disaster Coverage: A Qualitative Content Analysis of Press Releases and Newspaper
Coverage of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita
Maria I Fontenot, Texas State U, USA
Kris Boyle, Texas State U, USA
Amanda H. Gallagher, Texas State U, USA
Respondents
Seungahn Nah, U of Kentucky, USA
Paul D'Angelo, College of New Jersey, USA
Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA
Leen S. J. d'Haenens, Catholic U – Leuven, BELGIUM
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Scholar to Scholar: Political Communication Interactive Paper Poster Session
Political Communication
Participants
125. Media Malaise or Virtuous Circle? The Impact of Media Consumption on Political Interest
Jesper Stromback, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
Adam Mahmoud Shehata, ITM/Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
126. Media Use, Interpersonal Communication, and Civic Engagement: An Exploration of Personal Talk as a
Mediator
Wenjing Xie, U of Maryland, USA
127. Politicians in the Media: Determinants of Legislators' Presence and Prominence in Swiss Newspapers
Anke Daniela Tresch, U of Geneva, SWITZERLAND
128. Politics and Cable News Credibility
Natalie Jomini Stroud, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Jae Kook Lee, U of Texas, USA
129. Quality of Newspaper Reporting on Political Polls: A New Approach
Wolfgang Wichmann, Indiana U, USA
130. The Contemporary Media Environment and Breadth of Communication: The Contribution of the Internet to the
Heterogeneity of Political Discussion Networks
Jennifer Brundidge, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
131. The Government as Risk Communicator: Good Communication Practices in the Context of Terrorism
Isabelle Stevens, U of Ghent, BELGIUM
132. The Limits of Objective Reporting
Raphael Cohen-Almagor, U of Hull, UNITED KINGDOM
133. Political Advertising: How Much Germany and Poland Have in Common?
Ewa Musialowska, U of Dresden and U of Wroclaw, POLAND
134. Candidate Campaign Experience and Willingness to Run Again
James Kevin Hertog, U of Kentucky, USA
J Human, U of Kentucky, USA
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
5450
Sunday
12:00-13:15
Ballroom East
Scholar to Scholar: Popular Communication Interactive Paper Poster Session
Popular Communication
Participants
135. Campaigning for Real Beauty or Reinforcing Social Norms?
Sara Roedl, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA
136. Candy to Beer to Network of Fear: Marketing's Influence on Contemporary Halloween Rituals
Brooke Duffy, U of Pennsylvania, USA
137. Compassionate Consumerism: Healing Africa Through Gap's Product (RED) Campaign
Kathleen Kuehn, Pennsylvania State U, USA
138. Music Subcultures, Community, and Cultural Resistance: A Case Study of Independent Record-Store Culture at
The House of Records
David Gracon, U of Oregon, USA
139. The Gender Factor of "Survivor": A Q Method Approach
Carolyn Joan Davis, Syracuse U, USA
140. The Popular Press and its Public in Contemporary China
Hsiao-wen Lee, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
141. Why French Television Drama Lags Behind: A Multiperspectival Approach
Jill G. Campaiola, Rutgers U, USA
142. Crisis in Quality Television or The Changing Taste and Media Use of the "Quality Audience"
Irene Costera Meijer, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Visual Communication Studies Scholar to Scholar Interactive Paper/Poster Session
Visual Communication Studies
Participants
143. Leni-Riefenstahlization of US Politics? The Visual Legacy of the Bush Administration - A View From Abroad
Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U – Bremen, GERMANY
Carola Betzold, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY
Friedrich Kauder, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY
Johannes Loh, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY
144. Analysis of Influences on the Production of Visual War Coverage
Stefanie Frie, U Ludwigsburg, GERMANY
Jeldrik Pannier, U Ludwigsburg, GERMANY
145. Filmic Experience and Critical Writing on Film as Performance
Arseli Dokumaci, U of Aberystwyth, UNITED KINGDOM
146. Cruel Pleasures: Smiling at the Suffering of Others
Pinar Yildiz, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY
147. Visuals and Visualizers—Effects of Congruent Commercials
Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA
Yinjiao Ye, U of Rhode Island, USA
Jie Xu, U of Alabama, USA
5510
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon A
Advances in Media Enjoyment
Mass Communication
Chair
Peter Vorderer, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
*Enjoyment of Daytime Soap Operas: A Longitudinal Test of Affective Disposition Theory (Top 4 Paper)
Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA
Hye Eun Lee, U of Hawaii - Manoa, USA
Horst Stipp, NBC Universal, USA
Enjoyment of Mediated Threat as a Function of Outcome and Liking for the Character: Responses to Recalled Scenes
from a Popular Prime Time Series
Cynthia A. Hoffner, Georgia State U, USA
Qing Tian, Georgia State U, USA
The Movie Is So Real Because I Am Sad: The Cognitive and Affective Processes of the Enjoyment-of-Tragedy
Dohyun Ahn, U of Alabama, USA
Ute Ritterfeld, U of Southern California, USA
Seung-A Annie Jin, Boston College, USA
Trait Emapthy, Transportation, Perceived Realism, and Movie Enjoyment
Alice E. Hall, U of Missouri - St. Louis, USA
Cheryl Campanella Bracken, Cleveland State U, USA
Is Watching Others Self-Disclose Enjoyable? An Examination of the Effects of Depth and Mode of Information
Delivery in Entertainment Media
Mina Tsay, U of Kentucky, USA
Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA
5511
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon B
Predicting Use of the Internet and Social Networking Websites
Mass Communication
Communication and Technology
Chair
Tracy R. Worrell, Emerson College, USA
Participants
Correlates of Internet Addiction: Self-Esteem, Subjective Values, and Concern About Uncertain Online Situations
Hokyung Kim, U of South Carolina, USA
Keith Davis, U of South Carolina, USA
The Role of Internet User Characteristics and Motives in Explaining Three Dimensions of Internet Addiction
Junghyun Frannie Kim, Kent State U, USA
Paul Haridakis, Kent State U, USA
Individual Media Dependency (IMD) and Social Networking Website: Exploring Relations between Motivational
Dimensions of IMD and SNW Use
Yang-Hwan Lee, U of South Carolina, USA
Older Adolescents' Motivations for Use of Social Networking Sites: The Influence of Group Identity and Collective
Self-esteem
Valerie E. Barker, San Diego State U, USA
Make New Friends / Keep the Old: Media, Social Networks, and Identity During the College Transition
Mark Andrew Rademacher, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Michelle R. Nelson, Univeristy of Illinois, USA
5512
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon C
The Best of Information Systems
Information Systems
Chair
Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
In the Mood to Face the Facts: Positive Mood Promotes Systematic Processing of Self-Threatening Information
Enny Henrica Das, Free U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Bob M. Fennis, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Motivational Processing and Choice Behavior During Television Viewing: An Integrative Dynamic Approach
Zheng Joyce Wang, Ohio State U, USA
Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA
Jerome R Busemeyer, Indiana U, USA
The Impact of Attitude Accessibility and Decision Style on Adolescents' Biased Processing of Antismoking PSAs
Lijiang Shen, U of Georgia, USA
Jennifer Monahan, U of Georgia, USA
Nancy Rhodes, U of Alabama, USA
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
When Are Strong Arguments Stronger Than Weak Arguments? Deindividuation Effects on Message Elaboration in
CMC
Eun-Ju Lee, Seoul National U, USA
5520
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Lamartine
Visual Journalism: Contemporary Challenges and Lessons From Virginia Tech
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
David D. Perlmutter, U of Kansas, USA
Participants
Lessons From Virginia Tech: Examining Disparities and Commonalities Between Visual Coverage in U.S.
Newspapers and Audience Perceptions
Shahira S. Fahmy, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA
Sara Roedl, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA
The Right to Know About Violent Images?: The Virginia Tech Killer's Gun Points at the Viewer
Ahran Park, U of Oregon, USA
Moment Captured in Time: A Pilot Study Comparing The Tampa Tribune's Print and Online Photos
Jessica Smith, U of North Carolina, USA
Interacting With Visual Information in Online Journalism: A Reception Study on Multimodal Presentation Forms
Peter Schumacher, U of Trier, GERMANY
This sessions covers the latest developments in visual journalism, covering both online and newspaper journalism.
Which lessons can be learnt from the visual coverage of the Virginia Tech shooting? How did US newspapers report,
and what were the audience perceptions? Two papers on the topic of the visual coverage of the Virginia Tech
shooting will scrutinize those questions, followed by a case study comparing print and online photos of a US
newspaper. The last paper in this session adds a more general perspective on the multimodal challenges that online
journalism is currently confronted with.
5521
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Kafka
Public Relations Chair's Panel
Public Relations
Chair
Craig E. Carroll, U of North Carolina, USA
Participants
Ray E. Hiebert, U of Maryland, USA
Hochang Shin, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA
Carl H. Botan, George Mason U, USA
Magda Pieczka, Queen Margaret U, UNITED KINGDOM
Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY
A group of editors and former editors of several leading public relations scholarly journals will discuss the positions
of their journals, their editorial policies, and strategies for academics to get published.
5522
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Hemon
Beyond the Profit Motive: Values-Based Organizing
Organizational Communication
Chair
Alison Mary Henderson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Participants
Helping Caregivers Make a Maximum Impact: A Search for Ways to Improve Communicative Responsiveness in the
Human Services Industry
Jason L. Snyder, Central Connecticut State U, USA
Leading With Values: Challenges for a Values-Led Business Organization
Sasha Meena Grant, U of Texas - Arlington, USA
Tzu Chi's Organizing for a Compassionate World: Insights Into the Paradoxical Nature of Buddhist Organizing
Jennie Hwang, U of Buffalo - SUNY, USA
Boris H. J. M. Brummans, U of Montreal, CANADA
Volunteers, Volunteering and Volunteerism: A Review of Discourses of Representation, Understanding, Suspicion,
and Vulnerability
Shiv Ganesh, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Kirstie McAllum, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Respondent
Sarah E. Dempsey, U of North Carolina, USA
5523
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Jarry
Seeking and Dispensing Health Information Across Media
Health Communication
Chair
Amanda Hinnant, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Participants
Seeking and Scanning for Lifestyle Information From Media Sources: Healthy-Weight, Overweight, and Obese Older
Americans
Taressa Fraze, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Norman C. H. Wong, U of Oklahoma, USA
Information Acquisition Among Pennsylvania Breast, Prostate, and Colon Cancer Patients: Results From a
Representative Survey
Rebekah Nagler, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Stacy Gray, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Cancer-Related Information Seeking Within an Interactive Health Communication System: An Application of the
Comprehensive Model of Information Seeking (CMIS)
Jeong Yeob Han, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Raymond J. Pingree, U of Wisconsin, USA
Robert P. Hawkins, U of Wisconsin, USA
Meg E. Wise, U of Wisconsin, USA
Suzanne Pingree, U of Wisconsin, USA
Fiona M. McTavish, U of Wisconsin, USA
David Gustafson, U of Wisconsin, USA
Occupational Practices and the Making of Health News: A National Survey of U.S. Health and Medical Science
Journalists
K. Viswanath, Harvard School of Public Health, USA
Kelly D. Blake, Harvard School of Public Health, USA
Helen I. Meissner, National Institutes of Health, USA
Nicole Saiontz, National Cancer Institute, USA
Bradford William Hesse, National Cancer Institute, USA
Robert T. Croyle, National Cancer Institute, USA
5524
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Joyce
Research on Healthcare and Sick Roles
Health Communication
Chair
Rukhsana Ahmed, U of Ottawa, CANADA
Participants
Influences on Health Delivery System Satisfaction: A Partial Test of Street's Ecological Model
Kevin B. Wright, U of Oklahoma, USA
Scott Moore, California State U - Fresno, USA
Daniel Bernard, U of Oklahoma, USA
Internet Health Information in the Patient-Provider Dialogue
Traci Hong, Tulane School of Public Health and Tropica, USA
"I Expected to be Superwoman and I Was Real Disappointed When I Wasn't": Self-Efficacy and Recovery From
Surgery
Tony L. Kroll, Texas A and M U, USA
No Pain, No Gain: Investigating College Athletes' Sick Role Expectations
Rachel A. Smith, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Garrett Weber-Gale, U of Texas - Austin, USA
5525
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Musset
Top Four Papers In Interpersonal Communication
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Pamela J. Kalbfleisch, U of North Dakota, USA
Participants
The Message Design Logics of Responses to HIV Disclosures
John P. Caughlin, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Dale E. Brashers, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Mary E Ramey, U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Kama Allyn Kosenko, U of Illinois - Urbana Champaign, USA
Erin Donovan-Kicken, U of Illinois, USA
Jennifer J. Bute, Ohio U, USA
The "Cycle of Concealment" in Families and Strategies for Revealing Secrets
Tamara D. Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Keli Ryan Steuber, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Relationship Quality and Compulsive Internet Use: A Study Among Newlywed Couples
Peter Kerkhof, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Catrin Finkenauer, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Comparing Private and Secret Information in Disclosure Decisions
Maria Koskan Venetis, Rutgers U, USA
Kathryn Greene, Rutgers U, USA
Smita C. Banerjee, U of Lincoln, USA
Zhanna Bagdasarov, Rutgers U, USA
Respondent
Mary Anne Fitzpatrick, U of South Carolina, USA
5530
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon 1
Symbolic Politics
Political Communication
Chair
Christopher Bodmann, U of Illinois, USA
Participants
Parsing, Semantic Networks, and Political Authority: Using Syntactic Analysis to Extract Semantic Relations From
Dutch Newspaper Articles
Wouter Van Atteveldt, Free U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Nel Ruigrok, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Impression Management in Televised Debates: The Effect of Background Nonverbal Behavior on Audience
Perceptions of Debaters' Likeability
John S. Seiter, Utah State U, USA
Harold J. Kinzer, Utah State U, USA
Andrea Sandry Jensen, Utah State U, USA
Harry Weger, Jr., U of Central Florida, USA
Picture Perfect News: Sound Bites and Image Bites in American, British, French and German Elections in a Time
Perspective
Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Bernd Spanier, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
The Visual Image and the Political Image: Finding a Place for Visual Communication in the Study of Political
Communication
Dan K Schill, Southern Methodist U, USA
5532
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon 3
Identities on Screen: Culture, Race, Gender
Popular Communication
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Toby Miller, U of California - Riverside, USA
Participants
Teens, Television Characters, and Identity
Divya C. McMillin, U of Washington - Tacoma, USA
JoEllen Fisherkeller, New York U, USA
Cultural Identity Consubstantially Negotiated in Cultural Assimilation: An Analysis of the Television Sitcom "Little
Mosque on the Prairie"
Christian Alexander Vukasovich, Bowling Green State U, USA
Documentary Stories for Change: Viewing and Producing Immigrant Narratives as Social Documents
Alicia Kemmitt, U of California - San Diego, USA
What's Black, Yellow, and White All Over?: An Examination of Black and Asian Intimate Relationships
Myra Susan Washington, U of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA
Barbie as Feminine Icon: The Subversion Narrative Gets a Second Run on Film
Jeffrey Cannon, Indiana U, USA
Stereotypes, Gender Roles, and Transformation on Reality TV: Is Beauty and the Geek's Social Experiment a
Success?
Mackenzie Anne Cato, U of North Carolina, USA
5533
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon 4
Women, New Media, and International Dynamics
Feminist Scholarship
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Diana Iulia Nastasia, U of North Dakota, USA
Participants
Return of the Cyborg; Gendered Antidepressant Ads, Biopsychiatry
Paula M Gardner, Ontario College of Art and Design, CANADA
Looking for Love in All the White Places: A Study of Skin-Color Preferences on Indian Matrimonial and MateSeeking Web Sites
Sonora Jha-Nambiar, Seattle U, USA
New Visual Media and Gender: A Content, Visual, and Audience Analysis of YouTube Vlogs
Heather Molyneaux, National Research Council of Canada, CANADA
Kerri L Gibson, National Research Council and the U of New Brunswick, CANADA
Janice Singer, National Research Council of Canada, CANADA
Susan O'Donnell, National Research Council, CANADA
Women's Representation in the Israeli Press During the Yom Kippur War (1973)
Dalia Gavriely-Nuri, Bar Ilan U, ISRAEL
Hagar Lahav, Sapir College, ISRAELl
Nirit Topol, Bar Ilan U, Israel, ISRAEL
5534
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon 5
The Day the Music Digitized: Exploring the Digital Music Commodity
Popular Communication
Chair
Steve Jones, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
Participants
MP3, the Listening Test and the Rise of Timbre
Jonathan Sterne, McGill U, CANADA
Trends in Digital Music Archiving
Patrick Burkart, Texas A&M U, USA
Music as a Digital File: Winamp and the CD Database
Jeremy Wade Morris, McGill U, CANADA
Notes of Melancholia on the 25th Anniversary of the CD
Eric W. Rothenbuhler, Texas A&M U, USA
Respondent
Steve Jones, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
This year marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the advent of the compact disc. Over the course of the last two and a
half decades, technological and cultural developments have transpired to detach digital music from the confines of the
disc. Music now exists in multiple formats on local hard drives, networked servers, and a variety of other portable
devices. This panel traces this migration and explores how we got to where we are going with the digital music
commodity.
5540
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Drummond West
The Social Impact of Networking the Poor for Development
Theme Sessions
Chair
Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Participants
Aceh Besar Midwives With Mobile-Phones Project
Arul Chib, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Maternal Health in Indonesia: Determinants of Health Knowledge and Attitude
Seungyoon Lee, U of Southern California, USA
Arul Chib, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Mind the Gap: The Shifting Fortunes of Small and Microscale Intermediaries in the Mobile Phone Industry
Araba B. Sey, U of Southern California, USA
American Media Assistance 2.0: The Role of ICTs in United States Government Media Assistance Programs
Amelia Hardee Arsenault, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
This panel explores the potential of information and communication technologies (ICT) to transform the sociopolitical realities of individuals in lesser-developed regions of the world. The papers included for presentation reflect
the theme of the 2008 conference by exploring both the assumptions and the realities on the ground of the social
impact of ICTs for development. Empirical analyses from Indonesia and Africa examine ICT usage as it relates to
health care provision, poverty reduction, and attitude formation.
5541
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Drummond Centre
Interpersonal Influences, Social Media
Communication and Technology
Chair
Nicole Ellison, Michigan State U, USA
Participants
A Social Cognitive Perspective on Blogging: Comparing the U.S. and China
Xun Liu, California State U - Stanislaus, USA
Robert Larose, Michigan State U, USA
Characterizing the Communicative Affordances of MySpace: A Place for Friends or a Friendless Place?
Malcolm R. Parks, U of Washington, USA
Motivations and Social Relationships: A Comparative Study of Social Network Sites in the U.S. and Korea
Sejung Marina Choi, U of Texas, USA
Yoojung Kim, U of Texas, USA
Yongjun Sung, U of Texas, USA
Dongyoung Sohn, U of South Florida, USA
Interaction of Interpersonal, Peer, and Media Influence Sources Online: A Research Agenda for Technology
Convergence
Caleb T Carr, Michigan State U, USA
Scott Seung Woo Choi, Michigan State U, USA
David C. DeAndrea, Michigan State U, USA
Jinsuk Kim, Michigan State U, USA
Stephanie Tom Tong, Michigan State U, USA
Brandon Lee Van Der Heide, Michigan State U, USA
Joseph B. Walther, Michigan State U, USA
5542
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Drummond East
The Emergence and Growth of Online Communities in Theory and Practice
Communication and Technology
Chair
Noshir S. Contractor, Northwestern U, USA
Participants
The Evolution of Online Community Networks
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
The Evolution of Online Communities: A Structural Perspective
Matthew Scott Weber, U of Southern California, USA
Janet Fulk, U of Southern California, USA
Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA
Ecological Dynamics of Online Communities
Cuihua Shen, U of Southern California, USA
Janet Fulk, U of Southern California, USA
The Evolution of the HIV/AIDS Hyperlink Network
Michelle D. Shumate, U of Illinois, USA
This panel examines the fundamental processes that guide the formation and development of online communities.
Each paper presents a theoretical approach for understanding the evolution of communication in online environments,
as well as methods for analyzing these interactions. Grounded in organization theory, evolutionary theory and social
network analysis, this panel examines the distinctive nature of online community lifecycles. This panel aims to begin
a dialogue about what constitutes online communities and what may influence their evolution over time.
5543
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon 6
International Convergence Policies
Communication Law & Policy
Chair
Amit Schejter, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Participants
Digital Convergence, European Competition Policy, and the Future of Public Service Broadcasting: The UK and
German Cases
Peter J. Humphreys, U of Manchester, UNITED KINGDOM
An Analysis of the Convergence Policy in Korea Using Actor Network Theory: Why is Convergence in Korea
Delayed?
Don-Hee Shin, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Evolving Policy: Convergence, Congruence, and Technology Neutrality
Siddhartha Sunder Raja, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
The Costs and Benefits of Separating Wireless Telephone Service From Handset Sales and Imposing Network
Neutrality Obligations
Robert M. Frieden, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Respondent
Amit Schejter, Pennsylvania State U, USA
National policymakers have struggled to integrate new or changing communication technologies and capabilities into
existing legal and regulatory frameworks. These papers analyze some of the difficulties they face and how some
regions have adapted.
5544
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon 7
Social Impact of Drama for Development: Understanding the Relationship Between Audience Research,
Dramatic Elements and Evidence of Impact
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Bella Mody, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
Participants
New Home New Life: Integrating People's Stories on Radio Drama in Afghanistan
Dr Andrew Skuse, U of Adelaide, AUSTRALIA
Marie Bernadette Gillespie, Open U, UNITED KINGDOM
Esther Saville, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Jasoos Vijay: Solving Mysteries and Asking Questions in India
Joyee Shairee Chatterjee, U of Southern California, USA
Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA
Nupur Sen, U of Southern California, USA
Andy Bhanot, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Wetin Dey: Good Girls/Bad Girls in TV Drama in Nigeria
Anna Godfrey, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Tim Cooper, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Tomaz Volf, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Linda Nwoke, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Taste of Life: Reflecting Contemporary Cambodian Society to Promote Attitude and Behaviour Change
Lizz Frost Yocum, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Linna Chiv, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Narith Khim, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Anji Loman Field, BBC World Service Trust, UNITED KINGDOM
Panellists have been challenged to consider how the research advances their thinking around the use of television and
radio drama to achieve development objectives. Individual papers discuss dramas from four developing countries
from Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Cambodia. In Afghanistan, New Home New Life weaves its storylines around
the lives of three fictional village families. It raises a range of issues, including: repatriation, mines awareness, health
and conflict resolution. The paper will examine the role of audience evaluation in informing new creative content and
assessing the social realist fit of the drama. First broadcast across India in 2002, Jasoos Vijay is a television serial
detective drama addressing HIV and AIDS and sexual health through its central character, an HIV positive detective.
The drama employs a range of interactive strategies, all of which have been tested with the target audience. Wetin
Dey, a Nigerian television drama, aims to reach a diverse ethnic, religious, linguistic, urban and rural population to
address sexual health issues in general and HIV and AIDS in particular. The development of the drama and the
research, focused particular attention on the resonance and audience engagement of key characters. In Cambodia,
Taste of Life first aired on television in 2004. The programme conveyed key information about HIV and AIDS, road
safety, people trafficking and maternal and child health. Audience research has highlighted the relative effectiveness
of a variety of dramatic strategies and tactics.
5551
Sunday
13:30-14:45
Salon 8
The NRC Study: Gaining Insights on Doctoral Education in the Field
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Linda L. Putnam, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Participants
Edward L. Fink, U of Maryland, USA
Marshall Scott Poole, U of Illinois, USA
Charles Self, U of Oklahoma, USA
Timothy Stephen, U of Albany, USA
Chair Linda L. Putnam, U. of California-Santa Barbara, CA, USA Participants Edward L. Fink, U. of Maryland,
College Park, MD, USA M. Scott Poole, U. of Illinois, Champaign, IL, USA Charles Self, U. of Oklahoma, Norman,
OK, USA Tim Stephen, U. of Albany, Albany, NY, USA This panel will focus on the data from the National
Research Council survey of doctoral programs in communication. It will summarize and present the results of the
NRC survey and discuss the work of the CCA/NRC Task Force in analyzing the data to gain better knowledge about
the quality doctoral programs, rating of programs, specializations in the field, placement of doctoral students,
mentoring of students, and ethnic/gender/international diversity of doctoral programs. In addition, panelists will
discuss comparisons of the NRC with other surveys in the field, including the NCA reputation survey, Academic
Analytics, and CIOS/ComVista.
5560
Sunday
13:30-14:45
701
High Density Session: Talking to Journalists About Journalism
Journalism Studies
Chair
Michael Conway, Indiana U, USA
Participants
Hard News, Soft News, General News: The Necessity and Utility of an Intermediate Classification
Sam N. Lehman-Wilzig, Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL
Michal Seletzky, Bar-Ilan U (ISRAEL), ISRAEL
How Journalists at the New Orleans Times-Picayune Understand the Role of a Post-Katrina Newspaper
Nicole B. Usher, U of Southern California, USA
On the Values Guiding the French Practice of Journalism: Interviews of Twelve War Correspondents
Sandrine Boudana, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL
Professionalism, Political Orientation, and Perceived Self-Censorship: A Survey Study of Hong Kong Journalists
Francis L. F. Lee, City U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Joseph M. Chan, Chinese U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Women in Newspaper Newsrooms Show Signs of Burnout and Intentions to Leave Journalism
Scott Robert Reinardy, Ball State U, USA
Global Miami and the Construction of International News
Dana M. Janbek, U of Miami, USA
Comparative Constructions of Journalism as a Profession: A Comparison Between English and Spanish-Language
Journalists in South Florida
Luis Ernesto Lopez-Preciado, U of Miami, USA
Transmission, Translation and Transformation: Communication of Ethical Codes in the Newsroom
Bruno F. Battistoli, Syracuse U, USA
This session features research based on discussions with working journalist. Methodologically and conceptually this
collection of papers transcends cookie cutter approaches and demonstrate that the Journalism Studies Division is well
positioned to break new theoretical ground.
5561
Sunday
13:30-14:45
705
Shifting Criteria in Crime and Disaster Reporting
Journalism Studies
Chair
Anita M. J. van Hoof, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
Loverboys: the Media Construction of a New Crime. Content Analysis of Dutch News Coverage (1995-2005)
Johannes Peter Burger, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS
Willem M. Koetsenruijter, U of Leiden, THE NETHERLANDS
Missing Children in News: Racial and Gender Representation of Missing Children Cases in Television News
Seong Jae Min, Ohio State U, USA
John Christian Feaster, Ohio State U, USA
Me(di)a Culpa?: The "Missing White Woman Syndrome" and Media Self-Critique
Carol M. Liebler, Syracuse U, USA
What Can You Read From "Disaster" News?: Content Analysis of Hurricane Katrina
Jae-Hwa Shin, U of Southern Mississippi, USA
Respondent
James S. Ettema, Northwestern U, USA
In an age of widespread uncertainty and fear about boundary-crossing dangers such as organized crime, worldwide
terrorism, and global warming, reporting on these threats becomes an increasingly significant part of the function of
local and national news media. The papers in this session identify the prominent victims in crime and disaster
reporting, who makes sense of it all and, most importantly, who does not.
5562
Sunday
13:30-14:45
716
Rhetoric, Witnessing, and the Constitution of Politics
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Ingrid Volkmer, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Participants
Guerillas in Our Midst: An Alternative Perspective to the Public Sphere
William H Lawson, Florida State U, USA
The Political Public
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Columbia U, USA
Witnessing as a Field
Tamar Ashuri, Ben-Gurion U, Sapir Academic C., ISRAEL
Amit Pinchevski, Hebrew U, ISRAEL
The Case for a Discourse Ethics Approach to International Rights
Thomas L. Jacobson, Temple U, USA
Pi-Chun Chang, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Lingling Pan, Temple U, USA
Leanne Li-Yuan Chang, National U - Singapore, SINGAPORE
Respondent
Stewart M. Hoover, U of Colorado, USA
What role do media and communication play in expanding the scope of politics, whether generating new political
agents or new topics for politics? This panel examines these questions in a range of settings from the ethics of
witnessing to issues of representation, inclusion and agency.
5563
Sunday
13:30-14:45
720
Racializing Asia at Home and Abroad
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Mia N. Moody, Baylor U, USA
Participants
A Study on the Japanese Censorship in Colonial Korea: Examined by Japanese Censors
Min Ju Lee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Asian American Images in Mainstream Magazine Advertisements: Gender Gaps in Stereotypical Depictions
Sang Y. Bai, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Reinforcement of Reciprocity Through Personal Narrative in Midwest Korean-American Community
Yujung Nam, U of Southern California, USA
Taiwan and ROC: A Critical Analysis of President Chen's Construction of Taiwan Identity in National Speeches,
2000-2007
Hui-Ching Chang, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
Richard Holt, Northern Illinois U, USA
Watching the Nation, Singing the Nation: How Filipino Migrants in the UK Construct their Identity in Media Rituals
of News and Karaoke
Jonathan Corpus Ong, U of Cambridge, UNITED KINGDOM
5564
Sunday
13:30-14:45
728
Teacher and Student Dynamics in Instructional Communication
Instructional & Developmental Communication
Chair
Alan K. Goodboy, Bloomsburg U, USA
Participants
Communicative Connection: A Theoretical Clarification of the Role of Teacher Immediacy in Classroom
Communication
Paul L. Witt, Texas Christian U, USA
Teacher Immediacy, Confidence Testing, and the Measurement of Cognitive Learning
Paul E. King, Texas Christian U, USA
Paul L. Witt, Texas Christian U, USA
The Effectiveness of Teacher Preparation: An Assessment of a Graduate Teaching Assistant (GTA) Training Program
Stacy L. Young, California State U - Long Beach, USA
Amy M. Bippus, California State U – Long Beach, USA
R U Able to Meat Me: The Impact of Students' Overly Casual E-Mail Messages to Instructors
Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Marian Houser, Texas State U, USA
Renee Cowan, Texas A&M U, USA
Communication and Learning in a Peer-Mentoring Program: A Qualitative Analysis of Electronic Mentor Journals
Jenepher Lennox Terrion, U of Ottawa, CANADA
Ruth Philion, Student Academic Success Service, U of Ottawa, CANADA
Respondent
Alan K. Goodboy, Bloomsburg U, USA
5566
Sunday
13:30-14:45
820
5610
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon A
International Federation of Communication Associations - Business Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Klaus Krippendorff, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Media Policy: Diversity and Integration
Mass Communication
Chair
Stanley D. Tickton, Norfolk State U, USA
Participants
Public Interest, Media Diversity, and the Meaning of Media Democracy: Integrated Paradigm of Media Diversity
Kim McCann, Bowling Green State U, USA
When the Market Does Not Reign Supreme: Localism and Diversity in U.S. Media Policy
Mark N. Cooper, McGannon Center for Communications Research, USA
The Impact of Ownership, Regulation Issues, and Technology Adoption on the Introduction of Digital Terrestrial
Television: A Comparison of the United States and Mainland China
Miao Guo, U of Florida, USA
Broadcast Radio as an Instrument of Integration - How Mass Media Can Contribute to Social Cohesion
Katrin Ohlendorf, Journalist, GERMANY
Harald Rau, U of Leipzig, GERMANY
5611
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon B
Public Debates on Biotechnology: Transatlantic Dialogue and Divide
Mass Communication
Participants
Political Communication in the U.S. Debate over Stem Cell Research and Cloning
Matthew C. Nisbet, Ohio State U, USA
Media Frame Building and Culture: Genetically Modified Organisms in Brazilian Coverage
Dominique Brossard, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Luisa Massarini, Museum of Life/Oswaldo Cruz House, Fiocruz, BRAZIL
Emily Acosta, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Bruno Buys, Museum of Life/Oswaldo Cruz House, Fiocruz, BRAZIL
Shaping the Biotechnology Debate in Switzerland: Actors and Paths of Influence
Urs Dahinden, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Heinz Bonfadelli, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Werner A. Meier, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Martina Leonarz, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Michael Schanne, Zurich U of Applied Sciences Winterthur, SWITZERLAND
Sharon Lopata, Zurich U of Applied Sciences Winterthur, SWITZERLAND
Public Opinion and Global Biotechnology: a Review
Martin Bauer, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM
Public debates on biotechnology have taken place in many countries, but there are striking differences between
Europe, the USA and some developing countries. This panel asks which theoretical concepts and methodological
approaches are best suited for analysing and explaining these differences. The panellists discuss these questions from
a comparative perspective by presenting recent findings from four contrasting countries (Brazil, Switzerland, the
United Kingdom and the United States).
5612
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon C
Information Systems Business Meeting
Information Systems
5620
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Lamartine
Top Four Papers in Intercultural Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
James W. Neuliep, St. Norbert College, USA
Participants
Punctuated Equilibria of Ethnic Identity Development: The Case of Mexican-Heritage Youth in the United States
Masaki Matsunaga, Waseda U, JAPAN
Khadidiatou Ndiaye, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Michael L. Hecht, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Elvira Elek, RTI International, USA
Differences Between White Americans and Asian Americans for Social Responsibility, Individual Right, and
Intentions Regarding Organ Donation
Hee Sun Park, Michigan State U, USA
Yoon Sook Shin, Michigan State U, USA
Doshik Yun, Michigan State U, USA
The Relationships Between Ethnocentrism and Cultural Identity, Self-Esteem and Emotional Intelligence
Christine M Collaco, U of the Pacific, USA
Qingwen Dong, U of the Pacific, USA
Mariela Vera, U of the Pacific, USA
Danny Nuss, U of the Pacific, USA
Ashley Dolezal, U of the Pacific, USA
Jaime Souza, U of the Pacific, USA
A Comparative Analysis Between Muslim and Non-Muslim Self-Construals and Conflict Styles in France and Britain
Stephen Michael Croucher, Bowling Green State U, USA
Ian M Borton, Bowling Green State U, USA
Deepa Oommen, Bowling Green State U, USA
Jacob Stephen Turner, Bowling Green State U, USA
Samara Anarbaeva, Bowling Green State U, USA
Respondent
James W. Neuliep, St. Norbert College, USA
These are the four highest ranked papers in Division 5.
5621
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Kafka
Top Papers in Public Relations
Public Relations
Chair
Hochang Shin, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Participants
Who Should Represent?: Source Credibility of the IR and the PR Spokesperson and the Affiliated Company
Youngshin Hong, U of South Carolina, USA
Sooyoung Cho, Kyung Hee University, USA
Ethics Statements of Public Relations Firms: What Do They Say?
Eyun-Jung Ki, U of Alabama, USA
Sooyeon Kim, U of Florida, USA
Can Interactivity in Corporate Websites Influence Public Perceptions of Organizations?
Jamie Guillory, Cornell U, USA
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
The Disappearing Act: Public Relations Consultancy in Theory and Research
Magda Pieczka, Queen Margaret U, UNITED KINGDOM
Respondent
Hochang Shin, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
5622
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Hemon
Examining Social Justice in Multiple Organizational Forms: Nonprofits, Community Groups, NGOs, and ForProfits
Organizational Communication
Chair
Owen Hanley Lynch, Southern Methodist U, USA
Participants
Contesting Collaborative Community Engagement
Sarah E Dempsey, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
In the Triangle of Civil Society, Politics, and Economy: Communications of Nonprofit Organizations
Jochen Hoffmann, U of Bern, SWITZERLAND
Daniela Spranger, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
NGO-Corporate Alliances: Testing the Symbiotic Sustainability Model
Michelle D. Shumate, U of Illinois, USA
Amy O'Connor, North Dakota State U, USA
The Relationship Between Organizational Identification and Organizational Justice in Thai For-Profit Organizations
Thanawut Naigowit, Bangkok U, THAILAND
Claudia L. Hale, Ohio U, USA
Respondent
Shiv Ganesh, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
5623
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Jarry
Top Three Papers in Language and Social Interaction
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Mark Aakhus, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
The Clashes of Expert and Laymen Talk: Constructing Meanings in Interpreter-Mediated Medical Encounters
Elaine Hsieh, U of Oklahoma, USA
Eric Kramer, U of Oklahoma, USA
When Are Persons "White"? The Organization of Racial Categories in Talk-in-Interaction
Kevin Andrew Whitehead, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Gene Lerner, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
'Occasional' Drinking: Some Uses of a Nonstandard Temporal Metric
Timothy Halkowski, U at Albany - SUNY, USA
5624
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Joyce
Top Papers in Health Communication
Health Communication
Chair
Douglas Storey, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg, USA
Participants
Network Influences in Health Initiatives: Multimedia Games for Youth in Peru
Arul Chib, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
The Persuasiveness of Gain- and Loss-Framed Messages for Encouraging Disease Detection: A Meta-Analytic
Review
Daniel O'Keefe, Northwestern U, USA
Jakob D. Jensen, Purdue U, USA
Strategic Health Communication and HIV/AIDS Stigma Reduction: A Field Experience From Malawi
Alisha Heather Creel, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Rajiv N. Rimal, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Kirsten Patricia Bose, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Glory Mkandawire, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Lisa Folda, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Jane Brown, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Minority Communities and Health Information Knowledge Gaps On Obesity-Related Risk Factors
Joyee Shairee Chatterjee, U of Southern California, USA
5625
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Musset
5630
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon 1
Interpersonal Communication Business Meeting
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Pamela J. Kalbfleisch, U of North Dakota, USA
Political Knowledge
Political Communication
Chair
Nicholas W. Geidner, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
The Effects of Political Knowledge on the Ability to Spot Manipulated Information in Print News Coverage of the
2004 Ukrainian Presidential Election
Vasyl Kucherenko, Colorado State U, USA
Cindy T. Christen, Colorado State U, USA
The Effects of Journalist Opinionation on Learning From Television News
Lauren M. Feldman, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Knowledge Diminishes, But News Exposure Enhances Susceptibility to the News
Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
J. A. De Ridder, Amsterdam School of Communications Research, THE NETHERLANDS
Anita M. J. van Hoof, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Dirk Oegema, Free U, THE NETHERLANDS
Interpersonal Talk About Media News as Factor in the Knowledge Gap Process: A Quasi-Experimental Analysis of
Conversation Content
Dorothee Hefner, Hanover U of Music and Drama, GERMANY
Marko Bachl, Hannover U of Music and Drama, GERMANY
Christopher Blake, Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hannover, GERMANY
Verena Pompetzki, Hannover U of Music and Drama, GERMANY
Christoph Klimmt, Johannes Gutenberg U - Mainz, GERMANY
5632
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon 3
Agenda Setting
Political Communication
Chair
Xiaoxia Cao, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Participants
On the Emergence of a Journalistic Field in Democratic Corporatism: Another Round of Refeudalization or a Further
Step in Differentiation/Professionalism?
Risto Kunelius, U of Tampere, FINLAND
Jari Valiverronen, U of Tampere, FINLAND
Unemployment on the Agenda: A Panel Study of Agenda Setting Effects during the 2006 Swedish National Election
Campaign
Adam Mahmoud Shehata, ITM/Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN
Using Public Will to Secure Political Will
Lori Post, Michigan State U, USA
Charles T. Salmon, Michigan State U, USA
Amber N.W. Raile, Michigan State U, USA
Issue Ownership Dynamics: How Political Parties Claim and Maintain Issues Through Media Appearances
Stefaan Walgrave, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Jonas Lefevere, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Michiel Nuytemans, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Peter Van Aelst, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
5633
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon 4
Private Stories, Public Accounts, and the Complicated Narratives of Women We Interview
Feminist Scholarship
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
E-K. Daufin, Alabama State U, USA
Participants
Immigrant Women Braving Cultural Isolation: Ethnographic Research and Theoretical Insights on Dialogic
Communication
Ilia Rodriguez, U of New Mexico, USA
Perceptions and Actions of Breast Cancer Survivors: Pessimistic or Optimistic?
Zhuojun Joyce Chen, U of Northern Iowa, USA
Public Narratives by Private People: Reflections on a Rural Life
Glenda R Balas, U of New Mexico, USA
Institutional Ethnography and the Talk of Academic Women
Martina H. Myers, U of New Mexico / New Mexico State U, USA
This panel explores how women's narratives produced in the process of academic research may work to empower
and/or further marginalize the women. Each of these presenters has conducted research with women who--through
illness, migration, or work environment--live at the edges of the mainstream social world. The panelists describe the
narratives developed by these women, explore the social uses of their stories, and examine interpersonal integrity in
the context of qualitative research.
5634
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon 5
New Concepts, New Methods: The Challenges of Popular Communication Research in the 21st Century
Popular Communication
Participants
User-Created Content and the Active Audience: Growing Objective Knowledge and Creative Imagination in
Postbroadcast Media
John Hartley, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
Audiences and Ordinary Life
Brian Longhurst, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM
How I Learned to Love Moby Dick, or When Fan Studies Meet High Culture
Henry Guy Jenkins, Massachusetts Insititue Technology, USA
Audience Ethnography Today: Is Everyone a Fan?
Elizabeth Bird, U of South Florida, USA
Why the Creative Industries Must Die
Toby Miller, U of California - Riverside, USA
Considering Global Popular Communication
Denise D. Bielby, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Over the past three decades the study of popular communication and popular media has formed a key concern of a
range of emerging interdisciplinary academic fields from Media and Communication Studies, Area Studies and
Cultural Sociology to (British) Cultural Studies. At the same time, popular communication research has explored the
impact of a wide range of political, cultural, social, economic and technological transformations from
democratization, mass consumerism and globalization to post-Fordism, deregulation and convergence. However, as
such phenomena further deepen the profound transformations of our life worlds and transform the role and forms of
popular communication in our daily routines, popular communication research confronts new challenges, offers new
insights and examines the need for new methodological departures.
5640
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Drummond West
Communicating for Social and Occupational Change: Girls and Women in STEM
Theme Sessions
Chair
Linda L. Putnam, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Participants
What Kids Say: Stories About Jobs, Science, and Engineering From China, Belgium, and the United States
Lorraine G. Kisselburgh, Purdue U, USA
Brenda L. Berkelaar, Purdue U, USA
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
Steven Eggermont, Catholic U - Leuven, BELGIUM
Girls, "Intrinsic Aptitude" and the Harvard President: A Tale of Science and Patriarchy
Maria Mastronardi, U of Illinois - Urbana, USA
Designing Interaction, Building Communities: Game Studies as a New Entry Into STEM Disciplines
Michele H. Jackson, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA
Participation, Perceptions, and Achievement of Women Scientists in Cutting-Edge Research: A Study of
Nanotechnology
Kimberly A. Stoltzfus, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Pursuing Engineering Careers in Transnational Worlds: Chinese American Women's Reflections on their Professional
Journeys
Jane Jorgenson, U of South Florida, USA
Broadening the interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) is an interdisciplinary and
global issue of the 21st century, and the low number of women in STEM continues to puzzle scholars. We examine
multi-disciplinary communicative perspectives underlying this critical social issue, with research on cross-cultural
career stories, media representations, game studies, nanotechnology scientists, and transnational work-family issues.
Participants discuss new insights, outline agendas for future research, and offer pragmatic recommendations for
solutions.
5641
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Drummond Centre
Technology and Social Change
Communication and Technology
Chair
Teresa Marie Harrison, SUNY - Albany, USA
Participants
Contesting Technology, Development and the Private Sector in Seelampur, India
Sreela Sarkar, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Is An Online Public Sphere Emerging in China?A Comparative Study of Deliberativeness of Chinese Online
Discussion Forums
XIANG ZHOU, Shantou U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Zhen-Mei Peng, Shantou U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Is WiFi use Compatible with Public Spaces?: Wireless Internet Use, Sociability, and Social Networks
Keith N. Hampton, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Oren Livio, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Craig Trachtenberg, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Physical Spaces in a Virtual World?: The Social Impact of the Alberta SuperNet
Andrew P Blundell, U of Calgary, CANADA
Aiden Buckland, U of Calgary, CANADA
Concetta Ranieri, U of Calgary, CANADA
Hayley Redpath, U of Calgary, CANADA
Milan Singh, U of Calgary, CANADA
Everett Wilson, U of Calgary, CANADA
Social Impacts of Community Wireless Networking: Articulating Technology and Politics
Alison Powell, Concordia U, CANADA
5642
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Drummond East
Self, Society, and Technology
Communication and Technology
Chair
Laura Robinson, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
Personal Communication Technologies as an Extension of the Self: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of People's
Associations With Technology and Their Symbolic Proximity With Others
Arun Vishwanath, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Hao Chen, SUNY at Buffalo, USA
"Free the Spectrum!" Activist Encounters With Old and New Media Technology * (TOP STUDENT PAPER IN
CAT)
Christina Dunbar-Hester, Fordham U, USA
Learning to Balance "A Two-Edged Sword": A Situated Understanding of Older Mormon Maori and Computers
Margaret Richardson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
C. Kay Weaver, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
Ted Zorn, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND
The Technological Embodiment of Colonialism in Puerto Rico
Manuel Gerardo Aviles-Santiago, U of Texas, USA
5643
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon 6
Media Beyond the Middle East
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Richard C Vincent, Indiana State U, USA
Participants
Al-Jazeera, Phoenix Satellite Television and the Return of the State: Case Studies in Market Liberalization, Public
Sphere, and Media Imperialism
Oliver Boyd-Barrett, Bowling Green State U, USA
Shuang Xie, Bowling Green State U, USA
Emerging Media in Peril: Iraqi Journalism in the Post-Saddam Hussein Era
Hun-Shik Kim, U of Colorado, USA
Mariwan Hama-Saeed, U of Colorado, USA
Mediated Negotiations: A Case Study of a Transcultural Exchange Between Lebanon and Israel
Keren Tenenboim Weinblatt, U of Pennsylvania, USA
The Opinion and the Other Opinion: Al-Jazeera's Agenda Setting Effect in the Arab-Islamic World
Maha Bashri, Roger Williams U, USA
Viewing and Avoidance of Al-Jazeera Satellite Channel in Kuwait: A Uses and Gratifications Perspective
Ali Jamal, Kuwait U, KUWAIT
Srinivas R. Melkote, Bowling Green State U, USA
Respondent
Richard C. Vincent, Indiana State U - Department of Communication, USA
5644
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon 7
Dialoguing E-E: A Participant-Centered Exchange on Entertainment-Education Scholarship
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Sarah Elizabeth Ryan, Baruch College, USA
Participants
Is Art Resistance?: An Entertainment-Education Analysis of Nine Inch Nails Year Zero Online Alternate Reality
Game
Keith Okrosy, Baruch College, City U of New York, USA
Entertainment Education: Shaken and Stirred
Edina Leiher, Baruch College, City U of New York, USA
Participatory Theater, Debates, and Collaborative Art as Entertainment-Education: Colombia's "La Carsa," a "Mobile
Tent on Art and Sexuality"
Rafael Obregon, Ohio U, USA
Jesús Antonio Arroyave, U del Norte, COLOMBIA
Jair Vega, Universidad del Norte, COLOMBIA
Complexity-Based Entertainment-Education? The Case of Nicaragua's Sexto Sentido
Karen Patricia Greiner, Ohio U, USA
Virginia Lacayo, Ohio U, USA
Respondent
Arvind Singhal, The U of Texas at El Paso, USA
This panel-discussion invites different perspectives on Entertainment- Education. Each panelist will briefly present a
debut study that advocates a unique interpretation of E-E. These presentations will be followed by response and
dialogue with facilitators and the audience. Panel facilitators Arvind Singhal of the University of Texas at El Paso and
Sarah Ryan of Baruch College, City University of New York will provide their perspectives, engaging and inviting
both presenters and audience members to share ideas and concerns about Entertainment-Education and its potential
for social impact.
5651
Sunday
15:00-16:15
Salon 8
The Korean American Communication Association State-of-the-Art Panel
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Hye-Ryeon Lee, U of Hawaii - Manoa, USA
Participants
Framing of South Korean Legislator Blogs
Sungwook Hwang, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Wayne Wanta, U of Missouri, USA
The Impact of Korean Television Drama Viewership on the Social Perceptions of Single Life and Having Fewer
Children in Married Life
Bumsub Jin, U of Florida, USA
Seongjung Jeong, Dong-Ah Institute of Media and Arts, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Women of Stuck-Generation and New-Generation in South Korea: Internal Dialectics in Transitional MotherDaughter Relationships
Sook-Young Lee, Luther College, USA
Balanced Friendship and Social Information Processing: A Simultaneous Test of Two Theories with Implications for
Job Satisfaction
Hye Eun Lee, U of Hawaii - Manoa, USA
Hee Sun Park, Michigan State U, USA
Jeonghee Noh, Michigan State U, USA
The Korean American Communication Association continues the tradition of presenting state-of-the-art research
endeavors related to various Korea-related communication themes.
5660
Sunday
15:00-16:15
701
News Between Narrativity and News Value. Integrating Competing Concepts to Explain News Processing
Journalism Studies
Chair
Rick W. Busselle, Washington State U, USA
Participants
Narrativity as a Latent Pattern in the Construction of News: A Survey Among Journalists
Susanne Kinnebrock, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA
Helena Bilandzic, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
News Value and Narrativity in Professional Journalism and User-Generated News on the World Wide Web
Christiane Eilders, U of Augsburg, GERMANY
The Downfall of Narrativity and News Values in the New Media Environment
Tamar Liebes, Hebrew U, ISRAEL
Menahem Blondheim, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL
Beyond Vividness: The Impact of Narratives versus Personalization on Message Selection, Liking, and Recall
Matthias R. Hastall, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Helena Bilandzic, U of Erfurt, GERMANY
Susanne Kinnebrock, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA
This panel focuses on the effects of narrativity and news value on news construction, selection and retention among
journalists and recipients. It brings together two distinctly different research traditions in order to enhance our
understanding of news not only as an accumulation of attention generating components but also as a "good story".
The panel clarifies the meaning of narrativity and presents empirical applications.
5661
Sunday
15:00-16:15
705
Media Cultures and the Mediatization of Religion
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Stewart M. Hoover, U of Colorado, USA
Participants
Particularism and the "Common Culture": Negotiating the boundary between religious and secular culture.
Stewart M. Hoover, U of Colorado, USA
From Media Events to Computer Games: Mediatization as Branding Religion
Andreas Hepp, U of Bremen, GERMANY
Veronika Krönert, U of Bremen, GERMANY
Rethinking Cyberreligion? Teens, the Internet and Mediatized Religion in Sweden
Mia Lövheim, Uppsala U, SWEDEN
Ritualization and mediatization in religion and commercial entertainment
Eric W. Rothenbuhler, Texas A&M U, USA
Respondent
Jeremy Stolow, McMaster U, CANADA
In the interactions between "religion" and "the media" we can argue that "the latter are, in many ways, in the driver's
seat." (Hoover, 2006: 284). This metaphor refers to two fundamental insights: First, media "do not 'replace religion'",
and second, "media are religiously relevant" (Hoover, 2006: 269). So while religion does not disappear "in the media
age" we can't understand religion without understanding the media and its "influences" on religion. Using in this
context the concept of "mediatization", this panel will address the "driver's seat" metaphor. If we understand
"mediatization" to be the process of the incursion of "technical communication media" into different social and
cultural spheres, we can argue that the process of mediatization has both "quantitative" (more and more media are
accessible at more and more times, in more and more locations and so on) and a "qualitative" (this increase is related
to the change of our forms of communication and further socio-cultural contexts) implication. This panel will discuss
the present process of "mediatization of religion" within different media cultures in a transnational and transcultural
perspective. Doing this, the aim is to deepen theorization of this process. Based on empirical research in different
socio-cultural contexts (USA, Sweden, Germany) fundamental patterns of the mediatization of religion will be
outlined to in order to support the development of a general theoretical framework to describe the present and
increasingly contested process of the mediatization of religion.
5662
Sunday
15:00-16:15
716
Digital Dissent, User-Generated Content, and Web-Based Publics: Reconceptualizing Citizenship, Resistance,
and Political Media
Philosophy of Communication
Political Communication
Chair
Megan Boler, U of Toronto, CANADA
Participants
Politics for Consumption: How War Bloggers Feed the Spectacle
Andrea Schmidt, Independent Journalist, CANADA
Memes/Virals: Political Resistance and Recombinant Media
Alessandra Renzi, U of Toronto, CANADA
Calling on the Colbert Nation: Politics and Parody in Fan Culture
Catherine Burwell, U of Toronto, CANADA
Bush in 30 Seconds: Rhetoric and Discourses of Truth and Lies in Oppositional Media
Stephen Turpin, U of Toronto, CANADA
Megan Boler, U of Toronto, CANADA
Respondent
Jonathan Alan Gray, Fordham U, USA
This panel analyzes "digital dissent" - tactical online expressions that seek to supplement and subvert corporate news
and 'infotaintment.' Developing concepts drawn from philosophers ranging from Guy Debord to Gilles Deleuze, Brian
Massumi to Jodi Dean, we theorize citizenship, publics, and politics as emergent themes throughout our interview
data and critical discourse analyses of war-blogs, viral videos, and "fake news." We challenge philosophies of
communication to account for the political efficacy of irony, fan sites as citizen participation, and the complicity of
participatory social networks in spectacular commodification.
5663
Sunday
15:00-16:15
720
Commodity Activism: A Cross-Divisional Roundtable
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Popular Communication
Feminist Scholarship
Participants
Acting Political and 'Making It Right': The Performance of Celebrity Activism in 'Post-Katrina' New Orleans
Joy V. Fuqua, CUNY/Queens College, USA
Cause-Celeb: Angelina Jolie as Celebrity Missionary
Alison Trope, U of Southern California, USA
Empower(Red)?: Consumerism, Capitalism, and Commodity Activism in the (Red) Campaign to Aid Africa
Spring-Serenity Duvall, Indiana U, USA
"Hip-Hop Philanthropy": The Red Campaign and Social Impact
Sarah Banet-Weiser, U of Southern California, USA
Salma's Frida: Troubling the Cinematic Commodification of Latinidad as Social Action
Isabel Molina Guzman, U of Illinois, USA
(E)racing Self-Esteem: A Look at Tyra Banks's Philanthropy
Ralina Landwehr Joseph, U of Washington, USA
Diamonds (Are From Sierra Leone): Kanye West and the Promise of Capitalist Contradiction
Roopali Mukherjee, CUNY - Queens College, USA
Taking a Stand Against Discrimination: Examining MTV's Use of Social Marketing to Promote Gay Rights
Tara M. Kachgal, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Neoliberalism and Media Reform
John McMurria, DePaul U, USA
Recent years have witnessed a growing concern among scholars of media/communication over the limits of social
action, specifically, the implications of neoliberalism in the "post-feminist," "post-civil rights," and "post-capitalist"
era(s) as it bowdlerizes and represses forms of activism. As feminist critics and scholars of race/ethnicity ponder the
incorporation of radical icons into the logics of merchandising, as tactics of social critique become transformed into
commodity forms surviving as little more than diverting spectacles, and as corporations and corporate celebrities take
their place as models for social empowerment leading charitable campaigns and global philanthropies, this roundtable
explores the ways in which social activism may itself be transforming into a branded commodity in the neoliberal era.
Providing a range of examples culled from radio and television media, consumer and cultural activist campaigns, and
Hollywood and independent films, the speakers at this roundtable consider modes and practices of social activism as
marketable commodities that are produced through labor, for purposes of trade within markets, and which generate
profit, competitive accumulation, and fetishization as commodities tend to do. Offering a variety of cases of
"commodity activism," this session highlights the implications of such commoditization for critical scholarship and
social action at this historical moment
5664
Sunday
15:00-16:15
728
History of Journalism
Communication History
Chair
David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA
Participants
ABC, Agnew, and Richard Nixon's War on Network Television News
Dale L. Cressman, Brigham Young U, USA
Lane Williams, Brigham Young U, USA
Interactivity, Technology, and the News: Nineteenth-Century J-Blogging
Jennifer Horner, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Of Fragments and Fallen Heroes: How the Newseum Constructs Remembrance of Journalism's Martyrs
Mark Nimkoff, U of Illinois, USA
"Whether the Giants Should Be Slain or Persuaded to Be Good": Revisiting the Hutchins Commission and the Role of
Media in a Democratic Society (Best Student Paper)
Victor W. Pickard, U of Illinois, USA
Respondent
Carolyn Kitch, Temple U, USA
This paper session brings together scholars who address the history of journalism, one of the most contested areas in
the field of media history.
5666
Sunday
15:00-16:15
820
Games and Audience
Game Studies
Chair
Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA
Participants
Meaningful Play in Elderly Life
Bob De Schutter, Group T - Leuven Engineering School, BELGIUM
Vero Vanden Abeele, Group T Leuven Engineering School, BELGIUM
Gaming for Different Reasons: What Motivates People to Play a Specific Video Game?
Martin Tanis, Vijire U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Jeroen Jansz, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Playing a Health Video Game: Impacts of Social Interaction and Gender on Health Outcomes
Grace Leigh Anderson, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Paul Kang, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Debra A. Lieberman, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Facilitating Game Play: How Others Affect Performance and Enjoyment of Video Games
Nicholas David Bowman, Michigan State U, USA
Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA
5710
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon A
Examining Media Effects in Children
Mass Communication
Chair
Robert W. Kubey, Rutgers U, USA
Participants
Young Children's Fright Reactions to Violence, War, and Conflict in the News
Karyn E. Riddle, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Joanne Cantor, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA
Emily J. Moyer-Guse, Ohio State U, USA
Investigating the Boomerang Effect in Anti-Aggression Media Literacy Interventions
Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA
Daniel Linz, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
W. James Potter, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Investigating the Generalizability of Mediation Results to New Populations and New Contexts
Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA
Parents Speak: Parental Utilization of and Satisfaction With the Motion Picture Association of America's Film Rating
System
Patricia Anne Williamson, Central Michigan U, USA
5711
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon B
News Coverage of Conflict and War
Mass Communication
Political Communication
Chair
John P Pollock, The College of New Jersey, USA
Participants
From 7/7 to 8/10: Media Framing of Terrorist Incidents in the United States and United Kingdom
Mary Elizabeth Danis, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Michael Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
One War, Three Pictures: A Cross-Country Analysis of the 2003 Iraq War
Jin Yang, U of Memphis, USA
Conflict Photos in News About Protests: Effects on Story Selection, Attention, Comprehension, and Attitudes
Laura M. Arpan, Florida State U, USA
Firat Tuzunkan, Eastern Mediterranean U, TURKEY
Testing the "Proximate Casualties Hypothesis": Local Troop Loss, Attention to News, and Support for Military
Intervention
Andrew F. Hayes, Ohio State U, USA
Teresa A Myers, Ohio State U, USA
Testing the Second Level of Agenda Setting: Effects of News Frames on Reader-Assigned Attributes of Hezbollah
and Israel in the 2006 War in Lebanon
Lesile A. Rill, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Corey B. Davis, U of Missouri, USA
5712
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon C
Studies in Media Selection and Use
Mass Communication
Chair
Keith Roe, Catholic U – Leuven, BELGIUM
Participants
Exploring Movie Choice: An Examination of Uses and Gratifications
Marina Krcmar, Wake Forest U, USA
Kathryn Greene, Rutgers U, USA
Smita C. Banerjee, U of Lincoln, USA
Zhanna Bagdasarov, Rutgers U, USA
The Role of Media in Transgender Identity and Relational Development: An Extension of Uses and Gratifications
Kama Allyn Kosenko, U of Illinois - Urbana Champaign, USA
Ryan J. Hurley, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Individual and Structural Determinants of Audience Exposure to Television: An Empirical Integration
Roger Cooper, Ohio U, USA
Tang Tang, Ohio U, USA
Television Program Avoidance and Personality
Tabea Boecking, Ludwig-Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY
Andreas Martin Fahr, Ludwig-Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY
Mass Media Use in Social Contexts
Thomas N. Friemel, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
5720
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Lamartine
5721
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Kafka
5722
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Hemon
Intercultural Communication Business Meeting
Intercultural Communication
Public Relations Division Business Meeting
Public Relations
Chair
Craig E. Carroll, U of North Carolina, USA
Researching the Virtual Organization
Organizational Communication
Chair
R. Tyler Spradley, Stephen F. Austin State U, USA
Participants
Methods and Measures for the Analysis of Corporate Wikis: A Case Study
Steffen Blaschke, U of Bamberg, GERMANY
Klaus Stein, U of Bamberg, GERMANY
Socially Imprisoned, Virtually Free: Internet-Based Sites of Support
Brittany L. Peterson, U of Texas, USA
Social Influence on an Organization's Successful Adoption of Instant Messaging
Caleb T Carr, Michigan State U, USA
The Interplay Between Interpersonal and Electronic Resources in Expertise Seeking Among Colocated and
Distributed Employees
Y. Connie Yuan, Cornell U, USA
Ling Xia, Cornell U, USA
Laura Rickard, Cornell U, USA
Clifford W. Scherer, Cornell U, USA
Respondent
Jorge F. Pena, U of Texas, USA
5723
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Jarry
5724
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Joyce
Language & Social Interaction Business Meeting
Language & Social Interaction
Health Communication Division Business Meeting
Health Communication
Chair
Douglas Storey, Johns Hopkins U, USA
All division members are invited to attend the Division's business meeting to receive updates on division activities
and plan future division events.
5725
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Musset
Conversations in Families
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Rene M. Dailey, U of Texas, USA
Participants
Avoidance Among Adolescents in Conversations About Their Parents' Relationship: Applying the Theory of
Motivated Information Management
Walid Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Tamara D. Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Doing Facework While Managing Private Information: Talking With Family Members About Romantic Relationship
Problems
M. Chad McBride, Creighton U, USA
Dawn O. Braithwaite, U of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA
Emotional Expressivity and Social Support Among Adult Daughters of Alcoholic Mothers
Sripriya Rangarajan, Utah Valley U, USA
The Influence of Family Communication Patterns on Willingness to Engage in Family Discussion about Organ
Donation
Hee Sun Park, Michigan State U, USA
Doshik Yun, Michigan State U, USA
Sandi Smith, Michigan State U, USA
Kelly Morrison, Michigan State U, USA
Respondent
Rene M. Dailey, U of Texas - Austin, USA
5730
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon 1
Political Communication Business Meeting
Political Communication
Chair
Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA
Participants
Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Andrew Rojecki, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
5732
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon 3
Queer Medias: Communicating for Social Change
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies
Mass Communication
Chair
Vincent Doyle, Macalester College, USA
Participants
The Howl Not Silenced: The Rise of Queer Radio
Phylis Anne Johnson, Southern Illinois U, USA
Lambda on the Hill: History of the GLBT Newsletter at the University of North Carolina
Piotr Bobkowski, U of North Carolina, USA
Online Organization of the Gay and Lesbian Community in Singapore
Joe Jin Phua, U of Southern California, USA
Transgender Tolerance and Entertainment-Education: Decreasing Stigma Through All My Children's Zoe Storyline
Eleanor Morrison, U of Southern California, USA
5733
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon 4
Feminist Scholarship Division Business Meeting
Feminist Scholarship
Chair
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
This is the annual meeting of the Feminist Scholarship Division.
5734
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon 5
Popular Communication Business Meeting
Popular Communication
Chair
Lynn Schofield Clark, U of Denver, USA
Participant
Isabel Molina Guzman, U of Illinois, USA
5740
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Drummond West
Communicating for Social Impact in Public Discourse
Theme Sessions
Chair
Michelle Calka, Ohio U, USA
Participants
Contradictory Nature of Participation and Deliberation
Amir Har-Gil, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL
Roei Davidson, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL
The Structuration of Racialized Sports Talk
Kelby Kenneth Halone, West Virginia U, USA
Andrew Billings, Clemson U, USA
Urban Space and Immigration Discourse
Paul Mason Fotsch, California State U - Northridge, USA
Respondent
Robyn Virginia Remke, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK
5741
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Drummond Centre
Immigration and Media: Towards Citizenship
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Debra L. Merskin, U of Oregon, USA
Participants
KPCN: In Search of Many Voices
Gabriela Martinez, U of Oregon, USA
Immigrant Broadcasting and the Reproduction of Homelands: The Case of Guyanese Radio and Television in New
York, NY
Vibert C. Cambridge, Ohio U, USA
LAPD Pressed to Act on May Day Melee! Television News Representations of the 2007 Los Angeles ImmigrantRights Demonstration
Otto Santa Ana, U of California - Los Angeles, USA
Picturing Activism: A Visual Rhetorical Analysis of Broadcast Coverage of Day Without an Immigrant
Debra L. Merskin, U of Oregon, USA
Immigration has become racialized where we have global ethnic minorities (usually poor) seeing the need to migrate
from their countries of origin to core-rich nations. In the past fifty years, the influx of immigrants both mestizo and
indigenous people coming to the U.S. from Latin American countries has grown exponentially. This migration trend
is linked to economic hardship and political upheaval in the region, both provoked, in most cases, by institutions such
as the IMF and the World Bank along with U.S. government's policies detrimental for Latin American nations.
Responses to the growing presence of Latino immigrants and their U.S. born children, varies. The media is serving as
the main site for the discussion about immigration, depiction of migrants, and resistance from the population in
question.
5742
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Drummond East
Communication and Technology Business Meeting
Communication and Technology
Chair
Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Lidwien van de Wijngaert, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS
5743
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon 6
Public Participation, Public Expectations
Communication Law & Policy
Chair
Tom McCourt, Fordham U, USA
Participants
A Postwar Settlement for U.S. Broadcasting:
Victor W. Pickard, U of Illinois, USA
Professionalizing Artistic Expression: Governmentality and the American Street Performer
Jeffrey Cannon, Indiana U, USA
Public Participation and Agency Discretion in Rule Making at the Federal Communications Commission
Seeta Pena Gangadharan, Stanford U, USA
In Media We Trust? New Demands on Responsibility, Responsiveness, and Accountability
Yael de Haan, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Respondent
Tom McCourt, Fordham U, USA
This panel's historical studies examine moments in U.S. legal history that illustrate how participating in public life
meets with a somewhat unwilling institutional response. From an international perspective, contemporary media
systems and their "publicness" raise questions about accountability.
5744
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon 7
Gender and Health in Media and Development
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Participants
Critical Reflection and Normative Change Among Women and Men in Uganda: African Transformation
Carol R. Underwood, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Jane Brown, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Donna Sherard, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Basil Tushabe, CDFU, UGANDA
Afeefa Abdurrahman, Johns Hopkins U, USA
The Association of Women's Rights in Development: Building Global Spaces of Possibility
Alexa M. Dare, U of Montana, USA
Testing the Effectiveness of an Entertainment-Education Health-Focused Soap Opera: Exposure and Postdiscussion in
Colombian Young Adults
Jesús Antonio Arroyave, U del Norte, COLOMBIA
The Changing Face of Women's Magazines in China
Katherine T. Frith, Southern Illinois U, USA
Yang Feng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Respondent
Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas - Austin, USA
5751
Sunday
16:30-17:45
Salon 8
5760
Sunday
16:30-17:45
701
5761
Sunday
16:30-17:45
705
Korean American Communication Association Business Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Hye-Ryeon Lee, U of Hawaii - Manoa, USA
Journalism Studies Business Meeting
Journalism Studies
Chair
John E. Newhagen, U of Maryland, USA
On Addiction and Violence and Games
Game Studies
Chair
Dmitri Williams, U of Southern California, USA
Participants
Development and Validation of a Game Addiction Scale
Jeroen S Lemmens, U van Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Developing the Problematic Online Game Use [POGU] Scale: Identifying Underlying Factors and Testing
Convergent and Discriminant Validity
Joohan Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Mingyu Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
Eun Joo Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
How Violent Video Game Play and Aggressive Personality Interact to Affect Aggression: An Examination of
Competing Hypotheses
Chad Mahood, Ohio State U, USA
Babies Against Bullets: Empathy as an Intervention Technique in Violent Video Game Play
Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Marije Nije Bijvank, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Yoeri Van der Heijden, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Juliette Walma Van Der Molen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Johan F. Hoorn, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
5762
Sunday
16:30-17:45
716
Power and Value Under Neoliberalism
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Andreas Hepp, U of Bremen - IMKI, GERMANY
Participants
"Like a Bird in Lime Twigs:" On the Strange Tangle of Power and Authority in Media Research
Christopher William Anderson, Columbia U, USA
Imbibo Ergo Sum: New Belgium Brewery and the Myths of McEmpire (Joint Top Paper)
Joe Mohrfeld, Colorado State U, USA
Marc Leverette, Colorado State U, USA
Symbolic Production and Value in the Media Industries
Goran Bolin, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN
Cutting Edge Atavism: Appropriation and Control in Creative Work
Matt Stahl, Muhlenberg College, USA
Celebrating (With) Credibility: Archiving the 25th Anniversary of Celine Dion's Career in Quebec
Line Grenier, U de Montréal, CANADA
Across cultural and political production, what passes for 'value' is closely linked to dynamics of power. This panel
looks at the relations between power and value within neoliberal settings, across a range of cultural examples
including the case of media power itself
5763
Sunday
16:30-17:45
720
Histories of the Field of Communication
Communication History
Chair
Jefferson D. Pooley, Muhlenberg College, USA
Participants
Diffusion of Innovations: Evolution and Influences
Jatin Srivastava, Ohio State U, USA
Montreal, September 1968: The "Meeting of Experts" We Almost Never Heard About. Taking A Look Back…at a
Peculiar Report
François Yelle, U de Sherbrooke, CANADA
Paul Lazarsfeld as Educator and His Idea of the Social Sciences
David E. Morrison, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM
Towards an Institutional and Intellectual History of British Communication Studies (Top Paper in the Communication
History Interest Group)
Philip Lodge, Napier U, UNITED KINGDOM
Writing the Intellectual History of Intercultural Communication
Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz, U of Wisconsin - Parkside, USA
Respondent
Jefferson D. Pooley, Muhlenberg College, USA
5766
Sunday
16:30-17:45
820
Insights Into Intergroup Dynamics of Communication in Health Contexts via Leximancer
Intergroup Communication
Participants
An Analysis of Interspecialty Communication at Admission Using the Leximancer Program
David George Hewett, U of Queensland - School of Medicine, AUSTRALIA
Bernadette Maria Watson, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Michael Ward, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Barbara Leggett, Dept of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, RBWH, AUSTRALIA
Managing Clinical Handovers Effectively: What Health Professionals Say
Bernadette Maria Watson, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Liz Jones, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA
Doctor Versus Patient Perspectives on Managing Musculoskeletal Disorders: Never the Twain Shall Meet?
Susan C Baker, St Francis Xavier U, CANADA
Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Michelle Driedger, U of Manitoba, CANADA
Nancy Santesso, U of Ottawa, CANADA
Comparing the Conversational Styles of Carers and People With Schizophrenia: Can Text Analytics Technology
Really Illustrate Intergroup Dynamics?
Julia Cretchley, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Andrew Edward Smith, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Helen Chenery, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Respondent
Rick Iedema, U of Technology, AUSTRALIA
The papers presented in this panel extend our understanding of intergroup dynamics in health environments. The four
studies examine interspecialty, doctor-patient, and carer-patient interactions, using the text-mining tool Leximancer to
elicit and explore key concepts in their linguistic context. They have in common one pursuit, to explore strategies that
improve the effectiveness of interactions between patients and health practitioners. The papers also highlight the
usefulness of text analytic software in understanding these complex interactions.
5820
Sunday
18:00-19:15
Lamartine
Intercultural Communication Reception
Intercultural Communication
Chair
James W. Neuliep, St. Norbert College, USA
Intercultural Communication Reception
5821
Sunday
18:00-19:15
Kafka
5824
Sunday
18:00-19:15
Joyce
Public Relations Division Reception
Public Relations
Chair
Craig E. Carroll, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Health Communication Division Reception
Health Communication
Chair
Douglas Storey, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg, USA
All division members are invited to attend this networking session.
5830
Sunday
18:00-19:15
Salon 1
5842
Sunday
18:00-19:30
Drummond East
Political Communication Reception
Political Communication
Participants
Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Andrew Rojecki, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA
Communication and Technology /Communication Law & Policy Divisions Joint Reception
5850
Sunday
18:00-19:30
Ballroom East
Joint Reception for the Feminist Scholarship, Philosophy of Communication, Popular Communication,
Ethnicity and Race in Communication, and Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender Divisions and Interest Groups
Feminist Scholarship
Chair
Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA
Reception to meet old and new friends.
5851
Sunday
18:00-19:15
Salon 8
5860
Sunday
18:00-19:15
701
The Korean American Communication Association Reception
Sponsored Sessions
This is the official reception of the Korean American Communication Association
Journalism Studies Reception
Journalism Studies
Chair
John E. Newhagen, U of Maryland, USA
6140
Monday
08:00-11:45
Drummond West
2009 Conference Planning Meeting
Sponsored Sessions
Chair
Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Participants
Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA
Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA
Diana I. Rios, U of Connecticut, USA
Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM
Lynn A. Comella, U Nevada - Las Vegas, USA
Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA
Dennis K. Mumby, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Kristen Harrison, U of Illinois, USA
Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Myria Georgiou, Leeds U, UNITED KINGDOM
Katherine Currie Isbister, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
Richard Buttny, Syracuse U, USA
Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Indiana U, USA
Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND
Stephen D. McDowell, Florida State U, USA
Patricia A. Aufderheide, American U, USA
Walid Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Ling Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF
Margaret J. Pitts, Old Dominion U, USA
Craig E. Carroll, U of North Carolina, USA
David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA
Luc Pauwels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths College, London U, UNITED KINGDOM
Moniek Buijzen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Robert Huesca, Trinity U, USA
David B. Buller, Klein Buendel, Inc., USA
This meeting is for all division and special interest group planners for the 2009 conference in Chicago.
6210
Monday
09:00-10:15
Salon A
Advertising Structure and Effects
Mass Communication
Chair
Sheila Lodge, UHI Millenium Institute, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
*The Effects of Incongruity, Production, and Pacing on TV Advertisement (Top 4 Paper)
Hyo Jin Pak,
Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA
Repetition Effects on Exaggerated Advertising Claims
Sang Yeal Lee, West Virginia U, USA
Yong Suk Cho, Chungwoon U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
If You Feel It Now You Will Think It Later: Brand Extension Evaluations and Mood Over Time
Sela Sar, Iowa State U, USA
Brittany L. Duff, U of Minnesota, USA
George Anghelcev, U of Minnesota, USA
Television Pharmaceutical Advertising: Portrayals of Health Risks, Health-Related Perceptions, and Life Satisfaction
Yinjiao Ye, U of Rhode Island, USA
The Interaction of Websites and TV Commercials in Advertising Campaigns
Hilde Voorveld, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Peter Neijens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
6211
Monday
09:00-10:15
Salon B
Perspectives on Entertainment
Mass Communication
Chair
Sabine Trepte, Hamburg Media School, GERMANY
Participants
Media, Celebrities, and Fans: An Examination of Celebrity Worship Among Adolescents
Stella C. Chia, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Yip Ling Poo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
The Grammar of Hypertelevision: Character Multiplication and Narrative Complexity in Contemporary Television
Carlos Alberto Scolari, Fundacio U - Balmes, SPAIN
"It's Important To Be A Parent Who Parents": "Supernanny," Reality Television, and the Crisis in Postmodern Family
Life
Margaret Tally, Empire State College - SUNY, USA
Grey's Anatomy and Perceptions of Doctors: Employing Cultivation Theory as an Application of the Ecological
Model
Brian L. Quick, University of Illinois- Urbana-Champaign, USA
"Cut Me a Break!" Effects of Media and Social Pressure on Behavioral Intentions to Get Cosmetic Surgery
Maxim Polonsky, U of Connecticut, USA
Selcuk Acar, U of Connecticut, USA
Joseph Gregov, U of Connecticut, USA
6212
Monday
09:00-10:15
Salon C
Blogs, Chats, E-Mail, and Wikis
Information Systems
Chair
James Reynolds Angelini, U of Delaware, USA
Participants
Psychological Empowerment Derived From Blogging: Is It Agency or Is It Community?
Carmen Stavrositu, U of Colorado - Colorado Springs, USA
S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Who Taught Me That? Blog Structure, Information Recall, and Source Identification
Emily K. Vraga, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Stephanie Edgerly, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Ming Wang, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Social Internet Use, Trait Loneliness, and Mood Loneliness
Mu Hu, West Virginia Wesleyan College, USA
Daniel G. McDonald, Ohio State U, USA
Usefulness, Ease of Use, Attitude, and Their Interaction Effects on Usage Intention of Three Electronic Mail Systems
Julian Lin, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Chan Hock Chuan, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Cheung Wai Kin Denis, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
Incentives to Contribute in Online Collaboration: Wikipedia as Collective Action
Benjamin K. Johnson, Albany State U, USA
6220
Monday
09:00-10:15
Lamartine
Gaming, Technology, Community
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Greg F. Elmer, Ryerson U, CANADA
Participants
The Translocal and Community Media: Translocalisation as a Mirror Image of Glocalisation
Nico Carpentier, Vrije U Brussel, BELGIUM
Networked Being in the Runescape Economy: Critical Reflections on the Role of the Medium in Actor Network
Theory
Joost Van Loon, Nottingham Trent U, UNITED KINGDOM
Augmented Spaces and the Pursuit of Agonistic Democracy: A Report From the Front of Mobile Experience Design
Paula M Gardner, Ontario College of Art and Design, CANADA
Mimetic Totem, Mimetic Taboo: Adorno's Theory of Mimetic Experience and Alternate Reality Gaming
Chad J Vollrath, U of Iowa, USA
Extended Liveness and Eventfulness in Multiplatform Reality Formats
Espen Ytreberg, U of Oslo, NORWAY
What possibilities for community and social ties are enabled by new media technologies? What are the ethical
implications of such new forms of technologically dependent social connection? This panel explores such questions
through papers on gaming, urban design and alternative media.
6221
Monday
09:00-10:15
Kafka
Public Relations and the Practice: Individual, Organization, and Population-Level Perspectives
Public Relations
Chair
Bonita Dostal Neff, Valparaiso U, USA
Participants
Towards a Practice Turn in Public Relations: Conceptualizing Communication and Strategy in Real Life
Jesper Falkheimer, Lund U, SWEDEN
Mats Heide, Lund U, SWEDEN
How Ethical Do PR-Practitioners Think? Evaluation of Ethical Values and Attitudes of the Professional Field in
Germany
Guenter Bentele, U of Leipzig, GERMANY
Are Public Relations Practitioners Embracing Communication Complexity as Relational Opportunity?
Joyleen Chia, U of South Australia, AUSTRALIA
The Social Impact of Public Relations Practice: Locating Practitioners in their Social Context
Lee Edwards, Leeds Metropolitan U, UNITED KINGDOM
A Longitudinal Analysis of Mergers and Acquisitions Patterns of U.S. Public Relations Agencies Between 1984 and
2005
Eyun-Jung Ki, U of Alabama, USA
Hyoungkoo Khang, U of Florida, USA
6222
Monday
09:00-10:15
Hemon
Discursive Approaches to Organizing: Advances in Theory and Research
Organizational Communication
Chair
Kristen Lucas, U of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA
Participants
Accounting as Organizing Through Communicating: Calculating the Budget as a Complex Speech Act
Bertrand Fauré, U of Toulouse III, France, FRANCE
James R. Taylor, U de Montreal, CANADA
Genealogies as Communicative Artifacts of Organizational Community Transformation: Tracing Organizational
Form Evolution from a Community Perspective
Bettina M. Richards Heiss, U of Southern California, USA
Manager's Extended Working Hours: The Cognitive Dissonance of Institutional Expectation and Individual
Obligation
Neal William Waddell, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Bernard J. McKenna, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA
Methodological Emotional Reflexivity: On Becoming Adaptive Studying Multiple Media Use in Organizations
Keith David Munkejord, Norwegian U of Science and Technology (NTNU), NORWAY
Respondent
Boris H. J. M. Brummans, U of Montreal, CANADA
6223
Monday
09:00-10:15
Jarry
Insights Into the Future of Journalism
Journalism Studies
Chair
Esra Ayse Ozcan, Jacobs U - Bremen, GERMANY
Participants
High School Journalists as Young Citizens
Lynn Schofield Clark, U of Denver, USA
Rachel Marie Monserrate, U of Denver, USA
The Media Logic of Journalism
Mark Deuze, Indiana U, USA
Bloggers, Journalists, and Credentialism: Questioning the "Seriousness" of the DC Cocktail Weenie Circuit
Thomas B. Hove, U of Georgia, USA
The Two Professionalisms of Journalism: Updating Journalism Research for the 21st Century
Henrik Ornebring, Oxford U, UNITED KINGDOM
Respondent
Thorsten Quandt, Free U - Berlin, GERMANY
Deliberation on the future of journalism tends to either emphasize rapid and dramatic change or point to the stability
of the news core despite technological, commercial, and global shifts in the news landscape. Both these perspectives
tend to be disconnected from the daily realities of the journalistic workplace, and often ignore empirical work on
future generations of news professionals. This session brings together researchers who articulate the necessary key
elements for rethinking journalism and its (future) role in society.
6224
Monday
09:00-10:15
Joyce
Traditional and Online Sources of Social Support
Health Communication
Chair
Godfrey Steele, U of The West Indies, JAMAICA
Participants
Cognitive and Emotional Effects of Breast Cancer Survivor Testimonies
Glenn M. Leshner, U of Missouri, USA
Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Jensen Joann Moore, U of Missouri, USA
Sara Peters, U of Missouri, USA
Anastasia Kononova, U of Missouri, USA
Rachel L. Bailey, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Elizabeth Gardner, U of Missouri, USA
Kevin Wise, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Supportive Communication in the Context of Miscarriage: Rationale for a Research Agenda
Erina L. MacGeorge, Purdue U, USA
Kristi Lee Chopski Wilkum, Purdue U, USA
Barriers Impeding Support: The Experiences of People With Bipolar Disorder
Eileen Doherty, Purdue U, USA
Erina L. MacGeorge, Purdue U, USA
Online Social Support for Cancer and the Impact of Cancer Survival Rate and Community Host
Lorraine R. Buis, Veterans Affairs HSR and D, USA
6230
Monday
09:00-10:15
Salon 1
Online Participation
Political Communication
Chair
Mira Sotirovic, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
Participants
Politics as Friendship: The Impact of Online Social Networks on Young Voters' Political Behavior
Young Mie Kim, Ohio State U, USA
Nicholas W. Geidner, Ohio State U, USA
Online Infotainment: Exploring Incidental Exposure to Political Information on the Internet
Jocelyn Ilana Landau, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Rational Media Choice: A Utility Theory Approach to Explaining Online and Offline Political Communication
Martin J. Emmer, Technical U - Illmenau, GERMANY
Jens Wolling, Ludwig-Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY
Markus Seifert, Technical U of Ilmenau, GERMANY
Gerhard Vowe, DGPuk-Deutsche Gesellschaft fur PublizistikBowling Online, Not Alone: The Role of Online Social Capital in Promoting Political Participation
Deborah Ying Ying Ng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Marko M. Skoric, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
6232
Monday
09:00-10:15
Salon 3
Wikis for Politics
Political Communication
Participants
Collaboration and Conflict in Wikis
Daniel Cosley, Cornell U, USA
Measuring Deliberation in Wikipedia Policy Discussions
Laura W. Black, Ohio U, USA
Ted Welser, Ohio U, USA
Mediated Deliberation? The Role of the Communication Platform in Mediating Political Discourse
Dmitry Epstein, Cornell U, USA
Politics 2.0: Agenda-Setting in New Media Contexts
Joshua Braun, Cornell U, USA
Respondent
Tarleton L. Gillespie, Cornell U, USA
Can wikis be useful tools for politics? The demonstrative success of Wikipedia has provoked some to ask if wikis
might support political deliberation. This panel will tackle the question, by examining several dimensions of their
design and use that could shape, propagate, or derail efforts to do politics on a wiki platform. These include the
management of conflict in wiki-organized communities, both around the production of content and around the
governance of the wiki itself; the way the technological affordances of wiki tools may shape the political discourse
that can emerge through them; and the problem of whether the agenda-setting tendencies of mass media, which are
often imagined to no longer apply in online contexts, are nevertheless reintroduced by the participants themselves.
These papers draw both on analysis of collaborative practices in Wikipedia itself and in WikiCandidate, a site
designed expressly to test the possibility of facilitating political deliberation using the wiki platform.
6233
Monday
09:00-10:15
Salon 4
Gendered Gazing and International Representations
Feminist Scholarship
Popular Communication
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA
Participants
Beyond the Virgin/Vamp Binary: Constructions of Female Sexuality by North Indian Women in the Context of
Changing Representations of Women in Commercial Hindi Cinema
Purnima Mehrotra, U of Kentucky, USA
Feminist Epistemologies of Ignorance: Deconstructing the Media's Words About Eva Lokko
Doreen Vivian Kutufam, Carroll College, USA
Racializing "the Male Gaze": Images of Black Women in American Cinema
Demetria Rougeaux Shabazz, U of Massachusetts, USA
The Traitor and the Hedonist: The Mythology of Motherhood in Two New Zealand Child Abuse Cases
Linda Jean Kenix, U of Canterbury, NEW ZEALAND
6234
Monday
09:00-10:15
Salon 5
Celebrity Culture: From Stars to Fans
Popular Communication
Chair
C. Lee Harrington, Miami U - Ohio, USA
Participants
Star Testing: The Emerging Politics of Celebrity Consumption
Julie Ann Wilson, U of Minnesota, USA
Frozen in Time: Gender, Fan Culture, and a Young Widow's Icy Terrain
Christine Scodari, Florida Atlantic U, USA
"Stored Before an Online Audience": When Ordinary People Become Media Personas
Lars Holmgaard Christensen, Aalborg U, DENMARK
Parasocial and Social Interaction With Celebrities: Classification of Media Fans
Gayle S Stever, Arizona State U, USA
What to Think About and What to Search About: A Time-Series Analysis of Agenda-Setting Function of Traditional
Media on Public Interest on the Internet
Yongick Jeong, Louisiana State U, USA
6241
Monday
09:00-10:15
Drummond Centre
Race and Gender Effects in Technology Use
Communication and Technology
Chair
Rosa Mikeal Martey, Colorado State U, USA
Participants
Online Communication and Gender: A Case Study of an Online Discussion Board for Korean Daughters-in-law
Wonsun Shin, U of Minnesota, USA
Who's Got the Phone? The Gendered Use of Telephones at the Bottom of the Pyramid
Rohan Samarajiva, LIRNEasia, SRI LANKA
Zainab Ayesha Zainudeen, LIRNEasia, SRI LANKA
Tahani Iqbal, Researcher, LIRNEasia, SRI LANKA
Dimuthu Ratnadiwakara, Researcher, LIRNEasia, SRI LANKA
Race as a Real and Virtual Social Identity: The Moderating Effects of Ethnic Identity on Ingroup Favoritism Toward
Real vs. Virtual Human Representations
Li Gong, SAP Labs, USA
Osei Appiah, Ohio State U, USA
Troy Elias, Ohio State U, USA
Positive and Negative Effects of Facial Similarity in Virtual Environments
Henriette Christine Van Vugt, Vrije U, THE NETHERLANDS
Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA
Johan F. Hoorn-Konyn, Free U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
6242
Monday
09:00-10:15
Drummond East
Global Flows and Networks
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Participants
Bollywood Cinema at the Crossroads: Tracking the Dialectics of Globalization in Postcolonial Indian Cinema
David J. Schaefer, Franciscan U - Steubenville, USA
Kavita Karan, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Foreign Language Films Among Young Americans: A Study of Exposure and Attitude
Haijing Tu, U of Massachusetts - Amherst, USA
Mapping the Transformation of the U.S. Latino Television Field
Viviana C. Rojas, U of Texas - San Antonio, USA
Juan Pinon, New York U, USA
Media Imperialism Waned? The Cultural Politics of Korean Wave in East Asia
Siho Nam, U of North Florida, USA
The Structure of International Music Flows Using Network Analysis
Shinil Moon, SUNY Buffalo, USA
George A. Barnett, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Yon Soo Lim, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Network Analysis of International Film Trade Structure
Jae Eun Chung, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA
6244
Monday
09:00-10:15
Salon 7
Communicating Across Borders: The Implications of Changes in the Global Communications Environment for
Public Diplomacy
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Eytan Gilboa, Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL
Participants
Contested Airwaves: A Comparative Analysis of the Organizational Goals and Operations of Al-Hurra and Al-Jazeera
Shawn Powers, U of Southern California, USA
Of Tension and Trust: Reconsidering the 'Kennedy Experiment' of 1963
John Robert Kelley, U of Southern California, USA
Coordination and Control: Mapping United States Government Global Media Strategies
Amelia Hardee Arsenault, U of Southern California, USA
Frame Competition in Arab Media: Argument Analysis of Media Frames and Their Potential for U.S. Public
Diplomacy
Craig Hayden, U of Southern California, USA
Respondent
Monroe E. Price, U of Pennsylvania, USA
This panel examines how changes in the global media sphere have impacted the form, practice, and academic study of
public diplomacy. It reflects the 2008 conference theme by exploring the potential of public diplomacy efforts to
ameliorate cross-cultural tensions. Empirical studies examine how traditional government actors attempt to influence
the form and content of media flows across borders in service of public diplomacy goals and how this process is
complicated by the proliferation of media platforms and non-traditional public diplomacy actors.
6310
Monday
10:30-11:45
Salon A
Exploring Media Bias
Mass Communication
Chair
R. Lance Holbert, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
Does the Audience Matter? An Empirical Examination of the Hostile Media Effect
Marco Dohle, U of Duesseldorf, GERMANY
Tilo Hartmann, Vrije Universiteit - Amsterdam, GERMANY
Testing the Hostile Media Effect Under Selective Exposure
Anna-Maria Mende, Dresden U of Technology, GERMANY
Assimilation and Contrast in the Hostile Media Effect
Albert C. Gunther, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Nicole E Miller, UW-Madison, USA
The Nature of Reach and Perceptions of Media Bias in an Online Context
Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Pei Ying Chew, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Pearly Quek, Millward Brown Singapore, SINGAPORE
Derek Tan, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Ping Lonn Tay, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Sins of the Father: Does Scandalous News Undermine Social Trust?
Tim Groeling, U of California - Los Angeles, USA
Jeffrey Linneman, U of California - Los Angeles, USA
6311
Monday
10:30-11:45
Salon B
Race and the Media
Mass Communication
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Chair
Linda Jean Kenix, U of Canterbury, NEW ZEALAND
Participants
In Search of the African American Audience
Emory H. Woodard, Villanova U, USA
Hegemony, Hedonism, and Hip-Hop: An Examination of the Portrayal of Race and Sexuality in Music Videos
Jacob Stephen Turner, Bowling Green State U, USA
Dark Black Rap and Bright White Rock: Effects of Radical Music on Support of Ethnic Groups
Heather LaMarre, Ohio State U, USA
Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA
An Ethnic Hierarchy of News Effects
Christopher E. Beaudoin, Tulane U, USA
6312
Monday
10:30-11:45
Salon C
Hybrid Film Formats: East Meets West?
Visual Communication Studies
Chair
Michael Griffin, Carleton College, USA
Participants
Black Sunday: Hollywood Counterterrorism in the Post-Vietnam Era
Jason Grant McKahan, Shepherd U, USA
China Under Western Gazes: Visual Rhetoric in a Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Promotional Film
Ying Huang, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA
New Directions in Hybrid Popular Television: A Reassessment of Television Mock-Documentary
Jelle Mast, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM
Documenting Melodrama: Hybridity and Nationalism in Korean Reality TV
Kyoung-Lae Kang, U of Rochester, USA
Contemporary filmic experience as well as film production merge formerly separated formats into new hybrid film
formats. The emphasis of this session is on the diversity and hybridity of film formats, ranging from Hollywood to
Beijing, from Dutch TV-mock documentaries to Korean reality TV. Are 'Western' and 'Eastern' formats converging in
a globally hybrid film format?
6320
Monday
10:30-11:45
Lamartine
Filling in the Blanks: Phenomenological Approaches to Embodied Mediation
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Margaret Mackenzie Schwartz, U of Iowa, USA
Participants
Space is the Place: Globalization and the New Phenomenological Media of Objects
Joshua Shepperd, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Leaky Minds and Mediation: Moving Embodied Cognition into Media Studies
Peter D. Schaefer, U of Iowa, USA
Death Becomes Her: The Embalmed Corpse as Archive
Margaret Mackenzie Schwartz, U of Iowa, USA
Respondent
Paddy Scannell, U of Michigan, USA
This panel provides a forum for new research on the phenomenology of media. Phenomenological analysis allows for
a unique consideration of the temporal, subjective and ontological elements of media texts and media objects.
Research is conducted with regard to practice of phenomenological reduction, which allows the media scholar to
seriously interrogate the question of being as it is related to the space of consumption and media objects themselves.
This panel is fortunate to include Professor Paddy Scannell, widely recognized as the authority on phenomenology of
media, as a respondent to the presenters' research.
6321
Monday
10:30-11:45
Kafka
Emotion, Well-Being, and Self-Esteem
Interpersonal Communication
Chair
Walid Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Participants
A Two-Dimensional Theory of Esteem Support Messages
Amanda J. Holmstrom, Michigan State U, USA
Sense of Well-Being in the New Location: The Importance of Social Ties
Irina A. Shklovski, U of California - Irvine, USA
Robert E. Kraut, Carnegie Mellon U, USA
Jonathon Cummings, Duke U, USA
Effects of Friendship Support and Friendship Strain on Positive Affect, Negative Affect, and Psychological WellBeing Across the Life Span
Amanda Goodwin, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Katie Stump, U of Kansas, USA
Hesitation to Share Bad News Between Friends and Strangers: Self-Presentation and Emotion-Centered Reasons for
the MUM Effect
Jayson Lee Dibble, Michigan State U, USA
Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA
Respondent
Walid Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
6322
Monday
10:30-11:45
Hemon
Constructing the Employee: Multiple Approaches to Workplace Communication
Organizational Communication
Chair
Shawn Long
Participants
All We Need is a Motive: Examining the Appropriateness of Various Motivations for Anonymous Communication in
the Workplace
Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA
Cybervetting (Potential) Employees: An Emerging Area of Study for Organizational Communication
Brenda L. Berkelaar, Purdue U, USA
Employees' Responses to Implementation of Smoke-Free Workforce Policy
Hee Sun Park, Michigan State U, USA
Elizabeth Jean Dalsey, NIOSH, USA
Doshik Yun, Michigan State U, USA
Xiaowen Guan, Michigan State U, USA
Justin Andrew Cherry, Michigan State U, USA
The Effects of Coworker Relational Maintenance Strategies on Employee Outcomes
Paul E Madlock, West Virginia U, USA
Melanie Booth-Butterfield, West Virginia U, USA
Respondent
Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas - Austin, USA
6323
Monday
10:30-11:45
Jarry
Values in the News
Journalism Studies
Mass Communication
Chair
Isabel Awad, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Participants
The Ironic Hero of Virginia Tech: Healing Trauma Through Collective Memory of the Holocaust
Daniel A. Berkowitz, U of Iowa, USA
The Unambiguous Deviance in a Fluid Reality: The Changing Frames of Homicide Reporting
Tuomo Mörä, U of Helsinki, FINLAND
Leena Mäkipää, U of Helsinki, FINLAND
Faith and Values: Journalism and the Critique of Religion Coverage of the 1990s
Frederick E. Vultee, Wayne State U, USA
Matthew Velker, U of Missouri, USA
Stephanie L. Craft, U of Missouri, USA
"This is a Workfree Smokeplace": Public Policy Change and the Resilience of Cultural Frames
Robert Lyle Handley, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Respondent
Denis McQuail, U of Southampton, UNITED KINGDOM
The four papers of this session touch on diverse news topics including religion, smoking bans, and homicide. Yet,
they all demonstrate the construction and maintenance of society-specific moral values through news coverage in
different parts of the world.
6324
Monday
10:30-11:45
Joyce
Preventing HIV/AIDS in Africa and the Caribbean
Health Communication
Chair
Jennifer Monahan, U of Georgia, USA
Participants
AIDS Communication, HIV Prevention, and HIV Infections Averted in South Africa, 2006
D. Lawrence Kincaid, Johns Hopkins U, USA
People Who Need People: The Impact of Social Capital on HIV-related Actions as Mediated by Self and Proxy
Efficacies in Namibia
Rachel A. Smith, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Rajiv N. Rimal, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Evaluating an HIV/AIDS Prevention Campaign in Trinidad and Tobago: Rethinking the Interpersonal and MassMediated Communication Link
Godfrey Steele, U of The West Indies, JAMAICA
Strategic Communication for HIV/AIDS Prevention in the Caribbean
Nancy W. Muturi, Kansas State U, USA
Godfrey Steele, U of The West Indies, JAMAICA
6330
Monday
10:30-11:45
Salon 1
Using Online Media for Civic Engagement
Political Communication
Chairs
Seungahn Nah, U of Kentucky, USA
Jens Erich Tenscher, U of Koblenz - Landau, GERMANY
Participants
Internet Radio and Radical Democratic Citizenship: The Experience of Hong Kong
Ka Kuen Leung, Chinese U - Hong Kong, HONG KONG
New Political Cyber-Associations: MoveOn.org as a Form of American Social Capital
Betty Houchin Winfield, U of Missouri, USA
Jeongsub Lim, Austin Peay State U, USA
Nicholas Leonard, U of Missouri, USA
User-Generated Online Video and the Atlantic Canadian Public Sphere: A YouTube Study
Mary Milliken, National Research Council of Canada, CANADA
Kerri L Gibson, National Research Council and the U of New Brunswick, CANADA
Susan O'Donnell, National Research Council, CANADA
Janice Singer, National Research Council of Canada, CANADA
"Wikipedia is Not a Democracy": Deliberation and Policy-Making in an Online Community
Laura W. Black, Ohio U, USA
Ted Welser, Ohio U, USA
Jocelyn M DeGroot, Ohio U, USA
Daniel Cosley, Cornell U, USA
6332
Monday
10:30-11:45
Salon 3
Performing Race: From the Radio to the World Wide Web
Ethnicity and Race in Communication
Communication History
Chair
Joshua Miller, U of Michigan, USA
Participants
Generational Shifts in Media Consumption Among U.S. Latinos: Mobility, Education, and Education
Jeremiah P. Spence, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Independent U.S. Latino Cinema (1980-1985): On the Margins
Henry Puente, California State U - Fullerton, USA
Racializing Feminist Film Theory and "the Male Gaze": Images of Black Women in American Cinema
Demetria Rougeaux Shabazz, U of Massachusetts, USA
Representation and Participation of First Nations Women in Online Videos
Sonja Perley, U of New Brunswick, CANADA
Racist Ideology and Black Characters on Early Radio: The Subsersive "Marriage" of Jack Benny and Rochester
Michael John Laramee, U of Miami, USA
6333
Monday
10:30-11:45
Salon 4
Feminist Voices in Media Analysis
Feminist Scholarship
Chair
Megan Biddinger, U of Michigan, USA
Participants
Politics of Gender Representation: A Comparative Study on Differences Between Gender Presentations in News
Coverage and the Female Candidate's Web site
Yonghwan Kim, U of Texas - Austin, USA
TV for Women?: The Confounding Case of Oxygen Media
Karen Allison Sichler, U of Georgia, USA
Equal Access - Equal Use? Internet Use at Homes of Couples
Julia Ahrens, U of Lueneburg, GERMANY
Newsqueens? A Comparative Analysis of Women's Roles in Network News
Kathleen M. Ryan, U of Oregon, USA
Hillary Lake, U of Oregon, USA
Joy Chavez Mapaye, U of Alaska, U of Oregon, USA
6334
Monday
10:30-11:45
Salon 5
New Technologies, New Texts? Technlogical Change and Popular Communication
Popular Communication
Chair
Virginia Anne Nightingale, U of Western Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Participants
Pop Songs, Text Messages, and Lessons: Media Culture in Everyday Life at School
Caroline Dover, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM
"TV or Not TV": Bloggers Discuss Television Nonusage
Michele Rosenthal, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Yoram M. Kalman, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Rivka Ribak, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Most Popular News: The Selection of Most Popular Online News Content With Interactive Story Tools
Chad Tew, U of Southern Indiana, USA
How the iPhone Became Divine: Bloggers, Religion, and Intertextuality
Heidi Ann Campbell, Texas A&M U, USA
Antonio C LaPastina, Texas A&M U, USA
Turntablism as a Subculture of Defiance: How Subverting Musical and Technological Hegemony Reappropriates the
Essence of Hip-Hop Culture
Andre Gilman Sirois, U of Oregon, USA
6341
Monday
10:30-11:45
Drummond Centre
Psychology of Technology Adoption
Communication and Technology
Chair
J. Richard Stevens, Southern Methodist U, USA
Participants
Acceptance of Third-Generation (3G) Mobile Services in Singapore: Decomposing Perceived Critical Mass and
Subjective Norms * (TOP FACULTY PAPER IN CAT)
Hichang Cho, National U - Singapore, SINGAPORE
Framing The Adoption Of Electronic Patient Health Records (PHR): A Randomized Experiment
Arun Vishwanath, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Adoption and Use of Computer-Based VoIP Phone Service: Toward an Integrated Model
Namkee Park, U of Oklahoma, USA
The Anticipated Adoption of Ambient Intelligent Appliances in Domestic Settings
Somaya Ben Allouch, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente / Cubicus / GW / CW, THE NETHERLANDS
Oscar Peters, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS
The Contribution of Online News Attributes to its Diffusion: An Empirical Exploration Based on a Proposed
Theoretical Model for the Microprocess of Online News Adoption/Use
An Duc Nguyen, U of Stirling, UNITED KINGDOM
6342
Monday
10:30-11:45
Drummond East
Digital Inclusion and Exclusion
Communication and Technology
Chair
David J. Schaefer, Franciscan U - Steubenville, USA
Participants
What's Meant by Digital Inclusion? An Interrogation of Municipal Broadband Policy in the City of San Francisco
Seeta Pena Gangadharan, Stanford U, USA
Who's Responsible for the Digital Divide? Public Perceptions and Policy Implications
Dmitry Epstein, Cornell U, USA
Erik C. Nisbet, Cornell U, USA
An Examination of the Communicative Behaviors and Digital Divides Among the Deaf
Elizabeth Karras
Pauline Cheong, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Code Blue: A Proposed Code of Conduct for Bloggers in the Context of Media Self-Regulation and a Civil Society
Gwen Lisa Shaffer, Temple U, USA
Telecentres and Cyber Cafés: A Case for ICT in Small Business
Nimmi Rangaswamy, Microsoft Research Labs India, INDIA
6344
Monday
10:30-11:45
Salon 7
Media Issues of Citizenship, Environment, and Health
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA
Participants
A Critical Review of the Participatory Potential in Media for Social Change
Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas, USA
Access to Broadcasting: Community Radio and Radio Communities
Kate Coyer, Central European U/U of Pennsylvania, USA
Deconstructing the Articulation of Social Change and HIV/AIDS Discourses in an Indian AIDS Campaign
Purba Das, Washington State U, USA
Jeffery C Peterson, Washington State U, USA
Putting the Earth Into International Communication: Towards a Cultural Approach to Media, Globalization, and the
Environment
Patrick D. Murphy, Southern Illinois U - Edwardsville, USA
Teaching Democracy? Exploring the Effects of Civic Education Programs in New Democracies
Jocelyn Ilana Landau, U of Pennsylvania, USA
Respondent
Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA
6410
Monday
12:00-13:15
Salon A
New Directions in Third Person Effects Research
Mass Communication
Chair
Scott A. Reid, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
Participants
Third-Person Perception as an Impression Management Tactic
Nurit Talor, U of Haifa, ISRAEL
Dorit Drukman, Dep. of Communication, U of Haifa, Israel, ISRAEL
Terror Management Theory and the Third-Person Effect
Laramie D. Taylor, U of California - Davis, USA
Third Person Effect, Mental Illness Stereotyping, and Responses to News Coverage of the Virginia Tech Shootings
Cynthia A. Hoffner, Georgia State U, USA
Yuki Fujioka, Georgia State U, USA
Elizabeth L. Cohen, Georgia State U, USA
Anita Atwell-Seate, Georgia State U, USA
For Us Only?: Perceiving Bias in Black Entertainment
Omotayo Banjo, Pennsylvania State U, USA
6411
Monday
12:00-13:15
Salon B
Sex and the Media
Mass Communication
Chair
Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin - Madison, USA
Participants
Risky Sex on Entertainment Television: Comparing Audience Responses to Different Types of Negative
Consequence Portrayals
Keli L. Finnerty, Pepperdine U, USA
Comparing the Persuasive Effects of Entertainment-Education and Educational Programming on Risky Sexual
Behavior
Emily J. Moyer-Guse, Ohio State U, USA
Robin Nabi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA
A Content Analysis of Youth Sexualized Language and Imagery in Adult Film, 1995-2007
Robin E. Jensen, Purdue U, USA
A Picture is Worth Twenty Words (about the Self): Testing the Priming Influence of Visual Sexual Objectification on
Women's Self-Objectification
Jennifer Stevens Aubrey, U of Missouri, USA
Jayne R. Henson, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Megan Hopper, U of Missouri, USA
Siobhan E. Smith, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
*Adolescents' Exposure to Sexually Explicit Internet Material and Notions of Women as Sex Objects: Assessing
Causality and Underlying Processes (Top 4 Paper)
Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
6412
Monday
12:00-13:15
Salon C
High Density Session: Exploring Methods, Measures & Analyses
Information Systems
Chair
David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, U of Alabama, USA
Participants
An Urban Communication Audit: Measuring Aspects of a "Communicative City"
Leo W. Jeffres, Cleveland State U, USA
A Spatial Analysis of Hazard Proximity, Information Processing, and Risk Perception
Craig Trumbo, Colorado State U, USA
Modeling Cognitive Perception and Memory: A Dynamic, Embodied Approach to Television Viewing
E. N. Siegrist, Texas State U, USA
Wendy A. Maxian, Texas Tech U, USA
Jaimie M. Hardesty, Ohio State U, USA
David Andrew Hutchinson, Northeastern U, USA
Samuel D. Bradley, Texas Tech U, USA
Cautions in the Interpretation of Coefficients and Hypothesis Tests From Linear Models With Interactions
Andrew F. Hayes, Ohio State U, USA
Carroll J. Glynn, Ohio State U, USA
Michael E. Huge, The Ohio State U, USA
Proposal of Photographic Image Categorization According to the Quality and the Emotions Perceived by the User
David Fonseca, La Salle U, SPAIN
Andrés Fernández, Eng. and Arch. La Salle, SPAIN
Oscar García, Eng. and Arch. La Salle, SPAIN
Lie Acceptability: A Construct and Measure
Carrie Marie Oliveira, East Tennessee State U, USA
Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA
Attending to Television: Linking Cardiac Deceleration and Controlled Attention
Jessica D. Freeman, Texas State U, USA
E. N. Siegrist, Texas State U, USA
Wes Wise, Texas Tech U, USA
Wendy A. Maxian, Texas Tech U, USA
Kelli R. Brown, Texas State U, USA
Brandon H. Nutting, Texas State U, USA
Samuel D. Bradley, Texas Tech U, USA
Heart Rate Variability Analysis Suggests a Reinterpretation of Cardiac Responses During Media Messages
Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA
Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Jacob Koruth, Indiana U, USA
Kevin Wise, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Rachel L. Bailey, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA
Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA
6420
Monday
12:00-13:15
Lamartine
Textures of the Public Sphere
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Ingrid Volkmer, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA
Participants
Political News Media Interviews as Agonistic Encounters
Geoffrey A. Craig, U of Otago, NEW ZEALAND
Strategic Ambiguity, Reframing, and Spin: The Social Impact of Language
David Haldane Lee, U of South Florida, USA
The Politics of Numbers: Enumeration as Communication
Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas - Austin, USA
The Informal and the Institutionalized Dimensions of the Public Sphere
Thomas B. Hove, U of Georgia, USA
Speech Without Rights: The Status of Public Space on the Internet
Laura Stein, U of Texas - Austin, USA
Many fear for the future of the public sphere, both in its traditional and online forms. This panel covers both specific
concerns (from the role of statistics to staged debates to political 'spin') to broader debates about the institutional and
legal basis of a possible public sphere.
6421
Monday
12:00-13:15
Kafka
Government Public Relations and Public Diplomacy: Old and New Directions
Public Relations
Chair
Juan-Carlos Molleda, U of Florida, USA
Participants
Winning American Hearts and Minds: Country Characteristics, Public Relations, and Mass Media
Xiuli Wang, Syracuse U, USA
Testing the Government Communication Decision Wheel: Toward a New Theory of Government Public Relations
Brooke Fisher Liu, DePaul U, USA
Abbey Levenshus, American U, USA
What Drives Political Activity in College Students? An Application of the Situational Theory of Publics
Lucinda Austin, U of Maryland, College Park, USA
Erik Halvorson, U of Maryland College Park, USA
Relational Approach to Public Diplomacy: Testing Applicability of Organization-Public Relationship Measures
Between the U.S. Embassy in Seoul and South Korean College Students
Hyung Min Lee, Uof Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
Jong Woo Jun, U of Florida, USA
6422
Monday
12:00-13:15
Hemon
Current Research on Network-Based Approaches to Organizational Communication
Organizational Communication
Chair
Edward T. Palazzolo, Arizona State U, USA
Participants
A Multitheoretical Network Perspective on Organizational Member's Information Retrieval From Human and Digital
Knowledge Repositories
Chunke Su, U of Texas - Arlington, USA
Communication Networks and Productivity: Rewiring Low Productivity Units' Networks to Match High Productivity
Units' Networks
James A. Danowski, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA
Ken Riopelle, Wayne State U, USA
Julia Gluesing, Wayne State U, USA
Scott Blow, Ford Motor Company, USA
Mark Ferencz, Ford Motor Company, USA
Fred Hallway, Ford Motor Company, USA
Mark Henry, Ford Motor Company, USA
Shawn McClain, Ford Motor Company, USA
Spheres of Influence: Dissent Networks at Enron
Johny T. Garner, Pepperdine U, USA
Amanda K. Leahy, Pepperdine U, USA
Rachel A. Rubenstein, Pepperdine U, USA
Krista Templeton, Pepperdine U, USA
The Evolutionary Stability of Network Links: Building Blocks for a Network Theory
Drew Margolin, U of Southern California, USA
Transactional vs. Interactive Knowledge Sharing: A Theory of Interorganizational Knowledge Networks
Lu Tang, U of Tennessee - Knoxville, USA
6423
Monday
12:00-13:15
Jarry
News and Politics
Journalism Studies
Political Communication
Chair
Erik P. Bucy, Indiana U, USA
Participants
The First Television Diplomats: Changing Media and Political Landscapes on Mexican Television News, 1959
Celeste Gonzalez De Bustamante, U of Arizona, USA
Is the President Setting Media's Agenda?: A Semantics-Based Analysis of State of the Union Addresses and
Accompanying Newspaper Coverage
Ying Roselyn Du, U of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA
Leaning to the Right or Leaning to the Left? Dutch Media and Politics
Janet Takens, Vrije U – Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Nel Ruigrok, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Anita M. J. van Hoof, Vrije U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Otto Scholten, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Power and Affiliation in Presidential Press Conferences: A Study on Interruptions, Jokes, and Laughter
Mats Erik Ekstrom, Orebro U, SWEDEN
Respondent
Kathleen Hall Jamieson, U of Pennsylvania, USA
The group of papers in this session examines symbiosis as well as tensions in the relationship between politicians and
journalists. Three papers focus on presidential coverage in Latin America and/or the U.S. while one paper examines
general election coverage in the Netherlands.
6424
Monday
12:00-13:15
Joyce
Talk it Up: Multiplying Campaign Effects Through Interpersonal Discussion
Health Communication
Chair
Melanie Booth-Butterfield, West Virginia U, USA
Participants
Interpersonal Discussion as an Amplifier of Campaign Effects: Experience From a Microcredit Loan Program to
Promote HIV Prevention and Financial Independence Among Women in Malawi
Rajiv N. Rimal, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Amelia Greiner, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Jane Brown, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Kirsten Patricia Bose, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Lisa Folda, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Josephine Mkandawier, Johns Hopkins U, USA
Scott Graham, FINCA International, USA
Talking and Planning to Talk About Health Messages: Effects of Anticipated and Actual Conversations on Attitudes
and Message Recall
John G. Wirtz, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA
Talking About Drug Prevention…Ads: Adolescent Responses to Interpersonal Discussion About Drug Prevention
Media Campaign Messages
Eusebio Martins Alvaro, Claremont Graduate U, USA
William D. Crano, Claremont Graduate U, USA
Jason T Siegel, Claremont Graduate U, USA
Joseph Grandpre, Wyoming Department of Health, USA
Claude Miller, U of Oklahoma, USA
Designing Messages to Stimulate Conversations: The Use of Rhetorical Figures
Hans Hoeken, Radboud U - Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS
6430
Monday
12:00-13:15
Salon 1
Family, Gender, and Race
Political Communication
Chair
Debra Burns Melican, U of Michigan, USA
Participants
Changing Images and Issues in U.S. Media Portrayal of Jesse Jackson and Barack Obama
Uyanga Bazaa
Christopher Brott, U of Kansas, USA
Denzyl Janneker, U of Kansas, USA
Tien-Tsung Lee, U of Kansas, USA
Soleak Seang, U of Kansas, USA
Jesse Skinner, U of Kansas, USA
Abigail Jeanette Stutzer, U of Kansas, USA
Gender Differences In News Media Use And Their Political Implications
Mira Sotirovic, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
The Role of Family Interaction in New Immigrant Latinos? Civic Engagement
Holley A. Wilkin, Georgia State U, USA
Vikki Sara Katz, U of Southern California, USA
Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA
Race, Poverty, and Causal Attributions: Media Framing of the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina
Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington U, USA
6432
Monday
12:00-13:15
Salon 3
Global Issues in Intercultural Communicaton
Intercultural Communication
Chair
Carmen M. Lee, Michigan State U, USA
Participants
Assessing Cultural Difference in Translation-Based Communication: Semantic Network Analysis of Multilingual
Translations of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Kyounghee Kwon, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
George A. Barnett, SUNY - Buffalo, USA
Global Theatrical Consumption of Hollywood Films: Homogenization and Cultural Determination
Wayne Fu, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
Achikannoo Govindaraju, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE
'Beam Me Down Scottie': The Dislocated Worker at the Interstices of Global Trade and Global Culture
Juliette Storr, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Respondent
Carmen M. Lee, Michigan State U, USA
6433
Monday
12:00-13:15
Salon 4
Digital Television, Media Reform
Communication Law & Policy
Chair
Patricia A. Aufderheide, American U, USA
Participants
Industry vs. Democracy: The "Audiovisual Media Services Directive" and the Future of European Media Policy
Mirjam Gollmitzer, Simon Fraser U, CANADA
Political Economy of Media Reform in Taiwan and South Korea in the 1990s: With a Focus on the Development of
Cable Television
Jae Eun Chung, U of Southern California, USA
Good Practices in Digital TV Development: Exploring Digital Programming Strategies of Broadcasters *TOP
THREE PAPER
Eun-A Park, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Exploring the Evolution of Digital Television in China: An Interplay Between Economic and Political Interests
Tuen Yu Lau, Stanford, USA
Guangchao Feng, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE
David J. Atkin, U of Connecticut, USA
Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA
Numerous individual countries and regions are facing media reform initiatives and transitioning to new, digital
broadcast systems. These papers profile some of the tensions created by new conceptualizations of the significance of
information and media and by new technologies.
6434
Monday
12:00-13:15
Salon 5
Media and Social Change: Transforming Self and Communities
Popular Communication
Philosophy of Communication
Chair
Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM
Participants
Oprah.com: Lifestyle Expertise and the Politics of Recognition
Peter Lunt, Brunel U, UNITED KINGDOM
Tania Lewis, Monash U, AUSTRALIA
The Soccer Myth: An Investigation of Soccer's Imagined Potential for Social Change
Floris Mueller, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Liesbet Van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Culture Jamming and Resistance in the Life World: Promoting Critical Postures in Public Spheres
William H Lawson, Florida State U, USA
T-Shirts are Good for Thinking: Branding, Consumption, and Radical Political Identity
Laura Louise Portwood-Stacer, U of Southern California, USA
Get Voting or Die Trying Not To, Bitch: On Apathy, Douches, and Turds
Marc Leverette, Colorado State U, USA
6440
Monday
12:00-13:15
Drummond West
Game Studies High Density Paper Session
Game Studies
Chair
Kenneth Alan Lachlan, Boston College, USA
Participants
Abstracting the Real City
Zeynep Tanes, Purdue U, USA
Zeynep Cemalcilar, Koc U, TURKEY
Exploring the Complex Relationships Between Player Performance, Self-Esteem Processes, and Video Game
Enjoyment
Christoph Klimmt, Johannes Gutenberg U - Mainz, GERMANY
Dorothee Hefner, Hanover U of Music and Drama, GERMANY
Peter Vorderer, VU University Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS
Christian Roth, Hannover U of Music and Drama, GERMANY
The Third-Person Effect and Online Game-Play
Zhijin Zhong, City U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG
Mediated Enactive Experience: A Sociocognitive Approach to Analyze the Effects of Playing Serious Games
Wei Peng, Michigan State U, USA
Presence, Arousal, and Memory in 3D Games - Effects of Blood Color, Sound and Perspective on Gamers' Arousal,
Presence, and Memory
Eui Jun Jeong, Michigan State U, USA
Frank Biocca, Michigan State U, USA
Corey Bohil, MINDLab, USA
A Meta-Analytic Review of Video/Computer Game Play on Short-Term Cognitive Performance
Christopher D Rodeheffer, Kansas State U, USA
Christopher Paul Barlett, Iowa State U, USA
Shaping Video Game Content: Modeling Determinants That Impact Game Quality
Andrew Boyan, Michigan State U, USA
Struggling With Reality: Technology and Aesthetic Realism in "Game Developer" Magazine
Robin Johnson, U of Iowa, USA
Five-minute overviews of papers, followed by interaction around posters, covering a wide range of game studies
topics.
6441
Monday
12:00-13:15
Drummond Centre
Real Issues in Virtual Groups
Communication and Technology
Chair
Chyng-Yang Jang, U of Texas - Arlington, USA
Participants
Communication Breakdowns in Collaborative Settings: The Influence of Visual Delay on Distributed Communication
Darren R. Gergle, Northwestern U, USA
Robert E. Kraut, Carnegie Mellon U, USA
The Effect of Media Modality on Cross-Cultural Virtual Cooperation
Qian Xu, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Deanna Behring, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Robert J. Chesnick, Pennsylvania State U, USA
Social Identification and Interpersonal Perception in Computer-Mediated Communication: What You Do Versus Who
You Are in Virtual Groups
Zuoming Wang, U of North Texas, USA
Joseph B. Walther, Michigan State U, USA
Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA
Rules Online: Coordinated Management of Meaning in Chat Rooms
Jensen Joann Moore, U of Missouri, USA
Amy Mattson Lauters, Wichita State U, USA
6442
Monday
12:00-13:15
Drummond East
LSI Studies on Arguments, Accounts, and Agency
Language & Social Interaction
Chair
Susan Lee Kline, Ohio State U, USA
Participants
Embodied Arguments: Verbal Claim + Bodily Evidence
Julien Christian Mirivel, U of Arkansas, USA
Multiple Forms of Agency in Dialogue: Passion, Ventriloquism, and Interaction
Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA
"What Do You Think God Thinks About That?": Accounting Between Evangelical Christian Accountability Partners
on a College Campus
Melissa Wood Aleman, James Madison U, USA
Carlos Galvan Aleman, James Madison U, USA
The Emergence of Conflict During Naturally Occurring Mediation Sessions
Alena L. Vasilyeva, Rutgers U, USA
6444
Monday
12:00-13:15
Salon 7
Neoliberal Development and the Ascending Power of Capital in China's Communication Industries: Social and
Class Analysis Perspectives
Global Communication and Social Change
Chair
Yuezhi Zhao, Simon Fraser U, CANADA
Participants
The Composition of ICT Workforces and Its Indications of China's Developmental Strategy
Yu Hong, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA
The "Masters" Who Have Lost Their Jobs: News Presentation of Laid-off Workers in a Chinese Metropolitan
Newspaper
Jun Xiao, Wuhan U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
Copyright, Movie Industry, and Free Speech in China
Dong Han, Univeristy of Illinois, USA
Communication, Class Power, and Social Contestation in China's "Third Debate on Reform" between 2004 and 2007
Yuezhi Zhao, Simon Fraser U, CANADA
Respondent
Ruoyun Bai, New York U, USA
As class polarization becomes the defining feature of China's protracted social transformation, there is a growing
urgency to examine China's communication industries from a class perspective. The four papers in these panel
respond to this compelling imperative by examining the relationship between communication and the processes of
class formation in a wide range of empirical sites, including labor relations in ICT manufacturing, copyright disputes
in film, news representation of laid-off workers and the class orientation of media and Internet debates on the future
direction of China's transformation.