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U of Westminster Regent Street Campus Board Room U of London Khalili Lecture Theatre London School of Economics Media and Communicatio n Department London Metropolitan U Conference Room Queen Margaret U Centre for Dialogue Oxford U Oxford Internet Institute 10:00am 11:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 12:00pm 9:00a - 5:00p 8:30a - 5:00p 12:00pm 1:00pm 8:45a - 5:30p [3172] - Preconference: Global Communications and National Policies: The Return of the State? [3265] - Preconference: New Media, Old Media, Social Media: Changing South Asian Communications Scholarship [3153] - Preconference: 10 Years On: Looking Forwards in Mobile ICT Research [3251] - Preconference: New Histories of Communication Study 9:00am Sunday June 16, 2013 8:00am 11:00am 1:00pm 10:00a - 4:00p 9:00a - 8:00p 2:00pm 9:30a - 4:30p [2261] - Preconference: Governance Through Communication: Stakeholder Engagement, Dialogue, and Corporate Social Responsibility 9:00am 10:00am [1258] - Preconference: China and the New Internet World Saturday June 15, 2013 9:00am Friday June 14, 2013 3:00pm 1:00pm 4:00pm 2:00pm 5:00pm 3:00pm 2:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 4:00pm 3:00pm Monday June 17, 2013 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm Hilton Metropole King's Suite 6:00p - 7:30p [4703] - ICA London Opening Plenary: Hilton Metropole Blenheim Hilton Metropole Waterloo/Towe r Hilton Metropole Chelsea/Richm ond Hilton Metropole St. James Hilton Metropole Regent's Hilton Metropole Clarence 1:00p - 5:00p [4404] - International Communication Association Annual Board of Director's Meeting 8:30a - 5:00p [4108] - Preconference: Organizational Communication Division Doctoral Consortium: Expanding Your Scholarly Comfort Zone 9:00a - 5:00p [4211] - Preconference: From Feminism, With a Feminist Agenda: Digital Interventions to Incite Change in Publishing, Pedagogy, the Academy and our Networks 9:00a - 4:30p [4212] - The Power of Play Breakout II 9:00a - 4:30p [4213] - The Power of Play Breakout I 9:00a - 4:30p [4214] - Preconference: The Power of Play: Motivational Uses and Applications 8:00a - 12:00p [4115] - International Communication Association Executive Committee Meeting Hilton Metropole Belgrave 9:00a - 5:00p [4216] - Preconference: 4th Annual Doctoral Consortium of the Communication and Technology Division Hilton Metropole Berkeley 9:00a - 5:00p [4217] - Preconference: Communication Science - Evolution, Biology, and Brains: Innovation in Theory and Methods Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 8:00pm 9:00pm 7:30p - 10:00p [4800] - ICA's 63rd Annual Conference Opening Welcome Reception Hilton Metropole Buckingham Hilton Metropole York 7:00pm 8:45a - 4:00p [4121] - Preconference: Exploring and Remaking Critical Studies of Advertising 8:30a - 5:00p [4122] - Preconference: Language and Engagement in Changing Forms of Public Interaction 9:00a - 5:30p [4223] - Preconference: New Media and Citizenship in Asia: Researching the Practices, Functions, and Effects of the New Media in Asian Politics 8:00a - 5:00p [4125] - Preconference: Transmedia Storytelling: Theories, Methods and Research Strategies Monday June 17, 2013 7:00am Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 City U of London Cass Business School 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm Frontline Club Conference Room Goldsmiths Small Hall 9:00a - 12:30p [4227] - Preconference: Teaching CAM: Pedagogical Issues and Practical Strategies for Sharing Theory and Research Related to Children, Adolescents, and Media London School of Economics 3.21 Old Building 3:00pm 4:00pm 1:00p - 5:00p [4427] - Preconference: Successful Publication in Top-Ranked Communication Journals: A Guide for Nonnative English Speakers 9:00a - 5:00p [4241] - Preconference: Governance Through Communication: Stakeholder Engagement, Dialogue, and Corporate Social Responsibility 1:00p - 4:00p [4442] - Preconference: Global Media Ethics: Problems and Perspectives 8:30a - 12:30p [4143] - Preconference: Internationalizing Journalism Studies 8:30a - 5:00p [4144] - Preconference: The Objects of Journalism: Media, Materiality and the News 9:30a - 5:30p [4245] - Preconference: Strategies for Media Reform: an International Workshop Ketchum Pleon Conference Room London Metropolitan U Conference Room 2:00pm 8:45a - 4:00p [4126] - Exploring and Remaking Critical Studies of Advertising (Breakout Room) City U of London Conference Room City U of London Graduate School of Journalism 1:00pm 2:00p - 5:00p [4548] - Preconference: Power Through Communication Technology in a 21st Century Global Society: Questions That Must Be Addressed 9:00a - 5:00p [4251] - Preconference: New Histories of Communication Study 8:00a - 4:30p [4152] - Preconference: Beyond the Brand (Popular Communication Preconference) London School of Economics Media and Communicatio n Department 8:30a - 1:00p [4153] - Preconference: 10 Years On: Looking Forwards in Mobile ICT Research London School of Economics TW1.2.01 8:30a - 4:00p [4154] - Preconference: ICA Political Communication 2013 Graduate Student Preconference London School of Economics STC.S75 8:30a - 4:00p [4156] - Preconference: The Political Communication of Young Citizens Through Social Media 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm Monday June 17, 2013 7:00am U of Leicester Charels Wilson Building U of London Clore Management Centre U of London Khalili Lecture Theatre U of London V211 U of Westminster Conference Building 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 9:00a - 3:40p [4263] - Preconference: Audiences, Elsewhere? Reviewing the Applicability of Audiences and Audience Research to Those in Other Fields 8:00a - 5:00p [4164] - Preconference: Conditions of Mediation: Phenomenological Approaches to Media, Technology and Communication 9:00a - 3:00p [4265] - Preconference: New Media, Old Media, Social Media: Changing South Asian Communications Scholarship 8:15a - 5:30p [4166] - PRECONFERENCE: Multilingual and Multicultural Communication 8:45a - 6:00p [4171] - Preconference: The BRICS Nations: Between National Identity and Global Citizenship 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm Tuesday June 18, 2013 8:00am Hilton Metropole Balmoral Hilton Metropole Palace A Hilton Metropole Palace B Hilton Metropole Palace C Hilton Metropole York Hilton Metropole Lancaster Hilton Metropole Waterloo/Towe r 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 9:00a - 10:15a [5202] - GIFTS: Great Ideas for Teaching Students 10:30a - 11:45a [5202] - ICA Annual Member Meeting and New Member and Graduate Student Orientation 9:00a - 10:15a [5205] - Antecedents and Effects of International News 12:00pm 12:00p - 1:15p [5302] - The Network Tradition in Communication Research and Scholarship 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 1:30p - 2:45p [5402] - Challenging Core Concepts in Communication and Media Studies 3:00p - 4:15p [5502] - Everything You Wanted to Know About Peer Review, but Were Afraid to Ask 4:30p - 5:45p [5602] - Journalism Studies Business Meeting 6:00p - 7:00p [5702] Journalism Studies Reception 10:30a - 11:45a [5205] - Comparing Political Communication Across Countries 1:30p - 2:45p [5405] - Changing Media Environments, Changing Media Use Patterns 3:00p - 4:15p [5505] Methodological Opportunities and Challenges in the Age of Social Media and “Big Data”: Beyond the Survey 4:30p - 5:45p [5605] - Challenging Online Research: Insights From Across the Field 9:00a - 10:15a [5206] - Cultural Experience, Interaction, and Adjustment 10:30a - 11:45a [5206] - Challenges of Creating Inclusivity and Exclusivity: Insights into the Communicative Constitution of Organizational Boundaries in Various Cultural Contexts 1:30p - 2:45p [5406] - Disaster and Emergency Communication Around the Globe: Opportunities for Organizational Communication Research 3:00p - 4:15p [5506] - Culture and Identity 4:30p - 5:45p [5606] - Agenda Setting for 21st Century Leadership Communication Research: Views From Management and Communication Scholars 9:00a - 10:15a [5207] - Deliberation and Opinion Formation 10:30a - 11:45a [5207] - Framing and Priming in Political Communication 1:30p - 2:45p [5407] - AgendaSetting in a New Media Environment 3:00p - 4:15p [5507] - Talking Politics, Online and Offline 4:30p - 5:45p [5607] - Election Campaigns and Campaign Effects 9:00a - 10:15a [5208] - Media Literacy and Internet Usage 10:30a - 11:45a [5208] - Big Data and Communication Research: Prospects, Perils, Alliances, and Impacts 1:30p - 2:45p [5408] - Social Networsk, Social Capital, and Motivations 3:00p - 4:15p [5508] - Online Interaction and Offline Interaction 4:30p - 5:45p [5608] Communication and Technology Business Meeting 6:00p - 7:00p [5708] Communication and Technology, Information Systems, and Game Studies Joint Reception 9:00a - 10:15a [5209] - InternetMediated Businesses 10:30a - 11:45a [5209] - Inequalities and Digital Divides 1:30p - 2:45p [5409] - Developing Hyperpersonal Relationship in Mediated Communications 3:00p - 4:15p [5509] Consequences of Individual Differences in Online Environments 4:30p - 5:45p [5609] - Culture, News, Magazine, and Television 6:00p - 7:00p [5709] - In Memoriam: A Tribute to Sam Becker 9:00a - 10:15a [5211] - Narrative Approaches to Illness and Health 10:30a - 11:45a [5211] - Tensions and challenges to effective communication about men's health issues: The impact of communication networks 1:30p - 2:45p [5411] - Health and the City: Challenges for and Insights from Communication 3:00p - 4:15p [5511] Communication Perspectives on Death, End-of-Life Challenges, and Organ Donation 4:30p - 5:45p [5611] - Making a Difference: Evaluating the Influence of Health Communication Strategies 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm Tuesday June 18, 2013 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 9:00a - 10:15a [5212] - More Challenging Issues in Health Communication 10:30a - 11:45a [5212] - Uncertainty, Health InformationSeeking, & Social Support 1:30p - 2:45p [5412] - Division Spotlight: Highly Rated Competitive Papers in Interpersonal Communication 3:00p - 4:15p [5512] - Advances in Deception and Deception Detection 4:30p - 5:45p [5612] - Competitive Papers in Interpersonal Communication 9:00a - 10:15a [5213] - Aggregate Search Behavior & Communication Research (Panel Session) 10:30a - 11:45a [5213] - Selective Exposure and Polarization (Session Begins with a TOP Student Paper) 1:30p - 2:45p [5413] - Diffusion Studies in New Media 3:00p - 4:15p [5513] - Bias in News 4:30p - 5:45p [5613] - Mass Communication Business Meeting 9:00a - 10:15a [5214] - Covering Conflicts and Disasters: Recent Case Studies 10:30a - 11:45a [5214] - New Practices in Newsrooms 1:30p - 2:45p [5414] - Theoretical Challenges in Comparing Media Systems 3:00p - 4:15p [5514] - Political Scandals: Journalistic Swings From Overkill to Neglect? 4:30p - 5:45p [5614] - Sound Bites, Negativity, and Horse-Race Style: Is Campaign Communication Getting Worse and Worse Again? LongTerm Research in Germany and Austria on the Eve of the 2013 Elections 9:00a - 10:15a [5216] - From Arab Spring to Occupy: Journalism and Social Movements 10:30a - 11:45a [5216] - Beyond Corporate Media: Alternative Models for News 1:30p - 2:45p [5416] - Television News in a PostBroadcast Society 3:00p - 4:15p [5516] - Living as if survival mattered: Sustaining ourselves, our world, and our economies 4:30p - 5:45p [5616] - Watch out for that tree! Human interaction and response to the environment Hilton Metropole Berkeley 9:00a - 10:15a [5217] - Media Use & Political Observations in Eight Arab Countries (Panel Session) 10:30a - 11:45a [5217] - Health and Risk Communication in Mass Media 1:30p - 4:15p [5417] - EXTENDED SESSION: Playing With Fire? Intense Game Experiences and Discussions and Debates in Pathological Gaming 4:30p - 5:45p [5617] - Game Studies Interest Group Business Meeting Hilton Metropole Cadogan 9:00a - 10:15a [5218] - Biological Perspectives on Interpersonal Processes 10:30a - 11:45a [5218] - New Methods and Measures 1:30p - 2:45p [5418] - Theoretical Perspectives 3:00p - 4:15p [5518] - The Best of Information Systems 4:30p - 5:45p [5618] - Information Systems Business Meeting 9:00a - 10:15a [5221] - Beyond Entertainment – Storytelling for Social Change 10:30a - 11:45a [5221] - Challenging Identities in Local, Regional, and Transnational Music Media, Industries, and Cultures 1:30p - 2:45p [5421] - Ten Years of Popular Communication: The International Journal of Media and Culture 3:00p - 4:15p [5521] - Political Narratives and the Horizon of Imagination 4:30p - 5:45p [5621] - Popular Communication Business Meeting 9:00a - 10:15a [5222] - Challenging Concepts in the Study of Global Communication 10:30a - 11:45a [5222] - Perception as Key: Signals from Audiences, Readers, Participants 1:30p - 2:45p [5422] Cartographies of Media Activism/Activism with Media 3:00p - 4:15p [5522] Broadcasting, Networking and the Forging of Identities 4:30p - 5:45p [5622] - Global Communication and Social Change Business Meeting Hilton Metropole Chelsea/Richm ond Hilton Metropole St. James Hilton Metropole Regent's Hilton Metropole Belgrave Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 6:00pm 6:00p - 7:00p [5713] - Mass Communication Reception 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm Tuesday June 18, 2013 8:00am Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Hilton Metropole Board Room 1 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 9:00a - 10:15a [5223] - Messages and Credibility 10:30a - 11:45a [5223] - An emerging socio-cultural paradigm of Public Relations research? Perspectives, research agenda and methodological issues 1:30p - 2:45p [5423] - Public Relations and Managing Crisis 3:00p - 4:15p [5523] - Public Relations and CSR 4:30p - 5:45p [5623] - Social Cause and Health Campaigns 9:00a - 10:15a [5224] - Visual design, persuasion and branding 10:30a - 11:45a [5224] - Measuring and understanding young people's practices and preferences in advertising and other media forms 1:30p - 2:45p [5424] - Why don’t they believe us? Why are media effects on children & adolescents routinely ignored or downplayed 3:00p - 4:15p [5524] - Top Papers in Intergroup Communication 4:30p - 5:45p [5624] - Intergroup Communication Business Meeting 9:00a - 10:15a [5225] - ERIC Roundtable – De-/Recentering Whiteness 10:30a - 11:45a [5225] - ERIC Roundtable – Ethnic Incorporation and National Identity 1:30p - 2:45p [5425] - Soundscapes of Meaning: Radio as a Cultural Force 3:00p - 4:15p [5525] - Race and Ethnicity in Communication: Two Sides of the Same Coin or Separate Concepts for Scholarly Discussion? 4:30p - 5:45p [5625] - Ethnicity and Race in Communication Business Meeting 9:00a - 10:15a [5226] - Digital Identities, Stages, Histories, and Uses 10:30a - 11:45a [5226] - Ordinary Grammars: The Rules for Representing and Performing the Ordinary in Popular Culture 1:30p - 2:45p [5426] - Complexities of Representing the Other 3:00p - 4:15p [5526] - The Business of Media History: News and Surveillance 4:30p - 5:45p [5626] Communication History Business Meeting 9:00a - 10:15a [5227] - Negotiating Europe: Perspectives on the mediation of the Eurozone crisis 10:30a - 11:45a [5227] - Young scholars’ roundtable: Visual narrative 1:30p - 2:45p [5427] - Mediating Digital Religion: Creatives, Confession, and Eloquence 3:00p - 4:15p [5527] - Re-thinking media theory for the post-mass media era 4:30p - 5:45p [5627] - Philosophy, Theory and Critique Business Meeting 9:00a - 10:15a [5228] - The Body Politic: Gendered Excursions, Performances and Violations 10:30a - 11:45a [5228] - The Global Politics of Change: ICT, Trafficking and Protest 1:30p - 2:45p [5428] - Visualverbal rhetorics in play, persuasion and politics 3:00p - 4:15p [5528] - Feminism LOL and the Postfeminist Agenda: Repoliticizing Feminist Media Studies in a Postfeminist Age 4:30p - 5:45p [5628] - Feminist Scholarship Business Meeting 9:00a - 10:15a [5231] - The Public Soundscape: Acoustic Ecology 10:30a - 11:45a [5231] - Showcasing ICLASP13: 2013 Research Directions: International Association of Language and Social Psychology 1:30p - 2:45p [5431] - Convergence Models: Innovations in Daily Newspaper Economy. Cases of Russia, Finland, Germany and Austria (Panel Session) 3:00p - 4:15p [5531] - Opinion Leadership in a Changing Media Environment. Responses to Conceptual and Empirical Challenges 4:30p - 5:45p [5631] - Media Studies and Latin American Perspectives 6:00pm 6:00p - 7:15p [5728] - Teresa Award Ceremony and Reception 7:00pm 8:00pm 7:30p - 8:45p [5828] - Special Film Screening: Flirting with Danger: & Choice in Heterosexual Relationships 9:00pm Tuesday June 18, 2013 8:00am Hilton Metropole Board Room 2 Hilton Metropole Board Room 3 Grand Union Paddington Reception 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 9:00a - 10:15a [5232] - Ways of Speaking About Ways of Relating: Comparative Research in Ethnography of Communication 10:30a - 11:45a [5232] - To Good Health and Hospitality: Rituals, Code-switching, and Conversational Management 1:30p - 4:15p [5432] - Extended Session: Changing Media Regimes, Changing Media Law and Policy? 9:00a - 10:15a [5233] - Maybe this isn't our planet: Rethinking the human relationship with the environment 10:30a - 11:45a [5233] Relationships and Expectations: Instructor-Student and Student-Student Communication 1:30p - 2:45p [5433] - Bullying, Dissent, and Misbehaviors: The Dark Side of Instructional Communication 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm 4:30p - 5:45p [5632] - Challenges to Regulating Copyright, Trademark and Defamation 3:00p - 5:45p [5533] - Extended Session: Challenging Transitions: Represention, Bodies, Identities and Policy in GLBT studies 8:00p - 10:00p [5846] - ICA Graduate Student Reception Wednesday June 19, 2013 6:00am Hilton Metropole Balmoral Hilton Metropole Palace A Hilton Metropole Palace B Hilton Metropole Palace C Hilton Metropole York Hilton Metropole Lancaster Hilton Metropole Waterloo/Towe r Hilton Metropole Chelsea/Richm ond 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 8:00a - 9:15a [6102] - Theories and Applications in Intercultural Communication 9:30a - 10:45a [6202] Challenging Communication Research Through Engaged Scholarship 11:00a - 12:15p [6302] - Top Theme Papers 2013: Challenging Communication Research 8:00a - 9:15a [6105] - Political Communication and Voter Behaviour 9:30a - 10:45a [6205] - Political Deliberation and Public Opinion 8:00a - 9:15a [6106] - Women's Work? Communication and Gender in the Workplace 12:00pm 1:00pm 12:30p - 1:45p [6402] - The Crisis in Higher Education 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 2:00p - 3:15p [6502] - Creative Research in Chaotic Times: Workstyles, Structure, and Output in Cultural Industries and Beyond 3:30p - 4:45p [6602] Challenging the Identity of Communication Stu dies From International Perspectives 11:00a - 12:15p [6305] - High Density Session: Online Political Campaigning 2:00p - 3:15p [6505] - Political Messages and Campaigning 3:30p - 4:45p [6605] - Political Knowledge: Causes and Consequences 9:30a - 10:45a [6206] Organizations and Their Social Context: Community, Transparency, and Civic Engagement 11:00a - 12:15p [6306] Communication Constituting Organizations: The CCO Perspective 2:00p - 3:15p [6506] - The Richness of Organizational Contexts in Organizational Communication Research 3:30p - 4:45p [6606] - Who Am I? Organizational Identification and Identity 8:00a - 9:15a [6107] - Online Political Engagement and Participation 9:30a - 10:45a [6207] Strengthening systematic normative assessment in political communication research: A challenge to the field 11:00a - 12:15p [6307] - Off the Beaten Trail: Novel Approaches to Studying Media Coverage in the 2012 U.S. Presidential Election 2:00p - 3:15p [6507] - Framing and Frame-building in Political Communication 3:30p - 4:45p [6607] - Perceptions and Misperceptions: Causes and Consequences 8:00a - 9:15a [6108] - Analyzing media content and use across platforms 9:30a - 10:45a [6208] - Diverse Facets of ICT Use (CAT High Density Panel I) 11:00a - 12:15p [6308] - Diverse Facets of ICT Use (CAT High Density Panel II) 2:00p - 3:15p [6508] - Games, Civic Education, and Civic Engagement 3:30p - 4:45p [6608] - Effects of Realism across Modalities 8:00a - 9:15a [6109] - Cognitive and Behavioral Aspects of Media Use 9:30a - 10:45a [6209] - Privacy and Trust in the Online Environment 11:00a - 12:15p [6309] - Embodied Experience In Virtual Environments 2:00p - 3:15p [6509] TechnologyCompatible Communications 3:30p - 4:45p [6609] - Copyright and Digital Piracy 8:00a - 9:15a [6111] - Pursuing Effective AntiSmoking Message Strategies in Health Campaigns 9:30a - 10:45a [6211] Communication Challenges in Cancer Prevention among High-Risk Populations 11:00a - 12:15p [6311] - Let’s Talk about Sex: Toward an Understanding of Risky Behavior and Intervention Strategies 2:00p - 3:15p [6511] - The Rise of Social Media in Disseminating Health Messages 3:30p - 4:45p [6611] Communication Influences on Health Behavior and Behavioral Change 8:00a - 9:15a [6112] - Food for Thought: Navigating Food Choice and Nutrition Communication Issues 9:30a - 10:45a [6212] - Strategies for Improving Health Communication Across Diverse Racial/Ethnic Groups 11:00a - 12:15p [6312] - Framing Health Risk in Traditional and New Media 2:00p - 3:15p [6512] Communication History High Density Panel 3:30p - 4:45p [6612] - Culture, Virtuality, Social Media, and ComputerSupported Interaction 5:00pm 5:00p - 6:15p [6702] International Communication Association Annual Awards and Presidential Address 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm Wednesday June 19, 2013 6:00am Hilton Metropole St. James 7:00am 8:00am 8:00a - 9:15a [6113] - Sex and romance and sexual identity: Exploring links with media HIGH DENSITY SESSION 9:00am 10:00am 9:30a - 10:45a [6213] - Media Uses and Motivations (Session Begins with a TOP Student Paper) 11:00am 11:00a - 12:15p [6313] - Media Violence and Aggression 7:00a - 9:15a [6014] - ICA Fellows' Breakfast Hilton Metropole Regent's Hilton Metropole Belgrave Hilton Metropole Berkeley Hilton Metropole Cadogan Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 12:30p - 1:45p [6413] - ICA Fellows' Panel: Calvert, Jones, and Hartley 2:00p - 3:15p [6513] - Partisan Content and Selective Exposure: Consequences and Implications (Panel Session) 3:30p - 4:45p [6613] - “I’m Ready for My Close-up”: Representations of Women and Gender on Reality Television (Panel Session) 6:30p - 7:30p [6813] - East Asia Networking Session 12:30p - 1:45p [6414] - ICA Fellows' Panel: Ellis, Fulk, and Mumby 2:00p - 3:15p [6514] - The Euro Crisis, Newspaper Coverage, Journalistic Practices, and Perceptions of European Institutions and Institutional Challenges 3:30p - 4:45p [6614] - Journalism at the Time of Big Data 6:30p - 7:30p [6814] European Networking Session 8:00a - 9:15a [6116] - The Power of the Media: Mediatization, Influence, and Technology 9:30a - 10:45a [6216] - Examining Audiences for Old and New Media 11:00a - 12:15p [6316] - Journalism in China and Hong Kong 2:00p - 3:15p [6516] - Networks of Journalism: New Linkages and New Actors 3:30p - 4:45p [6616] - Covering the World: Foreign Correspondents and Foreign News 6:30p - 7:30p [6816] Oceania/Africa Networking Session 8:00a - 9:15a [6117] Methodological Challenges in Communication Research 9:30a - 10:45a [6217] - Media and Minorities 11:00a - 12:15p [6317] Television/Film Viewing and Social Cognition (Session Begins with a TOP Faculty Paper) 2:00p - 3:15p [6517] International Perspectives on Mass Communication 3:30p - 4:45p [6617] - Cognitive Processing of Media Messages 6:30p - 7:30p [6817] - The Americas (Not Including the US) Networking Session 8:00a - 9:15a [6118] - High Density: Social Support 9:30a - 10:45a [6218] - High Density: Showcasing a Variety of Interpersonal Communication Topics 11:00a - 12:15p [6318] - News and Message Factors 2:00p - 4:45p [6518] - Extended Session: Violent, Antisocial, And Prosocial Media – New Insights And Future Perspectives 6:30p - 7:30p [6818] - West Asia Networking Session 8:00a - 9:15a [6121] - Mediated Geographies and Experiences of Globalization 9:30a - 10:45a [6221] - Big Bird in the Thick of It: Challenging Communication in the Interplay between Popular and Political Communication 11:00a - 12:15p [6321] - Reality TV and ‘PostRepresentational’ Approaches to Class Analysis 2:00p - 3:15p [6521] - The Ethics and Politics of Media Offence 3:30p - 4:45p [6621] - Meet Your Audience: Interacting with Fans and Anti-Fans 8:00a - 9:15a [6122] Deconstructing Discourses of Class, Diaspora, and Authorship in an Era of Globalization 9:30a - 10:45a [6222] Challenging Development Communication in Jordan, Benin, South Africa, and Turkey 11:00a - 12:15p [6322] Democratizing Public Spheres: Challenges and Opportunities 2:00p - 3:15p [6522] - Activist Community/Social Media and Global Youth Movements: Studies from the Global South 3:30p - 4:45p [6622] - Popular Culture and Identity Formation in Brazil, Salvador, Syria and India 8:00pm Wednesday June 19, 2013 6:00am 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 8:00a - 9:15a [6123] - Roles in Public Relations 9:30a - 10:45a [6223] - Public Relations and Not For Profits 11:00a - 12:15p [6323] - Best Student Papers Public Relations Division 2013 2:00p - 3:15p [6523] - Methods in Public Relations 3:30p - 4:45p [6623] - Social Media and Digital Public Relations 8:00a - 9:15a [6124] - Mapping the visual coverage of death 9:30a - 10:45a [6224] Cyberbullying, Aggression, and Violence: Harm to Others in Traditional and New Media Forms 11:00a - 12:15p [6324] Researching News and Young People’s Identities 2:00p - 3:15p [6524] - Learning and executive function among young children: The role of media 3:30p - 4:45p [6624] - Parenting and parental mediation in a media-saturated world Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 8:00a - 9:15a [6125] - Politicized digital intimacy of race, ethnicity and gender 9:30a - 10:45a [6225] - ERIC Roundtable – Diaspora Blues 11:00a - 12:15p [6325] - ERIC Roundtable – Producing the Nation 2:00p - 3:15p [6525] - Game Studies Top Papers 3:30p - 4:45p [6625] Challenging Game Research: Methods and Perspectives Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 8:00a - 9:15a [6126] - Inclusions and Exclusions in the Public Sphere in India, China, Mexico and the U.S. 9:30a - 10:45a [6226] - Media and Sport: Perspectives on Scholarly Inquiry and Key Issues 11:00a - 12:15p [6326] - Television Intermediaries 2:00p - 3:15p [6526] - Exploring Theory and Practice 3:30p - 4:45p [6626] - Economic and Political Ripples and the Shaping of Media Industries 8:00a - 9:15a [6127] - Media, Politics and Space 9:30a - 10:45a [6227] - In pursuit of meaning: The theory and philosophy of hermeneutics in the networked age 11:00a - 12:15p [6327] - Earth Observing Media 2:00p - 3:15p [6527] - Political Affective Communication: From Contagion to Control 3:30p - 4:45p [6627] - The Social, Economic, and Affective Materialities of Facebook Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 8:00a - 9:15a [6128] - Are we there yet? Cyberfeminists Across Generations Challenging Communication Researchers 9:30a - 10:45a [6228] - Gender Blind/Gender Vision: One Step Forward... 11:00a - 12:15p [6328] - Gender and Labour Citizenship in the Information Society 2:00p - 3:15p [6528] - Creating visual culture across cultures 3:30p - 4:45p [6628] Transcending Visual Communication: The Internet as Multimodal Discourse Hilton Metropole Board Room 1 8:00a - 9:15a [6131] - Media accountability in the digital age – International perspectives 9:30a - 10:45a [6231] - Chinese Communication: From Media Use to Framing China in the Internet Age 11:00a - 12:15p [6331] - ‘New concepts in political communication and their importance for research’ 2:00p - 3:15p [6531] - ICA Publication Strategic Planning Meeting 3:30p - 4:45p [6631] Challenging Values and Agency in Environmental Communication 8:00a - 9:15a [6132] - "In View of all of the Citizens": The Public Broadcasting Act, 1962-1967 9:30a - 10:45a [6232] - Digital Frontiers of Communication Law 11:00a - 12:15p [6332] - Creative Industries and the Reconfiguration of Cultural Policy 2:00p - 3:15p [6532] Technologicallymediated Interactions: Problems and Promises for Civic Engagement and Interpersonal Interactions 3:30p - 4:45p [6632] Constructing Group and intergroup identities through narratives and dialogue Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Hilton Metropole Board Room 2 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm Wednesday June 19, 2013 6:00am Hilton Metropole Board Room 3 Patisserie Valerie Dining Room Erasmus Dining Room 7:00am 8:00am 8:00a - 9:15a [6133] - Paging Dr. Communication: The Intersection of Instructional Communication and Health Communication 9:00am 10:00am 9:30a - 10:45a [6233] - Top Papers in Instructional and Developmental Communication Division 11:00am 11:00a - 12:15p [6333] Instructional and Developmental Communication Business Meeting 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 2:00p - 3:15p [6533] - The changing social climate of global warming 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 3:30p - 4:45p [6633] - Status Quo and Future Perspectives of Children’s Film Research in Europe 6:30a - 8:30a [6059] - Communication History Division Family Breakfast 7:00p - 9:00p [6800] - Ethnicity and Race in Communication, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies, and Popular Communication Joint Reception (OFF SITE) Thursday June 20, 2013 6:00am 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 2:00p - 3:15p [7501] - Plenary Interactive Paper/Poster Session 11:00a - 12:15p [7305] - Selecting and Attending Media Hilton Metropole Palace A 9:30a - 10:45a [7205] - Cultural Framing and Communication Practices Hilton Metropole Palace B 8:00a - 9:15a [7106] - Dealing with Difficult Issues in Organizations: Gossip, Dissent, and Exit 9:30a - 10:45a [7206] - Follow Me: Leadership Communication and Rhetoric in Organizations 8:00a - 9:15a [7107] - Comparative Perspectives on Media and Political Communication Hilton Metropole Palace C 3:30p - 4:45p [7605] - Key Concepts in News Research: A Comparative Examination of Political News in 16 Advanced Democracies 5:00p - 6:15p [7705] - Political Communication Business Meeting 6:30p - 7:30p [7805] - Political Communication Reception 11:00a - 1:45p [7306] - Extended Session: The Research Escalator 3:30p - 4:45p [7606] - Top Papers in Organizational Communication 5:00p - 6:15p [7706] Organizational Communication Business Meeting 6:30p - 7:30p [7806] Organizational Communication Reception 9:30a - 10:45a [7207] - Shaping Political News Coverage 11:00a - 12:15p [7307] - Comparative Perspectives 12:30p - 1:45p [7407] - Partisan Selectivity and Opinion Polarization 3:30p - 4:45p [7607] - Blogs, boundaries, and burly brothers: Building new environmental understanding with new media TOP PAPERS PANEL 5:00p - 6:15p [7707] Environmental Communication Business Meeting 8:00a - 9:15a [7108] - ComputerMediated Deception 9:30a - 10:45a [7208] - Research on clicks: Liking and sharing in the air 11:00a - 12:15p [7308] - News, reproduced by ICTs 12:30p - 1:45p [7408] - Positive and Negative Psychological Consequences of Information Technologies 3:30p - 4:45p [7608] - Downsizing Data: Analyzing Social Digital Traces 5:00p - 6:15p [7708] - Censorship machines, mobile networks, and socialbots: exploring the overdetermination between communication technology and culture 8:00a - 9:15a [7109] - Social Network and Social Support 9:30a - 10:45a [7209] - New Marketing Strategies for New Consumers in New Media 11:00a - 12:15p [7309] - Contents Diffusion in Online Environments 12:30p - 1:45p [7409] - Nonverbal Cues Exchanges in Online Communications 3:30p - 4:45p [7609] - Political and Economical Empowerment by Online Media 5:00p - 6:15p [7709] - Determinants of Online Participation Hilton Metropole York Hilton Metropole Lancaster 12:30p - 1:45p [7405] - MediaPolitics Interactions and Interdependencies 7:00pm 6:30p - 7:30p Communication History, Feminist Scholarship, Global Communication and Social Change, and Philosophy, Theory and Critique Joint Reception Hilton Metropole Sandringham 8:00a - 9:15a [7105] - Nations, corporations and international structures: Perspectives on the history of international communication 6:00pm Thursday June 20, 2013 6:00am Hilton Metropole Waterloo/Towe r Hilton Metropole Chelsea/Richm ond Hilton Metropole St. James 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am Hilton Metropole Cadogan 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 9:30a - 10:45a [7211] - Challenging Issues in Communicating Health Risk 11:00a - 12:15p [7311] - Interpersonal Communication Issues Across Varied Health Contexts 12:30p - 1:45p [7411] - Effective Health and Safety Messages: Overcoming Processing and Dissemination Challenges 3:30p - 4:45p [7611] - Message Strategies and Risk Perceptions: Health Messages, Cognitive Processing, and Behavioral Outcomes 5:00p - 6:15p [7711] - Health Communication Business Meeting 8:00a - 9:15a [7112] - Health Communication and the Mass Media: Advertising and Journalism Issues 9:30a - 10:45a [7212] - Playing Well With Others: Games and Community 11:00a - 12:15p [7312] Communication Challenges Involving Health Care Providers 12:30p - 1:45p [7412] - Topics In Interpersonal Communication 3:30p - 4:45p [7612] - Studying Gender & Games: Using Multiple Methodologies 5:00p - 6:15p [7712] - What is Critical Game Studies? 11:00a - 12:15p [7313] - Third Person Effects (Session Begins With a TOP Faculty Paper) 12:30p - 1:45p [7413] - News Audiences and Public Opinion (Session Begins with a TOP Faculty Paper) 3:30p - 4:45p [7613] - Mass Media and Body Image 5:00p - 6:15p [7713] - NonHedonic Entertainment Experiences: Determinants, Nature, and Effects (Panel Session) 11:00a - 12:15p [7314] - News Sources and News Values: Interrogating the Epistemologies of Journalism 12:30p - 1:45p [7414] - Challenging News Storytelling: Network Architectures, Mediality and the Emotional Life of News 3:30p - 4:45p [7614] - Exploring Global Implications of the UK Journalism Debacle 5:00p - 6:15p [7714] - Framing and Agenda Setting in the 21st Century 8:00a - 10:45a [7113] - Media literacy/media education: Guiding principles and applied research EXTENDED SESSION Hilton Metropole Regent's Hilton Metropole Berkeley 12:00pm 8:00a - 9:15a [7111] - Framing Health Messages: From Campaigns to Mass Media Coverage 7:00a - 9:15a [7014] - ICA Past Presidents' Breakfast Hilton Metropole Belgrave 11:00am 8:00a - 9:15a [7116] - Citizen Journalism: Global Perspectives on an Emerging Phenomenon 9:30a - 10:45a [7216] - Does Journalism's ForProfit Ownership Orientation Matter? Evidence from News Coverage 11:00a - 12:15p [7316] - Innovations and Struggles for African and Middle Eastern Journalism 12:30p - 1:45p [7416] Transnational Advocacy, Global Journalism and the International Public Sphere: Opportunities, Challenges and Transformations 3:30p - 4:45p [7616] - New Perspectives on Journalistic Structures and Labor 5:00p - 6:15p [7716] - The Changing Coverage of Campaigns: The View from the 2012 US Election 8:00a - 9:15a [7117] - Cultivation Studies in Mass Communication 9:30a - 10:45a [7217] - Narrative Persuasion 11:00a - 12:15p [7317] - Advertising Research 12:30p - 1:45p [7417] - Keeping Us Engaged: News Media's Role in Elections and Participation 3:30p - 4:45p [7617] - Media and Medals: Entertainment and Sports 5:00p - 6:15p [7717] - Media Portrayals of Interpersonal Issues 8:00a - 9:15a [7118] - Messages, Emotions and Physiological Measures 9:30a - 10:45a [7218] - High Density: More Competative Papers in Interpersonal Communication 11:00a - 12:15p [7318] - Guys walk into a bar and talk theory ... 12:30p - 1:45p [7418] - Social Media, Politics, and Promotion 3:30p - 4:45p [7618] - Top 3 Papers in Interpersonal Communication 5:00p - 6:15p [7718] - Interpersonal Communication Business Meeting 6:00pm 7:00pm 6:30p - 7:30p [7811] - Health Communication Reception 6:30p - 7:30p [7814] - In Memoriam: The Legacy of Charles K. Atkin Thursday June 20, 2013 6:00am Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00a - 9:15a [7121] - Popular Constructions of Race, Ethnicity, and Otherness 9:30a - 10:45a [7221] - Social Media as Big Data, Big Business, Big Brother 11:00a - 12:15p [7321] - Meanings of “Audiences”: Western and NonWestern Discourses 12:30p - 1:45p [7421] - Media Policy and Popular Culture 3:30p - 4:45p [7621] - AntiFandom, Hate, Annoyance, and Dislike in Media Reception 5:00p - 6:15p [7721] - Mediations of Gender and Bodies 8:00a - 9:15a [7122] - Digital cultures, migration and the regulation of citizenship 9:30a - 10:45a [7222] Communicating Protest Camps: Politics and communication in the Occupy movement and beyond 11:00a - 12:15p [7322] - Audiences in the face of distant suffering: new challenges for old idea(l)s? 12:30p - 1:45p [7422] - Beyond WikiLeaks: Implications for the Future of Communications, Journalism & Society 3:30p - 6:15p [7622] - Extended Session: Technological determinism and Communication for Sustainable Social Change 8:00a - 9:15a [7123] - Public Relations and Crisis 9:30a - 10:45a [7223] - Investigating ethical questions 11:00a - 12:15p [7323] - Outcomes of Public Relations Efforts 12:30p - 1:45p [7423] - Social Capital in Public Relations 3:30p - 4:45p [7623] - Best Papers in the Public Relations Division 2013 5:00p - 6:15p [7723] - Public Relations Business Meeting 6:30p - 7:30p [7823] - Public Relations Reception 8:00a - 9:15a [7124] - Culture, Work, and Organization 9:30a - 10:45a [7224] - Applied Conversation Analysis: Intervention to change institutional practices 11:00a - 12:15p [7324] - Excess or moderation? From Internet use to media influence on nutrition, food choice, and perceptions of appearance 12:30p - 1:45p [7424] - Youth in formation: Digital literacy and knowledge building for today’s teenagers 3:30p - 4:45p [7624] - Media, entertainment, and play in the lives of young children 5:00p - 6:15p [7724] - Children, Adolescents, and the Media Business Meeting 6:30p - 7:30p [7824] Children, Adolescents, and the Media Reception 8:00a - 9:15a [7125] - ERIC Roundtable Ethnicity and Race in the Digital Age 9:30a - 10:45a [7225] - The Uses of Extremism: Race, Muslims and the Media 11:00a - 12:15p [7325] - Contested Content: Mediated Spaces, Cultural Spheres, & Neoliberal Discourse 12:30p - 1:45p [7425] - ERIC Roundtable – Looking at the ‘Other’ 3:30p - 4:45p [7625] - The Discursive Negotiation of Controversy in Political and Institutional Contexts 5:00p - 6:15p [7725] - Language and Social Interaction Business Meeting 8:00a - 9:15a [7126] - Looking Outward: The Complexities of Public Diplomacy/Nation Branding 9:30a - 10:45a [7226] - Cultural Labor and Media Work Worlds 11:00a - 12:15p [7326] - New Questions of Audiences, Publics, and Participants 12:30p - 1:45p [7426] - News Framing Processes in Global Context 3:30p - 4:45p [7626] - Intercultural Top Four Papers 5:00p - 6:15p [7726] - Intercultural Communication Business Meeting 8:00a - 9:15a [7127] - Technology and Society in the Digital Age 9:30a - 10:45a [7227] - Theoretical Explorations in Communication 11:00a - 12:15p [7327] - Witnessing Pain and Loss 12:30p - 1:45p [7427] - Media and Social Protest Movements 3:30p - 4:45p [7627] - The Materiality of Voice: International Perspectives on Digital Storytelling Practice 5:00p - 6:15p [7727] - PreIndustrial Limits of Paper Manufacturing and their Impact on Print Culture: Historical Parallels with the Spectrum Scarcity Debate 6:30p - 7:30p [7826] Intercultural Communication Reception Thursday June 20, 2013 6:00am Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Hilton Metropole Board Room 1 Hilton Metropole Board Room 2 Hilton Metropole Board Room 3 InSpiral Lounge Dining Room Windsor Castle Pub Private Reception 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00a - 9:15a [7128] - Provoke: Five Minutes Feminist Interventions Challenging Communication Research 9:30a - 10:45a [7228] - Women Journalists in Turbulent Times: The gendered impact of historical shifts on newsrooms 11:00a - 12:15p [7328] - Gender, Politics and Social Media 12:30p - 1:45p [7428] - Uses of the Past, Memories of the Future 3:30p - 4:45p [7628] - Visual form, aesthetics and affect 5:00p - 6:15p [7728] - Visual Communication Studies Business Meeting 8:00a - 9:15a [7131] - Approaches to the Contemporary Study of Communication in Russia 9:30a - 10:45a [7231] - A European Strategic Research Agenda for the Next Decade (ECREA sponsored panel) 11:00a - 12:15p [7331] - IAMCR Special Session: Crises, "Creative Destruction," and the Global Power and Communication Orders 12:30p - 1:45p [7431] - 2103 Steve Jones Internet Research Lecture: 3:30p - 4:45p [7631] - Korean American Communication Association (KACA) state of art research panel 5:00p - 6:15p [7731] - Korean American Communication Association (KACA) business meeting 6:30p - 7:30p [7831] - Korean American Communication Association (KACA) Reception 8:00a - 9:15a [7132] Conceptualizing the Public, Localism and Co-regulation in Broadcast Regulation 9:30a - 10:45a [7232] Communication Policy Making in Political and Historical Perspective 12:30p - 1:45p [7432] - Feminist Media Studies Editorial Board Meeting 3:30p - 4:45p [7632] - Top Paper Session: Discourses, Power and Internet Law 5:00p - 6:15p [7732] Communication Law and Policy Business Meeting 6:30p - 7:30p Communication Law and Policy Reception 8:00a - 9:15a [7133] - From Theory to Practice: Exploring Social Media as an Instructional Tool 9:30a - 10:45a [7233] - Exploring the Conceptual Space between Science Communication and Science Education 12:30p - 1:45p [7433] - Let's Talk About It: Learning From Assessment 3:30p - 4:45p [7633] - Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies Business Meeting 5:00p - 6:15p [7733] - Contact Settings of Intergroup Communication 11:00a - 12:15p [7333] - Analyzing and Addressing Student Apprehension Across Multiple Contexts 6:30p - 7:30p [7847] Environmental Communication and Visual Communication Studies Joint Reception (OFF SITE) 6:30p - 8:00p [7873] - Language and Social Interaction Reception Friday June 21, 2013 8:00am Hilton Metropole Balmoral Hilton Metropole Palace A Hilton Metropole Palace B Hilton Metropole Palace C Hilton Metropole York Hilton Metropole Lancaster Hilton Metropole Waterloo/Towe r Hilton Metropole Chelsea/Richm ond Hilton Metropole St. James 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 9:00a - 10:15a [8202] - Where is cultural home? In search of a sense of place among multicultural individuals 10:30a - 11:45a [8202] - Challenging Digital Communication Research: The Role of Social Theory 12:00p - 1:15p [8302] - Intergroup Communication and the Media 1:30p - 2:45p [8402] - The Politics of Algorithms 3:00p - 4:15p [8502] - Challenging Communication Research: The Challenge of Ethics 9:00a - 10:15a [8205] - Immigration, Racial Attitudes and Right-Wing Populism 10:30a - 11:45a [8205] - Effects of Political Communication I 12:00p - 1:15p [8305] - Effects of Political Communication II 1:30p - 2:45p [8405] - Of Pros and Amateurs: Changing the Quality of Political Communication 3:00p - 4:15p [8505] - Political Communication During the Arab Spring and its Aftermath 9:00a - 10:15a [8206] - Studying Authority in Practice and Action From A Distance: A CCO Perspective 10:30a - 11:45a [8206] - Organizing the Social: Social media Use in Organizations 12:00p - 1:15p [8306] - Networks and Connections in Organizational Communication 1:30p - 2:45p [8406] - Ask Me No Questions: Sharing and Seeking Information in Organizations 3:00p - 4:15p [8506] - A Roundtable Discussion on Work Pressures and Organizational Communication 9:00a - 10:15a [8207] - The Human Challenge in Information Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D) research 10:30a - 11:45a [8207] - Political Knowledge and Learning Processes 12:00p - 1:15p [8307] - Virtual Representation of Self in Online Environments 1:30p - 2:45p [8407] - Politics Online: International Perspectives 3:00p - 4:15p [8507] - Methodological Perspectives 1:30p - 2:45p [8408] - Diverse Perspectives on Presence and Telepresence Research, Theory and Application 3:00p - 4:15p [8508] - CommentsMediated Communication 9:00a - 11:45a [8208] - 2014 Seattle Conference Planning Meeting 9:00a - 10:15a [8209] - Social Network and Social Influence 10:30a - 11:45a [8209] - Emergence of Opinion Leaders in Virtual Networks 12:00p - 1:15p [8309] - Twitter Politics: How Twitter Facilitates Political Movement? 1:30p - 2:45p [8409] - The Challenges of Big Data for Communication Research 3:00p - 4:15p [8509] - Interaction or Conversation with Media 9:00a - 10:15a [8211] - Challenging Issues Surrounding HIV Prevention Campaigns 10:30a - 11:45a [8211] - Thinking Outside the Box: Overcoming Communication Challenges in Health Interventions 12:00p - 1:15p [8311] - I Drink Therefore I Am (Drunk): Communication Issues Surrounding Alcohol Abuse, Policies, and Prevention Strategies 1:30p - 2:45p [8411] - Challenges of Disseminating Health Information in the Digital Age: Blogs, On-Line News Sources, and Search Engines 3:00p - 4:15p [8511] - Communicating Grown-Up Ideas about Health to Children and Young People 9:00a - 10:15a [8212] - Social Contexts and Consequences of Games 10:30a - 11:45a [8212] - Playing is Training: What Games Teach Us 12:00p - 1:15p [8312] - High Density: Family Communication 1:30p - 2:45p [8412] - High Density: Interpersonal Communication and New Media 3:00p - 4:15p [8512] - High Density: The Dark Side of Interpersonal 9:00a - 10:15a [8213] - Beyond the Qualitative/Quantitative Dichotomy: Q Methodology as an Innovative Approach to Audience Research (Panel Session) 10:30a - 11:45a [8213] - Harvey Milk’s Queer Inheritance 12:00p - 1:15p [8313] - Looking at Them to See Who I Am: Using Media for Identity Building through Social Comparison (Panel Session) 1:30p - 2:45p [8413] - Ostracism and Communication – Feeling Socially Excluded as a Motive for Media Use (Panel Session) 3:00p - 4:15p [8513] - Digital Games in Communication Research: Perspectives on the Institutional Embedding of a Growing Field 4:00pm 5:00pm 4:30p - 5:45p [8602] - ICA London Closing Plenary 6:00pm Friday June 21, 2013 8:00am Hilton Metropole Regent's Hilton Metropole Belgrave Hilton Metropole Berkeley Hilton Metropole Cadogan Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 9:00a - 10:15a [8214] - Professional Roles Revisited: Between the Rhetoric on Role Conceptions and Journalistic Performance 10:30a - 11:45a [8214] - Comparing Media Practices Across Nations 12:00p - 1:15p [8314] - Gender and Journalism: Past and Present Challenges 1:30p - 2:45p [8414] - The spectre of the spectacle: How to address the haunting anxieties around the visual image in political communication? 3:00p - 4:15p [8514] - New Directions in Collective Memory and Journalism 9:00a - 10:15a [8216] - Tweeting the News: Adding Twitter and Social Media to Journalism 10:30a - 11:45a [8216] - News Audiences and New Media: What Do Users Want? 12:00p - 1:15p [8316] - Participatory Journalism: Reimagining the Role of Audiences and Journalists 1:30p - 2:45p [8416] - Cultural Approaches to Understanding Journalism 3:00p - 4:15p [8516] - Loaded Words: Insights from Journalism, History and Culture 9:00a - 10:15a [8217] - Narrative Processes in Media 10:30a - 11:45a [8217] - The Role of Social Media in Public Opinion 12:00p - 1:15p [8317] - Media and Morality 1:30p - 2:45p [8417] - Challenges in Framing and Agenda Setting Research (Session Begins with a TOP Student Paper) 3:00p - 4:15p [8517] - Challenges in Research on Credibility 9:00a - 10:15a [8218] - Strategies for Marketing Brands, Ads and Causes 10:30a - 11:45a [8218] - Advances in Health Communication 12:00p - 1:15p [8318] - Back to Basics: Examining Best Practices for Developing and Evaluating Health Communication Campaigns 1:30p - 2:45p [8418] - Message Processing and Persuasion 3:00p - 4:15p [8518] - New Media Research 9:00a - 10:15a [8221] - Authority and Algorithm: Recommendation, Filtering, and Discovery in Popular Culture 10:30a - 11:45a [8221] - New Media Labor: Reconfiguring Audiences and Industries 12:00p - 1:15p [8321] - Popular Journalism in the Era of ‘Post-Truth’ Politics 1:30p - 2:45p [8421] - Game Industry in Local and Transnational Space 3:00p - 4:15p [8521] - Heritage, Collective Memory, and the Mediated Past 9:00a - 10:15a [8222] - Global and Local Advocacy for Social Change 10:30a - 11:45a [8222] - Bollywood in the Digital Era: Shifting Global Practices and Perspectives 12:00p - 1:15p [8322] - More bad news for Africa? Challenging research into Afropessimism and the international media 1:30p - 2:45p [8422] - Mapping Journalism Past and Present 3:00p - 4:15p [8522] - Blogs, Twitter, and You Tube as Contested Arenas 9:00a - 10:15a [8223] - Public Relations and Communication Channels 10:30a - 11:45a [8223] - Public Relations, Government and Political Communication 12:00p - 1:15p [8323] - Public Relations and News 1:30p - 2:45p [8423] - Researching public relations and strategic communication in conflict/post-conflict societies: An essential task for the field? 3:00p - 4:15p [8523] - Public Relations and Nation Branding 9:00a - 10:15a [8224] - How do you know?: Studies of Believability, Authenticity, and Epistemology 10:30a - 11:45a [8224] - Exploring relationships with characters and affinities toward media forms 12:00p - 1:15p [8324] - Health risks and online risks: Practices and policies 1:30p - 2:45p [8424] - Learning and socializing through use of mobile devices and games 3:00p - 4:15p [8524] - Wartime images in historical memory 9:00a - 10:15a [8225] - Digital Crossroads: Youth, Migration, Diasporas and Networked Learning. 10:30a - 11:45a [8225] - It's not easy being green: Hopping along with environmental advertising and consumerism 12:00p - 1:15p [8325] - ERIC Roundtable – Race Matters 1:30p - 2:45p [8425] - Communication approaches to reducing health disparities in Latino communities 3:00p - 4:15p [8525] - Contested Memories: Resituating Race, Ethnicity, and Contentious Pasts in Sites of Public Memory 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm Friday June 21, 2013 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 9:00a - 10:15a [8226] - Theoretical and methodological "frames" for visual studies 10:30a - 11:45a [8226] - Locating the Trans/National in a Globalized Media Terrain 12:00p - 1:15p [8326] - Cultural Differences and Similarities in Technology Use 1:30p - 2:45p [8426] - Culture and Health 3:00p - 4:15p [8526] - Media, Ritual and Religion. Exploring Contemporary Implications in Mediatized Rituals Online/Offline 9:00a - 10:15a [8227] - Edifying Communication: Dialogue, Images, and Rhetoric 10:30a - 11:45a [8227] - Precarity: Critical Discourse and Response to Disparity 12:00p - 1:15p [8327] - Critical Economies 1:30p - 2:45p [8427] - Reconfiguring and Extending the Constitutive Metamodel 3:00p - 4:15p [8527] - Serving the Public: Critical Perspectives on Journalism 9:00a - 10:15a [8228] - Popular International Media on Gender: Taiwan news, French Pop Magazines, Cosmo in China, Dutch Ads 10:30a - 11:45a [8228] - Photojournalism practices in the face of new media contexts 12:00p - 1:15p [8328] - Branding Femininity: From Food & Dining to Bankable & Turkish Brands 1:30p - 2:45p [8428] - Mentoring: Up, Down and Around 3:00p - 4:15p [8528] - Women, Protest, and Patriarchy in the PostSoviet World: Examining Pussy Riot and FEMEN 9:00a - 10:15a [8231] - International Encyclopedia Advisory Board 10:30a - 11:45a [8231] - Only Connect: Contributions to the Debate on the Cultural Impact of Communication Technologies 12:00p - 1:15p [8331] - Meet the Editors of ICA Publications 1:30p - 4:15p [8431] - EXTENDED SESSION: Organizing and Integrating Knowledge about Environmental Communication Hilton Metropole Board Room 2 9:00a - 10:15a [8232] - Policy Failure in Confronting the Journalism Crisis: Evidence from the US and Europe 10:30a - 11:45a [8232] - Post-Broadband Access: Comparative Assessments and Prospects 12:00p - 1:15p [8332] - Rights to Information and Access: Interpretation, Implementation and Use 1:30p - 2:45p [8432] - Self- and OtherInitiated Repair as Windows into Action Formation, Epistemics, and the Management of Understanding 3:00p - 4:15p [8532] - Deciding Who's In and Who's Out: Membership in Academic and Religious Contexts Hilton Metropole Board Room 3 9:00a - 10:15a [8233] - Instruction and Teaching in the 21st Century: Using Technology in the Classroom 10:30a - 11:45a [8233] - Challenging and Reimagining the Tradtional Instructional Communication Concepts and Processes 12:00p - 1:15p [8333] - The Ecology of Media Consumption 1:30p - 2:45p [8433] - Metapragmatics and Conversational Structuring in Ordinary Conversation, Broadcast Interactions, and Dispute Mediation 3:00p - 4:15p [8533] - Free Speech, Content Regulation and the State Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Hilton Metropole Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Hilton Metropole Board Room 1 King's College Strand Campus 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 5:30p - 7:00p [8749] - Postconference: Cultural work, subjectivity and communication technologies: crossing existing research paradigms 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm U of Leeds Conference Centre King's College Strand Campus 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am [A162] - Postconference: Advancing Media Production Research: A one day post-ICA / pre-IAMCR conference 8:00am Monday June 24, 2013 8:30a - 5:00p 12:00pm 1:00pm 9:30a - 5:45p [9249] - Postconference: Cultural work, subjectivity and communication technologies: crossing existing research paradigms 3:00pm 2:00pm 9:00a - 5:00p [9218] - Postconference: Bridging the Quantitative-Qualitative Divide in Comparative Communication Research: Heading towards Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) 11:00am Hilton Metropole Cadogan 10:00am 9:00a - 12:00p [9217] - Postconference: Political Public Relations: Examining an Emerging Field 9:00am Hilton Metropole Berkeley 8:00am Saturday June 22, 2013 3:00pm 4:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 1258 Friday 10:00-16:00 Oxford Internet Institute Preconference: China and the New Internet World Sponsored Sessions Participants Randy Kluver, Texas A&M U, USA Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Robert Georges Picard, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Nicole Stremlau, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Guobin Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Guoliang Zhang, Shanghai Jiao Tong U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Peter K Yu, Drake U, USA Ernest J. Wilson III, U of Southern California, USA Victoria Nash, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Linchuan Jack Qiu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yong Hu, Peking U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF This preconference is organized around a small number of plenary sessions and parallel panels. The preconference focuses on China in the New Internet World. The preconference is organized by the Oxford Internet Institute (OII) in collaboration with the Programme of Comparative Media Law and Policy (PCMLP) and the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (RISJ) at the University of Oxford, in partnership with the Chinese Internet Research Conference (CIRC), the Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism at USC, the Center for Global Communications Studies at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, the Global Communication Research Institute at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, and Singapore Internet Research Center at Nanyang Technological University. Additional sponsorship will be provided by Taylor and Francis/Routledge. 2261 Preconference: Governance Through Communication: Stakeholder Engagement, Dialogue, and Corporate Social Responsibility Saturday 09:30-16:30 Centre for Dialogue Sponsored Sessions Chair Mette Morsing, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Participants George Cheney, Kent State U, USA Bobby Banerjee, U of South Australia, AUSTRALIA Peter Fleming, Queen Mary, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Martin Parker, Leicester U, UNITED KINGDOM This two-part preconference investigates the topical question of governance, focusing on the role communication expertise and practices play in the way in which the idea is constructed and enacted by government and business organizations. The second part of the conference will focus more closely on corporate contexts and legitimacy by critically examining key assumptions about corporate social responsibility (CSR). The conference begins in Scotland’s historic capital of Edinburgh at Queen Margaret University, home to the Dialogue Centre. After a day of discussing stakeholder engagement and dialogue – as well as experiencing some key aspects of Scottish culture – we transfer to London with new perspectives to take forward in discussions of future directions for CSR communication research. 3153 Sunday 08:30-17:00 Media and Communication Department Preconference: 10 Years On: Looking Forwards in Mobile ICT Research Sponsored Sessions Respondents Rich Ling, IT U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Raz Schwartz, Rutgers U, USA Brett Oppegaard, Washington State U, Vancouver, USA Christian Licoppe, Telecom ParisTech, FRANCE Didem Ozkul, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Kathleen Mae Cumiskey, CUNY - Staten Island, USA Scott W. Campbell, U of Michigan, USA Jason Farman, U of Maryland, USA This one-and-a-half day preconference, sponsored by the Communications and Technology Division, will consist of expert panel presentations and reflections at the start and end and strands for the presentation of papers. The venue will be the Thai Theatre, New Academic Building on the London School of Economics and Political Sciences. Contemporary studies are already identifying challenges in achieving consistency, reliability and quality of results in a fast moving world of Big Data, petabytes and change. New research has already highlighted the effects of people on the move around the globe – migration within and between nations; as well as emotions, affect and sentiment with regard to using mobile devices. 3172 Sunday 08:45-17:30 Regent Street Campus Board Room Preconference: Global Communications and National Policies: The Return of the State? Sponsored Sessions Chairs Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Jeanette Steemers, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Stuart Duncan Cunningham, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Peter Goodwin, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The Reemergence of the Regulatory State Petros Iosifidis, City U, UNITED KINGDOM Legal Globalization and Communication Law Sandra Braman, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Media Policies Under Populism and the Blindspots of Media Globalization: Insights From Latin America Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: Media, States, and the Global Dimension Colin Sparks, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Return of the State @ the Heart of “New Internet-Centric Media Order” Dwayne Roy Winseck, Carleton U, CANADA The Emergence of New Global Online "Media" Companies: Convergence With a Vengeance Stuart Duncan Cunningham, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Jon Silver, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Privatization of Global Development: How National Policies Support Private Funding From Global Communications Industries Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas, USA Cultural Policy, Chinese National Identities, and Globalization Anthony Y.H. Fung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG The Return of Speech: Concepts of Free Speech in Changed Media Regimes Andrew Kenyon, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA The Implications of Transnational TV for Broadcasting Regulation in Small States Manuel Puppis, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND State Control, Media Hierarchies, and Globalization: The Case of Xinhua News Agency Xin Xin, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Public Broadcasters Meet Google: National Cultural Policy vs. Global Competition Policy? Hallvard Moe, U of Bergen, NORWAY The Sound of One Hand Computing: IT Policy and the Indian State Biswarup Sen, U of Oregon, USA A Dwarf Fighting Giants: Flemish Media Policies in an Age of Globalization Karen Donders, VU U - Brussels, BELGIUM Hilde Dy Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM The Nation-State and Media Globalization: Has the State Returned -- or Did it Never Leave? Graeme Turner, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA The State That Never Left: Policy Laundering in Global Communications Katharine Sarakakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Media Regulation and the Tensions Between a Global, Regional, and National Perspective Joan Barata Mir, Blanquerna Communications School, ITALY Challenges for Media Regulation Given the Context of Convergence and Global/Regional Media in the East African Community Nassanga Goretti, Makerere U, UGANDA Nakiwala Sembatya, Makerere U, UGANDA Need for a Helping Hand? Media Policy Paradigm Shifts in Times of Crisis Corinna Wenzel, U of Salzburg, AUSTRIA Stefan Gadringer, U of Salzburg, AUSTRIA Josef Trappel, U of Salzburg, AUSTRIA Between Google and Godliness: Government Regulation of Blasphemy Cherian George, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Media and Citizenship Christina Slade, Bath Spa U, UNITED KINGDOM The Media Welfare State: Nordic Media in the Era of Globalization Ole J. Mjos, U of Bergen, NORWAY Hallvard Moe, U of Bergen, NORWAY Gunn Enli, , NORWAY Trine Syvertsen, U of Oslo, NORWAY Global Social Media and the Challenges to European Audiovisual Regulatory Frameworks Ole J. Mjos, U of Bergen, NORWAY Global E-Commerce and National and EU Policies: The Case of Value Added Tax on Ebooks in Europe Terje Colbjornsen, U of Oslo, NORWAY Power Behind the Scene: State-Aided Media Concentration in Transitional Taiwan Ya-Chi Chen, Chinese Culture U, TAIWAN The Emergence of New Players in the Southern Europe Media Markets: How Regulation and the Financial Crises Are Altering Media Ownership Nelson Costa Ribeiro, Catholic U of Portugal, PORTUGAL Rita Maria Figueiras, Catholic U of Portugal, PORTUGAL Between Economic Objectives and Public Remit: Positive and Negative Integration in European Media Policy Eva G. M. Nowak, Jade U Wilhelmshaven, GERMANY Enforcement of National Legislation on Global Social Networks; Mission Impossible? Eva Lievens, KU Leuven, BELGIUM Narrating Neoliberalism via Financial Media: Comparing China’s Accession Into WTO in Economist and Caijing Jingwei Piao, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Digital Copyright and the State: Enforcing International Norms on Citizens Lucas Logan, Texas A&M U, USA Harmonization and Autonomy of Media Policy Within the European Union Cornelia Wallner, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Public and Private Ordering: The Case of Search Engines Joelle Farchy, U of Paris - Sorbonne, FRANCE Cecile Meadel, Mines ParisTech, FRANCE Global Communications and National Policies: The View From the EU Maria Michalis, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Building a Regional Film Space through National Policies? Analysis of Film Policies of Mercousr Countries Aimed at Regional Integration Daniele Pereira Canedo, VU U - Brussels, BELGIUM National vs. Global Media Policies: The Case of Mediaset and SkyItalia’s Struggle Over the Italian Television Sector Cinzia Padovani, International Association for Media and Communication Research, USA From “Foreign Propaganda” to “Cultural Soft Power”: Reading the National Regulations on Global Media in China Min Tang, U of Illinois, USA There has been much discussion as to whether forces associated with globalization (economic, political, cultural) weaken the capacity of nation-states to regulate media institutions and media content. These debates intersect with the shift towards convergent digital media, with the associated rise of user-created content, multi-platform content distribution, and moves from the mass communications paradigm that dominated 20th century media policy. At the same time, arguments have been made that the scalar shift towards media globalization has been overstated, and national governments remain key players in shaping the media environment, with media corporations responding to the legal and policy frameworks they deal with at a national level. This one-day preconference event will consider the relationship between global communications and national policies from a multidisciplinary perspective, incorporating global media studies, political economy, technology studies, and law and policy studies. This preconference event is sponsored by the Communication and Media Research Institute, University of Westminster, with the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation. It is cosponsored by the Global Communications & Social Change Division, the Communications Law & Policy Division, and the Communications & Technology Division of the ICA. 3251 Sunday 09:00-17:00 Conference Room 3265 Sunday 09:00-20:00 Khalili Lecture Theatre Preconference: New Histories of Communication Study Sponsored Sessions This preconference seeks to broaden, internationalize, and advance the history of communication study as a family of overlapping configurations and practices. It aims to bring together scholars from ICA, ECREA, IAMCR, and select rhetoric societies in an effort to stoke new, cross-national and cross-field conversations about the study of communication in long and broad historical perspective. It aspires to push the empirical and theoretical boundaries of histories and pre-histories of the field by attending to overlooked research areas, emerging conceptual orientations, and new axes of understanding and comparison among distinct traditions cutting across communication, media studies, cultural studies, journalism, and rhetoric, among other fields—and across institutional, intellectual, social, cultural, discursive, and material history. Preconference: New Media, Old Media, Social Media: Changing South Asian Communications Scholarship Sponsored Sessions Home to more than a billion and one half people, South Asia enjoys a shared history combined with a unique cultural, religious, political, linguistic, and ethnic diversity. South Asian media reflects this diversity through its cultural products, which are becoming increasingly popular throughout the region and in other parts of the world. This 2-day preconference will explore the emerging media systems, mediated publics and communications pedagogy in South Asia, in the context of the region’s growing salience in the dynamics of globalization. It will cover a range of topics on new media as well as conventional media, to provide a critical account of the media changes underway in South Asia and their implications for national politics, regional political dynamics, public cultures and communications scholarship. The preconference workshop will focus on themes of topical relevance for South Asia and for ICA members studying the region, by combining invited presentations with an open call for papers for each issue-specific panel. 4115 International Communication Association Executive Committee Meeting Monday 08:00-12:00 Clarence Sponsored Sessions Chair Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA Francois Cooren, U de Montréal, CANADA Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA 4125 Monday 08:00-17:00 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Preconference: Transmedia Storytelling: Theories, Methods, and Research Strategies Sponsored Sessions Chairs Indrek Ibrus, Tallinn U, ESTONIA Carlos Alberto Scolari, U Pompeu Fabra, SPAIN The objective of this preconference is to create an interdisciplinary environment for exchanging research experiences on transmedia storytelling. 21st century media convergence processes – that could be interpreted not only as a concentration of media ownership but as a complex series of operations that involve technological, professional, and cultural aspects – have completely changed the traditional communication landscape. In this context, many contemporary media productions are characterized by: 1) the expansion of their narrative through different media (film, TV, comics, etc.) and platforms (blogs, YouTube, etc.), and 2) the creation of user-generated contents that contribute to expanding the original story. In 2003 Henry Jenkins defined such productions as transmedia storytelling. In this preconference we place transmedia storytelling at the centre of a scientific exchange environment. Transmedia storytelling is one of the main strategies of media companies, and a significant practice for the consumers that cooperate in the expansion of a narrative. On the other side, transmedia storytelling is an interdisciplinary research object that can be studied under different approaches: Media Studies, Political Economy, Media Economics, Narratology, Ludology, Film Studies, Semiotics, Ethnography, etc. International research on TS is expanding but it is still a fragmented field. This preconference will provide a venue for innovative scholars from around the world who are doing research in exploring transmedia storytelling. 4152 Monday 08:00-16:30 3.21 Old Building Preconference: Beyond the Brand (Popular Communication Preconference) Sponsored Sessions Chairs Devon Powers, Drexel U, USA Melissa Aronczyk, Carleton U, CANADA One of the most vital shifts in contemporary communication relates to the ways in which interpersonal and public communication have been (re)located and transformed in increasingly promotional contexts. The “work” of the brand is to stand at once for representation and identity, communication and control, market and media. As concept, metaphor, technology and communicative logic, the brand is part popular culture and part commerce, part personal and part collective, part rationality and part affect. It appears to be everywhere even as it effectively seeks to hide its origins. What resources do scholars have to get “beyond the brand”? How can we come up with more effective and trenchant definitions and analytical tools to overcome the brand’s seeming ubiquity, and to defuse its apparent power in language and in practice? The goal of this preconference is to develop resources and strategies in four thematic areas: brands and methods/critique; brands, knowledge, and surveillance; brands and communities of resistance (locally and transnationally); and brands and industrial/institutional change. 4164 Monday 08:00-17:00 Clore Management Centre Preconference: Conditions of Mediation: Phenomenological Approaches to Media, Technology, and Communication Sponsored Sessions Chair Tim Markham, Birkbeck, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Paddy Scannell, U of Michigan, USA Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Lisa Parks, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Graham Harman, American U of Cairo, EGYPT David Berry, U of Swansea, UNITED KINGDOM Media theory seems to have reached a moment in which it is effectively orthodox to presume we must pay attention first and foremost to the intricacies of everyday experience. Studies of digital and networked media, meanwhile, have put into question the very notion of ‘audiences’ as the starting point for understanding mediated experience. For some, accounting for the intricacies of everyday mediated experience has implied asking people what they actually do with media. But for others this is not enough: instead, the question is what constitutes the conditions of media experience in the first place. Such questions point to a renewed confidence in explaining not just how but also why media, technology and communication are experienced as they are – all the while resisting a reversion to functionalism. These interests in the very conditions of mediation suggest, if sometimes only implicitly, an emerging interest in a phenomenology of media. Indeed, phenomenology – broadly the structuring of perception – has seemingly obvious relevance for recent academic interests in media experience. Yet its use or invocation in media studies has been scattered. This preconference seeks to bring together scholars from a very wide range of perspectives – such as media history, media archaeology, audience studies, political theory, metaphysics, software studies, science and technology studies, digital aesthetics, cultural geography and urban studies – to reflect explicitly on the phenomenological groundings of their work on media. 4166 Preconference: Multilingual and Multicultural Communication Monday 08:15-17:30 V211 Sponsored Sessions Recent research, including that by MERCATOR (The Fryske Akademy, The Netherlands) an independent European Research Centre for Multilingualism, has begun to acknowledge multilingual communication as a norm worldwide, with an increasing amount of research being focused on the complexities underlying multilingualism in individual, developmental, and societal perspectives. With this proposal, which is a joint enterprise of MERCATOR, the School of Oriential and Asian Studies (University of London), the ICA-affiliated International Association of Language and Social Psychology, and the ICA Intergroup Communication Interest Group, we aim to explore some of these recent trends from an interdisciplinary perspective with insights from sociolinguistics, sociology, social psychology and communication theory. 4108 Preconference: Organizational Communication Division Doctoral Consortium: Expanding Your Scholarly Comfort Zone Monday 08:30-17:00 York Sponsored Sessions Participants Brenda J. Allen, U of Colorado, USA Kevin J Barge, Texas A&M U, USA Boris H. J. M. Brummans, U de Montréal, CANADA Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA Ling Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Johny T. Garner, Texas Christian U, USA Matt Koschmann, U of Colorado, USA Debashish Munshi, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Anne M Nicotera, George Mason U, USA Linda L. Putnam, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA Sarah J. Tracy, Arizona State U, USA Paaige Kelle Turner, Saint Louis U, USA Bart J. van den Hooff, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA Every 2 years the division has sponsored its doctoral consortium to help socialize students as they move toward finishing their degrees. This full-day workshop brings together doctoral students and faculty to examine contemporary issues related to the development of our next generation of scholars. This is open to all doctoral students, but targeted toward more advanced students who are dissertating and/or who are about to finish coursework. As we hold our division’s first doctoral consortium outside the familiarity of North America, it is appropriate to discuss various ways in which we must learn to expand our scholarly comfort zone amid a variety of changes in our world. This preconference will use a diverse set of faculty mentors to help doctoral students think through the promises (and perils) of various transitions that take us beyond what may be most comfortable to us. 4122 Monday 08:30-17:00 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 4143 Monday 08:30-12:30 Graduate School of Journalism Preconference: Language and Engagement in Changing Forms of Public Interaction Sponsored Sessions Participants Joanna Thornborrow, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Mats Ekstrom, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Åsa Kroon Lundell, Örebro U, SWEDEN Kay Richardson, U of Liverpool, UNITED KINGDOM Marianna Patrona, Hellenic Military Academy, GREECE Richard Fitzgerald, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Andrew Tolson, De Montfort U, UNITED KINGDOM Michal Hamo, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Stephanie Marriott, Bangor U, UNITED KINGDOM Evelyn Ho, U of San Francisco, USA David Boromisza-Habashi, U of Colorado, USA Richard Buttny, U of Syracuse, USA Zohar Kampf, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Saskia Witteborn,Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Preconference: Internationalizing Journalism Studies Sponsored Sessions Chairs Michael Stuart Bromley, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Howard Tumber, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Stephanie L. Craft, U of Missouri, USA Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Munich, GERMANY Claudia Mellado, U of Santiago, CHILE Ibrahim Mostafa Saleh, International Association for Media and Communication Research, USA Hillel Nosseck, College of Management Academic Studies, ISRAEL Vera Slavtcheva-Petkova, U of Chester, UNITED KINGDOM Janet Ellen Steele, George Washington U, USA Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA Although Journalism Studies has matured rapidly as a scholarly field in recent years, the question of the attention it pays to its object of study globally remains a vexed one. Even the terminology of ‘internationalization’ is contested. The aim of this pre-conference, following on from the journalism extended session organized by Stephanie Craft in Phoenix, is to explore why and how Journalism Studies may become more routinely attuned to the multiplex nature of journalism through theorisation and methodological practices. Its objective is to offer suggestions for enhancing the internationalization of the field through individual scholarship and institutional infrastructure. 4144 Monday 08:30-17:00 Conference Room 4153 Monday 08:30-13:00 Media and Communication Department Preconference: The Objects of Journalism: Media, Materiality, and the News Sponsored Sessions Studying the “objects of journalism” involves looking at the role of actual things in the journalism production process. This pre-conference aims at moving away from perspectives focusing on overarching forces — be they of an economic, ideological or technical nature — as the main explanation of what happens in the making of the news. Without denying the existence of such forces, the approach advocated here tentatively explores the very material objects, sometimes seemingly innocuous or univocal, involved in journalistic production. It is an effort, in other words, towards fully embodying a vast set of heterogeneous objects that were or are enrolled in the making of the news: from the carrier-pigeon to Google algorithms, from Remington typewriters to robot-journalism. Taking objects seriously strikes us as being an approach towards which some very challenging research and researchers are currently tending, but also as lacking a larger, unified framework for discussing potential items of research. We also aim, finally, to help to facilitate discussion between those who scholars who might embrace this "material turn" and those who might see it as a return to a realist ontology perhaps best left behind. In a word, this preconference is concerned to reveal the very concrete materiality of journalism. Preconference: 10 Years On: Looking Forwards in Mobile ICT Research Sponsored Sessions Respondents Rich Ling, IT U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Raz Schwartz, Rutgers U, USA Brett Oppegaard, Washington State U, Vancouver, USA Christian Licoppe, Telecom ParisTech, FRANCE Didem Ozkul, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Kathleen Mae Cumiskey, CUNY - Staten Island, USA Scott W. Campbell, U of Michigan, USA Jason Farman, U of Maryland, USA This one-and-a-half day preconference, sponsored by the Communications and Technology Division, will consist of expert panel presentations and reflections at the start and end and strands for the presentation of papers. The venue will be the Thai Theatre, New Academic Building on the London School of Economics and Political Sciences. Contemporary studies are already identifying challenges in achieving consistency, reliability and quality of results in a fast moving world of Big Data, petabytes and change. New research has already highlighted the effects of people on the move around the globe – migration within and between nations; as well as emotions, affect and sentiment with regard to using mobile devices. 4154 Preconference: ICA Political Communication 2013 Graduate Student Preconference Monday 08:30-16:00 TW1.2.01 Sponsored Sessions 4156 Preconference: The Political Communication of Young Citizens Through Social Media Monday 08:30-16:00 STC.S75 Sponsored Sessions Aims: The preconference goals include providing guidance, feedback and professional socialization to political communication graduate students at the master's and doctoral levels, introducing graduate students to ICA and inviting them to take part in the academic discourse on political communication through ICA, and cultivating a network among young political communication scholars. To achieve these goals, the preconference will bring together a select group of graduate students working on political communication projects and provide them with the opportunity to present and discuss their projects in a constructive atmosphere. The preconference will also address common issues graduate students face, including working toward publication and building a CV. Participants The Civic Network: Young Citizens, Political Engagement, and Social Media ariadne vromen, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin, USA Brian Loader, U of York, UNITED KINGDOM Does Participatory Culture Create Civic Youth? Mats Ekstrom, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Tobias Olson, Lund U, SWEDEN Johan Östman, Örebro U, SWEDEN Political Influence Within Parent-Child Dyads: Partisanship, Candidate Preference, and Political Participation Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA It's Communication, Stupid Stephen Coleman, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM YouTube's Fantasies of Political Agency Nico Carpentier, VU U - Brussels, BELGIUM Organization in the Crowd: Twitter as Integrative Mechanism in the Networked Organization of the Occupy Protests W. Lance Bennett, U of Washington, USA Alexandra Segerberg, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Islam on the Visual Battleground Liesbet Van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Young Citizens and the Fine Art of Disengaging Online Kjerstin Thorson, U of Southern California, USA Social Media and Citizenship Education: What Do Teachers and Students Do, Why, and What Do They Want for the Future? Ian Davies, U of York, UNITED KINGDOM Networking Young Citizens Suzanne Mellor, ACER Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Thinking Beyond the Usual Chris Waller, Association for Citizenship Teaching, UNITED KINGDOM Key Issues in Researching Citizenship Education David Kerr, Citizenship Foundation, UNITED KINGDOM The Outraged Young: Young Europeans, Civic Engagement, and the Social Media in a Time of Crisis James Sloam, Royal Holloway, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM This one-day preconference explores the influence of social media communications technologies upon the participatory culture of young citizens. Comprising a number of leading international communications scholars in this field, it will consider these issues from a number of theoretical and methodological approaches, attempting to move beyond simplistic notions of young people as ‘the internet generation.’ 4121 Monday 08:45-16:00 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 4126 Monday 08:45-16:00 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Preconference: Exploring and Remaking Critical Studies of Advertising Sponsored Sessions Few other areas of communication research are as ripe for reassessment and reformulation as is the critical study of advertising. Current and impending practices of advertising have outstripped in many ways the reach of traditional modes of critique. The purposes of this preconference program are to present and discuss constitutive relationships between traditional critiques of advertising and the contexts of their emergence; probe, discuss, and evaluate recent and emergent theoretical resources for more historically responsive bases of a critical assessment of advertising in society; track, explain, and characterize changes in the advertising ecosystem (including changing role of media planners, buyers, third-party ad networks, data-mining companies, and online intermediaries; identify potential social and political implications due to changes in the advertising industry; and explore and assess new or neglected critical approaches to advertising. Exploring and Remaking Critical Studies of Advertising (Breakout Room) Sponsored Sessions 4171 Preconference: The BRICS Nations: Between National Identity and Global Citizenship Monday 08:45-18:00 Conference Building Sponsored Sessions Chair Peter Goodwin, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Xin Xin, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Xin Zhong, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zhengrong Hu, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Paula U. Chakravartty, U of Massachusetts, USA Jian Wang, U of Southern California, USA Kaarle Nordenstreng, U of Tampere, FINLAND Daya Thussu, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Elena Vartanova, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Participants Panel One: New Trends in the Media Industries and Popular Cultures of the BRICS Nations: A Comparative Perspective Hongmei Li, Georgia State U, USA Panel Two: National/Global Identity Building, Nationalism, and Cosmopolitanism Jeanette Steemers, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Panel Three: Public Diplomacy, External Communications, and Soft Power Leslie Louise Marsh, Georgia State U, USA Panel Four: Theoretical and Methodological Issues on Transcultural Studies of the BRICS Nations: Roundtable Discussions Colin Sparks, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF This preconference aims to compare the construction of national identities and global citizenship among five leading emerging economies—Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa or the “BRICS” nations. It draws particular attention to the internal and external challenges and opportunities the five countries face in the process of construction and reconstruction of their national and global identities in the digital environment. It will discuss the pressing issues the five nations face in the context of emerging consumer culture and reconstructing their national and global identities. It aims to advance research on emerging nations by bringing together scholars who conduct interdisciplinary research with a comparative approach. 4211 Monday 09:00-17:00 Waterloo/Tower Preconference: From Feminism, With a Feminist Agenda: Digital Interventions to Incite Change in Publishing, Pedagogy, the Academy, and Our Networks Sponsored Sessions Chairs Carol A. Stabile, Center for the Study of Women in Society, USA Mari Castaneda, U of Massachusetts, USA Kimberly Anne Sawchuk, Concordia U, CANADA Lisa Nakamura, U of Illinois, USA Participants Lisa Parks, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Anne Balsamo, U of Southern California, USA Alex Juhasz, Pitzer College, USA Bryce Peake, U of Oregon, USA Nina B. Huntemann, Suffolk U, USA Nermin Moufti, OCAD U, CANADA Sarah Kember, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Mél Hogan, Concordia U, CANADA Tara McPherson, U of Southern California, USA Jessie Daniels, Hunter College, USA YeonJu Oh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Emma Westecott, OCAD U, CANADA Angela McRobbie, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Joan Haran, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Shakuntala Banaji, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Phyllis Dako-Gyeke, U of Ghana, GHANA Kimberly Juanita Brown, Northeastern U, USA Karen Estlund, U of Oregon Micha Cardenas, Independent Researcher Urmila Goel, Independent Scholar and Trainer Sumana Harihareswara, Wikimedia Foundation Lisa M. McLaughlin, Miami U of Ohio Leslie Regan Shade, U of Toronto Caroline Seck Langill, OCAD U Caroline Bassett, U of Sussex Kate Riordan, U of Sussex Ursula Huws, U of Hertfordshire This preconference produces a space for Feminist Communication scholars using or seeking to use new media tools for activist agendas to dialogue on strategies in the areas of pedagogy, publishing and networking. Reflecting the spirit of the ICA 2013 conference, “Challenging Communication Research,” it “storms” traditional methods of pedagogy, publishing, mentoring, and networking, at the fulcrum where feminist scholarship meets digital methods. It brings together two key networks using feminist methods with agendas in publishing and pedagogy, FemBot and FemTechNet, which are led and facilitated by leading Feminist Communication scholars. These groups, working in tandem and collaboratively, will present their work to date, offering models for collaboration and creation. In the spirit of our work, the preconference is facilitated by a diversity of speakers and dialogue leaders: academic and non-academic, junior and senior, and from a range of institutions, nation states and ethnic, class and racial backgrounds. 4212 Monday 09:00-16:30 Chelsea/Richmond The Power of Play Breakout II Sponsored Sessions 4213 The Power of Play Breakout I Monday 09:00-16:30 St. James Sponsored Sessions 4214 Preconference: The Power of Play: Motivational Uses and Applications Monday 09:00-16:30 Regent's Sponsored Sessions 4216 Preconference: 4th Annual Doctoral Consortium of the Communication and Technology Division Monday 09:00-17:00 Belgrave Sponsored Sessions 4217 Preconference: Communication Science: Evolution, Biology, and Brains: Innovation in Theory and Methods Monday 09:00-17:00 Berkeley Sponsored Sessions The goal of this preconference is to shed light on the motivational aspects of digital games and gameplay, how they relate to the ways in which games are used for entertainment and other purposes, the domains in which they are applied, the challenges in their design and application, and the ways in which they are studied. There will be three concurrent sessions of presentations scheduled for each hour. The roundtable luncheon discussion will be facilitated by the preconference organization commitee with discussion topics allocated for each round table. Participants will be asked to sit at a table of their interest to discuss the allocated topic and exchange contact information with other participants. After the pre-conference, all accepted extended abstracts, unless stated other vice by the presenter, will be published on ICA GSIG's website and will be accessed by public free of charge. The Communication and Technology (CAT) Division proudly announces the fourth Doctoral Consortium to be held in conjunction with the 2013 Conference of the International Communication Association. The consortium brings together PhD candidates working on Communication and Technology to give them the opportunity to present and discuss their research in a constructive and international atmosphere. The goals of the event are to provide feedback and advice to participating PhD candidates on their in-progress research thesis. Moreover, the doctoral consortium will provide the opportunity to meet experts as well as fellow PhD candidates from different backgrounds working on related topics. During the consortium, students will be invited to present their work, following which they will receive feedback from their fellow students and faculty participants, all of whom will have read the proposals in advance of the Doctoral Consortium. In addition, at least one faculty participant will be assigned to respond in detail to each proposal. Chairs Emily Falk, U of Michigan, USA Allison Eden, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Frequency of Online Involvement and Neural Sensitivity to Exclusion Joseph Bayer, U of Michigan, USA Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Michigan, USA Emily Falk, U of Michigan, USA Christopher Cascio, U of Michigan, USA Telepresence by Choice: Evolution of Media Uses Cheryl Campanella Bracken, Cleveland State U, USA Gary R. Pettey, Cleveland State U, USA Towards a Science of Television News Research: Nonverbal Analysis of News Visuals Erik P. Bucy, Texas Tech U, USA Neural Correlates of Social Influence in Adolescence: Attitudes Towards Mobile Game Applications Christopher Cascio, U of Michigan, USA Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Michigan, USA Frank Tinney, U of Michigan, USA Joseph Bayer, U of Michigan, USA Kristin Shumaker, U of Michigan, USA Josh Carp, U of Michigan, USA Emily Falk, U of Michigan, USA Loving a Fantasy: How Neuroscientific and Biophysical Measures Can Provide Insight Into Parasocial Romance and Sexual Socialization Sarah Erickson, U of Michigan, USA Humans Are People, Too: Nurturing an Appreciation for Nature in Communication Research Kory Floyd, Arizona State U, USA Music, Morality, Mind: Voices From Jamaica’s Music Community, Ethical Universals, and Neuroscience Intersect Vernita Pearl Fort, U of Illinois, USA Patterns of Change in Heart Rate During Interpersonal Communication Steven Michael Giles, Wake Forest U, USA Jack Rejeski, Wake Forest U, USA Jennifer S Priem, Wake Forest U, USA Cooperative Video Game Play and Generosity: Oxytocin Production as a Causal Mechanism Regarding Prosocial Behavior Resulting From Cooperative Video Game Play Matthew N Grizzard, Michigan State U, USA Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA Evolution of What? A Network Approach to the Definition of Evolving Populations Martin Hilbert, U of Southern California, USA Poong Oh, U of Southern California, USA Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA Study of the Impact of Imagined Interactions and Arguing Among Couples on Heart Rate James M. Honeycutt, Louisiana State U, USA Does Signaling Theory Predict Aggressive Behaviors in Video Games? Richard Wayne Huskey, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Communication Optimization Model: A Proposal for an Evolutionary Model of Communication Media Yoram M. Kalman, Open U of Israel, ISRAEL May I Have Your Attention Please? A Neuroscientific Study Into Message Attention for Health Information Loes Kessels, U of Maastricht, THE NETHERLANDS Exploring the Relations Between Video Games, Emotional Responses, and Eye Tracking Jeroen S Lemmens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Susanne E. Baumgartner, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sindy R. Sumter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Multilevel Emergence of Communication Phenomena: A Philosophical Review of Subjectivity and Evolutionary Psychology From a Neurophysiological Perspective J. Michael Mangus, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Biology, Beauty, and the News: Do Evolutional Factors Influence Decision Making of Journalists? Dana Markowitz-Elfassi, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Exploring Neural and Linguistic Correlates of Enthusiastic Idea Propagation and Recommendation Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Michigan, USA Emily Falk, U of Michigan, USA Kristin Shumaker, U of Michigan, USA Matthew D Lieberman, U of California - Los Angeles, USA Perceived Distance Between Accents, Religious Groups, and Attraction to Ingroup-Accented Speakers, is Calibrated to the Costs of Infection Risk Scott A. Reid, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Jinguang Zhang, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Jessica Gasiorek, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Marko Dragojevic, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Susana Peinado, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Becky Robinson, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Grace Leigh Anderson, Samford U, USA How Evolutionary Theory Improves Health (Communication) Doreen Reifegerste, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY Personalized Media Processes and Effects: A Look at Relevant Biologically Based and Socially Constructed Individual Differences and Emotional Responses to Media Bridget E Rubenking, U of Central Florida, USA Exploring Narrative Comprehension Through Neural Networks: Challenges of Leveraging Neuroimaging Techniques in Communication Research Scott W Ruston, Arizona State U, USA Gene Brewer, Arizona State U, USA Adam Cohen, Arizona State U, USA Steven R. Corman, Arizona State U, USA Anthony J. Roberto, Arizona State U, USA Risk Perception Affects Neural Responses to Real-Life Risk Communication Ralf Schmälzle, U of Konstanz, GERMANY Frank Häcker, U of Konstanz, GERMANY Britta Renner, U of Konstanz, GERMANY Christopher Honey, Princeton U, USA Harald Schupp, U of Konstanz, GERMANY Cross-Validating a State Empathy Scale With fMRI Data Lijiang Shen, U of Georgia, USA Tianming Liu, U of Georgia, USA Kaiming Li, U of Georgia, USA Two Mechanisms to Rule Them All: The Cognitive Science of Media Experience John L. Sherry, Michigan State U, USA Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Passive-Active Brain Control Interface for Collaborative Artistic Interaction in a Virtual World David Harris Smith, McMaster U, CANADA Kiret Dhindsa, McMaster U, CANADA Orienting Responses to Expectation Violations in Narrative Processing Freya Sukalla, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Heather Shoenberger, U of Missouri, USA Exploring Physical Mobility in Interactive Media Use From an Embodied Cognition Perspective Kevin Wise, U of Missouri, USA This preconference responds to the critical mass of communication researchers who have taken up biological explanations, and seeks to bring together researchers under the explicit umbrella of our field and our questions. The preconference brings together scholars who are working across subfields of communication studies and use evolutionary theory, biological explanations as well as neuroscience and other biological measures to address core questions in communication studies. Most importantly, the preconference participants will share new data and ideas and discuss a vision for how communication studies can best leverage such new theorizing and study paradigms moving forward. The main theme of this pre-conference is that models and relationships discovered throughout the history of our field must continue to play an important role in our thinking, but those models and relationships must be updated to reflect current scientific thinking. 4223 Monday 09:00-17:30 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Preconference: New Media and Citizenship in Asia: Researching the Practices, Functions, and Effects of the New Media in Asian Politics Sponsored Sessions Chairs Nojin Kwak, U of Michigan, USA Marko M. Skoric, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Scott W. Campbell, U of Michigan, USA Junho Choi, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA Participants How is the Television Political Program Twittered?: Twitter’s Intermedia Agenda-Setting Effect Sohei Lim, Ewha Womans U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Seung-hee Lee, Ewha Womans U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Playing With Hegemony: Changing Receptions of the CCTV’s Annual Spring Festival Gala in China Jin Wang, New York U, USA Internet and Civic Engagement in the Midst of Social Differentiation: An Analysis From a Nationwide Survey in China Baohua Zhou, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Regime Change and Social Media Adoption: Identifying Contextual Determinants of Facebook Diffusion Shin Haeng Lee, U of Washington, USA Getting News Everywhere: How Incidental News Exposure on the Internet Promotes Young Adults’ Political Participation JungHwan Yang, U of Wisconsin, USA Byung-Gu Lee, U of Wisconsin, USA Use of Political Podcast in South Korea During Election Campaign: Twitter-Mediated Communication Network of “Naggomsu” Jiyoung Kim, Yeungnam U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Steven Sam, Brunel U, UNITED KINGDOM Han Woo Park, Yeungnam U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Social Media, Political Efficacy, and Political Engagement Chang Sup Park, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA A Trigger or a Muffler?: Examining the Dynamics Between Online Social Media Use and Participation in the 2012 Presidential Election of South Korea Soo Young Bae, U of Michigan, USA South Korean Young Adults’ Dependency on Parents and Their Political Engagement in the Digital Age Jiwoo Park, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Chang Sup Park, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Being a Real Journalist Who Tells the Truth: A Case Study of the Newstapa Wooyeol Shin, U of Minnesota, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jiyoon Ryu, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Developing Bridging Social Capital Using Smartphones Tetsuro Kobayashi, National Institute of Informatics, Japan, JAPAN Jeffrey Boase, Ryerson U, CANADA Tsutomu Suzuki, Research Organization of Information and Systems, JAPAN Takahisa Suzuki, Graduate U for Advanced Studies, JAPAN Social Media and Offline Political Participation: Uncovering the Paths From Digital to Physical Marko M. Skoric, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE The Impact of Social Media on Political Participation: The Case of Taiwan’s 2012 Presidential Elections Tai-Li Wang, National Taiwan U, TAIWAN Media Scandals in China Ruoyun Bai, U of Toronto, CANADA New Media and Citizenship: Online Communicative Spaces and the Dialectics of Identity-Based Political Mobilisations T.T. Sreekumar, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Cheryll Ruth Reyes Soriano, De La Salle U, PHILIPPINES Internet Aggregators Constructing the Political Right Wing Muneo Kaigo, U of Tsukuba, JAPAN Examining Korea’s 2012 Presidential Election Campaigns Using (Negative) Entropy Indicator Han Woo Park, Yeungnam U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Mobile Communication and Civic Engagement in South Korea: Examining the Interactions Between Public and Private Realms of Use Hoon Lee, U of Michigan, USA Nojin Kwak, U of Michigan, USA Scott W. Campbell, U of Michigan, USA Rich Ling, IT U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Framing and Misframing in Microblogging Sites in China: Online Propagation of Animal Cruelty Campaign Yuanxin Wang, Temple U, USA Water-Data Community: Making Social Media Relevant to Local Citizenship and Participation Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA Deepak Menon, Arghyam and Leader of the India Water Portal (digital commons) Bangalore, INDIA Where They Agree: How Media Exposure, Political Cynicism and Supporting Online Deliberation Influence Consonance in Online and Offline Public Opinion Debbie Goh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Natalie Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE This preconference aims to showcase innovative scholarly work examining various subjects concerning the role of social media, mobile phones, and other new communication technologies in the formation of democratic citizenship writ large—in Asia. The preference seeks studies that address relevant topics in a particular Asian county, and comparative research on Asian countries or Asian and non-Asian countries is also welcome. In particular, the preconference welcomes research on recent national elections in Asian countries, which presents a theory-driven analysis of the role of social media in real-world, offline civic and political action. 4227 Monday 09:00-12:30 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Preconference: Teaching CAM: Pedagogical Issues and Practical Strategies for Sharing Theory and Research Related to Children, Adolescents, and Media Sponsored Sessions Participant CAM Presession Overview Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Senior scholars have volunteered to share their “best practices” for teaching and learning around five key themes (see below). Thematic panels will include short presentations (2-3 minutes each) by a team of CAM scholars. We invite the participation of all workshop attendees who have questions or experiences they want to share. 4241 Monday 09:00-17:00 Cass Business School Preconference: Governance Through Communication: Stakeholder Engagement, Dialogue, and Corporate Social Responsibility Sponsored Sessions Chair Mette Morsing, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Participants George Cheney, Kent State U, USA Bobby Banerjee, U of South Australia, AUSTRALIA Peter Fleming, Queen Mary, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Martin Parker, Leicester U, UNITED KINGDOM This two-part preconference investigates the topical question of governance, focusing on the role communication expertise and practices play in the way in which the idea is constructed and enacted by government and business organizations. The second part of the conference will focus more closely on corporate contexts and legitimacy by critically examining key assumptions about corporate social responsibility (CSR). The conference begins in Scotland’s historic capital of Edinburgh at Queen Margaret University, home to the Dialogue Centre. After a day of discussing stakeholder engagement and dialogue – as well as experiencing some key aspects of Scottish culture – we transfer to London with new perspectives to take forward in discussions of future directions for CSR communication research. 4251 Monday 09:00-17:00 Conference Room 4263 Monday 09:00-15:40 Charels Wilson Building Preconference: New Histories of Communication Study Sponsored Sessions This preconference seeks to broaden, internationalize, and advance the history of communication study as a family of overlapping configurations and practices. It aims to bring together scholars from ICA, ECREA, IAMCR, and select rhetoric societies in an effort to stoke new, cross-national and cross-field conversations about the study of communication in long and broad historical perspective. It aspires to push the empirical and theoretical boundaries of histories and pre-histories of the field by attending to overlooked research areas, emerging conceptual orientations, and new axes of understanding and comparison among distinct traditions cutting across communication, media studies, cultural studies, journalism, and rhetoric, among other fields—and across institutional, intellectual, social, cultural, discursive, and material history. Preconference: Audiences, Elsewhere? Reviewing the Applicability of Audiences and Audience Research to Those in Other Fields Sponsored Sessions Participants Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Ranjana Das, U of Leicester, GERMANY Pille Pruulmann-Vengerfeldt, U of Tartu, ESTONIA Jacob Bjur, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Geoffroy Patriarche, FUSL, BELGIUM Helena Bilandzic, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Including keynote addresses from Professor Sonia Livingstone and Professor Kirsten Drotner, this preconference looks back at the past 50 years of audience research to ask - in what ways can insights from the field be applied, carried over or at least communicated to researchers working elsewhere? Such an approach places the tradition of audience research into a direct dialogue with other trajectories communication scholars walk on. For instance, for the scholar of communication technologies, the textreader metaphor that lies at the heart of audience reception becomes a tool worthy of interest in the face of discussions about technologies as texts or the affordances and appropriation of technologies. But just as we take note of the retention-worthiness of insights and concepts from audience research, we need to also question these – which insights need updating in the age of media convergence? What can audience research as a field do, to communicate itself better to researchers elsewhere? 4265 Monday 09:00-15:00 Khalili Lecture Theatre Preconference: New Media, Old Media, Social Media: Changing South Asian Communications Scholarship Sponsored Sessions Home to more than a billion and one half people, South Asia enjoys a shared history combined with a unique cultural, religious, political, linguistic, and ethnic diversity. South Asian media reflects this diversity through its cultural products, which are becoming increasingly popular throughout the region and in other parts of the world. This 2-day preconference will explore the emerging media systems, mediated publics and communications pedagogy in South Asia, in the context of the region’s growing salience in the dynamics of globalization. It will cover a range of topics on new media as well as conventional media, to provide a critical account of the media changes underway in South Asia and their implications for national politics, regional political dynamics, public cultures and communications scholarship. The preconference workshop will focus on themes of topical relevance for South Asia and for ICA members studying the region, by combining invited presentations with an open call for papers for each issue-specific panel. 4245 Preconference: Strategies for Media Reform: An International Workshop Monday 09:30-17:30 Small Hall Sponsored Sessions Participants Victor W. Pickard, U of Pennsylvania, USA Minna KM Aslama, New America Foundation, USA Given the crises of funding, legitimacy and accountability facing media systems across the world, there are currently unprecedented opportunities for media reform: for re-imagining, restructuring, and reviving our means of communication in the public interest. In Mexico, activists in the Yo Soy 132 movement have taken to the streets to protest the power of the main broadcast networks and to call for media democratization. Governments across Latin America have responded to the partisan political role of media conglomerates by passing progressive legislation on media ownership. In the UK, activists in Hacked Off and the Coordinating Committee for Media Reform have faced down the power of News Corporation in the context of the phone hacking scandal by launching important campaigns to secure ethical journalism and challenge media concentration. This international pre-conference will highlight efforts across a range of countries to build vibrant and viable media reform movements and offer all participants the chance to reflect on the strategies required to grow and sustain campaigns for media democracy. 4404 International Communication Association Annual Board of Director's Meeting Monday 13:00-17:00 Blenheim Sponsored Sessions Chair Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA Francois Cooren, U de Montréal, CANADA Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Roberta G. Lentz, McGill U, CANADA Jiro Takai, Nagoya U, JAPAN Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Sojung Claire Kim, U of Pennsylvania, USA Rahul Mitra, Purdue U, USA Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Kwan Min Lee, U of Southern California, USA Philip Lodge, Edinburgh Napier U, UNITED KINGDOM Laura Stein, U of Texas, USA Richard J. Doherty, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Roopali Mukherjee, CUNY - Queens College, USA Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA Dmitri Williams, U of Southern California, USA Vincent Doyle, IE U, SPAIN Adrienne Shaw, Temple U, USA Antonio C. La Pastina, Texas A&M U, USA Mohan Jyoti Dutta, National U of Singapore, USA Elly A. Konijn, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Brandi N Frisby, U of Kentucky, USA Steve T. Mortenson, U of Delaware, USA Liz Jones, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA John P. Caughlin, U of Illinois, USA Stephanie L. Craft, U of Missouri, USA Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA David Tewksbury, U of Illinois, USA Ted Zorn, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jonathan Alan Gray, U of Wisconsin, USA Juan-Carlos Molleda, U of Florida, USA Michael S. Griffin, Macalester College, USA The ICA Board of Director's Meeting is open to all members. Members are encouraged to attend to better understand how your association works. 4427 Monday 13:00-17:00 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Preconference: Successful Publication in Top-Ranked Communication Journals: A Guide for Nonnative English Speakers Sponsored Sessions Chair Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Addressing the Challenges of English-Language Journals for an International Association: Current Issues and Initiatives Frank Esser, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Issues in Publication for Nonnative English Speaking Scholars: An Editor’s Perspective Malcolm R. Parks, U of Washington, USA Progress, But We’re Not All the Way There Yet: A Historical Perspective on International Authors in English-Language Communication Journals Pamela J. Shoemaker, Syracuse U, USA A Reviewer’s Perspective Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA A View From Both Sides: Editing and Publishing in English and German Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Guidance for Successful Publication in English-Language Journals: A Workshop Presentation Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS As for many international academic associations, ICA employs English as the primary language for scholarly publication and exchange. The advantages of using a single language to share ideas and research findings are obvious. Challenges are equally apparent, notably the potential to disadvantage scholars for whom English is a second language and who may be less familiar with the norms of how scholarly articles are structured in such journals. The purpose of this preconference is to review these issues and provide guidance regarding publication in such journals, from journal editors, reviewers, and from scholars for whom English is a second language, who have had substantial success publishing in the major English language communication journals. This preconference is intended primarily to serve younger faculty and graduate students, or more senior faculty, planning or beginning to publish in English-language journals. It should also be of interest to native English-speaking scholars who are more senior, and serving or likely to serve as journal editors or active editorial board members, as well as to native English-speaking graduate students who might benefit from an in-depth discussion of journal publication issues. 4442 Monday 13:00-16:00 Conference Room Preconference: Global Media Ethics: Problems and Perspectives Sponsored Sessions Chair Stephen John Anthony Ward, U of Wisconsin, USA Participants Clifford Christians, independent s , USA Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Shakuntala Rao, SUNY – Plattsburgh, USA Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Lee Wilkins, U of Missouri, USA Muhammad Ayish, American U of Sharjah, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES Richard Keeble, Lincoln, UNITED KINGDOM The global media ethics preconference will follow a separate morning pre-conference event at City University on the internationalization of Journalism Studies. 4548 Monday 14:00-17:00 Conference Room Preconference: Power Through Communication Technology in a 21st Century Global Society: Questions That Must Be Addressed Sponsored Sessions Participants Dean Kruckeberg, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA Michael L. Kent, U of Oklahoma, USA Erich James Sommerfeldt, U of Maryland, USA Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Participants Another Inconvenient Truth Dean Kruckeberg, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA Social Media Silos and Civil Society: A Role for Public Relations in Contemporary Development Communication Efforts Erich James Sommerfeldt, U of Maryland, USA Taking a Critical Look at Technology in Public Relations: We Have an App for That Michael L. Kent, U of Oklahoma, USA Social Mediars: The New Online Stakeholders for Public Relations? Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK In @ We Trust? Public Relations Realities of Fake Online Personalities Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA Public relations scholars have thus far reflected very little on the use and abuse of communication technologies, on public relations’ role in such use and abuse, on the potential of these technologies for development communication as well as on those who use them and on their motivations for doing so. A critical need exists for a more thorough discussion that examines the historical development of communication technologies and their use, both by organizations and by those who represent the interests of organizations, i.e., public relations practitioners, and by these organizations’ publics. The goal of this preconference program is to bring together scholars of public relations and social media in a forum to examine a broad range of perspectives on this phenomenon and to explore the impact of communication technologies for public relations from a more critical perspective. 4703 ICA London Opening Plenary: Born Challenging: The Mark of Cultural Studies on Communication Research Monday 18:00-19:30 Buckingham Sponsored Sessions Chair Liesbet Van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants David Morely, Glodsmiths, UNITED KINGDOM Jackie Stacey, U of Manchester, UNITED KINGDOM Richard Hebdidge, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Cultural Studies have developed by challenging the existing ways of conceiving, conducting and reporting research. To challenge is often to meet scepticism or even resistance. To challenge is always to prompt debate and foster creativity. Cultural Studies have grown into a body of research that sheds new light on objects typically investigated in media and communication science. This panel will feature prominent figures of contemporary Cultural Studies to discuss the mark of cultural studies in communication research. 4800 ICA's 63rd Annual Conference Opening Welcome Reception Monday 19:30-22:00 King's Suite Sponsored Sessions 5102 GIFTS: Great Ideas for Teaching Students Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Balmoral Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Brandi N. Frisby, U of Kentucky, USA Participants GIFT: Postman, Pictures, Persuasion: Showing the Power of Video vs. Words, Plus Public Relations, in Electronic News Chris Roberts, U of Alabama, USA GIFT: Service Learning at its Best: Creating a Social Media Plan for Local Nonprofit Organization Courtney Carpenter Childers, U of Tennessee, USA GIFT: Teaching Students to Become Curators of Ideas: An Exercise in Applied New Media Literacy Corinne Weisgerber, St. Edward's U, USA GIFTS: Brand Your Website Using Multimedia on the About Page David Lynn Painter, Full Sail U, USA GIFTS: Building Community Through VoiceThread Speech Reflections Leslie Collins, Modesto Junior College, USA GIFTS: Computer-Mediated Communication Project Scott Christen, U of Tennessee, USA Stephanie Kelly, North Carolina A&T State U, USA GIFTS: Improving Interviewing Skills With “Speed Interviewing” Colleen Arendt, Fairfield U, USA GIFTS: Teaching Argumentation and Debate With a Presidential Play-By-Play Ashley Noel Mack, U of Texas, USA GIFTS: Teaching Students the Process of Theory Building Theon Edward Hill, Purdue U, USA GIFTS: Using the Critical Process to Evaluate Media Portrayal of Specific Groups Katie Clune, Rockhurst U, USA This interactive session will feature 10 different instructors sharing their Great Ideas for Teaching Students about a variety of communication topics including interviewing, social media, theory building, and media portrayals, among other topics relevant to both face-to-face and online courses. 5105 Antecedents and Effects of International News Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Palace A Political Communication Chair Katharina Kleinen-von Knigslw, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Participants All the News That is Fit to Print? Gatekeeping Effects in Newspaper Coverage of International Affairs Sean Jeremy Westwood, Stanford U, USA Rebecca J Weiss, Stanford U, USA Shanto Iyengar, Stanford U, USA News Coverage and Perceptions of China in the United States: Considering the Impact of Agenda-Setting and Framing Lars Willnat, Indiana U, USA Emily T. Metzgar, Indiana U, USA Shuo Tang, Indiana U, USA Tunga Lodato, Indiana U, USA Not All Countries Are Created Equal: Foreign Nation Visibility in U.S. News and Entertainment Media Dror Walter, U of Pennsylvania, USA Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Lilach Nir, Hebrew U / U of Pennsylvania, USA Shaul Shenhav, The Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Promoting Stories About Terrorism to the International News Media: A Study of Public Diplomacy Moran Yarchi, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Gadi Wolfsfeld, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Shaul Shenhav, The Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL 5106 Cultural Experience, Interaction, and Adjustment Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Palace B Intercultural Communication Chair Wuyu Liu, Michigan State U, USA Participants The Potentiality of Ethnography of Communication in Asian Communication Study Bingjuan Xiong, U of Colorado, USA A Study on Chinese-American Cultural Differences in Interpersonal Conflict Management Paul S. N. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Biologically Wired or Communally Formed?: Assessing Sex Differences in Friendship Expectations Across Five Countries Uttara Manohar, Ohio State U, USA Susan Lee Kline, Ohio State U, USA Wen Song, Ohio State U, USA Cultural Identifications as Manipulation Checks of Chinese International Students’ Acculturation Strategies: U.S. American Host Nationals’ Perspective Makiko Imamura, Saint Mary's College of California, USA Yan Bing Zhang, U of Kansas, USA Culture and Intercultural Experience as Predictors of Decision-Making Styles Weidan Cao, Temple U, USA Deborah A. Cai, Temple U, USA Edward L. Fink, U of Maryland, USA 5107 Deliberation and Opinion Formation Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Palace C Political Communication Chair Edith Manosevitch, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Participants Emanating Effects: The Impact of Microlevel Deliberation on the Public’s Political Attitudes Katherine Rhodes Knobloch, Colorado State U, USA Michael Barthel, U of Washington, USA John W. Gastil, Pennsylvania State U, USA Fully Considered Healthcare Policy Preferences and Deliberation Effects on Opinion Change Jin Woo Kim, U of Pennsylvania, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Investigating Predictors of Preferences for Deliberative Qualities of Political Conversations Using the Analytic Hierarchy Process David Lee Brinker, Pennsylvania State U, USA Sumana Chattopadhyay, Marquette U, USA Ready to Deliberate? The Effects of Prior Opinions on Deliberation Preparedness Wenjie Yan, U of Wisconsin, USA Zhongdang Pan, U of Wisconsin, USA Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin, USA The Influence of Diversity of Opinions Within Discussion Groups on Attitude Changes in the Deliberation Polling® Yushu Zhou, Stanford U, USA 5108 Media Literacy and Internet Usage Tuesday 09:00-10:15 York Communication and Technology Chair Robert Larose, Michigan State U, USA Participants A Skills Framework to Understanding Digital Engagement Ellen Johanna Helsper, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Rebecca Eynon, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Traditional Literacy and Internet Skills as Determinants of Internet Usage: A Structural Model Alexander van Deursen, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Oscar Peters, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Understanding J-Twitter Adoption: Factors That Influence Korean Journalists’ Twitter Adoption Na Yeon Lee, U of Texas, USA Yonghwan Kim, U of Alabama, USA Soliciting Reciprocity Socializing, Communality, and Other Motivations for Linking on Twitter Avery E. Holton, U of Texas, USA Kanghui Baek, U of Texas, USA Carolyn Yaschur, U of Texas, USA Mark Coddington, U of Texas, USA 5109 Internet-Mediated Businesses Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Saleem Elias Alhabash, Michigan State U, USA Participants Effects of Product Type and Source of Customized Recommendations on Attitudes Toward the Website Yeuseung Kim, DePaul U, USA Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of North Carolina, USA What Others Are Saying About the Product? Anonymity, Argument Quality, and Valence Effects in eWOM Qian Xu, Elon U, USA Barbara M. Miller, Elon U, USA Brooke Barnett, Elon U, USA Show Me The Goods: The Warranting Effect of User-Generated Photographs in Online Auctions Benjamin K. Johnson, Ohio State U, USA Mao Houamoua Vang, Ohio State U, USA Brandon Van Der Heide, Ohio State U, USA How Product Representation Shapes Virtual Experiences and Repatronage Intention Suzanne Overmars, Antwerp U, BELGIUM Karolien Poels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 5111 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Waterloo/Tower Narrative Approaches to Illness and Health Health Communication Chair Lynn Marie Harter, Ohio U, USA Participants Application of the Health Belief Model to Illness Narratives Expressing Help-Seeking Behaviors of Depressed Adults Jessica Castonguay, U of Arizona, USA Christine R. Filer, U of Arizona, USA The Ability of Narrative Communication to Address Health-related Social Norms Meghan Bridgid Moran, San Diego State U, USA Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA Lauren B. Frank, Portland State U, USA Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati, U of Southern California, USA The Role of Autobiographic Similarity and Narrative Perspective Under Different Processing Motives for a Health Message Hye Kyung Kim, Cornell U, USA Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA Narrative Health Messages in a Story Context Anja Kalch, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Helena Bilandzic, U of Augsburg, GERMANY 5112 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Chelsea/Richmond More Challenging Issues in Health Communication Health Communication Participants An Experimental Study of Medical Error Explanations: Do Apology, Empathy, Corrective Action, and Compensation Alter Intentions and Attitudes? Top Student Paper/Health Communication Division Kristin Pace, Michigan State U, USA Samantha Ann Nazione, Michigan State U, USA It’s Out of My Hands: God Control and Decreased Quality of Life for Cancer Patients Bryan McLaughlin, U of Wisconsin, USA Woohyun Yoo, U of Wisconsin, USA Jonathan D'Angelo, U of Wisconsin, USA Stephanie Jean Tsang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Bret Shaw, U of Wisconsin, USA Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA Timothy Baker, U of Wisconsin, USA David H Gustafson, U of Wisconsin, USA Understanding High School Athletes’ Use of Androgenic Anabolic Steroids: The Role of Source Proximity in the Theory of Normative Social Behavior Jules Woolf, U of Windsor, CANADA Rajiv N. Rimal, George Washington U, USA Pooja Sripad, Johns Hopkins U, USA From Perceived Effectiveness to Actual Effectiveness: A Further Exploration of the Relationship Ye Sun, U of Utah, USA 5113 Aggregate Search Behavior and Communication Research (Panel Session) Tuesday 09:00-10:15 St. James Mass Communication Chair Jens Vogelgesang, U Münster, GERMANY Participants Online Search Behavior and Political Communication: Building Theory With Unobtrusive Internet Data Brian E Weeks, Ohio State U, USA Using Google Trends to Study Public Interests in Science Elad Segev, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Ayelet Baram-Tsabari, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, ISRAEL Understanding the Influence of News Media Coverage on Search Query Volume Laura A. Granka, Stanford U, USA Is Aggregate Online Search Behavior a Valid Measure for Issue Salience? Jens Vogelgesang, U Münster, GERMANY The Value of Aggregate Online Search Behavior for Forecasting and Decision-Making Andreas Graefe, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Respondent Andrew F. Hayes, Ohio State U, USA On May 10, 2006, Google launched Google Trends (GT, http://www.google.com/trends/). Based on searches conducted on Google, this public web tool allows researchers to assess how often a particular search term has been entered into the Google search engine relative to the total search volume. GT results are represented as plot graphs or can be downloaded as comma-separated values (CSV) files. GT provides search volume data across time periods (from 2004 to present), various regions, and languages. Communication researchers from various subfields have recently used aggregate search data as an indicator for a variety of studies. Today there is an ever-growing amount of research evidence that GT provides valuable insights into human behavior. The rationale of this panel is to bring together researchers from various disciplines, such as political communication, science communication and forecasting. We believe that aggregate search behavior studies can deepen the understanding of online communication and that, therefore, the panel has much to offer to the communication community. 5114 Covering Conflicts and Disasters: Recent Case Studies Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Regent's Journalism Studies Chair Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA Participants Communication in Conflicts: Instrumentalizing Fukushima Hans Mathias Kepplinger, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Richard Lemke, U of Mainz, GERMANY Narratives Used to Portray in-Group Terrorists: A Comparative Analysis of Israeli and Norwegian Press Tal Samuel-Azran, IDC Herzliya, ISRAEL Amit Dinur, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Yuval Karniel, Interdisciplinary Center, ISRAEL Communicative Complexity and Stability of Agendas and Frames in the Financial Crisis Dirk Oegema, Free U Berlin, GERMANY Friederike Schultz, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Wouter van Atteveldt, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jan Kleinnijenhuis, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS News of Crisis: The Economic Crisis as a Generic Frame in Romanian News Media Hanna Orsolya Vincze, Babes-Bolyai U, ROMANIA Lights, Camera, Conflict! Newspaper Framing of the 2008 Screen Actors Guild Negotiations Ryan Patrick Fuller, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Ronald E. Rice, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 5116 From Arab Spring to Occupy: Journalism and Social Movements Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Adrienne Russell, U of Denver, USA Participants Al Jazeera English’s Networked Journalism During the 2011 Egyptian Uprising William Lafi Youmans, George Washington U, USA The Media Work of Syrian Diaspora Activists: Brokering Between the Protest and Mainstream Media Kari Anden-Papadopoulos, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Mervi Pantti, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Narratives of US: The National Narrative and the Disruptive Moments Hypothesis Robert Lyle Handley, U of Denver, USA Get to Know Your Local Occupiers: A Framing Analysis of the Coverage of the Occupy Movement Alison N. Novak, Drexel U, USA Ronald Bishop, Drexel U, USA Ernest A. Hakanen, Drexel U, USA Occupy Messages: Social Justice and Legitimacy in the New York Times Camille Marie Reyes, Rutgers U, USA 5117 Media Use & Political Observations in Eight Arab Countries (Panel Session) Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Participants Everette E Dennis, Northwestern U in Qatar, QATAR Princess Rym Ali, Jordan Media Institute, JORDAN Justin D. Martin, Northwestern U in Qatar, QATAR Rami Khouri, American U of Beirut, LEBANON Jad Melki, American U of Beirut, LEBANON Northwestern University in Qatar is conducting a large survey assessing media consumption patterns in eight Arab countries (Tunisia, Egypt, Lebanon, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, and Jordan). The data will be collected by Harris Interactive in mid-November 2012, and will include feedback from roughly 10,000 respondents. Northwestern University in Qatar has assembled a panel of scholars to discuss some of the findings and patterns at ICA’s 2013 convention in London. Panelists will discuss the findings both in light of prior research on media use in the Arab world, as well as in the tailwind of the region’s recent, and ongoing, uprisings. The panel will take place over a standard 75-90 minute session, with at least 25 minutes preserved for panelists to field questions. 5118 Biological Perspectives on Interpersonal Processes Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Cadogan Interpersonal Communication Chair Kory Floyd, Arizona State U, USA Participants Attachment Security and Oxytocin Receptor Gene Polymorphism Interact to Influence Affectionate Communication Kory Floyd, Arizona State U, USA Amanda Denes, U of Connecticut, USA Women’s Voices as a Cue of Physical Attractiveness and a Courtship Signal: The Interaction Effect of Perceived Vocal Attractiveness and Pitch Shifts on Men’s Mating Motivation Jinguang Zhang, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Scott A. Reid, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA On the Role of Static and Dynamic Faces on Attributions of Attractiveness, Social Competence, and Dominance Sabrina Sobieraj, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Katharina Nowak, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Ovulatory Cycle Changes Women’s Clothing Choices and How They Dress to Impress Same-Sex Rivals Grace Leigh Anderson, Samford U, USA The Effects of Target Sex, Presence of Others, and Attractiveness on Desire for Targets: A ReExamination of Hill and Buss (2008) Allison Zorzie Shaw, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA 5121 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Beyond Entertainment: Storytelling for Social Change Popular Communication Global Communication and Social Change Participants SoundBites Experience, an Interactive EE Film Martine P.A. Bouman, Center for Media and Health, THE NETHERLANDS Entertainment-Education Collaboration Processes Between Television Professionals and Sustainability Communication Experts in Germany Sarah Lubjuhn, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Entertainment or Education? Telling Health Stories in Primetime UK Television Lesley Henderson, Brunel U, UNITED KINGDOM The Role of the Writer in Entertainment-Education Lucy Hannah, Commonwealth Foundation, UNITED KINGDOM Entertainment-Education Capacity Building in Niger Francis Rolt, Radio for Peacebuilding, UNITED KINGDOM Popular media entertainment programs reach large sections of the public and can be a powerful vehicle for the promotion of healthy and sustainable lifestyles, social and ethnic tolerance. In both Western and nonWestern countries, a number of organizations have sought ways to incorporate health and other prosocial issues into diverse entertainment formats (prime time television, radio soap operas or web series). This concept is commonly referred to as ‘the entertainment-education (EE) strategy.’ This panel explores the collaboration processes between communication scholars, creative media professionals, and subject matter specialists in designing and implementing innovative and effective EE strategies. 5122 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Challenging Concepts in the Study of Global Communication Global Communication and Social Change Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Bingchun Meng, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Go "East"! A New Agenda for Comparative Research in Communication Bingchun Meng, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Terhi Rantanen, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Moral Acceptability of Nanotechnology and Human Development Values: A Multilevel Analysis Tsung-Jen Shih, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Infrastructural Media and Sociocultural Change: A Case Study Meng Li, U of Iowa, USA Transclusion vs. Demediation: Ambiguities of Media Practices in Cosmopolitan Re-Embedding Processes Andr Jansson, Karlstad U, SWEDEN 5123 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Messages and Credibility Public Relations Chair Ansgar Zerfass, U of Leipzig, GERMANY Participants Enhancing the Spokesperson’s Credibility Through Appearance May O. Lwin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Augustine Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Nur Arina bte Dafir, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Siti Hanna binte Ruslan, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Chrystal J. Yeong, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Lack of Credibility Accompanying Public Relations Messages Distributed Through Corporate Channels: A Longitudinal Experimental Coy Callison, Texas Tech U, USA Patrick Merle, Texas Tech U, USA Curtis Blaine Matthews, Kansas State U, USA Norman E. Youngblood, Auburn U, USA Does the Race of the Spokesman Matter in Times of Crisis? Seoyeon Hong, U of Missouri, USA Maria E. Len-Rios, U of Missouri, USA The Effect of Disclosure of Third-Party Influence on an Opinion Leader’s Credibility and Influence in Two-Step Flow: Public Relations via Social Media Caleb T. Carr, Illinois State U, USA Rebecca A. Hayes, Illinois State U, USA 5124 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Visual Design, Persuasion, and Branding Visual Communication Studies Chair Jana Holsanova, Lund U, SWEDEN Participants Attention and Memory for Explicit and Implicit Print Advertisements Jaana Simola, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Markus Kivikangas, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Christina M Krause, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Meaning-Conveying Role of Typeface in Advertising and its Influence on Brand Evaluation Mihyun Kang, Eastern Connecticut State U, USA Sejung Marina Choi, U of Texas, USA Beauty, Body, and Weight: An Evolution of Messages and Persuasion Techniques in Weight-Loss Advertising in the New York Times (1930-1990s) Suman Mishra, Southern Illinois U, Edwardsville, USA Optimizing Advertisement Design: An Application of the Elaboration Likelihood Model in an Experimental Setting Tobias Dienlin, Hamburg Media School, GERMANY Mediating Science and Nature: Representing and Consuming Infant Formula Advertising in China Qian Sarah Gong, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Peter Jackson, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM Co-Opt This! Guerrilla Marketing and the Subversive Limits of Appropriation Michael Glassco, U of Iowa, USA Occupy Wall Street Posters: Analysis of Publically Created Visuals in Global Branding Pamela Kay Morris, Loyola U, USA 5125 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 ERIC Roundtable: De-/Recentering Whiteness Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Khadijah White, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Discourses of Affirmation in the Spatialization of Whiteness Joshua Hoops, William Jewell College, USA The “Whitening” of Methamphetamine Use in America Jeffery Chaichana Peterson, Washington State U, USA Sheila S. Lee, Washington State U, USA Cameron Moody, Washington State U, USA Critical Interrogation of Transparency in Indian Movies Avinash Thombre, U of Arkansas - Little Rock, USA Shaheed Nick Mohammed, Pennsylvania State U - Altoona, USA Exfoliating Colorism: Contestations, Comedy, and Critique in a Transnational Field Radhika E. Parameswaran, Indiana U, USA Pieces of Democracy: Neoliberal Epideictic, Western Feminism, and the War on Terror Kim Hong Nguyen, Oregon State U, USA Respondent Khadijah White, U of Pennsylvania, USA 5126 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Digital Identities, Stages, Histories, and Uses Popular Communication Chair Jason Striker, Arizona State U, USA Participants Staging Identities: A Comparison of Video Gamers’ and Social Media Users’ Digital Identities Angela M. Cirucci, Temple U, USA Redefining Regions and Roles: The Case of Twitter and the Food Service Industry Katherine Felsburg Wong, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Long History of Participatory Video: YouTube, Public Access Television, and New Media History Danny Kimball, U of Wisconsin, USA Why is File Sharing Called File Sharing? Nicholas A. John, London School of Economics and Political Science, ISRAEL Music Use in the Digital Media Age: Early Insights From a Study of Music Cultures Among Young People in Moscow and Stockholm Sofia Johansson, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN 5127 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Negotiating Europe: Perspectives on the Mediation of the Eurozone Crisis Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Maria Kyriakidou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The Symbolic Crisis of the Euro: Trust and Distrust in the European Currency as Medium of Identity Formation Johan Fornas, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN The Story is Us -- The Media Are Us: Critical Media Practices of Crisis-Related Protest Movements Anne Kaun, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN How Greeks and Germans Make Sense of the Eurozone Crisis: A Comparative Analysis of Two Public Spheres Maximillian Theodore Hanska-Ahy, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Maria Kyriakidou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Articulating the Role of Greece in the Economic Crisis: An Analysis of the Media Discourses of the Extreme Right in Denmark and Sweden Yiannis Mylonas, Lund U, SWEDEN Tina Askanius, Lund U, SWEDEN Respondent Inaki Garcia-Blanco, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM The financial crisis of the Eurozone has been at the centre of public debate as one of the biggest challenges Europe has faced. Originating in structural economic causes, the crisis has been rapidly spilled into the cultural domain and transformed into a political and ideological struggle manifested in the interests of different countries and often expressed through national stereotypes. Debates about the crisis have moved beyond its economic nature to (re-)negotiate the very meaning (and nature) of the European Union, its idea(l)s and practices. The present panel examines the mediation of the crisis, to shed light onto its cultural dimension and the negotiations of its meaning through symbolic and political practices in different European contexts. 5128 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 The Body Politic: Gendered Excursions, Performances, and Violations Feminist Scholarship Chair Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA Participants Below the Belt: Gender Portrayal in Women’s Boxing During the 2012 Summer Olympic Games Sim Butler, U of Alabama, USA Kimberly Bissell, U of Alabama, USA Egypt's Nude Blogger: Sexuality, Citizenship, and Arab Body Politics Sara Mourad, U of Pennsylvania, USA Ironically Trashy and Fashionably Porn: Implications of Pornification in the Social Network Sites Kaarina Nikunen, Stanford U, USA Rape in the Era of Post-Identity Politics: The Controversy Over Rihanna’s “Man Down” Video Dayna Earlene Chatman, U of Southern California, USA 5131 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Board Room 1 The Public Soundscape: Acoustic Ecology Sponsored Sessions Chair Thom Gencarelli, MEA - Media Ecology Association, USA Participants Acoustic Ecology: Busking Against the Machine brian cogan, Molloy College, USA New York City Soundscape: A Cage-ian Analysis Thom Gencarelli, MEA - Media Ecology Association, USA Sounds of Public Silence Gary Gumpert, Urban Communication Foundation, USA Susan Drucker, Hofstra U, USA From the Crack of the Bat to the Digital Crackle: The Changing Soundscape of the Baseball Stadium Harvey Jassem, U of Hartford, USA Municipalities around the world have taken on the issue of noise. Noise level standards and noise abatement requirements are in effect in many cities. Part of our public experience is an encounter with sounds, yet noise pollution and nuisance are increasingly associated with environments of public communication. Sound amplification systems enhance, but may also be perceived as a form of aggression. Entering the public realm can result in listening to imposed “music,” advertising, or other undesired audio programs. A cellphone call can lead to being put on hold and forced to listen to recordings, making the caller a captive audience. Pitch correction in live performance is commonplace, raising issues of authenticity. One person’s music is another person’s noise. One person’s improvement is another person’s manipulation. Technological delights of communication reveal the delicate balance of sense ratios in a technological age. This panel will explore the diverse practices and technologicallyrooted changes in the public soundscape. 5132 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Board Room 2 Ways of Speaking About Ways of Relating: Comparative Research in Ethnography of Communication Language & Social Interaction Chair Donal Carbaugh, U of Massachusetts, USA Participants Ways of Speaking and Competing Cultural Dialectics on Campus: Student Dating and Advisor-Advisee Relationships Daniel Chornet, Saint Louis U Madrid, SPAIN Saila Poutiainen, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Maija Gerlander, U of Tampere, FINLAND Marriage and Motherhood: Cultural Communication at Intersections of Public and Private Todd L. Sandel, U of Macau, MACAU Kristine Munoz, U of Iowa, USA Daena Goldsmith, Lewis & Clark College, USA Relating With/Through/in the Environment: Examining Human-Nature Relationships in Water Controversies Trudy Milburn, U of Washington, USA Leah Sprain, U of Colorado, USA Relating in the Political Community: German Jammern and Hungarian Kommunkáció Michaela R. Winchatz, DePaul U, USA David Boromisza-Habashi, U of Colorado, USA This panel discusses relationships in a comparative mode, bringing together nine ethnography of communication case studies of relating in diverse social and cultural scenes. The case studies are arranged around four themes and presented in three pairs and a trio. Co-presenters will describe initial comparisons between at least two sites on the following topics: 1) relational dialectics and the competing cultural premises on university campuses, 2) marriage and motherhood at the intersection of public and private, 3) the cultural relationship(s) between humans and nature (water), and 4) culturally-specific ways of speaking used by community members to relate politically. 5133 Tuesday 09:00-10:15 Board Room 3 Maybe This Isn't Our Planet: Rethinking the Human Relationship With the Environment Environmental Communication Chair Johanne Saint-Charles, U du Québec à Montréal, CANADA Participants Embracing the Mongrel: Transcendence, Material Engagement, and Hybrid Identity in Ecological Discourse Natasha Seegert, U of Utah, USA Revisiting the Death of Environmentalism James Everett Hein, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Visual Rhetoric and Anthropocentrism in Whale Wars Collin Jacob Syfert, U of Rhode Island, USA The Influence of Psychological Distance and Emotion on Public Support for Climate Mitigation Projects Philip Solomon Hart, American U, USA Richard C. Stedman, Cornell U, USA Katherine A. McComas, Cornell U, USA 5202 ICA Annual Member Meeting and New Member and Graduate Student Orientation Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Balmoral Sponsored Sessions Chair Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA Francois Cooren, U de Montréal, CANADA Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Sojung Claire Kim, U of Pennsylvania, USA Rahul Mitra, Purdue U, USA Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA This session is designed for all members and provides an occasion to raise issues regarding the association. it will also include a general overview of ICA as an organization, an overview of the conference and ways to participate in ICA. This is your opportunity to interact with the Executive Committee of ICA and help shape the association and its future direction. ALL MEMBERS ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED TO ATTEND. Refreshments will be provided. 5205 Comparing Political Communication Across Countries Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Palace A Political Communication Chair Paolo Mancini, U di Perugia, ITALY Participants Media Choice and Informed Democracy: Towards Increasing News Consumption Gaps in Europe? Toril Aalberg, Norwegian U of Science and Technology, NORWAY Arild Blekesaune, Norwegian U of Science and Technology, NORWAY Eiri Elvestad, Vestfold U College, NORWAY Distinct Approaches to Newsmaking in Western Journalism? Comparing Political Affairs Coverage in Six Press Systems Frank Esser, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Andrea Umbricht, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Conditions of Europeanized Voting Behaviour: News Exposure and Information Environment Effects on Voting in European Parliament Elections Jil Fitzner, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hajo Boomgaarden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Media Selection and Partisan Fragmentation: A Comparative Study of Advanced Western Democracies Michael F. Meffert, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK 5206 Challenges of Creating Inclusivity and Exclusivity: Insights Into the Communicative Constitution of Organizational Boundaries in Various Cultural Contexts Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Boris H. J. M. Brummans, U de Montréal, CANADA Participants The Identity of Anonymous: Communicating Community Boundaries Leonhard Dobusch, Free U Berlin, GERMANY Dennis Schoeneborn, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Where is the Border of Wonderland? Understanding Boundary Management and Identity Transformation Through the Case of a Chinese Community Organization Xi Liu, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Guowei Jian, Cleveland State U, USA Reaching out in No Man’s Land: The Boundary Spanning Struggles of Outreach Workers Mark Van Vuuren, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS The Autopoietic Constitution of a Buddhist Humanitarian Organization Through Symbolic and Material Boundaries That Include and Exclude Boris H. J. M. Brummans, U de Montréal, CANADA Jennie M. Hwang, U de Montréal, CANADA Pauline Hope Cheong, Arizona State U, USA Respondent Lars Thoeger Christensen, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK While extant research has underlined the significance of studying organizational boundary management, it is important to gain deeper insight into the ways organizations are produced and reproduced through the communicative constitution of boundaries. In the spirit of the 2013 ICA conference theme, “Challenging Communication Research,” this panel will explore this question by investigating the challenges involved in using organizational boundaries to create a simultaneous sense of inclusivity and exclusivity. The panel will bring together a set of expert international scholars from various continents of the world whose research looks at topics related to this issue from different perspectives and in different cultural contexts. 5207 Framing and Priming in Political Communication Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Palace C Political Communication Chair Lars Willnat, Indiana U, USA Participants Issue Comparisons and Ordinal Priming Bruce Bimber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Jennifer Brundidge, U of Texas, USA Meredith Conroy, Occidental College, USA Erica Lively, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA News Frames, Intermedia Frame Transfer, and the Financial Crisis Mathias Weber, U of Mainz, GERMANY Thomas Bach, U of Mainz, GERMANY Oliver Quiring, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Priming Effects During the Financial Crisis: Accessibility and Applicability Mechanisms Behind Government Approval Kajsa Larsson Falasca, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Adam Shehata, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Priming Personal and National Perceptions of the Affordable Care Act Lauren Guggenheim, U of Michigan, USA 5208 Big Data and Communication Research: Prospects, Perils, Alliances, and Impacts Tuesday 10:30-11:45 York Communication and Technology Chair Eric Thomson Meyer, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Deconstructing Big Data: Database Ethnography, and Lessons Learned From Geocoding Wikipedia Bernie Hogan, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Mark Graham, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Wide Open or Locked Down? Platform Politics and Research Quality in Big Data Research Cornelius Puschmann, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, GERMANY Making Sense of Big Data: Developing a Social Science Research Agenda Matthew Scott Weber, Rutgers U, USA The Production of Big Data Knowledge Danah Michele Boyd, Microsoft Research, USA Kate Crawford, U of New South Wales, AUSTRALIA Big Data and Communications Research Ralph Schroeder, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Eric Thomson Meyer, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Research using what has been referred to as big data is growing in the social sciences, and particularly in communication research. While early debates focused on still unresolved issues such as access to data, representativeness of samples, and privacy threats, the aim of this panel is to advance the discussion to the next. The panel will encourage a wider debate with the range of researchers who attend the session to answer these and other emergent questions. The aim of the panel is to take stock, draw together experiences, and provide guidance towards how to support, strengthen and critically interrogate big data methods in communications research. 5209 Inequalities and Digital Divides Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Alexander van Deursen, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Digital Divides of Internet Awareness, Adoption, and Use Due to Low Economic Wellbeing and Foreign Language Skill in the Caucasus Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of Washington, USA Ronald E. Rice, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Bottom-up Technology Transmission: Exploring How Youths Influence Their Parents’ Digital Media Usage With Dyadic Data Teresa Correa, U Diego Portales, CHILE Persistant Inequalities and Heavy Tails in International Internet Connections: 2002-2011 Hyunjin Seo, U of Kansas, USA Stuart Thorson, Syracuse U, USA Learning of Digital Skills, Social Support Networks, and Digital Inequality: Evidence From the Netherlands Uwe Matzat, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS 5211 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Waterloo/Tower Tensions and Challenges to Effective Communication About Men's Health Issues: The Impact of Communication Networks Health Communication Chair Franzisca Weder, U of Klagenfurt, AUSTRIA Participants Women, Look for Your Men! Women as Target Audience in Prostate Cancer Campaigns in Austria and the Effects on Men’s Health Communication Franzisca Weder, U of Klagenfurt, AUSTRIA The Challenges to Effective Health Communication Concerning Prostate Cancer Across the Continuum of Cancer Care Gary L. Kreps, George Mason U, USA How Does the “The Good Kiwi Bloke” Communicate When He is Diagnosed With Prostate Cancer? Dorothy Brown, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND HIV and Men’s Health: Patterns and Stories From People Living With HIV in New Mexico John Oetzel, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Respondent Gary L. Kreps, George Mason U, USA This panel addresses tensions and challenges for effective communication about men’s health issues. Men are perceived as to be more indifferent towards their health when compared to the efforts of women who proactively and publicly address their health issues. The levels of awareness, understanding and sometimes funding for men’s health issues lag behind other causes. This panel focuses on two health issues: prostate cancer and HIV. Specifically, this panel will consider issues relate to prevention and screening, stereotypes about men’s health communication, linkages to information and providers, and stigma. The central theme of this panel is the issue of communication networks and how men are or are not connected to key sources of information and support as well as key resources. 5212 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Chelsea/Richmond Uncertainty, Health Information-Seeking, and Social Support Health Communication Chair Lance S. Rintamaki, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Participants Uncertainty Management and Social Support in Cancer Clinical Trials Treatment Decision-Making Janice Raup Krieger, Ohio State U, USA Angela Lynn Palmer-Wackerly, Ohio State U, USA Phokeng M Dailey, Ohio State U, USA Jessica Krok, Ohio State U, USA How Do Individuals Seek Information to Manage Health-Related Uncertainty? An Experimental Study Examining Web Use to Acquire Skin Cancer Information Steve Rains, U of Arizona, USA Riva Tukachinsky, Chapman U, USA Functions of Social Support and Self-Verification in Association With Loneliness, Depression, and Stress Kevin B. Wright, Saint Louis U, USA Shawn King, U of Oklahoma, USA Jenny Rosenberg, Kent State U, USA The Downsides of Online Support Groups: When Patients' Ability to Cope With Emotions Matters Anika Batenburg, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Enny Henrica Das, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS 5213 Selective Exposure and Polarization (Session Begins With a TOP Student Paper) Tuesday 10:30-11:45 St. James Mass Communication Chair Janice Barrett, Lasell College, USA Participants Selective Exposure Without Avoidance: Examining Selective Exposure in a Media Saturated Environment Seung Mo Jang, U of Michigan, USA Audience Polarization in Newspaper Use Thomas N. Friemel, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Jesse Bächler, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Political Polarization as a Function of Citizen Predispositions and Exposure to News on the Internet David Tewksbury, U of Illinois, USA Julius Matthew Riles, U of Illinois, USA Why Do Knowledgeable Partisans Polarize?: Cueing Knowledge, General Political Knowledge, and Policy Attitudes Daniel E. Bergan, Michigan State U, USA Why Does Ideological Selective Exposure Promote Polarization? Climate of Opinion Perceptions and Use of Arguments Originating From Media in Conversations as Mediating Factors Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Adi Chotiner, U of Haifa, ISRAEL 5214 New Practices in Newsrooms Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Regent's Journalism Studies Chair Claudia Mellado, U of Santiago, CHILE Participants Newsroom 2.0: Organizational Culture and Managing Change at a Daily Newspaper in the Digital Age Carrie Brown, U of Memphis, USA Al-Jazeera English Online: Understanding Web Metrics and News Production When a Quantified Audience is Not a Commodified Audience Nikki Usher, George Washington U, USA The Invisible Giants Emerge: Social Media and Professional Culture in Global News Agencies Bronwyn Jones, Liverpool John Moores U, UNITED KINGDOM Mobile Phones and the News: A Study of the Use of Mobile Phones in the Production and Presentation of News in UK Broadcasting Adrian John Chaplin Hadland, U of Stirling, UNITED KINGDOM Eddy Leonardo Borges-Rey, U of Stirling, UNITED KINGDOM Towards a Classification of Participatory News Websites: Comparing Heuristic and Empirical Types Sven Engesser, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND 5216 Beyond Corporate Media: Alternative Models for News Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Robert Lyle Handley, U of Denver, USA Participants What is Happening to Regional Online News Systems: A Study of the Bay Area News System David M. Ryfe, U of Nevada - Reno, USA Donica Mensing, U of Nevada - Reno, USA The Effect of the Nonprofit Business Model on News Content: A Case Study Magda Konieczna, U of Wisconsin, USA How Ethnic Media Producers Constitute Their Communities of Practice: An Ecological Approach (Top Three Faculty Paper) Matthew D. Matsaganis, U at Albany - SUNY, USA Vikki Sara Katz, Rutgers U, USA Dimensions of Māori Journalism Culture: Exploring Indigenous News-Making in Aotearoa New Zealand Folker Christian Hanusch, U of the Sunshine Coast, AUSTRALIA Family-Owned Newspaper: Filling Niches in Rural Communities Angela Marie Powers, Kansas State U, USA Ardyth Broadrick Sohn, U of Nevada - Las Vegas, USA Jane Briggs-Bunting, Michigan State U, USA 5217 Health and Risk Communication in Mass Media Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Emily Falk, U of Michigan, USA Participants Testing Effects of Fear, Threat, and Efficacy on Smokers’ Acceptance of Novel Smokeless Tobacco Products Lyudmila Popova, U of California - San Francisco, USA Pamela M. Ling, U of California - San Francisco, USA Reducing Stigma and Out-Group Distinctions Through Perspective-Taking in Narratives Adrienne Haesun Chung, Ohio State U, USA Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA The Effects of Perceived Media Dependence and Presumed Media Influence on College Students’ Responses to the Swine Flu Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA Ven-Hwei Lo, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Ran Wei, U of South Carolina, USA The Role of Cultural Worldviews and Message Framing in Shaping Public Opinions Toward the HPV Vaccination Mandate Xiaoli Nan, U of Maryland, USA Kelly Madden, U of Maryland, USA 5218 New Methods and Measures Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Cadogan Information Systems Chair Michael Scharkow, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Participants Analyzing Continuous Response Measurement Data Using Cross-Classified Growth Curve Models Marko Bachl, U of Hohenheim Jens Vogelgesang, U Münster, GERMANY Finding Patterns of Co-Occurrence: Explorative Hierarchical Cluster Analysis With Automated Item Exclusion Martin Wettstein, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND The Relative Trustworthiness of Popular Inferential Approaches to Testing Indirect Effects in Statistical Mediation Analysis: Does Method Really Matter? Andrew F. Hayes, Ohio State U, USA Michael Scharkow, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Applying IRT and Rasch Measurement Models to Deception Detection Accuracy Data David D. Clare, Michigan State U, USA Ryan P. Bowles, Michigan State U, USA Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA Explicating Psychological Reactance: Comparing Self-Report and Psychophysiological Measures Glenn M. Leshner, U of Missouri, USA Elizabeth L. Gardner, Texas Tech U, USA Brandon Harley Nutting, U of South Dakota, USA Development and Validation of Information Anxiety Scale Kexin Wang, Insititute of Psychology Chinese Academy of Sciences, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Mingjie Zhou, Institute of Psychology Chinese Acedemy of Sciences Key Laboratory of Mental Health, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Development and Validation of The Adolescent Measure of Empathy and Sympathy (AMES) Helen Vossen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Estimating Intercoder Reliability: A Structural Equation Modeling Approach Guangchao Feng, Hong Kong Baptist U, HONG KONG 5221 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Challenging Identities in Local, Regional, and Transnational Music Media, Industries, and Cultures Popular Communication Global Communication and Social Change Participants Open Mics: Mediating Voices in Contemporary Black British Music Nabeel Mustafa Zuberi, U of Auckland, NEW ZEALAND The (Re)Production of Regional Identity in Brazil by Festival Tourism, Migration, Radio, and the Music Industry Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas, USA New Asian Dance Music and the Politics of Production Anamik Saha, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM The New Cultural Politics of a Modern, Digital Age: Mexico’s Regional Musics Meet Global Trends Magdelana Red, U of Colorado, USA Respondent Jason Toynbee, Open U, UNITED KINGDOM This panel brings together scholars from three continents to examine how various stakeholders use popular music to articulate a politics of interregional, racial, or transnational identity. The panel is inherently multidimensional, with each panelist approaching questions of politics, identity, and cultural production from distinctive fields and approaches within media and communication research. This panel puts into conversation interdisciplinary perspectives on the role of popular music in highly mediated, politically challenging and globalized contexts. 5222 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Perception as Key: Signals from Audiences, Readers, Participants Global Communication and Social Change Chair David J. Schaefer, Franciscan U - Steubenville, USA Participants Critical Media Literacy in a Nondemocratic Regime: How Young Russians Navigate Their News Florian Toepfl, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Cultural Beacons: Grassroots Indicators of Change Lucia Dura, U of Texas - El Paso, USA Laurel Jeanne Felt, U of Southern California, USA Arvind Singhal, U of Texas - El Paso, USA Playing Catch Up: Alternative Political Information Online and the Democratic Divide in Singapore Debbie Goh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Soft Power, Bollywood Cinema, and Cultural Proximity: Comparing Viewer Reactions to Popular Hindi Cinema in India and the Diaspora David J. Schaefer, Franciscan U - Steubenville, USA Kavita Karan, Southern Illinois U Carbondale, USA 5223 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 An Emerging Sociocultural Paradigm of Public Relations Research? Perspectives, Research Agenda, and Methodological Issues Public Relations Participants On Being a Theoretical Magpie: All That Glitters is Not Gold Lee Edwards, Institute of Communications Studies, UNITED KINGDOM Radical Knowledge: Action Research and Public Relations Magda Pieczka, Queen Margaret U, UNITED KINGDOM Creative Voices: The Role of Participatory Research in Telling an Alternative Story of PR Caroline Hodges, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Ethnography in Sociocultural PR Research: Benefits, Challenges, and Alternatives Mathis Danelzik, U of Tübingen, GERMANY In recent years, various authors have identified a turn in Public Relations towards socio-cultural approaches to research. These approaches have been welcomed as a complement to the traditional functional paradigm, taking the understanding of public relations beyond organizational boundaries. However, while they may open up new horizons for PR thinking and research, they also bring challenges. The advantage of a clearly defined research paradigm such as Excellence in PR, is that it permits a clear focus for the allocation of resources and an agenda for research and teaching. In contrast, the sociocultural turn is complex and varied. A wide range of theories are relevant, each offering different directions for development. While intellectually inspiring, such diversity runs the risk of fragmenting the field and detracting from its academic identity. This panel engages with these dilemmas and considers whether the socio-cultural turn is capable of constituting a ‘paradigm’, in the traditional sense. 5224 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Measuring and Understanding Young People's Practices and Preferences in Advertising and Other Media Forms Children Adolescents and Media Participants Broadening the Scope, Dispelling the Myths: Younger Children and Online Social Networking—Towards a More Inclusive Research Agenda Sara Grimes, U of Toronto, CANADA Deborah Fields, Utah State U, USA Capturing Children’s Advertising Exposure: Comparing Methods and Measurements Suzanna Johanna Opree, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Challenging Eurocentrism in International Comparative Research: Reflections on an International Youth Media Participation Study Manisha Pathak-Shelat, U of Wisconsin, USA Irma Hirsjarvi, U of Tampere, FINLAND Sirkku Kotilainen, U of Tampere, FINLAND Children’s Responses to Advertising in Social Games: Persuasion Knowledge and Susceptibility to Peer Influence Esther Rozendaal, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Eva van Reijmersdal, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Moniek Buijzen, U of Amsterdam, NL Explaining the Effects of Targeted Online Advertising on Children’s Cognitive, Affective and Behavorial Brand Responses Eva van Reijmersdal, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Esther Rozendaal, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Nadia Smink, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Guda van Noort, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Moniek Buijzen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA 5225 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 ERIC Roundtable: Ethnic Incorporation and National Identity Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Kumi Silva, Northeastern U, USA Participants A Nation of Immigrants and a Nation of Laws: Race, Ethnicity, and the Neoliberal Exception in President Barack Obama’s Immigration Discourse Josue David Cisneros, Northeastern U, USA Challenging Hegemonic Multiculturalism: Spain’s “New Citizens” as Economic Givers Susana Martinez Guillem, U of New Mexico, USA Racial Incorporation; Asian Indian Immigrant Alignments With Whiteness Somava Pande, Washington State U, USA Jolanta Alicja Drzewiecka, Washington State U, USA In the Middle of Two Worlds: Identities Negotiation of 2nd-Generation Migrants Between Media Consumption and Family Guidance Marta Cola, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND Manuel Mauri Brusa, U della Svizzera Italiana, SWITZERLAND Framing Immigration, Migrant Integration, and Ethnic Diversity: Party Discourse in Electoral Competition Oliver Gruber, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Respondent Aymar Jean Christian, Northwestern U, USA 5226 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Ordinary Grammars: The Rules for Representing and Performing the Ordinary in Popular Culture Popular Communication Chairs Jason Vincent Cabanes, Ateneo de Manila U, PHILIPPINES Sue Collins, Michigan Technological U, USA Participants Performing the Ordinary: Politicians, Political Style, and Celebrity Sue Collins, Michigan Technological U, USA Ordinary News Nancy Thumim, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Extra-Ordinary Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA The Ordinary as Extraordinary: Indians, Koreans, and Their Photo Essays About Diasporic Life in Manila Jason Vincent Cabanes, Ateneo de Manila U, PHILIPPINES Respondent Beverly Skeggs, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM The ordinary as an unmarked reference to ‘the people’ and a performance marked by ethnic, racial, class and caste hierarchies has permeated popular communication since well before Raymond Williams commented on it in “Culture Is Ordinary” some 50 years ago. This panel will interrogate the ordinary and its rules of performance and representation across types of media production and their genres. Ultimately we show precisely how vexed and, at the same time, useful the idea(l) of ordinariness is. 5227 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Young Scholars’ Roundtable: Visual Narrative Visual Communication Studies Participants Mediation of the Crisis in America: Hollywood’s Pendulum Between Individualism and Evil Corporations Evren Dincer, Cornell U, USA Ergin Bulut, U of Illinois, USA Challenging “Callas”: An Exploration of the Intersections of Emotion and Meaning in Film as Constructed via Visual, Narrative, and Audio Streams Stephanie K. Brehe, Indiana U, USA Are Hollywood's Biggest Hits Getting Both More Formulaic and Better Critical Reviews? Sean Connolly, Indiana U, USA Telling Stories or Representing Topics? Theoretically Conceptualizing and Empirically Analyzing Visual Episodic and Thematic Frames Michael Grimm, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Stephanie Geise, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Visualizing Conflict: Creating Posttraumatic Narratives Through Cartoons and Photography Robin Emily Hoecker, Northwestern U, USA “Us vs. Them” Depictions of Immigrants in Campaign Posters of European Right-Wing Populist Parties Franziska Marquart, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Respondents Michael S. Griffin, Macalester College, USA Kevin G. Barnhurst, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Jana Holsanova, Lund U, SWEDEN Catherine L. Preston, U of Kansas, USA This roundtable presents an opportunity for young scholars in the field of Visual Communication Studies to obtain detailed feedback and engage in constructive conversation with senior scholars in the field regarding the challenges and methodologies of Visual Communication research. The overarching theme of this roundtable is that of narrative, the conveyance of story through the medium of imagery: in film, documentary, photography, and cultural narratives surrounding a series of discrete images. Informal and free-flowing dialogue on the topic of methodologies and the particular challenges inherent within studying the type of media under examination will follow each presentation, with the overarching goal of advancing the research presented in this roundtable to the next level, in professional development, preparing for future conferences, and preparing for publication. 5228 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 The Global Politics of Change: ICT, Trafficking, and Protest Feminist Scholarship Chair Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA Participants Gender Issues in ICT Policy: A Case Study of Jamaica Dominique Harrison, Howard U, USA Seelampur Women and Labor Away From the Doorsteps of the ICT Center Sreela Sarkar, U of Massachusetts, USA Raid, Rescue, Silence: Why a Feminist Approach to Antitrafficking Policy in Thailand is Needed Erin Michelle Kamler, U of Southern California, USA Online Media Representation of a Protest Woman Leader in Israel Dalia Liran Alper, Communication School, ISRAEL Orly Tsarfaty, Max Stern Academic College of Emek Yezreel, ISRAEL 5231 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Board Room 1 Showcasing ICLASP13: 2013 Research Directions: International Association of Language and Social Psychology Sponsored Sessions Chair Bernadette M Watson, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Participants Language Attitude Conflict: A Case of Secondary School Students in Postcolonial Hong Kong Bennan Zhang, U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF How the Doc Should (Not) Talk: When Breaking Bad News With Negations Influences Patients’ Immediate Responses and Medical Adherence Intentions Christian Burgers, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Camiel J. Beukeboom, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Lisa Sparks, Chapman U/U of California - Irvine, USA European Americans’ Cultural Orientations and Conflict Management Styles With Peers and Older Adults Yan Bing Zhang, U of Kansas, USA The Effectiveness of Apologies and Thanks in Favor Asking Messages: A Cross-Cultural Comparison Between Korea and the United States Hye Eun Lee, U of Hawaii, USA Giving Radon Gas Life Through Language: Effects of Linguistic Agency Assignment in Health Messages Marko Dragojevic, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Robert Alan Bell, U of California - Davis, USA Matthew S. McGlone, U of Texas, USA Visualizing Conversations Between Care Home Staff and Residents With Dementia Rosemary Baker, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Daniel Angus, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Erin R. Conway-Smith, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Katharine S. Baker, Stanford U, USA Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Andrew Edward Smith, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Janet Wiles, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Helen J. Chenery, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Respondents Liz Jones, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA Bernadette M Watson, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA This panel will reflect the scholarship of IALSP members who adopt a language and social psychology (LSP) approach to communication research. The selected papers will showcase the application of this LSP approach across communication contexts that overlap and extend the interests of the International Communication Association. The 2013 ICA theme “Challenging Communication Research” provides an ideal forum to demonstrate IALSP’s diverse communication endeavours. 5232 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Board Room 2 To Good Health and Hospitality: Rituals, Code-Switching, and Conversational Management Language & Social Interaction Chair Jessica Sarah Robles, U of New Hampshire, USA Participants Nigerianese and Socio-Discursive Errandry in Simulated Interactions: A Critical Analysis of Tatolo Alamu’s "Snooping Around" Lasisi Adeiza Isiaka, Adekunle Ajasin U, Akungba-Akoko, NIGERIA Gauging and Responding to Patient Complementary and Alternative Medicine Treatment Preferences in Acute Primary Care Visits Christopher J. Koenig, U of California - San Francisco, USA Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA The Edge of Precise Measurement: When Smoking and Drinking Don’t Count Timothy Halkowski, U of Wisconsin - Stevens Point, USA Parlez in the Parlor: Goal-Achievement in Tattoo Artist-Studio Client Greeting Rituals in the Learning Channel (TLC)’s Television Program NY Ink Sabrina Kim Pasztor, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Bilingualism in Hospitality Properties: Language Choice and Code Alternation as a Resource for Organizing the Multiple-Participant Check in Activity Yulia Ponomareva, Linköping U, SWEDEN 5233 Tuesday 10:30-11:45 Board Room 3 Relationships and Expectations: Instructor-Student and Student-Student Communication Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Lynne M. Webb, U of Arkansas, USA Participants Academic and Social Integration in the Basic Communication Course: Gateways to Students’ Other Curriculum Robert John Sidelinger, Oakland U, USA Derek Bolen, Angelo State U, USA Meghan Carroll Kelly Nyeste, Oakland U, USA Audra McMullen, Towson U, USA Emotion in the Classroom: How Teachers Influence Students’ Enjoyment, Hope, and Pride Scott Titsworth, Ohio U, USA Timothy McKenna, Ohio U, USA Joseph Paul Mazer, Clemson U, USA Margaret Mary Quinlan, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA No Nights or Weekends Off: College Students’ Expectations, Experiences, and Satisfaction With EMailing Their Professors Courtney Waite Miller, Elmhurst College, USA Rachel M. Reznik, Elmhurst College, USA Role Communication and Peer Mentors Janet Colvin, Utah Valley U, USA Nancy Tobler, Utah Valley U, USA 5302 ICA Plenary: The Network Tradition in Communication Research and Scholarship: A Round Table Conversation Tuesday 12:00-13:15 Balmoral Sponsored Sessions Chair Leah A. Lievrouw, U of California - Los Angeles, USA Participants Elihu Katz, U of Pennsylvania, USA Ronald E. Rice, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Richard Rogers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Noshir S. Contractor, Northwestern U, USA The proliferation of new media and information technologies over the last 30 years has captured the interest and imagination of communication scholars across the discipline, helping to move the concept of “network” to the forefront of theorizing and empirical study in diverse corners of the field. In this plenary session, a group of prominent scholars considers the long-term intellectual influence – what might be called the archaeology – of network thought, theory and methods in the communication discipline. 5402 Challenging Core Concepts in Communication and Media Studies Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Balmoral Theme Sessions Participants Challenging Identities Liesbet Van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Challenging Globalization Theories Colin Sparks, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Challenging Public Sphere Theories Peter Lunt, Brunel U, UNITED KINGDOM Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Forty years ago communication technologies were thought of as central media institutions that spoke to national-popular audiences within the frame of the nation state. National newspapers and broadcasting systems defined ‘the media’ in many countries. These ‘old media’ now sit alongside a host of new media that did not exist back then. All interact with each other today. All have contributed to the structural transformation of the contemporary worldwide public sphere. All have contributed to reconfiguring identity politics. The meaning of identity, the character of public life and the impact of global connectivity have been constant concerns in our field in continually changing circumstances. The panel reflects on how they have been thought, how they are now thought and how they might be thought as the field continues its journey looking back to the future. 5405 Changing Media Environments, Changing Media Use Patterns Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Palace A Political Communication Chair Myiah J Hutchens, U of Arizona, USA Participants Explaining Media Choice: Predictors of News Selection Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, IE U, SPAIN Lauren Feldman, American U, USA Natalie Jomini Stroud, U of Texas, USA Bruce Bimber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA News Media Use and the Informed Public in the Digital Age Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin, USA Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Dominique Brossard, U of Wisconsin, USA Doo-Hun Choi, U of Wisconsin, USA Michael Cacciatore, U of Wisconsin, USA Sara Yeo, U of Wisconsin, USA Leona Yi-Fan Su, U of Wisconsin, USA Partisan Enclaves or Diverse Repertoires? A Network Approach to Understanding Citizens’ Political Media Environments Brian E Weeks, Ohio State U, USA Thomas Burton Ksiazek, Villanova U, USA R. Lance Holbert, Ohio State U, USA Public Service Broadcasting, Inadvertent News Exposure, and Political Learning: An Empirical Test Using Panel Data Adam Shehata, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Lars W. Nord, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN 5406 Disaster and Emergency Communication Around the Globe: Opportunities for Organizational Communication Research Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Participants Disasters as Punctuated Equilibrium: Chance for Change or Not a Chance Marya L. Doerfel, Rutgers U, USA Timebanking and Community Resilience: Pre and Post Disaster Communication Processes at Port Lyttelton Shiv Ganesh, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND This is Urgent! This is Important! Organizations Using Productive Redundancy to Reach Audiences During Emergencies Ashley Katherine Barrett, U of Texas, USA Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA Cindy Posey, U of Texas, USA Narratives of Emergency Response in the Norway Shooting Massacre Jan-Oddvar Soernes, U of Bodo, NORWAY Peer J. Svenkerud, Norsk Tipping AS, NORWAY Using Mobile Devices for Emergency Response in the UK Laura Meadows, HTK Limited, UNITED KINGDOM Letting Everyone Know That Yes, I'm Okay: AT&T's Global Approach to Safety Caroline Sinclair, U of Texas, USA This panel focuses specifically on how organizations and organizing processes function in the preparation, response, and sensemaking activities of urgent events, drawing from work by prominent scholars and practitioners in a number of countries. By combining various global perspectives, this panel will provide an agenda for organizational communication scholars to make an impact on the existing bodies of research in disaster and emergency response. In addition to our individual research papers and presentations, we will provide attendees with a five-page summary of the most relevant research that can substantiate our arguments for the value of this research focus. Over half of this complied research will be from outside of the communication discipline; thus, the panel will also incorporate a multidisciplinary perspective on this topic. Panel members will also propose their top directions for future research and they will share best practices observed in diverse parts of the world. 5407 Agenda Setting in a New Media Environment Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Palace C Political Communication Chair Gilg U.H. Seeber, U of Innsbruck, AUSTRIA Participants Agenda Setting, Attitude Strength, and Motivated Reasoning Na Yeon Lee, U of Texas, USA Yoonmo Sang, U of Texas, USA All Things Considered? Investigating the Breadth of Public Affairs Issues That Individuals Think About Jae Kook Lee, Indiana U, USA Jihyang Choi, Indiana U, USA Sung Tae Kim, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Are You Rich?: Media Choice and Agenda Setting in Digital Media Environment Seok Ho Lee, U of Texas, USA The Agenda-Building Function of Political Tweets John Houston Parmelee, U of North Florida, USA 5408 Social Networks, Social Capital, and Motivations Tuesday 13:30-14:45 York Communication and Technology Chair Nicole Ellison, School of Information, USA Participants Social Media and First-Generation High School Students’ College Aspirations: A Social Capital Lens Donghee Yvette Wohn, Michigan State U, USA Nicole Ellison, School of Information, USA M Laeeq Khan, Michigan State U, USA Ryan Fewins-Bliss, Michigan State U, USA Rebecca Gray, Michigan State U, USA Calling All Facebook Friends: Exploring Broadcasted Mobilization Requests on Facebook Nicole Ellison, Michigan State U, USA Rebecca Gray, Michigan State U, USA Cliff Lampe, U of Michigan, USA Jessica Vitak, U of Maryland, USA Andrew T Fiore, Michigan State U, USA Motives for Mobile Phone-Mediated Social Interactions and Social Capital Outcomes Keunmin Bae, Pennsylvania State U, USA Facebook Feature Use by Dutch Students and Their Teachers: Effects of Motivation and Generation Sonja Utz, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Klaas Jan Huizing, Noordelijke Hogeschool Leeuwarden, THE NETHERLANDS 5409 Developing Hyperpersonal Relationship in Mediated Communications Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Participants The Warranting Value of Online Relationship Status Disclosure: An Indicator of Real World Relational Characteristics Cameron Wade Piercy, U of Oklahoma, USA Brianna L. Lane, U of Oklahoma, USA Caleb T. Carr, Illinois State U, USA How Individuals Cause Hyperpersonal Effects in CMC: Expectations, Malleability, Efficacy, and Channel Interactions Stephanie Tom Tong, Wayne State U, USA Joseph B. Walther, Michigan State U, USA Glancing Up or Down: Mood Management and Social Comparisons on Social Networking Sites Benjamin K. Johnson, Ohio State U, USA Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA Communicating Social Relationships via the Use of Photo Messaging Daniel Scot Hunt, Newbury College, USA Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA David J. Atkin, U of Connecticut, USA 5411 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Waterloo/Tower Health and the City: Challenges for and Insights From Communication Health Communication Chair Gary Gumpert, Urban Communication Foundation, USA Participants Identifying, Understanding, and Deploying a Community's Health Communication Assets Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA Holley A. Wilkin, Georgia State U, USA George Allen Onas Villanueva, U of Southern California, USA Carmen Gonzalez, U of Southern California, USA Leveraging Social Networks to Promote HIV/AIDS Education in Urban Minority Communities: The Community Liaison Project Gary L. Kreps, George Mason U, USA Does Size Really Matter? Combating Reproductive Health Disparities in a Small City Through a Communication Infrastructure Approach Matthew D. Matsaganis, U at Albany - SUNY, USA Annis G. Golden, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Urban Health Communication: Defining a New Subfield of Study Charles T. Salmon, Michigan State U, USA Respondent Susan Drucker, Hofstra U, USA The World Health Organization’s (WHO) Commission on the Social Determinants of Health stressed in its 2008 report that, “where people live affects their health and chances of leading flourishing lives. Communities and neighborhoods that ensure access to basic goods, that are socially cohesive, that are designed to promote good physical and psychological well-being, and that are protective of the natural environment are essential for health equity.” Communication as a discipline is underrepresented in this body of work and, more significantly, the role of communication as a social process in urban communities’ health is understudied. In this context, the Urban Communication Foundation (UCF) convenes a panel of scholars from four different institutions conducting research in very different urban contexts across the world to discuss the realized and potential contributions of communication theory and research to the multidisciplinary literature on health and the city. 5412 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Chelsea/Richmond Division Spotlight: Highly Rated Competitive Papers in Interpersonal Communication Interpersonal Communication Chair Nicholas A. Palomares, U of California - Davis, USA Participants When Online Dating Partners Meet Offline: The Effect of Modality Switching on Relational Communication Between Online Daters Artemio Ramirez, Jr., Arizona State U, USA Erin Michelle Bryant, Trinity U, USA Christina Fleuriet, Arizona State U, USA Megan Cole, Arizona State U, USA Maintaining Romantic Relationships as a Function of Cultural Values and Equity Young-ok Yum, Kansas State U, USA Daniel James Canary, Arizona State U, USA Joyce Baptist, Kansas State U, USA Narrating Adoption: Resisting Adoption as “Second Best” in Online Stories of Domestic Adoption Told by Adoptive Parents Leslie A. Baxter, U of Iowa, USA Kristen Norwood, St. Louis U, USA Bryan Asbury, U of Iowa, USA Kristina M. Scharp, U of Iowa, USA Romantic Relationship Dissolution on Social Networking Sites: Social Support, Coping, and Rituals on Facebook Jesse Fox, Ohio State U, USA Elizabeth Jones, Ohio State U, USA Kathryn L Lookadoo, U of Oklahoma, USA 5413 Diffusion Studies in New Media Tuesday 13:30-14:45 St. James Mass Communication Chair Ronald E. Rice, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Conceptualizing Media Generations: The Print, Online, and Individualized Generations Oscar Westlund, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Mathias A. Fardigh, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Neural Precursors of Successful Diffusion: Using Neuroimaging and Sentiment Analysis to Examine Enthusiastic Idea Sharing Emily Falk, U of Michigan, USA Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Michigan, USA Matthew D Lieberman, U of California - Los Angeles, USA "Gangnam Style": A Theoretical Overview of Viral Propagation in the Social and Digital Media Age T. E. Dominic Yeo, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Unfolding Digital Inequality in China: Survey Evidence on Social and Demographic Characteristics of Internet Use Jiawen Zheng, U of Wisconsin, USA Zhongdang Pan, U of Wisconsin, USA 5414 Theoretical Challenges in Comparing Media Systems Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Regent's Journalism Studies Participants “Area Studies” Versus Cosmopolitan Media Studies Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA The Challenges of Comparative Communication Research Daya Thussu, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Unpacking the Role of Technological Developments in Media System Change Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM From Media Effects to System Theory: The Journey of Comparative Research in Journalism Studies Paolo Mancini, U di Perugia, ITALY Respondent Frank Esser, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Daniel C. Hallin and Paolo Mancini’s Comparing Media Systems and its 2012 companion volume Comparing Media Systems: Beyond the Western World has helped spark a wave of comparative research in journalism studies, but also raised new challenges and been subject to much criticism for the particular ways in which the authors conceptualize media systems, the empirical approaches they suggest, and the hypotheses they formulate concerning how they change over time (see for instance Norris 2009, Curran 2010, Hardy 2011, and Humphreys 2012). This panel is dedicated to the theoretical challenges involved in comparing media systems and in understanding the changing institutional preconditions such systems provide for professional journalism around the world. 5416 Television News in a Postbroadcast Society Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Adrian John Chaplin Hadland, U of Stirling, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Changes in TV News-Making After Implementing the Integrated Newsroom: A Longitudinal Study Trisha Tsui-Chuan Lin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Di Cui, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Live Co-Produced News: Emerging Forms of News Production and Presentation on the Web Asa Kroon Lundell, Örebro U, SWEDEN Mats Erik Ekstrom, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Goran Eriksson, Örebro U, SWEDEN The “Status” of News: Implementation of Networked Technologies in Television News Organizations Tamar Ashuri, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Atara Frenkel-Faran, Sapir Academic College & Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL Long Live Soft News: How Economic Content With Human Interest Angles Favor Recall Patrick Merle, Texas Tech U, USA Clay Craig, Texas Tech U, USA Boom or Bust? U.S. Television News Industry is Booming but Burnout Looms for Some Scott Reinardy, U of Kansas, USA 5417 Extended Session: Playing With Fire? Intense Game Experiences and Discussions and Debates in Pathological Gaming Tuesday 13:30-16:15 Berkeley Game Studies Mass Communication Chair Christopher J. Ferguson, Texas A&M International U, USA Participants "High-Density" Paper Presentations Introduction Christopher J. Ferguson, Texas A&M International U, USA Addictive Playing: The Role of Implicit and Explicit Motives Julia Kneer, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sabine Glock, U of Luxembourg, LUXEMBOURG Drying Tears With Pacman: The Impact of Interactive and Noninteractive Media on Reported Mood and Physiological Arousal Diana Rieger, U of Cologne, GERMANY Julia Kneer, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY Is a Game More Effective in Raising Self and Collective Efficacy? How Media Modes Change Interpretation of the Game Experience Yu-Hao Lee, Michigan State U, USA Promoting Physical Activity Through an Active Video Game Among Young Adults Wei Peng, Michigan State U, USA Karin Pfeiffer, Michigan State U, USA Brian Winn, Michigan State U, USA Jih-Hsuan Lin, National Chiao Tung U, TAIWAN Darijan Suton, Michigan State U, USA Studying the Pleasures of the Discerning Gamer: Subjective Quality Judgments as Predictors of Good Video Game Experiences Christina Evelin Schumann, Technische U Ilmenau, GERMANY Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Daniel Schultheiss, Ilmenau U of Technology, GERMANY The (Co-)Occurrence of Problematic Video Game Play, Substance Use, and Psychosocial Problems in Adolescents Antonius J. Van Rooij, IVO Addiction Research Institute, THE NETHERLANDS Daria Kuss, Nottingham Trent U, UNITED KINGDOM Mark Griffiths, Nottingham Trent U, UNITED KINGDOM Gillian Shorter - Smith, U of Ulster, UNITED KINGDOM Dike van de Mheen, IVO Addiction Research Institute, THE NETHERLANDS The Effects of Playing Versus Watching a Digital Game on the Perception and Evaluation of in-Game Violence Johannes Breuer, U Münster, GERMANY Michael Scharkow, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Thorsten Quandt, U Münster, GERMANY The Relationship Between Playing Shooting Games and Desensitization to Violence. A Multifactor Approach Wannes Ribbens, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Steven Malliet, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Video Games, Moral Emotions, and Repeated Play: The Desensitizing Effect of Repeated Play on the Ability of Virtual Behaviors to Elicit Guilt Matthew N Grizzard, Michigan State U, USA Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA Poster Browsing Session/Intermission Christopher J. Ferguson, Texas A&M International U, USA "Discussions and Debates in Pathological Gaming" Panel Introduction Christopher J. Ferguson, Texas A&M International U, USA Video Game Addiction: Past, Present and Future Mark Griffiths, Nottingham Trent U, UNITED KINGDOM Treatment of Pathological Video-Gaming: The State-of-the-Art Daniel King, U of Adelaide, AUSTRALIA Online Gaming Addiction: The Issue of Diagnostics Daria Kuss, Nottingham Trent U, UNITED KINGDOM The issue of pathological gaming remains debated and discussed within the research community and general public. Given the potential for moral panic, good information may often be lost among the bad. This panel will address several of the major controversies in the field, such as the prevalence of pathological gaming, how pathological gaming may be best defined and assessed, whether pathological gaming arises from qualities of games, players or both, and whether pathological gaming should be considered as synonymous with chemical addictions as is often implied by media depictions and by some scholars. Several leading scholars will have the opportunity to present recent breakthroughs in this field as well as to debate these topics among each other and with the attending audience. 5418 Theoretical Perspectives Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Cadogan Information Systems Chair Edward A. Mabry, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Participants Dynamic Social Impact Theory: Comparative Effects for Computer-Mediated and Mixed-Mode Groups Edward A. Mabry, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Flow Theory and Media Exposure: Advances in Experimental Manipulation and Measurement Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Richard Wayne Huskey, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Motivated Threaded Cognition: A Theory of Multitasking in CMC Jatin Srivastava, Ohio U, USA Prabu David, Washington State U, USA Reflective Play and the Use of Game Genres. Predicting Preferences by Extrinsic and Intrinsic Activities Claudia Wilhelm, Eberhard Karls U Tübingen, GERMANY The Construal Level Theory of Persuasion Sherri Jean Katz, Cornell U, USA The Social Network Experience: A Two-Level Reception Model of Users’ Exposure to Social Networking Sites German Neubaum, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY The Relationship Between Online and Off-Line Fear of Crime: A Mediated Model Kathleen Custers, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Time-Bounded Ethicality: The Interplay of Temporal Frames on Moral Judgments of Media Characters Sungjong Roh, Cornell U, USA Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA 5421 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Ten Years of Popular Communication: The International Journal of Media and Culture Popular Communication Participants Internationalizing Popular Communication Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Breaking the Filter Bubble of Popular Communication Patrick Burkart, Texas A&M U, USA What is Popular Communication Research?... Or, Rather, What Isn’t? A History of the Field Through the Lens of Special Issues Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM The Sound Garden of Forking Paths: Tracing Music in 10 Years of Popular Communication Towards a Special Issue on the Topic Nabeel Mustafa Zuberi, U of Auckland, NEW ZEALAND Respondent Nancy Thumim, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Popular Communication made its debut in 2003 as an independent, but affiliated, journal of the ICA. Editors Sharon Mazarella and Norma Pecora stated in their editors’ introduction to the first issue that a primary intellectual challenge of the journal was to break free of the productivist bias of the media studies of its time and to investigate the ways in which “communication is ‘made popular.’” This panel brings together the new editors of Popular Communication to discuss the journal’s history of documenting the culture-communication analytic and consider future directions. 5422 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Cartographies of Media Activism/Activism With Media Global Communication and Social Change Chair Che Baysinger, Kaplan U, USA Participants A Social Movement Network and the Internet: An Analysis of Websites of South Korean Anti-G20 Movement Organizations Kanghui Baek, U of Texas, USA ***TOP PAPER*** Cyberspace as Contested Spaces: The Networks of Mass Collaboration, Grassroots Surveillance, and Popular Protests in China Zixue Tai, U of Kentucky, USA Fengbin Hu, Shanghai U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Making of a Collective Mind Through a Symbiotic Relationship Between the Protesters and the News Media Wooyeol Shin, U of Minnesota, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Muslimah Media Watch: Media Activism and Muslim Choreographies of Social Change Nabil Echchaibi, U of Colorado, USA 5423 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Public Relations and Managing Crisis Public Relations Chair Timothy Coombs, U of Central Florida, USA Participants Commodity Theory as a Theoretical Explanation for the Impact of the Self-Disclosure of Organizational Crises An-Sofie Claeys, U College Ghent, BELGIUM Verolien Cauberghe, Ghent U, BELGIUM Mario Pandelaere, Ghent U, BELGIUM Jan Leysen, Royal Military Academy, BELGIUM Evaluating the Crisis Response Strategies of a University Basketball Program: How Do Reactions Differ Based on Apologies, Crisis Severity, and Team Identification? Tom E Isaacson, Northern Michigan U, USA Scale Development for Measuring Publics’ Emotions in Organizational Crises Yan Jin, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Brooke Fisher Liu, U of Maryland, USA Deepa Anagondahalli, U of Maryland, USA Lucinda L. Austin, Elon U, USA Using Press Releases to Manage a Crisis: A Framing Analysis of Press Releases Dealing With the Fukushima Nuclear Power Station Crisis Jinbong Choi, SungKongHoe U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 5424 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Why Don’t They Believe Us? Why Are Media Effects on Children & Adolescents Routinely Ignored or Downplayed Children Adolescents and Media Participants Media Violence (Including Video Games) Ed Donnerstein, U of Arizona, USA Sex (Including Sexting and Sexual Exploitation Online) Victor C Strasburger, U of New Mexico, USA Obesity Russell Viner, Institute of Child Health, UNITED KINGDOM The Myth of the Fairness Doctrine: Why Both Sides of the Issue Don’t Need to be Represented! Douglas A. Gentile, Iowa State U, USA Worldwide, the general public and mainstream media remain skeptical that the media play any role in crucial child health areas like aggression, obesity, or early sexual activity, despite more than 50 years of research and thousands of research studies that say otherwise. An international panel will discuss the current state-of-the –art knowledge about 3 crucial areas in child and adolescent health – aggression, sex, and obesity – and what can be done to communicate the significant findings to a currently non-believing public. Emphasis will be placed on evidence-based conclusions regarding these key health-related areas, as well as what aspects of the research can or can not be successfully disseminated to the general public. Other public relations obstacles – including the presumed "Fairness Doctrine" in U.S.media – will be discussed as well. 5425 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Soundscapes of Meaning: Radio as a Cultural Force Communication History Chair Jefferson D. Pooley, Muhlenberg College, USA Participants Producing the “Amateur” in Preregulation U.S. Radio, 1899-1912 Kevin Driscoll, U of Southern California, USA Media Memories: The Case of Youth Radio DT64 Anne Kaun, Sodertorn U, SWEDEN Fredrik Stiernstedt, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Talk Back and Particiapte: The Making of the Active Audience Within Swedish Local Radio 1977-2000 Michael Forsman, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Listening to the Community: The Goals and Instructional Methods of Local Educational Radio Broadcasters Brian C Gregory, Columbia U, USA Socio-Cultural Pluriformity on the Dutch Airwaves, 1979–2005 Ruben P. Konig, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Johannes Bardoel, U of Amsterdam/Radboud U, THE NETHERLANDS Koos Nuijten, NHTV Breda U of Applied Sciences, THE NETHERLANDS The question of the influence of radio is a pervasive topic in the development of communication history, bringing together the various agendas which have shaped ongoing discussions about, for instance, audiences, technologies and consumption. This session examines the develpment and influence of radio in a variety of social and cultural contexts, and speaks to its central importance to the field. 5426 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Complexities of Representing the Other Global Communication and Social Change Chair Briar Thompson, U of Oxford Participants Challenging the Frame of Hopelessness: Engagement and Compassion in Western Mediations of Distant Suffering Anna Camilla Haavisto, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Mari Maasilta, U of Westminster/U of Helsinki, UNITED KINGDOM Bring Schemata of Interpretations Back: The Structured Framing Process of the Anti-CNN Movement Fen Jennifer Lin, U of Oslo, NORWAY Dingxin Zhao, U of Chicago, USA How American Media Framed the Egyptian Revolution Byung Wook Kim, Iowa State U, USA Xuan Zhang, Iowa State U, USA The Challenges of Visually Representing Poverty for NGO Communication Managers in New Zealand Briar Thompson, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Celia Kay Weaver, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND 5427 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Mediating Digital Religion: Creatives, Confession, and Eloquence Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Knut Lundby, U of Oslo, NORWAY Participants Conductors for Religion Across Media Knut Lundby, U of Oslo, NORWAY Religious Digital Creatives as New Cultural Authorities Heidi Ann Campbell, Texas A&M U, USA Digital Confession, Gender, and Religion Mia E. Lovheim, Uppsala U, NORWAY On Digital Religious Eloquence Peter D. Simonson, U of Colorado, USA Respondent Stig Hjarvard, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK 5428 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Visual-Verbal Rhetorics in Play, Persuasion, and Politics Visual Communication Studies Participants Text, Image, Violent Games, and God: A Concept Explication of Depiction Gregory Pearson Perreault, U of Missouri, USA Importance of Visual and Verbal Synchronicity in Health Arguments: Super Size Me and Fat Head Emma Frances Bloomfield, U of Southern California, USA Angeline L. Sangalang, U of Southern California, USA Speaking Under Duress: Verbal and Visual Elements of Personal and Political Messages in Captive Videos Tsfira Grebelsky-Lichtman, Hebrew U of Jerusalem / Ono Academic Colledge, ISRAEL Akiba A. Cohen, Emek Yezreel Academic College, ISRAEL Multimodal Campaign Strategies in U.S. Presidential Election 2012 Ognyan A. Seizov, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY The Role of Interactive Graphics in Reducing Misperceptions in the Electorate Nick Geidner, U of Tennessee, USA Ivanka Radovic, U of Tennessee, USA Iveta Imre, U of Tennessee, USA Ioana Alexandra Coman, U of Tennessee, USA Dzmitry Yuran, U of Tennessee, USA Visual Corporate Communication Strategies Between Documentary Sobriety and Marketing Persuasion Carmen Daniela Maier, Aarhus U, DENMARK The City and its Marks: Writing Practices Over Official Discourses Laura Guimaraes Correa, U Federal de Minas Gerais, BRAZIL 5431 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Board Room 1 Convergence Models: Innovations in Daily Newspaper Economy. Cases of Russia, Finland, Germany, and Austria (Panel Session) Mass Communication Chair Gregory Ferrell Lowe, U of Tampere, FINLAND Participants General Presentation of the Research Project Convergence and Business Models: Innovations in Daily Newspaper Economy Mikhail Makeenko, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Mike Friedrichsen, Stuttgart Media U, GERMANY Convergence and Business Models: Innovations in Daily Newspaper Economy -- Case of Russia Elena Vartanova, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Mikhail Makeenko, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Andrei Vyrkouski, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Convergence and Business Models: Innovations in Daily Newspaper Economy -- Case Germany Mike Friedrichsen, Stuttgart Media U, GERMANY Wolfgang Muehl-Benninghaus, Humboldt U of Berlin, GERMANY Convergence and Business Models: Innovations in Daily Newspaper Economy -- Case Finland Katja Koikkalainen, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Hannu Veli Nieminen, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Convergence and Business Models: Innovations in Daily Newspaper Economy -- Case Austria Johanna Grueblbauer, U of Applied Sciences, AUSTRIA Jan Krone, Applied U St. Pölten, AUSTRIA Respondent Robert Georges Picard, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM In this panel the results of comparing the differences in the strategies and innovations adopted by the daily newspapers in Russia, Germany, Austria and Finland will be presented. The presentation focuses to question, where do the newspaper publishers seek innovations for converged platforms, what are the elements of new business models of newspapers, and how does this affect newspaper production chain and contact with readers as well as economic and financial performance of major, regional and local dailies. The panel will identify common challenges that news media organizations face everywhere, while also taking into account differences in audience demand, market structure and business practices between these countries. By comparing the strategies and experiences of daily newspapers in these countries, the panel will offer a better understanding of the dynamics and implications of current technological, social and economic transformations associated with media convergence. 5432 Tuesday 13:30-16:15 Board Room 2 Extended Session: Changing Media Regimes, Changing Media Law, and Policy? Communication Law & Policy Chair Andrew Kenyon, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Participants Convergent Media, Regulation, and the Question of Platform Neutrality Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Protecting Freedom of Speech and Press in the Digital Era Laura Stein, U of Texas, USA "Simply Scan, Print and Repeat": New Challenges to Intellectual Property Laws and Potential Futures Nadine Irene Kozak, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Cloud-Based Facial Recognition: Establishing the Citizen at the Center of Policy and Design Jenifer Sunrise Winter, U of Hawaii, USA Road to Neo-Authoritarianism? A 25-Year Review of China’s Internet Policies Min Jiang, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA Media Regulation for Small Countries: A Case Study of Bhutan Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Yuanyuan Cao, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Search Engines, Markets, and Democracy Minjeong Kim, Colorado State U, USA The Troublesome Norm of International Police Enforcement of Digital Copyright Lucas Logan, Texas A&M U, USA “Local and Local and Local, local”: Conversations With Regulators About the Future of Media Localism in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom Christopher Ali, U of Pennsylvania, USA Respondent Sandra Braman, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA This session aims to encourage cross-area dialog about broader trends in technology design and use, media industry organization and practice, sociopolitical developments, and their implications for communication law and policy. Participants and attendees will discuss what has changed, or should change, in approaches to media law and policy given developments in media industries, technologies, environments and political contexts over the last few decades. Are new theories or approaches needed to understand law and policy in this changing environment? How have societal changes and developments interacted with different areas of law and policy and with what implications? 5433 Tuesday 13:30-14:45 Board Room 3 Bullying, Dissent, and Misbehaviors: The Dark Side of Instructional Communication Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Robert John Sidelinger, Oakland U, USA Participants Emotional Intelligence: A Framework for Examining Bullying in Schools Nancy Burrell, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Melissa Maier, Upper Iowa U, USA DeeAnne Priddis, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Angela Victor, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Jennifer Jackl, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Clare Gross, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Mike Allen, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Instructional Dissent in the College Classroom: A Test of the Instructional Beliefs Model Sara LaBelle, West Virginia U, USA Matthew M. Martin, West Virginia U, USA Keith David Weber, West Virginia U, USA Student Misbehaviors in Online Classrooms: Scale Development and Validation Li Li, U of Wyoming, USA Scott Titsworth, Ohio U, USA Students’ Academic Orientations and Instructional Dissent Alan K. Goodboy, West Virginia U, USA Brandi N Frisby, U of Kentucky, USA 5502 Everything You Wanted to Know About Peer Review, but Were Afraid to Ask Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Balmoral Journalism Studies Chair Stephanie L. Craft, U of Missouri, USA Participants Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Munich, GERMANY Howard Tumber, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA Bob Franklin, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Peer review lies at the center of professional life in academia, yet so much mystery surrounds it. Why, when and how should scholars get involved in reviewing? What makes for a constructive review? How should authors respond to reviews? The session brings together the editors of Communication Theory, International Journal of Press/Politics, Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism, Journalism Studies, Journalism Practice, and Digital Journalism to discuss the state of peer review as well as the nuts and bolts of journal publishing. Audience members will have the opportunity to ask editors about the reviewing and publishing process. This session is valuable for those who are just starting to submit their work, as well as for those who are veteran reviewers. 5505 Methodological Opportunities and Challenges in the Age of Social Media and “Big Data”: Beyond the Survey Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Palace A Theme Sessions Participants Methods for Examining Language and Behavior in Virtual Communities Adam Nicholas Joinson, U of the West of England, UNITED KINGDOM Quant E-Data for the Qual Researcher: Tools for Gathering and Processing Online Data Mike Arijan Thelwall, U of Wolverhampton, UNITED KINGDOM Pairing "Big" Data With Not So Big Data: Opportunities and Challenges Lauren Sessions Goulet, Facebook, USA Methodological Diversity in Studying Facebook Nicole Ellison, Michigan State U, USA The Importance of Interpretation Danah Michele Boyd, Microsoft Research, USA Respondent Noshir S. Contractor, Northwestern U, USA This panel brings together researchers who study social media using a range of methods. The presenters will share their insights, advice, and experiences with methods that are not as commonly employed by communication researchers. The panel will appeal to researchers from multiple divisions who are interested in taking advantage of newer, diverse methodological opportunities, especially in regard to social media research. It will focus on helping communication scholars from different divisions become aware of other methods for exploring social media and taking advantage of these new opportunities to explore both how social media is reshaping many communication processes as well as to test other communication theories in naturalistic settings using the affordances of social media applications. 5506 Culture and Identity Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Palace B Intercultural Communication Chair James M. Honeycutt, Louisiana State U, USA Participants Cultural Identity in Everyday Interactions and Relationships at Work: The Experiences of Russian Immigrants in Finland Malgorzata Lahti, Jyvskyl, FINLAND Identity and Intercultural Conflict Young Yun Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA New Challenges for Old Identities: The Future of Basque Media in the Current Context Txema Ramirez de la Piscina, U of the Basque Country, SPAIN Beatriz Zabalondo, U of the Basque Country, SPAIN Antxoka Agirre, U of the Basque Country, SPAIN Alazne Aiestaran, U of the Basque Country, SPAIN Estefania Jimenez, U of the Basque Country, SPAIN Maria González Gorosarri, U of the Basque Country, SPAIN The Impact of National Culture on Conceptions of Meaningful Work and Identity Negotiation: A Study Across Several Norwegian Organizations Ashley Katherine Barrett, U of Texas, USA IndiaUnheard: Vernacular Voices of Dalit Subaltern From Below Purba Das, Ohio U Southern, USA 5507 Talking Politics, Online and Offline Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Palace C Political Communication Chair Kjerstin Thorson, U of Southern California, USA Participants Online Media Use, Social Norms, and Aggressive Online Communication: A Communication Process of Political Flaming Jay D. Hmielowski, U of Arizona, USA Myiah J Hutchens, U of Arizona, USA Vincent Cicchirillo, U of Texas, USA Perception of Politics and Political Conversation Behavior: A Step Towards New Directions for the Study of Informal Political Conversation Ilka Jakobs, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Nicole Nadine Podschuweit, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Processes of Online Political Discussions and Public Opinion(s) Formation/Expression: A Three-Stage Model Based Upon Emergent Social Identities Sijia Yang, U of Pennsylvania, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Rational Information Sharing or Emotional Expression in the Online Discussion: How Do Leadership Spark Conversations and Trigger Feedbacks Pianpian Wang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Chengjun Wang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF 5508 Online Interaction and Offline Interaction Tuesday 15:00-16:15 York Communication and Technology Chair Malcolm R. Parks, U of Washington, USA Participants Mobilizing the Gay Bar: Grindr and the Layering of Spatial Context Brett A. Bumgarner, U of Pennsylvania, USA Internet Engagement and Community Participation: Implications for Digital Inequalities Chul-joo Lee, U of Illinois, USA Investigations on Empathy Towards Humans and Robots Using Psychophysiological Measures and fMRI Astrid Marieke Rosenthal-von der Puetten, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Frank Paul Schulte, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Sabrina Sobieraj, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Laura Hoffmann, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Stefan Maderwald, Erwin L. Hahn Institute for Magnetic Resonance Imaging, GERMANY Matthias Brand, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Nicole Claudia Krämer, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Intimacy in Computer-Mediated Communication: The Underestimation of Affective Influence Leads to the Illusion of Liking Online Joseph B. Walther, Michigan State U, USA Jeong-woo Jang, Michigan State U, USA Nicole C. Kashian, Michigan State U, USA James Falin, Michigan State U, USA Soo Yun Shin, Michigan State U, USA Aditi Paul, Michigan State U, USA Stephanie Tom Tong, Wayne State U, USA 5509 Consequences of Individual Differences in Online Environments Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Han Ei Chew, United Nations U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Participants Bystanders of Cyberbullying: Personal Characteristics and Contextual Factors That Determine "Helping," "Joining In," and "Doing Nothing’" Katrien Van Cleemput, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Sara Pabian, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM The Role of Sexual Orientation and Personality Traits on Gratifications Obtained Through Online Dating Websites Chris Clemens, U of Connecticut, USA David J. Atkin, U of Connecticut, USA Archana Krishnan, Yale U, USA Opportunistic Discovery of Information: Scale Validation Eunjin Kim, U of Missouri, USA Kevin Wise, U of Missouri, USA Suyoung Moon, U of Missouri, USA Chi Yao, U of Missouri, USA Just How White or Black Are You? Effects of Race and Stereotype-Congruence on Evaluations of Online Daters’ Attractiveness and Behavioral Intentions Saleem Elias Alhabash, Michigan State U, USA Kayla Danielle Hales, Michigan State U, USA Jong-Hwan Baek, Michigan State U, USA Hyun Jung Oh, Michigan State U, USA 5511 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Waterloo/Tower Communication Perspectives on Death, End-of-Life Challenges, and Organ Donation Health Communication Chair Keith Weber, West Virginia U, USA Participants Fear and Death: A Meta-Analytic Review of Fear Appeals From a Terror Management Perspective -- Top Three Paper/Health Communication Division Nancy Rhodes, Ohio State U, USA David M. Hunt, U of Wyoming, USA Scott Radford, U of Calgary, CANADA Managing Communication Tensions and Challenges During the End-of-Life Journey: Perspectives of Māori Kaumātua and Their Whānau John Oetzel, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Mary Louisa Simpson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Kay Berryman, Waikato Tainui College, NEW ZEALAND Tiwai Iti, Rauawaawa Kaumatua Charitable Trust, NEW ZEALAND Rangimahora Reddy, Rauawaawa Kaumatua Charitable Trust, NEW ZEALAND The Living Donor Study: Themes, Expectations, and Obligations in the Transplant Assessment Clinic Aimee Cunningham, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA The Role of Perceived Similarity and Education in Increasing Minority Organ Donor Consent Keith David Weber, West Virginia U, USA Hannah Ball, West Virginia U, USA Melissa Wanzer, Canisius College, USA 5512 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Chelsea/Richmond Advances in Deception and Deception Detection Interpersonal Communication Chair Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA Participants Are Human Judges as Accurate as Automated Tools in Detecting Truth and Deceit? Judee K. Burgoon, U of Arizona, USA Aaron Elkins, U of Arizona, USA Jay F. Nunamaker, U of Arizona, USA Dimitris Metaxas, Rutgers U, USA Deceptive Minds: Indirect Advantage in Judging Deceit When the Lie Detector is Turned Off Anne Solbu Slowe, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Mark G. Frank, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA I Couldn’t Lie to his Face (but I Could Omit): Deception, Detection, Demeanor, and Truth Bias in Faceto-Face and Computer-Mediated Communication Lyn M. Van Swol, U of Wisconsin, USA Michael Braun, U of Wisconsin, USA An Exploration of Concealment and Discovery in Romantic Infidelity Megan M. Dowd, Hamilton College, USA Claudia L. Hale, Ohio U, USA Respondent Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA 5513 Bias in News Tuesday 15:00-16:15 St. James Mass Communication Journalism Studies Chair David Tewksbury, U of Illinois, USA Participants How Real is Economic Mass Media Reality? Comparing the Real Economy and Economic News in German News Outlets Juliane Anke Lischka, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Motivated Evaluation of Mediated Information: The Role of Content and Source Affiliation in the Hostile Media Effect Albert C. Gunther, U of Wisconsin, USA Bryan McLaughlin, U of Wisconsin, USA Melissa R Gotlieb, Texas Tech U, USA David A. Wise, U of Wisconsin, USA Network TV Microframing of Bush vs. Obama: A Longitudinal Lexical Analysis of Relative News Bias Dennis Thomas Lowry, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Mohammad Delwar Hossain, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Jiachun Hong, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Stephanie C KANG, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA The Perceived Source Bias and Race: The Influence of Mainstream Versus Ethnic Media on Audience Responses to HIV/AIDS News Coverage Yuki Fujioka, Georgia State U, USA Tonia East, Edison State College, USA 5514 Political Scandals: Journalistic Swings From Overkill to Neglect? Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Regent's Political Communication Chair Sigurd Allern, U of Oslo, SWEDEN Participants When Watchdogs Sleep. Explaining the Nonscandals of Campaign 2012 Robert M. Entman, George Washington U, USA Scandals and the Silent Processes of Political Power Anu Marjaana Kantola, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Sensationalizing the Trivial? Ester Edla Pollack, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Anything Goes: The Discursive Strategies of "Calculated Ambivalence and Provocation" in Rightwing Populist Political Rhetoric Ruth Wodak, Lancaster U, UNITED KINGDOM The main aim of this panel, drawing on case studies from the US, Austria and the Nordic countries, is to discuss the contradictory status of journalism as both a “scandal machine” and a “watchdog” that often ignores serious political misdeeds that could lead to political revelations of importance for democracy. We also point to how politicians may provoke mediated scandals in order to influence the public agenda. 5516 Living as if Survival Mattered: Sustaining Ourselves, Our World, and Our Economies Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Belgrave Environmental Communication Chair Mark Pedelty, U of Minnesota, USA Participants Eating Meat and Climate Change: The Media Blind Spot Nuria Almiron, U Pompeu Fabra, SPAIN Ethnography of the Sustainable Agriculture Program: A Case Study of Social Change Rhetoric Benjamin Jared Triana, U of Kentucky, USA Signaling Environmental Product Benefits: The Interactive Influence of Eco-Label Source and Argument Quality on Consumer Trust Lucy Atkinson, U of Texas, USA Sonny Rosenthal, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Sustainability, Health, and Well-Being: Challenging the Agendas of Food Production Alison Mary Henderson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Ben Worth, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND 5518 The Best of Information Systems Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Cadogan Information Systems Chair Elly A. Konijn, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Egoistic versus Eco-Friendly Message for Eco-Driving: Importance of Consistency Effects Key Jung Lee, Stanford U, USA Rishabh Bhandari, Stanford U, USA Motivated Cognitive Processing of In-Game Advertising Sungwon Chung, Texas Tech U, USA Johnny V. Sparks, Central Michigan U, USA How Twitter Connects to Information Sources: A Network Analysis of the Sourcing Structure of the OWS Tweets Wenlin Liu, U of Southern California, USA Construal Level Theory and Psychological Reactance Theory: Theoretical Interactions, Message Salience and Message Effectiveness Sherri Jean Katz, Cornell U, USA 5521 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Political Narratives and the Horizon of Imagination Popular Communication Political Communication Chair Jeffrey P. Jones, Old Dominion U, USA Participants Elections as Storytelling Contests Stephen Coleman, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM The Disappearance of "Utopia": Pop Culture's Obsessions With the Dark Side of Politics Liesbet Van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS "We" or "Me", "Us" or "Them": The Moral Imagination of Television Narratives Jeffrey P. Jones, Old Dominion U, USA Soft Power: Political Narrative and the Scale of Group Identities John Hartley, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA The political process is underpinned by political narrative. It is at one and the same time true (news) and fictional (drama), universal (one represents all) and adversarial (we are different from they). Narratives create the polity, literally through electoral campaigns and founding stories (the U.S. Declaration of Independence), and imaginatively through the stories told within news and popular culture. Political narratives, furthermore, are the mechanisms by which individuals are ‘recruited’ to citizenship, and through which the polity comes to ‘see’ itself and its relationship to others. Despite the importance of political narratives, they are understudied in political communication research. 5522 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Broadcasting, Networking, and the Forging of Identities Global Communication and Social Change Chair Deborah James, Governors State U, USA Participants How Structure Shapes Content: The Politics of Indian TVs Hindi Turn Santanu Chakrabarti, Rutgers U, USA Television, Popular Culture and Latin American and Brazilian Identity Carolina Oliveira Matos, U of Essex, UNITED KINGDOM ***TOP STUDENT PAPER*** The Periphery That Speaks: FLN Radio and Post/Colonial Identity Discourse in the Algerian Revolution Annemarie Iddins, U of Michigan, USA Sitting on Two Stools | Ne Možeš Sjediti Na Dvije Stolice: Networked Between Home and the Homeland Deborah James, Governors State U, USA 5523 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Public Relations and CSR Public Relations Chair Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY Participants Corporate Social Responsibility and Media Social Responsibility: An Innovative Classification of Corporate Responsibility Philipp Bachmann, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Diana Ingenhoff, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Exploring the Practices of Dialogue Management Within CSR Field Laura Illia, IE U, SPAIN Stefania Romenti, Iulm U, ITALY Grazia Murtarelli, Iulm U, ITALY Belen Rodriguez-Canovas, ICADE Business School of Madrid, SPAIN Craig E. Carroll, New York U, USA Public Relations in Social Media: Opening the CSR Discourse for Critical Stakeholders in Social Media Michael Andreas Etter, Center for CSR Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK The Influence of International Reporting Standards on CSR Reporting Sabine A. Einwiller, U of Mainz, GERMANY Alexandra Schnauber, U of Mainz, GERMANY 5524 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Top Papers in Intergroup Communication Intergroup Communication Chair Liz Jones, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA Participants The Reference Frame Effect: An Intergroup Perspective on Language Attitudes Marko Dragojevic, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA The Irony Bias: How Verbal Irony Reflects and Maintains Stereotypic Expectancies Christian Burgers, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Camiel J. Beukeboom, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Tuning in to the RTLM: Tracking the Evolution of Language Alongside the Rwandan Genocide Using Social Identity Theory Brittnea Roozen, Marquette U, USA Hillary Cortney Shulman, North Central College, USA Does Virtual Diversity Matter? Effects of Avatar-Based Diversity Representation on Willingness to Express Offline Racial Identity Jong-Eun Roselyn Lee, Ohio State U, USA Online Intergenerational Communication of Young Adults in the United States, Australia, and Guam Lilnabeth P. Somera, U of Guam, USA Francis Dalisay, Cleveland State U, USA Amy L Forbes, James Cook U, AUSTRALIA 5525 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Race and Ethnicity in Communication: Two Sides of the Same Coin or Separate Concepts for Scholarly Discussion? Ethnicity and Race in Communication Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Christine L. Ogan, Indiana U, USA Participants White Logic, White Methods: Mass Communication, Race, and Ethnicity Hemant Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA The Postracial Retreat From Ethnicity and Race Roopali Mukherjee, CUNY - Queens College, USA Race, Ethnicity, and Migration in Europe Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN For Conceptual Juxtapositions Myria Georgiou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Going Global With Race and Ethnicity Kumi Silva, Northeastern U, USA Ethnicity and Race: Central Issues in the Contemporary Global Moment Angharad N. Valdivia, U of Illinois, USA Race and Ethnicity as Coconstructed Processes Saskia Witteborn, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Race and Ethnicity as Autonomous/Codependent Modes of Analysis Charles Husband, U of Bradford, UNITED KINGDOM This roundtable addresses the question of whether ethnicity and race actually deal with the same issues, concepts, theories--even have the same foundation in our scholarly work in communications. The race and ethnicity division has the responsibility to explicate these concepts as they form the core of the group’s scholarship as laid out in the mission statement. This roundtable will attempt to flesh out the relationship between these concepts as they apply to the field of communications for scholarship in the current era. The panel members are diverse in terms of their own research topics, use of research methodologies, and their affiliations with communication programs across the United States, Europe and Asia. 5526 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 The Business of Media History: News and Surveillance Communication History Chair Stephanie Schulte, U of Arkansas, USA Participants Robert McCormick, the Industrial Newspaper, and the Ironies of Planning Michael Stamm, Michigan State U, USA Overhead Costs and News-Agency Crises: An Innisian Analysis of Canadian Press Gene Allen, Ryerson U, CANADA Direct-Mail, Lists, and the Birth of Target Marketing, 1870-1930 Richard K. Popp, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Encoding the Consumer: The Rise of Computerized Credit Reporting in the United States Josh Lauer, U of New Hampshire, USA Respondent Richard John, Columbia U, USA Following the conference theme, this panel challenges the boundaries of communication research by highlighting the fertile, but often underappreciated, overlap between communication history and business history. This panel demonstrates the profound influence of commercial strategy, competitive pressures, and organizational forces in the development of two major twentieth-century enterprises: the North American newspaper business and the consumer surveillance industry. Together, the panelists underscore the parallel concerns of communication and business historians and suggest common thematic, analytical, and conceptual frameworks. 5527 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Rethinking Media Theory for the Post-Mass Media Era Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Mark B. Andrejevic, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Participants Welcome to the Grey Zone: Interpreting the Death and Strange Afterlife of Mass Media Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Toward a Critical Refrigerator Studies James Hay, U of Illinois, USA Emerging Conceptions of Audiences and Audiencing in a Digital Age Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Towards a Convergent Theory of the Media Graeme Turner, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA As media platforms, formats and technologies both proliferate and converge, it has become increasingly difficult to reconcile our accounts of the changing environment with traditional theories of the media. The presentations in this panel will discuss ways in which we might construct theoretical bridges between approaches to ‘old’ and ‘new’ media in a context where the media is no longer necessarily addressing a mass audience, when the precise make up of its structure, economy and use is increasingly reflective of a range of local, national, and regional conditions, and when the comprehensiveness of traditional accounts can no longer be taken for granted. 5528 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Feminism LOL and the Postfeminist Agenda: Repoliticizing Feminist Media Studies in a Postfeminist Age Feminist Scholarship Chairs Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA Andrea Lee Press, U of Virginia, USA Participants Postfeminism, Enlightened Sexism, and the Republican "War on Women" Susan J. Douglas, U of Michigan, US "Sexy-Fit Femininity": the New Cheerleader as Post-Feminist Icon Laura Grindstaff, U of California - Davis, USA Emily Elizabeth West, U of Massachusetts, USA Postfeminism and the Depressive Position Maria Mastronardi, Northwestern U, USA Postfeminist Culture in the Age of Austerity Yvonne Tasker, U of East Anglia, UNITED KINGDOM Diane Negra, U College Dublin, IRELAND Class, Propriety, and "Postfeminist" Sex Work on Geordie Shore Helen Wood, De Montfort U, UNITED KINGDOM As if Postfeminism Had Come True: The Search for Agency in Cultural Studies of "Sexualisation" Rosalind Gill, King's College London, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent Andrea Lee Press, U of Virginia, USA This roundtable will address the lexicon of concepts feminist media scholarship has used to describe the “post”-feminist situation, contextualized within each scholar’s theoretical contribution to this discussion, and their ongoing research on the issue. Scholars will address the questions of how a feminist political agenda, with reference to specific issues they have researched, is or is not possible in the current cultural and economic climate; how feminist media studies can transcend the postfeminist paradigm as we move into a more global framework and a world-wide recession economy; whether postfeminism describes only a “western” situation, and what theoretical alternatives might be found. 5531 Tuesday 15:00-16:15 Board Room 1 Opinion Leadership in a Changing Media Environment: Responses to Conceptual and Empirical Challenges Sponsored Sessions Chair Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Participants Patterns of Opinion Leadership in New Media Environments: Theoretical Challenges and Empirical Findings Mike Schaefer, U of Hamburg, GERMANY Monika Taddicken, U of Hamburg, GERMANY “Masspersonal” Opinion Leaders: The Role of Situational Factors in Opinion Leadership Katrin Jungnickel, Ilmenau U of Technology, GERMANY Parasocial Opinion Leadership: Theoretical Concept and Empirical Evidence Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Laura Leissner, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Paula Stehr, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Friederike Schönhardt, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Esther Döringer, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Influence vs. Selection. A Network Perspective on Opinion Leadership Thomas N. Friemel, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Respondent Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Questions remain, both conceptually and empirically, as to how opinion leadership configures itself, and potentially changes, in this new media environment. What exactly does it mean when media increasingly penetrate interpersonal communication and when the communication to family and friends – which protects ‚opinion followers’ from media effects in the classic model of opinion leadership – becomes mediatized? What effects does it have when internet and social media offer apparently direct interactions with other individuals, including celebrities and experts, and potentially pave the way for new forms of virtual or parasocial opinion leadership. How can this be incorporated in the existing concept(s) of opinion leadership, and in turn, how do they have to adapt to these new developments? These questions will be tackled in the proposed panel. 5533 Tuesday 15:00-17:45 Board Room 3 Extended Session: Challenging Transitions: Representation, Bodies, Identities, and Policy in GLBT Studies Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies Participants My Gay is Great! The Heteronormative Gaze of Girls Who Like Boys Who Like Boys (Top Student Paper) Evan Brody, U of Southern California, USA “Diversifying” Masculinity: Super Girls, Happy Boys, Cross-Dressers, and Real Men on Chinese Media Huike Wen, Willamette U, USA Transgender, Transmedia, Transnationality: Chaz Bono in Documentary and Dancing With the Stars Katherine Sender, U of Auckland, NEW ZEALAND This is Not a Queer Utopia: Contested Cultural Discourses in the Chinese Slash Fandom FSCN Jing Zhao, Chinese U of Hong Kong, USA Locating the "Scruff Guy": From Bodies to Communities in Bear-Targeted Social Media Yoel Roth, U of Pennsylvania, USA Queer in Polish: English Names Travelling to Central and Eastern Europe Lukasz Szulc, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Butch in the Sheets: Representations of Masculine Women in Pornography Stephanie Mannis, U of Pennsylvania, USA Traumatized Sick: A Look at the Post-Yugoslav Queer Cinema Dijana Jelaca, U of Massachusetts, USA “Put Your Rainbow Flag Away!” Discursive Confrontations Over Registered Partnerships in Slovakia Viera Lorencova, Fitchburg State U, USA Trans Advocacy and Public Relations: A Rhetorical Analysis of Mediated Transfemininity in the 2012 Miss Universe Pageant Erica Ciszek, U of Oregon, USA Possibilities for Queering Surveillance Infrastructure: The Case of the Quantified Self David J. Phillips, U of Toronto, CANADA Brian Harding, U of Toronto, CANADA Danielle Leighton, U of Toronto, CANADA Beyond Inclusion: The Differential Visions of Queer Migration Manifestos *Top Faculty Paper Karma Ruth Chavez, U of Wisconsin, USA Respondents Che Baysinger, Kaplan U, USA Lisa Henderson, U of Massachusetts, USA Travers Scott, Clemson U, USA In this extended session, participants will reflect on the state of the field of GLBT/Q research in communication. Instead of traditional panel presentations, the session will feature moderated half-hour discussions, followed by open discussion, on each of these three themes: 1) Representation; 2) Bodies and Identities; 3) Policy. 5602 Journalism Studies Business Meeting Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Balmoral Journalism Studies 5605 Challenging Online Research: Insights From Across the Field Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Palace A Theme Sessions Chair Stephanie L. Craft, U of Missouri, USA Chairs Hallvard Moe, U of Bergen, NORWAY Anders Olof Larsson, U of Oslo, NORWAY Participants ‘Catching the User’ in Online Research: An Innovative Approach for Respondent Recruitment Peter Mechant, iMinds-MICT-UGent, BELGIUM Pieter Verdegem, Ghent U, BELGIUM Doing Software Supported Facebook Analysis Anja Bechmann, Aarhus U, DK Content Analysis is Dead, Long Live Content Analysis? Michael B. Karlsson, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Political Communication and Methodological Triangulations in the Era of “Big Data” Anders Olof Larsson, U of Oslo, NORWAY Hallvard Moe, U of Bergen, NORWAY Jakob Svensson, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Respondent Maria Bakardjieva, U of Calgary, CANADA This panel brings together international scholars who have all made efforts to further our understanding of how online research can be performed, expanding the methodological toolbox in the process. Each presenter will discuss the pros and cons of various approaches to online data gathering and analysis, providing hands-on examples of specific cases. Given its focus on the “Do’s and Dont’s” of online data gathering and analysis, the panel promises to raise cross-divisional interest and contain something of relevance for members of all ICA divisions. As the panel will show, challenges pertaining to data collection still remains in the digital era - and are growing even bigger in the face of “big data” research and the likes. 5606 Agenda Setting for 21st Century Leadership Communication Research: Views From Management and Communication Scholars Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Participants Kevin J Barge, Texas A&M U, USA Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA David Collinson, Lancaster U, UNITED KINGDOM Keith Grint, U of Warwick, UNITED KINGDOM Dennis Tourish, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM This diverse panel of management and communication scholars is expected to discuss and debate, inter alia, how communication scholars can better contribute to the understanding of 21st century leadership forms; theory-practice tensions in theorizing about leadership and communication; the challenges to discursive leadership vis-à-vis materialities, including that of the body; dilemma-centered leadership and the role of tension, contradiction, and paradox in managing modern day “wicked” problems; and the future of cross paradigm work and multiple methodologies. In short, amidst lively and spirited debate, we hope to chart a future course for communication scholarship. 5607 Election Campaigns and Campaign Effects Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Palace C Political Communication Chair David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Participants A New Look at Campaign Advertising and Political Engagement: Do Opinion-Incongruent and Congruent Ads Matter? Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Franziska Marquart, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Collateral Damage: Involvement and the Effects of Negative Super PAC Advertising David Lynn Painter, Full Sail U, USA Political Communication and Direct Democracy at Local and National Level Julia Metag, U Münster, GERMANY The Dynamics of Recall campaigns: An Analysis of Issue Ownership Theory in the 2012 WI Recall Gubernatorial Debates Sumana Chattopadhyay, Marquette U, USA David M. Rhea, Governors State U, USA 5608 Communication and Technology Business Meeting Tuesday 16:30-17:45 York Communication and Technology Chair Kwan Min Lee, U of Southern California, USA Participants James A. Danowski, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Lee Humphreys, Cornell U, USA 5609 Culture, News, Magazine, and Television Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Lancaster Intercultural Communication Chair Yang-Soo Kim, II, Middle Tennessee State U, USA Participants Cultivating Host Receptivity and Host Conformity Pressure: Exploring Media Use and Host Attitudes on Immigration Kelly McKay-Semmler, U of South Dakota, USA Shane Michael Semmler, U of South Dakota, USA Culture and Politics in News Framing of Obesity in the United States and Japan Suman Mishra, Southern Illinois U, Edwardsville, USA Domestication of Foreign Emotion: A Cross-Cultural Comparison Over News Representation in 2011 Japan Earthquake by Journalists From China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan Yue Wang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Magazine Readership Study: A Cross-Cultural Analysis of South Korean and U.S. Women Readers Lysis of South Korean and U.S. Women Readers Leara Rhodes, U of Georgia, USA Jungwon Lee, U of Georgia, USA Watching Indian Television in America: A Study Across Five Major U.S. Cities Indira S. Somani, Howard U, USA Jing Guo, U of Maryland, USA Soo-Kwang Oh, U of Maryland, USA 5611 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Waterloo/Tower Making a Difference: Evaluating the Influence of Health Communication Strategies Health Communication Chair Marisa Greenberg, Pennsylvania State U, USA Participants The Direct and Indirect Media Influence on Perceived Smoking Prevalence Mena Ning Wang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF L.Crystal Jiang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Influence Attempts Using Efficacy Sources as Weight Loss Evidence Melanie Sarge, Texas Tech U, USA Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA Mood and Time Influence Defensive Affect Regulation Following Self-Threatening Health Information: Evidence at the Implicit Level Enny Henrica Das, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Jonathan Vantriet, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Influencing Health Discussions: The Effects of Emotions on Conversational Valence and Binge Drinking Hanneke Hendriks, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Gert-Jan De Bruijn, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5612 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Chelsea/Richmond Competitive Papers in Interpersonal Communication Interpersonal Communication Chair Young-ok Yum, Kansas State U, USA Participants Cohabitation, Involvement, and Trajectories of Commitment to Wed Jennifer S Priem, Wake Forest U, USA Perceptions of Communication Technology: Collective Instrumentalisation Through Everyday Social Practice Kenzie Burchell, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Preaching, Community, and Convergence: The Use of Media and New Media by Progressive Indonesian Islamic Leaders to Communicate With Their Followers Nurhaya Muchtar, Indiana U of Pennsylvania, USA Jeffrey Ritchey, Indiana U of Pennsylvania, USA Styling Matters: The Impact of Styling on Perceived Competence and Warmth of Female Leaders Jennifer Klatt, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Sabrina Cornelia Eimler, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Nicole Claudia Krämer, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY The Effects of Cognitive and Affective Processes on Message Content in Same-Culture and Cross-Culture Instant Messaging Conversations Duyen T. Nguyen, Cornell U, USA Susan R Fussell, Cornell U, USA 5613 Mass Communication Business Meeting Tuesday 16:30-17:45 St. James Mass Communication 5614 Sound Bites, Negativity, and Horse-Race Style: Is Campaign Communication Getting Worse and Worse Again? Long-Term Research in Germany and Austria on the Eve of the 2013 Elections Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Regent's Political Communication Chairs David Tewksbury, U of Illinois, USA Veronica Hefner, Chapman U, USA Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Chair Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA Participants How German Parties Court Their Voters: An Analysis of Electoral Advertising on Television From 1957 to 2009 Christina Holtz-Bacha, U of Erlangen - Nuremberg, GERMANY Eva-Maria Lessinger, U of Erlangen - Nuremberg, GERMANY Candidates for Chancellor: A Comparison of German Television Channels and Election Years Since 1990 Winfried Schulz, U of Erlangen - Nuremberg, GERMANY Reimar Zeh, U of Erlangen - Nuremberg, GERMANY Going Interpretive? Television Coverage of Austrian Election Campaigns Since the 1980s Gabriele Melischek, Austrian Academy of Sciences, AUSTRIA Josef Seethaler, Austrian Academy of Sciences, AUSTRIA Linear and Non-Linear Trends in Election Coverage (1949-2009): Looking Back and Looking Ahead Juergen Wilke, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Melanie Leidecker, U of Mainz, GERMANY The Decline of Media Performance: Myth or Reality? A Cross-National Comparison of German and Austrian Newspapers (1949-2009) Melanie Magin, U of Mainz, GERMANY Just a few months ahead of the 2013 elections, this panel aims to present an overview of the results of the main longitudinal research studies into campaign coverage in Germany and Austria in order to identify more reliable indicators with which to assess future media performance during election periods. The papers gathered in this panel apply a comprehensive set of indicators related to the “Americanization” or “modernization” of campaign communication to analyze the coverage by the news media – or better: to analyze the content of the news media, as the panel includes political ads as well, for the reason that such ads allow parties and candidates to speak directly to voters via the media. 5616 Watch Out for That Tree! Human Interaction and Response to the Environment Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Belgrave Environmental Communication Chair Charles T. Salmon, Michigan State U, USA Participants You Owe it to Yourself to See This Film: The First-Person Effect and Environmental Issues Sue-Jen Lin, I-Shou U, TAIWAN Felling a Tree to Save Paper: Short- and Long-Term Effects of Immersive Virtual Environments on Environmental Self-Efficacy, Attitude, and Behavior Sun Joo (Grace%29 Ahn, U of Georgia, USA Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA Dooyeon Park, U of Georgia, USA The Role of Social Toxicity in Responses to a Slow-Moving Environmental Disaster Rebecca J. Cline, Kent State U, USA Heather Orom, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Jae Eun Chung, Kent State U, USA Tanis Hernandez, Center for Abestos Related Disease, USA When Happy Drivers Go Green: Effects of Egoistic/Altruistic Framing and Affective States on EcoDriving Yeon Kyoung Joo, Stanford U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jong-Eun Roselyn Lee, Ohio State U, USA 5617 Game Studies Interest Group Business Meeting Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Berkeley Game Studies Chair Dmitri Williams, U of Southern California, USA Participants James D. Ivory, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Joyce L.D. Neys, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5618 Information Systems Business Meeting Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Cadogan Information Systems Chair Elly A. Konijn, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Prabu David, Washington State U, USA Kevin Wise, U of Missouri, USA Jolanda Veldhuis, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5621 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 5622 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 5623 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Popular Communication Business Meeting Popular Communication Participants Stijn Reijnders, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Melissa Aronczyk, Carleton U, CANADA Jason Striker, Arizona State U, USA Global Communication and Social Change Business Meeting Global Communication and Social Change Chair Antonio C. La Pastina, Texas A&M U, USA Social Cause and Health Campaigns Public Relations Chair Bree Devin, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Can Media Relations Promote Public Health? Teresa Ruao, U of Minho, PORTUGAL Sandra Marinho, U of Minho, PORTUGAL Challenging Resistance to Uncomfortable Messages: Obesity Communication Research Johanna Fawkes, Charles Sturt U, AUSTRALIA Ralph Tench, Leeds Metropolitan U, UNITED KINGDOM Planned Parenthood Take on Live Action: An Analysis of Media Interplay and Image Restoration Strategies in Strategic Conflict Management Leslie Rasmussen, Utah Valley U, USA The Impacts of Different Types of Social Cause Messages in Corporate Communication Campaigns Kihan Kim, Seoul National U of Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yunjae Cheong, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Joon Soo Lim, Mississippi State U, USA 5624 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 5625 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Intergroup Communication Business Meeting Intergroup Communication Participant Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Ethnicity and Race in Communication Business Meeting Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Roopali Mukherjee, CUNY - Queens College, USA Participant Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN 5626 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 5627 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 5628 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 5631 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Board Room 1 Communication History Business Meeting Communication History Chair Philip Lodge, Edinburgh Napier U, UNITED KINGDOM Philosophy, Theory, and Critique Business Meeting Philosophy, Theory and Critique Feminist Scholarship Business Meeting Feminist Scholarship Media Studies and Latin American Perspectives Sponsored Sessions Participants Latin American Communication Thought and the Challenges of the XXI Century César Bolaño, Federal U of Sergipe, BRAZIL Narrating Latin American Critical Thought, Keys for Understanding the Field and Research in Communication in Latin America Eliseo Colón, U of Puerto Rico, USA Latin American and Media Accountability Experiences Fernando Oliveira Paulino, U de Brasilia, BRAZIL Challenges for Latin American Urban Communication Research Patria Roman-Velazquez, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Alejandra Garcia Vargas, U Nacional de Jujuy, ARGENTINA Organized by Latin American Communication Researchers´ Association (ALAIC), this panel at the ICA Conference intends to present and analyze Latin American perspectives on Communication and Media Studies. We also aim to establish a permanent dialogue on interregional activities and common projects among International Communication Researchers´ organizations (IAMCR, ICA, ECREA, and ALAIC) and their members. We argue that Latin American urban communication research needs to formulate new questions and methodological approaches that will be at the forefront of new urban questioning. 5632 Tuesday 16:30-17:45 Board Room 2 Challenges to Regulating Copyright, Trademark, and Defamation Communication Law & Policy Chair Seamus Simpson, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Gunboat Diplomacy and Pirate Sanctuaries: The Use of Trade Agreements to Promote Copyright Reform Patrick Burkart, Texas A&M U, USA Jonas Andersson, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN Set the Fox to Watch the Geese: Voluntary IP Regimes in Piratical File-Sharing Communities Balazs Bodo, Budapest U of Technology and Economics, HUNGARY To Speak or Not to Speak: Recent Developments in U.S. Copyright and Defamation Law Heath Hooper, U of Missouri, USA Lost in the Semiotic Maze: Empirical Approaches to Proof of Blurring in Trademark Dilution Law Matthew D. Bunker, U of Alabama, USA Kimberly Bissell, U of Alabama, USA 5702 Journalism Studies Reception Tuesday 18:00-19:00 Balmoral Journalism Studies 5708 Communication and Technology, Information Systems, and Game Studies Joint Reception Tuesday 18:00-19:00 York Communication and Technology 5708 Information Systems, Communication and Technology, and Game Studies Joint Reception Tuesday 18:00-19:00 York Information Systems Game Studies Communication and Technology 5708 Game Studies, Communication and Technology, and Information Systems Joint Reception Tuesday 18:00-19:00 York Game Studies Communication and Technology Information Systems Game Studies Participants Kwan Min Lee, U of Southern California, USA Elly A. Konijn, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Dmitri Williams, U of Southern California, US This reception is sponsored jointly by the Communication and Technology Division, the Information Systems Division, and the Game Studies Special Interest Group for members of the three ICA sections. Information about the event's location will be made available at the business meetings of the hosting sections. 5709 In Memoriam: A Tribute to Sam Becker Tuesday 18:00-19:00 Lancaster Sponsored Sessions Chair Linda L. Putnam, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Steve Duck, U of Iowa, US Robert K. Avery, U of Utah, USA Roderick P. Hart, U of Texas, USA This panel honors Professor Emeritus Sam Becker, who passed away November 8, 2012, for his many contributions to communication studies, our professional associations, and the University of Iowa. As an ICA Fellow and a Distinguished Scholar of NCA, Sam was an active scholar, the advisor of nearly 60 dissertations, an incredible mentor, and a stellar leader in the field. Author of six books and more than 110 journal articles, Sam was known for his work in persuasion and his “mosaic model” of mediated communication. This panel pays tribute to his legacy and the many ways that he shaped our field. 5713 Mass Communication Reception Tuesday 18:00-19:00 St. James Mass Communication 5728 Teresa Award Ceremony and Reception Tuesday 18:00-19:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Chairs David Tewksbury, U of Illinois, USA Veronica Hefner, Chapman U, USA Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Feminist Scholarship Chair Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA Participant Marian J. Meyers, Georgia State U, USA Award Ceremony and reception for Teresa Award, presented by Feminist Scholarship Division. 5828 Tuesday 19:30-20:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Special Film Screening: Flirting with Danger: P ow Feminist Scholarship Chair Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA This session will screen the new documentary film from the Media Education Foundation, Flirting with Danger: Power & Choice in Heterosexual Relationships, featuring social and developmental psychologist and author Lynn Phillips. Phillips, who has taught in the Department of Communication at the University of Massachusetts since 2005, conducted interviews with hundreds of young women about their relationships and hookups. The film features dramatizations of these interviews, which, together with images from popular culture and analysis from Phillips, examines how the wider culture's frequently contradictory messages about pleasure, danger, agency, and victimization enter into women's most intimate relationships with men. 5846 ICA Graduate Student Reception Tuesday 20:00-22:00 Reception Sponsored Sessions Chairs Sojung Claire Kim, U of Pennsylvania, USA Rahul Mitra, Purdue U, USA 6059 Wednesday 06:30-08:30 Dining Room Communication History Division Family Breakfast Communication History Chair Philip Lodge, Edinburgh Napier U, UNITED KINGDOM Members of the Communication History Division, and any members of their families who may be accompanying them, will be very welcome at the Division's first family breakfast. Held in a restaurant which is just a few steps from the Conference hotel and which caters for all tastes and styles of breakfast, this new event will allow members and their families to meet and mingle informally. 6014 ICA Fellows' Breakfast Wednesday 07:00-09:15 Regent's Sponsored Sessions 6102 Theories and Applications in Intercultural Communication Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Balmoral Intercultural Communication Chair Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado, USA Chair Che Baysinger, Kaplan U, USA Participants From “Laying the Foundations” to Building the House: Extending Orbe’s (1998) Cocultural Theory to Include "Rationalization" as a Formal Strategy Gina Castle Bell, Texas Tech U, USA Melinda Weathers, Clemson U, USA Mark C. Hopson, George Mason U, USA Katy A Ross, Texas Tech U, USA The Application of Renewal and Symbolic Convergence Theory to the Ivory Coast Peace Process Benjamin Jared Triana, U of Kentucky, USA The Indonesian-African Encounter in a Multiethnic Housing District: A Cross-Cultural Perspective GLENNY FRANSISCA, The London School of Public Relations Jakarta, ID Rudi Sukandar, London School of Public Relations - Jakarta, INDONESIA A Theoretical Model for Cultural Fusion Theory Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Respondent Che Baysinger, Kaplan U, USA 6105 Political Communication and Voter Behaviour Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Palace A Political Communication Chair Hajo Boomgaarden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Accuracy of Vote Expectation Surveys in Forecasting Elections Andreas Graefe, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY News Exposure, Trust in the EU and European Parliament Election Turnout: How Determinants of Voting Differ Between Citizens of Established and New Member States Yioryos Nardis, U of Michigan, USA What Took You So Long? The Determinants of Time of Voting Decision Poong Oh, U of Southern California, USA By Ground or By Air? Voter Mobilization During the 2008 Presidential Campaign Jacob Neiheisel, U of Wisconsin, USA Sarah Niebler, Vanderbilt U, USA Matthew Holleque, U of Wisconsin, USA Issue and Leader Voting in U.S. Presidential Elections Andreas Graefe, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY 6106 Women's Work? Communication and Gender in the Workplace Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Robin P. Clair, Purdue U, USA Participants Designing Engineering Mentoring Cultures for the Professoriate: Men and Women Faculty’s Stories of Mentoring for Diversity and Inclusion Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA Ziyu Long, Purdue U, USA Klod Kokini, Purdue U, USA Lindsey B. Anderson, Purdue U, USA Jennifer Carrie Batra, Purdue U, USA Robyn Wilson, Purdue U, USA Market Women, Disenfranchised Work, and the Reworking of Stigma Joelle Cruz, Clemson U, USA Sustaining Liminality: Challenging Communication Research on International Female Engineers in U.S. Graduate Programs Debalina Dutta, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Lorraine G. Kisselburgh, Purdue U, USA Organizational Memories in Uncertain Contexts: Remembering War in Postconflict Organizations Joelle Cruz, Clemson U, USA Respondent Rebecca Gill, Texas A&M U, USA 6107 Online Political Engagement and Participation Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Palace C Political Communication Chair Ericka Menchen-Trevino, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Longitudinal Data Analysis of Social Media Use, Political Expression, and Their Effects on Political Participation Homero Gil de Zuniga, U of Texas, USA Logan Molyneux, U of Texas, USA PEI ZHENG, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Political Engagement via Mobile Communication: Unraveling the Effects of Political Trust and Efficacy on Political Participation in South Korea Chang Sup Park, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Kavita Karan, Southern Illinois U Carbondale, USA The Power of the Multiple Groups: A Study of Facebook Group Membership and Political Participation Kanni Huang, Michigan State U, USA Amy Lynn Hagerstrom, Michigan State U, USA The Public as Active Agents in Social Movement: Facebook and Gangjeong Movement in Korea Ji Won Kim, U of Texas, USA Yonghwan Kim, U of Alabama, USA Joseph Jai-sung Yoo, U of Texas, USA 6108 Analyzing Media Content and Use Across Platforms Wednesday 08:00-09:15 York Communication and Technology Chairs Frauke Zeller, U College London, GERMANY Kjetil Sandvik, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Participants Data on the Fly: Mobile Technologies and the Documentation of Media Use in Everyday Contexts Anne Mette Thorhauge, Copenhagen U, DENMARK “Being There, Everywhere”: How to Trace Interactions on Social Media in Real-Time Jacob Ørmen, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Analysing News Sharing on Social Network Sites Jakob Linaa Jensen, U of Aarhus, DENMARK Mixed Methods in Social Network Analysis Frauke Zeller, U College London, GERMANY Miguel Vicente-Marino, ACOP - Asociacion de Comunicacion Politica, SPAIN Respondent Klaus Bruhn Jensen, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK The panel combines more quantitative approaches originating in traditional network analysis with creative research strategies emerging from a qualitative tradition. It includes strategies for combining various methods through frameworks based on mixed methods as well as specific research tools and practical implications of the methods employed. By combining these different approaches the panel seeks to explore the frontline of research on media content and use across platforms as well as facilitating a dialogue between qualitative and quantitative approaches to studying cross-media use. 6109 Cognitive and Behavioral Aspects of Media Use Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Kevin Wise, U of Missouri, USA Participants Cognitive Dimensions of Media Multitasking Zheng Joyce Wang, Ohio State U, USA Matt Irwin, Ohio State U, USA Cody Kenneth Cooper, Ohio State U, USA Jatin Srivastava, Ohio U, USA Looking for the Signposts on the Web: Clickstream Analysis of the Flow of Public Attention Chengjun WANG, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Jing Liu, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Freeways, Detours, and Dead Ends: Unequal Searching Among Partially Wired Youth Jeremy Schulz, U of California - Berkeley, USA Laura Robinson, Santa Clara U, USA Motivations and Information Structures: A Closer Look at Web Searching Behavior Stephanie Edgerly, Northwestern U, USA Emily Vraga, George Mason U, USA Bryan McLaughlin, U of Wisconsin, USA German Adolfo Alvarez, U of Wisconsin, USA JungHwan Yang, U of Wisconsin, USA Young Mie Kim, U of Wisconsin, USA 6111 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Waterloo/Tower Pursuing Effective Antismoking Message Strategies in Health Campaigns Health Communication Chair Rebecca Katherine Ivic, U of Akron, USA Participants Targeting Smokers With Empathy Appeal Antismoking PSAs: A Field Experiment Lijiang Shen, U of Georgia, USA Exploring the Effects of Antismoking Ads on Optimistic Bias and Cessation Intent Jungsuk Kang, U of Connecticut, USA Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA Translating the Link between Social Identity and Health Behavior Into Effective Health Communication Strategies: An Experimental Test Using Anti-Smoking Advertisements Meghan Bridgid Moran, San Diego State U, USA Steve Sussman, U of Southern California, USA The Effectiveness of Physical and Social Threat Appeals in Antismoking Massages Among Flemish Adults Joyce Koeman, U of Leuven, BELGIUM 6112 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Chelsea/Richmond Food for Thought: Navigating Food Choice and Nutrition Communication Issues Health Communication Participants Work as a Means of Navigating Nutrition and Exercise Concerns in an Online Cancer Community Brad Love, U of Texas, USA Charee Thompson, U of Texas, USA Brittani Crook, U of Texas, USA Making Sense of Childhood Messages: Family Communication's Impact on Adult Eating Behaviors and Attitudes Trisha Hoffman, Arizona State U, USA How to Persuade Adolescents to Use Nutrition Labels Zhuowen Dong, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Defending America’s Food Supply: An Evaluation of the FDA’s ALERT Program Christine Skubisz, U of Pennsylvania, USA Monique Mitchell Turner, George Washington U, USA 6113 Sex and Romance and Sexual Identity: Exploring Links With Media (High Density Session) Wednesday 08:00-09:15 St. James Children Adolescents and Media Chair Erica L. Scharrer, U of Massachusetts, USA Participants Does Country Context Matter? Investigating the Predictors of Teen Sexting Across Europe Susanne E. Baumgartner, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sindy R. Sumter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Fotologs and the Socialization of Love: "Traditional" or "Alternative" Depictions? Yolanda Tortajada, U Rovira i Virgili, SPAIN Cilia Willem, U de Barcelona, SPAIN Nuria Arauna, U Rovira i Virgili, SPAIN Lucrezia Crescenzi, U de Barcelona, SPAIN Men's Magazines, Beliefs About Feminine Courtship Strategies and the Objectification of Women: A Longitudinal Study Among Adolescent Boys Laura Vandenbosch, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Steven Eggermont, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Lucretia Monique Ward, U of Michigan, USA Relationships Between Unintentional Exposure to Internet Sexual Content and Sexual Behavioral Intention Among Chinese Youth Jingwen Zhang, U of Pennsylvania, USA John B. Jemmott, III, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Impact of Television Viewing, Sensation Seeking and Gender on Adolescents’ Attitude Toward Uncommitted Sexual Exploration Laura Vandenbosch, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Ine Beyens, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM The Mediating Role of Self-Discrepancies in the Relationship Between Media Exposure and Emotional Well-Being Among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Adolescents Bradley J Bond, U of San Diego, USA Under Pressure to Sext? Applying the Theory of Planned Behaviour on Adolescents’ Sexting Michel Walrave, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Wannes Heirman, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM “I Want to Go Out With You” vs. “I Want to Talk to You”: Corpus Analysis of Gender Differences in Mobile Text Messages of Adolescents Tae Joon Moon, U of Wisconsin, USA Jonathan D'Angelo, U of Wisconsin, USA Stephanie Tsang, U of Wisconsin, USA Yangsun Hong, U of Wisconsin, USA Shawnika Jeanine Hull, U of Wisconsin, USA Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA Fiona M. McTavish, U of Wisconsin, USA David H Gustafson, U of Wisconsin, USA 6116 The Power of the Media: Mediatization, Influence, and Technology Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Henrik Ornebring, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Participants The Medium of the Media. Journalism, Politics, and the Theory of “Mediatization” Risto Kunelius, U of Tampere, FINLAND Esa Reunanen, U of Tampere, FINLAND The Mediatization of Politics: Interpreting the Value of Live vs. Edited Journalistic Interventions in UK Television News Bulletins Stephen Cushion, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Richard Thomas, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Do Even Journalists Support Media Restrictions? Presumed Political Media Influences and its Consequences Uli Bernhard, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Marco Dohle, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Gerhard Vowe, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY The Uncivilized Camera: Television Technology During the Vietnam War Mathias Crawford, Stanford U, USA Respondent Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Munich, GERMANY 6117 Methodological Challenges in Communication Research Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Jens Vogelgesang, U Münster, GERMANY Participants Adapting the Capability Approach to Evaluate New Media Literacy: A Structural Equation Modeling Methodology Uma Shankar Pandey, Surendranath College for Women, INDIA Between Big Data and Deep Analysis? Scaling Digital Media Research Merja Mahrt, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Michael Scharkow, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Inter-Coder Reliability Assessment With Fuzzy Kappa: Climate Change Discourse, Travel Reviews, and Visual Images Applications Andrei Kirilenko, U of North Dakota, USA Svetlana Stepchenkova, U of Florida, USA Tell it Like it is? Inaccuracies of Self-Reported TV Exposure in Comparison to People-Meter Data Anke Wonneberger, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Mariana Irazoqui, Stichting KijkOnderzoek, THE NETHERLANDS Total-Effect Test is Superfluous for Establishing Complementary Mediation Xinshu Zhao, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 6118 High Density: Social Support Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Cadogan Interpersonal Communication Chair David D. Clare, Michigan State U, USA Participants An Analysis of Esteem Support Messages Received by College Students Preparing to Enter the Workforce Amanda J. Holmstrom, Michigan State U, USA David D. Clare, Michigan State U, USA Jessica Russell, Michigan State U, USA Factors Influencing Friends’ Coping With Sexual Stressors and Their Impact on Relational and Coping Satisfaction Tara G. McManus, U of Nevada - Las Vegas, USA Alysa Ann Lucas, Mansfield U, USA Further Experimental Tests of the Cognitive-Emotional Theory of Esteem Support Messages: Order Effects and Interactions David D. Clare, Michigan State U, USA Amanda J. Holmstrom, Michigan State U, USA Ashley A Hanna, Michigan State U, USA Is a Profile Worth a Thousand Words?: How Online Support-Seeker’s Profile Features May Influence the Person-Centeredness and Politeness of Received Support Bo Feng, U of California - Davis, USA Siyue Li, U of California - Davis, USA Na Li, U of California - Davis, USA Predicting Perceived and Actual Effectiveness of Social Support: Examining Disclosure Strategies of Infertile Women Keli Ryan Steuber, U of Iowa, USA Andrew High, Pennsylvania State U, USA The Effect of Social Support Type on Resilience: The Moderating Effects of Sex and Sex Roles JooYoung Jang, U of California - Davis, USA Carol Bishop Mills, U of Alabama, USA The Social Support Process and Facebook: Soliciting Support From Strong and Weak Ties Amy Janan Johnson, U of Oklahoma, USA Brianna L. Lane, U of Oklahoma, USA Michael Tornes, U of Oklahoma, USA Shawn King, U of Oklahoma, USA Kevin B. Wright, Saint Louis U, USA Caleb T. Carr, Illinois State U, USA Cameron Wade Piercy, U of Oklahoma, USA Bobby L. Rozzell, U of Oklahoma, USA 6121 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Mediated Geographies and Experiences of Globalization Popular Communication Global Communication and Social Change Chair Myria Georgiou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Urban Cultures of Consumption: Articulating Hegemonic and Vernacular Cosmopolitanisms Myria Georgiou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Geographies of Sound: The Flow and Entrapment of Syrian Jazeera Music Omar Alghazzi, U of Pennsylvania, USA Watching From an Arm’s Length: The Foreign Hand in Tamil Cinema Preeti Mudliar, U of Texas, USA Joyojeet Pal, U of Michigan, USA Internet Jokes: The Secret Agents of Globalization? Limor Shifman, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Hadar Levy, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Michael Thelwall, U of Wolverhampton, UNITED KINGDOM Television’s Changing Role in Social Togetherness in the Personalized Consumption of Foreign TV Shows Online Yu-Kei Tse, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM 6122 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Deconstructing Discourses of Class, Diaspora, and Authorship in an Era of Globalization Global Communication and Social Change Chair Joan Ramon Rodriguez-Amat, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Participants Analyzing Variations and Stability in Danish Immigration Discourse Ferruh Yilmaz, Tulane U, USA The "Affordable Fashion" Discourse in TV Advertisements During Economic Hardship: An Analysis of UNIQLO in Taiwan Wei-Fen Chen, U of Illinois, USA iAuthor: The Fluid State of Creativity Rights and the Vanishing Author Joan Ramon Rodriguez-Amat, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Communicating the Homeland’s Relationship With Its Diaspora Community: The Cases of El Salvador and Colombia Maria De Moya, North Carolina State U, USA Vanessa Bravo, Elon U, USA 6123 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Roles in Public Relations Public Relations Chair Chun-ju Flora Hung-Baesecke, Hong Kong Baptist U, HONG KONG Participants A Longitudinal Co-Orientation Study on PR and Marketing Practitioners’ Perception Toward the Need for Public Relations, its Role, and Effect MYUNG OK YIM, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jung Ho Han, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyun Soon Park, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Challenging PR as a Management Function: Building Inclusive and Sustainable PR Theory and Practice Patricia A. Curtin, U of Oregon, USA Erica Ciszek, U of Oregon, USA T. Kenn Gaither, Elon U, USA Enacting the Manager Role: Questioning the Norm Hongmei Shen, San Diego State U, USA Hua Jiang, Towson U, USA David Michael Dozier, San Diego State U, USA The Realities of Public Relations: Applying the Circuit of Culture to the Knowledge of Practitioners Jennifer E. Vardeman-Winter, U of Houston, USA Katie Place, Saint Louis U, USA 6124 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Mapping the Visual Coverage of Death Visual Communication Studies Participants Why About To Die Matters in the Global Flow of News Images Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Visualizing Death Across Cultures: Differences in News Images of Disaster Deaths Around the Globe Folker Christian Hanusch, U of the Sunshine Coast, AUSTRALIA Picturing Tragedy: What’s Too Graphic to Arab Audiences? Shahira S. Fahmy, U of Arizona, USA Death Images in Israeli Newspapers: Ethics and Praxis Tal Morse, London School of Economics and Political Science, ISRAEL While there has been increased scholarly attention to the visibility of death in journalism, research so far has mainly focused on Anglo-American cultures, lacking a comparative perspective. This panel aims to fill that gap by offering a comprehensive understanding of the field, as it maps the different approaches to visualizing death. 6125 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Politicized Digital Intimacy of Race, Ethnicity and Gender Ethnicity and Race in Communication Popular Communication Chair Kaarina Nikunen, Stanford U, USA Participants Producing Particularized Black Queerness: Drama Queenz and the Reification of Whiteness Alfred Leonard Martin, Jr., U of Texas, USA Politics of Race and Sexuality and Moral Proximity: The View From Sweden Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Sex Networking and the Politics of Intersectional Queer Hyper/In/Visibility Amber Lauren Johnson, Prairie View A&M U, USA “We Take All Your Women”: Intimized Politics of Ethnicity and the Fear of Foreign Body on the Finnish Social Network Sites Kaarina Nikunen, Stanford U, USA Hide Yo’ Black With Yo’ Gay: The Public "EnCampment" of Antoine Dodson Lamiyah Bahrainwala, U of Texas, USA This panel investigates how notions of race, ethnicity and sexuality are circulated and re-shaped in the complex structure of digital media. The four authors offer different views on the ways in which online environment allows and limits self-expression of sexuality. The panel looks at the politicized, affective intimacy that is emerging through the clusters of social media sites with implications of intimate publicity and individualized politics of sexuality. 6126 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Inclusions and Exclusions in the Public Sphere in India, China, Mexico, and the US Global Communication and Social Change Chair Lorena Frankenberg Hernandez, U Metropolitana de Monterrey, GERMANY Participants Green Public Sphere, Solidarity, and Exclusions: Online and Offline Interactions Hao Cao, U of Texas, USA Rhetorics of Substantive Citizenship: Homelessness, Political Exclusion, and Critical Dialogue Michael Keith Middleton, U of Utah, USA Make it Count! Interactivity and Deliberative Democracy in Mexican Online Journalism Lorena Frankenberg Hernandez, U Metropolitana de Monterrey, GERMANY Jose-Carlos Lozano, Tecnologico de Monterrey, MEXICO Twenty 20 Vision: The Indian Premier League, New Media, and the Public Sphere in India Colin Agur, Columbia U, USA 6127 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Media, Politics, and Space Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants Challenging the Intersections of Media and Communication Research: Terra Incognita of Surveillance Studies Ilkin Mehrabov, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Communicative Practices and the City: The Mediated Phenomenologies of Urban Politics Scott Rodgers, Birkbeck, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Clive Barnett, Open U, UNITED KINGDOM Allan Cochrane, Open U, UNITED KINGDOM Digital Parrhesia: Towards a New Ethical and Reflexive Framework for Digital Communication Nicholas Gilewicz, U of Pennsylvania, USA Francois Allard, U of Paris - Sorbonne, FRANCE The Biopolitics of Sacrifice: Securing Infrastructure at the G20 Summit Alessandra Renzi, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Greg Elmer, Ryerson U, CANADA 6128 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Are We There Yet? Cyberfeminists Across Generations Challenging Communication Researchers Feminist Scholarship Chair Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA Participants Ubiquitous Cyberfeminisms Sarah Kember, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM "A Colorful Plastic Method of Indoctrination": Consumer Citizens and the Politics of Amazon Reviews Carol A. Stabile, Center for the Study of Women in Society, USA Youtubing From the Margins Liesbet Van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Ethics and Politics of Knowledge Production Among Female Software Programmers in FOSS Development YeonJu Oh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE From Active Aging to Activist Aging: Intergenerational Cyberfeminism Kimberly Anne Sawchuk, Concordia U, CANADA What Does Feminism Mean to You: Making Sense of Feminist Memes Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA Paula M Gardner, OCAD U, CANADA Shakuntala Banaji, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Feminist Communication researchers have always had to straddle activist and academic worlds in order to conduct communication research. Feminists have both researched and participated in Social movements done for generations. The present panel collection sets out to explore what it means to be a feminist or a cyberfeminist today as more and more activists use online communication tools and advocacy campaigns that incorporate social media to reach a so-called “global” audiences. The panel is based on an examination of current manifestations of feminist activities that engage and use online web 2.0 environments. 6131 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Board Room 1 Media Accountability in the Digital Age: International Perspectives Sponsored Sessions Chairs Susanne Fengler, U Dortmund - Communication Studies Department, GERMANY Boguslawa Dobek-Ostrowska, U of Wroclaw, POLAND Participants The (Behavioral) Economics of Media Accountability: Corrections Policies, Complaint Management, and Coverage of Media in a Convergent Environment Stephan Russ-Mohl, U della Svizzera italiana, SWITZERLAND A Question of Conscience: On the Efficacy of Media Self-Regulation in the Digital Age Tobias Eberwein, U of Dortmund, GERMANY Media Accountability Instruments and External Communication Through the Eyes of Journalists Cristina Coman, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA Raluca-Nicoleta Radu, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA How Polish is France (and Backwards)? Boguslawa Dobek-Ostrowska, U of Wroclaw, POLAND Michal Glowacki, U of Warsaw, POLAND Michal Kus, U of Wroclaw, POLAND Olivier Baisnée Baisnée, U of Toulouse, FRANCE Sandra Vera Zambrano, Institut D'Etudes Politiques, FRANCE Media Accountability in Transition: Survey Results From Tunisia and Jordan Judith Maria Pies, Technische U Dortmund, GERMANY Respondents Kaarle Nordenstreng, U of Tampere, FINLAND David H. Weaver, Indiana U, USA Scott R. Maier, U of Oregon, USA As journalism changes in a converging media environment, traditional institutions of media selfregulation and accountability are facing many problems: press councils often fail to address the new challenges imposed by digitalization processes, few critical reporting about the mass media is being done in the media, and ombudspersons remain an anomaly in the international media landscape. At the same time, the Internet offers new impulses to the endeavor of holding the media accountable: in many instances, cyber-ombudsmen, media blogs and media criticism via Twitter or Facebook have demonstrated their potential as a means for improving journalistic performance. These questions are currently being tackled by an EU-funded international research consortium which involves 14 partners from Western and Eastern Europe as well as the Arab world. In the proposed panel, members of the consortium present hitherto unpublished findings from the ongoing project, focusing on the results of a comparative journalists’ survey in all 14 participating countries. 6132 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Board Room 2 "In View of All of the Citizens": The Public Broadcasting Act, 1962-1967 Communication History Chair Richard John, Columbia U, USA Participants Education’s 5-Year Plan: The “Public” Precedent of the ETV Facilities Act of 1962 Josh Shepperd, U of Wisconsin, USA The Peculiar Politics of Noncommercial Television: Race, the State, and the Impact of the Public Broadcasting Act Allison Perlman, U of California - Irvine, USA A Civic Network: The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 Chris Loomis, U of Virginia, USA The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967: Communication Policy Precedent or Political Fluke? Robert K. Avery, U of Utah, USA Respondent Hugh Slotten, U of Otago, NEW ZEALAND Calling upon new primary document research, this panel examines the legacy of cultural and regulatory debates surrounding the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, which created a self-regulating federal infrastructure for educational and noncommercial programming. This panel complicates dominant narratives of broadcast history by looking at the concurrent development and implementation of the noncommercial public sphere as it reached fruition during the Great Society era. 6133 Wednesday 08:00-09:15 Board Room 3 Paging Dr. Communication: The Intersection of Instructional Communication and Health Communication Instructional & Developmental Communication Participants An Individual Differences Receiver-Based Examination of Instructional Crisis Communication Deanna Dee Sellnow, U of Kentucky, USA Derek Ray Lane, U of Kentucky, USA Robert Littlefield, North Dakota State U, USA Timothy Sellnow, U of Kentucky, USA Bethney Wilson, U of Kentucky, USA Kimberly Beauchamp, North Dakota State U, USA The Moderating Role of Media Literacy in Adolescent Sexual Decision Making Bruce Pinkleton, Washington State U, USA Erica Weintraub Austin, Washington State U, USA Ming Lei, Washington State U, USA Marilyn Cohen, U of Washington, USA Tick Talk: Communication of Protective Practices Against Ticks for Children Using Multimedia Design and Curriculum David Murphy, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Karen Bartlett, U of British Columbia, CANADA Bonnie Henry, BC Centre for Disease Control, CANADA Anne-Marie Nicol, U of British Columbia, CANADA Who is the Doctor in This House?: Analyzing the Moral Evaluations of Doctors and Medical Students of House M.D. Serena Daalmans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Merel van Ommen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Addy Weijers, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS This panel of papers explores how instructional communication can be used to encourage behavioral changes in health decision making, in times of crisis, or in classes where medical students are learning about ethics. 6202 Challenging Communication Research Through Engaged Scholarship Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Balmoral Theme Sessions Chair Lawrence R. Frey, U of Colorado, USA Participants Reflections on Communication Activism Research Kevin Michael Carragee, Suffolk U, USA Lawrence R. Frey, U of Colorado, USA Sustaining Thought Partnerships Through Engaged Communication Activism and Scholarship Charlotte Ryan, U of Massachusetts - Lowell, USA Lessons Learned From Funding Scholar, Activist, and Advocacy Collaborations: A Philanthropic View Roberta G. Lentz, McGill U, CANADA One Step Forward: Translating Across the Clash of Organizational Cultures Stefania Milan, Tilburg U, CANADA Panelists reflect on opportunities and challenges of conducting engaged communication scholarship. They explore a range of significant issues, including the difficulty of forging meaningful partnerships between scholar-activists and marginalized groups and communities, and the need for researchers to respect “local knowledge” of activists and marginalized groups. Additionally, panelists reflect on how to evaluate engaged communication scholarship as a form of both research and as a form of activism. 6205 Political Deliberation and Public Opinion Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Palace A Political Communication Chair Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, IE U, SPAIN Participants Communicative Inequalities in Online Discussion Forums Hai Liang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Fei Chris Shen, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Making Deliberation Public: Argumentation in Reports of Deliberative Civic Forums Christopher Karpowitz, Brigham Young U, USA Chad Raphael, Santa Clara U, USA Mobile Communication and Democracy: Interactive Role of Disparate Mobile Phone Usage Patterns in Facilitating Deliberative and Participatory Democracy Hoon Lee, U of Michigan, USA Nojin Kwak, U of Michigan, USA Scott W. Campbell, U of Michigan, USA Promoting Online Deliberation Quality: Cognitive Cues Matter Edith Manosevitch, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Nili Steinfeld, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Azi Lev On, Ariel U Center, ISRAEL 6206 Organizations and Their Social Context: Community, Transparency, and Civic Engagement Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Kirstie Lynd McAllum, IESE Business School, SPAIN Participants Community Oorganizing, Social Movements and Collective Action Shiv Ganesh, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Seeing Through Transparency Lars Thoeger Christensen, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK George Cheney, Kent State U, USA Sociomateriality as Problem-Centered Organizing: The Case of Technology-Enabled Civic Engagement Amanda J. Porter, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS That Doesn’t Sound Like My Neighborhood: Corporate and Community Efforts to Contest and Redefine “Neighborhood” in a Public Meeting Disraelly Cruz, U of West Florida, USA Respondent Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA 6207 Strengthening Systematic Normative Assessment in Political Communication Research: A Challenge to the Field Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Palace C Political Communication Chair Hartmut Wessler, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Participants What Systematic Normative Assessment is and How it Can Be Applied in Political Communication Research Scott L. Althaus, U of Illinois, USA How to Bridge Tensions Between Normative and Empirical Research: Deriving Measures for Deliberation From a Systemic Approach to Deliberative Democracy Rousiley Celi Moreira Maia, Federal U of Minas Gerais, BR Systematic Normative Assessment in Online Political Communication Deen Goodwin Freelon, American U, USA Multiperspectival Normative Assessment of Mediated Contestation Eike Mark Rinke, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Hartmut Wessler, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Respondent Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin, USA This panel both calls for and offers state-of-the-art examples of systematic normative assessment in political communication research. Systematic normative assessment is proposed as a standard procedure for empirical research in political communication. It essentially involves systematically deriving evaluative standards from normative democratic theories and using these to subject empirical results to normative evaluation in order to more clearly understand which results seem problematic or laudable according to which democratic theory. Ideally, systematic normative assessment is multiperspectival, i.e. it specifies evaluative standards from competing democratic theories. While normative thinking does have a tradition in the field of political communication, on closer inspection normative judgments often remain implicit or ad hoc. Empirical scholarship can benefit from explicit connections to normative thinking in several ways. 6208 Diverse Facets of ICT Use (CAT High Density Panel I) Wednesday 09:30-10:45 York Communication and Technology Chair Younbo Jung, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participants The Effects of Source Cues in Online News on Credibility Perception Eun Go, Pennsylvania State U, USA Eun Hwa Jung, Pennsylvania State U, USA Mu Wu, Pennsylvania State U, USA Tweeting Television: Exploring Communication Activities on Twitter While Watching TV Christopher Buschow, HMTM Hannover, GERMANY Beate M Schneider, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Simon Ueberheide, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Bodystorming with a Wood Block: Formative Design Ideas for Mobile Content, Shaped by Activity Theory Brett Oppegaard, Washington State U, Vancouver, USA Perceiving Spaces Through Digital Augmentation: An Exploratory Study of the Effects of Navigational Augmented Reality Sebastian Andreas Richard Hofmann, Erasmus U Rotterdam, GERMANY Lela Mosemghvdlishvili, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Twitter as Social TV: A Full-Season Analysis of #serviziopubblico Hashtag Fabio Giglietto, U of Urbino Carlo Bo, ITALY Luca Rossi, U of Urbino Carlo Bo, ITALY Multifaceted Companion Devices: Applying the New Model of Media Attendance to Smartphone Usage Karel Verbrugge, iMinds-MICT-UGent, BELGIUM Isabelle Stevens, Ghent U, BELGIUM Lieven De Marez, Ghent U, BELGIUM The Effects of Risk Content on Online Decision Making Tracy Loh, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Integrating Uses and Gratifications Theory With Social Exchange Theory: An Empirical Study of Internet Prosumers Orly Melamed, Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL Sam N. Lehman-Wilzig, Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL 6209 Privacy and Trust in the Online Environment Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Kayla Danielle Hales, Michigan State U, USA Participants Usable Security: What Do Stakeholders Expect From Secure Communication and Cooperation Technologies? Pille Pruulmann-Vengerfeldt, U of Tartu, ESTONIA Kadri Tõldsepp, U of Tartu, ESTONIA Towards an Apomediation Effect: Technological and Social Aspects of Online Trust Andrew Duffy, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE My Privacy is Okay, But Theirs is Endangered! Social Origin of Online Privacy Concern and its Behavioral Implications Young Min Baek, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Eun-Mee Kim, Seoul National U of Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Young Bae, Soongsil U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Trusted Surprises? Antecedents of Serendipitous Encounters Online Christoph Lutz, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Giulia Ranzini, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Miriam Meckel, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND 6211 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Waterloo/Tower Communication Challenges in Cancer Prevention Among High-Risk Populations Health Communication Chair Sophie H Janicke, Florida State U, USA Participants Laughing and Crying: Mixed Emotions, Compassion, and the Effectiveness of a YouTube PSA About Skin Cancer Jessica Gall Myrick, U of North Carolina, USA Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Challenging Conversations for High-Risk Mothers and Their Daughters and Communication Strategies to Enhance Their Interactions Carla Fisher, George Mason U, USA Erin K. Maloney, U of Pennsylvania, USA Emily Glogowski, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, USA Karen Hurley, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, USA Shawna Edgerson, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, USA Wendy Lichtenthal, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, USA David Kissane, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, USA Carma L. Bylund, U of Iowa, USA Cancer Prevention Information Seeking and Health Consciousness Among American Indian, Hispanic, and Non-Hispanic White Cancer Patients and Family Members Tamar Ginossar, U of New Mexico, USA Patient Navigation and Cervical Cancer Prevention: Communication Strategies for Addressing Barriers to Follow-up Care in Appalachia Kentucky Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA Allison Marie Scott, U of Kentucky, USA 6212 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Chelsea/Richmond Strategies for Improving Health Communication Across Diverse Racial/Ethnic Groups Health Communication Chair Dyah Pitaloka, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants The Social Meanings of Illness Management: Embodied Experiences of Indonesian Women With Type II Diabetes Dyah Pitaloka, U of Oklahoma, USA Elaine Hsieh, U of Oklahoma, USA Interdependent Self Construal, Social Norms, and Latina’s Intent to Vaccinate Their Daughters Against Human Papilloma Virus Nan Zhao, U of Southern California, USA Joyee Shairee Chatterjee, U of Southern California, USA Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati, U of Southern California, USA Application of Communication Infrastructure Theory in Health Communication: Strategies to Improve Racial/Ethnic Minority Health Zheng An, U of Southern California, USA Influences of Immigration on Health Information Seeking Behaviors Between Korean Americans and Native Koreans Kyeung Mi Oh, George Mason U, USA Quiping (Pearl) Zhou, George Washington U, USA Gary L. Kreps, George Mason U, USA Wonsun Kim, George Mason U, USA 6213 Media Uses and Motivations (Session Begins with a TOP Student Paper) Wednesday 09:30-10:45 St. James Mass Communication Chair Robert Larose, Michigan State U, USA Participants Media Habits: The Core of Media Repertoires Anna Schnauber, U of Mainz, GERMANY Cornelia Wolf, U of Passau, GERMANY Development and Validation of a Response-Frequency Measure of Media Habit Teresa K. Naab, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Anna Schnauber, U of Mainz, GERMANY Do I Need to Belong? Development of a Scale for Measuring the Need to Belong and its Predictive Value for Media Usage Nicole C. Kramer, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Laura Hoffmann, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Alberto Fuchslocher, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Sabrina Cornelia Eimler, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Jessica Martina Szczuka, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Matthias Brand, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY News Audiences Revisited: Theorizing the Link Between Audience Motivations and News Consumption Angela M. Lee, U of Texas, USA Predicting Social Media Use and Online Communication Practices Among Adolescents Drew Cingel, Northwestern U, USA Alexis Lauricella, Northwestern U, USA Ellen Wartella, Northwestern U, USA Annie Conway, Museum of Science and Industry, USA 6216 Examining Audiences for Old and New Media Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Joshua Braun, Quinnipiac U, USA Participants Audience Expectations of Media Accountability: More Professionalization of Journalism Richard van der Wurff, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Klaus Schoenbach, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Discovering Media Repertoires: Daily News Source Use by College Students as a Function of Daypart Margaret Ellen Duffy, U of Missouri, USA Eunjin Kim, U of Missouri, USA Bokyung Kim, U of Missouri, USA Between Viewing and Commenting: What Makes Users Click on Online News and What Provokes Them for Discussion Ori Tenenboim, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Akiba A. Cohen, Emek Yezreel Academic College, ISRAEL Biological-Based Motivational Differences in Perceptions of Assessing News With Mobile Devices and Social Engagement With Online News Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri, USA Heather Shoenberger, U of Missouri, USA Anthony Sean Almond, U of Missouri, USA Respondent Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM 6217 Media and Minorities Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Brian E Weeks, Ohio State U, USA Participants Aversive Enjoyment From Racially Disparaging Humor Riva Tukachinsky, Chapman U, USA Coviewing Effects of Ethnic-Oriented Programming: An Examination of In-Group Bias and Racial Comedy Exposure Omotayo Banjo, U of Cincinnati, USA Osei Appiah, Ohio State U, USA Zheng Joyce Wang, Ohio State U, USA Christopher Brown, Ohio State U, USA Whitney Walther, U of Minnesota, USA John Tchernev, Ohio State U, USA Eleanor Pierman, Ohio State U, USA Dose-Dependent Media Priming Effects of Stereotypic Newspaper Articles on Implicit and Explicit Stereotypes Florian Arendt, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Putting the “Self” in Self-Deprecation: When Deprecating Humor About Minorities is Acceptable Sarah Esralew, Ohio State U, USA Morgan E. Ellithorpe, Ohio State U, USA R. Lance Holbert, Ohio State U, USA Racial and Gender Exclusion Affect Novel Group Identity: Effects of a Single Instance of Symbolic Annihilation Charisse L'Pree Corsbie-Massay, U of Southern California, USA 6218 High Density: Showcasing a Variety of Interpersonal Communication Topics Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Cadogan Interpersonal Communication Chair Anne Merrill, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants A Communicative Interdependence Perspective of Close Relationships: The Connections Between Mediated and Unmediated Interactions Matter John P. Caughlin, U of Illinois, USA Liesel Sharabi, U of Illinois, USA A Theoretical Model Explaining the Intersection of Research on Security and Uncertainty in Close Relationships Anne Merrill, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Emerging Adults and Parental Idealization: Examinations of Communication Modality, Geographic Distance, and Living Arrangements Erin Michelle Bryant, Trinity U, USA Artemio Ramirez, Jr., Arizona State U, USA Formative Communication Experiences and Message Production Ability in Adulthood: Family Communication Patterns and Creative Facility John O. Greene, Purdue U, USA Melanie Morgan, Purdue U, USA Lindsey B. Anderson, Purdue U, USA Elizabeth Gill, Eastern Illinois U, USA Elizabeth Dorrance Hall, Purdue U, USA Brenda L. Berkelaar, U of Texas, USA Lauren Elizabeth Herbers, Purdue U, USA LaReina Hingson, Purdue U, USA Right to Refuse: An Application of Politeness Theory to a Compliance-Gaining Exchange Allison Zorzie Shaw, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Tobias Reynolds-Tylus, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Tanuka Mukherjee, U at Buffalo – SUNY, USA Jessica M. Covert, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA The Content of Goal Inferences in Conversation: How Goal Congruency Influences the Goals People Infer Nicholas A. Palomares, U of California - Davis, USA Na Li, U of California - Davis, USA Siyue Li, U of California - Davis, USA Katherine L Grasso, U of California - Davis, USA The Daily Use of Imagined Interaction Features James M. Honeycutt, Louisiana State U, USA Andrea Vickery, Louisiana State U, USA Laura C Hatcher, Louisiana State U, USA Watching Television With Others. The Influence of Interpersonal Communication on Enjoyment Arne Freya Zillich, Friedrich Schiller U Jena, GERMANY 6221 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Big Bird in the Thick of It: Challenging Communication in the Interplay Between Popular and Political Communication Popular Communication Political Communication Chair Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The 2012 Debate Goes Pop: Stewart v. O’Reilly and the Complex State of American Political Discourse Geoffrey Baym, U of North Carolina - Greensboro, USA The Popularisation of Politics: From Public Relations to Pussy Riot John Street, U of East Anglia, UNITED KINGDOM Yes Dutch Minister; Political Fiction in Multiparty Systems Liesbet Van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Celebrity First Families? A Comparative Examination of the Mediated Visibility of National Leaders' Spouses and Children in Seven Advanced Industrial Democracies James Stanyer, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Emily Harmer, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Daily Kos, Fanzines, and the Textual Boundaries of Political Fandom: Analyzing Community and Partisanship in the 2012 Presidential Election Cornel Sandvoss, U of Surrey, UNITED KINGDOM This panel builds on the growing tradition of interdisciplinary research that challenges assumptions in popular and political communication research alike and explores the contexts, impacts, consequences and opportunities of these overlapping spheres, as well as its associated conventions and consumption practices. 6222 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Challenging Development Communication in Jordan, Benin, South Africa, and Turkey Global Communication and Social Change Chair Altug Akin, Izmir U of Economics, TURKEY Participants A Network Perspective of Social Capital: Linking Effective ICT Use to Human Capability and Development Rong Wang, U of Southern California, USA Challenges to Participatory Communication in a Youth Video Project in Benin, West Africa Robert Huesca, Trinity U, USA Marshall Plan Films in Turkey: A Prologue to Communication for Development and Social Change Altug Akin, Izmir U of Economics, TURKEY Teaching and Preaching About Reproductive Health: Evidence From a Study of Religious Leaders in Jordan Carol R. Underwood, Johns Hopkins U, USA Sarah Kamhawi, Johns Hopkins U, JORDAN 6223 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Public Relations and Not For Profits Public Relations Chair Johanna Fawkes, Charles Sturt U, AUSTRALIA Participants Virtual Stewardship: Have Nonprofit Organizations’ Moved Beyond Web 1.0 Strategies Richard D. Waters, U of San Francisco, USA PR Capacity on Nonprofit Boards Timothy S. Penning, Grand Valley State U, USA The Role of Reputation to Engender Support for Nonprofit Organizations Christian Schultz, U of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland, SWITZERLAND Sabine A. Einwiller, U of Mainz, GERMANY The Influence of Message Source and Cultivation Strategies in a Nonprofit Public Relations Context Elizabeth L. Gardner, Texas Tech U, USA Trent Seltzer, Texas Tech U, USA Rachel Page, Texas Tech U, USA 6224 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Cyberbullying, Aggression, and Violence: Harm to Others in Traditional and New Media Forms Children Adolescents and Media Participants The Implications of Chronic Exposure to Political Violence via Media: Evidence From a Longitudinal Analysis Shira Dvir-Gvirsman, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA Simha Landau, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Eric F. Dubow, Bowling Green State U, USA Paul Boxer, Rutgers U, USA Khalil Shikaki, Palestinian Center for Policy and Survery Research, USA Adolescents’ Cyberbullying Behavior and Their Exposure to Media With Antisocial Content Anouk H. den Hamer, VU U - Brussels, THE NETHERLANDS Elly A. Konijn, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Micha G. Keijer, VU U - Brussels, THE NETHERLANDS Determinants of Bystander Behaviour in Cyberbullying Incidents Amongst Adolescents Ann DeSmet, Ghent U, BELGIUM Sara Bastiaensens, Antwerp U, BELGIUM Katrien Van Cleemput, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Karolien Poels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Ilse De Bourdeaudhuij, Ghent U, BELGIUM Who Bullies Who Online: A Social Network Analysis of Cyberbullying in a School Context Denis Wegge, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Steven Eggermont, U of Leuven, BELGIUM How Family Conflict Moderates the Relationship Between Media Violence and Adolescents' Aggression Karin Fikkers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Helen Vossen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Cynthia A. Hoffner, Georgia State U, USA 6225 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 ERIC Roundtable: Diaspora Blues Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Robeson Taj Frazier, U of Southern California, USA Participants Media Reception, Ontological Security and Imaginative Copresence: Haitian Immigrants and Wellbeing in Miami Sallie L. Hughes, U of Miami, USA Elena Sabogal, William Paterson U, USA Hymn of the Hyphens: Construction of American-Muslim Identity in Taqwacore Songs Syed Saif Shahin, U of Texas, USA Affective Belongings Across Geographies: Locating YouTube Viewing Practices of Moroccan-Dutch Youths Koen Leurs, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Mariëtte de Haan, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Homeland Politics and Politics of Homeland: Hegemonic Discourse of China in Minority-Newspapers in the Netherlands Cindy Cheung-Kwan Chong, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Mediating Palestine May Farah, American U of Beirut, LEBANON “As if I Never Left”: Homeland Media Connectivity and Denial of Diasporic Identity Among Israelis in USA Vered Malka, Emek Yezreel Academic College, ISRAEL Amit Kama, Emek Yezreel Academic College, ISRAEL “Hawaiian Identity Crises”: A Postcolonial Deconstruction of Diasporic Hawaiian Narratives of Ethnicity David A Maile, U of New Mexico, USA 6226 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Media and Sport: Perspectives on Scholarly Inquiry and Key Issues Popular Communication Chair Andrew C. Billings, U of Alabama, USA Participants Media and Sport: On Mediatization and Cultural Analysis Garry Whannel, U of Bedfordshire, UNITED KINGDOM Media and Sport: On Spectacle and Mega Events Michael R. Real, Royal Roads U, CANADA Media and Sport: On Reading Sport and Narrative Ethics Lawrence Wenner, Loyola Marymount U, USA Media and Sport: On Nation and Globalization David Rowe, U of Western Sydney, AUSTRALIA Media and Sport: On Journalism and Digital Culture Raymond Boyle, U of Glasgow, UNITED KINGDOM In taking stock of both the challenges in and prospects for scholarly inquiry on media and sport, this panel features leading scholars from the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and the United States in an assessment of the development of research on media and sport. Each of these panelists is recognized as a key figure in the scholarly development of media, communication, and sport as an area of inquiry and brings a nuanced and distinct theoretical perspective along with experiences from different parts of the world. Each panelist has published numerous major works that have been influential to the study of media and sport and brings broad experiences that have spanned media, sport, and cultural studies. Looking back and looking forward, each paper considers why the study of media and sport is important, the nature of the scholarly journey that has enabled the growth of research in this area, the promises and prospects for key topic areas within the larger area of study, and future needs and directions in the research agenda. 6227 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 In Pursuit of Meaning: The Theory and Philosophy of Hermeneutics in the Networked Age Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Tereza Pavlickova, Charles U, CZECH REPUBLIC Participants Dynamics of Dialogue: Connecting the Past, Present, and Future Tereza Pavlickova, Charles U, CZECH REPUBLIC Prospecting, in Retrospect: Three Concepts From Wolfgang Iser’s Reception Aesthetics in the Networked Age Ranjana Das, U of Leicester, GERMANY The Hermeneutics of Desire Johan Isaac Siebers, U of London, GB Let's Take a Simple One: Apples': What is Pursued @ Mall/Media Visitor Reception Research? Tony J. Wilson, Jeffrey Cheah Educational Foundation, MALAYSIA Respondent Maria Bakardjieva, U of Calgary, CA This panel brings together four international contributions and a response, from panellists with diverse media research interests and at different stages in their academic careers. The panel demonstrates that despite hermeneutics being primarily preoccupied with the understanding of an individual text, the five main hermeneutical concepts of prejudice, tradition, expectation, anticipations and horizons, in particular, are all of great importance and relevance to (new) media research. 6228 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Gender Blind/Gender Vision: One Step Forward Feminist Scholarship Chair Mél Hogan, Concordia U, CANADA Participants Challenging Communication Research: Elizabeth Edwards’ Walk of Shame, The Mediated Representations of a Betrayed Political Wife Sorin Nastasia, Southern Illinois U, USA Diana Iulia Nastasia, Southern Illinois U, USA Letting Go of Superwoman: Embodying the Mother-Child Dyad Beth Lee Sundstrom, College of Charleston, USA Where Are the Women? The Presence of Female Columnists in U.S. Opinion Pages Dustin M. Harp, U of Texas, US Ingrid Bachmann, Catholic U of Chile, CHILE Jaime Loke, U of Oklahoma, USA Queering Everything: Thomas Beatie, Male Pregnancy, and the Mediation of New Gender Politics Bernadette Barker-Plummer, U of San Francisco, USA 6231 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Board Room 1 Chinese Communication: From Media Use to Framing China in the Internet Age Sponsored Sessions Chair Ven-Hwei Lo, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Revisiting the Gaps Between Journalism Education and Practice in the Digital Age: The Twin Surveys in Hong Kong Ying Roselyn Du, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF S.C. Eric Lo, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Officials’ Openness at News Conferences: Their Influences on Foreign Media Coverage of the Chinese Government Di Zhang, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Perceived Issue Importance, Information Processing, and Third-Person Effects of News About the Imported U.S. Beef Controversy Ven-Hwei Lo, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Ran Wei, U of South Carolina, USA Hung-Yi Lu, National Chung Cheng U, TAIWAN Hsin-Ya Hou, National Chengchi U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Privacy in Semantic Networks on Chinese Social Media: The Case of Sina Weibo Elaine J. Yuan, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Favor (Renqing): Characteristics and Practice From a Resourced-Based Perspective Christine Huang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF National Image Strategies: An Analysis of the London Olympics Opening Ceremony in Chinese Mainstream Media Xin Zhong, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA Bin Shen, U of Alabama, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Chao Huang, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF This panel session presents six papers about a wide array of current topics, including journalism education, social media, and the Olympics. Presenters come from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and the United States, representing diverse perspectives in communication research in the Chinese context. 6232 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Board Room 2 6233 Wednesday 09:30-10:45 Board Room 3 Digital Frontiers of Communication Law Communication Law & Policy Participants Code as Speech: Machine Language, Authorship, and Expression Jennifer Petersen, U of Virginia, USA The Law of Forgetting: A Case Study of Argentina Edward L. Carter, Brigham Young U, USA A Crooked Balance of Interests? Comparing Users’ Rights in Printed Anna-Laura Markkanen, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Hannu Veli Nieminen, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Obscenity to the Max: Max Hardcore, Community Standards, and “Works as a Whole” Online Ronald Leone, Stonehill College, USA Dale A Herbeck, Northeastern U, USA Top Papers in Instructional and Developmental Communication Division Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Brandi N Frisby, U of Kentucky, USA Participants Problematic Family Interaction: A Communication Model of Elder Abuse and Neglect Mei-Chen Lin, Kent State U, USA Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA The Role of Instructor Humor and Students’ Educational Orientations in Student Learning, Extra Effort, Participation, and Out-of-Class Communication Alan K. Goodboy, West Virginia U, USA Melanie Booth-Butterfield, West Virginia U, USA San Steven Bolkan, U of Texas, USA Darrin J. Griffin, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Understanding Out-of-Class Communication and Social Support Received From Instructors Using Leader-Member Exchange Theory Michael Sollitto, West Virginia U, USA Matthew M. Martin, West Virginia U, USA Understanding the Impact of Multimodal Instructional Technology on Learning in a Simulated Online Class Anthony Michael Limperos, U of Kentucky, USA Rachael A Record, U of Kentucky, USA Brandi N Frisby, U of Kentucky, USA 6302 Top Theme Papers 2013: Challenging Communication Research Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Balmoral Theme Sessions Chair Terhi Rantanen, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The Viewertariat as News Frame-Builders: Real-Time Twitter Sentiment, News Frames, and the Republican “Commander-in-Chief” Debate Theo Mazumdar, U of Southern California, USA Francois Bar, U of Southern California, US Laura Alberti, U of Southern California, US Material Challenges to Communication Research: Rethinking the Dynamic Roles of Materiality in Communication Gina Neff, U of Washington, USA Brittany Fiore-Silfvast, U of Washington, USA Carrie Sturts Dossick, U of Washington, US The Ironic Incongruity of Canonical Common Sense in Critical Communication: The Case of Stuart Hall’s “Encoding, Decoding” Model Anita Varma, Stanford U, USA Eggnog and Community: A Case Study of Local Digital Commentary and the Emerging Role of Television Edgar C. Simpson, Central Michigan U, USA Respondent Ursula Maier-Rabler, ICT&S Center, U of Salzburg, AUSTRIA 6305 High Density Session: Online Political Campaigning Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Palace A Political Communication Chair Raluca Cozma, Iowa State U, USA Participants City Hall 2.0? Italian Local Executive Officials’ Presence and Popularity on Web 2.0 Platforms Cristian Vaccari, U di Bologna, ITALY My Voter, My Party, and Me. American and German Parliamentarians on Facebook Sarah Geber, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Helmut Scherer, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Online Politics: A Cross-National Explanatory Analysis of Political Websites Guda van Noort, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sanne Kruikemeier, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Adrian Paul Aparaschivei, National School of Political Science and Public Administration, ROMANIA Hajo Boomgaarden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rens Vliegenthart, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Impact of Use Motives on Politicians' Social Media Adoption Christian Pieter Hoffmann, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Anne Suphan, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Miriam Meckel, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND The Million Follower Fallacy? Measuring Candidates’ Political Twitter Activity in the 2010 Midterm Elections JungHwan Yang, U of Wisconsin, USA Young Mie Kim, U of Wisconsin, USA The Relationship Between Campaigning on Twitter and Electoral Support; Present or Absent? Sanne Kruikemeier, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Guda van Noort, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rens Vliegenthart, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 6306 Communication Constituting Organizations: The CCO Perspective Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair James R. Taylor, U de Montréal, CANADA Participants Beware of the Spirits That You Call! Explorations Into the (Dis)ordering Properties of Communication Consuelo Vasquez, U du Québec à Montréal, CANADA Dennis Schoeneborn, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Viviane Sergi, HEC Montréal, CANADA Communicating for High Reliability: How Wildland Firefighters Enact Safety Rules Through Their Workgroup Routines Jody Jahn, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Communication as Ecological Coherence: Examining the Constitutive Interplay of Bodies, Sites, and Objects Within Organizational Practices R. Tyler Spradley, Stephen F. Austin State U, USA Who/What Constitutes IPCC? Exploring the Role of Strategic Communication in Constitution of Organizations Jagadish J Thaker, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Anne M Nicotera, George Mason U, USA Respondent Francois Cooren, U de Montréal, CANADA 6307 Off the Beaten Trail: Novel Approaches to Studying Media Coverage in the 2012 U.S. Presidential Election Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Palace C Political Communication Chair Daniel C. Hallin, U of California - San Diego, USA Participants Fact-Checking the Campaign: How Political Reporters Use Twitter to Set the Record Straight (or Not) Mark Coddington, U of Texas, USA Logan Molyneux, U of Texas Regina G. Lawrence, U of Texas, USA The Long Tail of “47 Percent”: Disentangling Press and Publicity Metacoverage in Mainstream News Coverage of a Seminal Campaign 2012 Episode Paul D'Angelo, The College of New Jersey, USA Frank Esser, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Candidate Affinity, Political Competition, and Televised Leader Displays: Winning Over Hearts in the 2012 Presidential Election Erik P. Bucy, Texas Tech U, USA Patrick Stewart, U of Arkansas - Little Rock, USA Linking to Alternative Views Natalie Jomini Stroud, U of Texas, USA Ashley Muddiman, U of Texas, USA Joshua M. Scacco, U of Texas, USA The Testosterone Factor: News Values as Gendered Frames in Covering U.S. Presidential Candidates Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Indiana U, USA Ozen Bas, Indiana U, USA Similar to good reporting, each of the papers on this panel goes off the beaten trail to examine the message environment that enables voters to engage with campaign messages. Centering on efforts within mainstream news media, these message environments include tweets mainstream journalists communicate during the party conventions, metacoverage in mainstream news that aims to cover the mediated environment itself, the veritable smorgasbord of links on online news sites, the gendered portrayals by mainstream news media of political parties themselves, and the televised nonverbal behaviors that candidates communicate when talking to voters via mass media. Collectively, these papers tell the story of campaigns that matters most—the story of how the press in its various guises connects people to candidates and campaign organizations, while informing the electorate in subtle and symbolic ways. 6308 Diverse Facets of ICT Use (CAT High Density Panel II) Wednesday 11:00-12:15 York Communication and Technology Chair Donghee Yvette Wohn, Michigan State U, USA Participants Schmooze for Businesses in Digital Era Predicting Mediated Business Networking With Incentive and Efficacy Ji Pan, Nanyang Technological U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Wayne Fu, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Marko M. Skoric, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Moving Beyond the Digital Divide: Social Media and Social Influence Between Generations Brian J. Bowe, Michigan State U, USA Donghee Yvette Wohn, Michigan State U, USA Exploring Factors Affecting Tablet PC Users’ Intention to Purchase Sangwon Lee, Kyunghee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Eun-A Park, U of New Haven, USA Moonhee Cho, U of South Florida, USA A Comparison of the Persuasive Tactics in the Websites of Violent, Ideological, and Nonideological Groups Norah E. Dunbar, U of Oklahoma, USA Shane Connelly, U of Oklahoma, USA Matthew Jensen, U of Oklahoma, USA Bradley Adame, U of Oklahoma, USA Bobby L. Rozzell, U of Oklahoma, USA Jennifer Griffith, U of Oklahoma, USA H. Dan O'Hair, U of Kentucky, USA m-Health: A Systematic Review of the First 10 Years of Research Maddalena Fiordelli, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND Nicola Diviani, U della Svizzera italiana, SWITZERLAND Peter J. Schulz, U della Svizzera Italiana, SWITZERLAND A User Study to Investigate Print Books vs. Tablet Reading Devices: Reading Experience of Comic Books Jinghui (Jove) Hou, U of Southern California, USA Justin Rashid, U of Southern California, USA Kwan Min Lee, U of Southern California, USA Status, Social Signaling and Collective Action: A Field Study of Awards on Wikipedia Benjamin Mako Hill, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Aaron Shaw, Northwestern U, USA Yochai Benkler, Harvard U, USA The Use of Contestation and Social Norms in Developing Radicalized Discourses Online Rachel Lara Davis, U of Missouri, USA 6309 Embodied Experience in Virtual Environments Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Rabindra A. Ratan, Michigan State U, USA Participants Sexualized Avatars and Women’s Experiences of Self-Objectification and Identification in a Virtual Environment Jesse Fox, Ohio State U, USA Rachel Ralston, Ohio State U, USA Framing Embodied Experiences in Virtual Environments: Effects on Environmental Self-Efficacy and Behavior Over Time Sun Joo (Grace%29 Ahn, U of Georgia, USA Jesse Fox, Ohio State U, USA Katherine R. Dale, Ohio State U, USA Adam Avant, U of Georgia, USA Virtual Self-Sexualization: The Consequences of Female Sexual Objectification in a Virtual World on Self-Objectification Elizabeth Behm-Morawitz, U of Missouri, USA Ashton Lee Gerding, U of Missouri, USA Virtual Superheroes: Using Superpowers in Virtual Reality to Encourage Prosocial Behavior Shawnee Baughman, Stanford U, USA Robin Rosenberg, Private Practice, USA Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA 6311 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Waterloo/Tower Let’s Talk About Sex: Toward an Understanding of Risky Behavior and Intervention Strategies Health Communication Chair Sara LaBelle, West Virginia U, USA Participants Do Sexual Assault Bystander Interventions Change Men’s Intentions? Applying the Theory of Normative Social Behavior to Predicting Bystander Outcomes Amanda Mabry, U of Texas, USA Monique Mitchell Turner, George Washington U, USA Karen McDonnell, George Washington U, USA Testing a Model Predicting Risky Sexual Behavior Katherine Hertlein, U of Nevada - Las Vegas, USA Tara M. Emmers-Sommer, U of Nevada - Las Vegas, USA M Alexis Kennedy, U of Nevada - Las Vegas, USA A Communicative Analysis of a Sexual Health Screening Intervention Conducted in a Low-Income Housing Complex Muriel E. Scott, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Alana R. Elia, U at Albany - SUNY, USA Annis G. Golden, U at Albany – SUNY, USA The Fear Factor: Augmenting Perceived Threat Through an Internet-Based Intervention for Condom Use to Prevent STDs Among Men Who Have Sex With Men in Hong Kong Annisa Lai Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 6312 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Chelsea/Richmond Framing Health Risk in Traditional and New Media Health Communication Chair Lauren B. Frank, Portland State U, USA Participants Framing Medical Tourism: Assessment of the Procedures, Appeals, Risks, and Interactivity in Medical Tourism Broker Web Sites Hyunmin Lee, Saint Louis U, USA Kevin B. Wright, Saint Louis U, USA Newspaper Coverage, Trust and Risk Knowledge, Perception, and Behavior Resulting From a Food Safety Scandal Lulu Rodriguez, Iowa State U, USA Jing Li, Iowa State U, USA Newspaper Coverage of the Risks and Benefits of Medical Radiation Imaging Erin K. Maloney, U of Pennsylvania, USA Carma L. Bylund, U of Iowa, USA Smita C. Banerjee, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, USA Jennifer Hay, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, USA Raymond Thornton, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, USA Lawrence Dauer, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, USA Constructing Local Risk for a Global Health Crisis: Framing Devices of H1N1 in Singapore News Media Daniel Teo, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE 6313 Media Violence and Aggression Wednesday 11:00-12:15 St. James Mass Communication Chair Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants A Content Analysis of Print News Coverage of Media Violence and Aggression Research Nicole Martins, Indiana U, USA Andrew J. Weaver, Indiana U, USA Daphna Yeshua-Katz, Indiana U, USA Nicky Lewis, Indiana U, USA Nancy E. Tyree, Indiana U, USA Jakob D. Jensen, U of Utah, USA Perceived Meaningfulness and Audience Attraction to Violent Content: Experimental Results From Germany and the US Anne Bartsch, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin, USA The Effects of Violent Game Playing on Implicit Stereotyping and Aggressive Behavior Grace S. Yang, U of Michigan, USA Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA Brad Bushman, Ohio State U, USA The Mainstreaming of Verbally Aggressive Online Political Behaviors Vincent Cicchirillo, U of Texas, USA Jay D. Hmielowski, U of Arizona, USA Myiah Hutchens, U of Arizona, USA Toward a Better Understanding of Cultivation Processes: The Effects of Movie and TV Violence on Chronic Accessibility Karyn E. Riddle, U of Wisconsin, USA 6316 Journalism in China and Hong Kong Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Erik Albaek, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Participants Journalism Discourse and Legitimacy in Postreform China Jingrong Tong, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Poaching Professionalism: International Broadcasting in China’s Quest for Soft Power Limin Liang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Professional Values of Investigative Journalists in China: Findings From a Census in 2010 Fei Chris Shen, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zhian Zhang, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Journalists’ Perceptions of Media Influence in Hong Kong Miao Li, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Political Implications of Cultural Identities of Hong Kong Journalists: Two Survey Studies in 2006 and 2011 Xiaoxiao Zhang, Jinan U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Francis L. F. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Joseph M. Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF 6317 Television/Film Viewing and Social Cognition (Session Begins with a TOP Faculty Paper) Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Allison Eden, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Self-Disclosure and Liking for Participants in Reality TV Nurit Talor, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Michal Hershman Shitrit, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Social Television Viewing: Examining Social Engagement Tendencies With Different Television Program Genres Miao Guo, Ball State U, USA The Effect of Adults’ Coviewing on Transportation Nurit Talor, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Empathy or Schadenfreude: How Do Viewers of Reality Shows Really Feel About Participants? Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Michal Hershman Shitrit, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Begin Wherever You Please, As Long As You Keep Me Interested. Exposition Location Influence on Interest in Film Miruna Maria Doicaru, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Eduard Sioe-Hao Tan, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 6318 News and Message Factors Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Cadogan Information Systems 6321 Reality TV and "Postrepresentational" Approaches to Class Analysis Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Participants All the News That’s Fit to See?: Effects of Sexy Female Anchors on Attention, Intention to Watch, and News Perception Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA Tom Reichert, U of Georgia, USA Cui Zhang, U of Alabama, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Michael Nitz, Augustana College, USA Steve Smith, U of Georgia, USA Don’t Keep it (Too) Simple: How Representations of Scientific Uncertainty in Online Articles Affect Laypersons’ Attitudes Stephan Winter, U Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Nicole Claudia Krämer, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Leonie Roesner, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY German Neubaum, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Effects of Agency in New Media Storytelling on Attitudes and Behavior Intention Ryan Rogers, U of North Carolina, USA Lisa Marie Barnard, U of North Carolina, USA Francesca Renee Dillman Carpentier, U of North Carolina, USA How Emotional Media Reports Influence Attitude Formation and Change Fabian Ryffel, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Dominique Stefanie Wirz, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Werner Wirth, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Rinaldo Kuehne, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND If You Want it to Count, Make it Visual? Effects of Poll Results and Exemplars on People’s Judgments on Political Issues Christina V. Peter, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Hans-Bernd Brosius, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Measuring Personalization Effects in Google Search Results Pascal Juergens, U of Mainz, GERMANY Birgit Stark, U of Mainz, GERMANY Never Trust an Optimist! Effects of Valence-Framing on Message and Source Credibility Thomas Koch, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Christina V. Peter, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Magdalena Obermaier, U of Munich, GERMANY Selective Exposure as an Attitude Bolstering Behavior: Using Media to Affirm Attitudes and Reduce Dissonance Sean Garguilo, Ohio State U, USA David R. Ewoldsen, Ohio State U, USA Teresa Myers, George Mason U, USA Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA Scott M Alter, Morristown Medical Center, USA Russell H. Fazio, Ohio State U, USA Popular Communication Chairs Laura Grindstaff, U of California - Davis, USA Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA Participants "It's Life Boyo - But Not as We Know it": Men Performing in the Valleys Gareth Palmer, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM The Importance of Being Ordinary: Performing Class and Cultural Hierarchy in Reality TV Laura Grindstaff, U of California - Davis, USA At Risk Girls: Reality Television and Bio-Politics Laurie Ouellette, U of Minnesota, USA Looking Through Classes: Upward Mobility and Reflexivity in U.S. Makeover Television Audience Research” Katherine Sender, U of Auckland, NEW ZEALAND Tournaments of Value: Affect, Ambiguity and Ideology Beverly Skeggs, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Helen Wood, De Montfort U, UNITED KINGDOM Blurring boundaries between fact and fiction, authenticity and performativity, public service and commercialism, subject and celebrity, and viewer and participant, reality television raises new questions and demands new theoretical tools from scholars. This panel showcases “post-representational” methods for analyzing reality television’s complicated relationship to class difference and class inequality. Our aim is not to re-theorize reality television in ontological terms, but rather to consider how the surge of reality television entertainment pushes the boundaries of existing modes of critical media analysis. 6322 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Democratizing Public Spheres: Challenges and Opportunities Global Communication and Social Change Chair Janice Barrett, Lasell College, USA Participants Networked Communication in Closed Regimes: Linking Broadcast and Social Media in Iran Maximillian Theodore Hanska-Ahy, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Media-Domestication and Citizen-Domestication: The 2011 Japanese Earthquake in Chinese Newspapers and Blogosphere Weiwei Zhang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Television and Public Sphere in Bangladesh: An Uneasy Relationship Anis Rahman, Simon Fraser U, CANADA ***TOP PAPER*** The Right to Communicate in the Midst of Political Violence: Media Reform and Social Change in Thailand Lisa B. Brooten, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA 6323 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Best Student Papers Public Relations Division 2013 Public Relations Chair Michael L. Kent, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants Crisis Communicative Strategies, Organization Ownership Type, Confidence in Organization and Media Image Coverage: An Investigation of Infant Milk Powder Product Safety Crisis Management in Mainland China Peiyi Huang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Credibility in Crisis: Agenda Building and Crisis Communicative Strategy at a Chinese NGO Yang Cheng, Chinese U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Yi-Hui Huang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Ching Man Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Beyond the Corporate Lens: The Use of Humour in Activist Communication Katharina Wolf, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA People Like You and Me: How Social Marketing Informed by Visual Communication Research Can Change the Views on HIV-Positive People Viorela Dan, Free U Berlin, GERMANY Laura Busert, Free U Berlin, GERMANY The Strategic Nature of CSR Communication: An Institutional and Rhetorical Perspective Bree Devin, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA 6324 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Researching News and Young People’s Identities Children Adolescents and Media Chair Cristina Ponte, U Nova de Lisboa, PORTUGAL Participants Inhibiting Two Worlds: The Role of News in the Lives of Jewish and Arab Children and Youth in Israel Dafna Lemish, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Teen News in the UK: Young People’s Ideas for Improving the BBC’s News Provision Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Maire Messenger Davies, U of Ulster, UNITED KINGDOM Stuart Allan, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Children and Young People Making Sense of the News: A Case Study in a Portuguese Low-Income Neighborhood Lidia Maropo, U Autonoma de Lisboa/U Nova de Lisboa, PORTUGAL The Reciprocal Role of Media and Civic Literacies: A Case Study of News and Young Citizens in Portugal Maria Jose Brites, Media and Journalism Research Centre/ U Nova de Lisboa/Lusofona U, PORTUGAL Respondent David Buckingham, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM How do young people, especially children, engage with news discourse? To what extent does this engagement shape the construction of their personal identities as citizens? These two questions signal the agenda informing this panel’s mode of enquiry. Its aim is to shift the focus of current debates – typically framed within the realm of adults – regarding journalism, political socialization and participation in the public sphere. More specifically, it will explore the complex ways in which the news media influence young people’s civic cultures, including their incipient sense of citizenship, social responsibility and empathy with distant others. 6325 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 ERIC Roundtable: Producing the Nation Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Participants The Spatial Production of the Civic Nation: Berlin’s World Cup Flag Fight Kate Zambon, U of Pennsylvania, USA A Europe of Rights and Values? Public Debates on Sarkozy’s Roma Affair in France, Bulgaria, and Romania Alex Balch, U of Liverpool, UNITED KINGDOM Ekaterina Balabanova, U of Liverpool, UNITED KINGDOM Ruxandra Mihaela Trandafoiu, Edge Hill, UNITED KINGDOM Street Vendors as Global Entrepreneurs Karin E. Becker, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Nancy Hauserman, U of Iowa, USA The U.S. Supreme Court’s Justifications in the Chinese Exclusion Case: An Argumentation Analysis Misti Hill Carter, Texas A&M U, USA From National Threat to National Hero: Black Mixed-Race and the Struggle for Koreanness in Contemporary South Korean Television Ji-Hyun Ahn, U of Texas, USA 6326 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Television Intermediaries Popular Communication Chair Goran Bolin, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN Participants It's Not HBO, it's TV: The View of Critics and Producers on Flemish "Quality TV" Alexander Dhoest, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Israeli Drama: Constructing the Israeli Television Drama Series as an Art Form Noa Lavie, The Tel Aviv-Jaffa Academic College, ISRAEL Scholars as Audiences, Symbolic Boundaries, and Culturally Legitimated Prime-Time Cable Drama Michael Wayne, U of Virginia, USA Over the Top: Structure and Agency in Television Distribution Joshua Braun, Quinnipiac U, USA Questioning Entertainment Values: Moments of Disruption in the History of Swedish Television Entertainment Goran Bolin, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN 6327 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Earth Observing Media Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Chris Russill, Carleton U, CANADA Participants Conceptual Cleavages of Earth Observing Media Chris Russill, Carleton U, CANADA Signal Territories: Studying US Broadcast Infrastructure Using Google Earth Lisa Parks, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA The Digital Globe and Climactic Coming Attractions: From Theatrical Release to Theatre of War Leon Gurevitch, Victoria U of Wellington, NEW ZEALAND Ripple Effects: The Residual Uses of Undersea Cables Nicole Starosielski, Miami U, USA Surveillance Warfare: Intelligence and Anxiety in the Global Sonar Network John Patrick Shiga, McGill U, CANADA Logistics of Listening: Acoustic Location and the Extension of National Space Judd A. Case, Manchester U, USA This roundtable introduces key sites of earth observing and discusses the media theories, cultural forms, institutional entanglements, and communication infrastructure that animate contemporary earth observing processes. It builds on the recent work of Lisa Parks and Paul Edwards to explore the usefulness of an infrastructural perspective for recasting key issues in media and communication studies, and pays special attention to the way that air, water, and earth are not only objects of mediation, but ‘media’ as well. 6328 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Gender and Labour Citizenship in the Information Society Feminist Scholarship Chair Lisa M. McLaughlin, Miami U, USA Participants Connected but Atomised: Women's Voice in the New Media Labour Market Ursula Huws, U of Hertfordshire, UNITED KINGDOM Labour, Gender, and the Cultural Reserve Alison C.M. Beale, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Will Women Information Workers of the World Unite? Indications From India and Malaysia Lisa M. McLaughlin, Miami U, USA Hungry for the Job: Gender, Unpaid Internships, and the Creative Economy Leslie Regan Shade, U of Toronto, CANADA The Effacement of Labour in the Sex-Culture Industries Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA This panel interrogates the notion of labor citizenship through a gender lens. Current scholarship emphasizes economic and labor citizenship due to a neoliberal environment characterized by economic uncertainties, differential mobilities associated with migration and place-based labour, new transnational forms of social organization, and contingent work. The panel takes an intersectional approach, addressing not only gender, but “race”/ethnicity, nation, generation, and class. 6331 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Board Room 1 New Concepts in Political Communication and Their Importance for Research Sponsored Sessions Participants Explaining the Gap Between Performance and Perception: The Role of Public Policies’ Communication Strategy in Building "City Reputation" Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN Gildo Seisdedos, IE U, SPAIN An Analytical Model of Online Political Reputation: Spanish 2011 Regional Elections Karen Sanders, CEU San Pablo U, SPAIN Francisco Diaz, CEU San Pablo U, SPAIN María Sánchez, CEU San Pablo U, SPAIN Negativity and Trust in Political News Rosa Berganza, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Oller Martín, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Iñigo Ana Isabel, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Who is Really the “Watchdog” Now? News Political and Journalistic Approaches on Professional Media Autonomy Andreu Casero- Ripollés, U Jaume I de Castellón, SPAIN PABLO LOPEZ-RABADAN, U Jaume I de Castellón, SPAIN Mediated Trust: Theoretical and Empirical Analysis of the Relation Between Trust, Media Use, and Political Engagement Silvia Majó, U Oberta de Catalunya, SPAIN Political communication scholarship needs to “update” its focus to incorporate newly emerging concepts, which become salient for citizens, stakeholders and governments. This panel focuses on three such concepts: (1) reputation, (2) trust and (3) control. These concepts have been present in communication research in general and in political communication research in particular. Yet the current sociopolitical context internationally has recently underscored their ever increasing importance to research that aims to understand and improve the interactions between governments and citizens, the citizens themselves, various social groups, journalist and politicians and the media and audiences. 6332 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Board Room 2 Creative Industries and the Reconfiguration of Cultural Policy Communication Law & Policy Chair David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The End of Cultural Policy Toby Miller, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Cultural Economy and Development: A New Policy Configuration? Justin O'Connor, Monash U, AUSTRALIA The Goals of ‘After Neo Liberal’ Cultural Policy Kate Oakley, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Melissa Nisbett, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM David Lee, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Academic Expertise and Cultural Policy-Making Philip Schlesinger, U of Glasgow, UNITED KINGDOM This panel brings together leading exponents of cultural policy research to discuss the concepts of ‘creative industries’ and ‘creative economy’, and how they have reconfigured cultural policy internationally. These papers thus provide a sense of the importance of creative industries within the cultural policy domain, and the significance of cultural policy itself. 6333 Wednesday 11:00-12:15 Board Room 3 Instructional and Developmental Communication Business Meeting Instructional & Developmental Communication Participant Aaron R. Boyson, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Business meeting. Chair: Brandi N. Frisby Vice-Chair: Aaron Boyson Secretary: Betsy Bach 6402 ICA Miniplenary: Challenges in Media and Communication Regulation Wednesday 12:30-13:45 Balmoral Sponsored Sessions Chair Peter Lunt, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Colette Bowe, Chiar, Ofcom, UNITED KINGDOM Sascha Meinrath, New America Foundation, USA Rod Tiffen, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA The pace of evolution of media and communication technology and its uses outruns that of legislation and regulatory mechanisms. Freedom of expression and free flows of communication collide with privacy, intellectual property, and accountability. This panel will discuss the challenges of media, and communication regulation in the face of a fast-changing communication ecosystem. 6413 ICA Fellows' Panel: Calvert, Jones, and Hartley Wednesday 12:30-13:45 St. James Sponsored Sessions Chair Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Parasocial Relationships for Young Children's Learning Sandra L. Calvert, Georgetown U, USA Rise of the Machines: Computer-Mediated Communication or Computer Communication Steven Jones, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Malvoisin or the Bad Neighbour: Cultural Cooperation and the Problem of Scale John Hartley, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA ICA honors its new Fellows each year with a special program that focuses on their life, work, and contributions to the field of communication. 6414 ICA Fellows' Panel: Ellis, Fulk, and Mumby Wednesday 12:30-13:45 Regent's Sponsored Sessions Chair Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado, USA Participants Theorizing Communication and Ethnopolitical Conflict Don Ellis, U of Hartford, USA Social Networks and the Etiology of Contagious Knowledge in Organizations Janet Fulk, U of Southern California, USA Communication, Organizations, and Power: A Casual Perspective Dennis K. Mumby, U of North Carolina, 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. 6502 Creative Research in Chaotic Times: Workstyles, Structure, and Output in Cultural Industries and Beyond Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Balmoral Theme Sessions Participants Living for a Working: Cultural Labor, Lifestyle Creep, and the Gendered Problem of Affect in Media Work Gina Neff, U of Washington, USA Concertizing Journalism Christine Larson, Stanford U, USA Career Structure and Experiences of Television Screenwriters in an Internationalizing Industry Roei Davidson, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Postinstitutional Strategies in Media Work Mark Deuze, Indiana U, USA Respondent Joseph Turow, U of Pennsylvania, USA In the past decade, an emerging set of career practices and expectations, deeply rooted in creative and cultural industries, has rapidly spread across sectors. These norms prize personal entrepreneurism and blur lines between work and life, global and local, risk and opportunity. They have transformed economic structures in music, journalism and other cultural fields. Understanding this complex interplay between communication, norms and structure requires innovative, interdisciplinary approaches: Such a shift in tactics is profoundly important as these employment modes spread to knowledge work in general, reshaping patterns of opportunity, equality and self-expression. By reaching across fields, this panel explores those relationships in a rich and productive theoretical context. 6505 Political Messages and Campaigning Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Palace A Political Communication Chair Donatella Campus, U of Bologna, ITALY Participants A Semantic Network Analysis of Political Party Platforms: Predicting Coalitions in Scottish Elections, 1999-2011 Barbara Myslik, U of California - Davis, USA George A. Barnett, U of California - Davis, USA Mainstreaming Gay Politicians Online: Verbal and Visual Presentations on LGBT Candidate Websites David Lynn Painter, Full Sail U, USA Nataliya Dmytrochenko, U of Florida, USA Christine Eschenfelder, U of Florida, USA Power and Agency in Political Communication: How Masculinist Politics Framed Competing Carbon Campaigns in the Australian Legislature Richard C. Stanton, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA The Structural Transformation of the Chinese Premier’s Press Conferences: A Study in Institutionalization Yan Yi, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 6506 The Richness of Organizational Contexts in Organizational Communication Research Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Jeffrey William Treem, U of Texas, USA Participants Habermas and the Garants: Narrowing the Gap Between Policy and Practice in French OrganisationCitizen Engagement Judy Burnside-Lawry, RMIT U, AUSTRALIA Carolyne Ruth Lee, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Sandrine Rui, U of Bordeaux, FRANCE Organizing an On-Site Farmers Market: Accessing Resources Through Workplace Wellness Policies Marianne LeGreco, U of North Carolina - Greensboro, USA Beth Archie, U of North Carolina - Greensboro, USA The Media's Role in Demobilization: Framing Trends, Susan G. Komen, and the Planned Parenthood Reversal Brandon Chase Bouchillon, Texas Tech U, USA Work-Life Conflict and Coping: Challenging the Individual-Centric Norm Hongmei Shen, San Diego State U, USA Hua Jiang, Towson U, USA Yan Jin, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Bey-Ling Sha, San Diego State U, USA Respondent Juliet P. Roper, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND 6507 Framing and Frame-Building in Political Communication Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Palace C Political Communication Chair Paul D'Angelo, The College of New Jersey, USA Participants Framing Crime: A Comparison of Frame-Building Effects Between Newspapers and Parliament in France and the Netherlands Anoeska Schipper, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Rens Vliegenthart, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Framing the Financial Crisis: Political Actors Influence on Frame Building in the News Media Kajsa Larsson Falasca, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Framing and Emotion in the Debate Over Health Care Reform Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington U, USA Emily Vraga, George Mason U, USA Robert M. Entman, George Washington U, USA Value Poaching: Issue Frames That Target the Same Value for Competing Political Ends Thomas E. Nelson, Ohio State U, USA Sophie Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Andreas Schuck, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 6508 Games, Civic Education, and Civic Engagement Wednesday 14:00-15:15 York Communication and Technology Chair Chad Raphael, Santa Clara U, USA Participants A Model for Civic Game Design in "Global Conflicts: Afghanistan" Jeppe Nielsen, Serious Games Interactive, DENMARK Civic Games and Civic Gaps: Which Students Benefit Most From Civic Game Play? Christine Bachen, Santa Clara U, USA Pedro Hernandez-Ramos, Santa Clara U, USA Chad Raphael, Santa Clara U, USA Teaching College Students to Build Networks: The "Reality" Game Benjamin Stokes, U of Southern California, USA Jeff Watson, U of Southern California, USA Beyond Participation: How an Online Game Transformed Urban Planning in Detroit Eric Gordon, Engagement Game Lab, USA Jessica Baldwin-Philippi, Emerson College, USA Increasingly, digital games are being designed not simply to prepare youth for civic life, but to immerse people of all ages directly in civic participation. This panel brings together game designers and scholars to advance our understanding of games for civic learning and engagement. By convening panelists with experience in game design and research on ICTs and civic engagement, the panel will foster dialogue between practitioners and scholars. The panel will stimulate discussion among participants by circulating papers before the conference and asking each panelist to comment on useful aspects of each other’s work. To spark discussion with the audience, the last 15 minutes of the panel will be devoted to discussion with attendees, instead of a traditional discussant. 6509 Technology-Compatible Communications Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Cameron Wade Piercy, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants Text Messaging in Long-Distance Parent-Child Relationships: A Test of the Theory of Electric Propinquity Shawn King, U of Oklahoma, USA Michael Tornes, U of Oklahoma, USA Dongya Wang, U of Oklahoma, USA Work-Related Computer-Mediated Communication (CMC) and Work Life Balance: The Influence of New Communication Technologies on Perceived Work Life Balance, Burnout, Job Satisfaction, and Intention to Leave the Organization Kevin B. Wright, Saint Louis U, USA How Technology Shapes Communicative Conduct: A Case Study in Online Trainer-Student Interactions Tabitha Hart, San Jose State U, USA Who's My Audience Again? How Users Perceive and Manage Their Audience on Online Social Networks Ralf Patrick De Wolf, VU U - Brussels, BELGIUM 6511 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Waterloo/Tower The Rise of Social Media in Disseminating Health Messages Health Communication Chair Chul-joo Lee, U of Illinois, USA Participants Stigma and its Effect on Social Interaction and Social Media Activity: Top Three Paper/Health Communication Division Vanessa Boudewyns, RTI International, USA Itai Himelboim, U of Georgia, USA Derek L. Hansen, Brigham Young U, USA Brian G. Southwell, RTI International, USA Health Campaign on Online Social Media: Evaluating CDC’s Antismoking Campaign on YouTube Jae Eun Chung, Kent State U, USA Social Media Use for Food Recall Information and Antecedent Factors: Application of the Comprehensive Model of Information Seeking Minsun Shim, Inha U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Vicki Freimuth, U of Georgia, USA Laura Min Mercer Kollar, U of Georgia, USA Nancy Ostrove, FDA, USA Cari A Wolfson, Focus on U!, USA Communicating Food Safety via the Social Media Yi Mou, Macau U of Science and Technology, MACAU Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA 6512 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Chelsea/Richmond Communication History High-Density Panel Communication History Chair Philip Lodge, Edinburgh Napier U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Making Do With Media: Teachers, Technology, and Tactics of Media Management in Interwar American Classrooms Katie Day Good, Northwestern U, USA Cinema With a Capitole C: A Cultural Economics Analysis of the 1953-1971 Capitole Ledgers Khael Velders, Ghent U, BELGIUM Daniel Biltereyst, Ghent U, BELGIUM Liesbeth Van de Vijver, Ghent U, BELGIUM Surveys of Public Opinion in the USA Concerning Latin America During the Second World War Jose Luis Ortiz, U Panamericana, MEXICO Modernity as "Urbanity" in Early Public Service Broadcasting: the Case of Flanders Hilde Dy Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Sketching Jimmy Who: Tony Auth and the Production of a Presidency, 1976-1980 Lori Amber Roessner, U of Tennessee, USA The Transnational Relations Between the BBC and the WDR (1960-1969) Christian Potschka, Leuphana U Lüneburg, GERMANY Between Censorship Execution and Record in Colonial Korea: A Comparative Analysis of the Monthly Report of Chosun Publication Police and Pages of Newspapers Min Ju Lee, Far East U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF "Darktown": The Ideal Black Community in Late-19th-Century White Imagination Gretta Moody, U of Pennsylvania, USA Communicating Dissent: Antiwar Voices in Early America Abbe S Depretis, Christopher Newport U, USA Ladies of the Times: Women’s Letters to the Editor in the 1880s and 1900s Allison Cavanagh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Towards a New History of the American Movie Poster Beth Corzo-Duchardt, Northwestern U, USA Then Press #: A Brief History of Digital Labor Michael Palm, U of North Carolina, USA This high density panel provides an opportunity to meet a number of authors who, after each giving a brief (2-3 minutes) introduction to their research, will make themselves available on a one-to-one basis or in small groups to discuss their work, using an interactive display. This is a very real chance to engage with the range and diversity of current work in communication history. 6513 Partisan Content and Selective Exposure: Consequences and Implications (Panel Session) Wednesday 14:00-15:15 St. James Mass Communication Participants Beyond the Mass Media: Fragmentation in Nonjournalistic Online Media Content on Climate Change Pablo Porten-Chee, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Christiane Eilders, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Implications of Pro- and Counterattitudinal Information Exposure for Affective Polarization R. Kelly Garrett, Ohio State U, USA Benjamin K. Johnson, Ohio State U, USA Rachel L. Neo, Ohio State U, USA Aysenur Dal, Ohio State U, USA Fragmentation and Hostile Media Effects? The Selection and Perception of Political Online and Offline Content Marco Dohle, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Uli Bernhard, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Gerhard Vowe, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Egocentric Publics and the Hostile Media Effect Hernando Rojas, U of Wisconsin, USA Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, IE U, SPAIN Respondent Klaus Schoenbach, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA This panel will assess the effects of politically motivated selective exposure on individuals’ attitudes and perceptions. This includes attitudes toward people with different political views or perceptions of hostile media and of public opinion in society. With a view on different countries and with a special focus on the role of online media, the presentations will address the key issues in this field of research. 6514 The Euro Crisis, Newspaper Coverage, Journalistic Practices, and Perceptions of European Institutions and Institutional Challenges Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Regent's Journalism Studies Chair David A. L. Levy, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Europe Between Economic and Political Integration: The Role of its Institutions in Print Press Coverage of Euro Crisis Paolo Mancini, U di Perugia, ITALY Marco Mazzoni, U di Perugia, ITALY Influences of Media Systems and Journalistic Cultures on Coverage of the Euro Crisis Robert Georges Picard, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Susana Salgado, New U of Lisbon, PORTUGAL The Metaphors of Crisis Leen S. J. d'Haenens, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Willem Joris, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM How the Press Depicted the Emergence of and Solutions for the Euro Crisis Heinz-Werner Nienstedt, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Hans Mathias Kepplinger, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Oliver Quiring, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY This panel discussion focuses on coverage of the Euro Crisis and its implications. In response to the crisis a large-scale comparative research project involving communications research teams in 10 European nations developed and has been exploring how differences in coverage, media systems, and journalistic practices have affected portrayals of the crisis and public perceptions of the crisis and European institutions. The panel will present results relating to how differences in media system and journalistic practice affected coverage, variations in how the roots and responsibility for the crisis were conveyed, how the European Commission and European Central Bank were portrayed and the implications for integration, and the metaphors used to describe the events. The study and the panel’s approach are solidly cast within comparative media research theories and approaches and media effects theories. 6516 Networks of Journalism: New Linkages and New Actors Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Daniel Kreiss, U of North Carolina, USA Participants Imagined Networks: How International Journalism Innovators Negotiate Authority and Rework News Norms (Top Three Faculty Paper) Adrienne Russell, U of Denver, USA Mike Joseph Ananny, U of Southern California, USA Positioning Journalism Within Networks: Conceptualizing and Operationalizing "Connective Journalism" Mohammad Yousuf, U of Oklahoma, USA Journalists, Hackers, and the Boundary Object of News: Establishing a New Contact Language for News Innovation Nikki Usher, George Washington U, USA Seth C. Lewis, U of Minnesota, USA Todd Kominiak, George Washington U, USA Normalizing the Hyperlink: How Bloggers, Professional Journalists, and Institutions Shape Linking Values Mark Coddington, U of Texas, USA An Attempt at Corralling the Commons: The Mutual Shaping of a Content Management System for Social Journalism at Five Levels of a News Organization Mark Anthony Poepsel, Loyola U, USA 6517 International Perspectives on Mass Communication Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Vivian Hsueh-Hua Chen, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participants Mediated Disaster and Remote Care: Linking Trauma, Resource Losses/Gains Shaojing Sun, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Ying Wang, Youngstown State U, USA Portrayals of Women in Transnational Arab Television Drama Series Tamara Kharroub, Indiana U Bloomington, USA Andrew J. Weaver, Indiana U, USA Social Impacts of Public Service Broadcasting News in Japan and South Korea June Woong Rhee, Seoul National U of Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yukio Maeda, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Misook Lee, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Kaori Hayashi, U of Tokyo, JAPAN The Picture of China in Our Heads: Mapping China on Taiwan’s Network Media Agenda, 1987-2011 Hsiang Iris Chyi, U of Texas, USA Lei Guo, U of Texas, USA Value Predispositions as Perceptual Filters: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Public Attitudes toward Nanotechnology in the United States and Singapore Shirley S. Ho, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Xuan Liang, U of Wisconsin, USA Dominique Brossard, U of Wisconsin, USA Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin, USA Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Xiaoming Hao, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Xiaoyu He, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 6518 Extended Session: Violent, Antisocial, and Prosocial Media – New Insights and Future Perspectives Wednesday 14:00-16:45 Cadogan Information Systems Game Studies Mass Communication Chair Elly A. Konijn, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants The More You Play, The More Aggressive You Become: A Long-Term Experimental Study of Cumulative Violent Video Game Effects on Hostile Expectations and Aggressive Behavior Youssef Hasan, U Pierre Mendès France, FRANCE Macbeth and the Media: Effects of Violent Media on Perceived Moral Purity and Self-Regulatory Behavior Andre Melzer, U of Luxembourg, LUXEMBOURG Mario Gollwitzer, Philipps U Marburg, GERMANY Moral Judgment of Antisocial Media Content Among Rejected Adolescents Xanthe S. Plaisier, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Elly A. Konijn, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Developmental Trajectories of Media Violence Use and Aggression in Adolescence: Evidence From a Five-Wave Longitudinal Study Barbara Krahé, U of Potsdam, GERMANY Robert Busching, U of Potsdam, GERMANY Habitual Exposure to Media Violence in Childhood Predicts to Serious Aggression and Crime in Late Adolescence and Adulthood: Evidence From Four Longitudinal Studies Rowell Huesmann, U of Michigan, USA Reducing Harm for Children Online: Risk and Protective Factors in Self-Reported Responses to InternetRelated Risks Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Breaking the Vicious Cycle of Media Violence Use and Aggression: An Evidence-Based Intervention Ingrid Möller, U of Potsdam, GERMANY Barbara Krahé, U of Potsdam, GERMANY “Remain Calm. Be Kind”: Effects of Stressful and Relaxing Video Games on Aggressive and Helping Behavior Brad Bushman, Ohio State U, USA The Benefits of Cooperative Game Play in Violent Video Games David R. Ewoldsen, Ohio State U, USA John Velez, Ohio State U, USA Social Psychological Perspectives on Prosocial Media Research and Application Karen Elizabeth Dill-Shackleford, Fielding Graduate U, USA Media can be used in multiple ways, depending on the content. Violent media content can increase antisocial behavior, while prosocial media can increase cooperation and helping behavior. This session includes two rounds of presentations and discussions, focusing on 1) underlying mechanisms in the negative effects of violent and antisocial media and 2) reducing harmful effects and discuss positive effects of prosocial media. Cutting edge work from Europe and the United States is brought together in a lively format. 6521 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 The Ethics and Politics of Media Offence Popular Communication Chairs Ranjana Das, U of Leicester, GERMANY Jonathan Corpus Ong, Hong Kong Baptist U, HONG KONG Participants Sticks and Stones: Media Ubiquity, Victimhood, and the Expansion of Offence Paul Frosh, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL The Politics of Being Offended: Censorious and Satirical Discourses in LGBT Media Activism Joel Penney, Montclair State U, USA The Socio-Political Potential of Viewing Offence: Is There Any? Can There Ever be? Ranjana Das, U of Leicester, GERMANY Offence as Presence, Presence as Offence: Classed Cultures of Visibility Jonathan Corpus Ong, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondent Carolyn Marvin, U of Pennsylvania, USA This panel brings together scholars working with media audiences in four different cultural contexts to interrogate the role of ‘offence’ in popular media culture. It brings together four pieces of research from Israel, USA, UK, and Hong Kong, and straddles texts as well as audiences, production as well as consumption, and commutes between cultures to contextualize its findings across a range of genres in popular communication. 6522 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Activist Community/Social Media and Global Youth Movements: Studies From the Global South Global Communication and Social Change Chair Priya Kapoor, Portland State U, USA Participants The Potential of Social Media as a Public Countersphere in a Situation of Conflict: What the Kashmir 2010 Uprising Teaches Us Rashmi Luthra, U of Michigan - Dearborn, USA Mobilizing Latino Youth for Social Change: The Impact of Social Media and Traditional Latino-Oriented Media Federico Subervi, Texas State U, USA Tools of Emancipation? Media Glare, Online Social Networks, and Discursive Choice in the Chilean Student Movement Jackson Bales Foote, U of Wisconsin, USA Community and Transnational Media Trajectories: Radio in India and South Asia Priya Kapoor, Portland State U, USA Social Media as a Virtual Public Space for Global Citizenship and Activism Manisha Pathak-Shelat, U of Wisconsin, USA Respondent Melissa M. Brough, U of Southern California, USA Despite the absence, or scant presence, of policies facilitating the expression of dissent and the use of media for social change, movements have used whatever spaces are available to mobilize dissent and to create pressure for sociopolitical change. The questions that the participants in this panel will explore are: 1) how do chosen forms of social and community media transform local politics and movements? 2) Is there something intrinsic in particular forms of media that leads to success in activism? 3) Since terms given to successful mobilizations are unabashedly celebratory, such as “facebook revolution” for the Tunisian Arab Spring, what part of the story of interpersonal and local dynamics, including media dynamics, is not being told? 6523 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Methods in Public Relations Public Relations Chair Michael J. Palenchar, U of Tennessee, USA Participants Mapping and Measuring the Dimensions of Trust: Scale Development to Measure Trust in Organizations Joosuk Park, Public Relations Consultant, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Candace L. White, U of Tennessee, USA John W. Lounsbury, U of Tennessee, USA Mixed-Methods: Measurement and Evaluation Among Investor Relations Officers Matthew Wade Ragas, DePaul U, USA Alexander V Laskin, Quinnipiac U, USA "But Pottsie is a God": Researching Australian Public Relations History Using Interviews Kate Fitch, Murdoch U, AUSTRALIA Social Mood Reader: Mapping Citizen Engagement in Public Relations Using the Semantic Web and Supercomputing Mark Balnaves, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA Andrea Cassin, Newcastle U, AUSTRALIA Melanie Brigid James, U of Newcastle, AUSTRALIA 6524 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Learning and Executive Function Among Young Children: The Role of Media Children Adolescents and Media Participants The Relation Between Television Exposure and Theory of Mind Among Preschoolers Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA Molly Sharp, Ohio State U, USA Fashina Mira Alade, Ohio State U, USA Eric E Rasmussen, Ohio State U, USA Katheryn Christy, Ohio State U, USA Effects of Sesame Street: A Meta-Analysis of Children’s Learning in 15 Countries Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin, USA Zhongdang Pan, U of Wisconsin, USA The Relation Between Television Exposure and Executive Function Among Preschoolers Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA Fashina Mira Alade, Ohio State U, USA Molly Sharp, Ohio State U, USA Eric E Rasmussen, Ohio State U, USA Katheryn Christy, Ohio State U, USA The Relationship Between Media Multitasking and Executive Function in Early Adolescents Susanne E. Baumgartner, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Wouter Weeda, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Lisa van der Heijden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Mariette Huizinga, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Parental Beliefs About Childhood Activities: Media Use, Play, and Education Marina Krcmar, Wake Forest U, USA Drew Cingel, Northwestern U, USA Erin Ruth Silva, Wake Forest U, USA Mikaela Malsin, Wake Forest U, USA Respondent Sandra L. Calvert, Georgetown U, USA 6525 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Game Studies Top Papers Game Studies Chair James D. Ivory, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Participants Play to the Camera: Audio-Visual Research and Spectatorship in e-Sports Nicholas Taylor, North Carolina State U, USA Information vs. Persuasive Effects of Advergames: Experiment in the Context of Prescription Drug Advertising Jisu Huh, U of Minnesota, USA Yoshikazu Suzuki, U of Minnesota, USA Michelle Gross, Ackmann and Dickenson Inc., USA It Is Not Okay to Hit a Liked Character: The Effects of a Player’s Affective State Toward an Opponent on the Enjoyment of a Violent Game Keunyeong (Karina) Kim, Pennsylvania State U, USA Michael Schmierbach, Pennsylvania State U, USA Eun Hwa Jung, Pennsylvania State U, USA Red Dead Masculinity: The Power of the Masculine Narrative Found in Red Dead Redemption Benjamin Jared Triana, U of Kentucky, USA 6526 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Exploring Theory and Practice Public Relations Chair Lee Edwards, Institute of Communications Studies, UNITED KINGDOM Participants A Literature Review on Public Relations Within the Energy Industry: Towards a New Theory Alejandra Isabel Pinera-Camacho, U of Navarra, SPAIN Elena Gutiérrez-García, U of Navarra, SPAIN Excellence in Internal Public Relations: The Impact of Transformational Leadership on Symmetrical Communication and Employee Outcomes Linjuan Rita Men, Southern Methodist U, USA Information Seeking and Information Sharing as Underlying Processes of Public Relations Kirk Hallahan, Colorado State U, USA The Linkage Between Ethical Behaviors and Job Satisfaction of Public Relations Professionals Jin-Ae Kang, East Carolina U, USA Bruce K. Berger, U of Alabama, USA 6527 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Political Affective Communication: From Contagion to Control Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Jayson Harsin, American U of Paris, FRANCE Participants Making Flashpublics: Social Media, Network Sovereignty, and Transnational Jack Zeljko Bratich, Rutgers U, USA Attention Economy, Affect, and Circulatory Control Jayson Harsin, American U of Paris, FRANCE Short-Circuiting the Affective Network: Psychoanalysis, Political Drive, and Acting Out Charles Talcott, American U of Paris, FRANCE Beyond Deliberation: Affect, Collaboration, and Network Culture Darrin Hicks, U of Denver, USA Respondent Carrie Rentschler, McGill U, CANADA Much of that scholarship on the affective turn in communication has focused on the relationship of affect between bodies and has often essentialized it as post-semiotic, pre-conscious and liberatory. This panel aims to direct affect scholarship toward networked bodies mediated by communication technologies. While accounting for the possible liberatory aspects of affective effects, the papers in this panel also critically explore the ways in which affect is used for population control. 6528 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Creating Visual Culture Across Cultures Visual Communication Studies Participants New Forms of Transborder Visuality in Urban China: Saving Face for Magazine Covers Eric Ma, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The (Digital) Majesty of All Under Heaven: Affective Constitutive Rhetoric at the Hong Kong Museum of History's Exhibition of Terracotta Warriors David R Gruber, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Between Tradition, Imitation, and Innovation: Interactive Information Graphics in Asia Wibke Weber, Stuttgart Media U, GERMANY Hans-Martin Rall, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Appeals, Sexual Images, Visual Metaphors, and Themes: Differences in Condom Print Ads Across Four Continents Jo-Yun Li, Iowa State U, USA Lulu Rodriguez, Iowa State U, USA TV Talk Show, Visual Representation, and the Ascendency of “Philanthropic Capitalist” Political Leader in South Korea Su Young Choi, U of Massachusetts, USA How Travelers “Make” and Not “Take” a Photo Eunbyul Lee, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 6531 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Board Room 1 ICA Publication Strategic Planning Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA Francois Cooren, U de Montréal, CANADA Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Frank Esser, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Jake Harwood, U of Arizona, USA Jonathan Sterne, McGill U, CANADA Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado, USA Sun Sun Lim, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Malcolm R. Parks, U of Washington, USA John A. Courtright, U of Delaware, USA Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Munich, GERMANY Maria Bakardjieva, U of Calgary, CANADA John Downing, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA John Paul Gutierrez, International Communication Association, USA Michael J. West, International Communication Association, USA Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA This is a meeting of the ICA leadership, the publications committee, and the editors of ICA publications to focus on a strategic plan for ICA publications. 6532 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Board Room 2 Technologically-Mediated Interactions: Problems and Promises for Civic Engagement and Interpersonal Interactions Language & Social Interaction Chair Chaim Noy, U of South Florida, USA Participants Irony, Sarcasm, and Insults as Humor Devices for Solidarity Building in Adult-Oriented Internet Chat Danielle Lawson, Edinboro U of Pennsylvania, USA Identity, Sequential Organization, and Categorical Organization: Interactions in Comments on a Chinese Microblogging Website Luling Huang, U of Texas, USA The Israeli Term for Talk "Tokbek" (Talk-Back - Online Commenting) and its Relevance to the Online Public Sphere Nimrod Shavit, U of Massachusetts, ISRAEL Gonen Dori-Hacohen, U of Massachusetts, USA The Writing on the Collapsing Walls: "Reversed Graffiti" in the Israeli Withdrawal, August 2005 Hananel Rosenberg, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Ayelet Cohen, Hadassa College, ISRAEL Coordinating Affordances, Bridging Modalities: Managing Mobile Devices and the “Text-Based” Summons During Copresent Conversation Stephen DiDomenico, Rutgers U, USA 6533 Wednesday 14:00-15:15 Board Room 3 The Changing Social Climate of Global Warming Environmental Communication Chair Alison Mary Henderson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Participants Amplifying Hill Women’s Perceptions About Climate Change: Case of Henvalvani Community Radio, Chamba, India Aparna Moitra, U of Delhi, INDIA Archna Kumar, U of Delhi, INDIA Changes of Public Perceptions and Actions Concerning Climate Change in Taiwan Mei-Ling Hsu, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN Yie-Jing Yang, Shih Hsin U, TAIWAN Opening Up the Societal Debate on Climate Engineering: How Newspaper Frames Are Changing Samantha Scholte, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Eleftheria Vasileiadou, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Arthur C. Petersen, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Window Frames: The Interplay of Temperature Experiences and Emphasis Framing in Motivated Reasoning About Climate Jonathon P. Schuldt, Cornell U, USA Sungjong Roh, Cornell U, USA 6602 Challenging the Identity of Communication Studies From International Perspectives Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Balmoral Theme Sessions Chair Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado, USA Participants Wolfgang Donsbach, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY Mahdi Yousefi, U of Tehran, IRAN, ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF Olena Igorevna Goroshko, National Technical U - Kharkiv Polytechnic Institute, UKRAINE Bagila Akhatova, Kazakh U of International Relations and World Languages, KAZAKHSTAN Jiro Takai, Nagoya U, JAPAN Fei Jiang, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Mapping the Field of Communication: From the Perspective of an Encyclopedia Editor Wolfgang Donsbach, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY Is There Such a Field as Communication Studies in Russia? Challenges of Identifying the Discipline Olga Ivanovna Matyash, Russian Communication Association, USA The Development of Communication Studies in Ukraine Olena Igorevna Goroshko, National Technical U - Kharkiv Polytechnic Institute, UKRAINE Problems and Prospects of Development of Communicative Education in Kazakhstan Bagila Akhatova, Kazakh U of International Relations and World Languages, KAZAKHSTAN The Story of Communication Studies in the Muslim World: A Struggle for the Identity and Legitimacy Mahdi Yousefi, U of Tehran, IRAN, ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF The Background of Communication Discipline in Japan Jiro Takai, Nagoya U, JAPAN Three Waves of Communication Studies in China: On the Problems and Directions of Chinese Communication Studies Fei Jiang, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The purpose of this panel is to invite international scholars to critically reflect upon "what is going on" with Communication Studies in their countries and regions, from a variety of perspectives: theoretical/ methodological, philosophical/epistemological, cultural/intercultural, spiritual, practical, political, or educational. The following questions are also suggested as a framework for discussion: What are intellectual approaches and traditions to studying and understanding communication in your country? How is this understanding represented in national social discourses and metadiscourses? How do you view the status and role of CS in social science and humanities in your country? What are prospects or constraints in the development of the discipline? What is the role of national researchers and practitioners (educators and policy-makers) in the formation of the discipline? We suggest that, considering the potentially world-wide scope of the suggested topic, it would be beneficial to include this session into the program of the ICA's virtual conference and to offer it as a live streaming session. 6605 Political Knowledge: Causes and Consequences Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Palace A Political Communication Chair Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Political Aptitude: A Revised Measure of Political Sophistication Patrick Merle, Texas Tech U, USA The Influence of Interactive Online Poll Features on Political Learning Joshua M. Scacco, U of Texas, USA Ashley Muddiman, U of Texas, USA Natalie Jomini Stroud, U of Texas, USA Testing Our Quasi-Statistical Sense: News Exposure, Political Knowledge, and False Projection Shira Dvir-Gvirsman, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Jacob Shamir, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Democratic Norms and Social Learning: A Study of Influences on Iraqi Journalists' Attitudes Toward Information Access Jeannine E. Relly, U of Arizona, USA Margaret Zanger, U of Arizona, USA Shahira S. Fahmy, U of Arizona, USA 6606 Who Am I? Organizational Identification and Identity Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Alison Mary Henderson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Participants Boosting Employer-Sponsored Health Dissemination Efforts: Identification and Information Sharing Intentions Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA Angela Erin Pastorek, U of Texas, USA Brittani Crook, U of Texas, USA Michael S. Mackert, U of Texas, USA Erin Donovan-Kicken, U of Texas, USA Heidi Shalev, Austin Regional Clinic, USA Communicative Constructions of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR): Implications for Organizational Identity Vidhi Chaudhri, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA From Conflict to Creativity in Global Teams: The Moderating Role of Shared Identity and Perceived Proximity Jennifer L. Gibbs, Rutgers U, USA Malgorzata Boyraz, Rutgers U, USA Christine Goldthwaite, Rutgers U, USA The Role of Values in Alternative Organizations: Examining Organizational Identification in Farmers Markets Carrisa S Hoelscher, U of Oklahoma, USA Alaina Zanin, U of Oklahoma, USA Michael W. Kramer, U of Oklahoma, USA Respondent Rebecca J. Meisenbach, U of Missouri, USA 6607 Perceptions and Misperceptions: Causes and Consequences Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Palace C Political Communication Chair Thomas Petersen, Institut Fur Demoskopie Allensbach, GERMANY Participants The Relationships Between Media Use and Fairness Perceptions in the Context of General and Specific Uses of Agricultural Biotechnology John C. Besley, Michigan State U, USA Katherine A. McComas, Cornell U, USA The Role of Conversation in Developing Accurate Political Perceptions: A Multilevel Social Network Approach William P. Eveland, Jr., Ohio State U, USA Myiah J Hutchens, U of Arizona, USA The Role of Emotions in the Hostile Media Effect: Testing the Mediation Function of Emotions Chanjung Kim, Oklahoma State U, USA Kenneth Eun Han Kim, Oklahoma State U, USA Presumed Online Media Influence and Support for Censorship: Results From a Survey Among German Parliamentarians Marco Dohle, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Uli Bernhard, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Gerhard Vowe, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY 6608 Effects of Realism Across Modalities Wednesday 15:30-16:45 York Communication and Technology Chair S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U and Sungkyunkwan U, USA Participants The Effects of Avatar Realism on Heart Rate Variability, Feelings, Thoughts, and Behaviors Sung Yeun Kim, Syracuse U, USA Reid A Searls, Syracuse U, USA Mark Costa, Syracuse U, USA YONG-IL SHIN, Pusan National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Frank Biocca, Syracuse U, USA Exploring Users’ Social Responses to Computer Counseling Interviewers’ Behavior Sin-Hwa Kang, U of Southern California, USA Jonathan Gratch, U of Southern California, USA Elementary, My Dear Watson: Examining Interactivity as Exploration in Augmented Reality via a Magnifying-Glass Simulator Guan-Soon Khoo, Pennsylvania State U, USA Ruobing Li, Pennsylvania State U, USA Shintaro Kitazawa, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Koh Sueda, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Henry Been-Lirn Duh, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Gameplay Controllers and Modalities for Older Adults: A User-Centred Perspective on Usability and Experiences Yin-Leng Theng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Tan Phat Pham, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 6609 Copyright and Digital Piracy Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Jan Fernback, Temple U, USA Participants Tracking Configurable Culture From the Margins to the Mainstream Aram A. Sinnreich, Rutgers U, USA Mark Latonero, U of Southern California, USA Estimating Prevalence of Digital Piracy: An Examination of Interacting Sources and Effects on Downloading Behavior Hichang Cho, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Siyoung Chung, Singapore Management U, SINGAPORE Anna Filippova, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE No Copyright Infringement Intended: Emergent Discourses in Networked Media Sharing Alex Leavitt, U of Southern California, USA Public Science or Virtual Water Cooler? The Role of Academic Blogs in the Scholarly Communication Ecology Merja Mahrt, U of Dusseldorf, GERMANY Cornelius Puschmann, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, GERMANY 6611 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Waterloo/Tower Communication Influences on Health Behavior and Behavioral Change Health Communication Chair Dyah Pitaloka, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants Theory of Planned Behavior: Women’s Stories of Water Treatment and Safe Water Storage in Kenya Keli FensonHood Okere, U of Denver, USA Renee A. Botta, U of Denver, USA Leah Scandurra, Johns Hopkins U, USA When Sickness Closes in: Drivers of a Proactive Behavior During a Health Crisis Avery E. Holton, U of Texas, USA Angela M. Lee, U of Texas, USA Self-Affirmation Before Exposure to Persuasive Health Communications Promotes Anticipated Regret and Health Behavior Change Guido M Van Koningsbruggen, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peter R Harris, U of Sussex, UNITED KINGDOM Anjes J Smits, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Validating Measures of Health-Related Conversation Content in the Context of Sleep Behavior Among College Students Rebecca Robbins, Cornell U, USA Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell U, USA 6612 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Chelsea/Richmond Culture, Virtuality, Social Media, and Computer-Supported Interaction Intercultural Communication Chair Douglas A. Boyd, U of Kentucky, USA Participants Agency and Deixis Across Virtualized “Turkish” Imagined Community Ali Ersen Erol, Howard U, USA A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Domestic and International Students’ Social Media Usage Qiong Xu, U of Alabama, USA Richard Mocarski, U of Alabama, USA Cultural and Relational Effects on Awareness Information Gathering Behaviors Nanyi Bi, Cornell U, USA Jeremy Birnholtz, Northwestern U, USA Susan R Fussell, Cornell U, USA Social Networking Sites as Cultural Products: A Test With Facebook and Renren Cong Li, U of Miami, USA Jiangmeng Liu, U of Miami, USA Testing News Trustworthiness in Online Public Sphere: A Case Study of The Economist’s News Report Covering Riots in Xinjiang, China Dexin Tian, SCAD-Savannah, USA Chin-Chung Chao, U of Nebraska - Omaha, USA 6613 “I’m Ready for My Close-Up”: Representations of Women and Gender on Reality Television (Panel Session) Wednesday 15:30-16:45 St. James Mass Communication Participants The Construction of Femininity in Reality Television: Bridalplasty as a Narrative of Resistance Lara Stache, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA “Anybody Can Win, Even A Girl”: Reality TV Engendered Participation and Possibilities in India Lauhona Ganguly, American U, USA I Do, Don’t I?: Hyper-Femininity and Celebrity Aspiration in Reality Wedding Programming Kirsty Fairclough, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM Laughing at Little Girls: Class and Gender in “Honey Boo Boo” and “Toddlers and Tiaras” Paul Myron Hillier, U of Tampa, USA Respondent Rachel E. Dubrofsky, U of South Florida, USA This panel focuses on reality TV shows as a popular symbolic form, providing an opportunity to look contextually at how the shows are national products that animate popular conceptions of gender and femininity. The panelists examine the ways in which the images are global and local, in particular in terms of playing out patriarchal norms – resisting and reinforcing these. The panel invites us to think of reality TV’s ubiquity as socially specific and contingent, and also irrefutably important in understanding how popular television engages and remaps gender roles and relations. 6614 Journalism at the Time of Big Data Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Regent's Journalism Studies Communication and Technology Chair Stefania Milan, Tilburg U, CANADA Participants Towards a Genealogy of Data Journalism C.W. Anderson, College of Staten Island - CUNY, USA Is There Room for Big Data in Journalists' Skills? Juliette De Maeyer, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM How Data Tells Stories Lorenz Matzat, OpenDataCity, GERMANY Data Validation Between Journalism and Social Sciences Hille van der Kaa, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Surveilliance, Sousveilliance, and Big Data (Journalism) Lisa Lynch, Concordia U, CANADA Respondent Lorenz Matzat, OpenDataCity, GERMANY This panel presents a mix of academic and practitioner presentations to address the numerous challenges “Big Data” present contemporary journalism with. The five contributions situate the practice of data journalism in its historical, socio-political, and professional context. 6616 Covering the World: Foreign Correspondents and Foreign News Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Hillel Nossek, College of Management Academic Studies, ISRAEL Participants The Marginal Majority: Foreign Journalistic Hires at the Associated Press Soomin Seo, Columbia U, USA The Role of Foreign Correspondents in Diplomacy: A Case Study Thomas Birkner, U Münster, GERMANY International News Coverage and Issue Relevance to the US Heungseok Koh, U of Iowa, USA Making the World a Distant Place? How Foreign TV News Affects Individual Cynicism in Post-Colonial Hong Kong Wan-Ying Lin, City U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Xinzhi Zhang, City U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Respondent Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA 6617 Cognitive Processing of Media Messages Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Allison Eden, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Hedonist or Pragmatist? Conceptualizing Appreciation as Primary Emotion in the Framework of Metaemotions Katharina Hoelck, VU U - Brussels, BELGIUM An Jacobs, VU U - Brussels, BELGIUM Media Induced Recovery: The Effects of Positive Versus Negative Media Stimuli on Recovery Experience, Cognitive Performance, and Vitality Diana Rieger, U of Cologne, GERMANY Leonard Reinecke, U of Mainz, GERMANY Julia Kneer, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Lena Frischlich, U of Cologne, GERMANY Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY Processing Media Story Characters: A "Theory of Mind" Model Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA Tae Kyoung Lee, Cornell U, USA Hye Kyung Kim, Cornell U, USA Sungjong Roh, Cornell U, USA A Mediated Uncertainty Management Model: Uncertainty as Motivating Specific Uses and Gratifications of Media Use Robert Benjamin Lull, Ohio State U, USA 6621 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Meet Your Audience: Interacting with Fans and Antifans Popular Communication Chair Nancy K. Baym, Microsoft Research, USA Participants Close Encounters: Ritualizing Proximity in the Age of Celebrity. An Ethnographic Analysis of Meet-andGreets With Dutch Singer Marco Borsato Stijn Reijnders, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Perils and Pleasures of Tweeting With Fans Nancy Baym, Microsoft Research, USA So Far Yet so Close: A Case Study of Intimacy in Celebrity-Fan Communication on Chinese Microblog Yue Dai, U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF With Fans Like These, Who Needs Enemies? An Analysis of Celebrities’ Online Antifans Nathalie Claessens, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Hilde Dy Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Lesbian Romances in FSCN Fan Fiction: A Study of Online Chinese Slash Literature Jing Zhao, Chinese U of Hong Kong, USA 6622 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Popular Culture and Identity Formation in Brazil, Salvador, Syria, and India Global Communication and Social Change Popular Communication Chair Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas, USA Participants A Kiss is (Not) Just a Kiss Samantha Nogueira Joyce, Indiana U South Bend, USA Dramatizing Syrian Identity: The Case of Bab al-Hara & the Damascene Milieu Television Series Omar Alghazzi, U of Pennsylvania, USA Race, Identity, Drumming, and Digital Inclusion in Salvador, Bahia Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas, USA Passing to India: A Critical Look at American Football’s Expansion Erika Polson, U of Denver, USA Erin Elizabeth Whiteside, U of Tennessee, USA 6623 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Social Media and Digital Public Relations Public Relations Chair Emma Wood, Queen Margaret U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Building Relationships Online: Top 100 Global Brands’ Use of Websites, Facebook, and Twitter Wonsun Shin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Augustine Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Hyo Jung Kim, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Does Being Social Matter? The Relationship Between Enabled Comments and Purchase Intention in Blogs Rebecca A. Hayes, Illinois State U, USA Caleb T. Carr, Illinois State U, USA Framing Digital Public Affairs Martin Hoefelmann, U of Applied Sciences and Arts Hannover, GERMANY Wiebke Moehring, U of Applied Sciences, GERMANY The Relationship of Trust in Public Relations: Toward a Model of Optimal Contextual Matching Anne-Marie Gagne, TELUQ, CANADA Pierre Mongeau, U du Québec à Montréal, CANADA 6624 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Parenting and Parental Mediation in a Media-Saturated World Children Adolescents and Media Participants Developing and Validating the Perceived Parental Media Mediation Scale: A Self-Determination Perspective Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jo Hermanns, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rebecca de Leeuw, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Identifying Household Television Practices to Reduce Children’s Television Time Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Amy Bleakley, U of Pennsylvania, USA Michael Hennessy, U of Pennsylvania, USA Parenting in the Age of Technology: Parent Attitudes and Behaviors Related to Children’s Media Use Alexis Lauricella, Northwestern U, USA Ariel Maschke, Northwestern U, USA Sabrina Connell, Northwestern U, USA Ellen Wartella, Northwestern U, USA Victoria Rideout, Kaiser Family Foundation, USA Stance-Taking in Talking to Children About Media: A Language Socialization Perspective Letizia Caronia, U of Bologna, ITALY Teenagers' Internet Use and the Relationship With Their Parents Marjon Schols, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jos de Haan, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jeroen Jansz, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA 6625 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Challenging Game Research: Methods and Perspectives Game Studies Popular Communication Chair Malte Elson, U Münster, GERMANY Participants Concerning Interactivity: Effective Video Game Content Analysis Ryan Rogers, U of North Carolina, USA Game Studies: A View From Outside Marcella Szablewicz, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Standing Athwart the Ludic Turn: The Study of Games in the Field of Communication William J. White, Pennsylvania State U - Altoona, USA The Trojan Player Typology: A Cross-Genre, Cross-Cultural, Behaviorally Validated Scale of Video Game Play Motivations Adam S. Kahn, U of Southern California, USA Cuihua Shen, U of Texas - Dallas, USA Li Lu, U of Southern California, USA Rabindra A. Ratan, Michigan State U, USA Sean Coary, U of Southern California, USA Jinghui (Jove) Hou, U of Southern California, USA Jingbo Meng, U of Southern California, USA Joseph C. Osborn, U of California - Santa Cruz, USA Dmitri Williams, U of Southern California, USA Videorec as a Form of Gameplay: Ways in Which the Recording of Play Contributes to the Engagement, Analysis, and Development of Videogames Gabriel Menotti Gonring, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM 6626 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Economic and Political Ripples and the Shaping of Media Industries Global Communication and Social Change Chair Joe F. Khalil, Northwestern U in Qatar, USA Participants From Europe to the Arab World: Media Moguls, Cities, and Clusters Joe F. Khalil, Northwestern U in Qatar, USA Neoliberal Intimation, Colonial Administration, and the Privatization of Telegraphy in Gibraltar, 19141944 (Challenging the History of Neoliberalism in Communication Studies) Bryce Peake, U of Oregon, USA Postcrisis Globalization and Media Internationalization Strategy of Emerging Countries: The Angolan Case Rita Maria Figueiras, Catholic U of Portugal, PORTUGAL Nelson Costa Ribeiro, Catholic U of Portugal, PORTUGAL Rupture and Revitalization: Colonial Governance, China, and the Reconfiguration of the Hong Kong Film Industry Sylvia Janet Martin, Pomona College, USA The Formation of a Global Formats Trade System Jean K. Chalaby, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM 6627 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 The Social, Economic, and Affective Materialities of Facebook Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Mark Edward Cote, Victoria U, AUSTRALIA Participants Data Motility: The Nonhuman Materiality of Big Social Data Mark Edward Cote, Victoria U, AUSTRALIA Facebook as Multivalence Machine: The Continuity of Affect, Data, and Economic Value Carolin Gerlitz, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Happy Accidents: Facebook and the Value of Affect Tero Karppi, U of Turku, FINLAND Accumulating Affect: Social Networks and Their Archives of Feelings Jennifer Pybus, McMaster U, CANADA Facebook has both expanded and intensified social relations in an unprecedented manner while developing a new market paradigm for extracting value from the voluminous social data generated therein. Existing conceptual frames offer partial understanding. Convergence and/or Web 2.0 clarify the quotidian conflation of work and play, and new mediated cultural practices where consumption elides with production. Also, the Foucauldian concept of biopower offers a robust analysis of how the everyday life of the social body has become a focus of power and value. Yet key elements, such as social data, affective relations, and the specific materialities of the platform in which it transpires, demand a sustained theoretical focus and critique. Our panel will draw on its strong body of international research to offer four highly resonant but unique lines of critical inquiry into the conflation of social and economic relations in social networks. 6628 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Transcending Visual Communication: The Internet as Multimodal Discourse Visual Communication Studies Chair Hans-Juergen Bucher, U of Trier, GERMANY Participants Transcending Visual Communication: The Internet as Multimodal Discourse Hans-Juergen Bucher, U of Trier, GERMANY Christian Volker Pentzold, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Gunther Kress, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Philipp Niemann, Trier U, GERMANY Elisabetta Adami, U degli Studi "G. d'Annunzio" Chieti-Pescara, ITALY Using Multimodal Analysis in Investigating Digital Texts: The Case of Food Blogs Gunther Kress, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Elisabetta Adami, U degli Studi "G. d'Annunzio" Chieti-Pescara, ITALY From Multimodality to Hypermodality: User Navigation as Semiotic Process of Meaning Making Hans-Juergen Bucher, U of Trier, GERMANY Multimodal Online Campaigning: The Relevance of the Modal Orchestration for the Potential Political Impact of Party Website Features Philipp Niemann, Trier U, GERMANY The Structures and Practices of Multimodal Online Discourse Christian Volker Pentzold, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY This panel will bring together experts from different research centres on multimodal discourse from Germany, England and Italy to present different disciplinary approaches on multimodal online communication. Therefore the four presentations refer to quite different theoretical traditions: to functional linguistics and socio-semiotics (Adam/Kress), to audience research and reception theory (Bucher; Niemann), to theories of public communication (Niemann; Pentzold), to discourse theory and ethnography (Pentzold). The panel will discuss theoretical and empirical approaches and exemplify them with case studies on weblogs dealing with food issues, political online communication, websites from welfare organizations, online newspapers and online news media. The intention of the panel is first to present the theoretical tools for analyzing online-communication as multimodal discourse and second to demonstrate the potentials of a multimodal approach to the Internet. 6631 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Board Room 1 Challenging Values and Agency in Environmental Communication Sponsored Sessions Chair Mark S. Meisner, IECA, USA Participants Environmental Communication in Wider Context Tom Crompton, World Wildlife Fund - UK, UNITED KINGDOM Pride Campaigns and Community Values: An Examination of Positive Messaging Stacey Kathryn Sowards, U of Texas - El Paso, USA Environmental Movements, Democratic Publics, and Rhetorical Culture: The Challenges of Public Activism Terence Check, College of St. Benedict / St. John's U, USA The Environmentalist’s Dilemma Revisited: Intrinsic Values in Environmental Communication Mark S. Meisner, IECA, USA This panel challenges existing assumptions about the relationships between values and agency in environmental communication. Questions related to values are at the heart of current debates about short and long-term goals for environmental communication. This panel of practitioners and academics considers these in terms of practical outcomes, as well as identity and sense of agency among the citizenry, willingness to engage in civil society, and the rhetorical choices that stem from them. 6632 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Board Room 2 Constructing Group and Intergroup Identities Through Narratives and Dialogue Intergroup Communication Participants Narratives of Trauma and Reconciliation Leonard C. Hawes, U of Utah, USA Identity Dilemmas for Israeli Settlers Don Ellis, U of Hartford, USA Dangerous Stories: Encountering Narratives of the Other in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: Processes, Effects, Identity, and Moral Response Yiftach Ron, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Ifat Maoz, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL French–Israelis: Narratives of Hybrid Identities Esther Schely-Newman, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL The Arabic Language and Ideas of the Nation Cameila Sulieman, Michigan State U, USA Respondent Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA This panel will explore theoretical and methodological issues related to the construction and reconstruction of group and intergroup identities through various practices of communication. This will be explored in different research settings and while relating to diverse groups defined by different parameters: national, ethnic, language, political and cultural - with special attention to the emergence of hybrid identities through different societal processes and dynamics such as intergroup conflict, conflict resolution and integration. In this framework we will also discuss and reassess methodologies and practices such as the narrative approach, discourse analysis and ethnographic studies, through which construction of identities through intergroup communication is studied as well as their societal and ethical entailment 6633 Wednesday 15:30-16:45 Board Room 3 Status Quo and Future Perspectives of Children’s Film Research in Europe Sponsored Sessions Chairs Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Franziska Matthes, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Participants Lothar Mikos, U Autónoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Becky Parry, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Malena Janson, Stockholm U, SWEDEN This roundtable shall be used to bring scholars together to discuss about the status quo and future perspectives in children’s film research from various scientific perspectives with a special note on European films for children. 6702 International Communication Association Annual Awards and Presidential Address Wednesday 17:00-18:15 Balmoral Sponsored Sessions 6813 East Asia Networking Session Wednesday 18:30-19:30 St. James Sponsored Sessions Chair Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Chair Jiro Takai, Nagoya U, JAPAN This session is designed as a networking opportunity for scholars from the East Asia region. You are encouraged to attend and meet others from your geopgraphical region and discuss possible ways to collaborate, explore ideas on how ICA can better meet your needs, and address issues such as journal publication, conference presnetations, and any other topics that seem relevant. Refreshments will be provided. 6814 European Networking Session Wednesday 18:30-19:30 Regent's Sponsored Sessions Chair Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM This session is designed as a networking opportunity for scholars from the European region. You are encouraged to attend and meet others from your geopgraphical region and discuss possible ways to collaborate, explore ideas on how ICA can better meet your needs, and address issues such as journal publication, conference presnetations, and any other topics that seem relevant. Refreshments will be provided. 6816 Oceania/Africa Networking Session Wednesday 18:30-19:30 Belgrave Sponsored Sessions Chair Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA This session is designed as a networking opportunity for scholars from the Oceania/Africa region. You are encouraged to attend and meet others from your geopgraphical region and discuss possible ways to collaborate, explore ideas on how ICA can better meet your needs, and address issues such as journal publication, conference presnetations, and any other topics that seem relevant. Refreshments will be provided. 6817 The Americas (Not Including the US) Networking Session Wednesday 18:30-19:30 Berkeley Sponsored Sessions Chair Roberta G. Lentz, McGill U, CANADA This session is designed as a networking opportunity for scholars from the Americas (not including the US)region. You are encouraged to attend and meet others from your geopgraphical region and discuss possible ways to collaborate, explore ideas on how ICA can better meet your needs, and address issues such as journal publication, conference presnetations, and any other topics that seem relevant. Refreshments will be provided. 6818 West Asia Networking Session Wednesday 18:30-19:30 Cadogan Sponsored Sessions Chair Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL This session is designed as a networking opportunity for scholars from the West Asia region. You are encouraged to attend and meet others from your geopgraphical region and discuss possible ways to collaborate, explore ideas on how ICA can better meet your needs, and address issues such as journal publication, conference presnetations, and any other topics that seem relevant. Refreshments will be provided. 6800 Wednesday 19:00-21:00 Dining Room 880 Wednesday 19:00-21:00 Dining Room 6800 Wednesday 19:00-21:00 Dining Room Ethnicity and Race in Communication, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies, and Popular Communication Joint Reception (OFF SITE) Ethnicity and Race in Communication Joint Boat Party of the Popular Communication Division, Ethnicity and Race in Communication Division, and Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Interest Group on the River Thames. Sponsored by Stockholm University, Department of Media Studies; Taylor and Francis and Popular Communication: The International Journal of Media and Culture; and the Media, Culture and Society Programme at the University of Surrey. Those wishing to take part in a guided walk to Westminster Pier should gather in the lobby by 18:00. Those traveling by Underground should allow 30 minutes for their journey (Jubilee Line to Embankment). A taxi will take 15-20 minutes. For more information on transport to and from the MS Erasmus, please consult the PopComm, ERIC, and GLBT pages on the ICA website and/or their Facebook pages. Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies, Ethnicity and Race in Communication, and Popular Communication Joint Reception (OFF SITE) Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies Joint Boat Party of the Popular Communication Division, Ethnicity and Race in Communication Division, and Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Interest Group on the River Thames. Sponsored by Stockholm University, Department of Media Studies; Taylor and Francis and Popular Communication: The International Journal of Media and Culture; and the Media, Culture and Society Programme at the University of Surrey. Those wishing to take part in a guided walk to Westminster Pier should gather in the lobby by 18:00. Those traveling by Underground should allow 30 minutes for their journey (Jubilee Line to Embankment). A taxi will take 15-20 minutes. For more information on transport to and from the MS Erasmus, please consult the PopComm, ERIC, and GLBT pages on the ICA website and/or their Facebook pages. Popular Communication, Ethnicity and Race in Communication, and Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies Joint Reception (OFF SITE) Popular Communication Joint Boat Party of the Popular Communication Division, Ethnicity and Race in Communication Division, and Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Interest Group on the River Thames. Sponsored by Stockholm University, Department of Media Studies; Taylor and Francis and Popular Communication: The International Journal of Media and Culture; and the Media, Culture and Society Programme at the University of Surrey. Those wishing to take part in a guided walk to Westminster Pier should gather in the lobby by 18:00. Those traveling by Underground should allow 30 minutes for their journey (Jubilee Line to Embankment). A taxi will take 15-20 minutes. For more information on transport to and from the MS Erasmus, please consult the PopComm, ERIC, and GLBT pages on the ICA website and/or their Facebook pages. 7014 ICA Past Presidents' Breakfast Thursday 07:00-09:15 Regent's Sponsored Sessions 7105 Nations, Corporations and International Structures: Perspectives on the History of International Communication Thursday 08:00-09:15 Palace A Communication History Chair Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Projecting Power Overseas: The 1863 Paris Postal Conference, the American Civil War, and the Creation of International Communications Networks Richard John, Columbia U, USA Breaking the International News Cartel, 1933-34: New Evidence and a New Analysis Gene Allen, Ryerson U, CANADA Reuters and the Idea of a British Commonwealth News Agency in the Aftermath of the Second World War Peter Putnis, U of Canberra, AUSTRALIA An Overview of News-Agency "Company" Archives: AP, Reuters (Thomson-Reuters), and France's Havas, OFI, AFP... Michael Palmer, U of Paris - Sorbonne, FRANCE This panel provides four case studies of how the international communication system was shaped between the 1860s and 1960s, concluding with a reflection on how knowledge about this evolution is created. The case studies examine the varying roles of national interest and corporate strategy – two of the major threads in analyzing the creation of international communication structures -- and the ways in which these have overlapped. 7106 Dealing With Difficult Issues in Organizations: Gossip, Dissent, and Exit Thursday 08:00-09:15 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Justin P. Boren, Santa Clara U, USA Participants Communicating Organizational Exit: The Development and Validation of the Peer-Influenced Exit Measure Michael Sollitto, West Virginia U, USA Keith David Weber, West Virginia U, USA Rebecca M. Chory, West Virginia U, USA Different Ways to Disagree: A Mixed Methods Exploration of Organizational Dissent Johny T. Garner, Texas Christian U, USA Exploring Others’ Perceptions of Dissent Expression: Testing the Viability of the Organizational Dissent Scale as an Other Report Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Jeffrey Kassing, Arizona State U, USA Audra Rebecca Diers, Strategy Consulting, GERMANY Gossip in the Workplace: An Exploration of Organizational Gossip Topics, Emotional Responses, and Communication Changes Jessalyn I. Vallade, West Virginia U, USA Rebecca M. Chory, West Virginia U, USA Respondent Vernon D. Miller, Michigan State U, USA 7107 Comparative Perspectives on Media and Political Communication Thursday 08:00-09:15 Palace C Political Communication Chair Katrin Voltmer, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Deliberative Strengths and Weaknesses in Television News: Insights From the US, Germany, and Russia Hartmut Wessler, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Eike Mark Rinke, U of Mannheim, GERMANY News and Gendered Knowledge Gaps: A Media Systems Perspective Lilach Nir, Hebrew U / U of Pennsylvania, USA Parties, Ideology, and News Media in Central-Eastern and Western Europe Laia Castro Herrero, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Sven Engesser, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND The Content of the Message: Effects of Media and Interpersonal Communication on EU Evaluations Pieterjan Desmet, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Joost van Spanje, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 7108 Computer-Mediated Deception Thursday 08:00-09:15 York Communication and Technology Chair Rabindra A. Ratan, Michigan State U, USA Participants People, Place and Time: The Daily Rhythms of Deception in Interpersonal Text Messaging Madeline E Smith, Northwestern U, USA Jeremy Birnholtz, Northwestern U, USA Lindsay Reynolds, Cornell U, USA Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA Avatar-Driven Deception in a Virtual Environment Rosalie Hooi, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Hichang Cho, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Lies in the Eye of the Beholder: Self-Other Asymmetry in Beliefs About Deception Across Interpersonal Media Catalina Laura Toma, U of Wisconsin, USA L.Crystal Jiang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA Everyday Deception or Prolific Liars? A New Approach to the Prevalence of Deception Lindsay Reynolds, Cornell U, USA Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA Jeremy Birnholtz, Northwestern U, USA Madeline E Smith, Northwestern U, USA 7109 Social Network and Social Support Thursday 08:00-09:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Yoram M. Kalman, Open U of Israel, ISRAEL Participants Lurking as an Active Participation Process: A Longitudinal Investigation of Engagement With an Online Cancer Support Group Jeong Yeob Han, U of Georgia, USA Jiran Hou, U of Georgia, USA Eunkyung Kim, U of Georgia, USA David H Gustafson, U of Wisconsin, USA How Does Online Social Networking Enhance Life Satisfaction? The Relationships Among Online Supportive Interaction, Affect, Sense of Community, and Life Satisfaction Hyun Jung Oh, Michigan State U, USA Elif Yilmaz Ozkaya, Michigan State U, USA Robert Larose, Michigan State U, USA The Weakness of Strong Ties: Online Social Support From Networks via Facebook Introduction Bobby L. Rozzell, U of Oklahoma, USA Cameron Wade Piercy, U of Oklahoma, USA Caleb T. Carr, Illinois State U, USA Shawn King, U of Oklahoma, USA Brianna L. Lane, U of Oklahoma, USA Michael Tornes, U of Oklahoma, USA Amy Janan Johnson, U of Oklahoma, USA Kevin B. Wright, Saint Louis U, USA Online vs. Offline Social Support: How Do They Pay Into Satisfaction With Social Support and Satisfaction With Life? Sabine Trepte, U of Hamburg, GERMANY Tobias Dienlin, Hamburg Media School, GERMANY Leonard Reinecke, U of Mainz, GERMANY 7111 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Waterloo/Tower Framing Health Messages: From Campaigns to Mass Media Coverage Health Communication Chair Hyunmin Lee, Saint Louis U, USA Participants Effects of Culturally Adapted Health Promotion Message Framing Soojung Kim, U of Minnesota, USA Jisu Huh, U of Minnesota, USA Effectiveness of Cigarette Warning Labels: Exploring the Impact of Graphics, Message Framing, and Temporal Framing Xiaoli Nan, U of Maryland, USA Xiaoquan Zhao, George Mason U, USA Bo Yang, U of Maryland, USA Irina Iles, U of Maryland, USA Framing Attributes of Information Subsidies as Predictors of Pandemic News Seow Ting Lee, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Coverage of Autism Spectrum Disorder in the U.S. TV News: An Analysis of Framing Seok Kang, U of Texas - San Antonio, USA 7112 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Chelsea/Richmond Health Communication and the Mass Media: Advertising and Journalism Issues Health Communication Chair Jennifer Cornacchione, Michigan State U, USA Participants Overcoming Consumer Suspicion of Advocacy Advertising: An Exploration of the Persuasive Effects of Self-Brand Connections -- Top Paper/Health Communication Division Christina Valerie Malik, U of North Carolina, USA Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of North Carolina, USA Consumers' Attitude Towards Advertising of Medical Professionals Kara Chan, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Lennon Leung Lun Tsang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Vivienne, Shuet Yan Leung, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Health Journalism Reform: Cultivating Solutions With Media Logic to Improve Communication About Health Determinants Amanda Hinnant, U of Missouri, USA Joy Jenkins, U of Missouri, USA Roma Subramanian, U of Missouri, USA Analyzing Extended Parallel Process Model and Health Belief Model Constructs in Texting While Driving News Coverage in Leading U.S. News Media Outlets Taejin Jung, SUNY – Oswego, USA Maria Brann, West Virginia U, USA 7113 Media Literacy/Media Education: Guiding Principles and Applied Research (Extended Session) Thursday 08:00-10:45 St. James Children Adolescents and Media Participants Media Education: Introductory Remarks David Buckingham, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Conceptualizing Media and Other Literacies Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Using Media Literacy to Teach Young Children About Advertising, Nutrition and Persuasive Intent Cynthia L. Scheibe, Ithaca College, USA To Guide or to be the Sage: Varying Facilitator Prompts Following a Media Literacy Curriculum Erica L. Scharrer, U of Massachusetts, USA Laras Sekarasih, U of Massachusetts, USA Kimberly R. Walsh, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Christine Olson, U of Massachusetts, USA Donica O'Malley, U of Massachusetts, USA Media Production as a Way to Increase Collaboration Skills: A Media Literacy Experiment Elizaveta Provorova, Temple U, USA Young People, Sex and the Media: Challenging Assumptions About Media Literacy and Sexual Learning Kath Albury, U of New South Wales, AUSTRALIA Efficacy of a School-Based Intervention to Reduce Screen Media Time for 6th-8th Graders David S. Bickham, Children's Hospital Boston/Harvard Medical School, USA Yulin Hswen, Boston Children's Hospital/Harvard U, USA Kristine Paulsen, Take the Challenge Foundation, USA Media Education Research and Theory: Concluding Remarks Renee Hobbs, U of Rhode Island, USA Respondents Erica Weintraub Austin, Washington State U, USA Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA Esther Rozendaal, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Rebekah Willett, U of Wisconsin, USA Allison Butler, Western Connecticut State U, USA Srividya Ramasubramanian, Texas A&M U, USA Erica L. Scharrer, U of Massachusetts, USA This extended session features remarks from internationally renowned media education scholars, including David Buckingham, Sonia Livingstone, and Renee Hobbs. It will also feature the presentation of competitively selected papers with Erica Weintraub Austin (one of the most prolific scholars of media education) serving as expert respondent. Finally, there will be small group interactions--led by emerging and established researchers in the field--that will involve the audience in discussion of relevant theoretical principles and directions in research. 7116 Citizen Journalism: Global Perspectives on an Emerging Phenomenon Thursday 08:00-09:15 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Einar Thorsen, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Citizen Eyewitness Images and Audience Engagement in Crisis Coverage Laura Ahva, U of Tampere, FINLAND Maria Hellman, , SWEDEN Beyond Control and Resistance: Transforming Journalism in the Chinese Microblogosphere Le Han, U of Pennsylvania, USA Collaborative, Complementary, and Negotiated Journalistic Professionalism: A Case Study of OhmyNews in a Participatory Media Climate Deborah S. Chung, U of Kentucky, USA Seungahn Nah, U of Kentucky, USA De-Westernizing New Media Discourse: The Case of Citizen Journalism in the Arab World (Top Three Student Paper) Omar Alghazzi, U of Pennsylvania, USA 7117 Cultivation Studies in Mass Communication Thursday 08:00-09:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Participants A Cross-Cultural Test of the Implicit Cultivation Process Florian Arendt, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Temple Northup, U of Houston, USA Crime Fiction, Procedural Fairness, and Trust in the Police Astrid Dirikx, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Meta-Analysis of Genre-Specific Cultivation Studies Rachael A Record, U of Kentucky, USA Online vs. Memory Based: Variables Explaining and Moderating the Occurrence and Interrelation of First- and Second-Order Cultivation Effects Anna Schnauber, U of Mainz, GERMANY Christine E. Meltzer, U of Mainz, GERMANY Television Drama Viewing and Romantic Beliefs: Parasocial Interaction as Mediator and Attachment Styles as Antecedent Borae Jin, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Joohan Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 7118 Messages, Emotions, and Physiological Measures Thursday 08:00-09:15 Cadogan Information Systems Chair Satoko Kurita, Osaka U of Economics, JAPAN Participants Mediated Empathy as an Embodied Motivated Process Anthony Sean Almond, U of Missouri, USA Freya Sukalla, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Russell Brent Clayton, U of Missouri, USA Disgust Responses as a Function of Trait Motivational Activation and Disgust Sensitivity Bridget E Rubenking, U of Central Florida, USA Event-Related Brain Potentials During Emotional Pictures as a Function of Violent Game Exposure and Motivational Activation Satoko Kurita, Osaka U of Economics, JAPAN Intense News Photos, Motivational Activation and Processing of Online News Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri, USA Jennah Sontag, U of Missouri, USA Rachel Lara Davis, U of Missouri, USA Multitasking on a Computer: Emotions and the Frequency, Anticipation, and Prediction of TaskSwitching Leo Yeykelis, Stanford U, USA James J Cummings, Stanford U, USA Byron Reeves, Stanford U, USA Processing of Fear and Disgust in Natural Disaster Images Rachel Lara Davis, U of Missouri, USA Resting Heart Rate Variability as a Predictor of Trait Motivational Reactivity Rachel L. Bailey, Indiana U, USA Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA Sneers and Double-Takes: An Examination of Emotional and Cognitive Responses to Mediated Disgust Bridget E Rubenking, U of Central Florida, USA 7121 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Popular Constructions of Race, Ethnicity, and Otherness Popular Communication Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Christopher Boulton, U of Tampa, USA Participants Trapped in a Generic Closet: The Black Sitcom and Containment of Gay Black Bodies Alfred Leonard Martin, Jr., U of Texas, USA Race, Place, and Performance: How HBO’s True Blood Imagines the South Dayna Earlene Chatman, U of Southern California, USA Asian Parties in the Netherlands: (Re)producing Asianness in Dutch Nightlife Reza Kartosen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Homeland: The Homegrown Terrorist, The Enemy, “Our” Double -- Top Paper in Pop Comm Piotr Michal Szpunar, U of Pennsylvania, USA The "Guido" Situation: Constructing Ethnicity on MTV's Jersey Shore Alexandra Sastre, U of Pennsylvania, USA 7122 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Digital Cultures, Migration, and the Regulation of Citizenship Global Communication and Social Change Communication and Technology Chair Karina Horsti, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Participants Digital Islamophobia: Circulation of a Rape Image and the Scandinavian Woman as a Figure of Pure Whiteness Karina Horsti, U of Helsinki, FINLAND A Voice of One’s Own? Migration, Gender, and Citizenship in a Polymedia Environment Maria Mirca Madianou, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Rethinking Otherness: Cosmopolitanism and New Platforms Elke Grittmann, Leuphana U Lüneburg, GERMANY Tanja Thomas, U of Lueneburg, GERMANY Accumulating Legitmacy: Digital Networks and the Documentation of Dreams Radha S. Hegde, New York U, USA New media practices and convergence culture shape the spheres and structures where citizenship and belonging are re-negotiated. Bordering capabilities of digitalization and globalization shift understandings of binaries such as the national/ global, private/ public, and professional/ amateur. While newer pathways of migration are emerging, nations are enforcing stricter versions of border control and regulating citizenship. On the ground, cultural citizenship is increasingly shaped in popular and more participatory forms of communication and narratives of migration are being shaped through newer forms and networks of sociality. The intersection of digital technology and migration has opened up a vibrant area of study. This panel hopes to contribute and extend this discussion by exploring the ways in which citizenship is defined, performed and communicated in the global context. 7123 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Public Relations and Crisis Public Relations Chair Friederike Schultz, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants A State TV’s Reputation Restoration After a Devastating Disaster: Framing Analysis of Journalistic Reflection on Sichuan Earthquake Joanne Chen Lyu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Kelly Yuying Dong, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Animal Rights vs. Nationalism: A Semantic Network Analysis of Value Advocacy in Corporate Crisis Aimei Yang, U of Dayton, USA Shari R. Veil, U of Kentucky, USA Message Convergence as a Message-Centered Approach to Analyzing and Improving Risk Communication Kathryn Elizabeth Anthony, U of Kentucky, USA Timothy Sellnow, U of Kentucky, USA Moving Toward a Stakeholder-Centric View of Crisis Communication: Implications for Practice and Society Timothy Coombs, U of Central Florida, USA Sherry J. Holladay, U of Central Florida, USA 7124 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Culture, Work, and Organization Intercultural Communication Chair Sorin Nastasia, Southern Illinois U, USA Participants Computing Social Networks and Clustering Culture: A Communication Research on a National Level Jianxun CHU, U of Science and Technology of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Wenbo Luo, U of Science and Technology of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF EVE J. Yang, U of Michigan, USA Shukun Tang, U of Science and Technology of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Explaining Cohesion Linkages in Workgroups: The Cooperative Communication in Collectivism and High Power Distance Workgroup Context Hassan Abu Bakar, U of Utara - Malaysia, MALAYSIA Haslina Halim, U Utara Malaysia, MALAYSIA Filling the Trust Gap in Transcultural and Transnational Business Relations: Sinicization Within SinoChilean Economic Exchange Claudia Labarca, Pontificia U Catolica de Chile, CHILE The Perception of “Cultural Awareness” in German-South Korean Business Negotiations Christiane Geissler, Dresden International U, GERMANY The Relationship between Individual, Organizational and Non-Work Factors and Cross-Cultural Adjustment: The Mediating Role of Communication Haslina Halim, U Utara Malaysia, MALAYSIA Hassan Abu Bakar, U of Utara - Malaysia, MALAYSIA Che Su Mustaffa, U Utara Malaysia, MALAYSIA 7125 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 ERIC Roundtable: Ethnicity and Race in the Digital Age Ethnicity and Race in Communication Communication and Technology Chair Roopali Mukherjee, CUNY - Queens College, USA Participants Vloggers and the "Black” Label: Audience Understandings of “Black” Media in the Digital Age Gretta Moody, U of Pennsylvania, USA Tweeting #Palestine: Twitter and the Mediation of Palestine Eugenia Siapera, Aristotle U of Thessaloniki, GREECE When Ethnic Humor Goes Digital Lillian A Boxman-Shabtai, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Limor Shifman, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Connected Viewing Across a Dangerous Border: Latino Families Watch Television in the Space of Flows Ikram Toumi, U of Texas, USA Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas, USA Exploring the Impact of Ethnic Identity Through Other Generated Cues on Perceptions of Spokesperson Credibility among Caucasian and African American Audiences Patric R. Spence, U of Kentucky, USA Stephen Spates, U of Tennessee, USA Xialing Lin, U of Kentucky, USA CJ Gentile, Western Michigan U, USA Kenneth Alan Lachlan, U of Massachusetts - Boston, USA Katie Reno, U of Tennessee, USA Hispanics’ Motivations to Use Social Networking Sites for Brand Communication: The Role of Cultural Factors Sigal Segev, Florida International U, USA Weirui Wang, Florida International U, USA Rosanna Fiske, República, USA 7126 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Looking Outward: The Complexities of Public Diplomacy/Nation Branding Global Communication and Social Change Chair Young-Gil Chae, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, USA Participants A New World of Spectacle: China’s Central Television and Its Significant Other, 1992-2006 Yunya Song, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Tsan-Kuo Chang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Beyond 2010: Assessing South Africa’s Domestic Nation Branding Strategy Nora A Draper, U of Pennsylvania, USA Cold War International Broadcasting in the Post-Cold War Era: South Korea, U.S., and China Young-Gil Chae, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, USA Baye Yoon, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Networks of Freedom, Networks of Control: The Internet's Complicated Role in Public Diplomacy Amelia Hardee Arsenault, Georgia State U, USA 7127 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Technology and Society in the Digital Age Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants From Mediation to Mediatization: The Institutionalization of New Media Stig Hjarvard, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Networked Individuality: Implications of Current Media Change for Social Theory Marian Thomas Adolf, Zeppelin U, GERMANY Dennis Manfred Deicke, Zeppelin U, GERMANY Slices of Time: Exploring Temporal Capital in a Digital Age Cynthia Wang, U of Southern California, USA Understanding the Backbone of Technology: A Conceptual Model to Research Code Lela Mosemghvdlishvili, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jeroen Jansz, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 7128 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Provoke: Five Minutes Feminist Interventions Challenging Communication Research Feminist Scholarship Participants Communication for Empowerment: Measurement and Questions of Power Emily G LeRoux-Rutledge, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Dr. Jenevieve Mannell, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Provoke: Disruption and Subversion in the Digital: Women Perform Public Memory Deborah James, Governors State U, USA The Gendering of Mobile Technology in South Asia: Examining How Mobile Phones Are Used by Women/Girls in Rural Pakistan, Bangladesh, and India Sadaf R. Ali, Eastern Michigan U, USA Suture and Scars: Evidencing the Struggles of Academic Feminism Mél Hogan, Concordia U, CANADA Andrea Zeffiro, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Feminist Research Praxis in Multicultural Settings Koen Leurs, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Changing the State of Play: Feminist Interventions in Game Culture Alison Harvey, U of Toronto, CANADA Kelly Bergstrom, York U, CANADA Immaterial, Precarious, Affective: Academic Feminism and the Feminization of Academic Labour Tamara Shepherd, Ryerson U, CANADA “Your Body is a Battleground”: Theorizing the Politics of the Body in Barbara Kruger’s Feminist CultureJamming Michael Glassco, U of Iowa, USA Meenakshi Gigi Durham, U of Iowa, USA Respondents Sandra Ponzanesi, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Anne Balsamo, U of Southern California, USA 7131 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Board Room 1 Approaches to the Contemporary Study of Communication in Russia Sponsored Sessions Chair Michael David Hazen, Wake Forest U, USA Participants Understanding as the Beginning of Agreement: The Challenges of Intercultural Family Communication Olga Leontovich, Volgograd State Pedagogical U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Communication Research Paradigms in Russia: Challenges and Approaches Viacheslav B. Kashkin, Voronezh State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Computer-Mediated Communication Research in Russia Irina Rozina, Russian Communication Association, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Reframing Theoretical Concepts in Russian Media Studies: Interpreting Mass Media and Journalism Elena Vartanova, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Local and Glocal: Communicating Identity in a Globalized World Elena Gritsenko, Linguistics U of Nizhny Novgorod, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Alexandra Laletina, Linguistics U of Nizhny Novgorod, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Key Features of Internet Communication Svetlana Viktorovna Ivanova, Bashkir State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Verbal Abuse: Russian View V I Zhelvis, K. D. Ushinsky State Pedagogical U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Culture-Specific Approach to the Study of Internet Communicative Behavior of Russian Users Irina Privalova, Higher School of Realty (Institute), RUSSIAN FEDERATION Theorizing Press in Post-Soviet Societies Galina V. Sinekopova, Eastern Washington U, USA Elderly People and Computers: New Perspective in Russian Communication Research Olga Vyacheslavovna Sergeyeva, Volgograd State Pedagogical U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Urban Studies in Russian Public Relations Education Alexandra Kvyat, Omsk State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION How Does Non-Bona-Fide Discourse Fit in the Existing Models of Communication? Ksenia M Shilikhina, Voronezh State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION The study of communication in Post-Soviet Russia has become an important part of the academic scene in Russia. Approaches have depended on both traditional perspectives and new theoretical developments. This panel provides a survey of contemporary research programs in the areas of mass media, new media, intercultural communication, public relations, interpersonal communication, and linguistics. 7132 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Board Room 2 Conceptualizing the Public, Localism and Coregulation in Broadcast Regulation Communication Law & Policy Chair Victor W. Pickard, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Advances and Uncertainties in the Laws for Public Radio and TV Broadcasting in Three South American Countries: Argentina, Brazil, and Ecuador Sonia Virginia Moreira, Rio de Janeiro State U, BRAZIL The Canadian Digital Television Transition: Testing the Limits of Co-Regulation Gregory A.K. Taylor, Ryerson U, CANADA International Comparisons of "Local Media Ecology" Studies: Implications for the Canadian Regulatory Context Christopher Ali, U of Pennsylvania, USA Public Value as a Media Policy Buzzword Hallvard Moe, U of Bergen, NORWAY Hilde Dy Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 7133 Thursday 08:00-09:15 Board Room 3 From Theory to Practice: Exploring Social Media as an Instructional Tool Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Christine Greenhow, Michigan State U, USA Participants The Hybrid Schoolhouse: When Digital and Traditional Education Meet Julia Sonnevend, Columbia U, USA Digital Media, Copyright Reform, and Educational Progress Nicholas Bramble, Yale U, USA Mobile Learning: Connectivity and Education in Developing Countries Colin Agur, Columbia U, USA Interaction and Training: Social Media in News Organizations Valerie Belair-Gagnon, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent Laura Denardis, American U, USA This panel explores uses for social media as a teaching tool in multiple educational contexts, with a comparative and international set of papers. The participants represent several fields of study: education, sociology, journalism, law, and political economy. They also bring perspectives from educational systems in the United States, Canada, the UK, Eastern Europe, South Asia, and East Asia. This range of cultural and disciplinary variety gives the panel members a rich set of experiences with learners and technologies in multiple contexts. The panel conceives learning as a dynamic and multifaceted process, and examines ways that social media can enrich the learning experience. 7205 Cultural Framing and Communication Practices Thursday 09:30-10:45 Palace A Communication History Chair David E. Morrison, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Top Student Paper: The Unobserved Observer: Humphrey Spender's Hidden Camera and the Politics of Visibility in Interwar Britain Annie Rudd, Columbia U, USA Canned Music and Captive Audiences: The Battle Over the Public Soundscape at Grand Central Terminal Matthew F. Jordan, Pennsylvania State U, USA Good News: The Carmel Newsreels and Their Place in the Emerging Hebrew Language Media oren Soffer, Open U of Israel, ISRAEL Tamar Liebes, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Rumors of the Death of Cash: The Diners’ Club Card Network, 1950–1969 Lana Swartz, U of Southern California, USA The constituent elements of a history of communication are open to ongoing debate, but one starting point for discussion must be the nature and extent of the situation of communicaton practices in cultural forms. These papers explore the complex nature of that embeddedness through personal, visual and aural case studies. 7206 Follow Me: Leadership Communication and Rhetoric in Organizations Thursday 09:30-10:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Hassan Abu Bakar, U of Utara - Malaysia, MALAYSIA Participants Communicative Leadership: Leaders and Members Reflecting on Leadership and Communication Solange Barros de Alcantara Hamrin, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Catrin E. Johansson, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Jody Jahn, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Conversation at Work: The Effects of Leader-Member Conversational Quality Guowei Jian, Cleveland State U, USA Francis Dalisay, Cleveland State U, USA International Business Organism: The Mimetic Code in Corporate Rhetoric and Transformation at IBM Jaclyn Lee Selby, U of Southern California, USA Examining the Behavioral Aspect of Leader-Member Exchange: The Integral Roles of Leadership Style and Communication Exchange Vivian C. Sheer, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondent Dennis Tourish, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM 7207 Shaping Political News Coverage Thursday 09:30-10:45 Palace C Political Communication Journalism Studies Chair Jan Kleinnijenhuis, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Changing Election News Coverage in Increasingly Commercialized Media: A Systematic Comparison Across Time and Across Media Types Linards Udris, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND To Be is to be Seen: Party Leaders in Swedish News Photographs Johannes Bjerling, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Understanding the Influence of Journalists and Politicians on Content: A Cross-Longitudinal Analysis of Chilean Political News Coverage Claudia Mellado, U of Santiago, CHILE Kevin Rafter, Dublin Institute of Technology, IRELAND How Does Beauty Shape Political News in Television? The Effect of Physical Attractiveness of the Israeli Politicians on the Tone of Their News Coverage Dana Markowitz-Elfassi, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL 7208 Research on Clicks: Liking and Sharing in the Air Thursday 09:30-10:45 York Communication and Technology Chair Akiba A. Cohen, Emek Yezreel Academic College, ISRAEL Participants “What’s on Your Mind?": Why Facebook Users Click “Like” Katie Lever-Mazzuto, Western Connecticut State U, USA Liking as Affective Connection: Emotional Branding and Clicking Behaviors on the Facebook Web Platform Jay Brower, Western Connecticut State U, USA City, Media Fans, and Social Media Szu-Yin Yeh, Shih Hsin U, TAIWAN Chick to Share: Touristic Experiences in Real Time Yi-Fan Chen, Old Dominion U, USA Respondent James E. Katz, Boston U, USA Millions of social media users click their mobile media and their computer mice to “like” or to “share” media content each day. The panel examines clickable behaviors from both users and producers’ sides. 7209 New Marketing Strategies for New Consumers in New Media Thursday 09:30-10:45 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Sun Joo (Grace) Ahn, U of Georgia, USA Participants Conceptualizing Social Media Integration: The Evolution of Online Marketing Communication Andrea B. Hollingshead, U of Southern California, USA Young Ji Kim, U of Southern California, USA William Scott Sanders, U of Southern California, USA Hierarchical Antecedents of In-App Advertising Effectiveness Sang Chon Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA Daniel Ng, U of Oklahoma, USA You Got Coffee in My Racing Game: Brand Congruity and Reality in Video Game Advertising Ted Dickinson, Ohio State U, USA Michael Hanus, Ohio State U, USA Jesse Fox, Ohio State U, USA Understanding the Psychology of Mobile Shopping of the Millennial Generation in China: A Lifestyle Approach Ran Wei, U of South Carolina, USA Matthew Joseph Haught, U of South Carolina, USA Yang Xuerui, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Jin Zhang, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF 7211 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Waterloo/Tower Challenging Issues in Communicating Health Risk Health Communication Chair Saleem Elias Alhabash, Michigan State U, USA Participants Improvements to and Utilization of the Risk Behavior Diagnostic Scale to Increase Outdoor Smoke-Free Policy Compliance Rachael A Record, U of Kentucky, USA Risk and Efficacy: Genetic-Belief Profiles of Young Adults Using Latent Class Analysis Rachel A. Smith, Pennsylvania State U, USA Marisa Greenberg, Pennsylvania State U, USA Roxanne Parrott, Pennsylvania State U, USA Risk Promotion, Sensation-Seeking, and Behavior: Testing the Susceptibility Threshold Maria Knight Lapinski, Michigan State U, USA Lindsay Neuberger, U of Central Florida, USA Meredith Gore, Michigan State U, USA Katelyn Grayson, Michigan State U, USA Bret Muter, Michigan State U, USA Media Coverage as a Risk Factor for Suicide: New Evidence for a Werther Effect After Celebrity Suicide Reporting Markus Schaefer, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Oliver Quiring, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY 7212 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Chelsea/Richmond Playing Well With Others: Games and Community Game Studies Chair Thorsten Quandt, U Münster, GERMANY Participants Death of a Child, Birth of a Guild: Rethinking the Function of Weak Ties in Online Communities Nathaniel D. Poor, independent scholar, USA Cliff Lampe, U of Michigan, USA Marko M. Skoric, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Death of a Guild, Birth of a Network: Online Community Ties Within and Beyond Code Nathaniel D. Poor, independent scholar, USA Marko M. Skoric, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Laser Cannons and Placards: Social Movement Theory in Massively Multiplayer Online Games Joshua Andrew Clark, U of Southern California, USA Team Sports in Virtual Worlds: Are Clan Members Team Players in the Real World, too? Elisabeth Guenther, U Münster, GERMANY Ruth Festl, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Thorsten Quandt, U Münster, GERMANY We Came to Play: Studying MMOGs in Public Settings Nicholas Taylor, North Carolina State U, USA Jennifer Jenson, York U, CANADA Suzanne de Castell, U of Ontario Institute of Technology, CANADA Barak Dilouya, York U, CANADA 7216 Does Journalism's For-Profit Ownership Orientation Matter? Evidence From News Coverage Thursday 09:30-10:45 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair John C. Pollock, College of New Jersey, USA Participants Cracks in the Gates: The Market-Driven Newspaper Movement as a Precursor of “The-Future-of-NewsConsensus” Anthony Nadler, Ursinus College, USA Speed, Digital Media and News Coverage of Poverty Joanna Redden, Ryerson U, CANADA Framing Fraud: Discourse on Benefit Cheating in Sweden and the UK Ragnar Lundstroem, Umea U, SWEDEN Murder Incorporated: Organizational Influences on Coverage of the Annie Le Investigation Patrick Ferrucci, U of Missouri, USA Respondent Theodore L. Glasser, Stanford U, USA 7217 Narrative Persuasion Thursday 09:30-10:45 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Angeline L. Sangalang, U of Southern California, USA Participants Example, Please! Comparing the Effects of Single and Average Customer Reviews on Online Shoppers' Product Evaluations Marc Ziegele, U of Mainz, GERMANY Mathias Weber, U of Mainz, GERMANY Exploring Subtext Processing in Narrative Persuasion: The Role of Eudaimonic Entertainment Use Motivation and a Supplemental Conclusion Scene Elizabeth L. Cohen, West Virginia U, USA The Effectiveness of Adaptation of the Protagonist in Narrative Persuasion Anneke de Graaf, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Impact of Identification and Just Outcome Perceptions on the Evoking of Emotions Hans Hoeken, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS 7218 High Density: More Competative Papers in Interpersonal Communication Thursday 09:30-10:45 Cadogan Interpersonal Communication Chair Nancy Burrell, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Participants A Mediation Model of Parents’ References to Their Past Substance Use and Youths’ Substance Use Outcomes Jennifer Andrea Kam, U of Illinois, USA Ashley V Middleton, U of Illinois, USA Breaking Good and Bad News: Face-Implicating Concerns as Mediating the Relationship Between News Valence and Reluctance to Share the News Jayson L. Dibble, Hope College, USA Deaf or Hearing: A Hard of Hearing Individual's Navigation Between Two Worlds Brittany Nicole Lash, U of Kentucky, USA Donald W. Helme, U of Kentucky, USA Managerial Workplace Conversations: Influences and Reflections on Future Intent Ann M Rogerson, U of Wollongong, AUSTRALIA Managing the Intersections of Disclosure: Gendered and Raced Privacy in Mandated Reports of Sexual Violence Kate Lockwood Harris, U of Colorado, USA The Persistence of Interpersonal Resilience: Longitudinal Analysis of Communication in the Aftermath of Job Loss Gary A. Beck, Old Dominion U, USA The Relationship Between Narcissism, Humor Uses and Humor Styles Hailey Grace Gillen, West Virginia U, USA Melanie Booth-Butterfield, West Virginia U, USA “I Tell My Partner Everything . . . (or Not)”: Patients’ Perceptions of Sharing Heart-Related Information With Their Partner Maria G. Checton, College of Saint Elizabeth, USA Kathryn Greene, Rutgers U, USA 7221 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Social Media as Big Data, Big Business, Big Brother Popular Communication Participants The Political Economy of Algorithms: The Implications of Personalization Services in Social Media Sites Robert Bodle, College of Mount St. Joseph, USA Branded Content, Media Firms, and Data Mining: An Agenda for Research Joseph Turow, U of Pennsylvania, USA Tracing Worker Subjectivities in the Data Stream Alison Mary Virginia Hearn, U of Western Ontario, CANADA Crowd-Sourced User Surveillance on Social Media Daniel Trottier, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM What We Talk About When We Talk About Privacy Mark B. Andrejevic, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA What Do Social Media Users Think of Social Media Monitoring? Helen Kennedy, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Social media industries, experts, consultancies and companies have begun to emerge, offering a broad range of social media intelligence services. This roundtable brings together key scholars whose research interrogates the social media intelligence work that is undertaken in the name of big data, big business and big brother. In so doing, it draws together approaches from surveillance studies, Marxism, critical advertising studies, the philosophy of technology and social media usage studies to reflect key issues in social media monitoring, data-mining and analytics. 7222 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Communicating Protest Camps: Politics and Communication in the Occupy Movement and Beyond Global Communication and Social Change Chairs Anastasia Kavada, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Anna Feigenbaum, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants I Post, You Tweet, She Chats. And We All Occupy: Spaces of Struggles and Participation in Occupy Wall Street Alice Mattoni, European U Institute, ITALY Protest Camps as Political Communication Anna Feigenbaum, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Media Practices and Protest Camps Patrick McCurdy, U of Ottawa, UNITED KINGDOM Multiplatform Communication Strategies and the Occupy Movement Anastasia Kavada, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent Julie Uldam, Copenhagen Business School, UNITED KINGDOM In 2011, urban protest camps and occupations captured the world’s attention and imagination. From Tahrir Square to the tent city of Tel Aviv, from the encampments of the Los Indignados in Spain to the Occupy movement, enduring protests arose to demand democracy and fight austerity measures. This session seeks to examine some of the forms in which communication took place in these recent and contemporary expressions of protest camps, and related social movement spaces. The panel will explore how communication strategies arise and are implemented, and how practices become innovated and reified in the protesters’ diverse communication spaces, both real and mediated. 7223 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Investigating Ethical Questions Public Relations Chair Magda Pieczka, Queen Margaret U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Unequal Investors: Questioning the Ethicality of Australia’s Financial Sector Susan O'Byrne, Bellbird Consulting, AUSTRALIA Christine Daymon, Murdoch U, AUSTRALIA Public Relations as a Quest for Justice: Resource Dependency and the Philosophy of David Hume Charles Marsh, U of Kansas, USA Challenging Notions of Ethical Responsibility Johanna Fawkes, Charles Sturt U, AUSTRALIA Public Relations and Ethics Through Journalists’ Eyes: How the U.S. Journalism Review Movement Viewed PR Susan Keith, Rutgers U, USA Nadia Riley, Rutgers U, USA 7224 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Applied Conversation Analysis: Intervention to Change Institutional Practices Language & Social Interaction Participants Overcoming Barriers to Mediation in Intake Calls to Services: Research-Based Strategies for Mediators Elizabeth Stokoe, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Turning Practices Into Strategies: Evidence Based Training to Support Helpline Workers in the Management of Caller Emotion Alexa Hepburn, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Managing Caller Emotions in Emergency Calls Tom Koole, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS The Real-Time Use of Medical Telephone Triage Rebecca Barnes, Bristol U, UNITED KINGDOM Supporting Adults With Intellectual Impairments: Interactional Challenges for Staff Charles Antaki, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Challenges by and Challenges for Applied Conversation Analysis: The Example of Making Recommendations for Communication in UK Jobcentres Merran Toerien, U of York, UNITED KINGDOM Conversation Analysis is the study of how social action is brought about through the close organisation of talk. It can be applied, but the term 'Applied Conversation Analysis' has various shades of meaning. This panel reports studies in which CA has been applied to practical institutional problems as they play out in interaction, with the intention of bringing about some sort of change. Although much profitable work emerged, the engagement with the practitioners was not always trouble-free, and the panelists will explain some of the difficulties - ethical, legal and scholarly - that beset intervention research. 7225 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 The Uses of Extremism: Race, Muslims, and the Media Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Milly Williamson, Brunel U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants They Called a War, and Someone Came: The Communicative Politics of Breivik's Hypertext Gavan Titley, Centre for Media Studies, IRELAND “Muslim Rage” Redux: U.S. Media Coverage of Anti-American Protests Deepa Kumar, Rutgers U, USA Free Speech and Racism: An Analysis of the UK Press Milly Williamson, Brunel U, UNITED KINGDOM Racialisation and Radicalisation: Extremism and the Limits of Multiculturalism Arun Kundnani, New York U, USA This panel examines the ways in which Muslim identity is constructed as essentially intolerant, extremist and radical in recent European and US media and policy discussions of multiculturalism, freedom of expression, and national security. It proposes that formations of anti-Muslim racism rest on a dialectical exchange between the rightwing extreme and the mainstream of the media and political elites. It further suggests that these formations of racism feed the notion that multiculturalism is in crisis and limit the rights and freedoms of Muslim citizens. 7226 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Cultural Labor and Media Work Worlds Popular Communication Chair Anthony Y.H. Fung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Popular Culture as Cultural Industries: Contradictions and Dilemma in China Anthony Y.H. Fung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Avatar as Second Suit: Power and Participation in Virtual Work Stina Bengtsson, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN Commerce and Creative Agency in Factual Television Production Anna Zoellner, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Looking Back at the Land: Technology, Work, Morality in Indian Cinema: Top Paper in Pop Comm Padma Chirumamilla, U of Michigan, USA "The Reality is Not as it Seems From Turkey”: Imaginations About the Eurovision Song Contest From its National Production Field Altug Akin, Izmir U of Economics, TURKEY 7227 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 7228 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Theoretical Explorations in Communication Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants An Aesthetic Approach to the Constitutive Metamodel of Communication Jher, U of Oregon, USA Building on a (Mis)understanding: Deleuze and Communication Alexandre Macmillan, McGill U, CANADA Culturing Latour: (Re)Constructing Culture in Latour's Actor-Network Theory Jonathan Scott Brennen, U of North Carolina, USA The-Interruption-That-We-Are: Acknowledging a Rhetorical Force of Nature Michael Joseph Hyde, Wake Forest U, USA Women Journalists in Turbulent Times: The Gendered Impact of Historical Shifts on Newsrooms Feminist Scholarship Participants Overview of Panel Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA The Prevalence of Gender Discrimination and Sexual Harassment of Female Journalists in Lebanon Jad Melki, American U of Beirut, LEBANON Technology’s Mixed Blessing for Women Journalists in Nordic Nations Maria Edstrom, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN The "Feminization" of the Media in Postcommunist Eastern Europe Diana Iulia Nastasia, Southern Illinois U, USA South African Women Journalists Exceed Parity in Newsrooms, Now Face Threats to Media Freedom Margaretha Geertsema-Sligh, Butler U, US Women journalists are caught in a confluence of local world events that is not of their making but which shapes their work lives nonetheless. This panel identifies some of these events – what we characterize as “historical shifts”—and explores how these shifts are affecting women’s occupational status and ability to do their work as reporters. The scope of concerns for panelists is intentionally broad to enable them to look within their own nations and regions of Lebanon/Arab states, South Africa/Africa, Sweden/Nordic Europe, and Romania/Eastern Europe in applying the concept of “historical shifts” to women’s journalistic practice . 7231 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Board Room 1 A European Strategic Research Agenda for the Next Decade (ECREA Sponsored Panel) Sponsored Sessions Participants Peter Golding, Northumbria U, UNITED KINGDOM Slavko Splichal, U of Ljubljana, SLOVENIA Peter Dahlgren, Lund U, SWEDEN Claudia Alvares, Lusofona U, PORTUGAL Colin Sparks, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Hannu Veli Nieminen, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Ola Erstad, U of Oslo, NORWAY Gustavo Cardoso, ISCTE-IUL, PORTUGAL Johan Fornas, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN Charis Xinaris, European U Cyprus, CYPRUS Given the pervasive presence of media in our daily lives, the important question presents itself as to how so-called “new” media – and the implications of technological changes for “old” media – affect our lives and society. In this context, the European Science Foundation (ESF) Media Studies Forward Look has drawn up a strategic research and science policy agenda for Media Studies for the next 5 to 10 years. Concrete recommendations for actions, which have been discussed with relevant science policy and funding organizations, practitioners, technological developers and other stakeholders from across Europe, will be discussed. 7232 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Board Room 2 Communication Policy Making in Political and Historical Perspective Communication Law & Policy Chair Manuel Puppis, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Participants Amending Equal Time: Explaining Institutional Change in American Communication Policy Tim P. Vos, U of Missouri, USA Seth Ashley, Boise State U, USA Film Policy and the Construction of a Nation: Regulating the Film Industry in Early Israel Tamar Ashuri, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Mor Hassid Levi, The Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL The Communication Have-Nots: Understanding Communication Control and "Counterpublics" in Contemporary China Jun Liu, Lund U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF The “Arab Spring” in North Africa and the Typological Validity of the Gateway Model of Internet Regulation Lyombe S. Eko, U of Iowa, USA 7233 Thursday 09:30-10:45 Board Room 3 Exploring the Conceptual Space Between Science Communication and Science Education Instructional & Developmental Communication Participants Information Seeking as Public Engagement: Accounting for Individual and Structural Components Ashley A Anderson, George Mason U, USA When Can Education on the Nature of Scientific Practice Help Science Communication? neil stenhouse, George Mason U, USA Defining Media-Based Knowledge About Science Megan Anderson, U of Wisconsin, USA The primary aim of this panel is to address issues of public engagement with science found in the conceptual space between science communication and science education. In this panel, we address three issues. These include information seeking, the nature of the media-based knowledge about science, and the role of the nature of scientific practice. The second goal is to bring these two perspectives together to reconsider related to public engagement with science according to research on aspects of educational and communications research. 7305 Selecting and Attending Media Thursday 11:00-12:15 Palace A Political Communication Chair Julia Metag, U Münster, GERMANY Participants Automating the News: Understanding How Personalized News System Design Choices Impact News Reception Michael A. Beam, Washington State U, USA How Social Distance Structures Selectivity and Evaluation of Content in Social Media Solomon Messing, Stanford U, USA Sean Jeremy Westwood, Stanford U, USA Making Sense of the News in a Hybrid Regime: How Young Russians Decode State TV and an Oppositional Blog Florian Toepfl, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Collective Efficacy and Trusted Information Sources Shape Indians’ Support for Climate Change Adaptation Policies Jagadish J Thaker, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Edward Maibach, George Mason U, USA Anthony Leiserowitz, Yale U, USA Timothy Gibson, George Mason U, USA Xiaoquan Zhao, George Mason U, USA 7306 Extended Session: The Research Escalator Thursday 11:00-13:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Chairs Mary Louisa Simpson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Johny T. Garner, Texas Christian U, USA Participants Which Works Better? Global vs. Local CSR: The Role of Message Framing (CLT) Mi Kyung Park, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Ga In Park, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Assessing the Credibility of Social Media Sources: Strategies From Human Rights Practitioners Ella Elizabeth McPherson, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM “How Do I Participate? Let Me Count the Ways”: Constructing Participation in Local Self-Governance Institutions Preeti Mudliar, U of Texas, USA Interruptions in the Court: Status and Information Control in the Oral Arguments of the Supreme Court Nicholas Aaron Merola, U of Texas, USA Vysali Soundararajan, U of Texas, USA Selling Risky Products “in a Responsible Way:” Tobacco Industry Promotion of Reduced Harm Products Ganna Yuryivna Kostygina, U of California - San Francisco, USA Immense Pride and Intense Frustration: Structural Dialectics in Contemporary Military Nursing Colleen Arendt, Fairfield U, USA Organizing an Oasis: Using Community-Based Communication Practices to Reorganize a Low-Income Food Desert Marianne LeGreco, U of North Carolina - Greensboro, USA Leadership Through Portraiture: An Analysis of Hispanic Leadership, Culture, and Performance Ariadne Alejandra Gonzalez, Texas A&M U, USA Performing Digital Careers: Identifying and Assessing Types of Online (Personal) Information Management Brenda L. Berkelaar, U of Texas, USA Which Technological Attribute, Specifically? Experimenting Technological Potentials for Organizing Collective Action Young Mie Kim, U of Wisconsin, USA Business Talking to Business: Challenging Organizational Communication Research Regarding Businessto-Business Communication Helena Maria Stehle, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY New Ways of Conceptualizing Communication in Social Movement Networks Alana Margaret Mann, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA TMS in Action: The Role of Professional Identity in Coordinating Organizational Knowledge Networks Leonie Houtman, VU U - Brussels, THE NETHERLANDS Julia Kotlarsky, Aston Business School, UNITED KINGDOM Bart J. van den Hooff, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Professionalized Volunteering and Volunteers’ Wellbeing Kirstie Lynd McAllum, IESE Business School, SPAIN Towards an Integrative Framework for the Analysis of Public Diplomacy: Contributions From Agenda Setting and Framing Alice Srugies, Ilmenau U of Technology, GERMANY Learning in Practice: A Study of Knowledge Development in Multinational Corporations in a Chinese Context Juana Juan Du, Polytechnic Institute of New York U, USA Membership Negotiation in a Results-Only Work Environment: What Might be Different? Emily M Dahlen, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA The Acceptance of Mobile Government From a Citizens' Perspective Jakob Ohme, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY How to Resolve License Fee Conflicts Between Public Broadcasting and Audiences: Application of Prospect Theory HyeonJu Jeong, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Inho Park, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Structuration of Advertising Ethics: The Dynamic Relationship Between Leadership and Ethics Erin Elizabeth Schauster, Bradley U, USA "Messing Around": Glitches, Workarounds, and Repairs Using Media Technology for Daily Work Justine Humphry, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Intranet in a University: From the Point of View of Developers and End Users Tiiu Taur, U of Tartu, ESTONIA Governance Communication in Russia and in the US: Interdisciplinary Comparative Research via Discourse Analysis Yulia Danyushina, U of Management, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Coauthorship Networks and Collaboration Typologies: The Case of CASCON Zack Hayat, U of Toronto, CANADA Kelly Lyons, U of Toronto, CANADA The Constitutive Power of the #hashtag: Strategies and Practices of Identity Reconstruction in Social Media Michael Andreas Etter, Center for CSR Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Organizations Facing Systemic Shifts in Sociology Andrea Pitasi, Gabriele d'Annunzio U, ITALY Transformative Communication and Cooperation at Work: Toward a Conceptual Framework to Analyze 2.0 Technologies Tatiana Domingues Aguiar, Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers, FRANCE Doing Understanding in Financial Consultations: Comprehension Checks Marloes Herijgers, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Transparency and the Organizational Self: Everyday Politics of Identification in Cooperatives Oana Brindusa Albu, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Online Labor: The Experience of Working Online Tabitha Hart, San Jose State U, USA Organizational Communication in Braga 2012 European Youth Capital Ronaldo Mendes Neves, U do Minho, PORTUGAL Using State-of-the-Art Qualitative Data Analysis Software NVivo10 in Organizational Communication Research: Example and Reflections Florian Kaefer, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Corporate Social Irresponsibility. Who Cares in Lifestyle and Luxury Business? Stefan Jarolimek, U of Jena, GERMANY The Communicative Constitution of an IT-Department: The Role of Conversation in Forming an ITDepartment Therese Eva Maria Hedman Monstad, Uppsala U, SWEDEN New Ways of Working, Vitality, and Employee Performance: The Role of Self Determination Claartje L. ter Hoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Frederique Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Marieke L. Fransen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondents Shiv Ganesh, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Sarah E Dempsey, U of North Carolina, USA Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA Boris H. J. M. Brummans, U de Montréal, CANADA Jennifer L. Gibbs, Rutgers U, USA Linda L. Putnam, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Lars Thoeger Christensen, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY Gail Fairhurst, U of Cincinnati, USA Dennis Tourish, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Bart J. van den Hooff, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Joshua B. Barbour, Texas A&M U, USA Laurie K. Lewis, Rutgers U, USA George Cheney, Kent State U, USA Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA Juliet P. Roper, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Marya L. Doerfel, Rutgers U, USA Patricia Riley, U of Southern California, USA Jocelyn A. DeAngelis, Western New England U, USA Noshir S. Contractor, Northwestern U, USA In this extended session, contributing authors have been matched up with mentors--experienced organizational scholars--to discuss how their papers can be "escalated" to prepare for publication or conference submission. This session is open to ICA members who are interested in observing the process by which papers are elaborated, edited, and prepared for publication. They can also join in the discussion at the end focused on tips for success in publishing. 7307 Comparative Perspectives Thursday 11:00-12:15 Palace C Political Communication Chair Arjen van Dalen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Participants Charismatic Leaders and Mediated Personalization in the International Arena Meital Balmas, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Explaining European Political Elites’ Perceptions of Mass Media’s Influence on Democracy Peter Maurer, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Florian Arendt, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Explaining Quality of Government in Europe Using Media Systems Characteristics Mathias A. Fardigh, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN The Myth of “Voting With Dollars”: A Cross-Polity and Multilevel Analysis of Political Consumerism Xinzhi Zhang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 7308 News, Reproduced by ICTs Thursday 11:00-12:15 York Communication and Technology Chair Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participants Frequent Contributors in U.S. Newspaper Comment Forums: An Examination of Their Civility and Informational Value Robin Blom, Michigan State U, USA Serena Carpenter, Michigan State U, USA Brian J. Bowe, Michigan State U, USA Ryan Lance Lange, Alvernia U, USA Sharing Good News and Bad News Over Interpersonal Media: Patterns and Effects on Emotional WellBeing Mina Choi, U of Wisconsin, USA Catalina Laura Toma, U of Wisconsin, USA Choose Your Own Exemplar: Exemplification and Risk in Interactive Online News Bartosz Wojtek Wojdynski, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Temple Northup, U of Houston, USA News in a Multiscreen World: A Taxonomy of Daily Screen Usage for News and Information Esther Thorson, U of Missouri, USA Eunjin Kim, U of Missouri, USA Margaret Ellen Duffy, U of Missouri, USA 7309 Contents Diffusion in Online Environments Thursday 11:00-12:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Chih-Hui Lai, U of Akron, USA Participants Epidemiology of Bieber Fever: GLEaMviz Simulation of Viral Video Diffusion Sonny Rosenthal, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Malin Björnsdotter, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Entertaining Videos Go Viral: How Hedonic and Eudaimonic Aspects of Entertainment Affect Sharing of Online Videos Leonie Roesner, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Philipp Kulms, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY German Neubaum, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Elisa Wegmann, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Self-Determination and Long-Term Participation in Peer-Production Communities Donghee Yvette Wohn, Michigan State U, USA Cliff Lampe, U of Michigan, USA Youyang Hou, U of Michigan, USA Innovation Diffusion, Social Media, and the Simplicial Model of Social Aggregation: Computational Simulation of Cluster Traversers for Community Health Interventions Kerk F. Kee, Chapman U, USA Lisa Sparks, Chapman U/U of California - Irvine, USA Daniele C. Struppa, Chapman U, USA Mirco Mannucci, George Mason U, USA Alberto Damiano, Deledda International School, ITALY 7311 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Waterloo/Tower Interpersonal Communication Issues Across Varied Health Contexts Health Communication Chair Kevin B. Wright, Saint Louis U, USA Participants The Effects of Frequency, Valence, Partner, and Topic of Interpersonal Communication on Smoking Cessation Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Gert-Jan de Bruijn, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Use of Modern Contraceptive Methods in Uttar Pradesh, India: The Role of Normative Influences and Interpersonal Communication Rajiv N. Rimal, George Washington U, USA Pooja Sripad, Johns Hopkins U, USA Ilene S Speizer, U of North Carolina, USA Lisa Calhoun, U of North Carolina, USA Nilesh Chatterjee, Johns Hopkins U, USA Sanjanthi Velu, Johns Hopkins U, USA Sukhpal Marwa, Johns Hopkins U, USA Basil Safi, Johns Hopkins U, USA Priya Nanda, ICRW, INDIA Nursing the Identity: Mediating Roles of Learned Helplessness and Interaction Involvement in Predicting Willingness to Confront Conflict and Turnover Jennifer J. Moreland, The College of Wooster, USA Digital House Calls: Health Care Professionals, Interest and Motivation for Online Media Interaction Clay Craig, Texas Tech U, USA Brittany Campbell, Texas Tech U, USA Danette Baker, Texas Tech U, USA Shannon Bichard, Texas Tech U, USA 7312 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Chelsea/Richmond Communication Challenges Involving Health Care Providers Health Communication Chair Muriel E. Scott, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Participants Nurses’ Perceptions of Conflict as Constructive or Destructive Wonsun Kim, George Mason U, USA Mollie Rose Canzona, George Mason U, USA “Pain is What the Patient Says it is”: Nurse-Patient Communication, Information Seeking, and Pain Management Laura Elizabeth Miller, U of Tennessee, USA Elizabeth Dortch Dalton, U of Tennessee, USA Scott Eldredge, U of Tennessee, USA Patient Preferences for Discussing Sexual Health With Physicians Deya Roy, U of Connecticut, USA Lance S. Rintamaki, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Narratives Featuring Dr. Horror and Dr. Nice: A Study of Status and Affect in Online Talk About Migrant Physicians Anna Camilla Haavisto, U of Helsinki, FINLAND 7313 Third Person Effects (Session Begins With a TOP Faculty Paper) Thursday 11:00-12:15 St. James Mass Communication Chair Theodore L. Glasser, Stanford U, USA Participants Media Use and Political Participation Reconsidered: The Actual and Perceived Influence of Political Campaign Messages Sue-Jen Lin, I-Shou U, TAIWAN A Social Judgmental Model of the Third-Person Perception Hypothesis: Focusing on the Effect of PreExisting Attitudes, the Level of Knowledge, and Message Strength on Judgments on Media Impact Sungeun Chung, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Wonji Lee, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jungwon Kwak, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Third-Person Effect of Rumors: Panic Purchase of Salt in China After Japan “3.11” Earthquake Miao Li, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF “Biased” Media With “Discrepant” Effects: Mediated Sociotropic Perceptions and Political Participatory Behaviors Ye Sun, U of Utah, USA Hyunseo Hwang, U of California - Davis, USA 7314 News Sources and News Values: Interrogating the Epistemologies of Journalism Thursday 11:00-12:15 Regent's Journalism Studies Chair Helle Sjovaag, U of Bergen, NORWAY Participants How Journalists "Realize" Facts: Epistemology in Practice at Press Conferences Yigal Godler, Ben Gurion U, ISRAEL Zvi Reich, Ben Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Definitional Sources of Journalists in the United States (Top Three Student Paper) Wendy Marie Weinhold, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Finding the Man on the Street: Challenges to the Use of Experiential Knowledge in News Katherine Fink, Columbia U, USA Mind the Gap. Consequences of Interrole Conflicts of Freelance Journalists With Secondary Employment in the Field of PR Magdalena Obermaier, U of Munich, GERMANY Thomas Koch, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY News Values in Organizational Contexts and in the Journalistic News Selection Process Ines Engelmann, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY 7316 Innovations and Struggles for African and Middle Eastern Journalism Thursday 11:00-12:15 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Janice Barrett, Lasell College, USA Participants Beyond the Prison Cell: Comprehensive Study of Iranian Journalists Working in Iran Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, IE U, SPAIN Briar Smith, U of Pennsylvania, USA Debating Darija: Telquel and Language Politics in Modern Morocco Annemarie Iddins, U of Michigan, USA Deconstructing the Community Radio Model: Applying Practice to Theory in East Africa David Conrad, U of Pennsylvania, USA Competing Loyalties: Journalism Culture in the Ethiopian State Media Terje Steinulfsson Skjerdal, NLA U College, NORWAY Print Journalism in Sudan After Separation: Writing Despite Official Constraints Anke Fiedler, U of Munich, GERMANY 7317 Advertising Research Thursday 11:00-12:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Participants Causes and Consequences of Trust in Direct-to-Consumer Pharmaceutical Advertising Jennifer Gerard Ball, U of Minnesota, USA Danae Manika, Queen Mary, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Patricia A. Stout, U of Texas, USA Effect of Risk Disclosures on DTC Ads: The Role of Involvement and Need-for-Cognition Ignatius Fosu, U of Arkansas, USA Effects of Mental Imagery on Responses of Listeners to Advertisements on Commercial Radio Anu Sachdev, U of Texas - El Paso, USA Anjali Capila, Delhi U, INDIA Measuring Audience Perceptions of Prime-Time Television Commercials: An Update Yunjae Cheong, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Federico de Gregorio, U of Akron, USA Kihan Kim, Seoul National U of Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 7318 Guys Walk Into a Bar and Talk Theory Thursday 11:00-12:15 Cadogan Information Systems Chair Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA Participants Three Guys Walk Into a Bar: An Information Theoretic Analysis W. Russell Neuman, U of Michigan, USA Assessing Story Appraisal Theory: From Appraisal Dimensions to Implications and Impact Charles R. Berger, U of California - Davis, USA Yerheen Ha, Pennsylvania State U, USA Dynamic Human-Centered Communication Systems Theory Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA How Deeply Do We Process Online Recommendations? Heuristic vs. Systematic Processing of Authority and Bandwagon Cues S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U and Sungkyunkwan U, USA Qian Xu, Elon U, USA Anne Oeldorf-Hirsch, Northwestern U, USA 7321 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Meanings of “Audiences”: Western and Non-Western Discourses Popular Communication Global Communication and Social Change Chairs Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Richard Butsch, Rider U, USA Participants Politics, Religion, and Markets as Markers of Contemporary Discourses on Arab Audiences Joe F. Khalil, Northwestern U in Qatar, USA Shoppers and Dupes: The Television Audience in Contemporary Russian Discourses Sudha Rajagopalan, U of Utrecht, THE NETHERLANDS Super Fans, Citizens, or Kids: An Examination of the Discourses About Audience in Mainland China Jingsi Christina Wu, Hofstra U, USA Between Unruliness and Sociality: Discourses on Diasporic Cinema Audiences for Turkish and Indian Films Kevin Smets, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Iris Vandevelde, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Philippe Meers, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Roel Vande Winkel, Ghent U, BELGIUM Sofie Van Bauwel, Ghent U, BELGIUM Producing Loyal Citizens and Entertaining Volatile Subjects: Imagining Audience Agency in Colonial Rhodesia and Postcolonial Zimbabwe Wendy Willems, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM This panel will present selected contrasting analyses from distinct cultures to reflect upon these questions in an effort to understand how and when talk about audiences matters. It is based on a project, and an edited book in progress (to appear with Routledge under the same title as the panel). This encompasses diverse cultures and historical time periods in order to trace the trajectories and contexts that have shaped the meanings of audiences in Western and, a particular contribution, Non-Western discourses. 7322 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Audiences in the Face of Distant Suffering: New Challenges for Old Idea(l)s? Global Communication and Social Change Participants "The Deserving Victim": Public Responses to Humanitarian Communication in the UK Irene Bruna Seu, Birkbeck, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Shani Orgad, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Mastoureh Fathi, Birkbeck, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM "It's All False to Me": The Role of Celebrities in Mediating Distant Others Martin Scott, U of East Anglia, UNITED KINGDOM Domesticating Distant Suffering: How Do News Media Discursively Invite the Audience to Care? Stijn Joye, Ghent U, BELGIUM Facing the Mediated Pain of Others: New Directions for the Empirical Study of Audiences of Distant Suffering Johannes von Engelhardt, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jeroen Jansz, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM An emerging field within humanities and social sciences concerns itself with the issue of distant suffering. Also within communication and media studies, an increasing number of scholars have contributed to a rich and diverse body of work on public perceptions of mediated, distant suffering and its socio-political significance. However, this mostly theoretical literature has not yet been matched with substantial empirical efforts. In particular, there is a striking scarcity of empirical studies of audiences’ reactions to and interpretations of mediated suffering (Höijer, 2004; Wilkinson, 2005; Ong, 2009). Cottle (2009) further refers to the need for closer empirical engagement with this field, refined concepts and further analytical distinctions. This panel answers some of these calls by presenting ongoing research and simultaneously setting out future research agendas. 7323 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Outcomes of Public Relations Efforts Public Relations Chair Ian Somerville, U of Ulster, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Attribution of Corporate Hypocrisy in Corporate Social Responsibility Perceptions: The Effect of Bad Reputation and Responsiveness to Crisis KyuJin Shim, Syracuse U, USA Sung-Un Yang, Indiana U, USA I’m Connected, Thus Powerful: Influence of SNS Use on Consumer Activism Jounghwa Choi, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Playing to Publics: The Role of the Media and Public Relations in Negotiating Public Policy Kenneth Dean Plowman, Brigham Young U, USA Susan L. Walton, U of North Dakota, USA The Role of Government Communication in the Reputation of a City: Communicating Spanish Local Governments Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN Karen Sanders, CEU San Pablo U, SPAIN 7324 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Excess or Moderation? From Internet Use to Media Influence on Nutrition, Food Choice, and Perceptions of Appearance Children Adolescents and Media Participants Parent TV Viewing Predicts Energy-Dense Food Choices in Preschoolers’ Pretend Healthy Meals Kristen Harrison, U of Michigan, USA Mericarmen Peralta, U of Michigan, USA The Effect of Social Network Sites on Adolescents’ Appearance Investment and Desire for Cosmetic Surgery Dian de Vries, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peter Nikken, Netherlands Youth Institute/Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hanneke de Graaf, Rutgers WPF, THE NETHERLANDS The Multifaceted Nature of Television Viewing Effects on Obesity: A National Multilevel Study Leslie Snyder, U of Connecticut, USA Tao Ma, U of Connecticut, USA The Effect of Playing Advergames on Actual Food Intake Among Children Frans Folkvord, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Using Psychological and Digital Inclusion Frameworks to Explain Excessive Internet Use by Young Europeans Ellen Johanna Helsper, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM David Smahel, Masaryk U, CZECH REPUBLIC Respondent Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 7325 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Contested Content: Mediated Spaces, Cultural Spheres, and Neoliberal Discourse Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Christopher Harris, Nevada State College, USA Participants Pimps, Pushers, and Predators: Neoliberal Discourse in Rap Lyrics, 1994-2004 Christopher Harris, Nevada State College, USA Sebern Coleman, Nevada State College, USA Krumpin' in North Hollywood: The Ecology of Street Dance and the Production of Space Robeson Taj Frazier, U of Southern California, USA Mediated Place-Making: Implicating News Media as Dominant Definers of Geography Robert Gutsche Jr, Florida International U, USA Cities of Illusion: Las Vegas, Miami, and Urban Environments of Mediated Neoliberalism Moses A Shumow, Florida International U, USA Christopher Harris, Nevada State College, USA Redeeming White Heroes, Neoliberalism, and Black Martyrs in Changing Lanes Michael G. Lacy, DePaul U, USA Over the course of the last three decades neoliberalism, with its focus on deregulation, free markets, hyper-consumerism, and the conflation of capitalism and democracy, has successfully entrenched itself as the most dominant socio-political discourse of the Global North. Throughout this progression proponents of this discourse have employed a range of strategies—including brutal state-sanctioned repression, geographic displacement, economic coercion, and cultural co-optation—to quell resistance and push forward their agendas. This panel seeks to illuminate some of the ways that neoliberal discourse flows through the mediated spaces and cultural spheres of subordinated groups. By interrogating rap lyrics, tourist city residents, grass roots multimedia storytelling, and street-dance contributing scholars endeavor to add to deeper understandings of the imposition of and resistance to neoliberal ideals amongst urban youth. 7326 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 New Questions of Audiences, Publics, and Participants Popular Communication Chair Adrienne Shaw, Temple U, USA Participants Representation Matters (?): When, How and if Media Representation Matters to Marginalized Game Audiences Adrienne Shaw, Temple U, USA Speaking of the Unspeakable? Reflections on Unacknowledged Dimensions of Media Experiences Brita Ytre-Arne, U of Bergen, NORWAY Forty is the New 65? "Older Adults" as Niche Market in the Online Dating Industry Derek Blackwell, U of Pennsylvania, USA Understanding Arab Blogospheres: Counterpublics or Enacting Cultural Citizenship? Kristina Maj Riegert, Stockholm U, SWEDEN TV Bullying as Viewed by “Gleeks”: An Exploratory Analysis of Fan Forum Posts Kimberly R. Walsh, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 7327 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Witnessing Pain and Loss Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants Being-With a Loss: Aphasic Affects in Contemporary Installation Arts Megan Patricia Toye, McGill U, CANADA Testimony and the Failure of Communication Sandra Ristovska, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Art of Self-Concretization in the Space of Appearance: The Self-Immolation of Chun Tae-il Young Cheon Cho, California State U, Chico, USA The Construction of Grievable Death Tal Morse, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM 7328 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Gender, Politics, and Social Media Feminist Scholarship Participants Off Your Face(book): Gender, Politics, and Social Media Karen Ross, Liverpool U, UNITED KINGDOM Margie Comrie, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Susan Fountaine, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Twittering Women or Tweeting Candidates? The Case of the U.S. Presidential Election 2012 Valentina Cardo, U of Auckland, NEW ZEALAND Slutwalk and Social Media Kaitlynn D Mendes, De Montfort U, UNITED KINGDOM Protesting Online and on the Street: A Study of Protest Against Religious Harassment of Women and Girls in a Small Israeli Town Keren Natalie Darmon, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM This panel this seeks to address some of the gaps in the existing literature relating to the changes in political communication brought about by social media. The first is the gender gap: to assume that political women and men (both elected officials and activists) occupy equal positions in society, and that any differences between them are due to personal, individual even biological characteristics, ignores structural social, political and cultural processes. The second is the political representation gap: research on women’s presence in the political sphere shows that women often adopt a different communicative style from men. They are less argumentative and competitive, more consensual and cooperative. The third gap is in the lack of international comparisons: Communication styles differ across polities, cultures and communication environments. 7331 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Board Room 1 IAMCR Special Session: Crises, "Creative Destruction," and the Global Power and Communication Orders Sponsored Sessions Chair Janet Wasko, International Association for Media and Communication Research, USA Participants How the Economic Crisis and "Creative Destruction" Matter for Communication Studies Paschal Preston, Dublin Institute of Technology, IRELAND The Governance of Communicative Spaces in Crisis: Systemic Failure and the Limits of "Creative Destruction" Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA New Media, Different Actors, and Alternative Challenges: Egypt’s Dilemma Between Social Movements, Religious Fascism and Socialist Anarchists Ibrahim Mostafa Saleh, International Association for Media and Communication Research, USA The Economical Crisis Management and Political Communication: Sarkozy and Hollande, Two Opposite Ways of Government Communication Management? Philippe J. Maarek, U of Paris - Est Créteil, FRANCE Eyes in the Future With Hands in the Past: When Emerging Movements Rediscover the Meaning of Public Adilson Vaz Cabral Filho, Fluminense Federal U, BRAZIL The panel will focus on the conference theme for IAMCR's 2013 conference in Dublin, Ireland. The theme centres on whether and how the current economic crisis and its attendant gales of "creative destruction" may serve to reshape the geo-political and communication orders. The panel will feature several presentations that will address this theme. 7333 Thursday 11:00-12:15 Board Room 3 Analyzing and Addressing Student Apprehension Across Multiple Contexts Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Sara LaBelle, West Virginia U, USA Participants Are International Students Quiet in Class? The Influence of Teacher Confirmation and Classroom Connectedness on Classroom Apprehension and Willingness to Talk Among International Students I-Ting Huang, Yao Han Taiwan, TAIWAN Chai-Fang Hsu, U of Wyoming, USA Effects of Imagined Interactions and Rehearsal on Speaking Performance Charles W. Choi, George Fox U, USA James M. Honeycutt, Louisiana State U, USA Graham Douglas Bodie, Louisiana State U, USA Relationship Between Math Apprehension and Curricular Choices of Public Relations Students: An Experiment Alexander V Laskin, Quinnipiac U, USA Hilary Fussell Sisco, Quinnipiac U, USA 7405 Media-Politics Interactions and Interdependencies Thursday 12:30-13:45 Palace A Political Communication Chair Peter Van Aelst, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Participants Media-Politics Interaction in Times of Economic Crisis: A Comparative Study of Spain and the Netherlands Rens Vliegenthart, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Noemi Mena, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN The Canadian Parliamentary Press Gallery: Still Relevant or Relic of Another Time? Daniel Pare, U of Ottawa, CANADA Tweeting Conventions: Political Journalists’ Use of Twitter to Cover the 2012 Presidential Campaign Regina G. Lawrence, U of Texas, USA Logan Molyneux, U of Texas, USA Mark Coddington, U of Texas, USA Avery E. Holton, U of Texas, USA Which Politicians Pass Media Gates and Why? A Preliminary Model and Review of Previous Studies Debby Vos, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Cooperativeness or Adversarialness? Politics and the Watchdog Function in Key Moments of News Production Goran Eriksson, Örebro U, SWEDEN Johan Östman, Örebro U, SWEDEN 7407 Partisan Selectivity and Opinion Polarization Thursday 12:30-13:45 Palace C Political Communication Chair Lilach Nir, Hebrew U / U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Loud and Clear: Effects of Homogenous and Extreme Partisan Media Diets Douglas Allen, U of Pennsylvania, USA Devra C. Moehler, U of Pennsylvania, USA Elizabeth Roodhouse, U of Pennsylvania, USA Misperceptions in Polarized Politics: The Role of Knowledge, Religiosity, and Media Michael Cacciatore, U of Wisconsin, USA Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Sara Yeo, U of Wisconsin, USA Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin, USA Doo-Hun Choi, U of Wisconsin, USA Dominique Brossard, U of Wisconsin, USA Elizabeth A. Corley, Arizona State U, USA Partisan News Media and Opinion Polarization: A Self-Categorization Theory Approach Jiyoung Han, U of Minnesota, USA Daniel B. Wackman, U of Minnesota, USA The Extremists Across the Aisle: Selective Exposure and Evaluations of Presidential Candidate Extremity Aaron S. Veenstra, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA 7408 Positive and Negative Psychological Consequences of Information Technologies Thursday 12:30-13:45 York Communication and Technology Chair Daniela M. Schluetz, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Participants Towards a Working Definition of Social Network Fatigue Thara Ravindran, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Alton Y.K Chua, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Dion Goh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE The Smartphone as Daily Hassle: Exploring Communication Workers‘ Stress Experience and Coping Strategies Daniela M. Schluetz, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Friederike Mohr, Markenberatung, Munich, GERMANY Christoph Klimmt, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Facebook Comparisons Among Adolescents: How do Identification and Contrast Relate to Social Wellbeing? Seok Kang, U of Texas - San Antonio, USA Wonjun Chung, U of Louisiana - Lafayette, USA Adolfo Mora, U of Texas, USA Mobile Phone Use, Emotion Regulation, and Well-Being Cynthia A. Hoffner, Georgia State U, USA Sangmi Lee, Georgia State U, USA 7409 Nonverbal Cues Exchanges in Online Communications Thursday 12:30-13:45 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair L.Crystal Jiang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants The Waiting Game: Manipulating Response Time as a Form of Self-Presentation in CMC Rebecca Gray, Michigan State U, USA Nicole Ellison, School of Information, USA Explaining Online Self-Influence: Exploring the Effects of Computer-Mediation on Attitude Change Brandon Van Der Heide, Ohio State U, USA Ted Dickinson, Ohio State U, USA Erin M. Schumaker, Ohio State U, USA David C DeAndrea, Ohio State U, USA Automatic Detection of Nonverbal Behavior Predicts Learning in Dyadic Interactions Andrea Stevenson Won, Stanford U, USA Le Yu, Stanford U, USA Joris H. Janssen, Phillips Research, THE NETHERLANDS Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA The Ubiquity and Influence of CMC Cues in Social Networking Sites Yoram M. Kalman, Open U of Israel, ISRAEL Darren R. Gergle, Northwestern U, USA 7411 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Waterloo/Tower 7412 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Chelsea/Richmond Effective Health and Safety Messages: Overcoming Processing and Dissemination Challenges Health Communication Participants Self-Bolstering and Self-Motivating Through Selective Exposure to Online Health Messages Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA Benjamin K. Johnson, Ohio State U, USA Axel Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA Individual and Social Determinants of Obesity in Strategic Health Messages: Interaction With Political Ideology Rachel Young, U of Iowa, USA Amanda Hinnant, U of Missouri, USA Glenn M. Leshner, U of Missouri, USA Alpha Strategies for Persuasive Health Messages: The Interplay Between Source Credibility Perceptions and Psychological Reactance Hyunmin Lee, Saint Louis U, USA Translating a Health Communication Sun Safety Program to Ski and Snowboard Schools Throughout North America Barbara J. Walkosz, Klein Buendel, Inc., USA David B. Buller, Klein Buendel, Inc., USA Peter A. Andersen, San Diego State U, USA Michael D. Scott, Mikonics, USA Xia Liu, Klein Buendel, Inc., USA Gary Cutter, U of Alabama, USA Mark Dignan, U of Kentucky, USA Topics in Interpersonal Communication Interpersonal Communication Chair Masaki Matsunaga, Rikkyo U, JAPAN Participants Development and Validation of the Employee “Voice” Strategy Scale Masaki Matsunaga, Rikkyo U, JAPAN Parental Patterns of Cooperation in Parent-Child Interactions: The Relationship Between Nonverbal and Verbal Communication Tsfira Grebelsky-Lichtman, Hebrew U of Jerusalem / Ono Academic Colledge, ISRAEL The Role of Family Communication on Emotion Coaching and Children's Emotion Regulation Capacity Sung Jin Ryu, Daegu U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Susan Lee Kline, Ohio State U, USA Understanding Immediate Behaviors Through Meta-Analyses: Immediate Behaviors as Related to SelfDisclosure and Liking Stephanie Kelly, North Carolina A&T State U, USA Michael R. Kotowski, U of Tennessee, USA 7413 News Audiences and Public Opinion (Session Begins with a TOP Faculty Paper) Thursday 12:30-13:45 St. James Mass Communication Journalism Studies Chair David Tewksbury, U of Illinois, USA Participants Would Habermas Enjoy The Daily Show? Entertainment Media and the Normative Presuppositions of the Public Sphere Udo Göttlich, Zeppelin U, GERMANY Martin Rolf Herbers, Zeppelin U, GERMANY Is Laughter the Best Medicine for Public Opinion? Elise M. Stevens, Pennsylvania State U, USA Ashley Han, Pennsylvania State U, USA Examining Differential Gains From Political News on Mass Media in Nondemocratic Context: A Survey Study From China Tianjiao Wang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Web Metrics as Heuristics? How Online News Audiences Prioritize Economic and Cultural Capital When Choosing Which News Stories to Read Edson Jr. Castro Tandoc, U of Missouri, USA 7414 Challenging News Storytelling: Network Architectures, Mediality, and the Emotional Life of News Thursday 12:30-13:45 Regent's Journalism Studies Participants Affective News and Electronic Elsewheres Zizi A. Papacharissi, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA The Emotional Architecture of Social Media: The Case of the Facebook "Like" Button Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Rewiring Journalism: The New Literacies of Networked Communication Architectures Alfred Hermida, U of British Columbia, CANADA Network Architectures, Storytelling and Polymedia Events Maria Mirca Madianou, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent Adrienne Russell, U of Denver, USA The explosion of spreadable, social media platforms is transforming existing ecologies of journalism and challenging traditional forms of news storytelling. Recent studies have observed how Twitter and other social networking sites have emerged as alternative, and in some cases, primary channels for information. Twitter in particular has received much attention as a news sharing mechanism during natural disasters and as the platform of choice for social movements. This panel brings together papers which assess the consequences of network architectures – for example, the design and software of social media – for storytelling and for users’ emotional engagement. 7416 Transnational Advocacy, Global Journalism, and the International Public Sphere: Opportunities, Challenges, and Transformations Thursday 12:30-13:45 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA Participants Transnational Environmental NGOs in China: New Journalistic Spaces Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas, USA Networks of Coproduction: How Mainstream NGOs and Journalists Create Common Interpretations of the UN Climate Summits Hartmut Wessler, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Julia Lueck, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Antal Wozniak, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY Charlotte Loeb, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Do Transnational Advocacy Groups Remedy, or Reinforce, Global Attention Inequalities? The Case of Humanitarian and Human Rights News Matthew Powers, New York U, USA Reporting Africa: When, Wow and Why Journalists Use NGO-Provided Photos and Audio-Visual Materials Kate Wright, Roehampton, UNITED KINGDOM This panel examines the changing nature of contemporary global news and the role transnational advocacy groups play in this transformation. As legacy news outlets slash foreign news budgets, scholars have discussed advocacy groups as sources of both promise and caution with respect to the future of global news. To optimists, such groups provide original, insightful reporting from neglected areas of the world and help thematize issues for public deliberation and political action. To skeptics, the influence of advocacy groups augurs a worrisome conflation of the lines between advocacy and journalism, with deleterious consequences befalling both parties. This panel of international scholars offers empirical and analytical clarity to these important normative concerns. 7417 Keeping Us Engaged: News Media's Role in Elections and Participation Thursday 12:30-13:45 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Janice Barrett, Lasell College, USA Participants An Ecological View of Multiplex Local News Consumption and Community Integration Chih-Hui Lai, U of Akron, USA Attack or Substance? Different Types of Conflict in the News and Their Effect on Citizen Engagement Andreas Schuck, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Media and Economic Voting in 2008 U.S. Presidential Election: Beyond Sociotropic and Egotropic Dichotomies Hyunjin Song, Ohio State U, USA Moral Foundations in News: A Content Analysis of Government-Controlled Versus Market-Appeal Newspapers in China Lu Wang, Michigan State U, USA Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA Sujay Prabhu, Michigan State U, USA Matthew N Grizzard, Michigan State U, USA Red Media, Blue Media, and Purple Media: News Patterns in the Colorful Media Landscape Stephanie Edgerly, Northwestern U, USA 7418 Social Media, Politics, and Promotion Thursday 12:30-13:45 Cadogan Information Systems 7421 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Participants Effects of Structural Features in Text Messages on Voters: Formality and Interactivity on Perceived Image and Voting Intent Byungho Park, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Moon Young Kang, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jiwon Lee, L’Oreal, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF When Less Means More: An Experimental Comparison of TV and Twitter as Political Campaign Tools Eun-Ju Lee, Seoul National U of Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Soo Yun Shin, Michigan State U, USA The Moderating Effects of Motivational Reactivity and Implicit Bias on Processing Antialcohol Tweets by White and Native American Protagonists Miglena Mantcheva Sternadori, U of South Dakota, USA Saleem Elias Alhabash, Michigan State U, USA Jing Yang, Michigan State U, USA Sookyong Kim, Michigan State U, USA The Context is the Message. Social Influence of User-Generated Content on Online Advertising Effects Johannes Knoll, Wuerzburg U, GERMANY How Influential Consumers’ Characteristics, Motivations, and Product Type Interact to Predict BrandRelated User-Generated Content on Social Media Daniel G. Muntinga, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Marjolein Moorman, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Perceptions of Media as a Mood Management Tool: A Cross Medium Comparison of Intervention Potential John J. Davies, Brigham Young U, USA “Understand a Fury in Your Words”: The Effects of Posting and Viewing Negative Online Word-ofMouth on Consumers’ Purchase Behaviors Su Jung Kim, Northwestern U, USA Rebecca Jen-Hui Wang, Northwestern U, USA Edward Malthouse, Northwestern U, USA Texting Among the Bottom of the Pyramid: Enabling Factors and Demographic Effects on SMS Use Among Low-Income Mobile Users in Asia Juhee Kang, Michigan State U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Maity Moutusy, Indian Institute of Management Lucknow, INDIA Constantinos Coursaris, Michigan State U, USA Media Policy and Popular Culture Popular Communication Participants Graffiti, Media, and Cultural Policy: Beirut as a Contested “Creative City” Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA Communicating Copyright: Media Policy and Everyday Life Bethany Klein, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Control Over Personal Information in the Digital Era Mark B. Andrejevic, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA When Media Policy Hits the Streets Des Freedman, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Media policy is a current that runs through popular culture production, distribution and consumption, yet it remains rarely confronted directly and explicitly by popular media users and popular communication scholarship. Media policy can influence the shape of popular culture and the ways in which it is distributed; it can alternately condemn user-created popular culture as illicit or exalt it as art; and it can itself become the focus of popular media and everyday conversation. This panel explores various intersections of media policy and popular culture through a range of international examples, with the goal of fixing the spotlight on policy’s role in the popular. 7422 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Beyond WikiLeaks: Implications for the Future of Communications, Journalism, and Society Global Communication and Social Change Communication and Technology Chair John Downing, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Participants Following the Money: WikiLeaks and the Political Economy of Disclosure Benedetta Brevini, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Graham Murdock, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM The Leak Heard Around the World? Cablegate in the Evolving Global Mediascape Lisa Lynch, Concordia U, CANADA WikiLeaks and Whistleblowing: The Framing of Bradley Manning Einar Thorsen, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Chindu Sreedharan, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Stuart Allan, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM From the Pentagon Papers to Cablegate: How the Network Society Has Changed Leaking Patrick McCurdy, U of Ottawa, UNITED KINGDOM Dimensions of Modern Freedom of Expression: WikiLeaks, Policy Hacking, and Digital Freedoms Arne Hintz, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM WikiLeaks, Anonymous, and the Exercise of Individuality: Protesting in the Cloud Stefania Milan, Tilburg U, CANADA Respondents Sandra Braman, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Marc Raboy, McGill U, CANADA The presentations will discuss a variety of issues, from changes in journalism to new developments in online activism, from questions of political economy to trends in policy, and from the representation of whistleblowing to its social and political effects around the globe. In six brief presentations, followed by comments from two renowned respondents, they will inquire about the challenges to freedom of expression in the digital age, the roles of journalism and whistleblowing in a changing media ecology, and the new forms of engagement, organizational models, and repertoires of action of online activism. The rise and legacy of WikiLeaks will serve as a lens through which to try and understand the significant changes which we can witness in the increasingly networked field of media and communication. This panel will present findings from an edited volume on the subject which will be published by Palgrave in 2013. It will bring together several of the authors and editors for a roundtable discussion on the social, political and communicative transformations in the wake of WikiLeaks. 7423 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Social Capital in Public Relations Public Relations Chair Erich James Sommerfeldt, U of Maryland, USA Participants Public Relations in Advocacy: Building Online Influence and Social Capital Adam J. Saffer, U of Oklahoma, USA Maureen Taylor, U of Oklahoma, USA Aimei Yang, U of Dayton, USA The Challenge of Social Capital: Public Relations in the Public Sphere, Civil Society, and Democracy Erich James Sommerfeldt, U of Maryland, USA The Relationship Between the Professionalization of Public Relations and Societal Social Capital: Evidence From a Cross-National Study Aimei Yang, U of Dayton, USA Maureen Taylor, U of Oklahoma, USA Corporations' Involvement in Societal Debates: Towards Postreflective Organizations Trine Susanne Johansen, Aarhus U, DENMARK Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK 7424 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Youth in Formation: Digital Literacy and Knowledge Building for Today’s Teenagers Children Adolescents and Media Chairs Urs Gasser, Harvard U, USA Miriam Meckel, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Participants Youth and Information Quality: How Young People Search, Evaluate, Share, and Create Information Online Urs Gasser, Harvard U, USA Sandra Cortesi, Harvard U, USA Youth and Online News: The Battle for Control Nathan Stolero, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Too Much of a Good Thing? Technostress and Information Overload Among Young Swiss Miriam Meckel, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Giulia Ranzini, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Christoph Lutz, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Parental Mediation and Adolescents’ Social Media Use: Assessing Beneficial Parental Strategies Among Young Italians Marina Micheli, U of Milano-Bicocca, ITALY Marco Gui, U of Milano-Bicocca, ITALY Giovanna Mascheroni, U Cattolica of Milano, ITALY Through this panel, we aim at exploring how teenagers relate to information on the Internet, focusing in particular on the processes beyond the search for data and news, as well as on the perception of what elements constitute reliable, or even interesting, information online. Basing ourselves on the connectedness that Social Media establish, both online and in the “real world”, we will also consider elements of information overload, and the role of families in the establishment of a healthy relationship with living and interacting online. The exposure of today’s youth to different formats through which information is circulated, and knowledge is built (e.g. Youtube) makes for an interesting case regarding what could constitute the education of tomorrow. We aim at exploring this possibility through both qualitative and quantitative approaches, and based on a selection of papers from four different countries, providing a broad overview of the subject. 7425 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 ERIC Roundtable: Looking at the "Other" Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Aymar Jean Christian, Northwestern U, USA Participants How Many More Indians? An Argument for a Representational Ethics of Native Americans Debra L. Merskin, U of Oregon, USA Just Another Gypsy Dancer, Just Another Refugee: Constructions of Gypsies in Musical and World Publications Adina Schneeweis, Oakland U, USA Poststructural Intersectionality and the Four-Woman Comedy Ensemble Mary Elizabeth Durden, U of Wisconsin, USA The Model Minority in the Zombie Apocalypse: Asian American Manhood on AMC’s The Walking Dead Helen Ho, Saint Mary's College, USA Unveiling Obsessions: Muslims and the Trap of Representation Nabil Echchaibi, U of Colorado, USA The Influence of Virtual Perspective Taking on Attitudes Toward Mexican Immigrants in the United States Scott Parrott, U of Alabama/U of North Carolina, USA Temple Northup, U of Houston, USA Francesca Renee Dillman Carpentier, U of North Carolina, USA Coverage of the Kyrgyz-Uzbek Ethnic Conflict of 2010 in Selected American Newspapers Sagar Rajendra Atre, Ohio U, USA Naubet Bisenov, Ohio U, USA 7426 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 News Framing Processes in Global Context Global Communication and Social Change Journalism Studies Chair Cherian George, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participants Framing the Jos Crisis in Nigeria: A Comparative Analysis of the Punch, the Guardian, and Thisday Ngozi Agwaziam, Southern Illinois U, USA Li Zeng, Arkansas State U, USA Zhiwen Xiao, U of Houston, USA Journalism and the Politics of Hate: Charting Ethical Responses to Religious Intolerance Cherian George, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Remembering Tiananmen and Berlin Wall: the Elite U.S. Press's Anniversary Journalism, 1990-2009 Chin-Chuan Lee, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Hongtao Li, Zhejiang U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Seeing Europe From the Outside in: The Al Jazeera English Series Surprising Europe Alexa Robertson, Stockholm U, SWEDEN 7427 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Media and Social Protest Movements Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants "The Story is Us, the Media Are Us": Occupy in the European Periphery Anne Kaun, Sodertorn U College, SWEDEN Challenging Idealism: A Materialist Critique of (New) Social Movements Marco Briziarelli, U of New Mexico, USA Susana Martinez Guillem, U of New Mexico, USA Media and the Politics of the Earth Patrick D. Murphy, Temple U, USA The UN Climate Conferences and the Fantasy of the Postpolitical: Online Media and Protest Tactics Julie Uldam, Copenhagen Business School, UNITED KINGDOM 7428 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Uses of the Past, Memories of the Future Visual Communication Studies Chair Sandra Ristovska, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Private Pasts and Future Publics: Mobilizing Histories Through Amateur Media Daniel J. Mauro, U of Texas, USA Redistricting the Face of America Catherine L. Preston, U of Kansas, USA Memories of Displacement and Diasporic Korean Women’s Documentaries So Huyn Lee, Dongguk U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Roma Visuals Between the Symbolic and the Particular Sandra Ristovska, U of Pennsylvania, USA The past three decades have witnessed proliferating discussions about memory in the academy that oscillate between two conceptual extremes—the disappearance of memory and the overabundance of memory. The papers show how discussions of visual memories are interwoven in discussions of cultural practice—of the ways in which images are made, preserved, presented, recycled, legitimized, challenged, remembered and forgotten. Following Barbie Zelizer’s contribution to visual communication and collective remembering, the panelists scrutinize the relationship between the material and discursive dimensions of images and the inextricable link between “visual memories and a culture’s socially, politically and economically mandated and sanctioned modes of interpretation.” 7431 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Board Room 1 2013 Steve Jones Internet Research Lecture Sponsored Sessions Chair Steven Jones, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA See ad on page XXX for details. 7432 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Board Room 2 Feminist Media Studies Editorial Board Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Lisa M. McLaughlin, Miami U, USA Radha S. Hegde, New York U, USA Kumi Silva, Northeastern U, USA Kaitlynn D Mendes, De Montfort U, UNITED KINGDOM Alison C.M. Beale, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Monika Anna Lena Djerf-Pierre, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Kirsten Drotner, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Meenakshi Gigi Durham, U of Iowa, USA Romy Froehlich, U of Munich, GERMANY Rosalind Gill, King's College London, UNITED KINGDOM Isabel Molina-Guzman, U of Illinois, USA Lisa Henderson, U of Massachusetts, USA Dafna Lemish, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Vicki Mayer, Tulane U, USA Toby Miller, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Andrea Lee Press, U of Virginia, USA Jane Rhodes, Macalester College, USA Karen Ross, Liverpool U, UNITED KINGDOM Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Katherine Sender, U of Auckland, NEW ZEALAND Leslie Regan Shade, U of Toronto, CANADA Linda C. Steiner, U of Maryland, USA Celia Kay Weaver, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND 7433 Thursday 12:30-13:45 Board Room 3 Let's Talk About It: Learning From Assessment Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Deanna Dee Sellnow, U of Kentucky, USA Participants Assessing the Assessors: JMC Administrators Critique the Nine ACEJMC Standards Scott Reinardy, U of Kansas, USA Jerry Crawford, U of Kansas, USA Challenging Research on Classroom Communication: The Relevance of Dialogue and Practical Theorizing Heidi Lynn Muller, U of Northern Colorado, USA Department Dialogue Increases Commitment to General Education Assessment Sarah F. Rosaen, U of Michigan - Flint, USA Rebecca A. Hayes, Illinois State U, USA Marcus Paroske, U of Michigan - Flint, USA Danielle DeLaMare, U of Michigan - Flint, USA Rethinking and Challenge Communication Research Methods About the Effectiveness of Digital Literacy Education seunghyun Lee, U of North Carolina - Greensboro, USA This panel will include discussions about how assessment and dialogue can help to enhance departments and classrooms. 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Plenary Interactive Paper/Poster Session Sponsored Sessions Chair Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Children, Adolescents, and the Media Interactive Poster Session Children Adolescents and Media Participants 1. “Mauled by a Bear:” Narrative Analysis of Self-Injury Among Adolescents in U.S. News, 20072012 Warren Bareiss, U of South Carolina - Upstate, USA 2. Everyday Creativity: Online Creative Production by Teenagers in the Netherlands Jeroen Jansz, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Mijke Slot, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sam Tol, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Romy Verstraeten, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 3. Media Exposure, the Three-Step Process of Self-Objectification and Adolescents’ Sexual Attitudes Laura Vandenbosch, U of Leuven, BELGIUM 4. Predicting Parents' Support for Internet Risk Prevention Strategies Theodore Lee, Cornell U, USA Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Communication and Technology Interactive Poster Session Communication and Technology Participants 5. A Study of 3D HDTV Adoption: An Analysis of Predictors, Perceptions, and Behavioral Intention Xu Song, Colorado State U, USA 6. Effects of eWOM on Facebook Lutz M. Hagen, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY Daniel Hofmann, iCrossing GmbH, GERMANY 7. Public and Private Relational Maintenance in Social Network Websites: Effects on Social Presence, Relational Satisfaction, and Uncertainty Stephanie Tom Tong, Wayne State U, USA David Keith Westerman, West Virginia U, USA 8. Do You Trust My Avatar? Influence of Seller Avatars on Trust in Online Transactions Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY Thomas Dratsch, U of Cologne, GERMANY Simon Rehbach, U of Cologne, GERMANY Matthias Reyl, U of Cologne, GERMANY Blerta Lushaj, U of Cologne, GERMANY 9. The Usage of Information and Communication Technologies to Support Seeking and Sharing Information About Plant Disease Y. Connie Yuan, Cornell U, USA Joseph S Steinhardt, Cornell U, USA Katherine A. McComas, Cornell U, USA Geri Gay, Cornell U, USA Chris Smart, Cornell U, USA 10. Using the Coping Model of User Adaptation to Explore the Implementation Process of a New Electronic Health Record in a Multispecialty Physician Group Nancy Tobler, Utah Valley U, USA Janet Colvin, Utah Valley U, USA 11. Networking Skills: A Link Between Facebook Use and College Students’ Civic Engagement Kye-Hyoung Lee, U of Texas, USA Wenhong Chen, U of Texas, USA 12. Gaming Motivations, Avatar-Self Identification, and Symptoms of Online Game Addiction Zhi-Jin Zhong, Sun Yat-Sen U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Mike Z. Yao, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 13. Sexing of the Avatar: Gender, Sexualization, and Cyber-Harassment in a Virtual World Elizabeth Behm-Morawitz, U of Missouri, USA Shannon Schipper, Arizona State U, USA 14. A Comparison of Digital and Face-to-Face Communication Effects on Self-Esteem Using Ecological Momentary Assessment Amy L Gonzales, Indiana U, USA 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Communication History Interactive Poster Session Communication History Participants 15. PoliMedia: Improving Analyses of Radio, TV, and Newspaper Coverage of Political Debates Martijn Kleppe, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Henri Beunders, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Max Kemman, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 16. Mapping Addison and Steele's London Jon Leon Torn, Northern Arizona U, USA 17. Personal History: An Autoethnography of Life and Work Peter Joseph Gloviczki, U of Minnesota, USA Communication Law and Policy Interactive Poster Session Communication Law & Policy Participants 18. A Comparative Study of China and the US: Defamation and the Liability of Internet Service Provider in Social Media Era Yanfang Wu, U of Missouri, USA William Hein Freivogel, Southern Illinois U, USA 19. Municipal Broadband as Civic Infrastructure: The Australian Case Ian Gerrard McShane, RMIT U, AUSTRALIA Denise Meredyth, RMIT U, AUSTRALIA 20. The Spectrum Opportunity: A Case for Open and Shared Spectrum Policies to Maximize Innovation Aalok Mehta, U of Southern California, USA Kevin Werbach, U of Pennsylvania, USA Environmental Communication Interactive Poster Session Environmental Communication Participants 21. How Newspapers Represent Environmental Risk: The Case of Carcinogenic Hazards in South Korea Thomas Hove, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hye-Jin Paek, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Moonyoung Yun, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Bo Kyung Jwa, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 22. Making Waves: Mass Media, Opinion Leaders, and the Campaign for Environmental Change Kajsa E. Dalrymple, U of Iowa, USA Bret Shaw, U of Wisconsin, USA Dominique Brossard, U of Wisconsin, USA Ethnicity and Race in Communication Interactive Poster Session Ethnicity and Race in Communication Participants 23. Effects of Racial Stereotypes on Cognitive Dissonance as Displayed by Changes in Explicit Attitudes Nikita Hamilton, U of Southern California, USA 24. I’m Coming Out: Social Emergence and Sexual Risk Taking Among Young African American MSM Robin C Stevens, Rutgers U–Camden, USA Stephen Bernadini, Rutgers U–Camden, USA 25. The Relationship Between Television News Viewing, Motivations for Viewing, Stereotypes, and Prejudice Bradley W. Gorham, Syracuse U, USA 26. When Racism and Professionalism Collide: Negotiating Racial Identity Threats on a Predominantly White Campus Marlo Goldstein Hode, U of Missouri, USA Angela Gist, U of Missouri, USA 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Feminist Scholarship Interactive Paper Session Feminist Scholarship Participants 27. Sexualized Branded Entertainment and the Male Consumer Gaze. Matthew P. McAllister, Pennsylvania State U, USA Lauren Jaclyn DeCarvalho, Pennsylvania State U, USA 28. Crossroads of Gender and Internet Studies: The Case of Spain in the European Context Rainer Rubira, King Juan Carlos U, SPAIN Sonia Núñez, King Juan Carlos U, SPAIN Diana Fernández, King Juan Carlos U, SPAIN 29. Newspaper Framing of Domestic Violence Eileen N. Gilligan, SUNY – Oswego, USA Arvind Diddi, Michigan State U, USA Christine Courtade Hirsch, SUNY – Oswego, USA Game Studies Interactive Poster Session Game Studies Participants 30. How Much Choice Do Gamers Want? The Effects of Choice Assortment and Complexity on Enjoyment, Frustration, and Regret Travis Leigh Ross, Indiana U, USA James J Cummings, Stanford U, USA 31. The Virtual Cityscapes of Rock Star Games Jon Leon Torn, Northern Arizona U, USA 32. Video Games as Meaningful Entertainment Experiences Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Julia K. Woolley, California Polytechnic State U, San Luis Obispo, USA Ryan Rogers, U of North Carolina, USA Brett Sherrick, Pennsylvania State U, USA Mun-Young Chung, Pennsylvania State U, USA Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies Interactive Poster Session Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies Participants 33. Are the Kids All Right? Family Status, Challenges, Public Opinion, and Gay Civil Rights Amy B. Becker, Towson U, USA 34. It’s (Not) in His Kiss: Gay Kisses, Narrative Strategies, and Camera Angles in Postnetwork Television Comedy Alfred Leonard Martin, Jr., U of Texas, USA 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Global Communication and Social Change Interactive Paper Session Global Communication and Social Change Participants 35. Culture in the Time of Cholera: Crisis and the Limits of “Cultural Democracy” in Europe Sarah Anne Ganter, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA 36. Challenges of a Rejected Technology: Communication Solutions to the Bt Eggplant Case in Rural India Meghnaa Tallapragada, Cornell U, USA 37. Framing an Online Social Movement: 6th of April Youth Movement manaf Bashir, Indiana U, USA 38. Global Negotiations of National Unity and Diversity in Public Media: A Comparative Study on South Africa and Flanders Hannelie Marx, U of South Africa, SOUTH AFRICA Alexander Dhoest, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 39. How to Play the Game of Intellectual Property in China Jing Liu, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Mike Z. Yao, City U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG 40. The Popular Culture Celebrity and the Viewer: Awareness Through Entertainment-Education and Parasocial Interactions in Lebanon Jessica R. El-Khoury, Texas Tech U, USA Kenton T. Wilkinson, Texas Tech U, USA 41. The Usage Behaviors, Motivations and Gratifications of Using User-Generated Media: The Case Study of Taiwan’s YouTube Tai-Li Wang, National Taiwan U, TAIWAN Health Communication Interactive Paper Session Health Communication Participants 42. A Communication Infrastructure Approach to Reproductive Health Disparities: Engaged Research as a Storytelling Network Intervention Matthew D. Matsaganis, U at Albany - SUNY, USA Annis G. Golden, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Muriel E. Scott, U at Albany – SUNY, USA 43. Barriers to Patient-Centered Mammography Among Appalachian Kentucky Women Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA Robin C. Vanderpool, U of Kentucky, USA Bethney Wilson, U of Kentucky, USA 44. Evaluation of a Social Norms Campaign Approach to Suicide Prevention: Are Celebrity Sources More Effective Than Peer Sources? Kami J. Silk, Michigan State U, USA Samantha Ann Nazione, Michigan State U, USA Kristin Pace, Michigan State U, USA Evan Perrault, Michigan State U, USA Jan Collins-Eaglin, Michigan State U, USA 45. Personal Protection Behaviors Against Malaria in India: Urban Attitudes and Health Info Seeking Preferences May O. Lwin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Santosh Vijaykumar, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Gentatsu Lim, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Yin-Leng Theng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Schubert Foo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 46. Physician Communication in the Operating Room Kris A. Kirschbaum, East Carolina U, USA 47. Seeking and Processing Information for Health Decisions Among Elderly Chinese Singaporean Women Leanne Chang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Iccha Basnyat, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Daniel Teo, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE 48. Undocumented Struggles of Graduate Students: The Psychosocial Wellbeing of the Knowledge Engine Nadine A. Yehya, American U of Beirut, LEBANON Mohan Jyoti Dutta, National U of Singapore, USA 49. Zombie Apocalypse: Can the Undead Teach the Living How to Survive an Emergency? Marjorie Kruvand, Loyola U Chicago, USA Fred B. Bryant, Loyola U Chicago, USA 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Information Systems Interactive Poster Session Information Systems Participants 50. Exploring the Impact of Emotional Content During Media Multitasking Cody Kenneth Cooper, Ohio State U, USA 51. In Sync: How Synchronous Movement Improves Social Identification and Cooperation in Ivar Vermeulen, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Esther Weijkamp, VU U - Amsterdam, NL 52. Time-Orientation and Environmental Risk Perception and Attitudes in Two Cultures Wei Peng, Michigan State U, USA Jie Zhuang, Michigan State U, USA Maria Knight Lapinski, Michigan State U, USA 53. Media Schema and Heuristic Processing in Third-Person Perception Lelia Samson, Indiana U, USA Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA Instructional and Developmental Communication Interactive Paper Session Instructional & Developmental Communication Participants 54. Age Differences in Media Multitasking: A Diary Study Margot van der Goot, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hilde Voorveld, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 55. Children Process Advertisements in Video Games With More Cognitive Effort Than Adults Christoph Klimmt, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Alexandra Ellen Sowka, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Franziska Susanne Roth, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Gregor Daschmann, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY 56. Invading Public Spaces: Exploring the Effects of Media Type Edward Downs, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Jacqueline Y Borrett, U of North Carolina, USA Sarah Erickson, Great Lakes Aquarium, USA 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Intercultural Communication Interactive Poster Session Intercultural Communication Participants 57. A Longitudinal Study of Person-Culture Fit: Galileo Mental Models and Intercultural Adaptation Processes Lin Zhu, U of Massachusetts - Boston, USA Meina Liu, U of Maryland, USA Edward L. Fink, U of Maryland, USA 58. Effects of Physical Similarity Between the Models in Fashion Advertisements and Viewers on Purchase Intention Younbo Jung, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Xin Yi Chan, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Cassandra Lew, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Derrick Lim, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Hyun Ou Lee, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 59. Individuals’ Perception of Others’ Self-Esteem and Psychological Well-being: Role of Body Size and Peers’ Comments Emiko Taniguchi, U of Texas, USA Hye Eun Lee, U of Hawaii, USA Intergroup Communication Interactive Poster Session Intergroup Communication Participant 60. Ingroup Versus Outgroup: Different Perceptions of Social Identities Between Students From Mainland China and Local Taiwanese Students Pei-Wen Lee, Shih Hsin U, TAIWAN Interpersonal Communication Interactive Poster Session Interpersonal Communication Participants 61. An Examination of Equity and Interdependence Theory as Predictors of Maintenance Behaviors: Interracial vs. Intraracial Dating Relationships Narissra Maria Punyanunt-Carter, Texas Tech U, USA Stacy Carter, Texas Tech U, USA Natasha Rodriguez, Texas Tech U, USA 62. An Exploratory Investigation of Communication With Cousins Krystyna S. Aune, U of Hawaii, USA Robert Kelly Aune, U of Hawaii, USA 63. Incarcerated Mothers: An Examination of Parenting Style and Attitude Alicia Romano, Beech Brook Organization, USA Jill E. Rudd, Cleveland State U, USA Kimberly Neuendorf, Cleveland State U, USA Clare Gross, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Journalism Studies Interactive Poster Session Journalism Studies Participants 64. Climate Summits as Global Media Events: Journalistic Contributions to a Transnational Public Sphere Julia Lueck, U of Mannheim, GERMANY 65. How Journalists‘ and Scientists‘ Views on Objectivity Influence Their Accounts of Reality Senja Post, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY 66. Science Journalists’ Selection Criteria and Their Depiction of Nanotechnology and its (Un)Certainty in German Media Lars Guenther, Friedrich Schiller U Jena, GERMANY Georg Ruhrmann, U of Jena, GERMANY 67. Analyzing Web Analytics: How Newsrooms Use Web Metrics in News Construction and Why Edson Jr. Castro Tandoc, U of Missouri, USA Michael M. Jenner, U of Missouri, USA 68. How Reddit Sees the World: Analyzing Secondary Gatekeeping and Geographic Patterns in News Posted to a Social Link Aggregator Jeffrey Kyle Riley, U of Florida, USA Ashley Carnifax, U of Central Florida, USA 69. The Effects of Micropayments on Online News Story Selection and Engagement Nick Geidner, U of Tennessee, USA Denae Lynn D'Arcy, U of Tennessee, USA 70. The Influence of Elite Disagreement and Political Power Separation on Framing Competition Over the Iraq Troop Withdrawal in 2006 Jihyang Choi, Indiana U, USA 71. We're Out Here: How the Daily Yonder's Political Coverage Builds Social Capital Alecia Swasy, U of Missouri, USA 72. “Whose Team is it?”: The Construction and Deconstruction of National Identity in the Sports Pages Haim Hagay, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Language and Social Interaction Interactive Paper Session Language & Social Interaction Chair Zohar Kampf, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Participants 73. “Axi, Ma- Ze Nishma Kemo Shem Aravi Ma” (Bro, What- it Sound Like an Arabic Name, What): The Hebrew Discourse Marker Ma in Spoken and Written Interactions Chaim Noy, U of South Florida, USA 74. Exploring the Pragmatic Functions of the Acronym LOL in Instant Messenger Conversations Kris M. Markman, U of Memphis, USA 75. LOL in Nonmediated Communication Contexts? Perceived Appropriateness and Text Speak Frequency in Verbal Communication David J. Park, Florida International U, USA Weirui Wang, Florida International U, USA Joseph Knuckles, Florida International U, USA Respondent Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Mass Communication Interactive Poster Session Mass Communication Participants 76. An Experiment Investigating the Links Among Online Dating Profile Attractiveness, Ideal Endorsement, and Romantic Media Veronica Hefner, Chapman U, USA Julie Kahn, Chapman U, USA 77. Bonding and Bridging Social Capital on Twitter: Differentiating Between Followers and Followees Matthias Hofer, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Viviane Bianca Aubert, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND 78. Media Literacy and Information Literacy: Subset, Overlapping, or Parallel Relationship? Alice Yuet Lin Lee, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Clement YK So, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF 79. The Effects of Evidence Type, Peer Opinions, and Information Processing on Consumers’ Perceived Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Image in Online Journalism Environment Lei Jia, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Minchul Kim, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA 80. Virtuous People Doing Noble Work: Professionalism and Public Service Among U.S. Media Exemplars Patrick Lee Plaisance, Colorado State U, USA 81. Webmalaise in the Social Media Era: Interactivity and Internet Effects on Trust Michael Barthel, U of Washington, USA Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA Eike Mark Rinke, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Sheetal Doshi Agarwal, U of Washington, USA Muzammil M Hussain, U of Washington, USA 82. Women’s Rejection of Sexually Explicit Material: The Role of Hyperfemininity and Processing Style Johanna M.F. van Oosten, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Inge Boot, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 83. Antecedents and Consequences of Television Audiences’ Social Engagement With Primetime Network Programming Miao Guo, Ball State U, USA Organizational Communication Interactive Poster Session Organizational Communication Participants 84. Discontinuities and Continuities in Constructing Work: Exploring Chinese Post80s Generation’s Interpretations of Meaningful Work Ziyu Long, Purdue U, USA Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA Kai Kuang, Purdue U, USA 85. Looks Good to Me...or Not: The Impact of Web Site Aesthetics on Online Job Seekers Steve Matuszak, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Bartosz Wojtek Wojdynski, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Kevin Carlson, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA 86. Stiffening and Bypassing the Organizational Text: The Case of the Electronic Patient Healthcare Record Anne Mayère, U of Toulouse, FRANCE Consuelo Vasquez, U du Québec à Montréal, CANADA 87. The Quality vs. Accessibility Debate Revisited: A Contingency Perspective on Information Source Selection Lilian Woudstra, U of Tilburg, THE NETHERLANDS Bart J. van den Hooff, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Alexander Peter Schouten, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS 88. “It’s Difficult to Say.”: Discourse Analysis, Global Business, and the Difficulties of Distal Contextualization Iain Donald Macpherson, MacEwan U, CANADA 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Philosophy, Theory, and Critique Interactive Paper Session Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants 89. Addressing Cultural “Barriers” in the Dominant Health Communication Paradigm: Theorizing a Cultural Bridge Approach Benjamin J. Li, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 90. Enlightenment, the Remix: Transparency as a DJ’s Trick of Seeing Everyone From Nowhere Ethan Plaut, Stanford U, USA 91. Loss of Innovation: Reliance of Health Communication Research on Health Psychology Yumeng Wang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 92. Performing Disrespect: Recognition, Civility, and Personhood in the French “Burqa” Debates of 2009-2011 Shazia Iftkhar, U of Michigan, USA 93. Technoculture Versus Big Brother: Pirate Politics as a Countercultural Movement Patrick Burkart, Texas A&M U, USA Political Communication Interactive Poster Session Political Communication Participants 94. Call Your Legislator: A Field Experimental Study of the Impact of Citizen Contacts on Legislative Voting Daniel E. Bergan, Michigan State U, USA Richard T Cole, Michigan State U, USA 95. Gaining Attention Yet Communicating Little? On Episodic and Thematic Coverage of Protest Events in Belgian Television News Ruud Wouters, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 96. Political Homophily on Social Network Site and Users’ Poll Skepticism Young Min Baek, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Irkwon Jeong, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF June Woong Rhee, Seoul National U of Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 97. Race to the Starting Line: Voter Assessment of Media Coverage Before the 2012 Iowa Caucus Jane B. Singer, U of Iowa, USA Julie L. Andsager, U of Iowa, USA 98. Recognition and Ideology: Tensions in Honneth’s Justified and Ideological Recognition for Rethinking the Case of Child Domestic Labor Rousiley Celi Moreira Maia, Federal U of Minas Gerais, BRAZIL Danila Gentil Rodriguez Cal, U Federal de Minas Gerais, BRAZIL 99. The Affective Citizen Communication Model: How Emotions Engage Citizens With Politics Through Media and Discussion Sebastian Valenzuela, Pontificia U Catolica de Chile, CHILE 100. Web 2.0 Spaces for Activism: Critiquing its Novelty Through a Historical Lens of Public Political Space Payal Arora, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Popular Communication Interactive Poster Session Popular Communication Participants 101. Roma and Sulukule: Heritage, Memory, Identity, and a Destruction of a Community Sandra Ristovska, U of Pennsylvania, USA 102. 5,535 Hours of Impact: Effects of Olympic Media on Nationalism Attitudes Andrew C. Billings, U of Alabama, USA Kenon A Brown, U of Alabama, USA Natalie Brown, U of Alabama, USA 103. Amplifying the People’s Mic: Internet Memes, Pop Polyvocality, and the Occupy Wall Street Movement Ryan M. Milner, College of Charleston, USA 104. Children’s Films on European Television: Between Concentration of Production Countries and Diversity of Content Franziska Matthes, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY 105. Watching TV Fiction. Changing Viewing Practices in the Age of Digitization? Nele Simons, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 106. The Social Side of Disruptive Innovations: An Analysis of Polaroid’s Cultural Legacy Nora A Draper, U of Pennsylvania, USA 107. The Red Hatters: Negotiating Gender Through Fun, Fantasy and Play Samira Van Bohemen, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Public Relations Interactive Poster Session Public Relations Participants 108. Community Relationship Strategies and Outcomes in Third Sector Organizations: A Colombian Conservation Program Case Study Jennie Pena, U del Norte, COLOMBIA 109. Problematizing Digital Transparency: The Normative and Axiological Functions of "Transparency Discourse" in Online Public Relations Sun ha Hong, U of Pennsylvania, USA Francois Allard, U of Paris - Sorbonne, FRANCE 110. The Effects of the Stakeholder Engagement Strategy in CSR Communication on CSR Goal Achievement Joon Soo Lim, Mississippi State U, USA Cary A. Greenwood, Middle Tennessee State U, USA 111. Whistleblowing in the Fortune 1000: What Did Public Relations Practitioners Tell Us? Cary A. Greenwood, Middle Tennessee State U, USA 112. This Blog Brought to You by…: Exploring Blogger Perceptions of a Product Endorsement Policy Justin Walden, Pennsylvania State U, USA Denise S. Bortree, Pennsylvania State U, USA Marcia DiStaso, Pennsylvania State U, USA Interactive Paper Session: Visual Storytelling and Impact Visual Communication Studies Participants 113. What Does Credibility Look Like? Tweets, Walls, and Websites in U.S. Presidential Candidates’ Visual Storytelling Janis Teruggi Page, George Washington U, USA Margaret Ellen Duffy, U of Missouri, USA 114. Examining the Impact of Antecedent Variables on Photo Messaging Use Daniel Scot Hunt, Newbury College, USA David J. Atkin, U of Connecticut, USA Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA 115. The Genre of Street Photography as Visual Communication: The Myth of the Invisible Observer Ruben Demasure, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 7501 Thursday 14:00-15:15 Sandringham Interactive Theme Papers: Challenging Communication Research Theme Sessions Participants 116. Reconceptualizing Information in Light of Communication Contexts Joseph M. Kayany, Western Michigan U, USA 117. Identity, Well Being, and Crisis Management in Social Interaction: Challenging Communication Researchers to Examine the Adolescent Suicide Epidemic From a Communication Perspective Stephen DiDomenico, Rutgers U, USA 118. When Course Evaluations Fail: A Whistleblower's Tale A Anonymous, U of the Intermountain West, USA 7605 Key Concepts in News Research: A Comparative Examination of Political News in 16 Advanced Democracies Thursday 15:30-16:45 Palace A Political Communication Journalism Studies Chair Susan Banducci, U of Exeter, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Interpretive Journalism Susana Salgado, New U of Lisbon, PORTUGAL Jesper Stromback, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Rosa Berganza, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Personalization of Political News: A Comparative Study Peter Van Aelst, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Nicolas Hube, U of Paris, FRANCE Stylianos Papathanassopoulos, National and Kapodistrian U - Athens, GREECE From Hard to Soft News Carsten E. Reinemann, U of Munich, GERMANY James Stanyer, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Sebastian Scherr, U of Munich, GERMANY Guido Legnante, U of Pavia, ITALY Partisan Biases in Newspaper, TV, and Online Journalism Across 16 Advanced Democracies David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Frank Esser, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Toril Aalberg, Norwegian U of Science and Technology, NORWAY Respondent Erik P. Bucy, Texas Tech U, USA This panel presents results from a large-scale comparative content-analysis of political news coverage across 16 advanced democracies. Each paper will focus on the analysis of one of six prominent concepts; including personalization, negativity, soft vs. hard news, political balance, and strategy framing. Each paper will outline the need for a comparative analysis, present the characteristics of news coverage across media systems and explore the implications for our understanding of what shapes news coverage. 7606 Top Papers in Organizational Communication Thursday 15:30-16:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Bart J. van den Hooff, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Meanings of Organizational Volunteering: Diverse Volunteer Pathways Kirstie Lynd McAllum, IESE Business School, SPAIN The Conversational Constitution of the Task at Hand: A Temporal Work Katharina Hohmann, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND Jeanne Mengis, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND The Institutionalization of Genetically Modified Food: A Longitudinal Semantic Network Analysis Kimberlie Joy Stephens, U of Southern California, USA Gail Fann Thomas, Naval Postgraduate School, USA Worker Co-Rumination Mediates the Relationships Between Social Support and Stress and Burnout Justin P Boren, Santa Clara U, USA Respondent Janet Fulk, U of Southern California, USA These papers were selected through a double review process in which the most highly ranked in the first round of reviews were then submitted to a panel of senior scholars who chose these four as the "best of the best". 7607 Blogs, Boundaries, and Burly Brothers: Building New Environmental Understanding With New Media TOP PAPERS PANEL Thursday 15:30-16:45 Palace C Environmental Communication Chair Charlotte Ryan, U of Massachusetts - Lowell, USA Participants An Online Narrative of Colorado Wilderness: Self-in-Cybernetic Space Joseph Grant Champ, Colorado State U, USA Daniel R Williams, U.S. Department of Agriculture, USA Rhetorical Framing During Xiamen Environmental Movement in China: Boundary-Spanning Contention and Schism of Civil Society Hao Cao, U of Texas, USA Lisa B. Brooten, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA The Changing Nature of Environmental Discourse: An Exploratory Comparison of Environmental Journalists and Bloggers Edson Jr. Castro Tandoc, U of Missouri, USA Bruno Takahashi, Michigan State U, USA Climate Science vs. Distributing Responsibilities: A Content Analysis of The People’s Daily Zhan Li, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF 7608 Downsizing Data: Analyzing Social Digital Traces Thursday 15:30-16:45 York Communication and Technology Participants Creating Social-Science Grounded Algorithms to Analyze Communication Dynamics in Big Data Jennifer Stromer-Galley, U at Albany - SUNY, USA Tomek Strzalkowski, U at Albany – SUNY, USA George Aaron Broadwell, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Samira Shaikh, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Ting Liu, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Sarah Taylor, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Xiaoai Ren, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Feifei Zhang, U at Albany - SUNY, USA Jennifer Crowley, U at Albany – SUNY, USA Where Everybody Knows Your Name: Tracing Regulars and Their Hubs From Social Media Raz Schwartz, Rutgers U, USA Occupies, Generators, and Tents: Resource Mobilization by OccupyNYC via Twitter Shawn Walker, U of Washington, USA Reblog If: Information Resharing on a Massive Creative Social Media Platform Alex Leavitt, U of Southern California, USA The recent flurry of interest in the potentials of "big data" has led to a number of critiques by social scientists on the theories, methodologies, and analysis of large data sources. The emergent call for "small data" inquiries highlights a defensive tone on the part of traditional social scientists in the face of the popularization of large-scale, computationally-driven projects. This panel aims to bridge these discourses by introducing research that begins in large collections of data and crafts research questions to fit their application to particular social scientific inquiries. The panel brings together four qualitative or quantitative projects that look at social dynamics of online, networked social media systems. They build on prior theories and empirical research around critical questions regarding communication, identity, information, and sociality, and inquire into data from their respective platforms. 7609 Political and Economical Empowerment by Online Media Thursday 15:30-16:45 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente, NL Participants Collective Activism Through Social Media: The Role of Collective Efficacy Alcides Velasquez, Pontificia U Javeriana, USA Robert Larose, Michigan State U, USA The Benefits and Burdens of Network Diversity: Political Engagement on Social Networking Sites Weiai Xu, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Jian Rui, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Michael A. Stefanone, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Online Media and Offline Empowerment in Democratic Transition: Linking Forms of Internet Use With Political Attitudes and Behaviors in Post-Rebellion Tunisia Anita Breuer, German Development Institute, GERMANY Jacob Groshek, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA The Amplification Effect of Mobile Phones: User Expectations and Economic Outcomes in the Context of Development Han Ei Chew, United Nations U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Vigneswara Ilavarasan, Indian Institute of Management Rohtak, INDIA Mark Levy, Michigan State U, USA 7611 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Waterloo/Tower Message Strategies and Risk Perceptions: Health Messages, Cognitive Processing, and Behavioral Outcomes Health Communication Chair Hyun Suk Kim, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants The Utilization of the HSM to Assess Risk Belief and Attitude Formation From Translated Scientific Messages About PFOA Sandi W Smith, Michigan State U, USA Rose Clark-Hitt, Michigan State U, USA Jessica Russell, Michigan State U, USA Samantha Ann Nazione, Michigan State U, USA Kami J. Silk, Michigan State U, USA Charles Atkin, Michigan State U, USA Knowledge Types and Risk Perceptions: Driving Information-Seeking and Risk Prevention Behaviors Danae Manika, Queen Mary, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Patricia A. Stout, U of Texas, USA Linda L. Golden, U of Texas, USA Michael S. Mackert, U of Texas, USA Influence of Evidence Type and Narrative Type on HPV Risk Perception and Intention to Obtain the HPV Vaccine Xiaoli Nan, U of Maryland, USA Michael Field Dahlstrom, Iowa State U, USA Adam S. Richards, U of Maryland, USA Sarani Rangarajan, Iowa State U, USA The Effects of Metaphor Use and Message Format on Cognitive Processing and Persuasive Outcomes of Condom Promotion Messages Stephanie Kay Van Stee, U of Kentucky, USA Seth M. Noar, U of North Carolina, USA Nancy Grant Harrington, U of Kentucky, USA 7612 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Chelsea/Richmond Studying Gender and Games: Using Multiple Methodologies Game Studies Participants Postfeminism in Games: Views From the Contexts of Play and Production Alison Harvey, U of Toronto, CANADA Booth Babe or Games Researcher? Methodological Trade-Offs Between Theory and Situated Praxis Florence Chee, IDRC, CANADA There’s No Crying in New Eden: Theorizing Why Women Don’t Play EVE Online Kelly Bergstrom, York U, CANADA All's Fair in Love and War? Gaming Couples in League of Legends Tracy L. M. Kennedy, Brock U, CANADA Rabindra A. Ratan, Michigan State U, USA Dmitri Williams, U of Southern California, USA Motivated by the call at the 2012 ICA Game Studies AGM for increased participation by qualitative researchers, this panel brings together four diverse investigations of gender and gaming communities. Differing in their methodological approaches and theoretical framing, each paper will present an example of the nuanced ways that “gender” can be used as an interpretive lens within a larger investigation of gaming cultures and player practices. Ultimately, the goal for this panel is to showcase the diversity of methodologies, theories, and analytical frameworks open to games researchers who seek to move beyond “gender” as a stable and binary category for sorting study participants. 7613 Mass Media and Body Image Thursday 15:30-16:45 St. James Mass Communication Chair Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Participants Effects of Mediated Celebrity on Young People’s Attitudes Toward Cosmetic Surgery Nainan Wen, Macau U of Science and Technology, MACAU Stella C. Chia, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xiaoming Hao, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Identification With Media Celebrities: A Self-Discrepancy Theory Based Examination of Actual, Ideal, and Ought Identification Kari Michelle Wilson, Indiana U South Bend, USA Hyunyi Cho, Purdue U, USA Lijiang Shen, U of Georgia, USA Real Ideal: The Effects of Attainable and Unattainable Video Game Bodies on Users’ Body-Image Disturbance Nicholas L Matthews, Indiana U, USA Teresa Lynch, Indiana U, USA Nicole Martins, Indiana U, USA The Relationship Between Use of Ideal-Body Media and Men’s Drive for Muscularity: Considering the Roles of Peer Expectations and Current Exercise Patterns Alice E. Hall, U of Missouri - St. Louis, USA 7614 Exploring Global Implications of the UK Journalism Debacle Thursday 15:30-16:45 Regent's Journalism Studies Chair Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA Participants On the Relevance and Irrelevance of Place in the Journalistic Imaginary Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Leveson and Finkelstein: A Tale of Two Inquiries Mathew Ricketson, U of Canberra, AUSTRALIA Abuse, Dope, and Charities: Armstrong and Savile, a Failure of Journalism Howard Tumber, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Regulating Journalism: Thomas Jefferson in the Age of Monitory Democracy Rodney Evan Tiffen, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Hackgate and Institutional Change in Journalism: Shock, Layering, Conversion, Drift, and Displacement Michael Stuart Bromley, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM What in the UK is known as Hackgate – the scandal of, and surrounding, nefarious editorial activities at the News of the World newspaper – and the consequent Leveson Inquiry into ‘the culture, practices and ethics of the press’ were commonly represented as presaging an abrupt and wholesale transformation of Britain’s distinctive modern tradition of freewheeling tabloid-inflected journalism. Was the UK journalism debacle just a little local difficulty, or did it have wider, global implications? Systemic failure on this scale has opened up opportunities to reconsider some of the assumptions underpinning journalism research. 7616 New Perspectives on Journalistic Structures and Labor Thursday 15:30-16:45 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair C.W. Anderson, College of Staten Island - CUNY, USA Participants Online Sophistication of News Websites Elisabeth Guenther, U Münster, GERMANY Michael Scharkow, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Accountability Reporting in The Wall Street Journal Before and After Murdoch Beth Knobel, Fordham U, USA Communicating Imperfection: The Ethical Principles of News Corrections Zohar Kampf, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Efrat Daskal, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Time to Rethink Journalistic Labour? What We Can Learn From Studying Freelancers and Interns Mirjam Gollmitzer, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Respondent David M. Ryfe, U of Nevada - Reno, USA 7617 Media and Medals: Entertainment and Sports Thursday 15:30-16:45 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Participants Inspired by the Paralympics Anne Bartsch, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Anja Kalch, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Cordula Nitsch, U of Düsseldorf, GERMANY Medialization of Soccer: How TV Changed Our Favorite Sport Michael Meyen, U of Munich, GERMANY Olympics Everywhere: Predictors of Multiplatform Media Uses During the 2012 London Olympics Tang Tang, U of Akron, USA Roger Cooper, Ohio U, USA Visualizing London: Analyzing Gender and Race on International Websites During the 2012 Olympics Lauren Reichart Smith, Auburn U, USA Skye C Cooley, Mississippi State U, USA “Big Run, or Smart Gun”: How Racially-Based Sports Frames Influence Subsequent Audience Behaviors and Attitudes of Audiences Towards Athletes Gregory A. Cranmer, West Virginia U, USA Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Zac W. Goldman, West Virginia U, USA 7618 Top 3 Papers in Interpersonal Communication Thursday 15:30-16:45 Cadogan Interpersonal Communication Chair John P. Caughlin, U of Illinois, USA Participants Response Thresholds Predict Demand/Withdraw Communication in Division of Labor Conflict Among Marital Dyads Kendra Knight, Christopher Newport U, Select One Janet K. Alberts, Arizona State U, USA The Influence of Goals and Discussion Type on Emotional Experience and Expression Within Interpersonal Conflict Christin E Huggins, U of Georgia, USA Jennifer A. Samp, U of Georgia, USA “You Need to Stop Talking About This!”: Verbal Rumination and the Costs of Social Support Tamara D. Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Walid Afifi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Anne Merrill, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Amanda Denes, U of Connecticut, USA Sharde Davis, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Respondent John P. Caughlin, U of Illinois, USA 7621 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Antifandom, Hate, Annoyance, and Dislike in Media Reception Popular Communication Chair Jonathan Alan Gray, U of Wisconsin, USA Participants Antifandom as Social Performance Anne Gilbert, Rutgers U, USA Twitards and Tyler’s Van: Antifans, Twilight, and Textuality Melissa A. Click, U of Missouri, USA Holly Willson Holladay, U of Missouri, USA Antifandom: The Next Generation? Exploring Textual Dislike and the Life Course Matt Hills, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM What Were You Expecting? Negotiating the Mediated Center Through Annoyance Sarah Anne Murray, U of Wisconsin, USA Jonathan Alan Gray, U of Wisconsin, USA Feelings of hate, dislike, disgust, and annoyance increasingly pervade mediated spaces, facilitated at least in part by the democratizing forces of a converged, participatory media environment. Yet theorization and empirical data that considers the role of negative affect for audiences are in too short supply. As a result, some key questions that we might ask of a media audience – what does it mean to dislike or hate a text, what rhetorical strategies are employed to voice this hate, and how are hate and love, anti-fandom and fandom related? – continue to go largely unanswered. This panel therefore aims to turn from love to hate, dislike, alienation, and annoyance, and from fandom to anti-fandom, to make sense of what dislike and hate of media products are as sociocultural phenomena. 7622 Thursday 15:30-18:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Extended Session: Technological Determinism and Communication for Sustainable Social Change Global Communication and Social Change Chair Jan E. Servaes, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Microproductivity, Creative Systems, and Digital Storytelling John Hartley, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA Technology, Integrative Development and Intercultural Communication Rico Lie, Wageningen U, THE NETHERLANDS Development, Technology, and Sustainable Social Change From a Buddhist Perspective Patchanee Malikhao, U of Massachusetts, USA Technologies of Transformation? David Morley, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Digital Inequality Still Exists, But "How to Change?" Christine L. Ogan, Indiana U, USA Issues of Development and Human Liberation Ultimately Remain Questions of Politics and Economics Colin Sparks, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Being Meaningfully Mobile: Mobile Phones and Development Jo Tacchi, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Creating Sustainable Programs for Women in Micro-Enterprise Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas, USA Video Technologies and Participatory Approaches for Sustainable Peace: Tackling Conflict Through Social Change Communication Valentina Bau, Macquarie U, AUSTRALIA Digital Communication and/as Participation? A Critical Analysis of New Media Initiatives for Civic/Political Engagement and Development in Medellin, Colombia Melissa M. Brough, U of Southern California, USA Making the Global Local: Communicating the Transition Network On and Offline Emily Polk, U of Massachusetts, USA Tiger Gate: How ICT Empowered Activists Are Engaged in Social Change Actions to Increase Government Accountability and Transparency in China Song Shi, U of Massachusetts, USA The Emancipatory Technology and Struggle for Independent Society: Dialectics of Culture and Technology for Social Change in the Case of Iran Mahdi Yousefi, U of Tehran, IRAN, ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF Technological Determinism and Communication for Sustainable Social Change Jan E. Servaes, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The aim of this panel is to shed new light on a theoretically and practically significant issue in communication studies: technological determinism and communication for sustainable social change. It provides insight into the role of technology and culture in social change, an issue that has been increasingly central to communication for social change theories and practices around the world over the past decades. Given the variety and depth of challenges in sustainable social change both researchers and practitioners need to espouse a broad and contextualized understanding of the role of technology in social change that transcends conventional technological deterministic approaches. 7623 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Best Papers in the Public Relations Division 2013 Public Relations Chair Sherry J. Holladay, U of Central Florida, USA Participants Action Research and Public Relations: Dialogue, Peer Learning, and the Issue of Alcohol Magda Pieczka, Queen Margaret U, UNITED KINGDOM Emma Wood, Queen Margaret U, UNITED KINGDOM "Outnumbered Yet Still on Top, But for How Long?" Theorizing About Males Working in the Feminized Field of Public Relations Donnalyn Pompper, Temple U, USA Taejin Jung, SUNY – Oswego, USA Empowerment as a Key Construct for Understanding Public Relations' Potential for Community Building Moonhee Cho, U of South Florida, USA Maria De Moya, North Carolina State U, USA Strategic Communication of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR): Effects of Stated Motives and Corporate Reputation on Stakeholder Responses Yeonsoo Kim, Weber State U, USA What Do Stakeholders "Like" on Facebook? Public Reactions to Organizations’ Informational, Promotional, and Community-Building Messages Gregory Douglas Saxton, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Richard D. Waters, U of San Francisco, USA 7624 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Media, Entertainment, and Play in the Lives of Young Children Children Adolescents and Media Participants Children’s Preferences for TV Show Hosts: An International Perspective on Learning From Television Andrea Holler, International Central Insititute for Youth and Educational Television, GERMANY Maya Goetz, the International Central Institute for Youth and Educational Television, GERMANY Meryl Alper, U of Southern California, USA Predictors of Baby Video/DVD Ownership: Findings From a National Sample of American Parents With Young Children Sarah Ellen Vaala, U of Pennsylvania, USA Matthew A. Lapierre, U of North Carolina - Wilmington, USA The Effect of Foreground Television on the Quality of Young Children’s Concurrent Play Behaviors Amy Nathanson, Ohio State U, USA Laura Willis, Ohio State U, USA Eric E Rasmussen, Ohio State U, USA What’s Real and What’s Pretend? Preschoolers’ Judgments About TV Depictions of Ethnicity Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin, USA Gayathri Sivakumar, U of Wisconsin, USA Youth and the Internet: Developmental Implications of Website Preferences Among 8 to 12-Year-Old Children Courtney Blackwell, Northwestern U, USA Alexis Lauricella, Northwestern U, USA Ellen Wartella, Northwestern U, USA Annie Conway, Museum of Science and Industry, USA Respondent Kristen Harrison, U of Michigan, USA 7625 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 The Discursive Negotiation of Controversy in Political and Institutional Contexts Language & Social Interaction Chair Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA Participants Speaking Out:Testimonial Rhetoric in Israeli Soldiers’ Dissent (Top Paper) Tamar Katriel, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Nimrod Shavit, U of Massachusetts, USA Managing the Problematic Relationship Between God and Government: Discourse Strategies in Legislative Hearings About Same-Sex Marriage Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA The Transnational Convergence of the Discourse of Civic Integration Marco Scalvini, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM “Why You Should Stay in Bulgaria”: (Re)constructing the Bulgarian Identity in Discourses on Emigration Nadezhda Mihaylova Sotirova, U of Massachusetts, USA Rhetorical Agency in Ideological Dispute: Party Members’ Discursive Legitimisation of Contested Political Narratives Jiska Engelbert, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 7626 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Intercultural Top Four Papers Intercultural Communication Participants “Outsourced,” (Re)presentation, and “The Politics of the Image” Avinash Thombre, U of Arkansas - Little Rock, USA Shaheed Nick Mohammed, Pennsylvania State U - Altoona, USA Value of International Experience and Cultural intelligence in Developing Global Mindset: The Role of Global Mindset in Effective Intercultural Collaboration in Global Teams (Top Student Paper) Malgorzata Boyraz, Rutgers U, USA Negotiating the Landscape of Division: The Rhetorical Uses of Multiculturalism in Macedonia Linda Ziberi, South East European U, MACEDONIA Lara Lengel, Bowling Green State U, USA Artan Limani, South East European U, MACEDONIA Understanding Cultural Variations in Giving Advice Among Americans and Chinese Hairong Feng, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Respondent Steve T. Mortenson, U of Delaware, USA 7627 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 The Materiality of Voice: International Perspectives on Digital Storytelling Practice Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants Creating Queer Referential Metaculture: Stories About Moving, Friends, and the Mainstream Aristea Fotopoulou, U of Sussex, UNITED KINGDOM Digital Storytelling as a Method for Women’s Empowerment in South Africa Sigrid Kannengieser, U of Bremen, GERMANY Crossing Time and Space: Geohistories and Narrative Exchange Wilma Clark, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Hilde Stephansen, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Sharing Migrant Stories Online. The Case of a Moroccan Discussion Forum in Germany Cigdem Bozdag, U of Bremen, GERMANY Voice and Recognition: An International Comparative Overview Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Richard Macdonald, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM This panel considers more recent empirical projects that explore how voice is valued through processes of narrative production and exchange sustained both through workshops, as in the now classical digital storytelling methodology, but also using digital infrastructures in a sense that goes beyond the digital format of the story itself. Potentially these new practices can be understood to approximate to a ‘story circle’ in a fully digital form, so providing a way in which ‘voice’ is materialised in complex digital practices across multiple times and spaces. 7628 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Visual Form, Aesthetics, and Affect Visual Communication Studies Chair Robert L. Craig, U of St. Thomas, USA Participants Visual Agenda-Setting, Emotion, and the BP Oil Disaster Andrea L. Miller, Louisiana State U, USA Victoria Leigh Bemker LaPoe, Louisiana State U, USA The First Blink: Impacts of Information on Art Appreciation Fen Jennifer Lin, U of Oslo, NORWAY Mike Z. Yao, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Pretty as a Website: Examining Aesthetics on Nonsurgical Cosmetic Procedure Websites Adriane Jewett, U of Florida, USA J. Robyn Goodman, U of Florida, USA Thoroughfare, Speedway, Highway, Streetscape: The Urban Performances of Seattle’s Aurora Avenue Giorgia Aiello, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Emotional Action Tendencies in Response to Narrative Film Eduard Sioe-Hao Tan, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 7631 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Board Room 1 Korean American Communication Association (KACA) State of Art Research Panel Sponsored Sessions Chair Hye-Jin Paek, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Participants Social-Media-Based Public Forums: How Does the Information Flow? Sujin Choi, U of Texas, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Elderly Population and Community Engagement in the Republic of Korea: The Role of Community Storytelling Network Seok Kang, U of Texas - San Antonio, USA The Multitude and the Changing Face of Korean Democracy: The 2008 Candlelight Protests and “Swarm Intelligence" Keith Scott, Academy of Korean Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF A Case Study on KT Skylife’s Business Model Innovation Minzheong Song, Korea Telecom, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Korean Wave: Enjoyment Factors of Korean Dramas in the US Lisa Chuang, U of Hawaii, USA Hye Eun Lee, U of Hawaii, USA Narrative Effects of a Movie About Hearing-Impaired Rape Victims: Narrative Engagement and Persuasion Hyuhn-Suhck Bae, Yeungnam U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Doohwang Lee, Kyunghee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Eun-Gyuhl Bae, U of Pennsylvania, USA They Do, but I Don’t: AIDS Stigma Gap, Its Causes and Consequences Seyeon Keum, NHN Search Marketing Corporation, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Byoungkwan Lee, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyun Ou Lee, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Framing Aid to North Korea: A Content Analysis of Four South Korean Newspapers on Humanitarian Assistance to North Korea Hwalbin Kim, U of South Carolina, USA Eunjeong Soh, U of South Carolina, USA Sang Hwa Oh, U of South Carolina, USA Sei-Hill Kim, U of South Carolina, USA Examining Perceptions of Climate Change Among South Koreans: An Image-Based Qualitative Investigation George Anghelcev, Pennsylvania State U, USA Mun-Young Chung, Pennsylvania State U, USA Sela Sar, Iowa State U, USA Brittany R. L. Duff, U of Illinois, USA 7632 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Board Room 2 Top Paper Session: Discourses, Power, and Internet Law Communication Law & Policy Chair Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Discourse Networks on State-Mandated Access Blocking in France and Germany Yana Breindl, Georg-August U Goettingen, BELGIUM Justifying Copyright: Discourse, Legitimation, and Critique Lee Edwards, Institute of Communications Studies, UNITED KINGDOM Bethany Klein, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM David Lee, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Giles Moss, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Fiona Philip, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Laundering Policies: The Case of the Ley Sinde in Spain Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Joan Ramon Rodriguez-Amat, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA The New Reputation Custodians: Repositioning Individuals as the Guardians of Their Online Reputation Nora A Draper, U of Pennsylvania, USA 7633 Thursday 15:30-16:45 Board Room 3 Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies Business Meeting Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies 7705 Political Communication Business Meeting Thursday 17:00-18:15 Palace A Political Communication 7706 Organizational Communication Business Meeting Thursday 17:00-18:15 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Ted Zorn, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Participants Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA Boris H. J. M. Brummans, U de Montréal, CANADA Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA 7707 Environmental Communication Business Meeting Thursday 17:00-18:15 Palace C Environmental Communication Participants Merav Katz-Kimchi, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Janel S. Schuh, Stanford U, USA Activity of group report. Awards presentation. New business. Elected officers introduction. Other business. 7708 Censorship Machines, Mobile Networks, and Socialbots: Exploring the Overdetermination Between Communication Technology and Culture Thursday 17:00-18:15 York Communication and Technology Chair Robert William Gehl, U of Utah, USA Participants Recoding “Sensitive Words” on Chinese Social Media: Internet Censorship and the Politics of Visibility Fan Yang, U of Maryland - Baltimore County, USA Mobile Commerce: Bridging the "Digital Divide" in the Philippines? Cecilia Uy-Tioco, George Mason U, US The Computerized Socialbot Turing Test: The Encoding and Appropriation of Our Social Media States of Mind Robert William Gehl, U of Utah, USA Respondent Toby Miller, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Broadly speaking, this panel explores the overdetermination between communication technology and culture: how machines and networks structure our actions, but also how within those structures human agency shifts and changes. We examine the architectures of social and mobile media, looking at how those architectures shape communication practices and culture. Ultimately, then, this panel will start a conversation about the complex relationships between technology and communication, censorship and polysemy, vertical and horizontal social networks, and human and nonhuman actors. 7709 Determinants of Online Participation Thursday 17:00-18:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Sonja Utz, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Promoting Participation: The Role of Communication in Online Crowdsourcing Contests Lian Jian, U of Southern California, USA Li Lu, U of Southern California, USA L.Crystal Jiang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Operant Conditioning and the Moderating Role of Habit Strength on Behavior in an Online Community Donghee Yvette Wohn, Michigan State U, USA Modeling Proximal Determinants of Cyberbullying Perpetration Sara Pabian, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM An Ecological View of Multiplex Participation and Organizing of Voluntary Associations Chih-Hui Lai, U of Akron, USA 7711 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Waterloo/Tower 7712 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Chelsea/Richmond Health Communication Business Meeting Health Communication What is Critical Game Studies? Game Studies Popular Communication Participants Role-Playing the Atom Age: Diplomacy Fanzines and the RAND Corporation Aaron Trammell, Rutgers U, USA How Revenue Models Influence the Design of a Game: A Critical Perspective Patrick Prax, Uppsala U, SWEDEN From Gold Farmers to Water Army: The Gamification of Cyber-Labor in China Jin Ge, U of California - San Diego, USA Productive vs. Pathological: The Two Faces of Chinese Gamers as Consumer Labor Lin Zhang, U of Southern California, USA The papers presented in this panel intend to open up new avenues for thinking through critical game studies. While Kellner’s approach to critical cultural studies was appropriate for thinking through the cultural production of media in the 20th century, the present information landscape prompts meditation on several related themes. These include transnational economic flows, cultural approaches to the history of games, the present ambiguity of work and play, and questions of affective and immaterial labor. In short, how can game studies scholarship avert the replication of exploitative business practices within the technological sector? Can we incorporate new ways of understanding and unifying ourselves as a field that focus on the activist potentials of games rather than their reductive commercial tendencies? 7713 Nonhedonic Entertainment Experiences: Determinants, Nature, and Effects (Panel Session) Thursday 17:00-18:15 St. James Mass Communication Chair Holger Schramm, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Participants The Role of the Need for Affect in Genre Preferences, Subjective Movie Evaluation Criteria, and the Appreciation of Dramas Frank M. Schneider, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Ines Clara Vogel, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Uli Gleich, U Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Markus Appel, U of Linz, AUSTRIA Anticipated Meaningfulness and Mirth: Partial Explanations of Age Differences in Media Preferences Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin, USA Anne Bartsch, U of Augsburg, GERMANY The Role of Age in Eudaimonic Entertainment Matthias Hofer, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Werner Wirth, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND "Elevation!": Examining the Determinants of Users' Elevation Responses to Short Film Clips Allison Eden, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Tilo Hartmann, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin, USA Responses to Lifestyle Transforming Reality-Based Television: Appreciating Human Kindness, Dignity, and Compassion Mina Tsay-Vogel, Boston U, USA K. Maja Krakowiak, U of Colorado - Colorado Springs, USA Respondent Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Scholars have theoretically developed and empirically studied several concepts to grasp so-called nonhedonic entertainment experiences. However, the next step in the process of further examining these conceptual innovations would be first to explore the factors that determine these experiences (e.g., different properties of genres or user characteristics such as age, genre preferences or psychological traits). Second, it seems expedient to further examine the nature of entertainment experiences that might challenge one’s view of the world. It seems to entail different cognitive and affective sensations, including specific emotions like “elevation”, “admiration” and “awe”, or experiences of relatedness, competence, and a sense that life has meaning. Third, what are (longer lasting) outcomes of more complex entertainment experiences? Do such experiences affect increased altruism, self-reflection, or the desire to live one’s life a better way? This panel aims to give some answers to these questions. 7714 Framing and Agenda Setting in the 21st Century Thursday 17:00-18:15 Regent's Journalism Studies Mass Communication Chair Seth Ashley, Boise State U, USA Participants Between Frame-Sending and Frame-Setting: A Conceptualization of how Journalists Contribute to News Frames Michael Brueggemann, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND An Experimental Investigation of News Frames and the Hostile Media Effect Kenneth Eun Han Kim, Oklahoma State U, USA Chanjung Kim, Oklahoma State U, USA Connecting Campaign Content and Effects: “Game Frame” and Voter Learning in a U.S. Senate Election Jason A. Martin, DePaul U, USA Testing the Effects of Framing on Reader Comments Brian Moritz, Syracuse U, USA Greg James Munno, Syracuse U, USA Extended Agenda-Setting in the Era of the Internet Manuel Wendelin, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Julia Neubarth, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY 7716 The Changing Coverage of Campaigns: The View from the 2012 U.S. Election Thursday 17:00-18:15 Belgrave Journalism Studies Political Communication Chair Kjerstin Thorson, U of Southern California, USA Participants Political Journalists and Twitter: Influences on Norms and Practices John Houston Parmelee, U of North Florida, USA A Commentary Echo Chamber: Twitter as an Information Subsidy in Coverage of U.S. Senate Candidate Todd Akin Alecia Swasy, U of Missouri, USA Gregory Pearson Perreault, U of Missouri, USA Political Performance and Active Spectatorship: Symbolically Organizing the Polity During the 2012 Democratic National Convention (Top Three Faculty Paper) Daniel Kreiss, U of North Carolina, USA Laura Meadows, U of North Carolina, USA John Remensperger, U of North Carolina, USA Transformations in Accountability Interviewing: Extended interviews on The Daily Show (.com) Geoffrey Baym, U of North Carolina - Greensboro, USA Respondent Paul D'Angelo, The College of New Jersey, USA 7717 Media Portrayals of Interpersonal Issues Thursday 17:00-18:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Scott A. Reid, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants How Do You Rate Real Life? The Public’s Rating of the Documentary Bully: The Movie Kelly Patricia Dillon, Ohio State U, USA Brad Bushman, Ohio State U, USA I Did it Because I Never Stopped Loving You: Effects of Media Portrayals of Stalking Julia R Lippman, U of Michigan, USA Maintaining You and Me: A Content Analysis of Relational Maintenance Behaviors on Prime Time Television Courtney E. Anderegg, Ohio State U, USA Katherine R. Dale, Ohio State U, USA Jesse Fox, Ohio State U, USA Messages About Sex on Israeli Television Keren Eyal, The Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, ISRAEL Yarden Raz, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Michaela Levi, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL 7718 Interpersonal Communication Business Meeting Thursday 17:00-18:15 Cadogan Interpersonal Communication 7721 Mediations of Gender and Bodies Thursday 17:00-18:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Chair John P. Caughlin, U of Illinois, USA Popular Communication Feminist Scholarship Chair Derek Johnson, U of Wisconsin, USA Participants “May the Force Be With Katie”: Pink Media Franchising and the Postfeminist Politics of Her Universe Derek Johnson, U of Wisconsin, USA Being Middle-Class as a Matter of Values: Women and Jobs in Popular Hindi Television and Cinema Joyojeet Pal, U of Michigan, USA Margaret Young, U of Michigan, USA Media and the Intersectional Other: The Complex Negotiation of Migration and Gender on German Television Margreth Luenenborg, Free U Berlin, GERMANY Elfriede Fursich, Boston College, GERMANY “A Boy Once Broken”: Framing Oscar Pistorius’s Disability Within the 2012 Olympic Games Sim Butler, U of Alabama, USA Kimberly Bissell, U of Alabama, USA “Why Women Like Boy’s Love Novels?”: Chinese Fujoshi Subculture and its Communication Practices Around Boy’s Love Novels Yuan Gong, U of Massachusetts, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF 7723 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 7724 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 7725 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Public Relations Business Meeting Public Relations Chair Juan-Carlos Molleda, U of Florida, USA Children, Adolescents, and the Media Business Meeting Children Adolescents and Media Language and Social Interaction Business Meeting Language & Social Interaction Chair Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA Participants Theresa R. Castor, U of Wisconsin - Parkside, USA Jessica Sarah Robles, U of New Hampshire, USA Alena L. Vasilyeva, Minsk State Linguistic U, BELARUS 7726 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 7727 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Intercultural Communication Business Meeting Intercultural Communication Pre-Industrial Limits of Paper Manufacturing and Their Impact on Print Culture: Historical Parallels With the Spectrum Scarcity Debate Communication History Participants From Rags to Riches: The Regulation of Paper Production in Renaissance Italy Juraj Kittler, St. Lawrence U, USA Paper Scarcity Issues and Print Business in Colonial America Roger Mellen, New Mexico State U, USA Press, Paper Prices and Public Sphere: The Rise of a Mass Press in Detroit, 1870-1900 Richard L. Kaplan, , USA The Space for News: Ether and Paper in North America, 1900-1940 Michael Stamm, Michigan State U, USA The Language of Scarcity an the New and Old Media in Portugal, 1939-1945 Nelson Costa Ribeiro, Catholic U of Portugal, PORTUGAL Respondent John Nerone, U of Illinois, USA Since the 1920s, regulatory policies of most Western societies have evolved from the premise that “spectrum scarcity” makes broadcast communication diametrically different from print technologies. Yet up until its mass production in the industrial mills of the late nineteenth century, paper used to be a scarce commodity itself. In the first four centuries after Gutenberg’s invention, paper was produced mainly from old rags and manufactured in very limited quantities. Consequently, the genuinely occurring, but also perceived or at some point even artificially created shortage of paper shaped the print era in a manner that has many historical parallels with limitations peculiar to the electronic spectrum during the early stages of the age of broadcasting. 7728 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 7731 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Board Room 1 7732 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Board Room 2 7733 Thursday 17:00-18:15 Board Room 3 Visual Communication Studies Business Meeting Visual Communication Studies Chair Michael S. Griffin, Macalester College, USA Korean American Communication Association (KACA) Business Meeting Sponsored Sessions This is a business meeting where members of Korean American Communication Association (KACA) discuss matters relevant to KACA. This year, we invite professors from US and Korea to discuss about hiring trends in both countries. The panelists include: Hye-Ryeon Lee, U of Hawaii-Manoa, USA YongChan Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Minsun Shim, Inha U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hanna Park, Middle Tennessee State U, USA Communication Law and Policy Business Meeting Communication Law & Policy Contact Settings of Intergroup Communication Intergroup Communication Chair Nicholas A. Palomares, U of California - Davis, USA Participants Behind the Scenes: Domestic Students’ Perspectives on Interactions With International Students on a South Florida University Campus Jasmine Rene Phillips, U of Miami, USA Intergroup Contact in Computer-Mediated Communication: Effects of a Disconfirming Behaviour and Group Membership on Out-Group Evaluations Salvador Alvidrez, U of Salamanca, SPAIN Valeriano Piñeiro, U of Salamanca, SPAIN María Marcos, U of Salamanca, SPAIN Jose Luis Rojas, U of Salamanca, SPAIN All Nonaccommodation is Not Created Equal: Differential Effects of Over- and Underaccommodation on Perceptions of Social Distance Jessica Gasiorek, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA A Pilot Study to Understand Physician Categorization: Implications for Patient-Provider Communication Parul Jain, Ohio U, USA David R. Ewoldsen, Ohio State U, USA 7801 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Sandringham 7801 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Sandringham 7801 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Sandringham 7801 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Sandringham Communication History, Feminist Scholarship, Global Communication and Social Change, and Philosophy, Theory and Critique Joint Reception Communication History Feminist Scholarship, Communication History, Global Communication and Social Change, and Philosophy, Theory, and Critique Joint Reception Feminist Scholarship Global Communication and Social Change, Communication History, Feminist Scholarship, and Philosophy, Theory, and Critique Joint Reception Global Communication and Social Change Philosophy, Theory, and Critique, Communication History, Feminist Scholarship, and Global Communication and Social Change Joint Reception Philosophy, Theory and Critique 7805 Political Communication Reception Thursday 18:30-19:30 Palace A Political Communication 7806 Organizational Communication Reception Thursday 18:30-19:30 Palace B Organizational Communication Chairs Disraelly Cruz, U of South Dakota, USA Ted Zorn, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Organizational Communication Division members are invited to enjoy a drink, some nibbles, and good company at an off-site venue to be announced at the OCD Business Meeting. Sponsored by Management Communication Quarterly. 7811 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Waterloo/Tower Health Communication Reception Health Communication 7814 In Memoriam: The Legacy of Charles K. Atkin Thursday 18:30-19:30 Regent's Sponsored Sessions Chair Judee K. Burgoon, U of Arizona, USA Participants Bradley S. Greenberg, Michigan State U, USA Charles T. Salmon, Michigan State U, USA Ronald E. Rice, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA Kami J. Silk, Michigan State U, USA David B. Buller, Klein Buendel, Inc., USA Charles Atkin was one of the most prolific and honored scholars in our field and someone who left a very significant mark on scholarship and policy in media, political, campaign and health arenas. Speaking to his legacy in these various streams of research are his colleagues, co-authors and collaborators spanning four decades of research. Each presenter will review different aspects of Chuck's research and its impact on communication scholarship and policy. 7823 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 7824 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Public Relations Reception Public Relations Children, Adolescents, and the Media Reception Children Adolescents and Media 7826 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 7831 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Board Room 1 7847 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Dining Room 7847 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Dining Room 7857 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Board Room 2 7873 Thursday 18:30-20:00 Private Reception Intercultural Communication Reception Intercultural Communication Korean American Communication Association (KACA) Reception Sponsored Sessions Korean American Communication Association (KACA) and the Nam Center for Korean Studies at University of Michigan will cohost a reception for their members and guests. Environmental Communication and Visual Communication Studies Joint Reception (OFF SITE) Environmental Communication Time and place will be announced at a later date. Visual Communication Studies and Environmental Communication Joint Reception (OFF SITE) Visual Communication Studies Time and location will be announced at a later date. Communication Law and Policy Reception Communication Law and Policy Cosponsored by The Donald McGannon Communication Research Center and Penn State's Institute of Information Policy home of the Journal of Information Policy. Language and Social Interaction Reception Language & Social Interaction Chair Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA Participants Jessica Sarah Robles, U of New Hampshire, USA Alena L. Vasilyeva, Minsk State Linguistic U, BELARUS The Windsor Castle Pub, 27-29 Crawford Place London W1H 4LJ, United Kingdom 8102 Where is Cultural Home? In Search of a Sense of Place Among Multicultural Individuals Friday 09:00-10:15 Balmoral Intercultural Communication Chair Ling Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Participants Finding a “Home” Beyond Culture: The Emergence of Intercultural Personhood in the Globalizing World Young Yun Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA The Fate of the Minority Bilingual: Assimilation or Hybridization? Richard Clement, U of Ottawa, CANADA Multiculturalism, Identities and Acculturation in Immigrant Groups in the Netherlands Fons J. R. van de Vijver, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Growing up Among Worlds: Identity Negotiation of Second-Generation Chinese Migrants in Australia Shuang Liu, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Respondent Ling Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF This panel explores identity negotiation of multicultural and multilingual individuals, their sense of cultural home, their identity conflict, and their psychological well-being. The four papers represent intercultural research in four multicultural nations: USA, Canada, the Netherlands and Australia. The papers collectively address the critical issue of searching for a “cultural home” in a multicultural society, challenge the common conceptions about cultural identities, and suggest directions for future research. 8105 Immigration, Racial Attitudes, and Right-Wing Populism Friday 09:00-10:15 Palace A Political Communication Chair Rens Vliegenthart, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Birtherism, Racial Attitudes, and Media Use Michael W. Traugott, U of Michigan, USA Ashley E Jardina, U of Michigan, USA Media Effects on Racial Attitudes: Evidence From Two Panel Surveys in Germany Christian Schemer, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Media Cues and Citizen Support for Right-Wing Populist Parties Penelope Helen Sheets, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Linda Bos, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hajo Boomgaarden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Owning the Immigration Issue Bjoern Burscher, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Joost van Spanje, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 8106 Studying Authority in Practice and Action From A Distance: A CCO Perspective Friday 09:00-10:15 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Francois Cooren, U de Montréal, CANADA Participants Without Texts No Author/Authority! Studying the Power of Materiality to Act From a Distance Consuelo Vasquez, U du Québec à Montréal, CANADA Acceptance of Authority: Agents in the Accomplishment of Open and Distance Learning Jean Anda Saludadez, U of the Philippines Open U, PHILIPPINES Respondent James R. Taylor, U de Montréal, CANADA This panel engages questions of authority and its key role in understanding the constitution of organization (Taylor & Van Every, 2011). It raises different issues about how to study authority from a distance, how to account for it, and how to analyze it taking a communicative and practice-centered perspective. Empirical studies in distinct organizational settings and regions of the world focus on “authority at a distance” and explore the various ways by which sources of authorities are constantly invoked and mobilized in discourse and interaction. With communication as the starting point of their inquiry, these studies analyze how power relationships are enacted in practice. 8107 The Human Challenge in Information Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D) research Friday 09:00-10:15 Palace C Communication and Technology Chairs Mark Levy, Michigan State U, USA Han Ei Chew, United Nations U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Participants Impact of Information Society Research in the Global South Arul Chib, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Understanding Context for Designing ICTs for Global Development: Lessons From India Edward Cutrell, Microsoft Research, INDIA Challenges in ICT-Enabled Knowledge Sharing Among Agricultural Extension Workers in Lao PDR Borort Sort, United Nations U, MACAU Peter Haddawy, United Nations U, MACAU Mattering Matters: Measuring Women Empowerment and Mobile Phone Use Han Ei Chew, United Nations U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Vigneswara Ilavarasan, Indian Institute of Management Rohtak, INDIA Mark Levy, Michigan State U, USA The panel session brings together leading ICT4D researchers from across the world to examine the human challenges in ICT4D research. Collectively, the papers in the session address the challenges in designing ICT4D solutions as well as in assessing the impact of communication technologies on users. Goals of the session include increasing the visibility of ICT4D scholarship among scholars of communication and technology, encouraging communication and technology researchers to share theory and methods with scholars in ICT4D studies and, in turn, considering how the interdisciplinary scholarship of ICT4D might enhance work by CAT scholars. In addition, the panel will serve as a platform for discussing the difficulties and opportunities in implementing technology-enabled solutions for poverty reduction. 8108 2014 Seattle Conference Planning Meeting Friday 09:00-11:45 York Sponsored Sessions Chair Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Participants Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA Erica L. Scharrer, U of Massachusetts, USA Philip Lodge, Edinburgh Napier U, UNITED KINGDOM Laura Stein, U of Texas, USA Seamus Simpson, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM Merav Katz-Kimchi, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Adrienne Shaw, Temple U, USA Travers Scott, Clemson U, USA Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Aaron R. Boyson, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Janice Raup Krieger, Ohio State U, USA Timothy R. Levine, Michigan State U, USA Theresa R. Castor, U of Wisconsin - Parkside, USA Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Alison Mary Virginia Hearn, U of Western Ontario, CANADA Jesper Stromback, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Andy David Ruddock, Monash U, AUSTRALIA Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA Jana Holsanova, Lund U, SWEDEN Kevin Wise, U of Missouri, USA Natalia Rybas, Indiana U East, USA Kevin B. Wright, Saint Louis U, USA Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Hua Wang, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA This meeting is for all Division and Interest Group planners for the 2014 conference in Seattle. All sections need to be represented. 8109 Social Network and Social Influence Friday 09:00-10:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Stephanie Tom Tong, Wayne State U, USA Participants Online Social Influence: Past, Present, and Future Young Ji Kim, U of Southern California, USA Like What You See? A Qualitative Exploration of Peer Influence Exerted Through the Display of Likes on Facebook Pages Tina Ganster, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY The Social Network Effect: The Determinants of Donations on Social Media Sites Gregory Douglas Saxton, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Lili Wang, Arizona State U, USA How Social Media Influences College Students’ Smoking Attitudes and Susceptibility: Focused on the Influence of Presumed Influence Model Woohyun Yoo, U of Wisconsin, USA JungHwan Yang, U of Wisconsin, USA Eunji Cho, U of Wisconsin, USA 8111 Friday 09:00-10:15 Waterloo/Tower Challenging Issues Surrounding HIV Prevention Campaigns Health Communication Chair Erin K. Maloney, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Mass Media as HIV Prevention Information Sources Among Female Sex Workers in Beijing, China Zhiwen Xiao, U of Houston, USA Xiaoming Li, Wayne State U, USA Li Zeng, Arkansas State U, USA Empowering Women to Increase Condom Use: A Meta-Analysis of Empowerment HIV Prevention Intervention Effectiveness Janeane Nicole Anderson, U of Southern California, USA Tanzanian Self Efficacy: Meta-Analysis of HIV Prevalence Research Through Situational Context Perspective Sarah Ward Merritt, American U, USA James Kiwanuka-Tondo, North Carolina State U, USA The Influence of Viewers’ Perceived Risk, Regulatory Focus, Behavior Inhibition/Activation System on the Persuasiveness of Framed HIV Test Promotion Messages Shawnika Jeanine Hull, U of Wisconsin, USA Yangsun Hong, U of Wisconsin, USA 8112 Friday 09:00-10:15 Chelsea/Richmond Social Contexts and Consequences of Games Game Studies Chair Michael Schmierbach, Pennsylvania State U, USA Participants A New Name for the Game: eSports Fans and Spectatorship Elizabeth Newbury, Cornell U, USA Playing Video Games to Become an Active Citizen? The Influence of Learning Prosocial Behaviors on Real Life Civic Engagement Vivian Hsueh-Hua Chen, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Qinyuen Wong, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE The Effects of Evaluative Reviews on Market Success in the Video Game Industry Brett Sherrick, Pennsylvania State U, USA Michael Schmierbach, Pennsylvania State U, USA Video Game Involvement and Social Skills: A Systematic Review of the Literature Rachel Kowert, U Münster, GERMANY Video Game Therapy? The Use of Video Games to Cope With Stress Jinghui (Jove) Hou, U of Southern California, USA Dmitri Williams, U of Southern California, USA 8113 Beyond the Qualitative/Quantitative Dichotomy: Q Methodology as an Innovative Approach to Audience Research (Panel Session) Friday 09:00-10:15 St. James Mass Communication Chair Kim Christian Schroder, Roskilde U, DENMARK Participants A Q Case Study: Researching Student Experiences in Art Gallery Education Christian Kobbernagel, Roskilde U, DENMARK Q Methodology as a Facilitator of Comparative Research: Exploring Landscapes of News Consumption Cross-Nationally Cedric Courtois, Ghent U, BELGIUM Kim Christian Schroder, Roskilde U, DENMARK On the Integration of Theory Within Q Research Design Carolyn Michelle, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Large Cross-Cultural Q Research Projects Require Particular Operational and Analytical Approaches Charles H. Davis, Ryerson U, CANADA In this panel, a group of international scholars involved with a large-scale study of receptions of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey will discuss the potential uses and challenges of Q methodology for audience research. A methodological hybrid concerned with revealing similarities and differences in people’s viewpoints, attitudes, beliefs, or experiences, Q methodology provides insight into audience subjectivities in a richer way than that provided by conventional surveys, while providing more structure and better replicability than purely qualitative approaches such as focus groups or ethnographic observation. Thus, we believe this panel will be of interest to qualitative, quantitative and mixed-methods researchers interested in new approaches to studying individual and collective subjective responses to various aspects of the communication circuit. 8114 Professional Roles Revisited: Between the Rhetoric on Role Conceptions and Journalistic Performance Friday 09:00-10:15 Regent's Journalism Studies Chair Claudia Mellado, U of Santiago, CHILE Participants Journalistic Roles and Revisiting Gatekeeping Tim P. Vos, U of Missouri, USA Journalistic Ideals Versus Journalistic Practice: The Relationship Between Role Perception and Valued Skills Among Journalists in Six European Countries Henrik Ornebring, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Between Rhetorics and Performance: Comparing Journalistic Role Conceptions and News Reporting Styles Among Chilean Journalists Claudia Mellado, U of Santiago, CHILE Arjen van Dalen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Facts From Friends: How Journalists’ Roles Influence Their Interaction With Politicians Lea C. Hellmueller, U of Texas, USA Professional Roles in News Content: Six Models of Journalistic Role Performance Claudia Mellado, U of Santiago, CHILE Respondents Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas, USA Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Munich, GERMANY This panel discusses how journalistic practices can be explained and operationalized by applying the concept of professional roles as well as the relationship between professional role conception and role performance. Journalism studies need a more thorough understanding of the processes of professional practice in relation to the ideals of professional roles. In a contemporary era characterized by a journalistic ‘crisis of identity’, such scholarly effort is even more urgent. To accomplish that goal, the panel gathers journalism scholars to analyze the evaluative and performative levels of journalism culture. Specifically, the papers of the panel present conceptual and empirical examinations on key skills valued by journalists as an indicator of role performance, new operationalizations of journalistic roles in content and the relation between roles perception and role enactment, the influence of journalist´ roles on their reportying styles and interation with politicians, and a re-examination of the standard gatekeeping model in light of these issues. 8116 Tweeting the News: Adding Twitter and Social Media to Journalism Friday 09:00-10:15 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Seth C. Lewis, U of Minnesota, USA Participants Inverting the Pyramid? The Interactions of Elite and Nonelite U.S. Political Journalists on Twitter Kyle Heim, Seton Hall U, USA Is Twitter an Alternative Medium? Comparing Gulf Coast Twitter and Newspaper Coverage of the 2010 BP Oil Spill Brendan R. Watson, U of Minnesota, USA The Social Journalist: Embracing the Social Media Life or Creating a New Digital Divide? Ulrika Hedman, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Monika Anna Lena Djerf-Pierre, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Why People Post News Through SNS? A Focus on Technology Adoption, Media Bias, and Partisanship Strength (Top Three Student Paper) Jayeon Lee, Ohio State U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyunjin Song, Ohio State U, USA We Get "Marching Orders to Tweet": The Ethical Challenges of Digital Dilemmas for Professional Journalists and the Rest of Us Anup Kumar, Cleveland State U, USA 8117 Narrative Processes in Media Friday 09:00-10:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Participants I Would Ask Her Out if I Wasn’t a Cop: Vicarious Interaction, Perspective-Taking and Narrative Comprehension Daniel G. McDonald, Ohio State U, USA James Collier, Ohio State U, USA Katherine R. Dale, Ohio State U, USA Kaitlyn Jones, Ohio State U, USA Shu-Fang Lin, National Chung Cheng U, TAIWAN Influence of Narrative Trailer Political Advertising on Transportation and Resistance to Persuasion Shane Michael Semmler, U of South Dakota, USA The Nature and Embodiment of Narrative Engagement Freya Sukalla, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Helena Bilandzic, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri, USA Rick W. Busselle, Bowling Green State U, USA The Triplets and the Incredible Shrinking Narrative. Transmedia Storytelling, Adaptation and Narrative Expansion/Compression Strategies Carlos Alberto Scolari, U Pompeu Fabra, SPAIN 8118 Strategies for Marketing Brands, Ads, and Causes Friday 09:00-10:15 Cadogan Information Systems Participants A Negation Bias in Word of Mouth: How Negations Reveal and Maintain Expectancies About Brands and Products Camiel J. Beukeboom, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peeter Verlegh, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Making Ads Easy, Creative, and Persuasive: Effects of Conventional Metaphors and Irony in Print Advertising Christian Burgers, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Elly A. Konijn, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Gerard J. Steen, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Marlies A. R. Iepsma, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Positively Valenced Calming Political Ads Influence the Correspondence Between Implicit and Explicit Attitudes Florian Arendt, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Franziska Marquart, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA “That’s-Not-All” as a Media Influence Strategy: Exploring the Role of Excitement in Motivating Purchase Desire Robin Nabi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Marko Dragojevic, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Ethan Hartsell, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Ariel Hasell, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Katlyn Elise Roggensack, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA J. Michael Mangus, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA “This Program Contains Advertising”: How the Timing of Sponsorship Disclosure Influences Critical Processing of Sponsored Content Sophie Carolien Boerman, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Eva van Reijmersdal, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peter Neijens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Comparing the Effectiveness of Personalization and Tailoring for Charitable Fundraising Campaigns Ewa Halina Maslowska, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Avatars and Expectations: Influencing Perceptions in an Online Consumer Setting Rory Peter McGloin, U of Connecticut, USA Kristine L. Nowak, U of Connecticut, USA James H. Watt, U of Connecticut, USA The “Foot-in-the-Door” Compliance-Gaining Effect and Psychological Moderators Maria Leonora (Nori) G. Comello, U of North Carolina, USA Jessica Gall Myrick, U of North Carolina, USA April L. Raphiou, U of North Carolina, USA 8121 Friday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Authority and Algorithm: Recommendation, Filtering, and Discovery in Popular Culture Popular Communication Participants Lost in the Shuffle: A History of Musical Randomness Devon Powers, Drexel U, USA Curation by Code Jeremy Wade Morris, U of Wisconsin, USA Journalism and Popular Music: Converging Modes of Filtering Henrik Bødker, Aarhus U, DENMARK Branded Recommendation: Music Licensing Software and the Standardizing Search Leslie M. Meier, U of Western Ontario, CANADA Respondent Fernando Bermejo, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Through the insights music provides, this international panel considers how the increased delegation of recommendation and curation activities to technology suggests we are moving from a world where “life is random” to a world where it categorically isn’t. 8122 Friday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Global and Local Advocacy for Social Change Global Communication and Social Change Chair Catherine Harbour, BBC Media Action, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Do Transnational Advocacy Groups Remedy, or Reinforce, Global Attention Inequalities? Matthew Powers, New York U, USA Normative Influence, Household Smoking Restrictions, and Communication in Minya, Egypt Catherine Harbour, BBC Media Action, UNITED KINGDOM Speaking for Women's Rights in Pakistan: The Voice of Benazir Bhutto Julia A. Spiker, U of Akron, USA Strategic Climate Change Campaigns: A Case Study of Earth Hour Marianne D. Sison, RMIT U, AUSTRALIA 8123 Friday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Public Relations and Communication Channels Public Relations Chair Maureen Taylor, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants A Social Networks Approach to Public Relations on Twitter: Social Mediators and Mediated Public Relations Itai Himelboim, U of Georgia, USA Guy J. Golan, Syracuse U, USA Bitt Beach Moon, Syracuse U, USA Ryan J Suto, Syracuse U, USA From Monophonic to Jazzy Integrated Communications Simon Torp, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK If a Picture is Worth a Thousand Words, Are a Thousand Words Worth a Picture? Comparing the Effects of Vivid Writing and Photographs on Moral Judgment in Public Relations Rebecca Ann McEntee, U of Texas, USA Carolyn Yaschur, U of Texas, USA Renita Coleman, U of Texas, USA Privacy Concerns When Using Facebook: Does Relational Context Matter? Kyung Jung Han, U of Missouri, USA Bryan H. Reber, U of Georgia, USA 8124 Friday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 How Do You Know?: Studies of Believability, Authenticity, and Epistemology Language & Social Interaction Chair Leah Sprain, U of Colorado, USA Participants Believability: Epistemic Stance in Interviews With Abused Children (Top Student Paper) Clara Iversen, Uppsala U, SWEDEN “What Happened?” From Talk to Text in Police Interrogations Tessa van Charldorp, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Communicating Deception: Differences in Language Use Lyn M. Van Swol, U of Wisconsin, USA Michael Braun, U of Wisconsin, USA The (In)Authenticity of Simulated Talk: Comparing Role-Played and Actual Interaction Elizabeth Stokoe, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM The Development of the "Quick Question" Instant Messaging Genre: Social Networking and the Moral Economy of Contribution in "Connected” Organizations Christian Licoppe, Telecom ParisTech, FRANCE Serge Proulx, Telecom ParisTech, FRANCE Renato Cudicio, U du Québec à Montréal, CANADA 8125 Friday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Digital Crossroads: Youth, Migration, Diasporas and Networked Learning Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Olga Bailey, Nottingham Trent U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Digital Diasporas: Media, Postcoloniality, and Identity Sandra Ponzanesi, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Intersectional Micropolitics of Digitized Identities and Digital Inequalities Koen Leurs, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Learning Networks of Immigrant and Non-Immigrant Youth: Reconsidering Learning Mariëtte de Haan, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Respondents Alexander Dhoest, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Alison Harvey, U of Toronto, CANADA In this panel we will present the findings of a five-year research project “Wired Up” conducted in the Netherlands which focused on the study the digital activities and identities of migrant youths. The panel will illustrate the different theoretical perspectives adopted in this interdisciplinary project and present some of the results and insights that focus on how race and ethnicity, along with the analysis of national and transnational dynamics, inflect the online behaviour of young migrants online. We will explore, in particular, how new forms of youthful digital diasporas are re-constituted across local and global spaces, online and offline settings, creating multiple worlds of relations and identifications that go beyond the straightjackets of ethnic, national, gender, religious and linguistic categories. 8126 Friday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Theoretical and Methodological "Frames" for Visual Studies Visual Communication Studies Participants Fractured Paradigm? Theories, Concepts, and Methodology of Visual Framing Research: A Systematic Review Cornelia Brantner, U of Virginia, USA Stephanie Geise, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Katharina Lobinger, U of Bremen, GERMANY Putting the Image Back Into the Frame: Modeling the Linkage Between Visual Communication and Frame-Processing Theory Stephanie Geise, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Christian Baden, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY "Participatory" Visual Research Revisited Luc Pauwels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Understanding the Visual in Team Communication: A Collaborative Dimensions Approach Sabrina Bresciani, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Martin J. Eppler, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND The Hermeneutic Sublime: Fisting, Famine, and Frames Melanie Joy McNaughton, Bridgewater State U, USA The Role of Images for a Virtual 3D Reconstruction of Historic Artifacts Sander Muenster, Dresden U of Technology, GERMANY 8127 Friday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 8128 Friday 09:00-10:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Edifying Communication: Dialogue, Images, and Rhetoric Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants Challenging Communication Research: Toward a Practical Theory of Dialogic Classroom Discussion Heidi Lynn Muller, U of Northern Colorado, USA From Media Competence to New Literacies: Questioning the Literacification of Everything Theo Hug, U of Innsbruck, AUSTRIA The Image is (Not) the Event: Negotiating the Pedagogy of Controversial Images Sharrona Pearl, U of Pennsylvania, USA Alexandra Sastre, U of Pennsylvania, USA Toward a Theory of Metonymy With Implications for “The Poor” Robin P. Clair, Purdue U, USA Popular International Media on Gender: Taiwan News, French Pop Magazines, Cosmo in China, Dutch Ads Feminist Scholarship Chair Mary Douglas Vavrus, U of Minnesota, USA Participants Feminism and Social Change: Women’s Place in Taiwan Newspaper and Public Opinion Ping Shaw, National Sun Yat-Sen U, TAIWAN Yue Tan, National Sun Yat-Sen U, TAIWAN Forward to the Past? A Longitudinal Exploration of Gender Portrayal in Dutch Television Commercials Serena Daalmans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Ellen Hijmans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Fred Wester, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Making a Sexual Contract? Discourse Analysis on the Construction of Female Sexual Subjectivity in Cosmopolitan China From 1999-2011 qi ling, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Intimacy of Imagined Communities: New Possibilities for French Women Through Postwar Popular Magazines Edward Timke, U of Michigan, USA 8131 Friday 09:00-10:15 Board Room 1 International Encyclopedia Advisory Board Sponsored Sessions Chair Elizabeth P. Swayze, Wiley-Blackwell, US Participants Wolfgang Donsbach, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Charles R. Berger, U of California - Davis, USA Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA Joseph M. Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado, USA Akiba A. Cohen, Emek Yezreel Academic College, ISRAEL John Nguyet Erni, Lingnan U - Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Youichi Ito, Akita International U, JAPAN Hans Mathias Kepplinger, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Paolo Mancini, U di Perugia, ITALY Robin Mansell, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Denis McQuail, U of Amsterdam, UNITED KINGDOM Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Alvaro Rojas Guzman, U Autónoma de Occidente, COLOMBIA Karen Ross, Liverpool U, UNITED KINGDOM Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Janet Wasko, U of Oregon, USA Jane B. Singer, U of Iowa, USA Michael E. Roloff, Northwestern U, USA Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Gianpietro Mazzoleni, U of Milan, ITALY Young Yim Kim, Korea National Open U, USA Klaus Bruhn Jensen, U of Copenhagen, DK Hans-Bernd Brosius, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA Robert N. Gaines, U of Maryland, USA Bruce Gronbeck, n/a, USA Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA John O. Greene, Purdue U, USA Michael S. Griffin, Macalester College, USA Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas, USA Kevin G. Barnhurst, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Carroll J. Glynn, Ohio State U, USA Winfried Schulz, U of Erlangen - Nuremberg, GERMANY Rebecca B. Rubin, Kent State U, USA Katherine Miller, Arizona State U, USA A. A. Betteke Van Ruler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Robert L. Heath, U of Houston, USA K. Viswanath, Harvard U, USA Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Debra L. Merskin, U of Oregon, USA John Downing, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas, USA Juergen Wilke, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Stuart Allan, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Kyu Ho Youm, U of Oregon, USA Renee Hobbs, U of Rhode Island, USA Joanne Cantor, U of Wisconsin, USA 8132 Friday 09:00-10:15 Board Room 2 Policy Failure in Confronting the Journalism Crisis: Evidence From the US and Europe Communication Law & Policy Chair James Curran, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Participants US: The Return of the Nervous Liberals: A Market Fundamentalist Approach to the Journalism Crisis Victor W. Pickard, U of Pennsylvania, USA UK: The Phone Hacking Crisis: What Happens to Media Policy When the Shit Hits the Fan Natalie Fenton, International Association for Media and Communication Research, UNITED KINGDOM Des Freedman, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Switzerland: The Role of Research in Nondecision Making and Delaying Action Manuel Puppis, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Sweden: Are Direct Press Subsidies the Preferred Solution? Lars W. Nord, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Respondent James Curran, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM The media and especially newspapers are in a profound structural crisis. The resources available to news organizations are shrinking, bringing about repeated buyouts and even newspaper closures. Increasingly, scholars are voicing concerns about the repercussions of this media crisis for democracy, worrying that whole sectors of civic life will go dark. While many commentators suggest that this crisis was caused by a combination of the recession and the internet luring away readers and advertisers, the latter is also often characterized as a possible salvation for journalism. Others observe that despite the many promises that new online platforms holds for enhanced democracy, relatively few websites are journalistic in nature. The proposed panel session sheds light on governments’ policy inaction in confronting the journalism crisis. Bringing together scholars from the US and Europe, the panel consists of four presentations and a subsequent discussion initiated by a respondent. 8133 Friday 09:00-10:15 Board Room 3 Instruction and Teaching in the 21st Century: Using Technology in the Classroom Instructional & Developmental Communication Communication and Technology Chairs Kathy Denker, Ball State U, USA Lesile A. Rill, Portland State U, USA Participants A Tough Act to Follow: An Examination of Cognitive Performance and Attitudes Toward Multitasking in Five Multimedia, Multitasking Classroom Environments Edward Downs, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Angela Tran, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Robert McMenemy, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Nahom Abegaze, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA College Students’ Adoption of New Media Production Technologies: The Role of Antecedents Over Time Tobias M Hopp, U of Oregon, USA Harsha Gangadharbatla, U of Oregon, USA Learning in Digital Worlds: Commercial Video Games and Online Communities Pilar Lacasa, U of Alcala, SPAIN Laura Mendez-Zaballos, U Nacional de Educación a Distancia, SPAIN Maria Rut Garcia-Pernia, U of Alcala, SPAIN Maria Jose Estables, U of Alcala, SPAIN Me, Myself, and My Eduction: Technology and Personalized Learning Lisa Marie Barnard, U of North Carolina, USA Because the process of teaching and learning is evolving, these papers examine the effects of technology in face-to-face and online learning environments. 8202 Challenging Digital Communication Research: The Role of Social Theory Friday 10:30-11:45 Balmoral Theme Sessions Chair Guobin Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Media Systems and the Production of Value Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Music, Capabilities, and Flourishing in the Digital Era David Hesmondhalgh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Classics of Social Theory and the Challenge of Digital Media: Simmel and Touraine Leah A. Lievrouw, U of California - Los Angeles, USA Remediating Theory Zizi A. Papacharissi, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Social Theory and Digital Activism Guobin Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA This theme session proposal addresses the conference theme by examining how social theory may help to meet the challenges facing digital communication research. While expanding the boundaries of communication research, the field of digital communication research faces serious challenges. This roundtable brings together five scholars to explore the opportunities and challenges facing digital communication research. Our hypothesis is that social theory, broadly defined, may be made to play a bigger role in these endeavors. Panelists will examine how social theory may help to conceptualize and analyze digital media institutions, practices, and forms, and what specific theories and theorists may be appropriated. 8205 Effects of Political Communication I Friday 10:30-11:45 Palace A Political Communication Chair Lesile A. Rill, Portland State U, USA Participants Competitive Frames and Motivated Processing: Examining the Role of Ambivalence in Value Framing Effects Porismita Borah, Washington State U, USA Effects of Partisan Rhetoric on Attention and Influence in the Blogosphere Christopher Brown, U of Pennsylvania, USA Devra C. Moehler, U of Pennsylvania, USA Elizabeth Roodhouse, U of Pennsylvania, USA Incivility in Political Discussion: Effects on Expressed Disagreement and Agreement, and OpenMindedness Hyunseo Hwang, U of California - Davis, USA Youngju Kim, U of Alabama, USA Yeo Jin Kim, U of Alabama, USA It’s Funny: but is it Appropriate? Political Humor in the Media and its Conditional Effects on Citizens’ Social Trust and Efficacy Andreas Schuck, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sophie Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 8206 Organizing the Social: Social Media Use in Organizations Friday 10:30-11:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Matthew Scott Weber, Rutgers U, USA Participants The Promise of Social: Improving Work Outcomes in Large Multinational Organizations Through the Use of Collaborative Technology Heewon Kim, Rutgers U, USA Matthew Scott Weber, Rutgers U, USA Message Wars in the Blogosphere: Organizational Sensemaking in the 2007-2008 Writers Guild Strike Ryan Patrick Fuller, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Katherine Sarah Holland, U of California – Santa Barbara, USA Linda L. Putnam, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Connected to Impress: Communication Managers and Self-Representation on Social Media Johannes Christian Fieseler, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Giulia Ranzini, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Millennials’ Attitudes Toward Organizational Social Media Policies: Effects on Expected Openness, Innovativeness, and Organizational Attractiveness Jaehee Cho, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA Dong-Jin Park, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Talking Through Technology: The Duality of Maintaining Internal and External Organizational Relationships Through Social Media Muge Haseki, Rutgers U, USA Matthew Scott Weber, Rutgers U, USA When Social Media Meets Workplace Settings: Differing Technological Frames and Expectations of Organizational Members Jeffrey William Treem, U of Texas, USA Stephanie Layne Dailey, U of Texas, USA Casey B Spruill, Northwestern U, USA The Worker as Politician: How Electoral Heuristics and Online Information Shape Personnel Selection and Careers Brenda L. Berkelaar, U of Texas, USA Joshua M. Scacco, U of Texas, USA Jeffrey L Birdsell, U of Texas, USA What Does Really Matter in Organization Wikis? A Sociomaterial Approach Thomas Martine, Heidelberg U, GERMANY Francois Cooren, U de Montréal, CANADA Aurélien Bénel, U of Technology of Troyes, FRANCE Manuel Zacklad, U of Trinidad and Tobago, TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO Respondents Michele H. Jackson, U of Colorado, USA Jennifer L. Gibbs, Rutgers U, USA In this high density panel, authors will provide brief (3-4 minute) introductions to their research and then make themselves available to discuss their research one-on-one or in small groups through the aid of an interactive display. Respondents will provide feedback one-on-one to the authors, and pariticipants will be invited to listen and join in the discussion. 8207 Political Knowledge and Learning Processes Friday 10:30-11:45 Palace C Political Communication Chair Shira Dvir-Gvirsman, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Participants How Network Diversity, Centrality, and Context Influence Political Ambivalence, Participation, and Knowledge Hyunjin Song, Ohio State U, USA William P. Eveland, Jr., Ohio State U, USA Political Knowledge Test Performance as a Function of Venue, Time Pressure, and Performance Norms Franklin J. Boster, Michigan State U, USA Hillary Cortney Shulman, North Central College, USA Spiral of Political Learning. The Reciprocal Relationship of News Media Use and Political Knowledge Judith Moller, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS State or Trait? Validating the Effect of Elaboration on Learning From the News Gabi Joachim Schaap, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Paul G. HendriksVettehen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Doeschka Anschutz, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 8209 Emergence of Opinion Leaders in Virtual Networks Friday 10:30-11:45 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Kerk F. Kee, Chapman U, USA Participants Profiling Opinion Leaders in Twitter Discussion Network: The Case of the Wisconsin Recall Election Weiai Xu, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Stacy Blasiola, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Yoonmo Sang, U of Texas, USA Opinion Leadership in Social Networks: Preferential Attachment Versus Reciprocal Linking Mark Tremayne, U of Texas - Arlington, USA Milad Minooie, U of Texas - Arlington, USA Being Popular While Being Authentic: The Need for Popularity and Authenticity Among Microblogging Users Joon Soo Lim, Mississippi State U, USA Sung-Un Yang, Indiana U, USA A New Perspective of Opinion Leaders on Twitter Hitoshi Yamamoto, Rissho U, JAPAN Kakuko Miyata, Meiji Gakuin U, JAPAN Yuki Ogawa, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, JAPAN Kenichi Ikeda, U of Tokyo, JAPAN 8211 Friday 10:30-11:45 Waterloo/Tower Thinking Outside the Box: Overcoming Communication Challenges in Health Interventions Health Communication Chair Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA Participants Testing Messages to Reduce Smokers’ Openness to Using Novel Smokeless Tobacco Products Lyudmila Popova, U of California - San Francisco, USA Torsten Neilands, U of California - San Francisco, USA Pamela M. Ling, U of California - San Francisco, USA Changes in Youth Intent to Use Substances Achieved by Dynamic Coupling: Dynamic Growth Modeling of Community-Based Interventions Emil Coman, Wesleyan U, USA Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA L Suzanne Suggs, ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association, SWITZERLAND Communication Strategies to Redirect Patients From an Urban Hospital Emergency Department to Primary Healthcare Clinics Holley A. Wilkin, Georgia State U, USA Melissa Plew, Georgia Southern U, USA Michael Adam Tannebaum, Georgia State U, USA Elizabeth L. Cohen, West Virginia U, USA Exploring the Potential of Communication Infrastructure Theory for Community-Level Health Communication Interventions Holley A. Wilkin, Georgia State U, USA 8212 Friday 10:30-11:45 Chelsea/Richmond Playing is Training: What Games Teach Us Game Studies Chair Julia Kneer, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Improving Arithmetic Skills Through an Educational Game Elena Nunez Castellar, Ghent U, BELGIUM Jan Van Looy, Ghent U, BELGIUM Arnaud Szmalec, U Catholique de Louvain, BELGIUM Lieven De Marez, Ghent U, BELGIUM Increasing Military Cognitive Readiness Through Computer and Video Game: Based Training Jorge F. Pena, U of Texas, USA Nicholas Brody, U of Texas, USA Chris Miller, The Praevius Group, USA Macbeth: Development of a Serious Game for the Mitigation of Cognitive Bias Norah E. Dunbar, U of Oklahoma, USA Scott Wilson, U of Oklahoma, USA Bradley Adame, U of Oklahoma, USA Javier Elizondo, U of Oklahoma, USA Matthew Jensen, U of Oklahoma, USA Claude Miller, U of Oklahoma, USA Abigail Allums, U of Oklahoma, USA Tobias Seltsam, U of Oklahoma, USA Elena Bessarabova, U of Oklahoma, USA Cindy S. Vincent, U of Oklahoma, USA Sara Straub, U of Oklahoma, USA Ryan Ralston, U of Oklahoma, USA Christopher Dulawan, U of Arizona, USA Dennis Paiz-Ramirez, U of Wisconsin, USA Kurt Squire, U of Wisconsin, USA Playing Singly, Playing in Dyads in a Computerized Simulation of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Ronit Kampf, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL The (De-)Evolution of Evolution Games: Analyzing the Accuracy of Evolution Depiction in Video Games Alex Page Leith, Michigan State U, USA Rabindra A. Ratan, Michigan State U, USA Donghee Yvette Wohn, Michigan State U, USA 8213 Harvey Milk’s Queer Inheritance Friday 10:30-11:45 St. James Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Studies Chair Robert Brookey, Northern Illinois U, USA Participants Harvey Milk and the Crumbling Celluloid Closet Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA Harvey Milk’s FAIR Future: K-12 Education and Queer Mnemonic World Making Charles E Morris III, Syracuse U, USA White Out: Filling the Cipher of Dan White Thomas K. Nakayama, Northeastern U, USA This panel marks the 35th anniversary of Harvey Milk’s assassination. Milk passionately lived as an activist, community builder, stalwart campaigner, and one of the first openly gay U.S. political officials. And Milk died a martyr, if not immediately, as some will quibble, than surely at the pronouncement of the unjust, homophobic verdict in his assassin’s trial. Public memory is fraught, mutable, forceful, consequential, and can be transformative—for GLBTQ people, for everyone. Here we explore Harvey Milk’s queer inheritance. This panel is fitting not only because of the anniversary, but due to Milk’s resurgent relevancy in GLBTQ culture and politics in recent years as a result of the 2008 film Milk. 8214 Comparing Media Practices Across Nations Friday 10:30-11:45 Regent's Journalism Studies Chair Jane B. Singer, U of Iowa, USA Participants Valued Skills Among Journalists: An Exploratory Comparison of Six European Nations Henrik Ornebring, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Claudia Mellado, U of Santiago, CHILE Media System, Public Knowledge, and Political Engagement: An 11-Nation Study James Curran, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Sharon Coen, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM Stuart Soroka, McGill U, CANADA Zira Hichy, U di Catania, ITALY Toril Aalberg, Norwegian U of Science and Technology, NORWAY Kaori Hayashi, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Shanto Iyengar, Stanford U, USA Paul Jones, U of New South Wales, AUSTRALIA Gianpietro Mazzoleni, U of Milan, ITALY Stylianos Papathanassopoulos, National and Kapodistrian U - Athens, GR Hernando Rojas, U of Wisconsin, USA Rodney Evan Tiffen, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA June Woong Rhee, Seoul National U of Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF David Rowe, U of Western Sydney, AUSTRALIA Pradeep Krishnatray, Mudra Institute of Communications Ahmedabad (MICA), IN Yukio Maeda, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Assessing the Quality of Media Debates on Unemployment in Six European Countries Rinaldo Kuehne, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Christian Schemer, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Martin Wettstein, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Katrin Reichel, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Werner Wirth, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Adoption of Social Media Among Journalists in Australia, Canada, France, Finland, Germany, Sweden, UK, US Agnes Gulyas, Canterbury Christ Church U, UNITED KINGDOM Kristine Pole, Canterbury Christ Church U, UNITED KINGDOM Explaining the Use of Vox Pops in Television News: An International Comparison Knut De Swert, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 8216 News Audiences and New Media: What Do Users Want? Friday 10:30-11:45 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Features, Blogs and User-Generated Content Might Not Save Journalism: Evidence From a Comparative Study of the Supply and Demand of Online News Pablo J. Boczkowski, Northwestern U, USA Eugenia mitchelstein, Northwestern U, ARGENTINA On the Measurement of Reader Preferences for News Topics: An Application of Choice-Based Conjoint Technique Vamsi Krishna Kanuri, U of Missouri, USA Murali Mantrala, U of Missouri, USA Esther Thorson, U of Missouri, USA Newspaper Consumption in the Digital Age: Measuring Multichannel Audience Attention and Brand Popularity Neil James Thurman, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM News Consumption Across Platforms: Exploring Media Complementarity and Media Substitution on the Local Level Christopher Brott, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY Paying for Local Online Newspapers: An Analysis on Paying Intent, Price Elasticity of Demand, and Predictors of Paying Intent Mengchieh Jacie Yang, Texas State U, USA 8217 The Role of Social Media in Public Opinion Friday 10:30-11:45 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair J. Michael Mangus, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Examining Societal-Level Predictors of Political Discussion in Online Forums Fei Chris Shen, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Hai Liang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Examining the Relationship Between Perceived Opinion Climate Incongruence and Willingness to Express One’s True Thoughts: A Survey Study From China Tianjiao Wang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Fei Chris Shen, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Talking About GM Foods Sei-Hill Kim, U of South Carolina, USA Hwalbin Kim, U of South Carolina, USA Sang Hwa Oh, U of South Carolina, USA Using Twitter to Assess Public Opinion About Nuclear Power Pre- and Post-Fukushima Nan Li, U of Wisconsin, USA Heather Akin, U of Wisconsin, USA Leona Yi-Fan Su, U of Wisconsin, USA Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin, USA Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Dominique Brossard, U of Wisconsin, USA “Was It Something I Said?” “No, It Was Something You Tweeted!” Applying the Spiral of Silence to Social Media Sherice Gearhart, Texas Tech U, USA Weiwu Zhang, Texas Tech U, USA 8218 Advances in Health Communication Friday 10:30-11:45 Cadogan Information Systems Chair Autumn Starr Shafer, Texas Tech U, USA Participants Do e-Patients “Like” High-Quality Information in Online Health Communities? Content Analysis of Diabetic Connect Young Ji Kim, U of Southern California, USA Framing Effects in Narrative and Nonnarrative Health and Risk Messages Joseph S Steinhardt, Cornell U, USA Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA The Benefits of Drama and Contemplation: Examining the Mediating Role of Word-Use on Health Guan-Soon Khoo, Pennsylvania State U, USA “I Remember the One About…”: Examining Differences in Recall of Public Service Announcements Elisabeth Bigsby, Northeastern U, USA Jennifer L. Monahan, U of Georgia, USA Motivated Processing of Message Frames: Third-Person Gain/Loss Frames and Vividness Hilary Gamble, U of Missouri, USA Rachel Lara Davis, U of Missouri, USA Russell Brent Clayton, U of Missouri, USA Di Zhu, U of Missouri, USA Theory of Planned Behavior on Technology Adoption: A Systematic Review Hsin-yi Sandy Tsai, Michigan State U, USA Anger, Sadness, and Fear in Response to Breaking Crime and Accident News Stories: How Emotions Influence Support for Alcohol-Control Public Policies via Concern About Risks Tyler Solloway, Ohio State U, USA Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA Adrienne Haesun Chung, Ohio State U, USA Catherine E. Goodall, Kent State U, USA Effects of a Campaign to Promote Caregiver Self-Care for Parents of Children With Eating Disorders Autumn Starr Shafer, Texas Tech U, USA Sheetal Janak Patel, U of Texas - Arlington, USA Cynthia M. Bulik, U of North Carolina, USA Nancy L. Zucker, Duke U, USA Development and Evaluation of a Body Image App to Improve Adolescent Girls’ Body Perceptions Jolanda Veldhuis, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Marloes Spekman, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 8221 Friday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 New Media Labor: Reconfiguring Audiences and Industries Popular Communication Participants The Labor of Logging On: Affective Labor and Gay Mobile Media Hollis Griffin, Denison U, USA Audiences, Captions, and Invisible Labor in Online Media Elizabeth Ellcessor, Indiana U, USA Shifty Business: The Communication Flows and Influence of Soundtrack Personnel in Contemporary Feature Film Production Natalie Lewandowski, Macquarie U, AUSTRALIA Networked Jamaican Reggae: Recording, Performance, and Race in a Transnational Music Industry Benjamin Aslinger, Bentley U, USA Tzarina Prater, Bentley U, USA How do we understand the role of digital technologies in the labors carried out by creative professionals and new media users? How can scholars study the relationships between digital media and labor in ways that foreground both breaks from and continuities with long-standing paradigms of industry work? How can this research move away from technological determinism and the fetishism of commodities? United by their focus on labor, the presentations feature an array of case studies and research methodologies in order to explore the varied, multivalent relationship between new media technologies and media industry practices. The common thread across these presentations is how the labor of media users and media professionals underlines the reconfiguration of audiences and industries in new media environments. 8222 Friday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Bollywood in the Digital Era: Shifting Global Practices and Perspectives Global Communication and Social Change Popular Communication Participants De-Americanizing Soft Power Daya Thussu, U of Westminister, UNITED KINGDOM Twenty-First Century Labour: Globalization and Production Crews in Mumbai’s Media Industries Sunitha Chitrapu, Sophia Polytechnic, INDIA Marketing Bollywood: Integrating Traditional and Digital Media Strategies to Reach Local and Global Audiences Kavita Karan, Southern Illinois U Carbondale, USA Brand Bollywood: The Political Economy of Product Placement in Hindi Movies Azmat Rasul, Florida State U, USA The 3-Ds of Globalized Bollywood: Digitalization, D-Cinema, and the Demassification of South Asian Cinematic Public Spheres David J. Schaefer, Franciscan U - Steubenville, USA This panel brings together Hindi film scholars from three continents to address multiple dimensions of the digitalization-globalization nexus, including its impact upon India’s soft power potential, filmmaking practices, marketing and product placement techniques, and digital exhibition and consumption. Together, these presentations paint a dynamic portrait of an industry and culture in transition and suggest important directions for future research. 8223 Friday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Public Relations, Government, and Political Communication Public Relations Chair Janice Barrett, Lasell College, USA Participants Exploring New Frontiers of Agenda Building During the 2012 U.S. Presidential Election Preconvention Period: Examining Linkages Across Three Levels Spiro K. Kiousis, U of Florida, USA Ji Young Kim, Bradley U, USA Matthew Wade Ragas, DePaul U, USA Gillian Wheat, U of Florida, USA Sarabdeep K Kochhar, U of Florida, USA Emma Svensson, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Maridith Dunton Miles, U of Florida, USA Technological Change and Transparency: The Effect on Government Public Relations Melissa Wooten Graham, U of Tennessee, USA Unveiling Government Ideology: Critical Metaphorical Analysis of Citizenship Education Discourse Mary Lee, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE What is the Role of the Private Sector in Public Diplomacy? A Research Agenda for the Study of Global Public Relations as Diplomacy Candace L. White, U of Tennessee, USA 8224 Friday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Exploring Relationships With Characters and Affinities Toward Media Forms Children Adolescents and Media Participants A Predictive Model of Young Children’s Parasocial Relationship Development Bradley J Bond, U of San Diego, USA Sandra L. Calvert, Georgetown U, USA Parental Socialization of Children’s Internet Use Wonsun Shin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participatory Influence Within Parent-Child Dyads: Rethinking the Transmission Model of Socialization Leticia Bode, Georgetown U, USA Emily Vraga, George Mason U, USA JungHwan Yang, U of Wisconsin, USA Stephanie Edgerly, Northwestern U, USA Kjerstin Thorson, U of Southern California, USA Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA Christopher Wells, U of Wisconsin, USA The Impact of “Unplugged” Day in the Life of Journalism Students Cristina Maria Pulido, U Autónoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Nuria Simelio, U Autónoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Santigo Tejedor, U Autónoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Beatriz Carballido Villarejo, U Autónoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Beatriz Cervino, U Autónoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Young Children’s Positive and Negative Parasocial Relationships With Media Characters Meryl Alper, U of Southern California, USA Nancy Jennings, U of Cincinnati, USA Respondent Moniek Buijzen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 8225 Friday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 It's Not Easy Being Green: Hopping Along With Environmental Advertising and Consumerism Environmental Communication Chair Katherine E. Rowan, George Mason U, USA Participants Green Makes it Feels Good: Articulating the Euphoria Appeal of Sustainable Consumption Through Social-Media Conversations T. E. Dominic Yeo, Hong Kong Baptist U, HONG KONG How the Effectiveness of Environmental Advertising is Influenced by Mood-Message Regulatory Frame Interactions George Anghelcev, Pennsylvania State U, USA Sela Sar, Iowa State U, USA Brittany R. L. Duff, U of Illinois, USA The Skeptical Green Consumer Revisited: Testing the Relationship Between Green Consumerism and Skepticism Toward Advertising Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Anke Wonneberger, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA The Green Meme: Perception, Reality and the Prevalence of Environmental Appeals in US TV Advertising Lee Ahern, Pennsylvania State U, USA 8226 Friday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Locating the Trans/National in a Globalized Media Terrain Global Communication and Social Change Chair Lina Dencik, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Alternative News Sites and the Complexities of "Space" Lina Dencik, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Borders as Information Flows and Trasnational Networks Peter Shields, Eastern Washington U, USA Globalization or Renationalization? The Transformation of Chinese Television Programs Since 1997 Hong Zhang, Zhejiang U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Transnational Media and the European Public Sphere: An Exploratory Analysis of France 24’s Talking Europe Program Christopher Michael Toula, Georgia State U, USA 8227 Friday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Precarity: Critical Discourse and Response to Disparity Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants The Lived Body: A Case Study in Disability Rhetoric Michael Joseph Hyde, Wake Forest U, USA Precarity: Critical Discourse and Response to the Abyss Ronald C. Arnett, Duquesne U, USA Always Already Being-on-the-Edge: Talk of the Precarious, Precarity, and the Precariat Ramsey Eric Ramsey, Arizona State U, USA Risk Communication and Transnational Youth Publics Ingrid Volkmer, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Respondent Amit Pinchevski, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL This panel critically examines precarity within multiple philosophy of communication coordinates, ranging from engagement of questions of disability, poverty, unexpected demands of debt, risk within the youth culture, and Dorothy Day’s originative response and its implications for this historical moment. Precarity announces the narrow ridge, the fragility, the interrupted routines of human conventions and lives. This panel interrogates various dimensions of precarity through case studies and examples, pointing not to solutions but to descriptive ways in which human beings have responded to precarity with the dignity and tenacity that transformed and continues to transform their communicative environments. 8228 Friday 10:30-11:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Photojournalism Practices in the Face of New Media Contexts Visual Communication Studies Chair Michael S. Griffin, Macalester College, USA Participants A Bleak Picture: How News Organizations Missed the Potential of Digitization to Improve Photojournalism Inbal Klein-Avraham, Ben Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Zvi Reich, Ben Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Picture This: Employing the Principles of Social Proof to Media Photographs to Identify Media Bias Michael Friedman, Michigan State U, USA Framing the Accused: Perp Walks, Media Rituals, and Image Recontextualization Mary Angela Bock, U of Texas, USA Gestures of Seeing: Amateur Photographers in the News Karin E. Becker, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Photojournalism in a Changing Online Environment: A Co-Orientational Study Tara Marie Buehner, U of South Carolina, USA 8231 Friday 10:30-11:45 Board Room 1 Only Connect: Contributions to the Debate on the Cultural Impact of Communication Technologies Communication History Chair Nicole Maurantonio, U of Richmond, USA Participants Influence of 19th-Century Telegraphy on Urbanization, Mass Communications, and the Corporate Economy Gerald Sussman, Portland State U, USA Telegraphy and 19th-Century Imperial Control in India Colin Agur, Columbia U, USA The Fast Printing Press and the Circulation of the Sunday Paper, 1886-1900 Paul S Moore, Ryerson U, CANADA Sandra Gabriele, Concordia U, CANADA Inventing Network Neutrality, 1973-1985 Peter D. Schaefer, Marymount Manhattan College, USA Starting from the given in communication history that our engagement with specific forms is shaped, in both the broadest and narrowest senses, by the available technlogy, these papers range over a long historical period. They explore and revise our understanding of the role of technology, from the speed of a printing press and the role of the telegraph to the development of online network architecture. Together they argue the continuing centrality of old and new technologies in the communication landscape. 8232 Friday 10:30-11:45 Board Room 2 Post-Broadband Access: Comparative Assessments and Prospects Communication Law & Policy Participants From "Open Internet" to "Mobile Enclosure:" The Case of 4G in the UK Alison Powell, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Government or Market Investments in Network Sharon Strover, U of Texas, USA East Asia Beyond Broadband Linchuan Jack Qiu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Broadband for the People! Canadian Activism for Universal Broadband Leslie Regan Shade, U of Toronto, CANADA Socio-Technical Analysis of Korea’s Broadband Convergence Network Dong-Hee Shin, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Respondent Graham Murdock, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Over the past 15 years or so, the rhetorical excitement and aspirations around Information Society (or Networked, or Post-Industrial society, depending on who one reads) have morphed into a variety of policies for building communications infrastructure and for encouraging and facilitating access to the Internet. Many of these initiatives have focused on broadband, the loose term for a high speed network capable of delivering voice, video and text reasonably quickly and facilitating a variety of citizen/user interactions. This panel of experts will create a discussion around how their respective countries have framed the core issues and defined government responsibilities as well as expectations regarding participation. 8233 Friday 10:30-11:45 Board Room 3 Challenging and Reimagining the Traditional Instructional Communication Concepts and Processes Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Michelle Epstein Garland, U of Tennessee, USA Participants Student Perceptions of Teacher Power in the Contemporary Classroom Jennifer H. Waldeck, Chapman U, USA Members of COM 498, Chapman U, USA The Role of Computer Mediated Instructional Message Quality on Perceived Message Effects in an Academic Analytics Intervention Zeynep Tanes-Ehle, Duquesne U, USA Patricia North Gettings, Purdue U, USA The Role of Teacher Self-Disclosure in Online Education Hayeon Song, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Jihyun Kim, Bloomsburg U, USA Wen Luo, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Amy May, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Web2.0PACK: Future Teachers’ Plans and Practices With Emerging Tools Ugur Kale, West Virginia U, USA Cheng-Hsien Wu, West Virginia U, USA Chris Clausell, West Virginia U, USA This collection of papers will reexamine, challenge, and propose revisions to traditional instructional concepts including self-disclosure, power, teacher training, and academic interventions. 8302 Intergroup Communication and the Media Friday 12:00-13:15 Balmoral Intergroup Communication Chair Camiel J. Beukeboom, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Dealing With the Dark Side: Negative Ingroups and the Effects of Right-Wing and Islamic Extremist Propaganda Videos Lena Frischlich, U of Cologne, GERMANY Diana Rieger, U of Cologne, GERMANY Debating LGBT Workplace Protections in the Bible Belt:Contested Identities in Legislative and Media Discourse Claire Rhodes, U of Memphis, USA Craig O. Stewart, U of Memphis, USA The Image of Immigration in Spanish Prime-Time TV Fiction Juan Jose Igartua, U of Salamanca, SPAIN Isabel Barrios, U of Salamanca, SPAIN Felix Ortega, U of Salamanca, SPAIN María Marcos, U of Salamanca, SPAIN Valeriano Piñeiro, U of Salamanca, SPAIN Salvador Alvidrez, U of Salamanca, SPAIN Understanding the Media’s Role in Immigration Attitudes: An Experimental Test of Intergroup Threat Theory Anita Atwell Seate, U of Maryland, USA Dana Mastro, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 8305 Effects of Political Communication II Friday 12:00-13:15 Palace A Political Communication Chair Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Participants Belief Echoes: The Persistent Effects of Corrected Misinformation Emily Thorson, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Mutual Reinforcement of Media Selectivity and Effects: Testing the Reinforcing Spirals Framework in the Context of Global Warming Lauren Feldman, American U, USA Teresa Myers, George Mason U, USA Jay D. Hmielowski, U of Arizona, USA Anthony Leiserowitz, Yale U, USA Mediated and Moderated Effects of Personalized Political Communication on Political Trust Lukas Otto, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Michaela Maier, U Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Up Close and Political; Assessing the Consequences of Personalization in Political Communication, a Survey Experiment peter achterberg, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Dick Houtman, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 8306 Networks and Connections in Organizational Communication Friday 12:00-13:15 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Bernadette Marie Gailliard, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Change Over Time in ICA Division Networks Based on Semantic Similarity of Papers Presented Versus Co-Memberships James A. Danowski, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA No Organization is an Island: Identifying the Theoretical Mechanisms That Motivate Collaboration Amongst Community-Based Organizations Lindsay Erin Young, Northwestern U, USA Noshir S. Contractor, Northwestern U, USA The Coevolution of Communication Networks and Expertise Recognition-Induced Information-Seeking Behaviors Young Hoon Kim, Rutgers, the State U of New Jersey, USA Niclas Erhardt, U of Maine, USA Jennifer L. Gibbs, Rutgers U, USA The Effects of Diversity on Collaborative Innovative Networks: The Emergence of Oncofertility Alina Lungeanu, Northwestern U, USA Noshir S. Contractor, Northwestern U, USA Tracking Social Avalanches: Dynamics of Communication Networks Iina Hellsten, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Networking Through the Recession: How Female Business Owners Utilized Advice Networks to Aid Organizational Performance Sandra K. Evans, U of Southern California, USA Intraorganizational Collaboration at a Scientific Laboratory: A Case Study of Authority, Identity, and Boudary Work Matt Koschmann, U of Colorado, USA Nicholas Burk, U of Colorado, USA Toward a Communication-Centered Theoretical Framework for Temporary Organizations: The Example of Film Production Ritesh Mehta, U of Southern California, USA Respondents Steven R. Corman, Arizona State U, USA Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA In this high density panel, authors will provide brief (3-4 minute) introductions to their research and then make themselves available to discuss their research one-on-one or in small groups through the aid of an interactive display. Respondents will provide feedback one-on-one to the authors, and pariticipants will be invited to listen and join in the discussion. 8307 Virtual Representation of Self in Online Environments Friday 12:00-13:15 Palace C Communication and Technology Chair Catalina Laura Toma, U of Wisconsin, USA Participants Women on Display: The Effect of Portraying the Self Online on Women’s Self-Objectification Dian de Vries, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Mirror or Megaphone?: How Narcissists Differ in Their Use of Facebook and Twitter Elliot T. Panek, East Carolina U, USA Yioryos Nardis, U of Michigan, USA Sara Konrath, U of Michigan, USA Building Better First Impressions Through More Information: The Impact of Quantity of Information Shared on a Profile, Profile Owner’s Gender, and Profile Viewer’s Voyeuristic Curiosity on Formation of Impressions Lemi Baruh, Koc U, TURKEY Yoram Chisik, Madeira Interactive Technologies Institute, PORTUGAL Christophe Bisson, Kadir Has U, TURKEY The Relative Contributions of Implicit and Explicit Self-Esteem to Narcissistic Use of Facebook Roma Subramanian, U of Missouri, USA Kevin Wise, U of Missouri, USA Doug Davis, U of Missouri, US Erin Morris, U of Missouri, USA Manu Bhandari, U of Missouri, USA 8309 Twitter Politics: How Twitter Facilitates Political Movement? Friday 12:00-13:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Seungahn Nah, U of Kentucky, USA Participants An Instantaneous Online Resource Mobilization in Twitter: A Temporal and Network Analysis of the January 25th Egypt Protest 2011 Kyounghee Hazel Kwon, Arizona State U, USA Onook Oh, U of Nebraska - Omaha, USA H.R. Rao, U at Buffalo - SUNY, USA Come Together, Right Now: Retweeting in the Social Model of Protest Mobilization Aaron S. Veenstra, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Narayanan Iyer, Southern Illinois U, USA Wenjing Xie, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Benjamin A. Lyons, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Chang Sup Park, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Yang Feng, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Social Sedia Use and Participation in the January 25 Egyptian Uprising: Comparing Participants and Nonparticipants in Street Protest Peter Kerkhof, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Andre Krouwel, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jacquelien van Stekelenburg, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bert Klandermans, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Internet, State Hegemony Versus Corporate Hegemony in the North African Arab Spring Lyombe S. Eko, U of Iowa, USA John Haman, U of Iowa, USA 8311 Friday 12:00-13:15 Waterloo/Tower I Drink Therefore I Am (Drunk): Communication Issues Surrounding Alcohol Abuse, Policies, and Prevention Strategies Health Communication Chair Keith Weber, West Virginia U, USA Participants Injury News Coverage, Relative Concern, and Support for Alcohol-Control Policies: An Impersonal Impact Explanation Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA Andrew F. Hayes, Ohio State U, USA Adrienne Haesun Chung, Ohio State U, USA Tapping Into Motivations for Drinking Among Youth: Normative Beliefs About Alcohol Use Among Underage Drinkers in the United States Rajiv N. Rimal, George Washington U, USA Alisa Padon, Johns Hopkins U, USA David Jernigan, Johns Hopkins U, USA Michael Siegel, Boston U, USA William DeJong, Boston U, USA Binge Drinking and TMT: Evaluating Responses to Anti-Binge-Drinking PSAs Norman C. H. Wong, U of Oklahoma, USA Stephanie G Schartel, U of Oklahoma, USA Message Framing and Student Alcohol Habit Strength Gert-Jan de Bruijn, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Amy Latimer, Queen's U, CANADA Benjamin Gardner, U College London, UNITED KINGDOM Jonathan Vantriet, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS 8312 Friday 12:00-13:15 Chelsea/Richmond High Density: Family Communication Interpersonal Communication Chair Lynne M. Webb, U of Arkansas, USA Participants Inhibitory Forces on Family Communication About Difficult Topics Jennifer Cornacchione, Michigan State U, USA Jessica Russell, Michigan State U, USA David M Keating, Michigan State U, USA Sandi W Smith, Michigan State U, USA Multiple Goals During Complex Family Conversations: What Goals Do Family Members Pursue When Talking With Returning Military Service Members About Seeking Mental Healthcare? Steven Robert Wilson, Purdue U, USA Patricia North Gettings, Purdue U, USA Elizabeth Dorrance Hall, Purdue U, USA Responsiveness and Control in Marital and Parental Communication: Exploring Consistencies Across Family Subsystems and Between Perceived and Observed Behavior Roi Estlein, Rutgers U, USA Jennifer A. Theiss, Rutgers U, USA The Content and Relational Implications of Children-in-law’s Relational Uncertainty Within the In-Law Dyad During the Transition to Extended Family Sylvia L Mikucki-Enyart, U of Wisconsin - Stevens Point, USA John P. Caughlin, U of Illinois, USA Christine E. Rittenour, West Virginia U, USA The Grandchildren Received Affection Scale: Examining Affectual Solidarity Factors Daniel Hans Mansson, Pennsylvania State U - Hazleton, USA The Role of Expectations and Perceptions of Sibling Maintenance Behavior in Ratings of Sibling Relationship Quality Elizabeth Dorrance Hall, Purdue U, USA Jenna McNallie, Purdue U, USA Trust as a Mediator Between Affection and Relational Maintenance in the Grandparent-Grandchild Relationship Daniel Hans Mansson, Pennsylvania State U - Hazleton, USA 8313 Looking at Them to See Who I Am: Using Media for Identity Building Through Social Comparison (Panel Session) Friday 12:00-13:15 St. James Mass Communication Chair Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA Participants Mirror, Mirror on the (Digital) Wall: Social Comparison in Social Networks and the Effects on SelfConcept and Mood Christina V. Peter, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Andreas M. Fahr, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Advertising Effects on Body Image Based on Social Comparison Processes. The Role of Physical Attractiveness and Sex Appeals Christian Schemer, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Rinaldo Kuehne, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Martina Livers, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Bettina Egger, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Social Comparison With Models in Gay Male-Targeted Magazines: Implications on Health Behaviors of Gay Men Catherine A. Luther, U of Tennessee, USA “We Are Better Than the Others”: Bias in Intergroup Social Comparisons Within Media Coverage Philipp Mueller, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Respondent Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA Media content helps people to constantly work on their personal identity. A major way for individuals to do so is to compare their self-perception with their perception of others, a process which has been introduced as “social comparison” by Festinger and attracted major attention in social psychology research since the early 1950s. In this context, several questions arise: Why are media characters attractive sources for comparison? What implications arise for the social comparison process due to the fact that it takes place in the media environment? Can patterns of social comparison even be observed within media content and how can that information help to convey messages to the audience (e.g., health information)? Which consequences for the self (self-concept, self-esteem etc.) and for media usage itself arise from the comparison with (idealized) media images? The presentations within the panel will address these questions from different perspectives and provide a broad overview about recent research in the field. 8314 Gender and Journalism: Past and Present Challenges Friday 12:00-13:15 Regent's Journalism Studies Feminist Scholarship Chair Randall Scott Sumpter, Texas A&M U, USA Participants Feminist Activism, News and Public Discourse Carolyn M. Byerly, Howard U, USA Marcus Hill, Howard U, USA Islands of Divergence in a Stream of Convergence: Comparing News Practices of Male and Female Journalists Zvi Reich, Ben Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Do Journalists Believe in Gender Specificities in News Work? The Impact of Professionalism and Family Life Sara X. T. Liao, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Francis L. F. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF African American Women in Local TV News: Breaking Stereotypes? Marian J. Meyers, Georgia State U, USA Respondent Linda C. Steiner, U of Maryland, USA 8316 Participatory Journalism: Reimagining the Role of Audiences and Journalists Friday 12:00-13:15 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Carrie Brown, U of Memphis, USA Participants From Public Spaces to Public Sphere: Rethinking Discursive Spaces on News Websites Rodrigo Zamith, U of Minnesota, USA Seth C. Lewis, U of Minnesota, USA Part of the Game? Conceptualizing the Integration of Participatory Journalism in the Journalistic Field Lea C. Hellmueller, U of Texas, USA You Li, Oakland U, USA New Opportunities to Revive an Old Relationship: Reader-Newsroom-Interaction on Online News Sites Anna Kümpel, U of Munich, GERMANY Nina Springer, U of Munich, GERMANY Ramona Ludolph, U of Munich, GERMANY “What is it Good for? Absolutely Nothing!?” Comparing Attitudes and Expectations of Journalists and Users Towards Audience Participation in News Journalism Nele Heise, Hans Bredow Institute, GERMANY Wiebke Loosen, Hans Bredow Institute, GERMANY Julius Reimer, Hans Bredow Institute, GERMANY Jan Schmidt, U of Hamburg, GERMANY Participatory Journalism in Newspapers and Its Contribution to Diversity in Local Reporting Annika Sehl, Technische U Dortmund, GERMANY 8317 Media and Morality Friday 12:00-13:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Are There Genre-Specific Moral Lessons? A Content Analysis of Norm Violations Depicted in Four Popular Television Genres Matthias R. Hastall, Technische U Dortmund, GERMANY Helena Bilandzic, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Freya Sukalla, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Effects of Morally Ambiguous Character Behavior on Affective Disposition, Character Perceptions, and Enjoyment Erica Bailey, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Mina Tsay-Vogel, Boston U, USA K. Maja Krakowiak, U of Colorado - Colorado Springs, USA James D. Ivory, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Setting the Moral Agenda: News Exposure’s Influence on the Salience of Moral Intuitions Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA Sujay Prabhu, Michigan State U, USA Lu Wang, Michigan State U, USA Matthew N Grizzard, Michigan State U, USA Virtue in Media: The Moral Psychology of U.S. Exemplars in News and PR Patrick Lee Plaisance, Colorado State U, USA Moral Foundations Theory and Decision Making in Video Game Play: Using Real-Life Morality Marina Krcmar, Wake Forest U, USA Drew Cingel, Northwestern U, USA 8318 Back to Basics: Examining Best Practices for Developing and Evaluating Health Communication Campaigns Friday 12:00-13:15 Cadogan Health Communication Chair Fuyuan Shen, Pennsylvania State U, USA Participants Examining Antecedents of Caregivers’ Access to Early Childhood Developmental Screening: Implications for Campaigns Promoting Use of Services in Appalachian Ohio Benjamin Roswell Bates, Ohio U, USA Dawn Graham, Ohio U, USA Katie Striley, Ohio U, USA Aarti Arora, Ohio U, USA Spencer Patterson, Alta Ventures, USA Jane Hamel-Lambert, Ohio U, USA “Smokers Are Still Going to Smoke”: Formative Research for a Smoke-Free Campus Campaign Lindsay Neuberger, U of Central Florida, USA Andra Vaduva, U of Central Florida, USA Tom Hall, U of Central Florida, USA Developing a Model for Mental Illness Stigma Reduction Campaigns Virginia McDermott, High Point U, USA John Oetzel, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Explaining the Effects of the National Youth Antidrug Media Campaign and Social Capital on Targeted Parent-Child Communication About Drugs Chul-joo Lee, U of Illinois, USA Jennifer Andrea Kam, U of Illinois, USA 8321 Friday 12:00-13:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Popular Journalism in the Era of "Posttruth" Politics Popular Communication Political Communication Participants What Has Happened to Truth in an Era of Postjournalism News? And How Can We Tell? John Hartley, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA Why Aren’t Politicians Afraid of Journalists?: Insiders, Outsiders, Transparency and "Truth" Stephen Harrington, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Leveson, Journalism, and the Degradation of Civic Life in an Era of "Post-Truth" Politics John Steel, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM "Not the Greatest Anymore": Fictional Anchors, Nonfictional Events, and Semifictional Journalism in HBO’s "The Newsroom" Chris Peters, U of Groningen, THE NETHERLANDS “We Built This”: Fox News’ Narrative Constructions of Truth Jeffrey P. Jones, Old Dominion U, USA This panel, comprising 5 leading scholars from around the globe, seeks to interrogate the changing role of journalism in the ‘post-truth’ – and, post-journalism (Turner, 1996) – age. The theme of the conference is “challenging research”, and here we are concerned with challenging the received wisdom regarding what journalism is, the cultural space it occupies, who can undertake it, and how it facilitates the operation of the public sphere. 8322 Friday 12:00-13:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 More Bad News for Africa? Challenging Research Into Afro-Pessimism and the International Media Global Communication and Social Change Journalism Studies Chair Chris Paterson, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Towards Clarification of a Concept: Mapping the Nature and Typologies of Afro-Pessimism Toussaint Nothias, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Politics, Aid, and the Media: BBC Reporting Africa in the 1980s Suzanne Franks, City U, UNITED KINGDOM How Not to Write About (Media Coverage of) Africa: Challenging Research Into Afro-Pessimism and the International Media Martin Scott, U of East Anglia, UNITED KINGDOM Foreign Correspondents in East Africa Today: New Storytellers, New Narratives? Melanie Jane Bunce, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM The international news media has long been criticized for its negative, dark and pessimistic coverage of the African continent. Despite the significance of these critiques, Afro-pessimism – sometimes referred to as “Heart of Darkness reporting” - has not been developed as a coherent analytical concept, particularly with regards to media coverage. Taken together, the papers make an important contribution to the concept of Afro-pessimism in media studies both theoretically and empirically. The panel also draws attention to key areas of debate and clash, and suggests avenues for future research. 8323 Friday 12:00-13:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Public Relations and News Public Relations Chair Erich James Sommerfeldt, U of Maryland, USA Participants Mapping Web Interactivity: A Comparative Study of Congressional Campaign Web Sites Kevin Y. Wang, Butler U, USA Hyung Min Lee, Sungshin Women's U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF David J. Atkin, U of Connecticut, USA Cheonsoo Kim, Indiana U, USA The Impact of Firms’ Corporate Social Performance on Their News Media Attention Craig E. Carroll, New York U, USA Stelios Zyglidopoulos, U of Cambridge, UNITED KINGDOM Philemon Bantimaroudis, U of the Aegean, GREECE What Are the Values and Impacts of Public Relations on Business News?: A Survey of Business Journalists on the Use of Information Subsidies and the Determinants of That Use Sun Young Lee, Texas Tech U, USA What Can We Expect From Facebook? Seoyeon Hong, U of Missouri, USA Bokyung Kim, Rowan U, USA 8324 Friday 12:00-13:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Health Risks and Online Risks: Practices and Policies Children Adolescents and Media Participants Evidence on the Extent of Harms Experienced by Children as a Result of Online Risks: A Critical Synthesis of Research Vera Slavtcheva-Petkova, U of Chester, UNITED KINGDOM Monica Bulger, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Victoria Nash, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Predicting Adolescents’ Disclosure of Personal Information in Exchange for Commercial Incentives: An Application of an Extended Theory of Planned Behavior Wannes Heirman, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Michel Walrave, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Koen Ponnet, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Gender and Grade as Moderators of the Relationship Between Music Television Viewing and Smoking: A Longitudinal Study Kathleen Beullens, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Let’s Get This Party Started!: An Analysis of Health Risk Behavior on MTV Reality Television Shows Mark Allen Flynn, Coastal Carolina U, USA David Morin, Bowling Green State U, USA Sung-Yeon Park, Bowling Green State U, USA Alexandru Stana, Bowling Green State U, USA The Reinforcing Spirals Model Revisited: The Effects of Alcohol Advertising on Adolescents’ Changes in Drinking and Association With Alcohol Using Peers Jared J.W. Tu, City U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Chu-Jie Chen, City U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Respondent Victor C Strasburger, U of New Mexico, USA 8325 Friday 12:00-13:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 ERIC Roundtable: Race Matters Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Federico Subervi, Texas State U, USA Participants Affect, Black Rage, and False Alternatives in the Hip-Hop Nation Bryan J McCann, Wayne State U, USA Gods, God, and Soul Food: Young Black Spirituality in Rap Music Christopher Harris, Nevada State College, USA Jesse and Barack: Examining How, and if, the Press Has Changed How They Frame African-American Politicians Lanier Frush Holt, Indiana U, USA Mammie’s Cookie Jar: The Commodification of Racial Pain Christopher A House, Ithaca College, USA Nike’s Commodification of LeBron James: Intoning Jesus and Hegemonic Masculinity for “Maximized Comfort” Richard Mocarski, U of Alabama, USA Andrew C. Billings, U of Alabama, USA “Good Riddance, Nigga”: Symbolic Lynching and the Struggle for Authentic Blackness in the NAACP’s 2007 Funeral for the “N-Word” Ashley Noel Mack, U of Texas, USA 8326 Friday 12:00-13:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Cultural Differences and Similarities in Technology Use Intercultural Communication Chair Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Participants Comparing Mobile App Acceptance Among U.S. and South Korean Smartphone Users Sang Chon Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA Doyle Yoon, U of Oklahoma, USA Eun-Kyung Han, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Cultural Distance and Intercultural Consumption of Korean Pop Music on Social Media Young Min Baek, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Insik Shin, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF How We Share: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Tablet Adoption and Usage Between the United States and Taiwan Yi-Fan Chen, Old Dominion U, USA Parental Mediation of the Internet and Cultural Values Across Europe Stefan Mertens, Hogeschool-U Brussel, BELGIUM Leen S. J. d'Haenens, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Respondent Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND 8327 Friday 12:00-13:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 8328 Friday 12:00-13:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Critical Economies Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants "We Are Not Here for the Money": Founders' Manifestos Yuval Dror, The College of Management Academic Studies, ISRAEL Critiquing the Critique of “Neoliberalism”: A Meta-Analysis of Discourses That Question the Value of the Concept Sean Phelan, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Immortal Brands Devon Powers, Drexel U, USA Ashley Blake Farkas, Drexel U, USA Specificity, Ambivalence, and the Commodity Form of Creative Work Matt Stahl, U of Western Ontario, CANADA Branding Femininity: From Food and Dining to Bankable and Turkish Brands Feminist Scholarship Chair Michelle Rodino-Colocino, Pennsylvania State U, USA Participants A Labor of Love: Fierce Model Citizens and a Bankable Brand Dara Persis Murray, Rutgers U, USA Vakko and the Veil: Negotiating History and Agency Through an Iconic Turkish Brand Alexandra Sastre, U of Pennsylvania, USA We Are What We Eat: Finding Femininity Through Food Narratives Tisha Dejmanee, U of Southern California, USA “Of Course the Diners’ Club Card is for You”: Gender and Payment Infrastructures at Midcentury in the United States Lana Swartz, U of Southern California, USA 8331 Friday 12:00-13:15 Board Room 1 Meet the Editors of ICA Publications Sponsored Sessions Chair Frank Esser, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND Participants Malcolm R. Parks, U of Washington, USA Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Munich, GERMANY Maria Bakardjieva, U of Calgary, CANADA John Downing, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, US John A. Courtright, U of Delaware, USA Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA Michael J. West, International Communication Association, USA This panel provides the ICA membership the opportunity to meet the editors of ICA's journals and Communication Yearbook. This session is devoted to answering and addressing issues you may have about specific ICA publications. 8332 Friday 12:00-13:15 Board Room 2 Rights to Information and Access: Interpretation, Implementation, and Use Communication Law & Policy Chair Laura Stein, U of Texas, USA Participants Journalistic Role in Chinese Freedom of Information Yong Tang, Western Illinois U, USA Could Wild Horses Drag Access Away From Courtrooms? Expanding First Amendment Rights to New Pastures Matthew D. Bunker, U of Alabama, USA Clay Calvert, U of Florida, USA Supreme Court on Cameras in the Courtroom Kyu Ho Youm, U of Oregon, USA Uses and Misuses of the Freedom of Information (FOI) Legislation in Transitional Societies Lindita Camaj, U of Houston, USA 8333 Friday 12:00-13:15 Board Room 3 The Ecology of Media Consumption Communication History Chair Sheila Lodge, London Metropolitan U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Top Paper: Media Evolution: Emergence, Dominance, Survival and Extinction in the Media Ecology Carlos Alberto Scolari, U Pompeu Fabra, SPAIN Participatory Innovation: The Culture of Contests in Popular Science Monthly, 1918-1938 Ioana Literat, U of Southern California, ROMANIA Commodifying Alternative Media: Advertising and Ideology at the Jewish Daily Forward in the 1920s and 1930s Brian Dolber, SUNY – Oneonta, USA A History of QUBE: Interactivity and the Evolution of Cable Television Noah Arceneaux, San Diego State U, USA Trust in Economy in Letters to the Editor Liina Kaisa Puustinen, U of Helsinki, FINLAND As communication history is an emerging discipline, the writing of that history is contested ground. Traditional linear approaches, arguably, are not as functional as those adopted through the ideas of media ecology. This sesssion examines the concept of media ecology, and reflects on its relevance to a number of significant case histories of media enterprises that tried to ensure their survival through creating particular relationships with their audiences. 8402 The Politics of Algorithms Friday 13:30-14:45 Balmoral Theme Sessions Chair Christian Sandvig, U of Michigan, USA Participants Censorship by Algorithm Tarleton L. Gillespie, Cornell U, USA When Television Programming is Computer Programming Christian Sandvig, U of Michigan, USA A Market of Algorithmic Identities: Total Information Awareness in Online Advertising Fernando Bermejo, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Making Visible the Algorithm: Citizen Science, Data Art, and Social Media Hacks Alison Powell, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Associational Algorithms and Public Work Mike Joseph Ananny, U of Southern California, USA Respondent Monroe E. Price, U of Pennsylvania, USA On the Internet and beyond it, today’s media experiences are no longer planned by executives, they are computed. Stored procedures on corporate servers—algorithms—produce totally individualized experiences that order, evaluate, and even create new content, audiences, and truth. This panel addresses the normative problems of algorithmic culture, investigating how opaque algorithms configure their users and how the field of communication should respond to the algorithmic turn in the systems that we study. 8405 Of Pros and Amateurs: Changing the Quality of Political Communication Friday 13:30-14:45 Palace A Political Communication Chair Stuart Allan, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Knowledge-Based Journalism: What it Means and What it Can Achieve Thomas E. Patterson, Harvard U, USA A New Quality of Political Participation: Direct Voter Engagement Through Social Media Miriam Meckel, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Christian Pieter Hoffmann, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND The Value of Objectivity as a Method of Professional Reporting: A Cross-Longitudinal Study of Reporting Styles in Chilean Political News Coverage Between 1990 and 2011. Claudia Mellado, U of Santiago, CHILE The Pro vs. the Amateur: Do Professional Journalists Make Better News Decisions? Cornelia Mothes, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY Wolfgang Donsbach, Technische U Dresden, GERMANY Respondent Stuart Allan, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Since the advent of the internet, impassioned debates have been waged over its expected consequences for the quality of political communication, in general, and for journalism, in particular. While some experts have predicted a ‘democratization of the news’ overcoming the ‘monopoly’ of professional journalists in defining and covering the pressing events of the day, others have warned that this same transformative shift may be decreasing the very legitimacy of the media in their conveyance of the political process to the people. Although some evidence exists on the implications for different news outletsa general assessment of overall patterns and trends cannot be made so far. This panel’s four papers, each focused on a different national context, will discuss three key dimensions in the quality of political communication and news. 8406 Ask Me No Questions: Sharing and Seeking Information in Organizations Friday 13:30-14:45 Palace B Organizational Communication Chair Claartje L. ter Hoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Information Sharing as Strategic Behaviour: The Role of Social Motivation, Time Pressure, and Information Display Nicoleta Balau, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sonja Utz, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Not in the Mood? Affective State and Transactive Communication Jessica G. Neff, U of Southern California, USA Janet Fulk, U of Southern California, USA Y. Connie Yuan, Cornell U, USA Relationships Among Team Autonomy, Interpersonal Communication, and Burnout of Japanese Care Workers: A Multilevel Analysis Ikushi Yamaguchi, Meiji U, JAPAN Sharing Personal Health Information at Work: What is Appropriate and Expected in Organizations? Catherine Y Kingsley Westerman, U of Tennessee, USA Laura Elizabeth Miller, U of Tennessee, USA Respondent Joshua B. Barbour, Texas A&M U, USA 8407 Politics Online: International Perspectives Friday 13:30-14:45 Palace C Political Communication Chair Guy J. Golan, Syracuse U, USA Participants An Unfulfilled Promise: Twitter and the Dictatorial Past in Brazil Mariella Trilling, Technische U Dortmund, GERMANY Damian Trilling, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Political Mapping of Korean Twitter Users Yoonmo Sang, U of Texas, USA Myunggoon Choi, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Han Woo Park, Yeungnam U, KR The Functions of Media and Dynamic Mechanisms in Social Movement: An Ethnographic Study of Wukan Miao Li, Chinese U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Preaching to the Choir: Internet-Mediated Advocacy, Issue Public Mobilization, and Climate Change Luis Hestres, American U, USA 8408 Diverse Perspectives on Presence and Telepresence Research, Theory, and Application Friday 13:30-14:45 York Communication and Technology Chair Matthew Lombard, Temple U, USA Participants Diverse Perspectives on Presence and Telepresence: An Introduction Matthew Lombard, Temple U, USA Telepresence: An Important Concept for Crisis and Risk Communication David Keith Westerman, West Virginia U, USA Patric R. Spence, U of Kentucky, USA Born for Presence: An Embodied Cognition Approach to Spatial, Self, and Social Presence Jakki Bailey, Stanford U, USA Measurement of Social Presence Jihyun Kim, Bloomsburg U, USA Hayeon Song, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Wen Luo, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Teletalker: Connecting Generations, But What Do They Talk About? Marianne Markowski, Middlesex U, UNITED KINGDOM Presence and Communication Technologies: Changing Forms, Changing Norms Christian Licoppe, Telecom ParisTech, FRANCE Self-Presence in a Revised Body Schema Andrea Stevenson Won, Stanford U, USA Telepresence (typically shortened to presence) refers to a sense of ‘being there’ in a technology-created environment and more broadly to an illusion of nonmediation in which some aspect of the role of the technology in a communication experience is intentionally or unintentionally misconstrued or overlooked. The concept has a rich history in the study of communication and technology. No panel (or conference for that matter) can relay all of the current scholarship related to presence and telepresence but this panel provides an overview of exciting work being done by a diverse set of scholars. The diversity of the panel applies in almost every category. 8409 The Challenges of Big Data for Communication Research Friday 13:30-14:45 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Seth C. Lewis, U of Minnesota, USA Participants The Relevance of Digital Trace Data for Communication Research Deen Goodwin Freelon, American U, USA Assessing the Bias in Communication Networks Sampled From Twitter Sandra Gonzalez-Bailon, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Content in Context: Applying Network Analysis to Examining Twitter Data Itai Himelboim, U of Georgia, USA Content Analysis in an Era of Big Data: Blending Computational and Manual Methods Seth C. Lewis, U of Minnesota, USA Rodrigo Zamith, U of Minnesota, USA This panel brings together some of the most prominent such early adopters of Big Data in communication research to discuss some of the key theoretical and methodological challenges involved in doing so. These scholars will offer recommendations based on their own research practices, and suggest avenues for negotiating the peculiarities of Big Data in communication. These contributions are sorely needed in light of the lack of consensus on theoretical and methodological best practices for Big Data, let alone the uncertain ethical questions surrounding the use of massive datasets representing human communication online. The discussion will address some of the most relevant Big Data problems for communication research, and in the process demonstrate its importance across communication subdisciplines. 8411 Friday 13:30-14:45 Waterloo/Tower Challenges of Disseminating Health Information in the Digital Age: Blogs, Online News Sources, and Search Engines Health Communication Chair Lisa Sparks, Chapman U/U of California - Irvine, USA Participants Biased Assimilation and Need for Closure: Examining the Effects of Mixed Blogs on Vaccine-Related Beliefs Xiaoli Nan, U of Maryland, USA Kelly Madden, U of Maryland, USA Presenting Health Information Online: The Effect of Modality and Communication Style on Satisfaction and Recall Nadine Bol, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Ellen M.A. Smets, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hanneke C.J.M. de Haes, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Eugène F. Loos, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Julia C.M. van Weert, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Online Cancer News: Trend Differences Between 2008 & 2012 Internet-Based Cancer News Ryan James Hurley, North Carolina State U, USA Angeline L. Sangalang, U of Southern California, USA Julius Matthew Riles, U of Illinois, USA Emily A Ford, North Carolina State U, USA The Google Effect: Extending Communication Channel Behavior in Diffusion of Innovations Theory Beth Lee Sundstrom, College of Charleston, USA 8412 Friday 13:30-14:45 Chelsea/Richmond High Density: Interpersonal Communication and New Media Interpersonal Communication Chair Erin Spottswood, Cornell U, USA Participants Confirmed: Surveillance, Relational Satisfaction, and Social Media Use Among Romantic Partners Stephanie Ann Smith, U of Arizona, USA Margaret J. Pitts, U of Arizona, USA Exploring the Roles of Narcissism, Uses and Gratifications of Microblog On Ruo Mo, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Louis W. Leung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Internet Pornography and Relationship Quality Linda Daphne Muusses, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Catrin Finkenauer, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peter Kerkhof, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Knapp's Model of Relational Development in the Digital Age Robert Duran, U of Hartford, USA Lynne Kelly, U of Hartford, USA Alexandra Frisbie, U of Hartford, USA Online Romantic Relationships Transitioning Offline: Impact of Intimacy and Relationship Uncertainty on Relational Characteristics Kimberly Mary Schaefer, Baker U, USA Seeking Interpersonal Information Over the Internet: An Application of the Theory of Motivated Information Management to Internet Use Abel Gustafson, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Robert Shota Tokunaga, U of Hawaii, USA The Effects of the Social Relations on Online Impression Formation Mina Park, U of Southern California, USA The Eyes Have It: How Publicness and Surveillance Primes Influence Prosocial Communication on Facebook Erin Spottswood, Cornell U, USA Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA 8413 Ostracism and Communication: Feeling Socially Excluded as a Motive for Media Use (Panel Session) Friday 13:30-14:45 St. James Mass Communication Chair Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Participants Ostracism: A Temporal Need-Threat Model on the Effects of Being Ignored and Excluded Kipling D. Williams, Purdue U, USA “I Just Like To Be Permanently Connected”: Does The Need To Belong Serve As a Motive For Media Use? Niklas Johannes, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Dorothee Hefner, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Media as Shelter for the Socially Excluded: How Mediated Human Artifacts Help to Overcome Feelings of Social Exclusion Enny Henrica Das, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Tamara Eva Bouwman, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Ostracism and the Effect Of Active vs. Passive Use of Facebook on Lethargy and Cognitive Decrements Jeana H. Frost, VU U - Brussels, THE NETHERLANDS Diena Jessica Schutten, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Annelies Visser, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS People have a fundamental need of being socially included and related to others (Deci & Ryan, 2000; Baumeister & Leary, 1995). If this need is not fulfilled, people feel pain and are eager to end this experience of exclusion and recapture connection to other people (Williams, 2007). In order to (re)gain social inclusion, several courses of action are possible. In this panel, we would like to address media use as an option of connecting to others and achieve the feeling to belong. 8414 Friday 13:30-14:45 Regent's The Spectre of the Spectacle: How to Address the Haunting Anxieties Around the Visual Image in Political Communication? Visual Communication Studies Chair Katy Jane Parry, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Participants “Bad Photos”: A Political Theorization of Lomography Gil Pasternak, U of Huddersfield, UNITED KINGDOM Politics Mitt Romney Style: Gangnam Style as a Cross-Cultural Visual Meme – Online Citizen Creativity and the Power of Digitally Facilitated Political Prosumer Participation Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY Arvid Kappas, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY Towards Developing a Theoretical and Methodological Model for Studying Images on Social Media Farida Aletta Vis, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Simon Faulkner, Manchester Metropolitan U, UNITED KINGDOM Iconophilia in the Public Sphere: Embracing the Visual in Big "P" and Small "p" Politics Katy Jane Parry, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Giorgia Aiello, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM This panel seeks to address how understanding various forms of ‘the political’ in mediated culture might benefit from the insights offered in visual culture and communication approaches. The panel is based on the observation that much of the past research which has sought to examine the ‘spectacle’ and the ‘image’ of the political world has not actually paid detailed attention to visual images themselves as communicative expressions, or has been too ready to condone the nature of visuals as simplistic, illustrative, ambiguous, misleading or lacking in their capacities to contribute to the ‘reasoned’ argument or debate. This session offers a critical and empirical engagement with key dimensions of political culture, such as parody, campaigning, social networking, counternarrative, and activism. 8416 Cultural Approaches to Understanding Journalism Friday 13:30-14:45 Belgrave Journalism Studies Chair Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Participants Purity and Danger: Newsworthiness, Framing Image Crises, and the Kishon Diving Investigative Report Oren Meyers, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Asaf Rozen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Journalism History in Popular Culture Matthew Ehrlich, U of Illinois, USA Mediated Constructions and Lived Experiences of Place: Applying “Communication Geography” to News and Mental Mapping Robert Gutsche Jr, Florida International U, USA The Guttenberg Plagiarism: Myth in Germany's Leading News Magazines Stine Eckert, U of Maryland, USA Respondent Daniel A. Berkowitz, U of Iowa, USA 8417 Challenges in Framing and Agenda-Setting Research (Session Begins With a TOP Student Paper) Friday 13:30-14:45 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Volker Gehrau, U Münster, GERMANY Participants The Role of Frame Diversity in Perceived Quality of Media Performance: The Case in Economic Journalism Omar O. Dumdum, U of the Philippines - Diliman, PHILIPPINES Framing Charitable Appeals: The Effect of Gain-and-Loss Framing and Perceived Susceptibility on Donation Intentions Xiaoxia Cao, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Institutional Justification of Frames: The Role of Social Institutions for Legitimizing and Stabilizing ReEmerging Meaning in Crises Christian Baden, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Friederike Schultz, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Issue Definition and Agenda-Setting Effects in Communication Research Gianna Haake, U Münster, GERMANY Volker Gehrau, U Münster, GERMANY Judith Väth, U Münster, GERMANY Benjamin Fretwurst, U of Zürich, SWITZERLAND What is Hot Online: Originality, Traditional Media Attention, and Agenda-Setting Time Lags Across Topics Yu Won Oh, U of Michigan, USA Rebecca Ping Yu, U of Michigan, USA 8418 Message Processing and Persuasion Friday 13:30-14:45 Cadogan Information Systems Chair Julia Fox, Indiana U, USA Participants A Multidimensional Analysis of Reactance, Restoration, and Cognitive Structure Elena Bessarabova, U of Oklahoma, USA Edward L. Fink, U of Maryland, USA Monique Mitchell Turner, George Washington U, USA Applying the Cognitive-Affective Processing System to Communication Research Martijn Jos Van Kelegom, U of Tennessee, USA Kenneth J. Levine, U of Tennessee, USA Buffering Social Influence: Neural Correlates of Response Inhibition Predict Resistance to Peer Influence Christopher Cascio, U of Michigan, USA Emily Falk, U of Michigan, USA Josh Carp, U of Michigan, USA Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Michigan, USA Frank Tinney, U of Michigan, USA Conceptualizing Audio Message Complexity as Available Processing Resources Ya Gao, Indiana U, US Rachel L. Bailey, Indiana U, USA Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA Seungjo Lee, Chung-Ang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA Byungho Park, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Crash Fear and Crash Risk Perception as Mediators of the Relationship Between Medical Drama Viewing and Speeding Kathleen Beullens, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Effects of Increasing Information Introduced by Camera Changes in Television Messages on Local Recognition Sensitivity and Criterion Bias Julia Fox, Indiana U, USA Satoko Kurita, Osaka U of Economics, JAPAN Encoding Systems and Evolved Message Processing: Pictures Enable Action, Words Enable Thinking Rachel L. Bailey, Indiana U, USA Sean Connolly, Indiana U, USA Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA 2D vs. 3D: The Effects of Additional Dimension in Visual Field on Information Processing Byungho Park, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Eunkyoung Lee, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Dal Woo Nam, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Kyunghee Lee, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 8421 Friday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Game Industry in Local and Transnational Space Popular Communication Global Communication and Social Change Game Studies Participants Production of the Micro-Urban Space: Understanding Spatial Dynamics in the Gaming Industry Ergin Bulut, U of Illinois, USA Long Distance Game Licensing: The Negotiation of Place in Transnational/Transmedia Labor Networks Derek Johnson, U of Wisconsin, USA Transnationalization of the Local Online Game Industry: The Discourse of Contraflow of Popular Culture Dal Yong Jin, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Localization: Making the Strange Familiar Mia L. Consalvo, Concordia U, CANADA Politicizing Art: Making Sense of the Transnational Reception of Global Terrorism in Resident Evil 6 Robert Mejia, College at Brockport – SUNY, USA As cultures of gameplay have traveled across the spaces of arcades, living room consoles, and mobile media, so too has the digital games industry become a transnational enterprise constituted by global flows and power structures that cross economic, cultural, and geographic boundaries. Game publishing and development increasingly occupy multiple regions, markets, and media capitals, forcing game scholars to confront the production of game culture as diverse, dispersed, and decentralized. Yet this scope by no means renders useless questions of locality, counter-cultural flows and production of meaning at the level of specific spaces. While game studies has found significant opportunity to examine global flows of desire, labor, and connectivity, it has often come at the cost of marginalizing the centrality of locality to the maintenance of a transnational industry. In response to that growing oversight, this panel identifies digital gaming industries as an opportunity to address the tensions and contradictions between the transnational and local, in terms of production, text, and the sites of play in which game work is engaged. 8422 Friday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Mapping Journalism Past and Present Global Communication and Social Change Journalism Studies Chair Anna A Popkova, U of Minnesota, USA Participants Global News Broadcasting in the Pretelevision Era Scott L. Althaus, U of Illinois, USA Kaye Usry, U of Illinois, USA Stanley Richards, U of Illinois, USA Bridgette Van Thuyle, U of Illinois, USA Isabelle Aron, U of Illinois, USA Lu Huang, U of Illinois, USA Monica Muehlfeld, U of Illinois, USA Karissa Snouffer, U of Illinois, USA Seth Weber, U of Illinois, USA Patricia Frances Phalen, George Washington U, USA Kalev Leetaru, U of Illinois, USA Yuji Zhang, U of Illinois, USA Post-Cold-War Journalism in the Post-Cold-War World: The Syrian Debate Anna A Popkova, U of Minnesota, USA Exploring Determinants and Frames of Eastern European News in American Newspapers Nataliya Dmytrochenko, U of Florida, USA The Geography of Travel Journalism: Mapping the Flow of Travel Stories About Foreign Countries Folker Christian Hanusch, U of the Sunshine Coast, AUSTRALIA 8423 Friday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Researching Public Relations and Strategic Communication in Conflict/Postconflict Societies: An Essential Task for the Field? Public Relations Participant Researching Public Relations and Strategic Communication in Conflict and Postconflict Societies: An Essential Task for the Field? Ian Somerville, U of Ulster, UNITED KINGDOM Maureen Taylor, U of Oklahoma, USA Margalit Toledano, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Owen Hargie, U of Ulster, UNITED KINGDOM Most literature and published empirical studies on public relations (PR) practice focus on the activity as it is engaged in in the context of ‘normal’ liberal democratic societies. Indeed arguably one ‘normal’ liberal democratic society in particular, the USA. Although there have been a few attempts to investigate the environmental factors influencing PR practice in non-Western contexts and even conflict societies this ‘normal’ liberal democratic context has had an hegemonic influence on attempts within the academy to theorize PR practice. 8424 Friday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Learning and Socializing Through Use of Mobile Devices and Games Children Adolescents and Media Participants Legos™ on Steroids: An Exploratory Analysis of the Constructivist Learning Principles in Minecraft Maria Cipollone, Temple U, USA Catherine Schifter, Temple U, USA Rick Moffat, Temple U, USA Mediating Sociality: The Use of iPod Touch Devices in the Classrooms of Students With Autism in Canada Rhonda McEwen, U of Toronto, CANADA More Than Just a Phone: An Exploration of the Uses of the Mobile Phone Within Teen Friendship Relations Mariek Vanden Abeele, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Parent-Child Joint Reading in Traditional and iPad Formats Marina Krcmar, Wake Forest U, USA Drew Cingel, Northwestern U, USA Practice Makes Perfect: The Longitudinal Effect of Adolescents’ Instant Messaging on Their Offline Social Competence Maria Koutamanis, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Helen Vossen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Ellen Wartella, Northwestern U, USA 8425 Friday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Communication Approaches to Reducing Health Disparities in Latino Communities Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Myria Georgiou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Transnational Communication and Health Practices Among Latina Immigrants Carmen Gonzalez, U of Southern California, USA Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA Paula Amezola, U of Southern California, USA The Communicative Construction of Civic Engagement and Access to Health-Enhancing Resources in Ethnically-Diverse Residential Communities Matthew D. Matsaganis, U at Albany - SUNY, USA Holley A. Wilkin, Georgia State U, USA Mapping Community Health: Using GIS to Identify Neighborhood-Level Factors That Predict Latina Residents’ Health Nan Zhao, U of Southern California, USA Carmen Gonzalez, U of Southern California, USA Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA Minhee Son, U of Southern California, USA Paula Amezola, U of Southern California, USA Narrative Films to Address Health Disparities Among Latinas Lauren B. Frank, Portland State U, USA Meghan Bridgid Moran, San Diego State U, USA Various health campaigns are shifting their attention to the neighborhood-level determinants of health in immigrant and ethnic minority communities. In this panel we present research that addresses health disparities in the Latino population by understanding both the communicative practices that influence health decision-making and the neighborhood characteristics that may promote or hinder a healthy community. The papers presented here respond to a growing need for culturally relevant research that can directly inform health promotion efforts and provide effective health communication strategies for reaching at-risk populations. 8426 Friday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Culture and Health Intercultural Communication Chair Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants Children as Brokers in Their Immigrant Families’ Healthcare Interactions Vikki Sara Katz, Rutgers U, USA Coping With a New Culture: Predicting Online Health Information Seeking Among Chinese Immigrants Weirui Wang, Florida International U, USA Nan Yu, North Dakota State U, USA Cultural Resonance: Examining Racial and Ethnic Concordance and Food Safety Message Efficacy for Diverse Audiences Lorin Brooke Friley, Purdue U, USA Hyunyi Cho, Purdue U, USA Mark A Tucker, Purdue U, USA Health as a Site of Intercultural Adaptation for International Students in the United States Marissa Joanna Doshi, Texas A&M U, USA Health in Newspapers: A Culture-Based Comparative Content Analysis of Newspapers in the US and China Lu Tang, U of Alabama, USA Wei Peng, Michigan State U, USA 8427 Friday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 Reconfiguring and Extending the Constitutive Metamodel Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA Participants Responding to the Exigencies of Craig’s Seven Traditions: Communication as an Explanans Francois Cooren, U de Montréal, CANADA Pragmatic Applications of the Consitutive Metamodel Leonarda Garcia-Jimenez, U of Murcia, SPAIN Extending “Metamodel Pragmatism” to Aesthetics Jher, U of Oregon, USA Metamodel Pragmatism Chris Russill, Carleton U, CANADA Response to “Reconfiguring and Extending the Constitutive Metamodel” Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado, USA Respondent Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado, USA This panel offers background history and context situating emerging reconfigurations and extensions to Robert T. Craig's constitutive metamodel of communication published in 1999. It begins by reviewing published responses to it during the first decade of the 2000s by Myers, Russill and Cooren. It then, continues by bringing together the original author as a respondent to a panel of scholars who will elucidate different perspectives and provide comments regarding reconfiguring, extending, and/or applying the constitutive metamodel. Each scholar will offer a different take on its evolution, and directions for its development. Together this panel of scholars will explore the reconfigurations and extensions to the constitutive metamodel. In addition to the original author and panelists, Larry Gross is the chair for this unique panel. 8428 Friday 13:30-14:45 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Mentoring: Up, Down and Around Feminist Scholarship Chair Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA Participants Radhika Gajjala, Bowling Green State U, USA Anne Balsamo, U of Southern California, USA Carol A. Stabile, Center for the Study of Women in Society, USA Angharad N. Valdivia, U of Illinois, USA Radha S. Hegde, New York U, USA Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA Michelle Rodino-Colocino, Pennsylvania State U, USA Participant Dialectical Tensions Experienced by Diversified Mentoring Dyads at a Midsized Midwestern State University Marcy Meyer, Ball State U, USA This is a special session with feminist mentors from all stages in the academy. It features brief presentations, and opportunities to engage in mentoring by key feminist academics in varied areas of Communication. 8431 Friday 13:30-16:15 Board Room 1 Extended Session: Organizing and Integrating Knowledge About Environmental Communication Environmental Communication Participants Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA John C. Besley, Michigan State U, USA Robert Cox, U of North Carolina, USA Libby Lester, U of Tasmania, AUSTRALIA Alison Anderson, Plymouth U, AUSTRALIA Anders Hansen, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Environmental communication has emerged as an expanding academic field in the last three decades. This session will bring together a group of five to six prominent environmental communication scholars with a diversity of views and experiences within the field. These scholars will address four core topics: knowledge, theories, actors, and future challenges for environmental communication. Guiding questions for this session are: How may the field be mapped? Which aspects are central and which are peripheral? How is environmental communication related to other fields of study? Are there any “settled” questions in environmental communication? What are the opportunities, and challenges, for research in environmental communication? How may knowledge best be organized and made accessible for researchers, students, practitioners, and the general public?. 8432 Friday 13:30-14:45 Board Room 2 Self- and Other-Initiated Repair as Windows Into Action Formation, Epistemics, and the Management of Understanding Language & Social Interaction Chair Jeffrey David Robinson, Portland State U, USA Participants On the Boundary of Repair: The Case of Questioning Repeats John Heritage, U of California - Los Angeles, USA Self-Repair and Action Construction Paul Drew, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Using Open-Class Repair Initiation to Comment on the Generic Organization of Conversational Repair Jeffrey David Robinson, Portland State U, USA Epistemics in the Organization of Other-Initiated Repair Galina Bolden, Rutgers U, USA This panel brings together four, well-established conversation analysts from four different institutions, who represent two different academic fields. Their respective research projects converge in the following way: In addition to examining practices of repair themselves, each project examines how such practices provide insight into other key topics in the analysis of language and social interaction more broadly, such as action formation, epistemics, and the management of understanding or ‘grounding.’ 8433 Friday 13:30-14:45 Board Room 3 Metapragmatics and Conversational Structuring in Ordinary Conversation, Broadcast Interactions, and Dispute Mediation Language & Social Interaction Chair Saskia Witteborn, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Metapragmatic Effects in Lexical Development Jerzy Tomaszczyk, Lodz International Studies Academy, POLAND Quotation Practices and Communication Ideals: Reporting Speech to Manage Potential Interactional Troubles Jessica Sarah Robles, U of New Hampshire, USA Overall Structural Organization of Phone-Ins in Two Countries and Their Relations to Societal Norms Gonen Dori-Hacohen, U of Massachusetts, USA A Comparison of Political Interviews in Public Television and Commercial Broadcasters Carles Roca-Cuberes, U Pompeu Fabra, SPAIN Strategic Maneuvering in Dispute Mediation Alena L. Vasilyeva, Minsk State Linguistic U, BELARUS 8502 Challenging Communication Research: The Challenge of Ethics Friday 15:00-16:15 Balmoral Theme Sessions Participants Regulating for Communication Onora O’Neill, none, UNITED KINGDOM Host, Witness, Translator, Monstrator: News Media and Journalists as Public Performers Daniel Dayan, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, FRANCE Wikileaks, National Security, and Cosmopolitan Ethics Damian Tambini, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM When Practice is Undercut by Ethics Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Respondent Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM The purpose of this panel is to present a fundamental challenge to existing research in communication and media by recasting the relation between the “what ought” and the “what is”—in other words, by putting ethics first. Such a challenge has bearing on almost every subfield in the communication discipline, as well as on how the study of media translates into various fields practice. The challenge of ethics is also a timely one. The humanities and social sciences have seen a surge of debates on ethical and moral concerns in the past two decades, with some scholars even referring to the trend as “the turn to ethics.” 8505 Political Communication During the Arab Spring and its Aftermath Friday 15:00-16:15 Palace A Political Communication Chair Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN Participants How Facebook Facilitated the Jasmine Revolution. A Case Study of the Events in Tunisia, 2010-2011 Marion G. Mueller, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY Celina Huebner, Jacobs U Bremen, GERMANY Ideology and Instrumentality in Ikhwanweb: The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, the Mubarak Regime, and the West Soumia Bardhan, St. Cloud State U, USA The Politics of Political Communication: How News Discourse Articulates Media and Politics in the 2011 Egyptian Protests Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas, USA Bahaa Ghobrial, U of Texas, USA Attention Economy and the Rise of the Networked Microcelebrity Activist: New Dynamics, Old Dilemmas Zeynep Tufekci, Princeton U, USA 8506 A Roundtable Discussion on Work Pressures and Organizational Communication Friday 15:00-16:15 Palace B Organizational Communication Chairs Dawna I. Ballard, U of Texas, USA Matthew S. McGlone, U of Texas, USA Participants The Untethered Professional: Making Time and Space for Contemplation in an Age of Connection Dawna I. Ballard, U of Texas, USA Managing Tensions in Distributed Collaboration Jennifer L. Gibbs, Rutgers U, USA Why Do We Blame Information for Our Overload? Yoram M. Kalman, Open U of Israel, ISRAEL Communicating Work-Life Support: Implications for Organizations, Employees, and Families Jamie Ladge, Northeastern U, USA Multitasking in the Workplace: Are We in an Era of Fragmented Information? Gloria Mark, U of California - Irvine, USA Time is Not on Our Side: Temporal Agency in the Enron E-Mail Corpus Matthew S. McGlone, U of Texas, USA Burnout: Etiology, Consequences, and Remedies Stacey Passalacqua, Rollins College, USA Pressure From Other People: Using Sociomateriality to Understand Communication Load Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA Escalating workloads, long work hours, anxieties about job security, and the fragmentation of attention across proliferating communication channels are taking a toll on organizational members’ lives—at home and work. These “work pressures” create dialectic tensions between fundamental aspects of employees’ experience of work. In today’s competitive and challenging business environment, organizations cannot afford to ignore their employees’ perceptions of work pressure. Given the tight link between work pressures and contemporary shifts in communication technology and new media, the roundtable brings together an interdisciplinary group of scholars whose interests lie at the intersection of communication, work, and technology to discuss pertinent theory and research methods for investigating work pressure issues and creating solutions. 8507 Methodological Perspectives Friday 15:00-16:15 Palace C Political Communication Chair Janice Barrett, Lasell College, USA Participants A New Era of Qualitative Political Communication Research? A History and a Case for New Approaches David Karpf, George Washington U, USA Daniel Kreiss, U of North Carolina, USA Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Automatically Extracting Frames From Media Content using Syntacting Analysis Wouter van Atteveldt, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Shaul Shenhav, The Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Janet Takens, VU U - Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Measuring Traits and States in Public Opinion Research: A Latent State–Trait Analysis of Political Efficacy Frank M. Schneider, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Lukas Otto, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Daniel Alings, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Manfred Schmitt, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Why Agreement Estimators Fail to Estimate Their Estimands?: Some Answers From a Reconstructed Experiment Xinshu Zhao, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 8508 Comments-Mediated Communication Friday 15:00-16:15 York Communication and Technology Chair Brianna L. Lane, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants Collective Coping Through Networked Narratives: YouTube Responses to a School Shooting Simon Lindgren, Umea U, SWEDEN Click “Like” to Express: Recommendation Systems and Uses and Gratification Approach JI WON KIM, U of Texas, USA Intramedia Interaction and the Third-Person Effect: How Partisans Respond to YouTube Ads and Comments Aaron S. Veenstra, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Chang Sup Park, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Stephanie C KANG, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Benjamin A. Lyons, Southern Illinois U, Carbondale, USA Narayanan Iyer, Southern Illinois U, USA Others' Comments and the Role of Need for Cognition and Internal Political Self-Efficacy in Impression Formation Jayeon Lee, Ohio State U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 8509 Interaction or Conversation With Media Friday 15:00-16:15 Lancaster Communication and Technology Chair Wei Peng, Michigan State U, USA Participants Interactivity as Conversation: Can Back and Forth Interactions Affect User Cognitions and Attitudes? Saraswathi Bellur, U of Connecticut, USA S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U and Sungkyunkwan U, USA The Impact of Anthropomorphic Cues on Personalized Health Assessment Users’ Privacy Concern and Intention to Disclose Yerheen Ha, Pennsylvania State U, USA Tara Lurae Traeder, Pennsylvania State U, USA Jessica Ruiz, Pennsylvania State U, USA When is a Humanlike Interface Helpful? Effects of Visual and Linguistic Anthropomorphic Cues on Response Behavior in a Website Young June Sah, Michigan State U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Wei Peng, Michigan State U, USA The Effect of Interactivity on User Experience: Comparing Visual Cues and Actual Use Bo Zhang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Alyssa Appelman, Pennsylvania State U, USA Youngjoon Choi, Pennsylvania State U, USA Ashley Han, Pennsylvania State U, USA 8511 Friday 15:00-16:15 Waterloo/Tower Communicating Grown-Up Ideas About Health to Children and Young People Health Communication Chair Jennifer J. Moreland, The College of Wooster, USA Participants Let's Talk About Sex!: Acceptance of Sexual Health Communication in Pakistani School Curricula Mariliis Vahe, Florida State U, USA Khawaja Zain-ul-abdin, Florida State U, USA Church Communication and Kenyan Church-Going Youths’ Safe Sex Attitudes and Behavior Ann Neville Miller, U of Central Florida, USA Kyalo Ngula, Africa Nazarene U, KENYA Planting the Seed: Parental Evaluations of Children's Strategies for Initiating Discussion of Future Care Needs Craig Fowler, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Carla Fisher, George Mason U, USA Margaret J. Pitts, U of Arizona, USA Implementing Vegetable-Promoting Picture Books to Enhance Children’s Vegetable Consumption Simone M. de Droog, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Moniek Buijzen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 8512 Friday 15:00-16:15 Chelsea/Richmond High Density: The Dark Side of Interpersonal Interpersonal Communication Chair Jennifer Cornacchione, Michigan State U, USA Participants Aggressive, Combative, and Aggression-Free: Assessing the Validity of the Relational ControlMotivated Aggression Perspective and Violent Couple Typology Loreen N. Olson, U of North Carolina - Greensboro, USA Jennifer Stevens Aubrey, U of Missouri, USA Mark Fine, U of North Carolina - Greensboro, USA Confronting Friends About Risky Behaviors: An Application of the GPA Framework Melissa Maier, Upper Iowa U, USA Nancy Burrell, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Dyadic Perceptions of Goals, Conflict Strategies, and Perceived Resolvability in Serial Arguments Jennifer L. Bevan, Chapman U, USA Managing Information About STI Testing in Intimate Relationships: Applying the Theory of Motivated Information Management Sara LaBelle, West Virginia U, USA Megan R. Dillow, West Virginia U, USA The Development and Preliminary Test of a Theory of Jealousy Expression: Jealousy Expression Profile Theory Jennifer L. Bevan, Chapman U, USA When Hurt Continues: Taking Conflict Personally Leads to Rumination, Residual Hurt, and Negative Motivations Courtney Waite Miller, Elmhurst College, USA Michael E. Roloff, Northwestern U, USA You Did What? The Communication of Forgiveness in Married and Dating Couples Pavica Sheldon, U of Alabama in Huntsville, USA Eletra Gilchrist, U of Alabama in Huntsville, USA James Lessley, U of Alabama in Huntsville, USA Sources of Irritating Partner Behavior in Empty-Nest Marriages and Relationship Characteristics That Predict Their Severity and Expression Mary Elizabeth Nagy, Bloomsburg U, USA Jennifer A. Theiss, Rutgers U, USA 8513 Digital Games in Communication Research: Perspectives on the Institutional Embedding of a Growing Field Friday 15:00-16:15 St. James Game Studies Participants Orbital Drop Shock Curriculum? The Administrative Issues of Introducing Video Game-Related Classes Into Communications Programs David D. Perlmutter, U of Iowa, USA Collegiate Gaming: Why Communication Programs Can’t Afford to Not Offer Games Courses Edward Downs, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Mapping the Field of Digital Games Research: Results of a Large International Survey Jan Van Looy, Ghent U, BELGIUM Thorsten Quandt, U Münster, GERMANY Malte Elson, U Münster, GERMANY James D. Ivory, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Frans Mäyrä, U of Tampere, FINLAND Mia L. Consalvo, Concordia U, CANADA As many of the ICA Game Studies Interest Group’s members continue to navigate and negotiate the role of their research on games with their duties in academic units devoted to communication and journalism, this panel shares multiple forms of insight about the developing role of video games in curricula and faculty roles in the field. 8514 New Directions in Collective Memory and Journalism Friday 15:00-16:15 Regent's Journalism Studies Chair Motti Neiger, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Participants Journalism and Collective Memory in a Postbroadcast World Jill A. Edy, U of Oklahoma, USA Journalism and Prospective Memory Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Gone, but Not Forgotten: Memories of Journalistic Deviance as Metajournalistic Discourse Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA News is an Act of Faith: Failure and Religiosity in Final Issues of Failed Newspapers Nicholas Gilewicz, U of Pennsylvania, USA Respondent Oren Meyers, U of Haifa, ISRAEL 8516 Loaded Words: Insights From Journalism, History, and Culture Friday 15:00-16:15 Belgrave Communication History Journalism Studies Chair Richard K. Popp, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Participants Journalism as Institution and Work in Europe, Circa 1860: A Comparative History of Journalism Henrik Ornebring, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Challenging U.S. Exceptionalism in the Early 20th Century: The Spanish-Language Anarchist Press in the US Ilia Rodriguez, U of New Mexico, USA Bringing the World to America: An Oral History of Foreign Correspondence Giovanna Dell'Orto, U of Minnesota, USA The Portrayal of German Anti-Semitism 1918-1933 in the Foreign Press: Comparative and Transnational Research Perspectives Stephanie Seul, U of Bremen, GERMANY “New” Media and Political Change: The Case of International Broadcasts to Portugal, 1962-1974 Nelson Costa Ribeiro, Catholic U of Portugal, PORTUGAL Informed by the broader themes of communicaton and media histories, the papers in this session draw on the developed field of journalism history to argue the critical influence of various forms of journalism practice in the cultural context. The range and interest of these papers together make a compelling case for the contribution of journalism to the evolution of communicaiton history. 8517 Challenges in Research on Credibility Friday 15:00-16:15 Berkeley Mass Communication Chair Miriam Metzger, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Asserting Credibility and Expertise in Times of Crisis: Bank Advertising During Economic Recession Stephanie Aragao, U of Massachusetts, USA Laras Sekarasih, U of Massachusetts, USA Cognitive Dissonance or Credibility? A Comparison of Two Theoretical Explanations for Selective Exposure to Biased News Content Ethan Hartsell, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Miriam Metzger, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Andrew Flanagin, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Credibility of Public Opinion Research: Influence of Source and Medium on People’s Attribution of Credibility of Public Opinion Research Results Julian Brocke, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Nora Denner, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Marlies Dumbsky, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Anja Hoefel, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Sven Joeckel, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Annicka Klausen, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Stella Loock, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Alexander Mainz, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Claudia Rose, U of Erfurt, GERMANY The Repetition Paradox: Why the Repetition of a Statement Both Increases and Decreases its Credibility Thomas Koch, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY Thomas Zerback, Ludwig Maximilian U of Munich, GERMANY 8518 New Media Research Friday 15:00-16:15 Cadogan Information Systems Chair Sabrina Cornelia Eimler, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Participants Hold the Phone: Mobile Phone Haptics and Activation of Socially Relevant Concepts Kevin Wise, U of Missouri, USA Rachel Young, U of Iowa, USA Mary Ryan, U of Missouri, USA How to Take Advantage of Tablets: Effects of News Structure on Recall and Understanding Anna Van Cauwenberge, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Is Less More? The Role of Gender and Information Quantity in Business Network Profile Evaluation Sabrina Cornelia Eimler, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Maria Kovtunenko, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Need to Belong, Social Norms and Self-Efficacy as Predictors of Social Networking Site Usage Julia Niemann, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Frank Mangold, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Michael Schenk, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Online Privacy and Social Gratifications: A Cross-Cultural Study on Privacy Management on Social Network Sites Leonard Reinecke, U of Mainz, GERMANY Sabine Trepte, U of Hamburg, GERMANY Oliver Quiring, Johannes Gutenberg U, GERMANY Mike Z. Yao, City U of Hong Kong, HONG KONG Marc Ziegele, U of Mainz, GERMANY Show Me Your Contacts: Status of Contacts and Gender in Evaluations of Business Network Profiles Sabrina Cornelia Eimler, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Vera J. Sauer, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Smart TV: Are They Really Smart in Interacting With People? Dong-Hee Shin, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Viewing Experience of 3D Entertainment Technology: A Stereopsis Perspective Chen-Chao Tao, National Chiao Tung U, TAIWAN 8521 Friday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 1 & 2 Heritage, Collective Memory, and the Mediated Past Popular Communication Chair Eyal Zandberg, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Participants "Ketchup is the Auschwitz of the Tomatoes": Humor and Collective Memory of Traumatic Events Eyal Zandberg, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Owning American History: Whiteness and U.S. National Culture in American Pickers -- Top Paper in Pop Comm Andrew J Bottomley, U of Wisconsin, USA Road Trips to the Past: Culinary Tourism as Commodified Heritage -- Top Paper in Pop Comm Christina Maria Ceisel, SUNY – Oneonta, USA The Localized Popular Music Heritage of the Netherlands in Museums and Archives Arno van der Hoeven, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Amanda Brandellero, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Dinosaurs on Noah’s Ark? Representations of Science, Religion, and Popular Culture at the Creation Museum David William Scott, Utah Valley U, USA 8522 Friday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 3 & 4 Blogs, Twitter, and YouTube as Contested Arenas Global Communication and Social Change Communication and Technology Chair Le Han, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants The Global News Network: the Structural Role of Chinese Bridge Blogs Nan Zheng, James Madison U, USA Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas, USA Tweet to Remember: Moments of Crisis in the Chinese Microblogosphere Le Han, U of Pennsylvania, USA When Big Brother Uses Twitter, Too: Productive Forms of Policing in the Seoul G20 Protests in South Korea Kyung Lee, U of Pennsylvania, USA Hyun Suk Kim, U of Pennsylvania, USA YouTube Interventions: The Syria Conflict from YouTube to the Mainstream Media Sean Aday, George Washington U, USA Deen Goodwin Freelon, American U, USA Marc Lynch, George Washington U, USA 8523 Friday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 5 & 6 Public Relations and Nation Branding Public Relations Chair Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Participants Country Reputation and the Power of Culture Hyun-Ji Lim, Jacksonville U, USA Ji Young Kim, Bradley U, USA Credibility at Stake? Environmental News Discourse and its Potential Implications for New Zealand’s Brand Positioning Florian Kaefer, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Juliet P. Roper, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Eva Collins, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND The Relevance of Brand Origin to the PR Efforts of Carmakers in the United States Nadine Christina Billgen, U of Georgia, USA Social Media Uses in Government Public Relations: A Content Analysis of Social Media Strategies Between South Korea and the United States of America EunJu Cho, U of Florida, USA Moon J Lee, U of Florida, USA 8524 Friday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 7 & 8 Wartime Images in Historical Memory Visual Communication Studies Participants The 2011 World Press Photo: A Study of Modern-Day Hagar in Yemen Through Collective Memory in Islam Natalia Mielczarek, U of Iowa, USA Visual Coverage of the 2006 Lebanon War: Framing Conflict in Three U.S. News Magazines Carol B. Schwalbe, U of Arizona, USA Shannon Dougherty, Arizona State U, USA War as a Sober Spectacle: A Revised Critique of Roger Fenton’s 1855 Photographs of the Crimean War Sandrine Boudana, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL The "Looking Into the Past" Photos and Their Potentially Comparative History Ryan Lizardi, Pennsylvania State U, USA Looking Back: The Shifting Public Life of the Abu Ghraib Photographs Michael S. Griffin, Macalester College, USA 8525 Friday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 9 & 10 Contested Memories: Resituating Race, Ethnicity, and Contentious Pasts in Sites of Public Memory Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Miranda Jean Brady, Carleton U, CANADA Participants Digital Media and the Contestation of the Memory of the Roma Porajmos (Holocaust) Anna Marie Reading, London South Bank U, UNITED KINGDOM Representing Spectacle and Inventing the Other: Human Zoos, Circuses, and Colonial Exhibitions at the Quai Branly Irina Mihalache, U of Toronto, CANADA The Embodiment of Memory: Exploring Beauty Practices as Holocaust Survival Tactics Reisa Klein, Carleton U, CANADA Managing Contentious Histories: The Digital Archive and Indian Residential School Survivor Testimonials in Canada Miranda Jean Brady, Carleton U, CANADA Sites of public memory offer important forms of ritual communication by which people make sense of contentious pasts and articulate collective identities. Whether state-sanctioned or initiated at the grassroots, memory sites like museums present opportunities and limitations for understanding the past through critiques of previous historical paradigms. However, their practitioners are not always reflexive about the limitations of interpreting the past through institutional or mediated lenses. This panel provides critical responses to contemporary memory sites addressing historical violence against racial and ethnic minorities. It offers an exploration of four disparate cases, which share a number of commonalities, regardless of their different historical and cultural contexts. This collection of papers demonstrates various approaches for studying public memory and mediation, and examines the cultural nuances involved when violent, historical events are interpreted by and for particular audiences/participants. 8526 Friday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 11 & 12 Media, Ritual and Religion. Exploring Contemporary Implications in Mediatized Rituals Online/Offline Popular Communication Chairs Johanna Maaria Sumiala, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Mihai Coman, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA Participants Media and Ritual: A Challenge for the Anthropological Thought? Mihai Coman, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA Amnon Yitzhak Online: YouTube and the Production of Ritual Knowledge Michele Rosenthal, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Synchronization Without Simultaneity? Media Rituals Beyond Program-Television and Media Events Guenter Thomas, Ruhr U Bochum, GERMANY Immortals: Ritualizing Death of a Celebrity in the Present-Day Media Culture Johanna Maaria Sumiala, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Respondent Eric W. Rothenbuhler, Ohio U, USA In recent years the interplay between media, ritual and religion has stimulated interest in media, religion, communications and anthropology scholarship. In this panel organized together with the ECREA Temporary Working Group Media and Religion we look at rituals and ritualization as a cultural practice carried out in relation to, via and through the contemporary religious and non-religious media including the complex web of mass media as well as social networking sites (e.g. Television, YouTube). In this panel we wish to argue that we need to rethink and reexamine symbolic communication and the place of ritualized practice in the contemporary context. The panel’s task is to make the complex interplay between media, ritual and religion theoretically and empirically more accessible to scholars and laypeople alike. 8527 Friday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 13, 14, & 15 8528 Friday 15:00-16:15 Hilton Meeting Rooms 16 & 17 Serving the Public: Critical Perspectives on Journalism Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants Radical Journalism, News Epistemology and Disruption in Paradigm in WikiLeaks Phenomenon Anup Kumar, Cleveland State U, USA Rethinking Truthfulness in Journalism Natalia Roudakova, U of California - San Diego, USA The Costs of “Free Radio”: Market Failure and the Clash of Media Policy Narratives Victor W. Pickard, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Public in Public Media: Debates, Dilemmas, and Discrepancies Christopher Ali, U of Pennsylvania, USA Women, Protest, and Patriarchy in the Post-Soviet World: Examining Pussy Riot and FEMEN Feminist Scholarship Chair Nadia Kaneva, U of Denver, USA Participants Pussy Riot: What Does it Mean? Olga Ivanovna Matyash, Russian Communication Association, USA The Punk Prayer, Balaclavas, and Putin: Tragicomic Culture Jamming in Modern Russia Anna Baranchuk, Georgia State U, USA Symbolic Violence in Nonviolent Social Movement Activism: Pussy Riot Performance and Suffragette Attack on the Rokeby Venus Ksenia Gorbenko, Johns Hopkins U, USA Naked Rebels With a Cause: Framing FEMEN in International News Elza Nistorova Ibroscheva, Southern Illinois U, Edwardsville, USA Nadia Kaneva, U of Denver, USA Affective Mediations: Social Media, Affect, and East European Feminist Activism Marusya Bociurkiw, Ryerson U, CANADA This panel aims to stimulate scholarly debate on the allegedly “new” forms of women’s protest that are taking place in the post-Soviet cultural space. The panel’s chair will facilitate a discussion among the presenters and the audience around some of the following questions: What do these examples of women’s protest movements tell us about the variants of feminism emerging in the post-Soviet world? How do these movements challenge or reproduce received ideas about the goals of feminism and about the best strategies for achieving these goals? How are women’s bodies deployed in these protest movements and to what end? And what is the role of mediation at the local and global level for these movements? 8532 Friday 15:00-16:15 Board Room 2 Deciding Who's In and Who's Out: Membership in Academic and Religious Contexts Language & Social Interaction Chair Alena L. Vasilyeva, Minsk State Linguistic U, BELARUS Participants Natural Criticism and Membering in Academia: The Study of an Extreme Case David Boromisza-Habashi, U of Colorado, USA Russell Parks, U of Colorado, USA Managing Stacy: A Case Study on Turn-Taking in the Language Classroom Hansun Zhang Waring, Columbia U, USA "Who's the Decider?": Discursive Strategies for Maintaining Sociability in Negotiations in Preschoolers' Peer Talk Shoshana Blum-Kulka, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Michal Hamo, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL The Trajectory of Resistance to Authority in Online Academic Institutional Talk Natasha Shrikant, U of Massachusetts, USA Effective Evangelism: Discourse Surrounding Evangelizing Practices in a Chinese Indonesian Evangelical Community in Boston Sunny Lie, U of Massachusetts, USA 8533 Friday 15:00-16:15 Board Room 3 Free Speech, Content Regulation, and the State Communication Law & Policy Chair Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Participants A Test of Legal Arguments Surrounding the FDA Proposed Cigarette Warning Labels Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA Sherri Jean Katz, Cornell U, USA Alan D. Mathios, Cornell U, USA Media Pluralism Policy in a Postsocialist Mediterranean Media System: The Case of Croatia Zrinjka Perusko, U of Zagreb, CROATIA Noncommercial Mechanisms in North American Media Regulation: Institutional Reception of Al Jazeera English Ian Kivelin Davis, U of Illinois, USA Valuing Expression Over Identity: Anonymity v. Compelled Disclosure in American Political Speech Sarah Chenoweth, U of Arizona, USA 8602 ICA London Closing Plenary: The Bridge and the Barrier: The Challenges of Language Use in Communication Research Friday 16:30-17:45 Balmoral Sponsored Sessions Chair Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Participants Toby Miller, City U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Michael Oustinoff, U Paris 3, FRANCE Dafna Lemish, Southern Illinois U, USA Chin Chuan Lee, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Jiro Takai, Nagoya U, JAPAN The hegemony of English in international research and publication is perceived by many as a barrier excluding scholars from many regions of the world. In spite of a consensus on the need for action to overcome the language barrier, initiatives seem to have very limited results. This panel will explore innovative ways to understand the causes and implications of these issues and to initiate new dynamics in internationalizing communication research in a way that benefits scholars and scholarship on both sides of the language barrier. 8749 Friday 17:30-19:00 Strand Campus Postconference: Cultural Work, Subjectivity and Communication Technologies: Crossing Existing Research Paradigms Sponsored Sessions Participants Christina Marie Scharff, King's College London, UNITED KINGDOM Rosalind Gill, King's College London, UNITED KINGDOM This one-day seminar will bring together communications research with specific areas of expertise at the Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries and Digital Humanities, King's College London. In particular, the event will put into dialogue research on three areas: work in the cultural and creative industries; subjectivity in and at work; and the interplay between work and communication technologies. 9217 Postconference: Political Public Relations: Examining an Emerging Field Saturday 09:00-12:00 Berkeley Sponsored Sessions Chair Spiro K. Kiousis, U of Florida, USA Participants Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Jesper Stromback, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Public relations efforts are more pervasive in political communication today than ever before. Still, there is neither much theorizing nor empirical research on political public relations. Consequently, the goal of this post-conference panel is to bring together scholars at the crossroads of public relations, political communication, political science, and political marketing, and to serve as an initial forum to discuss various perspectives on political public relations. The discussion will be based on studies in a forthcoming special issue of the Public Relations Journal, edited by Spiro Kiousis and Jesper Strömbäck. 9218 Postconference: Bridging the Quantitative-Qualitative Divide in Comparative Communication Research: Heading Towards Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) Saturday 09:00-17:00 Cadogan Sponsored Sessions Chair Thomas Hanitzsch, U of Munich, GERMANY Participants Benoît Rihoux, U Catholique de Louvain, BELGIUM Carsten Schneider, Central European U, HUNGARY James Stanyer, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL This postconference workshop will be an ideal opportunity for interested colleagues in the field to engage with Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) getting to grips with its language and procedures. The workshop brings together experts and users of the method with those who are interested in utilizing such an approach in their own work. The aim is threefold: First, to provide a hands-on introduction to QCA that acts as an impetus for researchers to use the method more widely in their own work. Second, to showcase applications of QCA in the wider field of communication and media studies, demonstrating its ability to bridge often gridlocked epistemological and methodological divides in comparative communication research. Third, to specifically discuss the issue of calibration and identify possible solutions. 9249 Saturday 09:30-17:45 Strand Campus Postconference: Cultural Work, Subjectivity and Communication Technologies: Crossing Existing Research Paradigms Sponsored Sessions Participants Christina Marie Scharff, King's College London, UNITED KINGDOM Rosalind Gill, King's College London, UNITED KINGDOM This one-day seminar will bring together communications research with specific areas of expertise at the Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries and Digital Humanities, King's College London. In particular, the event will put into dialogue research on three areas: work in the cultural and creative industries; subjectivity in and at work; and the interplay between work and communication technologies. A162 Monday 08:30-17:00 Conference Centre Postconference: Advancing Media Production Research: A 1-Day Post-ICA / Pre-IAMCR Conference Sponsored Sessions This one-day postconference will offer scholars researching within media organisations, and those who have done so, an opportunity to reflect on the value and limitations of such research. Discussions will focus on: How theories of news and cultural production have been advanced and challenged by recent media production research; Understanding “that which we cannot see” – the ongoing challenge of access to media and cultural institutions for in-depth, critical research; and pressing questions for production research in the coming decade. This event is hosted by the University of Leeds Institute for Communications Studies and is cosponsored by the IAMCR Working Group for Media Production Research, ICA Journalism Studies, and the ECREA Media Industries and Cultural Production Working Group.