Printed Program - International Communication Association
Transcription
Printed Program - International Communication Association
1002 Wednesday 08:00-17:00 Conference Room Preconference: Powers of Promotion: Apprehending the Social and Political Impacts of Promotional Culture Sponsored Sessions Chairs Melissa Aronczyk, Rutgers U, USA Lee Edwards, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Anu Marjaana Kantola, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Participants PR and Social Influence: Cases From the MENA Region Ilhem Allagui, Northwestern U in Qatar, QATAR Navigating Between Colonialism and Sustainable Development: Promotional Culture With Socio-Political Ambition in Global Trade Annette Cerne, Lund U, SWEDEN Doing Good or Looking Good? International Media Assistance as Public Diplomacy Florencia Enghel, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Instaprincess: Culture, Communication and Commodity Kate Fitch, Murdoch U, AUSTRALIA Between Media and Political Power: Can Government Press Officers ‘Hold the Line’ in the Age of Political Spin? The Case of the UK Since 1997 Ruth Garland, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Electrified Postwar Japan: An Analysis of the Electricity Company’s PR Strategy Kyungjin HA, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Promotional Culture and Government Communication in the Focus of Professionalisation Salli Hakala, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Gender Theory in the Primary School Rumor Bombs: Political De-/Promotion in Post-Truth Society Jayson Harsin, The American U of Paris, FRANCE Framing “the Common Good”: Professional Lobbying in the Media Spotlight Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY Ketil Raknes, Oslo School of Management, NORWAY Race, Taste and the Transnational Celebrity: A Critical Analysis of the Online Self-Promotion of Irene Major Mehita Iqani, U of the Witwatersrand, SOUTH AFRICA Narrative-Worlds as Promotional Strategy: Serial Promotion of Manga, Anime, and Games and the Mobilization of Fandom Thiam Huat Kam, Rutgers U, USA Discursive Political Consumerism for the Environment: Brandalism, Culture Jamming and the Logic of Appropriation Eleftheria J Lekakis, U of Sussex, UNITED KINGDOM Portlandia, Vancouverism, and the Rise of Green City Brands: The Promotional Culture of Ecotopia Derek Moscato, U of Oregon, USA The Application of Promotional Activities for the National and Transnational Peace Sopark Panichpapiboon, U of the Thai Chamber of Commerce, THAILAND Parichart Sthapitanonda, Chulalongkorn U, THAILAND The Strategic Advocate in the Digital Storm: How International NGOs Pursue Publicity Online Matthew Powers, U of Washington, USA Designing a Country From Scratch: Nation Branding in South Sudan Anne Quito, Atlantic Media, Quartz, USA Nation Branding Consultants and Korean Governments: Legitimacy and Political Influence in Contemporary Policy Juliette Schwak, City U of Hong Kong, PHILIPPINES The Berlin Twitter Wall: The Promotional Culture of Global Iconic Events Julia Sonnevend, U of Michigan, USA Powers of Promotion in the Digital Era: Problematizing Credibility and Social Network Doping Douglas Schules, Rikkyo U, JAPAN Hsin-Yen Yang, Fort Hays State U, USA Promoting the Nation in a Networked World: A Postmodern Media Theory Approach to Nation Branding and Digital Diplomacy in South Korea Damien Spry, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Branding Poland Online: Propagating and Resisting Nation Branding on Facebook Pawel Surowiec, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Seizing Opportunities to Mobilize: Climate Advocacy Organizations and Social Media Strategy Over Time Kjerstin Thorson, U of Southern California, USA Luping Wang, U of Southern California, USA The Personal is Political: Promoting Disability Rights Online Trevisan Filippo, American U, USA Competition Over Attention and the Rise of the Promotional Field in Nation Branding Katja Valaskivi, U of Tampere, FINLAND Beyond the Front: Corporate-Driven Activism and the Keystone XL Pipeline Tim Wood, New York U, USA Performing Medical Praxis: Communicating Cancer Research at the Human-Animal Crossroads Ekin Yasin, U of Washington, USA This preconference examines the growing social and political importance of promotional activities and public relations. The “abundance, ubiquity, reach and celerity” of modern communications practices, technologies and forms of participation – and particularly the advent of interactive, networked digital media – have permanently transformed what it means to be politically and socially engaged. Contests for power, influence and legitimacy among stakeholders are therefore more complex and take place on many fronts. However, the influence and power of PR in the context of an increasingly promotional culture is underresearched. The preconference addresses this gap, focusing on the societal and political significance of promotional activities and PR in particular, as used both alongside and independently of other promotional techniques. 1005 Wednesday 08:00-18:00 Room Number 13F 1301 1016 Wednesday 08:00-19:00 Waseda U Preconference: Power, Communication, and Technology in Internet Governance Sponsored Sessions Research on Internet governance has been gaining momentum since the concept broke into public and policy discourses in the years leading to, and especially during, the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS). 2015 marked the 10th anniversary of the WSIS process and 2016 marks the 10th anniversary of the first GigaNet symposium, which owes its genesis to a joint ICA-IAMCR workshop and has been part of the Internet Governance Forum since 2006. Research on Internet governance has evolved and is no longer focused solely on Internet infrastructure and politics surrounding its protocols, unique identifiers, and domain names. Yet, even with the expanding boundaries, the core questions of Internet governance remain focused on the intersection of power, communication, and technology. Preconference: Communicating With Cool Japan: New International Perspectives on Japanese Popular Culture Sponsored Sessions Chairs Casey Brienza, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Seio Nakajima, Waseda U, JAPAN Anamik Saha, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent Koichi Iwabuchi, Monash U, AUSTRALIA More children around the world recognize Mario than they do Mickey Mouse, and Japanese popular culture is among the most distinct and recognizable of any in the world. There is both intra-Asian cultural flow, as well as “counter-flow” from East to West. This year’s conference theme is “Communicating with Power,” and it implies both speaking to the powerful and speech that is powerful in and of itself. Both are salient here because “Cool Japan” is a governmental catchphrase, and to a postcolonial country like Japan, which has renounced the “hard” military power of warmongering and violence, the “soft power” of cultural diplomacy and the global recognition of its powerhouse popular culture are especially important. 1115 Wednesday 08:30-17:30 Kitasenju Campus Preconference: Willing Collaborators: The Rise of China and Changing Networks of Asian Media Production Sponsored Sessions Participants Michael Curtin, U of California – Santa Barbara, USA Anthony Y.H. Fung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Michael Keane, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA Brian Yecies, U of Wollongong, AUSTRALIA Dal Yong Jin, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Aynne Kokas, U of Virginia, USA Wenshan Jia, Chapman U, USA Mouri Yoshitaka, Tokyo U of the Arts, JAPAN This preconference is focused on the transformations of East Asian media production associated with the rise of China as a production centre, a large cultural market, and the centre of a growing number of strategic alliances ad coproduction arrangements in the region. The preconference provides a platform for conversations about how this is having impacts in the region, and for film, TV, games and other digital content industries in Japan, Korea and other countries in the East Asian region. It also considers rethinking in the upper echelons of the Chinese state about how to revitalise media production sector, and content aimed at domestic markets in particular, to reverse China’s ‘cultural trade deficit,’ and generate new forms of ‘cultural soft power.’ 1101 Wednesday 09:00-17:00 Conference Room Preconference: Communicating With New Power Blocs: Culture and Ethics in BRICS Media Sponsored Sessions Participants Claiming their Heritage: Concerned Citizens' Communication Charu Uppal, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Towards a More Balanced Ecological Agenda: China's Environmental Communication and its International Narratives Jingling Qian, U of International Business and Economics, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF BRICS News-Making as Uncharted Waters for Euro-Atlantic Audiences Dominique Lemoine, U du Quebec – Montreal, CANADA Power Asymmetries in BRICS Media Dani Madrid-Morales, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Putin’s War in Syria: Russian Media and the Justifications of Intervention Ethan Stokes, U of Alabama, USA Ryan Williams, U of Texas, USA Skye C Cooley, Mississippi State U, USA Geopolitical Visions in Chinese Media Randy Kluver, Texas A&M U, USA Jacquelyn Chinn, Texas A&M U, USA Robert Hinck, Texas A&M U, USA Reception and Impact of BRICS Soft Power Winston Mano, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Manufacturing Ideological Consent: A Structural Analysis of the Agenda Setting Role of CCTV-Africa Yu Xiang, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Investigation on the Chinese Diasporic Newspaper in 31 Countries: "International Bridgeheads" for Chinese New Media Industry Jack Liu, Guangdong U of Foreign Studies, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF How Organic is BRICS?: Towards the Future of International Communication Jia Xu, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yonghua Zhang, Shanghai U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Public Relations Entrepreneurship in Emerging Markets With Special Reference to BRICS: Challenges and Opportunities Gilbert Motsaathebe, Office of the Premier, North West Provincial Government, SOUTH AFRICA Russia’s Potential Weaknesses and Strengths of Communicating Power Ekaterina Kalinina, Södertörn U, SWEDEN The Occupy Movement in Hong Kong: A Comparison Between Xinhua, Hong Kong, and AP News Coverage Yin Wu, U of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Charting the BRICS Media Landscape Through the Examination of Reality Television William R. Davie, U of Louisiana, USA Influence of Ethnicity and Religion on the Voting Pattern of Nigerian Electorate as Represented in their Media as a New Power Bloc Godwin Ehiarekhian Oboh, Benson Idahosa U, NIGERIA Respondents Sudeshna Roy, Stephen F Austin State U, USA Colin Sparks, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Shakuntala Rao, State U of New York - Plattsburgh, USA Xin Zhong, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Elena Vartanova, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Herman Wasserman, U of Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICA The influence and relevance of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) countries are being increasing felt in the global media arena, as has been evident in recent international news coverage of events in the member countries, such as Chinese moves to devalue their currency and the state visits abroad of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to court the Indian diaspora. Russia is in the news too with its military intervention in Syria and the continuing conflict in Ukraine; Brazil’s corruption scandal around petroleum giant. While the concept of BRICS is problematic in that they are very different countries, nevertheless they have in common a rapid and globalised growth in their media systems. 1107 Wednesday 09:00-17:00 Conference Room Preconference: The Power of Presence: Using Telepresence Theory, Research, and Applications to Enhance Mediated Communication Experiences in the 21st Century Sponsored Sessions Chair Matthew Lombard, Temple U, USA The term ‘presence’ has many formal and informal meanings but is used by a growing interdisciplinary scholarly community to refer to experiences in which technology is overlooked or misconstrued in some way during a mediated experience. Long a focus of those who study virtual reality and environments, it’s increasingly relevant to a wide range of media experiences. The primary objective of the preconference will be to introduce communication scholars and practitioners to the centrality, pervasiveness, value, and power of presence phenomena, theory and research within and beyond the diverse field of communication. A secondary goal will be to deepen and update knowledge of those already familiar with presence 1110 Wednesday 09:00-17:00 Room 1901-1903 Preconference: Workshop on Mining Social Media for Communication Research Sponsored Sessions Chair Jonathan J.H. Zhu, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Hai Liang, U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Fujio Toriumi, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Tai-Quan Winson Peng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE The emergence of social media has provided both opportunities and challenges for communication research. However, the existing tools (such as manual content analysis and SPSS package) with which communication scholars are familiar become increasingly inadequate. As such, there has been an urgent need for in-depth knowledge and hands-on skills of computational methods throughout the field. To serve the need, this one-day workshop aims to: (1) demonstrate the potentials of mining social media for communication research by introducing the most recent empirical studies on social media from communication and neighbouring fields (e.g., information science, political science, sociology, and management); and (2) introduce the fundamental and medium-level knowledge and skills in mining social media for communication research. 1114 Wednesday 09:00-17:00 Conference Room Preconference: Algorithms, Automation, and Politics Sponsored Sessions Chairs Philip Howard, U of Washington, USA Samuel C Woolley, U of Washington, USA Research has revealed that algorithms and automation are being used by political actors in online efforts to sway public opinion. In some circumstances, the ways coded automation interacts with human users is unforeseeable--even by the engineers who build such programs. In others, individuals and organizations work to build software that targets voters, activists, and political opponents. Understanding the ways technologies like these are used to spread propaganda on social media sites and manipulate political outcomes elsewhere online, and the possible effects they have on a range of citizens worldwide, is a pressing problems for scholars of communication. This preconference seeks to address these problems and explore a broad range of interdisciplinary questions related to algorithms, automation, and political communication. 1204 Wednesday 09:30-17:30 Auditorium and Lecture Hall A 1211 Wednesday 09:30-16:00 Conference Room Preconference: Mobile Communication ("The All-Powerful Mobile") Sponsored Sessions Preconference: Just Games? Considering How Digital Games Can be More Than Entertainment Sponsored Sessions Chair Teresa Lynch, Indiana U, USA Driven by Japanese innovation in the early 1980s to its global extensions today, digital gaming has become pervasive not only in our contemporary mediascape, but as part of our broader cultures. Contemporary digital gaming derives much of its legacy from Japanese origins and with Japan hosting this year’s ICA conference, this pre-conference theme asks us to look beyond games merely as a means for entertainment and to consider the positive role of digital gaming in our lives. The goal of this preconference is to consider the history, future, ethics, and nature of games as prosocial forces. 2061 Thursday 08:00-17:00 Sage Preconference: Big Data: Critiques and Alternatives Sponsored Sessions Chairs Greg Elmer, Ryerson U, CANADA Ganaele Langlois, York U, CANADA Alison Powell, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Alessandra Renzi, Northeastern U, USA Participants Scandal-Mining: Assessing the Big Data Electoral Landscape Daniel Trottier, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Datafied ‘Threats’: Uses of Social Media for Policing Domestic Extremism and Disorder in the UK Lina Dencik, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Arne Hintz, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Big Data and Governance: Rendering Government Uses Knowable, Transparent, and Accountable Joanna Redden, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM The ‘Regime of Ethics’ of Big Data Joao Carlos Magalaes, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Rethinking Relations Between Law and Data Jake Goldenfein, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Andrew Kenyon, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Umbrellas Forgotten: Practical Implications of the ‘Right to be Forgotten’ in Big Data Research Rebekah Tromble, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS Data Sharing Platforms: Alternative Model or Uberisation of Research Jean-Christophe Plantin, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Christian Sandvig, U of Michigan, USA Carl Lagoze, U of Michigan, USA Pioneer Communities: Collective Actors of Deep Mediatization Andreas Hepp, U of Bremen, GERMANY Successor Systems: Lessons for Big Data From Feminist Epistemology and Activism R.Stuart Geiger, U of California-Berkeley, USA Data Polities in the Laboratory City Etienne Turpin, U of Wollongong, AUSTRALIA Tomas Holderness, U of Wollongong, AUSTRALIA The goal of this preconference is to reflect on alternatives to big data as a predictive model for population control, management and manipulation. Can we envision a framework through which big data will cease to be necessarily surveillant or personally intrusive? What would constitute an ethics of big data use? Beyond control, what kinds of relations between humans, between humans and their environment, and between humans and non-humans could be built through big data? What might be the consequences of placing different actors – citizens, activists, or even animals and plants - at the centre of data collection paradigms? 2072 Thursday 08:00-12:00 Ocean Penthouse International Communication Association Executive Committee Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA Laura Sawyer, International Communication Association, USA Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA Paula M Gardner, McMaster U, CANADA 2108 Thursday 08:30-17:00 Conference Room Preconference: Communicating the Power of Visual Images: ICA Young Scholars Preconference on Conceptualizing and Communicating Visual Communication Research Projects Sponsored Sessions This one-day preconference brings together young scholars from all ICA divisions and interest groups who focus on visual images in their research projects. 2131 Thursday 08:30-17:00 Kusu 2132 Thursday 08:30-17:00 Kashi Preconference: 7th Annual Doctoral Consortium of the Communication Technology Division Breakout Sponsored Sessions Preconference: 7th Annual Doctoral Consortium of the Communication Technology Division Sponsored Sessions Chair Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participation is by invitation only. 2147 Thursday 08:30-17:00 Yoh Preconference: Crossing Borders: Researching Transnational Media History - Breakout Sponsored Sessions Chairs Nour Halabi, U of Pennsylvania, USA Manuel Menke, Augsburg U, GERMANY Nicole Maurantonio, U of Richmond, USA Nelson Costa Ribeiro, U Católica Portuguesa, PORTUGAL Participants Transforming Symbolisms: Reinterpreting the Goddess of Democracy as the Victims of Communism Memorial Samantha Oliver, Annenberg School for Communication, U of Pennsylvania, USA Managing China’s Image Through Their Eyes: Co-Optation, Co-Operation and Western Journalists in Wartime China, 1937-1945 Yong Z. Volz, U of Missouri, USA Shifting Kanji Transnationally: Japan’s National Language Program and a U.S. Japanese-Language Newspaper Before and After WWII Kristin L. Gustafson, U of Washington, USA Beyond Western Europe: Public Service Broadcasting as a Global Historical Moment Jerome Bourdon, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Nahuel Ribke, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL ‘Americanization of the Press’: The Success of American Journalism in the Habsburg Empire, 1850-1910 Gabriele Melischek, Austrian Academy of Sciences, AUSTRIA Pacific Crossings? American Progressivism and the Making of Journalism in China From the Late 19th Century to 1920s Junbin Su, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The German Immigration and its Impact on the Development of an Advertising Industry: The Case of the Land of Israel in the 1930 Osnat Roth-Cohen, Ariel U and Bar Ilan U, ISRAEL Life in Exile: The Transnational Origins of the Photographically Illustrated Magazine Annie Rudd, Columbia U, USA The PRESSA (International Press Exhibition Cologne 1928) and the Conceptualisation of the Press as a Transnational Agent of Peace Stephanie Seul, U of Bremen, GERMANY “Colossal Misunderstanding”: The Transnational Media Narration of the Fall of the Berlin Wall Julia Sonnevend, U of Michigan, USA Spreading Vice: The Establishment of Vice Magazine and Vice Media as Transnational Phenomenon in the 1990s Henrik Bodker, Aarhus U, DENMARK Transnational Media-Reception as a Mundane Practice. Historical Development of Routines, Motives and Logics of Cross-Border Media Use Christian Schwarzenegger, Augsburg U, GERMANY Beyond Orientalism, or Who’s the “Great Imitator?” Critical Reflections on Japanese Transcultural Influence Fabienne Darling-Wolf, Temple U, USA Learn to Produce Classic TV: BBC’s Influences on China’s Early Television Drama Production George Duo, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM “Fashion” in the Socialism New China: The Chinese Version of International Fashion Magazines During the 1980s and 1990s Sue Tang, Zhejiang Gongshang U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Japanese Animation as a Model of Cross-Cultural Communication Vincenzo De Masi, New York Institute of Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 2148 Thursday 08:30-17:00 Kei Preconference: Crossing Borders: Researching Transnational Media History Sponsored Sessions Chairs Richard K. Popp, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA Nelson Costa Ribeiro, U Católica Portuguesa, PORTUGAL Thomas Birkner, U of Muenster, GERMANY Participants Dreaming of European Media During the Cold War: Louis Armand and the Tour Lumière Cybernétique Project Dominique Trudel, U du Quebec - Montreal, CANADA The Transnational Past as Global Present: Challenges to Journalistic Practice at Radio Free Europe During the Cold War Susan D. Haas, U of Pennsylvania, USA Broadcasting in the Cause of Peace David Charles Goodman, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Listening in Secret: The BBC Polish Service 1939-45 Suzanne Franks, City U, UNITED KINGDOM Reaching the Colonial Territories in Africa and Asia: Portuguese Media Content Travelling to the Empire Nelson Costa Ribeiro, U Católica Portuguesa, PORTUGAL Transnational Modernity: The Case of Radio Ceylon Biswarup Sen, U of Oregon, USA How Holidays Travel: The Case of Purim Elihu Katz, U of Pennsylvania, USA Menahem Blondheim, Hebrew U, ISRAEL An Empire That Innis Missed: Time and Space Biases in the Persian Empire According to the Biblical Book of Esther Elihu Katz, U of Pennsylvania, USA Menahem Blondheim, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Catholics and Censorial Transnationalism: Comparing Catholic Film Censorship Strategies and Practices (1946-1970) Daniël Biltereyst, Ghent U, BELGIUM BBC Monitoring: Watching the World Suzanne Franks, City U, UNITED KINGDOM History Sells! But What Kind of Historical Narratives are Sold? An Analysis of the Presentation of Transnational History in European Popular History Magazines Manuel Menke, Augsburg U, GERMANY Susanne Kinnebrock, Augbsurg U, GERMANY Producing Global Media Memories: Media Events and the Power Dynamics of Transnational Television History Lars Lundgren, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Christine Evans, U of Wisconsin Milwaukee, USA “The 10 Most Evil People in History:” How Ordinary People Communicate History in Social Media. (Trans)National Perspectives, Historical Factuality and the Race for Maximized Attention Christian Schwarzenegger, Augsburg U, GERMANY Transnational History and Media Memories: Facebook as Transnational Digital Archive? Anne Kaun, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Fredrik Stiernstedt, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Researching Transnational Media History: Theoretical and Methodological Challenges Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Sandra Braman, Texas A&M U, USA Susanne Kinnebrock, Augbsurg U, GERMANY Intervision: TV-Program Exchange and Cultural Media Life in Eastern Europe Between 1960-1993 Yulia Yurtaeva, Film U Babelsberg Konrad Wolf, GERMANY The British Ministry of Information as Transnational Publisher Marc Wiggam, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Radio ‘in Translation’ Richard Rudin, Liverpool John Moores U, UNITED KINGDOM Respondents Michael Schudson, Columbia U, USA Gabriele Balbi, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND This ICA preconference is dedicated to considering the history of media that operates across national borders. Indeed, communication has long been a central theme in historical schools of thought that stress the networked and interdependent nature of both the ancient and modern worlds. As such, we welcome papers on a wide array of historically grounded themes that explore transnational communication. States, businesses, commercial networks, and other institutions have long been preoccupied with managing the flow of communication across borders. These patterns raise numerous questions regarding the institutions connected to these flows, the messages they circulate, and the audiences they reach. 2130 Thursday 09:00-16:00 Nire Preconference: Journalism Studies Graduate Student Colloquium Sponsored Sessions Participants Urban Matters: The Convergence and Contrasts of Journalistic Identity, Organizational Identity, and Community Identity at a City Magazine Joy Michelle Jenkins, U of Missouri, USA Navigating a Landscape of Changing Media: Constructing a Roadmap to Discover Contributors to Knowledge Gaps Kim Baker, U of Alabama, USA Towards Crowdfunded Journalism Niv Mor, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Party-Market Corporatism, Patron-Client Relationship, and the Evolving Dynamics of Media Production in Contemporary China: A Longitudinal Analysis on the Nanfang Newspapers Chu-Jie Chen, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Subnational Comparative Approach in Media Studies: Comparing Anti Press-Violence at the Mexican Provinces Jose Antonio Brambila, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Is Positive News, News? Journalistic Norms and News Values in a Multinational Chinese Newsroom Dani Madrid-Morales, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Attribute Agenda Setting of Human Rights in NGO Journalism and Traditional News Lindsey Erin Blumell, Texas Tech U, USA Hong Kong’s Financial Journalism Suk Fun Leung, School of Communication Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Trust Between Journalists and Politicians’ Marco Rustemeyer, U of Muenster, GERMANY The Political Coverage in German Tabloids in the Course of Time Ursula Ohliger, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Journalistic Coverage of a Community Jonas Appelberg, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Media Representation of the News of the World Phone Hacking Scandal and the Leveson Inquiry Binakuromo Ogbebor, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM The Study of Reporters’ Knowledge Aviv Barnoy, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL The Engaging Effect of Exemplars Kim Andersen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK The Fabric of a Discursive Object the Ethics of Journalistic Practices in Times of War: The Case of the Ivorian Civil War of 2011 Oulai Goue, U de Montreal, CANADA The Impact of Online Citizen Criticism on Media Accountability: A Comparative Study of Kenya and South Africa David Cheruiyot, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Single-Issue Sources in News Coverage of Keystone XL Tim Wood, New York U, USA Eye and I Are One: (dis)Embodied Vision in Photojournalism Tara Pixley, U of California - San Diego, USA Towards a Typology of Conflict Frames Guus Bartholome, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Media’s Censorship of the Nira Radia News Story Swati Maheshwari, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Role of State-Run Media in a Façade Democracy: Coverage of Presidential Elections in Belarus Tatsiana Karaliova, U of Missouri, USA The Journalism Studies Graduate Student Colloquium brings together PhD candidates working in journalism studies with experienced scholars in the field. The Colloquium is part of the Journalism Studies Division’s commitment to academic mentorship and will be held as preconference in conjunction with the 2016 Annual Conference of the International Communication Association in Fukuoka, Japan. Its goal is to contribute actively to the professional development of young scholars by giving them an opportunity to present and discuss their research in a constructive and international atmosphere. Participating graduate students will receive project-specific feedback from recognized experts in the field, as well as general career development advice. 2133 Thursday 09:00-16:00 Kaede 2140 Thursday 09:00-17:00 Rigel Preconference: Journalism Studies Graduate Student Colloquium Breakout Sponsored Sessions Preconference: Remembering, Regulating, and Resilience: Investigating the Communicative Accomplishment of Safety and Reliability Organizing Sponsored Sessions Chairs Joshua B. Barbour, U of Texas, USA Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA Participants Questioning the Unquestionable: Challenges to Passenger and Patient Safety Alexandra Murphy, DePaul U, USA “Mobile-izing” the Communicative Accomplishment of Safety: Organizational Communication Perspectives and the Study of Wireless Emergency Alerts Hamilton Bean, U of Colorado Denver, USA Disaster Within a Disaster: Investigating Philippine Government’s Communication and Management Response on the Haiyan Crisis in Tacloban Reggy Capacio Figer, Nagoya U, JAPAN Characterizing Organizational Resilience in Competing and Converging Crisis Narratives Timothy Sellnow, U of Kentucky, USA Deanna Dee Sellnow, U of Central Florida, USA Matthew Seeger, Wayne State U, USA Communicative Accomplishment of Risk and Safety During a Nuclear Emergency Exercise Salla-Maaria Laaksonen, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Maarit Pedak, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Salli Hakala, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Minttu Tikka, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Antti Silvast, U of Edinburgh, UNITED KINGDOM Community Leadership in the Resilience Process Toru Kiyomiya, Seinan Gakuin U, JAPAN Intersections Between Past and Future Risk Management Discourses Jody Jahn, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA Safety and Organizational Narrative: An Example From China Juana Juan Du, Royal Roads U, CANADA Hongzhong Zhang, Beijing Normal U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Respondents Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas - Austin, USA William J. Kinsella, North Carolina State U, USA Chih-Hui Lai, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Timothy Coombs, U of Central Florida, USA Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA Safety and the organizational systems that constitute it are increasingly at the center of important public discussions. The regulation of complex industrial systems such as nuclear power plants, organizational responses to crisis including active shooter incidents, environmental protection and resource management in oil and gas exploration, safety and error in healthcare organizations offer just a few relevant examples. Communication scholarship is distinctively well-poised to contribute to our understanding of the organizational systems implicated in such settings. This preconference brings together communication scholars interested in the communicative accomplishment of safety, reliability, and resilience. 2141 Thursday 09:00-17:00 Vega Preconference: The Politics and Economics of Chinese New Media Industries Sponsored Sessions Chairs Zhan Li, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Min Jiang, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA Jing Wu, Peking U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Weiyu Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Bingchun Meng, London School of Economics, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Junbin Su, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yanfang Wu, U of Missouri, USA Miao Feng, U of Illinois at Chicago, USA Zehui Dai, Bowling Green State U, USA Le Han, U of Pennsylvania, USA Yu Xu, U of Southern California, USA Zhiqiu Zhou, Northwestern U, USA Lize Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Hui Xiong, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Lianrui Jia, York U, CANADA Lin Zhang, U of Southern California, USA Hatty Liu, Simon Fraser U/Communication U of China, CANADA Kecheng Fang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Gianluigi Negro, U of Lugano, ITALY Min Tang, U of Illinois, USA Hongmei Li, Miami U, USA Juan Du, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF weishan miao, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Yunxia Pang, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Benedetta Brevini, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Terence T. Lee, Murdoch U, AUSTRALIA Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas, USA Hongzhe Wang, Peking U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Jian Zhang, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Lotus Yang Ruan, U of British Columbia, CANADA Bjarke Liboriussen, U of Nottingham Ningbo, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Paul Martin, U of Nottingham Ningbo, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Andrew White, U of Nottingham Ningbo, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Jie Gu, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Susan Leong, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA With the global reach of Chinese IT companies and the international ambition of Chinese government, it is imperative to understand how the new developments in Chinese digital media industries, are reconfiguring the politics and the economics of information and communication technologies (ICTs). Moreover, it is important to understand how traditional media such as mainstream newspapers respond to such changes and incorporate digitalization into their own industry plans. This preconference aims to invite scholars from all over the world to tackle the issue, primarily using China as a context in which innovative research questions and methods can be applied. Selected full papers will be included in a special issue for a prestigious international journal, to be published in mid2017/early-2018. 2142 Thursday 09:00-17:00 Kiku Preconference: New Media and Citizenship in Asia: Communicating With Power Sponsored Sessions Chairs Nojin Kwak, U of Michigan, USA Marko M. Skoric, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Natalie Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Baohua Zhou, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Tetsuro Kobayashi, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Scott W. Campbell, U of Michigan, USA Junho Choi, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Participants Networked Measuring Citizenship After Fukushima Yasuhito Abe, Doshisha U, JAPAN Framing the 2013 Singapore Riots: A Multi-Method Analysis of Print Versus Social Media Saifuddin Ahmed, U of California, Davis, USA Kokil Jaidka, Independent Researcher, INDIA Jaeho Cho, U of California - Davis, USA Digital Privacy and Citizenship: An Ethnographic and Comparative Analysis of Low-Income Youth’s Usage of Mobile Phones in India and Brazil Payal Arora, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS National Security vs. Human Rights: News Frames, Official Sources and Alternative Voices in the U.S. Media Landscape of North Korea Kristen Bialik, U of Wisconsin-Madison, USA From (Anti-Mainland) Sinophobia and Shibboleths to Mobilization on a Taiwanese Message Board Joshua Cader, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Intertextuality and Nationalism Discourse: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Microblog Posts on Umbrella Movement Mengjun Jun Guo, U of Washington, USA Who Leads Advocacy Through Social Media in Japan? Evidence From the “Tsukuba Civic Activities Cyber-Square” Facebook Page Sae Okura, U of Tsukuba, JAPAN Muneo Kaigo, U of Tsukuba, JAPAN Financial Camaraderie through ‘Band’: An Ethnography of a Wealth-Tech Group on a Closed Mobile SNS in South Korea Bohyeong Kim, U of Massachusetts, USA Hurdles for VAAs in the Politics of Opacity Shin Dong Kim, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF “Si Gin Na” (“Brat”) Points out the Emperor New Clothes: Social Media, Juvenile Insolence and Political Articulations in Singapore Kai Khiun Liew, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Crystal Abidin, U of Western Australia, AUSTRALIA Mobile Communication and Social Capital in Singapore: A Perspective of How Mobile Phone Use Patterns Links to the Community Engagement May O. Lwin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Meiyin Luo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Opinion Polls versus Social Commenters as Opinion Climate Indicators for Individual Opinion Expression on Website Forums and Social Media Elmie Nekmat, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Effects and Selective Exposure of Online Election Campaigns in the 2013 and 2014 Japanese National Elections Morihiro Ogasahara, Kansai U, JAPAN Mobile Phones and Its Influence Among Burmese Indian in Myanmar, Chitra Panchapakesan, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Rich Ling, Nanyang Technological U/Telenor, SINGAPORE May O. Lwin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Different Platforms, Different Uses, Different Implications? Social Media and Political Participation During the Singapore General Elections 2015 Natalie Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Marko M. Skoric, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Analyzing Political Conversation Through Mobile Communication Logs Takahisa Suzuki, the Graduate U for Advanced Studies, JAPAN Tetsuro Kobayashi, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Jeffrey Boase, U of Toronto, CANADA Converged Agenda-Setting on Social Media: A Case Study of Online Public Opinion on Chinese “Anti-Corruption” Movement Liu Yang, U of Macau, , CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Wang En, Taobao E-Commerce Business Manager, , CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF New Media, Election and Party Politics: The Case of Taiwan Francis Yin, Shenzhen U, , CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Internet Trolling of National Intelligence Agency in South Korea Ho Young Yoon, U of Wisconsin-Madison, USA The role of new communication technologies—such as the internet, social media, and mobile phones—in political and civic engagement has generated significant interest not only from scholars, but also organizations, politicians, and ordinary citizens. While recent events in parts of the world, such as the Umbrella movement in Hong Kong, help recognize the potential of new communication media as agents contributing to macrolevel political changes, these new communication tools are also utilized in more traditional political processes, such as electoral campaigns. 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. 2143 Thursday 09:00-17:30 Ran Preconference: Populism in, by, and Against the Media Sponsored Sessions Chairs Benjamin Kramer, LMU Munich, GERMANY Participants Theorizing Populist Political Communication. Towards a Model of its Causes, Forms, and Effects Carsten E. Reinemann, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Toril Aalberg, Norwegian U of Science and Technology - Trondheim, NORWAY Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Populist Political Actors and Populist Political Communication James Stanyer, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Susana Salgado, U of Lisbon, PORTUGAL Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Populism Through and by the Media Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Agnieszka Magdalena Stepinska, Adam Mickiewicz U, POLAND David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Effects of Populist Political Communication Through and by the Media Carsten E. Reinemann, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Victims of the Mainstream Media? Right Wing Populism and Political Debate in Norway Torgeir Uberg Naerland, U of Bergen, NORWAY Magnus Hoem Iversen, U of Bergen, NORWAY Eirik Vatnoey, U of Bergen, NORWAY Populist Communication Strategies in News Media in Four European Democracies Nicole Ernst, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Dominique Stefanie Wirz, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Anne Schulz, U of Zurich, IPMZ, SWITZERLAND Sven Engesser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND News Media Use and Populist Attitudes: Is There an Unholy Alliance? Anne Schulz, U of Zurich, IPMZ, SWITZERLAND Martin Wettstein, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Philipp Mueller, U of Mainz, GERMANY Dominique Stefanie Wirz, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Christian Schemer, U of Mainz, GERMANY Werner Wirth, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Populism, Moral Panics, and the Media Ferruh Yilmaz, Tulane U, USA Populist Communication in the Self-Presentation of Politicians: A Comparative Content Analysis of Talk Shows, Facebook and Twitter in Switzerland, Germany, Great Britain, and the US Sina Blassnig, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Fox News and the Rise of the Journalistic Populism in the United States Reece Peck, CUNY- College of Staten Island, USA Media Populism: Understanding the Distinct Role of the Media in the Spread of Populist Discourse Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Nicole Ernst, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Sven Engesser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Florin Buechel, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND The Populist Communication Paradox of PEGDIA: Between “Lying Press” and Journalistic Sources Kristoffer Holt, Linnaeus U, SWEDEN Andre Haller, U of Bamberg, GERMANY Representing the People: Populists on Social Media Lone Sorensen, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM When Populist Party Politics Meets Online Activism: The Finns Party’s Identity Under Negotiation Niko Hatakka, U of Turku, FINLAND Radical and Populist Right-wing Criticism of Mainstream Media Kristoffer Holt, Linnaeus U, SWEDEN Respondents Kristoffer Holt, Linnaeus U, SWEDEN Nayla Fawzi, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Sven Engesser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND This preconference aims to bring together researchers from all over the world interested in the relationship between populism and the media. This relationship is at least threefold: 1. Populism in the media: How do the media cover populist actors and discourses? Does this coverage foster populism in the population and in the political field? 2. Populism by the media: Do the media act as populist actors themselves who express populist worldviews? Does this form of media populism promote or substitute other populist actors? 3. Populism against the media: Has media criticism become an integral part of populist ideologies and discourses? How can we understand and explain the distrust populists have expressed toward the (mainstream) media in many countries? 2145 Thursday 09:00-17:00 Sumire 2154 Thursday 09:00-17:00 Sakura 2249 Thursday 09:30-16:00 Board Room Preconference: How to Analyze Authority and Power in Interaction: Different Perspectives on a Case Study Sponsored Sessions Historically, studies on language and social interaction have often been criticized for their alleged incapacity to deal with questions of power, coercion and domination. In response, macro-sociologists and critical scholars keep reaffirming the key role that structures, ideologies and power relationships play in the constitution of interactions. However, they rarely analyze conversations or dialogues per se, which means that interaction studies seem often immune to this kind of consideration. A growing movement of scholars has decided to go beyond the sterile opposition between agency and structure by openly analyzing everything that happens to make a difference in a given interaction. Preconference: Communication Research Methods 2016: Practices and Challenges Sponsored Sessions The Communication Research Methods 2016 (CRM16) preconference aims to bring together scholars from all Divisions and Interest Groups who are concerned with research methods and practice. There is currently no division or interest group that is explicitly dedicated to communication research methodology. CRM16 provides a much-needed forum for scholars from all subfields of communication to discuss original scientific research, best practices, and issues in the area of methodology and research practice, both qualitative and quantitative. Preconference: China’s “Internet Plus” Initiative and the Next Generation Internet Research Sponsored Sessions Chairs Zizhong Zhao, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Jianbin Jin, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Ran Wei, U of South Carolina, USA Participants Web 3.0, Big Data and Paradigm Shift in Mobile Media Research Ran Wei, U of South Carolina, USA The Status and Prospects of the Internet Plus Initiative in China Zizhong Zhao, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Internationalizing Internet Plus Research Shuhua Zhou, Chinese Communication Association, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Warhorse Experiment: An Attempt Based on The Trend of Internet Zhenzheng Wang, Xinhua Net, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Building Model of User Experience That Based on Biological Sensing Data: A Set of Experimental Analysis in the Nonlinear Propagation of Internet Era Yusong Yang, Nanjing U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xiaoli Huang, Nanjing U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Chen Wan, Nanjing U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zhenzheng Wang, Nanjing U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xintong Zhu, Nanjing U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Study of Evaluation and Innovation of Artwork From the Perspective of "Internet Plus" Zhubin Peng, Hunan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zhefeng Jiang, Hunan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Automation of News Frame Dissemination in Mediated Public Diplomacy: Analysis of Twitter Discussion about Senkaku (Diaoyu) Dispute Joon Kyoung Kim, U of South Carolina, USA China's Mainstream Media and Social Media in the "Two Public Opinion Fields" Xin Wang, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Research on Big Data Industry Ecosystem in China Xu Qi, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Assessing the Influence of Customer Reviews on Trust and Online Purchasing Behavior Mark W. Tatge, U of South Carolina, USA Technology and Social Transformation: Recoding Identity and Subjectivity of IT Engineers in Modern China Sophie Sun Ping, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The New Media Empowerment and Resistance of Knowledge Workers: A Debate on the Development of a New Media Product in Newspaper Group Jun Xiao, Wuhan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Sixue Huang, Wuhan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Urban Festivals in the Social Media Era: A Case Study on Tokyo Halloween and Shanghai China Joy Huiming Qiu, Anhui U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Computational Issue of Cross-Platform Agenda-Setting Effect: An Methodological Consideration Jianbin Jin, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF When Individual Cites Official Television on Wechat: Effect of Credibility on Reader Responses to Food Safety Reports Online Ji Pan, Shanghai U of Finance and Economics, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Self-Disclosure and Information Privacy Management in SNS Li Yin, Tianjin Normal U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Understanding Physical Activities Behavior in Mobile Age through an Extension Model of the Theory of Planned Behavior Mei Wu, U of Macau, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zhihao Ma, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Silk Road Culture Studies: Specimen of Cross Cultural Communication Studies Lin Yang, Xi’an Jiaotong U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Analysis of Chinese Media "Going Global Strategy" Through Youtube Jing Zhao, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Research on New Media Education in Universities of Beijing Zizhong Zhao, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Importance of Strategic Communication in Cross-Cultural Curriculum of Graduate Education Weidong Liu, Tianjin Normal U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Communication Research About Fashion and Innovations in Professional Education Meifang Wang, Donghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Characteristics and Changes of the New Media Talent Demand Under the China’s “Internet Plus” Background Di Lu, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondents Xun Liu, California State U - Stanislaus, USA Nan Yu, North Dakota State U, USA Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA The preconference will be open to scholars interested in China’s new Internet initiative and next generation Internet research. It targets Chinese, Asian and International academics. 2446 Thursday 13:00-17:00 Koh Preconference: Media Performance and Democracy: Defining and Measuring the Quality of News Sponsored Sessions Chairs Josef Seethaler, Austrian Academy of Sciences, AUSTRIA Linards Udris, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Participants Measuring Trends in the News Media’s Democratic Performance Rodney Evan Tiffen, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Measuring Mediated Contestation: Four Dimensions of Democratic News Cultures Charlotte Loeb, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Eike Mark Rinke, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Hartmut Wessler, U Mannheim, GERMANY The Evolution of the VAP Method for Journalism Quality Measurement: Its Specific Adaptations to News Budgets and Natural Disasters Coverage Silvia Pellegrini, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Constanza Mujica, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Soledad Puente, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Daniela Grassau, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Putting the “Demos” Back in Democracy: Methodological Implications and Empirical Evidence for Measuring Media Performance Josef Seethaler, Austrian Academy of Sciences, AUSTRIA Maren Beaufort, Austrian Academy of Sciences, AUSTRIA Analyzing the Quality of the News Media – Lessons from a Large-Scale Empirical Project in Switzerland (Yearbook Quality of the Media Linards Udris, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Mario Schranz, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Mark Eisenegger, U of Salzburg, Austria, AUSTRIA Diversity as Proxy for Measuring the Quality of News: Operationalizations for a Large-Scale Research Project on the Norwegian Media Landscape Helle Sjovaag, U of Bergen, NORWAY Truls Pedersen, U of Bergen, NORWAY Eirik Stavelin, U of Bergen, NORWAY Sharing News Online: Using Computational Data Metrics for Social Media News Quality and Voice Plurality Assessments Tim Dwyer, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Fiona Ruth Martin, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Media Performance & Democratic Entitlements: The 2015 UK Televised Election Debates Giles Moss, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Stephen Coleman, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Jay George Blumler, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Between Proximity and Distance: The Balance in the Transforming Journalism-Audience Relationship as a Criterion for Media Quality? Wiebke Loosen, Hans-Bredow-Institut für Medienforschung, GERMANY Julius Reimer, Hans-Bredow-Institut für Medienforschung, GERMANY Measuring News Media Quality and Credibility From the Audience’s Perspective Diana Ingenhoff, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Philipp Bachmann, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Knowledge, Ignorance, and Media Performance: Audience Evaluation of Portrayals of Undocumented Immigrants Sarah C Bishop, Baruch College, USA Democratic Theory as a Rationale for Normative Standards and Benchmarks of Media Performance Raphael Kösters, Heinrich Heine U Düsseldorf, GERMANY The Environmental Reports of Chinese Traditional Media and the Public Expectations Gap He Huang, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Linlin Liu, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zhihao Weng, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondents Amy Mitchell, PEW Research Center, USA Angela Phillips, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM 2453 Thursday 13:00-17:00 Fuji Preconference: Public Deliberation and Dialogue: Building an International Network of Research, Pedagogy, and Service Sponsored Sessions Chair Tim Steffensmeier, Kansas State U, USA This preconference aims to bring together scholars already working on public deliberation and dialogue projects as well as those new to the field. The aim is to build a stronger international network of support and collaboration by sharing ideas in the areas of teaching, research, and service. Participants will provide presentations and summaries of connections between their work and pubic deliberation and dialogue. The preconference will focus on research connections, and it will also address connections to teaching and service. One of the particular benefits of this subject is the natural blending of the three typical responsibilities of faculty. 2460 Thursday 13:00-17:00 Olive International Communication Association Annual Board of Directors' Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Paula M. Gardner, McMaster U, CANADA Colleen Elizabeth Mills, U of Canterbury, NEW ZEALAND Akira Miyahara, Seinan Gakuin U, JAPAN Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Lilach Nir, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Francois Allard-Huver, Paris Sorbonne U - CELSA, FRANCE Charlotte Loeb, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA James A. Danowski, U of Illinois at Chicago, USA Richard K. Popp, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Seamus Simpson, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM Richard J. Doherty, New England College, USA Federico Subervi, unaffiliated, USA Natalia Rybas, Indiana U East, USA Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Eve C. Ng, Ohio U, USA Travers Scott, Clemson U, USA Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Kevin B. Wright, George Mason U, USA Kevin Wise, U of Illinois, USA Aaron R. Boyson, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Janice Krieger, U of Florida, USA Ascan F. Koerner, U of Minnesota, USA Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA Alena L. Vasilyeva, U of Massachusetts, USA Lance Holbert, Temple U, USA Patricia Frances Phalen, George Washington U, USA Veronika Karnowski, LMU Munich, GERMANY Alison Hearn, U of Western Ontario, CANADA Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Melissa A. Click, U of Missouri - Columbia, USA Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Andrew C. Billings, U of Alabama, USA Giorgia Aiello, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Laura Sawyer, International Communication Association, USA Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA Peter Monge, U of Southern California, USA Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA All members are welcome and encouraged to attend the annual meeting of the board of directors. 2825 Thursday 18:30-19:30 Navis B ICA Fukuoka Opening Plenary: Communicating With Power: From the Geopolitical to the Psychological Sponsored Sessions Chair Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participants Seiichi Kondo, Policy Alternatives Research Institute, USA Cherian George, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF John Gowdy, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA In keeping with communication studies’ engagement with multiple disciplines and different levels of analysis, the Opening Plenary interprets the conference theme from three distinct perspectives. 2823 Thursday 19:30-21:30 Argos F ICA's 66th Annual Conference Opening Welcome Reception Sponsored Sessions 3020 Friday 08:00-09:15 Argos C Diffusion of Innovations in the 21st Century Information Systems Chairs Do Kyun Kim, U of Louisiana - Lafayette, USA James W. Dearing, Michigan State U, USA Participants Challenges to the Diffusion of Health Innovations to Vulnerable Populations in the 21st Century Gary L. Kreps, George Mason U, USA The Cognitive View on the Adoption of Innovations: A Focus on Technology Schemas Arun Vishwanath, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA The Strong Ties Hypothesis for Innovation Diffusion in the Saturated Web 2.0 Environment: Prolonged Discussion, Repeated Exposure, and Peer Pressure to Imitate Kerk F. Kee, Chapman U, USA Digital Video as Non-Diluted Accelerant in Entrepreneurial Ambition Stephen Lind, Washington and Lee U, USA Respondents Do Kyun Kim, U of Louisiana - Lafayette, USA James W. Dearing, Michigan State U, USA This panel of outstanding scholars will feature new developments in the diffusion of innovation framework through highlighting newly emerging and generalizable patterns about diffusion. They will also speculate about where diffusion and our study of it is going, and whether those ideas strengthen, expand, and/or challenge the existing diffusion of innovation framework. 3021 Friday 08:00-09:15 Argos D Important Media and Message Features Information Systems Chair Byungho Park, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Participants Viewer Responses to YouTube Product Reviews: The Role of Sponsorship Disclosure and Viewers’ Expectancy Alexander Pfeuffer, U of Minnesota, USA Xinyu Lu, U of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA Yiran Zhang, U of Minnesota, USA Differences in Processing of Interactive Infographics on Different Screen Sizes and Interface Types Rachel Lara Davis, U of Missouri, USA Russell Brent Clayton, Florida State U, USA Esther Thorson, U of Missouri, USA Busy Pedestrians: How Media Content Complexity and Sensory Modalities Influence Street-Crossing Performance in Virtual Environment Shili Xiong, U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA Kevin Wise, U of Illinois, USA Effects of Musical Complexity and Intensity on Listener Emotion Edgar Jamison-Koenig, Indiana U, USA Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA The Continuance of Orienting to Auditory Structural Features Presented in Natural Listening Conditions Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA Edgar Jamison-Koenig, Indiana U, USA Joshua D. Sites, Indiana U, USA Xia Zheng, Indiana U, USA Information Introduced in Anime: Information Processing, Physiological Response, and Enjoyment in Entertainment Media Byungho Park, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Impact of Multiple Web Ads on Attention: An Eye Tracking Study Chen-Chao Tao, National Chiao Tung U, TAIWAN Text, Image, or Text and Image? Michael Suelflow, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Pablo B. Jost, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY 3022 Friday 08:00-09:15 Argos E Wanna Join? Teams and Clans in Games Game Studies Chair Alex Leavitt, U of Southern California USA Participants A Longitudinal Analysis of Gaming- and Non-Gaming-Related Friendships and Social Support Among Social Online Game Players Emese Domahidi, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Johannes Breuer, U of Cologne, GERMANY Rachel Kowert, U of Munster, GERMANY Ruth Festl, German Youth Institute, GERMANY Thorsten Quandt, U of Muenster, GERMANY Methodological Considerations in the Study of Tandem Play Jason Begy, Concordia U, CANADA Rainforest Scully-Blaker, Concordia U, CANADA Sarah Ganzon, Concordia U, CANADA Mia L. Consalvo, Concordia U, CANADA Name On! Identity and Naming Practices in Massively Multiplayer Online Games Jennifer Jenson, York U, CANADA Kelly Bergstrom, York U, CANADA Suzanne Christine de Castell, U of Ontario Institute of Technology, CANADA Ping to Win? Nonverbal Communication and Team Performance in Competitive Online Multiplayer Games Alex Leavitt, U of Southern California, USA Brian Christopher Keegan, Northeastern U, USA Joshua Andrew Clark, U of Southern California, USA Role Choices in Transitory and Established Teams: An Analysis of the Conventionality of Role Choices Within a Team-Based Online Game Lena Uszkoreit, U of Southern California, USA Joshua Andrew Clark, U of Southern California, USA 3023 Friday 08:00-09:15 Argos F Visual Cultures of Terror: Examining the Visual Communication of Islamic State (IS(IS)) Visual Communication Studies Chair Jelle Mast, Vrije U Brussel (VUB), BELGIUM Participants Illusions of the ‘Caliphate’: Understanding the Visual Communications of the Islamic State Shahira S. Fahmy, U of Arizona, USA “See How You Will Fight With the Heroes!”: Exploring Anticipatory Socialization Messages Distributed through ISIS Recruiting Videos Marjorie Buckner, Texas Tech U, USA David D. Perlmutter, Texas Tech U, USA The Use of Humor in Response to ISIS’s Graphic Videos Amal Bakry, Coastal Carolina U, USA Mainstream News Media's Incorporation of ISIS Imagery: Questions of Graphicness and Authenticity Jelle Mast, Vrije U Brussel, BELGIUM The Functional Use of Visuals in Frame-building Processes: How the Flemish Press Portrayed ‘their’ Syria Fighters Baldwin Van Gorp, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Jan Boesman, U of Leuven, BELGIUM This panel provides a multiperspectival look at the highly sophisticated and particularly powerful visual communication of Islamic State. It zooms in on IS(IS)’ self-communication and ‘preferred narrative’, but also looks further, to how the imagery, or visual propaganda, that circulates is incorporated and/or contested by other outlets and image providers in today’s media landscape, and the (counter-)narratives or –frames that are developed in the process. In doing so, the panel bridges scholarship in the domains of visual communication, journalism studies, organizational communication, and political communication, variously approaching the visual culture of IS(IS) through the theoretical lenses of strategic communication and organizational assimilation, framing and gatekeeping, journalistic norms, routines and ethics, and humor as political critique. 3024 Friday 08:00-09:15 Navis A News as Text: Narrative, Myth, and Exemplars Journalism Studies Chair Erik Albaek, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Participants National Narratives Within a Global Media Framing? Julia Lueck, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Hartmut Wessler, U Mannheim, GERMANY Antal Wozniak, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Temporal Layers in News Narratives Motti Neiger, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U, ISRAEL The News as Myth: Representing the Chinese Stock Market Crisis of 2015 Hatty Liu, Simon Fraser U, CANADA The Dilemmas of Using Exemplars in News Reporting Christian Elmelund-Prstekr, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Morten Skovsgaard, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Enlivening Illustration or Public Opinion? An Analysis of Vox Pop Statements in Political Television News Kathleen Beckers, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 3025 Friday 08:00-09:15 Navis B Innovations in Cancer Communication Research Health Communication Chair Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA Participants Communicating Complex Information About Cancer Research: An Experimental Comparison of Metaphorical and Low-Literacy Messages Janice Krieger, U of Florida, USA Jordan Neil, U of Florida, USA It Just Makes Me Feel Better: The Creation and Validation of the Mood-Based Indoor Tanning Scale (MITS) Nick Carcioppolo, U of Miami, USA Yixin (Cindy) Chen, Sam Houston State U, USA Kevin John, Brigham Young U, USA Andrea Gonzalez Martinez, U of Illinois, USA Andy J. King, Texas Tech U, USA Susan E. Morgan, U of Miami, USA Shasa Hu, U of Miami, USA Multilevel Factors Associated With Cervical Cancer Screening Among Latinas Lauren B. Frank, Portland State U, US Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA Nan Zhao, U of Southern California, USA Meghan Bridgid Moran, Johns Hopkins U, USA Chih-Ping Chou, U of Southern California, USA Paula Amezola, U of Southern California, USA Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA The Influences of Self-Efficacy in Medical Drama Programming on Cervical Cancer Preventive Behaviors: From the Perspective of Social Cognitive Theory Sungsu Kim, U of Georgia, USA Jay D. Hmielowski, Washington State U, USA This is How We Cope: Using PhotoVoice With Parents of Pediatric Cancer Patients Gabriela Morales, U of New Mexico, USA 3026 Friday 08:00-09:15 Navis C Hashtags, Tweets, and Instagram Communication and Technology Chair Cornelius Puschmann, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, GERMANY Participants Hashtag This! Tagging and Searching Motives Eunji Lee, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yongjun Sung, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jang Ho Moon, Sookmyung Women’s U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Tae Rang Choi, The U of Texas at Austin, USA Interaction and Influence on Twitter: A Content Analytic Comparison of User Types on Five Topics Sanja Kapidzic, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, DE Christoph Neuberger, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Stefan Stieglitz, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Milad Mirbabaie, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Pace of Life in Cities and the Emergence of Town Tweeters Dhiraj Murthy, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Lav Varshney, U of Illinois, USA Alexander Gross, U of Maine, USA Social Comparison as the Thief of Joy: Emotional Consequences of Viewing Strangers’ Instagram Posts Dian Afina de Vries, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Marthe Möller, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Anniek Eigenraam, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Kirsten Hamelink, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Marieke Wieringa, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 3030 Friday 08:00-09:15 Nire Science and Discourse Studies in Health Communication Health Communication Chair Roma Subramanian, U of Missouri, USA Participants Effects of Two Journalistic Practices in Reporting Conflicting Health-Related Scientific Evidence on Journalists' and Scientists' Credibility Hui Zhang, Colorado State U, USA Making the Invisible Colleges Visible: An Author Cocitation Analysis of Health Communication Scholarship, 1989-2012 Gang Han, Iowa State U, USA Chengrui Cai, Iowa State U, USA Yong Zhou, Renming U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xiuli Wang, Peking U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Di Zhang, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Perceived Conflict of Interest in Health Science Partnerships John C. Besley, Michigan State U, USA Aaron McCright, Michigan State U, USA Nagwan Refaat Zahry, Michigan State U, USA Kevin Elliott, Michigan State U, USA Joseph Martin, Michigan State U, USA Norbert Kaminski, Michigan State U, USA The Discursive and Political Function of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Within the Neoliberal Global Moment Shomik Chakrabarti, U of South Florida, USA Viewing Power and Organisational Transparency in Eldercare Through Foucault’s Heterotopic Mirror Janet Grace Sayers, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Margaret Ann Brunton, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND 3031 Friday 08:00-09:15 Kusu Perceived Credibility Online Communication and Technology Chair Lei Vincent Huang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants An Algorithm Wrote This? Psychological Responses to AI News Writers: Eeriness, Branding, and Credibility Andrew James Gambino, Pennsylvania State U, USA Jinyoung Kim, Pennsylvania State U, USA Readers' Perception of Computer-Written News: Credibility, Expertise, and Readability Andreas Graefe, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Mario Haim, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Bastian Haarmann, Fraunhofer Institute for Communication, Information Processing and Ergonomics, GERMANY Hans-Bernd Brosius, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Networks in the Eyes of the Beholder: The Influence of Cognitive Social Networks on Information Credibility Perception and Sharing Likelihood in Social Media Dongyoung Sohn, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Ranking Versus Reputation: Perception and Effects of Search Results’ Credibility Alexander T. Haas, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Julian Unkel, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY What Makes YouTube Videos Seem Credible? Examining Credibility Perceptions of YouTube Videos Among Young Adults Porismita Borah, Washington State U, USA 3032 Friday 08:00-09:15 Kashi Digital Media, Elections, and Politics Communication and Technology Chair Panayiota Tsatsou, U of Leicester - Department of Media and Communication, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Massive Expectations, Minor Implications? The Link Between Online Media Use And Voting Sanne Kruikemeier, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jasper van de Pol, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bodine Van Wingerden, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Viral News and the 2015 Election: Comparing Offline Expectations and Online Realities Evan Vellis, U of Manchester, UNITED KINGDOM Self-Motivated or Mobilized: Political Participation in a Digital Age Darren Lilleker, Media School Bornemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Karolina Koc-Michalska, Audencia Business School, FRANCE The Personal is Political: The Influence of Facebook Status Updates on the Perception of Politicians Judith Meinert, U Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Stephan Winter, U Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY 3033 Friday 08:00-09:15 Kaede Can Computers Develop a Nose for News? Journalism Studies Chair Jane B. Singer, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The Future of Journalism: Humans or Machines Mark Deuze, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Automation as an Editorial Act Nicholas Diakopoulos, U of Maryland, USA Drones as Sensor Platforms: New Dilemmas of Data Detection Astrid Gynnild, U of Bergen, NORWAY Perception versus Reality of the Self-Reliant News Audience in the Age of Social and Algorithmic Journalism Philip M. Napoli, Rutgers U, USA Inside the Black Box of Algorithmic News Detection: Plus ça Change? Neil James Thurman, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Stephen Schifferes, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM The panel explores an increasingly crucial aspect of the ongoing controversy about optimal use of digital technologies in news identification and production: the use and impact of computer algorithms and associated tools that sort, classify, and rate social and other news sources, and even write “journalistic” stories based on that analysis. Panellists will discuss the utility of computer algorithms and other increasingly savvy digital tools, including “robots” and drones, in identifying content that might be valuable to journalists, as well as the issues raised by the growing use of machines to make judgments about everything from source credibility to newsworthiness. Our overarching concern will be the impact on journalists’ traditional practices and social roles. 3040 Friday 08:00-09:15 Rigel Contention, Terrorism, and Media Global Communication and Social Change Chair William Lafi Youmans, George Washington U, USA Participants Evolving Repertoires: Digital Media Use in Contentious Politics Emad Khazraee, Kent State U, USA James Losey, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Human Rights Reporting and Press Freedom in Thailand: The Draconian Crackdown Since the 2014 Coup d’Etat Meghan Sobel, Regis U, USA The Other Danger Zone: Framing Culture through Documentary after 9/11 Alison N. Novak, Rowan U, USA Wajeeha A. Choudhary, Drexel U, USA Al Qaeda in the American Consciousness: Communicative Construction of the Terrorist Actor Through Attribute Framing Benjamin K Smith, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Andrea Figueroa-Caballero, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Michael Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA “Separatists” or “Terrorists”? Media Articulation of Ethno-Political Struggles in the East of Ukraine Olga Baysha, Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION 3041 Friday 08:00-09:15 Vega Audience Connections to Characters Mass Communication Chair Kekeli Kwabla Nuviadenu, Bethune-Cookman U, USA Participants Are Good Characters Better for Us? The Effect of Morality Salience on Entertainment Selection and Recovery Outcomes K. Maja Krakowiak, U of Colorado - Colorado Springs, USA Mina Tsay-Vogel, Boston U, USA Story Perspective and Character Similarity as Drivers of Identification and Narrative Persuasion Hans Hoeken, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Matthijs Kolthoff, HAN Applied U, THE NETHERLANDS José Sanders, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS The Virtues and Vices of Social Comparisons: Examining Assimilative and Contrastive Emotional Reactions to Media Characters Mina Tsay-Vogel, Boston U, USA K. Maja Krakowiak, U of Colorado - Colorado Springs, USA Why Do We Like Morally Ambiguous Characters? Attributions Impact on Character Appeal Clare Grall, Michigan State U, USA Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA Sujay Prabhu, Michigan State U, USA Lindsay S Hahn, Michigan State U, USA Brian Klebig, Michigan State U, USA Eric R Novotny, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA 3042 Friday 08:00-09:15 Kiku d’CATCH Project as an Educational Program Among Asian Universities for Media Literacy and Intercultural Understanding Intercultural Communication Chair Seongsoo Baeg, Kanda U of International Studies, JAPAN Participants A case study on d’CATCH Project as a intercultural workshop for media literacy and intercultural understanding: its design and process Nanatthun Wongbandue, Chulalongkorn U, THAILAND Reflecting cultural values through intercultural documentaries by Asian youth Metha Sereethanawong, Chulalongkorn U, THAILAND The effectiveness of Intercultural Communication Gengxin Wang, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF A Study on the meaning and the methodology of the visual reflection for intercultural workshops – re-construction of experiences by photos Seongsoo Baeg, Kanda U of International Studies, JAPAN Respondent Shin Mizukoshi, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Although many satellite broadcastings and SNS are functioning in Asian area today, the flow of information is not equal and people’s interest in other societies is partial. How can we raise interest and understanding of Asian students to others? This panel will introduce d’CATCH Project. This project, which centers on ‘Media Literacy’ and ‘Intercultural Understanding,’ is designed and practices to examine two matters. The first is the representation of Asian people by themselves, and its cause. The second is an attempt to construct a new media environment to recognize diversity and multiplicity in Asia. 3043 Friday 08:00-09:15 Ran Media Psychology and the Study of Gender-Related Issues Mass Communication Chair Michael Prieler, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Participants Can Media Help Women Be Better at Math? Stereotype Threat, Selective Exposure, Media Effects & Math Performance Kate Luong, Ohio State U, USA Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA Idealized Female Beauty, Social Comparisons, and Awareness Intervention Material: Evidence for Preventive Effects in Young Women Florian Arendt, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Christina V. Peter, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Julia Beck, Ludwig-Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Online Boundary Work in Stigmatized Communities Daphna Yeshua-Katz, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Sugar, Spice, and Everything Nice: Do Gender Biases Supersede Other Preferences in Domestic Violence Cases Osei Appiah, Ohio State U, USA Lanier Frush Holt, Ohio State U, USA Katherine R. Dale, Florida State U, USA Tiffany Nichole White, Ohio State U, USA 3045 Friday 08:00-09:15 Sumire Selective News Exposure and Political Opinions Political Communication Chair Adam Shehata, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Participants Role of Racial Attitudes in Selective News Reading and Evaluation Heesook Choi, U of Missouri, USA Benjamin Ryan Warner, U of Missouri, USA Self-Categorization Theory: An Alternative Way to Test News Effects On Polarized Opinion Jiyoung Han, U of Minnesota, USA Christopher Federico, U of Minnesota, USA Social Not Ideological: Political Social Identity, Social Polarization and Selective Exposure Shira Dvir-Gvirsman, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL When Party and Issue Preferences Clash: Selective Exposure and Attitudinal Depolarization Michael F. Meffert, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS 3046 Friday 08:00-09:15 Koh Interruptive Images Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chairs Jason Vincent Aquino Cabanes, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Jonathan Corpus Ong, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Interruptive Icons Mette Mortensen, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Disturbingly Racist Image: Interrupting the Discourses of Refugees and National Values in Finland Mervi Pantti, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Indigenous Imaginaries of Interruptive Photographs Jason Vincent Aquino Cabanes, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Jonathan Corpus Ong, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Feeling Ethnic, Visualizing Interruption John Nguyet Erni, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondent Amit Pinchevski, Hebrew U, ISRAEL The visual is often invested with great optimism in its ability to overcome the cultural and linguistic barriers that permeate many of today’s multicultural social environments. The ease in which images are created and circulated open up expansive opportunities for communication with diverse Others. The proliferation of new mobile and digital platforms has also made it simpler for images to be strategically used for individual self-expression and collective voice, both especially salient for the visibility of marginalized Others. There is, however, also a need to be cautious about the particular tendencies of the visual to conventionalize, simplify, and, ultimately, exclude. This panel reflects on whether and how images can destabilize dominant imaginaries we hold of marginalized Others and ultimately ourselves. 3047 Friday 08:00-09:15 Yoh Popular Television Audiences and Formats Popular Communication Chair Kirsten Drotner, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Participants Middle-Class Viewers and Breaking Bad: A Qualitative Examination of Audience and Social Status in the Postnetwork Era Michael Wayne, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL The Time of Television: Broadcasting, Dailiness, and the New Indian Middle Class Aswin Punathambekar, U of Michigan, USA Pavitra Sundar, Kettering U, USA "I'd Never Watch That!" British Audiences Interpreting "Offensive" Television Ranjana Das, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Recreating Paternal Love in the Chinese Way: The Sino-Korean Reality Programme Format Transfer of Where Are We Going? Dad! Ka Fai Cheung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 3048 Friday 08:00-09:15 Kei The Power of Dialogue in Public Relations Public Relations Chair Marianne Sison, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Building Relationships Through Dialogic Communication: Organizations, Stakeholders, and Computer-Mediated Communication Augustine Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Wonsun Shin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Zijian Lew, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Joseph B. Walther, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Strategic Rhetoric, Dialogue, and the Long Now Michael L. Kent, U of Tennessee Knoxville, USA Petra Theunissen, Auckland U of Technology, NEW ZEALAND Dump the Dialogue? Constraints and Challenges in the Implementation of Kent and Taylor’s Dialogic Principles in Public Relations Practice Anne B Lane, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Between “Challengers and Powerholders”: Framing of Issues Through Dynamic Discursive Processes in a Digital Arena Silvia Ravazzani, Aarhus U, DENMARK Carmen Daniela Maier, Aarhus U, DENMARK Building Bridges: Scaffolding the Public Relations Writing Curriculum Anne B Lane, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Kim A. Johnston, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Respondent Dean Kruckeberg, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA 3049 Friday 08:00-09:15 Board Room Green Advertising, Sustainable Consumption, and Business Practices Environmental Communication Chair Philip Solomon Hart, U of Michigan, USA Participants Being Green Is Being Luxurious: How Green Appeals Add Luxury to Utilitarian Products Marijn H. C. Meijers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peeter Verlegh, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Misleading Consumers With Green Advertising? Comparing the Effects of False and Vague Greenwashing Claims Desiree Schmuck, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Brigitte Naderer, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Using Subtle Environmental Cues to Motivate Sustainable Consumption: A Field Study Marijn H. C. Meijers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Marret K. Noordewier, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS Maartje Meijs, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Do it Yourself, Together Annette Klarenbeek, U of Applied Science Hanzehogeschool Groningen, THE NETHERLANDS Ton Batens, EMMA Communicatie, THE NETHERLANDS Joanna Duarte, U of Applied Science Hanzehogeschool Groningen, THE NETHERLANDS 3050 Friday 08:00-09:15 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: Combining Quantitative and Qualitative Analyses in Innovative Studies of Relations Between Public Discourse and Political Decision-Making Sponsored Sessions Chair Jostein Gripsrud, U of Bergen, NORWAY According to the official norms of liberal democracies, the mediated public sphere is to offer ways in which the public can influence political decision-making through functioning as a “sounding board” for complaints, grievances, new ideas etc that shapes the public agenda. Having achieved funding for a comparative four year project on public discourse on immigration in the Scandinavian public spheres between 1970 and 2015, the initiators of this workshop would like to invite fellow scholars to a “crowdsourcing” session on suitable and innovative methodologies for empirical studies of how or to which degree public discourse actually does influence political decision-making. 3051 Friday 08:00-09:15 Anzu Inside Journalism Organizations Media Industry Studies Journalism Studies Chair D. Charles Whitney, Northwestern U Qatar, QATAR Participants Opportunity or Risk? How News Organizations Frame Social Media in Their Guidelines for Journalists Jayeon (Janey) Lee, Lehigh U, USA #SocialJournalism: Local News Media on Twitter Kelly Meyer, U of Akron, USA Tang Tang, U of Akron, USA How Do Social Media Blur the Boundary Between Mass and Interpersonal Communications? A Comparative Study of Newspapers and Social Media in Japan, Korea, and Finland Joo-Young J. Jung, International Christian U, JAPAN Mikko Villi, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Value, Culture, and Gender Differences in Nordic Newspaper Editors and Their Decisions George Sylvie, U of Texas, USA Angela M. Lee, U of Texas - Dallas, USA Seth C. Lewis, U of Oregon, USA Deepa Fadnis, U of Texas, USA Serendipitous Processes in Media Work: Exploring the Value of Creative Coincidences in Media Organizations Nando Malmelin, Aalto U, FINLAND Sari Virta, U of Tampere, FINLAND 3052 Friday 08:00-09:15 Hagi Support and Coping in Interpersonal Relationships Interpersonal Communication Chair Jeff Youngquist, Oakland U, USA Participants A Theory of Social Identity Support in the Context of Everyday Racial Discrimination: What Type of Support Messages Work and Why? Uttara Manohar, Miami U, USA Susan Lee Kline, Ohio State U, USA A Mixed-Method Approach to Understanding Supportive Interactions: Support Seekers’ Problem Disclosures and Support Provider Reactions Jennifer S. Priem, Wake Forest U, USA Steven Michael Giles, Wake Forest U, USA Comparing the Roles of Social Network Sites and In-Person Communications in Social Support, Sociocultural Adjustment, and Well-Being Among International Student Sojourners Cherrie Joy Billedo, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peter Kerkhof, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Catrin Finkenauer, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Expressive Writing to Cope With Relational Transgressions: Tests of a Dual-Process Model of Expressive Writing and its Effects on Forgiveness Communication and Testosterone John Patrick Crowley, Colorado State U, USA Amanda Denes, U of Connecticut, USA Shana Makos, Colorado State U, USA Joseph Whitt, Colorado State U, USA Shame, Remorse, Humiliation, and Power: Exploring Emotions Reported, Expressed, and Communicated by Bullies and Victims Ross Buck, U of Connecticut, USA Zhan Xu, U of Connecticut, USA 3053 Friday 08:00-09:15 Fuji Constructions and Contestations of Gender in Gaming, Retail Ads, Sports Coverage, Prison Dramas, and Pornography Feminist Scholarship Participants Gender, Nationalism and Individualism: How Chinese Media Construct Tennis Elite During International Sporting Events Qingru Xu, U of Georgia, USA Portrayal of Women and Men in Chilean Retail Advertising: Female Stereotypes in a Society With Feminine Character? William Porath, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Claudia Labarca, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Enrique Vergara, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Paulina Gomez-Lorenzini, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Dominating the (Female) Incarcerated Body: Gender and Medical Control in Television Prison Dramas Katherine A Foss, Middle Tennessee State U, USA From Cum Shots to Cunnilingus, the Agentic and Objectifying Scripts of Feminist and Mainstream Pornography Niki Fritz, Indiana U, USA Calling In Instead of Calling Out: Intergenerational Feminist Praxis in Digital Games Scholarship and Activism Alison Harvey, U of Leicester - Department of Media and Communication, UNITED KINGDOM Stephanie Fisher, York U, CANADA 3054 Friday 08:00-09:15 Sakura The Annals of the International Communication Association Editorial Board Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair David R. Ewoldsen, Michigan State U, USA Participants Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Thomas Hanitzsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Weiyu Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Herman Wasserman, U of Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICA David Boromisza-Habashi, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA Jean Burgess, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA John P. Caughlin, U of Illinois, USA Arul Chib, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Hsiang Iris Chyi, U of Texas, USA Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Paul D'Angelo, The College of New Jersey, USA John D.H. Downing, Northwestern U in Qatar, USA Mohan Jyoti Dutta, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Daniel C. Hallin, U of California - San Diego, USA Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA Lance Holbert, Temple U, USA Chia-Fang (Sandy) Hsu, U of Wyoming, USA Veronika Karnowski, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA Timothy Kuhn, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA Chul-joo Lee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Eun-Ju Lee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Francis L. F. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Robin Elizabeth Mansell, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Toby Miller, U del Norte, COLOMBIA Peter Neijens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell U, USA Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Zizi A. Papacharissi, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sudeshna Roy, Stephen F Austin State U, USA Jennifer A. Samp, U of Georgia, USA Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Holger Schramm, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Federico Subervi, unaffiliated, USA S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA David Tewksbury, U of Illinois, USA Gavan Titley, Centre for Media Studies, IRELAND Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Alena L. Vasilyeva, U of Massachusetts, USA Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin, USA Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Kath Burton, Routledge, USA 3060 Friday 08:00-09:15 Olive Political Discourse, Ideology, and the Media Political Communication Language & Social Interaction Chair Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington U, USA Participants Beyond the Four Theories: Towards a Discourse Approach to the Comparative Study of Media and Politics Florian Toepfl, Free U of Berlin, GERMANY Ideology in the age of Mediatized Politics Angelos Kissas, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Liberal Articulations of the 'Enlightenment' in the Greek Public Sphere Yiannis Mylonas, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Symbolic Mobilization: Making Political Discourse at the Chinese Premier’s Press Conference, 1993-2012 Yan Yi, East China Normal U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 3061 Friday 08:00-09:15 Sage I Know You Because I Saw You on TV, but Where Am I? Youth, Stereotypes, and Prejudice Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Mexican Children’s Understanding of Criminals: A Social Representations Study Beatriz Elena Inzunza-Acedo, U de Monterrey, MEXICO Wanting to See People Like Me? Racial and Gender Diversity in Popular Adolescent Television Morgan E. Ellithorpe, U of Pennsylvania, USA Amy Bleakley, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Influence of Televised Gender Stereotypes and Counterstereotypes on Girls’ Perceptions of STEM Bradley J. Bond, U of San Diego, USA Media, Movies, and Anti-Muslim Prejudice in India Saifuddin Ahmed, U of California - Davis, USA Respondent Srividya Ramasubramanian, Texas A&M U, USA 3220 Friday 09:30-10:45 Argos C ICA Annual Member Meeting and New Member/Student and Early Career Representative Orientation Sponsored Sessions Chair Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Francois Allard-Huver, Paris Sorbonne U - CELSA, FRANCE Charlotte Loeb, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA John Paul Gutierrez, International Communication Association, USA Paula M. Gardner, McMaster U, CANADA Laura Sawyer, International Communication Association, USA This session is designed to provide opportunity for all members to raise issues regarding the association. It is your opportunity to interact with the Executive Committee and help shape the association and its future direction. You will also gain an overview of ICA, the conference, and opportunities for participation. ALL MEMBERS ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED TO ATTEND. Refreshments will be provided. 3221 Friday 09:30-10:45 Argos D The Role of Emotion in Information Processing Information Systems Chair Roselyn J. Lee-Won, Ohio State U, USA Participants Cancer Screening Message Framing in the Social Media Environment: A Closer Look at the Role of Fear Roselyn J. Lee-Won, Ohio State U, USA Kilhoe Miranda Na, Ohio State U, USA Putting the Fear Back Again: A Within-Individuals Perspective to the Role of Fear in Persuasion Lijiang Shen, Pennsylvania State U, USA Feeling the Candidates: The Impact of Presidential Candidate Emotions on Voter Responses Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri, USA Namyeon Lee, U of Missouri, USA Jonathon Hambacker, U of Missouri, USA Lydia Meyer, U of Missouri, USA Terry Britt, U of Missouri, USA Mingmin Xuan, U of Missouri, USA Yitian Gu, U of Missouri, USA Congrong Zheng, U of Missouri, USA Lauren Flaker, U of Missouri, USA Overwhelmed by a Theater-Sized Surrounded Projection Technology: Cognitive Overload, Emotional Responses, and Advertising Effectiveness Under a Large, Immersive Environment Byungho Park, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Shinyoung Park, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Self-Esteem and Public Self-Consciousness Moderate the Emotional Impact of Expressive Writing About Experiences with Bias Melanie C. Green, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Geoff Kaufman, Carnegie Mellon U, USA Mary Flanagan, Dartmouth College, USA The Interplay of News Frames on Emotional and Cognitive Processing Chau Tong, U of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Michael W. Wagner, U of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Poignancy and Mediated Wisdom of Experience: Narrative Impacts on Willingness to Accept Delayed Rewards Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Markus Appel, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Arousal as a Double Edge Sword in Moderating Ad Placement Effect Zongyuan Wang, U of Illinois, USA Kevin Wise, U of Illinois, USA 3222 Friday 09:30-10:45 Argos E Online and Health Information Seeking: High-Density Panel in Health Communication Health Communication Chair Nadine A. Yehya, American U of Beirut, LEBANON Participants "I Support Cancer Awareness": The Effects of Public Commitment on Intentions to Support Health Causes on Facebook Simin Michelle Chen, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA Xuan Zhu, U of Minnesota, Twin-Cities, USA Boosting Acceptance of Online Health Information With a New, Brief Self-Affirmation Intervention Guido M. Van Koningsbruggen, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Pain Tolerance Increased by Presence in Distant Virtual Environment Andrea Stevenson Won, Stanford U, USA Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA Power of Choice: Tensions Between Desired Quality of Care Criteria on Physician Online Rating Websites Fabia Bianca Rothenfluh, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND Peter J. Schulz, U Della Svizzera Italiana, SWITZERLAND Relaying Social Support Among Elderly People in China Miao Liu, U of Utah, USA Ye Sun, Un of Utah, USA Yiqing Yang, U of Utah, USA Ming Wen, U of Utah, USA Validation of an Italian Version of the eHealth Literacy Scale Using Item Response Theory. Nicola Diviani, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Alexandra Dima, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peter J. Schulz, U Della Svizzera Italiana, SWITZERLAND Value of Evaluation: A Study of Cancer Patients’ and Caregivers’ Evaluation of Health Information Sources Kang Namkoong, U of Kentucky, USA Tae Joon Moon, U of Wisconsin, Madison, USA Sojung Claire Kim, High Point U, USA Ming-yuan Chih, U of Kentucky, USA Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA 3223 Friday 09:30-10:45 Argos F Last but Not Least: Why Do We Play? Technical Development, Sexualization, Motivation, and Clans Game Studies Chair Kevin Koban, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Participants Exploring Measurement Tools of Embodiment Jose Aviles, Pennsylvania State U, USA Michael Schmierbach, Pennsylvania State U, USA The Hyper-Sexualization of Women in World of Warcaft Rebecca Waldie, Concordia U, CANADA Validating the Digital Games Motivation Scale for Comparative Research Between Countries and Sexes Frederik de Grove, Ghent U, BELGIUM Johannes Breuer, U of Cologne, GERMANY Vivian Hsueh Hua Chen, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Thorsten Quandt, U of Muenster, GERMANY Rabindra A. Ratan, Michigan State U, USA Jan Van Looy, Ghent U, BELGIUM Is This the Killer App? VR Headsets, NUIs, and Violent Video Games Daniel Pietschmann, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Benny Liebold, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY The Intertwined Role of Play at Game Companies: An Examination of Office Play Strategies Annakaisa Kultima, U of Tampere, FINLAND Kati Alha, U of Tampere, FINLAND 3224 Friday 09:30-10:45 Navis A Journalists and Their Sources: Relationships, Practices, Perceptions Journalism Studies Chair Wiebke Loosen, Hans-Bredow-Institut für Medienforschung, GERMANY Participants Journalistic Transformation: How Source Texts are Turned Into News Stories Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Christian Baden, Hebrew U, ISRAEL News Consumers’ Perceptions of New Journalistic Sourcing Techniques Sophie Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sanne Kruikemeier, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sourcing Social Media: Trust in Sources and Risk Perceptions of Journalists Florian Wintterlin, U of Muenster, GERMANY Who Takes the Lead? Investigating the Dynamic Interplay of Organizational and News Agendas Anne Cornelia Kroon, U of Amsterdam, ASCOR, THE NETHERLANDS Toni G.L.A. van der Meer, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Disloyal Opposition? Journalist Perspectives on Government-Media Communication in Northern Ireland’s Power-Sharing Democracy Charis Rice, Coventry U, UNITED KINGDOM Ian Somerville, U of Ulster, UNITED KINGDOM 3225 Friday 09:30-10:45 Navis B Message Design Research: Meta-Analyses, Message/Information Fatigue, Narratives Health Communication Chair Carmen Stitt, California State U, Sacramento, USA Participants How Do Similar Others’ Success Stories Increase Behavioral Intention? The Mediating Role of Expectation of Success Youl-Lee Kim, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sungeun Chung, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Message Fatigue: Conceptual Definition, Operationalization, and Correlates Jiyeon So, U of Georgia, USA Soela Kim, U of Georgia, USA Heather Cohen, U of Georgia, USA Narrator Point of View and Persuasion in Health Narratives: The Role of Protagonist-Reader Similarity, Identification, and SelfReferencing Meng Chen, U of California - Davis, USA Robert Alan Bell, U of California - Davis, USA Laramie D. Taylor, U of California - Davis, USA The Power of Metaphor: A Meta-Analysis of the Persuasive Effects of Metaphorical vs. Literal Messages Stephanie Kay Van Stee, U of Missouri - St. Louis, USA Who Avoids Cancer Information? Examining a Psychological Process Leading to Cancer Information Avoidance Jiyoung Chae, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE 3226 Friday 09:30-10:45 Navis C Other Veillances: Communication Technologies Allowing New Forms of Social Observation Communication and Technology Participants Reversing the Spiral of Silence: Tracing the Unexpected Political Repercussions of “Leaky” Transparency Alexander Campbell Halavais, Arizona State U, USA Autoveillance: A Sociotechnical Challenge to Existing Norms Mathias Klang, U of Massachusetts - Boston, USA Smart Objects, Quantified Selves, and a Sideways Flow of Data Erika Pearson, U of Otago, NEW ZEALAND Online Informational Voyeurism and the Rise of “Netaveillance” Michael Zimmer, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Mass society of the 20th century built systems for broadcasting information to and aggregating information about the masses. Surveillance is thus a function of mass society, and as the “sur” prefix suggests, such observations reproduced differences in power, suggested that society could be easily split between the observer and the observed, and that those categories were often determined by political power and social class. The rise of more sociable forms of media, especially during the early part of this century, has provided new models for everyday citizens to gain a better understanding of those in power, their own peers, and themselves. This panel explores ways in which the structures of observation have changed to allow for new “veillances” beyond surveillance. 3230 Friday 09:30-10:45 Nire Fighting the Continuum of Violence From Flaming and Street Harassment to Domestic Violence and Rape Feminist Scholarship Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Participants Speaking "Unspeakable Things": Documenting Digital Feminist Responses to Rape Culture Jessalynn Keller, U of East Anglia, UNITED KINGDOM Kaitlynn D. Mendes, U of Leicester - Department of Media and Communication, UNITED KINGDOM Jessica Ringrose, U College London, UNITED KINGDOM The Logic of Connective Feminism: Toward an Intersectional Approach to Anti-Street-Harassment Activism Rosemary Clark, U of Pennsylvania, USA Damaged Women, Godlike Men: Rape Mythologies in News Coverage of Bill Cosby and Inder Kumar Lindsey Erin Blumell, Texas Tech U, USA Miglena Mantcheva Sternadori, Texas Tech U, USA College Students’ Perceptions of Campus Sexual Assault: A Qualitative Study Jane O'Boyle, U of South Carolina, USA Leigh M Moscowitz, College of Charleston, USA Jo-Yun (Queenie) Li, U of South Carolina, USA "Killed out of Love”: Domestic Violence Coverage in Hong Kong Miriam Hernandez, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Experiential Learning Through Documentary Methodology: A Platform for Breaking Down Rape Culture on College Campus Jennifer Huemmer, Texas Tech U, USA Lindsey Erin Blumell, Texas Tech U, USA Framing, Flaming, and Labeling on YouTube Comments: The Case of “The Bearded Lady” Conchita Wurst Sasha Allgayer, Bowling Green State U, USA Gi Woong Yun, Bowling Green State U, USA Gamer-Hate and the “Problem” of Women: Finding Feminism Jennifer Jenson, York U, CANADA Suzanne Christine de Castell, U of Ontario Institute of Technology, CANADA 3231 Friday 09:30-10:45 Kusu Digital Media Circumvention: Industries and Practices Communication and Technology Media Industry Studies Chair Ramon Lobato, Swinburne U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Blocks, Whitelists, and Circumventions: Anti-Advertising in the Mobile Media Industries Julian Thomas, Swinburne U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Protocol and Counterprotocol: Circumventing China’s Great Firewall Jinying Li, U of Pittsburgh, USA The VPN Industry and the Commercial Dynamics of Anonymity Ramon Lobato, Swinburne U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Website Bans and the Expanding VPN Market in Turkey Cigdem Bozdag, Kadir Has U, TURKEY Australia’s Post-Circumvention Moment? Examining the Impact of Accessible Legal Streaming Media in the Australian Home James Meese, U of Technology Sydney, AUSTRALIA This panel investigates contemporary practices of internet circumvention and their implications for media policy. Circumvention is defined as the use of software “workarounds” including VPNs (virtual private networks), DNS (domain name system) proxies, web proxies, ad-blockers, and location-masking browser extensions. Together, these globally popular tools offer consumers significant usability benefits while at the same time presenting challenges for regulators, producers and advertisers. This panel brings together cutting-edge research on these circumvention practices as they play out in Turkey, China, Australia and the United States. In so doing, we explore implications for current policy debates about internet regulation, copyright protection, privacy, national security, metadata retention, and parallel importation. 3232 Friday 09:30-10:45 Kashi 3233 Friday 09:30-10:45 Kaede Social Protests and Technology Communication and Technology Participants Does Cyber-Proximity Matter? Social Media Network Exposure and Cross-National Protest Diffusion: Evidence From Event History Analysis of Arab Spring 2010—2011 K. Hazel Kwon, Arizona Sate U, USA Emotions in an Online Social Movement: A Study of India’s Nirbhaya Protest Saifuddin Ahmed, U of California - Davis, USA Kokil Jaidka, Independent Researcher, INDIA Jaeho Cho, U of California - Davis, USA Explaining Offline Participation in a Social Movement with Online Data: The Case of Observers for Fair Elections Olessia Koltsova, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Galina Selivanova, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Social Media's Effect on Youth Volunteers' Communication & Organizing Behaviors During the Rena Oil Spill Sarah Lockwood, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Celia Kay Weaver, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Debashish Munshi, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Mary Louisa Simpson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND The Critical Periphery in the Growth of Social Protests Sandra Gonzalez-Bailon, U of Pennsylvania, USA Local Journalism: Community and Diversity Journalism Studies Chair Helle Sjovaag, U of Bergen, NORWAY Participants Portrait of the Online Local News Audience Katie Ellen McCollough, Rutgers U, USA Jessica Crowell, Rutgers U, USA Philip M. Napoli, Rutgers U, USA Bounding and Bonding Community: Ethnic Diversity and the Ethic of Inclusion in Hyperlocal News Chi Zhang, U of Southern California, USA Field Interference: Toronto’s Rob Ford Mayoralty and the Hybridizing Spaces of Journalism, Media, and Urban Politics Scott Rodgers, Birkbeck, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Paths of Influence Between a Hyperlocal News Website and Civic Engagement in a Multiethnic Community Wenlin Liu, U of Southern California - Annenberg School for Communication, USA Nien-Tsu Nancy Chen, California State U, Channel Islands, USA Katherine Ognyanova, Rutgers U, USA Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, U of Southern California, USA Michael C. Parks, U of Southern California, USA Respondent Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM 3240 Friday 09:30-10:45 Rigel Globalization and Digital Media: Implications for Social Change Global Communication and Social Change Chair Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas - Austin, USA Participants A Cross-Cultural Analysis in Predicting App Preferences: Implications of Cultural Values and Maslow’s Human Needs Chris Chao Su, The Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yuchen Ren, The Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Social Media Contact Hypothesis: Cross-National Attitudes Towards Homosexuality in 24 Countries Jagadish J Thaker, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Assessing the Potential of ICTs for Participatory Development in Sub-Saharan Africa With Evidence From Urban Togo Anita Breuer, German Development Institute, GERMANY Jacob Groshek, Boston U, USA Visual Evidence From Above: Assessing the Value of Earth Observation Satellites as Human Rights Infrastructure Tanya Notley, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Camellia Webb-Gannon, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA 3241 Friday 09:30-10:45 Vega Entertaining the Informed, Informing the Entertained? The Relevance of Satirical News Shows for Political Communication. Mass Communication Chair Lance Holbert, Temple U, USA Participants News Satire as Part of the Political Public Sphere. A Normative-Empirical Assessment Katharina Kleinen-von Koenigsloew, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Same Same, but Different? A Comparison of the Issue Agenda of Satirical and Traditional News Katharina Emde, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Helmut Scherer, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Laughing About Politics – Source of Information or Reason for Declining Trust? Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Effects of Humor in Political Satire on TV on Viewers’ Information Processing: An Experimental Study Based on the Elaboration Likelihood Model of Persuasion Andrea Czepek, Jade U of Applied Sciences, GERMANY Philipp Korting, Jade U of Applied Sciences, GERMANY Respondent Dannagal G. Young, U of Delaware, USA While U.S. audiences have embraced political satire presented in TV news style for quite some time, the German-speaking world was slow to warm to “fake news” formats. The Heute-Show, an adaptation of the popular Daily Show with Jon Stewart, has finally succeeded in establishing satirical presentation in a setting mimicking a typical TV news show, blurring the boundaries between information and entertainment, in the German market. Due to substantial differences in the political system, the media system, and usage patterns, the results from studies in the US need additional verification for Germany. Intended as a first step in this direction, this panel provides theoretical and empirical insight into the contents and effects of the heute-show among German audiences. 3242 Friday 09:30-10:45 Kiku Communication and Africa I: Africa, Media, and Globalization Global Communication and Social Change Participants Balancing Plausible Lies and False Truth: Perception and Evaluation of the Local and Global News Coverage of Conflicts in Burundi and the DRC Anke Fiedler, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Marie-Soleil Frère, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Fabricated African Bodies, Commodification of Romance, and Cyber Fraud within Global Circuits Wisdom Tettey, U of British Columbia, CANADA Ebola Coverage and Representations of Africa: An Analysis of Hegemonic and Counter-Hegemonic Narratives on Twitter Janet D. Kwami, Furman U, USA Mobile Technology and Health Data: Challenges and Opportunities of Formulating Policies in Sub-Saharan Africa to Govern Global Distribution of Health Information Ammina Kothari, Rochester Institute of Technology, USA Respondent Leslie Steeves, U of Oregon, USA 3243 Friday 09:30-10:45 Ran Media, Conflict, and Violence Mass Communication Chair Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA Participants Death From Above: An Analysis of the Central Command YouTube Page Matthew Morley, Wayne State U, USA Examining News Stories of IPV: An Experimental Examination of Perpetrator Sex and Violence Severity Matthew W. Savage, U of Kentucky, USA Sarah Sheff, Michigan State U, USA Emma Richardson, U of Kentucky, USA Alexis Pullia, U of Kentucky, USA Jennifer Ann Scarduzio, Arizona Sate U, USA Kellie Carlyle, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Kate Lockwood Harris, U of Missouri, USA Media-Remembering the Falklands War: Identity, Power, and Memory Sarah Maltby, U of Sussex, UNITED KINGDOM More Than Shoot-Em-Up and Torture Porn: Reflective Appropriation and Meaning-Making of Violent Media Content Anne Bartsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Johanna Keppeler, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Lone Posthumus, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Andrea Kloss, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Sebastian Scherr, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin, USA Sonja Donata Kretzschmar, U of the Federal German Army, GERMANY 3245 Friday 09:30-10:45 Sumire Predicting and Explaining Opinion Diversity Political Communication Chair Lilach Nir, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Participants Epistemological Beliefs and Misperceptions About Contentious Issues R. Kelly Garrett, Ohio State U, USA Brian E Weeks, U of Michigan, USA Motivated Reasoning in Perceived Credibility of Public Opinion Polls Ozan Kuru, U of Michigan, USA Michael W. Traugott, U of Michigan, USA Joshua M. Pasek, U of Michigan, USA Opinion Diversity Over Time: Selective Expression and Collaborative Filtering in Web Forums Hai Liang, U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF To Speak or Not to Speak: Predicting College Students’ Outspokenness in the Prodemocracy Movement in Hong Kong Wan-Ying Lin, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Bolin Cao, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xinzhi Zhang, The Hong Kong Polytechnic U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 3246 Friday 09:30-10:45 Koh Media Sociology in the Age of Connectivity Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Nick Couldry, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Blank as Media: The Evolution of Media Sociology from Phenomenological Inquiry to Practice Theory Gina Neff, U of Washington, USA The Sociology of Emotions and Affect Theory Peter Lunt, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Ideas for a Sociology of Communication and Difference Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA The Mediated Construction of Reality Nick Couldry, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Andreas Hepp, U of Bremen, GERMANY Respondent Klaus Bruhn Jensen, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK 3247 Friday 09:30-10:45 Yoh Experiencing Entertainment Popular Communication Chair Matthew P. McAllister, Pennsylvania State U, USA Participants Refining the Media Events Concept: A Case Study of the (2014) Eurovision Song Contest Michael Skey, U of East Anglia, UNITED KINGDOM Maria Kyriakidou, U of East Anglia, UNITED KINGDOM Patrick McCurdy, U of Ottawa, CANADA Julie Uldam, Roskilde U, DENMARK Chasing Sleuths and Unravelling the Metropolis Nicky van Es, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Stijn Reijnders, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Leonieke Bolderman, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Immersion, Authenticity, and the Theme Park as Social Space: Experiencing the Wizarding World of Harry Potter Abby Waysdorf, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Stijn Reijnders, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Balazs Boross, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Museum Foyer as a Transformative Space of Communication Kirsten Drotner, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Erik Kristiansen, Museum Lolland-Falster, DENMARK Ditte Laursen, State Media Archive, DENMARK 3248 Friday 09:30-10:45 Kei Team Communication and Technologies Organizational Communication Chair William C. Barley, U of Illinois, USA Participants Concertive Resistance: How Teams Can Resist in the Absence of Resistance Leadership Alaina Zanin, U of Central Missouri, USA Ryan S. Bisel, U of Oklahoma, USA Investigating the Impacts of Team Type and Design on Virtual Team Processes Jennifer L. Gibbs, Rutgers U, USA Anu Sivunen, Aalto U, FINLAND Maggie Boyraz, Rutgers U, USA Successful Coordination in Distributed Project Teams Using Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) Dron M Mandhana, U of Texas, USA Vernon D. Miller, Michigan State U, USA Team Project Managers’ Communication Competencies in Interorganizational Relationships Dron M Mandhana, U of Texas, USA Vernon D. Miller, Michigan State U, USA Respondent Hassan Abu Bakar, U of Utara - Malaysia, MALAYSIA 3249 Friday 09:30-10:45 Board Room Top Faculty Papers in Public Relations Public Relations Chair Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Participants Effects of Self-Affirmation on Publics’ Perception of Crisis Xiaochen Zhang, Kansas State U, USA Rethinking Employee-Organization Relationship (EOR) Management: Integrating Authentic Leadership, Transparent Organizational Communication, and Work-Life Enrichment Hua Jiang, Syracuse U, USA Yi Luo, Montclair State U, USA Multistakeholder Network and Stakeholder Relationship Management: Reconsidering Power in Public Relations Relationships Adam J. Saffer, U of North Carolina, USA Aimei Yang, U of Southern California, USA Maureen Taylor, U of Tennessee, USA Respondent Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA 3250 Friday 09:30-10:45 Akane 3251 Friday 09:30-10:45 Anzu Blue Sky Workshop: Data Activism Sponsored Sessions Chair Stefania Milan, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Dating And Romantic Relationships Through Apps Mobile Communication Chair Colin Agur, Yale U, USA Participants “No Fats, No Fems, Masc Appearance, Str8 Acting Only”: Projecting Impressions of Masculinity on Grindr Andy Navarrete, Costco Wholesale Corporate, USA Exploring Self-Presentation on Tinder Stephen Stewart, Indiana U, USA Edgar Jamison-Koenig, Indiana U, USA Diana Sokolova, Indiana U, USA Swipe Right: An Exploration of Self-Presentation and Impression Management on Tinder Giulia Ranzini, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Christoph Lutz, BI Norwegian Business School, NORWAY Marjolein Gouderjaan, Vrije U, THE NETHERLANDS The Power of Knowing: WhatsApp and Lateral Surveillance in South African Romantic Relationships Mthobeli Ngcongo, U of Johannesburg, SOUTH AFRICA 3252 Friday 09:30-10:45 Hagi Communication Law and Policy Conference Theme Session: Communicating With Power in Communication Law and Policy Communication Law & Policy Chair Seamus Simpson, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Breaching Sites of Power: Four Models for Scholars Sharon Strover, U of Texas, USA Power as Medium: The Third Face of Communicating With Power Sandra Braman, Texas A&M U, USA Communicating With Judicial Power: Communication Law and Policy Scholarship in U.S. Federal Appellate Court Decisions Mark A. Cenite, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Communication Law and Policy Scholarship’s Role in Addressing Information/Power Asymmetries: The Case of Big Data Analytics and Social Welfare Jenifer Sunrise Winter, U of Hawaii, USA Making Policy or Making Controversy? Scholars, Press Freedom, and Press Regulation in the UK Steven Barnett, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Affirming Language Diversity Rights in International Domain Names Undrah B. Baasanjav, Southern Illinois U - Edwardsville, USA 3253 Friday 09:30-10:45 Fuji Visual Framing and Storytelling Between the Affective and the Iconic Visual Communication Studies Chair Katy Jane Parry, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Images of Resilience: The Case for Visual Restorative Narrative (Top Paper) Nicole Dahmen, U of Oregon, USA David Morris II, U of Oregon, USA British Military Community Responses to Photographs of Soldier Transgressions in the News Katy Jane Parry, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Future Visual Coverage of U.S. Women in Combat: Gatekeeping and Hierarchy of Influences Rebecca Ann Scoggin McEntee, South Dakota State U, USA Swept Away by Tears: Emotive Televisual Representations of Typhoon Morakot Chiaoning Su, Temple U, USA The Visual Depth of Hurricane Katrina Imagery: A Longitudinal Study Through the Lens of Commemorative Journalism and Iconicity Nicole Dahmen, U of Oregon, USA Andrea Miller, Louisiana State U, USA David Morris II, U of Oregon, USA 3254 Friday 09:30-10:45 Sakura Responding to Exclusion and Inequality Theme Sessions Chair Cherian George, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Struggling to be “Heard”: Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Patients’ Communication Experiences in the Healthcare Context Min Liu, Southern Illinois U- Edwardsville, USA Valarie Shaw, John Logan College, USA Researching the Role of Media in Social Diversity in Later Life Cecilie Givskov, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Mark Deuze, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS World Building Downtown Los Angeles (DTLA): Academic-Community Collaboration and Methodology for Applied Communication Research Nicholas Busalacchi, U of Southern California, USA Sonia Jawaid Shaikh, U of Southern California, USA Francois Bar, U of Southern California, USA Ann Pendleton-Jullian, Ohio State U/Georgetown U, USA Respondent Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA 3260 Friday 09:30-10:45 Olive Different Types of Media Content, Different Effects? Political Communication Chair Sebastian Valenzuela, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Participants How Much Do You Need to Know?: The Influence of Communication on Insufficiency and Processing Myiah J Hutchens, Washington State U, USA Rebecca Donaway, Washington State U, USA Jay D. Hmielowski, Washington State U, USA Michael A. Beam, Kent State U, USA Political Satire Processing and Policy Opinion Formation: Examining the Mediating Roles of Attitude Homophily and Enjoyment Heather LaMarre, Temple U, USA Christiane Grill, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Taking the Power Back: Does Interactivity Enhances Attitudes and Memory of Mediated Political Communication? Lauren Furey, U of Florida, USA Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of Florida, USA The Effect of Different Types of Political Conflict in the News on Cynicism and Participation Andreas Schuck, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Lukas Otto, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY 3261 Friday 09:30-10:45 Sage Adolescents and Media: Working Toward Adulthood Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Adolescents’ Social Reading: Motivation, Behavior and Their Relationship Wu Li, Shanghai Jiao Tong U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yuehua Wu, Shanghai Jiao Tong U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Applying the Theory of Planned Behavior to Adolescents’ Acceptance of Online Friendship Requests Sent by Online Strangers Wannes Heirman, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Anne Vermeulen, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Kris Hardies, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Beyond the Lab: Investigating Early Adolescents’ Cognitive, Emotional, and Arousal Responses to Violent Games Karin Fikkers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Exploring the Associations Across Adolescence of Perceived Desirability for Alcohol Advertising and Skepticism About Advertising Erica Weintraub Austin, Washington State U, USA Adrienne Fayola Muldrow, Washington State U, USA Davi Kallman, Washington State U, USA Bruce Pinkleton, Washington State U, USA MTV Reality Shows and Adolescents’ Intentions Towards Smoking and Alcohol Use: BIS/BAS and Social Norms Jolien Vangeel, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Nancy Rhodes, Michigan State U, USA Kathleen Beullens, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Lien Goossens, Ghent U, BELGIUM Leentje Vervoort, Ghent U, BELGIUM Nathalie De Cock, Ghent U, BELGIUM Wendy Van Lippevelde, Ghent U, BELGIUM Steven Eggermont, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Social Network Site Uses, Friendship Networks, and Well-Being of Australian Adolescents Sora Park, U of Canberra, AUSTRALIA Stop or Go? Playing Violent Computer Games Impairs Self Control in Adolescents Ewa Miedzobrodzka, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Fredrick Waiyaki, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jacek Buczny, SWPS U of Social Sciences and Humanities, POLAND Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Role of Communication and Rumors in Adolescents' Perceptions and Behaviors Regarding Sociopolitical Issues: A HeuristicSystematic Model Jae Seon Jeong, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Seungyoon Lee, Purdue U, USA This is Advertising! Effects of Disclosing Television Brand Placement on Adolescents Eva van Reijmersdal, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sophie Carolien Boerman, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Moniek Buijzen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Esther Rozendaal, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS 3320 Friday 11:00-12:15 Argos C 3321 Friday 11:00-12:15 Argos D Student and Early Career Representative Business Meeting Sponsored Sessions Bias, Intentionality, Judgment, and Decision Making Information Systems Chair Nancy Rhodes, Michigan State U, USA Participants The Role of Mindset Construal and Psychological Distance Cues in Online Truth Judgments Hande Sungur, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Tilo Hartmann, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Guido M Van Koningsbruggen, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Why User Comments Affect the Perceived Quality of Journalistic Content: The Role of Judgment Processes Patrick Weber, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Wolfgang Schweiger, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Fabian Prochazka, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Does What My Neighbors Do Still Matter to Me When Shopping Online? Examining the Impacts of Location-Based Social Identity on the Consumer Decision-Making Process Eunsin Joo, Michigan State U, USA Young June Sah, Michigan State U, USA Wei Peng, Michigan State U, USA Economic Messages Alter the Brain’s Response to Error Prediction and Consequent Behavioral Decisions Diamantis Petropoulos Petalas, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Paul G. HendriksVettehen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Hein van Schie, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Biases in Perceived Effect of Persuasive Campaigns: Differences Between Actual and Perceived Effects of Campaign Messages Daeun Jeong, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sungeun Chung, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF What Prompts People to Participate in Online Auctions: A Study of Bidders’ Behavioral Intention Saifur Bhuiyan, U of Arkansas, USA Soheil Goodarzi, U of Arkansas, USA Jinghui (Jove) Hou, Florida State U, USA Xiao Ma, U of Arkansas, USA The Influence in News Stories of Criminal Intentionality and Criminal and Victim Affective Dispositions on Support for Policy About Alcohol Crimes Tae Kyoung Lee, Cornell U, USA Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA Individual Differences in Intentions to Drink: Investigating the Relationship Between the BIS/BAS Scales and Accessibility Bridget Potocki, Ohio State U, USA Nancy Rhodes, Michigan State U, USA Sarah Thomas, Ohio State U, USA Christopher Loiewski, Ohio State U, USA Lindsey Morr, U of San Diego, USA Kevin Collier, Brigham Young U, USA 3322 Friday 11:00-12:15 Argos E CAT Hybrid Session 5: Global Perspectives on Technology Communication and Technology Chair Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of Washington, USA Participants Indigeneity and Telephony Mobile Phone Use Amongst Indigenous Igorot of Mountain Province, Philippines Dazzelyn Baltazar Zapata, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Did the Internet Have Mobilizing Effects During the 2011 Egyptian Revolution? Jin Woo Kim, U of Pennsylvania, USA Citizen-Driven Crisis Communication: ICT Supported Public Participation in China Qihui Xie, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Displacement or Complement? A Study on Social Media Competition in China Qianni Luo, Ohio U, USA Instruments of Liberation or Repression? Emerging Media and Sociopolitical Instability Types, 1990-2012 Britt D Christensen, Zayed U, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES Message Strategies in Crowdfunding: Similarities and Differences of Crowdfunding Messages in the United States and South Korea Moonhee Cho, U of Tennessee, USA Gawon Kim, U of Tennessee, USA Comments, Discussion, and Intergroup Communication in Facebook Groups: Language and Relations Between Group Members Eleni Kioumi, Aristotle U of Thessaloniki, GREECE Antonis Gardikiotis, Aristotle U of Thessaloniki, GREECE 3323 Friday 11:00-12:15 Argos F Not So Easy: Problematic Aspects of Digital Games Game Studies Chair Malte Elson, Ruhr U Bochum, GERMANY Participants Did the Joker Play Aggressive Video Games? A Two-Wave Cross-Lagged Panel Analysis of the Relation Between Aggressive Video Game Play, Trait Aggressiveness, and Psychopathy Benny Liebold, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Daniel Pietschmann, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Eva Zurbrügg, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Vanessa Schüppel, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Kevin Koban, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Experiencing Games: Investigating What Influences the Adverse Effects of Game Violence Nicholas L Matthews, Indiana U, USA Teresa Lynch, Indiana U, USA Glenna Lee Read, Indiana U, USA No You Cannot! Exploring the Longitudinal Relationships Between Parental Mediation, Parenting Style, Oppositional Defiance, and Parental Perceptions of Problematic (Addictive) Gaming Antonius J. van Rooij, Ghent U, BELGIUM Stijn Van Petegem, Ghent U, BELGIUM Jan Van Looy, Ghent U, BELGIUM Addictive Video Games: Examining the Relations Between Game Genres and Addiction Jeroen S Lemmens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Stefan Hendriks, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Effect of BREAKAWAY Gameplay on Bullying Victimization Self-Efficacy Among Youth in El Salvador Yishin Wu, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Hua Wang, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Ji Hye Choi, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Ann DeMarle, Champlain College, USA 3324 Friday 11:00-12:15 Navis A Dialogues in Journalism Studies: Newspapers and the Postdigital Future Beyond the 'Death of Print' Journalism Studies Chair Kevin G. Barnhurst, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Participants Print and Digital Bridging Strategies via Boundary Objects Kevin G. Barnhurst, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Guillaume Latzko-Toth, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Algorithms, Robots and Other Initiatives in News Production Leopoldina Fortunati, U of Udine, ITALY Changing the Mix: Migration and Re-Migration From Digital to Print John O'Sullivan, Dublin City U, IRELAND Bonding Strategies: Infusing Multimedia Into Print Sakari Taipale, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Respondent Steven Jones, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA This panel discussion sets out to help structure a wider debate on the more complex pattern of innovation in newspapers by setting out innovative responses to the digital by and of relevance to print news. 3325 Friday 11:00-12:15 Navis B Health Risk Perception and Behaviors Health Communication Chair BF F. Battistoli, Fairleigh Dickinson U, USA Participants Information Source, Credibility, Knowledge, and Risk Perceptions: Findings From the National Tuberculosis Survey in Korea Jarim Kim, Kookmin U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sunwook Yoo, Halla U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Revisiting the Role of Peer Communication in Normative Social Influences on Risk Behavior Sarah Geber, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Eva Baumann, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Christoph Klimmt, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Self-Determination Theory and Risk Behavior in a Collectivistic Society: Preventing Reckless Driving in Urban Nepal Yerina S. Ranjit, U of Connecticut, USA Leslie Snyder, U of Connecticut, USA The Impact of Online Social Capital on Social Trust and Risk Perception Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA Yi Mou, Shanghai Jiao Tong U, CHINA Understanding the Impact of Health Communication on Chronic Disease Risk Behaviors: A Test of the Structural Influence Model Elisabeth Bigsby, U of Illinois, USA Shelly R Hovick, Ohio State U, USA 3326 Friday 11:00-12:15 Navis C Digital Exclusion and Inequality Communication and Technology Chair Erin Flynn Klawitter, Northwestern U, USA Participants Compound and Sequential Digital Exclusion: Internet Skills, Uses, and Outcomes Alexander van Deursen, U of Twente / GW / CW, THE NETHERLANDS Ellen Johanna Helsper, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Rebecca Eynon, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS The Social Relativity of Digital Exclusion Ellen Johanna Helsper, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Beyond Technology: Nontechnological Determinants of Household Internet Adoption in Isolated Communities Teresa Correa, U Diego Portales, CHILE Isabel Pavez, U Finis Terrae, CHILE Javier Contreras, U Diego Portales, CHILE A Social Differentiation Perspective on Social Media Contribution Inequality: The Case of Wikipedia Sorin Adam Matei, Purdue U, USA Wuato Wei, Purdue U, USA Brian Christopher Britt, South Dakota State U, USA Michael Zhu, Purdue U, USA Chuanhai Liu, Purdue U, USA Elisa Bertino, Purdue U, USA The Implication of Institutional Ethnography for the Studies of ICTs and Inequalities Siyuan Yin, U of Massachusetts at, USA 3330 Friday 11:00-12:15 Nire LGBTQ Health Communication Health Communication Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Chair Jimmie Manning, Northern Illinois U, USA Participants Comparing Perceived Effectiveness of FDA-Proposed Cigarette Packaging Graphic Health Warnings Between Sexual and Gender Minorities and Heterosexual Adults Andy SL Tan, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard School of Public Health, USA Cabral A Bigman, U of Illinois, USA Sara Minsky, Harvard, USA K. Viswanath, Harvard U, USA Exploring MSM Culture in Singapore and Its Implications for Sexual Health Behavior Brendan Au, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Iccha Basnyat, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Media as a Source of Stigma Among Gender and Sexual Minorities Jagadish J Thaker, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Mohan Jyoti Dutta, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Vijay Nair, Alliance India, INDIA Vishnu Rao, Alliance India, INDIA Real to Me: Individual Differences Interact With Virtual Engagement to Change Real-World Behavior Jennifer Rose Talevich, U of Southern California, USA John L. Christensen, U of Connecticut, USA Carlos Gustavo Godoy, U of Southern California, USA Stephen J. Read, U of Southern California, USA Lynn Carol Miller, U of Southern California, USA Paul Robert Appleby, U of Southern California, USA SOLVE-ing (Some of) Stigma's Enigmas Using Neuroscience and Games: Reducing HIV-Risk for MSM Lynn Carol Miller, U of Southern California, USA John L. Christensen, U of Connecticut, USA Benjamin James Smith, U of Southern California, USA Paul Robert Appleby, U of Southern California, USA Stacy Marsella, U of Southern California, USA Feng Xue, U of Southern California, USA Antoine Bechara, U of Southern California, USA Zhong-Lin Lu, U of Southern California, USA Vitalya Droutman, U of Southern California, USA Charisse L'Pree Corsbie-Massay, Syracuse U, USA Emily Barkley-Levenson, Hofstra U, USA Carlos Gustavo Godoy, U of Southern California, USA Stephen J. Read, U of Southern California, USA 3331 Friday 11:00-12:15 Kusu Online Health Information and Behavioral Intentions Communication and Technology Chair Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell U, USA Participants Pathway Linking Internet Health Information Seeking to Better Health: A Moderated Mediation Study Shaohai Jiang, Texas A&M U, USA “I Never Thought I Could Get Health Information From the Internet!”: Ethiopian Immigrants' Unexpected Uses of a New Internet Website Designed for Low/No Literacy Skills Nurit Guttman, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Eimi Lev, Tel-Aviv U, ISRAEL Elad Segev, Sapir Academic College, ISRAEL Seffefe Ayecheh, Tene Briut Organization, ISRAEL Limor Ziv, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Fekado Gadamo, Tene Briut Organization, ISRAEL Nivi Dayan, Ruppin Academic Center, ISRAEL Gal Yavetz, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Quantity and Valence: How Social Network Sites Affect College Students’ Drinking Norms Jian Rui, Lamar U, USA Understanding Emotional Bond Between the Creator and the Avatar: Change in Behavioral Intentions to Engage in Alcohol-Related Traffic Risk Behaviors Hokyung Kim, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sei-Hill Kim, U of South Carolina, USA Keith Davis, U of South Carolina, USA Ki-Seok Kwon, Hanbat U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jeong-Min Park, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Are You Listening to Me?: The Persuasive Effects of Message Interactivity in an Antismoking Website for Individuals With High Need for Cognition Jeeyun Oh, Robert Morris U, USA 3332 Friday 11:00-12:15 Kashi Promoting Environmental Behaviors: The Role of Culture, Imagery, and Norms Environmental Communication Chair Marijn H. C. Meijers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Cultural Orientations and Sustainability in Households: A Comparative Analysis of Hispanic Immigrants and Non-Hispanic Whites in the US Yu Liu, Florida International U, USA Sigal Segev, Florida International U, USA Using a Synthetic Model to Examine the Impact of Global Warming Media Use on Three Types of Proenvironmental Behavior Huiping Huang, National Chiao Tung U, TAIWAN The Impact of Climate-Change-Related Imagery on Public Opinion and Behavior Change Philip Solomon Hart, U of Michigan, USA Lauren Feldman, Rutgers U, USA Using Normative Information to Influence Collective Efficacy and Behavioral Decision-Making About Water Conservation Jie Zhuang, Michigan State U, USA Maria Knight Lapinski, Michigan State U, USA Rajiv N. Rimal, George Washington U, USA Rain Wuyu Liu, Michigan State U, USA Doshik Yun, Western Illinois U, USA 3333 Friday 11:00-12:15 Kaede Dialogues in Journalism Studies: The Pressures, Possibilities, and Perils of a Future-Focussed Scholarly Field Journalism Studies Chair Chris Peters, Aalborg U, DENMARK Participants Boundaries of What? Anticipating the Future Journalistic Field Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA Seth C. Lewis, U of Oregon, USA From Rhetoric and Institution to Functional Object: Rethinking what journalism ‘is’ (again) Chris Peters, Aalborg U, DENMARK Marcel J. Broersma, U of Groningen, THE NETHERLANDS Babbling about the Future of Journalism Steen Steensen, Oslo and Akershus U College, NORWAY Laura Ahva, U of Tampere, FINLAND How Soon is Now? Normative, Historical and Critical Approaches to the Study of Digital Journalism C.W. Anderson, CUNY- College of Staten Island, USA David Domingo, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Alfred Hermida, U of British Columbia, CANADA Tamara Witschge, U of Groningen, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Stuart Allan, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM 3340 Friday 11:00-12:15 Rigel Competitive Papers in Global Media and Culture Global Communication and Social Change Chair Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Participants The International Communication Power of the English Language and the Global Creation of Cool Paolo Sigismondi, U of Southern California, USA Manufacturing Culture: The Role of International Media Convergence in Japan Ivory Mills, Northwestern U, USA Piracy is Normal: A Cognitive Dissonance Model of Piracy in Developing Countries Benjamin Loh, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Jude Yew, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Political and Media Systems Matter: U.S., Chinese, and British Press Coverage of China's Rise, 2008-2014 Yunya Song, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Chin-Chuan Lee, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zeping Huang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Cross-National Newspaper Coverage of Rape and Rape Culture: A Community Structure Approach Christina Luchkiw, The College of New Jersey, USA Hope Peraria, The College of New Jersey, USA Andrea Berger, The College of New Jersey, USA Jenna Fleck, The College of New Jersey, USA Jackie Gates, The College of New Jersey, USA James Etheridge, Columbia U, USA John C. Pollock, The College of New Jersey, USA Lauren Longo, The College of New Jersey, USA 3341 Friday 11:00-12:15 Vega The Study of Emotion in Relation to News Mass Communication Chair Lance Holbert, Temple U, USA Participants Look on the Bright Side of Life: The Effects of Positive Emotional News on Political Behavior Sophie Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Michael Bruter, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Sarah Harrison, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM The "Defensive Effect": Uncivil Comments Indirectly Increase Intention to Participate Politically, Through Negative Affect Gina Marie Chen, U of Texas, USA Pei Zheng, U of Texas, USA The Differential Effects of Related and Unrelated Emotions on Judgments About Media Messages Claudia Poggiolini, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Rinaldo Kuehne, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Werner Wirth, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND The Contingent Role of Emotions That Underlie Partisan Selective Exposure and Avoidance Hyunjin Song, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA 3342 Friday 11:00-12:15 Kiku Communication and Africa II: Power and Communication in the Digital Age Global Communication and Social Change Chair Winston Mano, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Participants “Let’s Whip Up a Twitter-Storm”: Multinational Businesses and African NGOs Kate Wright, U of Roehampton, UNITED KINGDOM Governmental Pressure, Foreign Correspondents, and the International News Coverage of Africa Mel Jane Bunce, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Reflexivity and the (Limited) Agency of Western Foreign Correspondents Toussaint Nothias, Stanford U, USA Civil Society and New Representations of Africa in the Digital Age Sean H. Jacobs, The New School, Manhattan, USA Respondent Suzanne Franks, City U, UNITED KINGDOM The international news coverage of Africa has long been criticised by scholars who argue that it is simplistic, perpetuates damaging stereotypes, and may entrench neo-imperial North/South relations. Despite the importance of these representations of Africa, there has been surprisingly little research into the people and processes that influence its production. Scholarly understanding has not kept pace with the transformations of the global media system in the intervening years. This panel responds to the call for more research in the area by presenting the results of a 'new wave' of production studies and ethnographic work on the factors that shape the international news coverage of Africa today. 3343 Friday 11:00-12:15 Ran News and the Active Audience Mass Communication Journalism Studies Chair Stephanie L. Craft, U of Illinois, USA Participants Conflicting Realities? How Recipients React to Discrepancies Between Media Representations and Personal Experience Mathias Weber, U of Mainz, GERMANY Marc Ziegele, U of Mainz, GERMANY Anna Schnauber, U Mainz, GERMANY Experiential Media Reception: Conceptualization and Empirical Validation of an Integrative Concept Felix Frey, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY How Being a Different American Makes You Feel Good About Yourself: Effects of Selective Exposure to International News on Self-Regard Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA Nick Polavin, Ohio State U, USA Cornelia Mothes, Ohio State U, USA Retweeting and Favoriting in a Crisis: Understanding Manifested Motivation and Strategic Messaging During #Ferguson Hyunmin Lee, Saint Louis U, USA Amber Hinsley, Saint Louis U, USA 3345 Friday 11:00-12:15 Sumire Public Opinion Research in the Digital Era Political Communication Chair Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Conditional Impact of Facebook as an Information Source on Political Opinions: The Case of Political Reform in Hong Kong Francis L. F. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Paul S. N. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Louis W. Leung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Clement YK So, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Michael Che Ming Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Extending the Spiral of Silence: Partisan Media, Perceived Support, and Sharing Opinions Online Yiran Wang, Washington State U, USA Jay D. Hmielowski, Washington State U, USA Myiah J Hutchens, Washington State U, USA Michael A. Beam, Kent State U, USA Interplay Between Public Attention and Public Affect Toward Multiple Social Issues on Twitter Tai-Quan Winson Peng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Guodao Sun, Zhejiang U of Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yingcai Wu, Zhejiang U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Bully Pulpit, Social Media, and Public Opinion: A Big Data Approach Gabriel Michael, Yale U, USA Colin Agur, Yale U, USA Under Surveillance: Examining Facebook's Spiral of Silence Effects in the Wake of NSA Internet Monitoring Elizabeth Stoycheff, Wayne State U, USA 3346 Friday 11:00-12:15 Koh Theorising the Digital Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Mirca Madianou, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The Structures of the Social World Revisited: A Phenomenology of Digital Communication Maria Bakardjieva, U of Calgary, CANADA Symbiotic Agency: Rethinking Theories of Agency Across Technological and Social Contexts Gina Neff, U of Washington, USA Peter Nagy, Central European U, HUNGARY Digital Media and Decontextualization: Sites of Violence and Sites of Resistance Andrew Fitzgerald, Stanford U, USA Communication Theory, Critical Disability Studies and Technologies for Collaborative In(ter)dependence Eleanor Sandry, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA 3347 Friday 11:00-12:15 Yoh Global Film: Culture and Conflict Popular Communication Chair Richard K. Popp, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Participants Same Story, Different War: Framing The Monomythic Memory of the Iraq War in American Sniper Miles Sari, Washington State U, USA South Korean Hostess Film and Film Censorship During the Military Regime (1960-1979) Molly Hyo Kim, UIUC, USA The Love and Resentment of Colonial Memory: A Cross-Societal Reading of the Politics of Interpretation of the Film Kano Shih-che Tang, National Chung Cheng U, TAIWAN Mitsuhiro Fujimaki, U of Shizuoka, JAPAN Chang-De Liu, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN De-Constructing Monoculturalism on the German Screen: A Critical Cultural Reading of On the Other Side Julia Khrebtan-Hoerhager, Colorado State U, USA 3348 Friday 11:00-12:15 Kei Communicating Organizations: Strategic and Constitutive Communication Organizational Communication Chair Joshua B. Barbour, U of Texas at Austin, USA Participants Contradicting Matters Talked Into Being: A Ventriloqual Perspective on Humanitarian Aid Frederik Matte, U of Ottawa, CANADA Guided Organizational Remembering. Memories as Agents in the Communicative Constitution of Organizations Michael Andreas Etter, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Christian Fieseler , BI Norwegian Business School, NORWAY Organizational Handicapping Strategies: Problem Formulation, Agency, and Blame in Organizations’ Responses to Sexual Violence Kate Lockwood Harris, U of Missouri, USA Megan McFarlane, U of Utah, USA Valerie Nicole Wieskamp, Appalachian State U, USA Organizational Transparency: Conceptualizations, Assumptions, and Methodological Strategies Oana Brindusa Albu, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Mikkel Flyverbom, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Respondent Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA 3349 Friday 11:00-12:15 Board Room Public Relations Business Meeting Public Relations Participants Elena Alina Dolea, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Lee Edwards, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Jennifer L. Bartlett, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Christina Grandien, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Tiffany Lynn Schweickart, U of Florida, USA Anli Xiao, Pennsylvania State U, USA Xiaochen Zhang, Kansas State U, USA Hua Jiang, Syracuse U, USA Adam J. Saffer, U of North Carolina, USA 3350 Friday 11:00-12:15 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: International Best Practice in Reporting Islam Sponsored Sessions Chairs Jacqui Ewart, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA Mark Pearson, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA This session shares and workshops the beta resources developed under a major Australian Government research project aimed at the fair and accurate reporting of stories involving Islam and Muslim people. After a short introduction to the funded project and its research rationale, the presenters will introduce the beta version of resources developed in the project to date, including a mobile device application, website, handbook, audio-visual materials and curricula covering the ethical reporting of a mosque proposal and the legal and ethical reporting of a terrorism arrest. The chairs will then open the discussion to participants’ feedback and the comparison and contrast with other approaches to this topic internationally with a view to prospective collaborations. 3351 Friday 11:00-12:15 Anzu Emotions and Beliefs: The Power of Internal Forces in the Classroom Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair CJ Claus, California State U - Stanislaus, USA Participants Impacting Student Satisfaction, Engagement and Motivation in Online and Traditional Classrooms Jen Eden, Marist College, USA Ryan Rogers, Marist College, USA Nadine Christina Hoffmann, Marist College, USA Learning From Group Projects: The Role of Instructor Immediacy, Academic Self-Efficacy, and Flow Hsiang-Ann Liao, Buffalo State College, USA Reexamining the Writing Apprehension Measure Hamlet Autman, Interactive College of Technology, USA Stephanie Kelly, North Carolina A&T State U, USA Teacher Caring in the College Classroom: Relationships With Immediacy, Clarity, and Self-Disclosure Jason Teven, California State U, Fullerton, USA Lucy Niess, California State U, Fullerton, USA Heather Kelley, Golden West College, USA The Power of Teachers’ Supportive Communication: Effects on Students’ Academic Emotions and Engagement Moyi Jia, Monmouth U, USA Li Li, U of Wyoming at Casper, USA 3352 Friday 11:00-12:15 Hagi Communicative Practices to Construct Reasonableness Standards, Responsibilization, Common Ground, and Relationship Bond Language & Social Interaction Chair Gonen Dori-Hacohen, U of Massachusetts, USA Participants Locally Constructing Reasonableness Standards in Talk About New Media and Technology Jessica Sarah Robles, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Stephen DiDomenico, State U of New York - Plattsburgh, USA Joshua Raclaw, U of Wisconsin, USA Doing “Being” Responsible Risk Communicators at Work Joel Dag Rasmussen, Oslo and Akershus U College, SWEDEN We’re Working Well Together: Common Ground Construction in a Collaborative Task Brian W. Horton, U of Texas - Arlington, USA Susan Lee Kline, Ohio State U, USA Gossip to Bond as a Life-Phase Performance: A Study of Multimodal Texting via Smartphone Among Taiwanese College Freshmen Hong-Chi Shiau, Shih-Hsin U, TAIWAN 3353 Friday 11:00-12:15 Fuji Friends, Enemies, and Strangers: Narratives of Cultural Others and Cultural Otherness in Japanese and U.S. News Media Ethnicity and Race in Communication Participants Japanese Identity (nihonjinron) and Depictions of Racial Foreigners: Blacks in Asahi Shimbun, 2001-2010 Atsushi Tajima, State U of New York - Geneseo, USA Japan Times’ Imagined Communities: Symbolic Boundaries with African Americans, 1998–2013 Michael Thornton, U of Wisconsin, USA Cultural Intruder or Full-Fledged American? News Coverage of Barak Obama in U.S. Legacy and Ethnic Community News Media, 2008 to the Present Hemant Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA The Imagined Gypsy of the American Press: News Coverage of the Racial Stranger, 2010-2015 Adina Schneeweis, Oakland U, USA 3354 Friday 11:00-12:15 Sakura Communication Science & Biology Interest Group Organizational Business Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Emily Falk, U of Pennsylvania, USA Allison Eden, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jason C. Coronel, Ohio State U, USA Richard Wayne Huskey, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA The Communication Science and Biology Interest Group promotes scientific research with relevance for the study of human communication, broadly defined, including biological perspectives such as psychophysiology, cognitive neuroscience, behavioral genetics, animal studies, and evolutionary psychology. Members of the Interest Group value a focus on human communication systems and processes, and strive for rigorous and replicable research. Empirical studies follow primarily a quantitative approach and employ both experimental and observational research designs.Data sharing and direct replication studies are highly encouraged; explorative research and null-findings are honored, if the research is based on a rigorous investigation. The Interest Group honors its members’ achievements through top paper awards and a special award designed to recognize outstanding contributions to communication science. 3360 Friday 11:00-12:15 Olive Pushed Into Chambers? Prioritization and Personalization of Online Information and its Effects on Public Opinion Formation Political Communication Chair David Tewksbury, U of Illinois, USA Participants The Burst of the Bubble? Effects of Automated Personalization on News Diversity Mario Haim, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Andreas Graefe, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Hans-Bernd Brosius, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Issues, Knowledge Diversity, and Random Information: How Personalized Search Routines Determine our Level of Knowledge Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Goeran Kuegler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Benedikt Gutheil, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Helena Ott, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Search Concentration, Bias, Parochialism and Political Filtering in China Min Jiang, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA News Media Content Personalization: Converged, Commodified, and Contracted Out Neil James Thurman, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Respondent Damian Trilling, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Available information has reached a level no human can cope with. Recipients thus need to find ways to process the available information, for example, by using heuristics or relying on services that select, prioritize, or personalize the available information. Concepts of selection, prioritization, or personalization, however, face theoretical challenges of a potentially vast scope of implications, the most important of which deals with public opinion formation. The related concepts of filter bubbles, echo chambers, or public sphericules follow similar arguments. Although raising huge concerns, the phenomenon of filter bubbles has not yet been fully validated. This panel seeks to revalidate the concept based on empirical evidence from various perspectives (crosssectional and longitudinal) and multiple countries (China, Germany, and the US). 3361 Friday 11:00-12:15 Sage Media, Marketing, and Children's Health Children Adolescents and the Media Participants How Candy Placements in Films Influence Children`s Selection Behavior in Real-Life Shopping Scenarios Maren Beaufort, Austrian Academy of Sciences, AUSTRIA Using New Media Technologies to Improve Eating and Exercise Behaviors via a Health Intervention Program Kimberly Bissell, U of Alabama, USA Xueying Zhang, U of Alabama, USA Kim Baker, U of Alabama, USA Sarah Pember, U of Alabama, USA Mobile Marketing to Children: A Content Analysis of Food and Beverage Company Apps Lisa B. Hurwitz, Northwestern U, USA Eric Morales, Northwestern U, USA Heather Zupancic-Montague, Northwestern U, USA Alexis Lauricella, Northwestern U, USA Ellen Wartella, Northwestern U, USA Heavy Childhood TV Use Persists Into Adulthood and is Associated With Increased BMI Chance York, Kent State U, USA Respondent Suzanna Johanna Opree, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer ICA Plenary Interactive Paper/Poster Session I Sponsored Sessions This year, ICA will again present three separate poster sessions. This session will feature presenters from Communication and Technology, Global Communication and Social Change, Intercultural Communication, Intergroup, Interpersonal Communication, Language and Social Interaction, Mobile Communication, Organizational Communication, and Public Relations divisions and interest groups. Communication and Technology Interactive Poster Session Communication and Technology Participants 1. For All Eyes to See: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of the Effect of Publicness on Opinion Expression in Social Media German Neubaum, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Shirley S. Ho, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 2. Interpersonal Rejection Sensitivity and Mobile Instant Messaging Borae Jin, Seoul Media Institute of Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 3. Smartphone Conversational Etiquette: The Impact of Injunctive and Descriptive Conversational Norms on Multicommunication Behaviors Tamara Makana Chock, Syracuse U, USA Ji Won Kim, Syracuse U, USA 4. Testing the Impact of Perceived Inequity via Social Media Jessica M. Covert, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Michael A. Stefanone, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA 5. The Benefits of Distance and Mediation: How People React to Conflicts in Video Chat vs. FtF Soo Yun Shin, Michigan State U, USA Rain Wuyu Liu, Michigan State U, USA Jeong-woo Jang, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY 6. The Positivity Bias and Prosocial Deception on Social Network Sites Erin Spottswood, Portland State U, USA Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA 7. A Cross-Culture Study of Impact of Mobile Phone Use on Loneliness Among Older Adults Xun Liu, California State U, Stanislaus, USA Fred Hilpert, California State U, Stanislaus, USA Walter Doraz, California State U, Stanislaus, USA Lipin Shi, Hunan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 8. Ambient Intimacy: Self-Disclosure and Parasocial Relationships on Twitter Ruoyun Lin, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Ana Levordashka, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Sonja Utz, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY 9. Computer Agent’s Advice: Effects of Embodiment and Labelling on People’s Responses to the Agent’s Advice Younbo Jung, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Taezoon Park, Soongsil U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jihyun Kim, Kent State U, USA Alvin Wong, A*Star Singapore, SINGAPORE Young-Nam Seo, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Data Capitalism: Redefining the Logics of Surveillance and Privacy Sarah Myers West, U of Southern California - Annenberg School for Communication, USA 10. Does Interactivity Influence Parasocial Relationships? A YouTube Paradigm Haiyan Jia, Pennsylvania State U, USA Arienne Ferchaud, Pennsylvania State U, USA Enica Castaneda, Pennsylvania State U, USA 11. Infrastructures of Community in 20th Century America Mathias Crawford, Stanford U, USA 12. Weibo, WeChat, and the Chinese Culture of Connectivity Kecheng Fang, U of Pennsylvania, USA 13. Why Users Share the News: Uncovering the Role of Motives, Attitudes, and Intention in Predicting News Sharing Behavior Anna Sophie Kuempel, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY Veronika Karnowski, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY Larissa Leonhard, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY 14. Caring Is Not Enough: The Importance of Internet Skills for Online Privacy Protection Moritz Buchi, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Natascha Just, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Michael Latzer, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND 15. Citizen Journalism and Civic Participation Revisited: The Moderating Roles of Discussion Network Attributes Masahiro Yamamoto, U of Wisconsin - La Crosse, USA Seungahn Nah, U of Kentucky, USA 16. Communication Competence and Expected Outcomes in Social Media Political Expression Alcides Velasquez, Pontificia U Javeriana, COLOMBIA Hernando Rojas, U of Wisconsin, USA 17. Cultural Differences in Online Community Motivations: Exploring Korean Automobile Online Brand Communities (KAOBCs) and American Automobile Online Brand Communities (AAOBCs) Jae Hee Park, U of North Florida, USA Sally J. McMillan, U of Tenessee, USA 18. Exploring the De-Stigmatizing Effect of Social Media on Homosexuality in China: An Interpersonal Mediated Contact Versus Parasocial Mediated Contact Perspective Yue Wu, China Youth U of Political Studies, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yi Mou, Shanghai Jiao Tong U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yi Wang, U of Louisville, USA David J. Atkin, U of Connecticut, USA 19. Facebook Brand Communities: A Qualitative and Quantitative Study on U.S. College Students’ Motivations for Participation Quan Xie, Bradley U, USA Hong Cheng, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA 20. I’ll Stay With You Even When You Betray Me : The Impact of Brand Anthropomorphism on Consumer-Brand Relationship and the Mediating Role of Social Presence Taeyeon Kim, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yongjun Sung, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jang Ho Moon, Sookmyung Women’s U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 21. Quantity and Quality of Support for Digital Engagement Alexander van Deursen, U of Twente / GW / CW, THE NETHERLANDS Ellen Johanna Helsper, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM 22. Do QR Codes Make People More Likely to Engage With iPad, Comparing People Who Are Interested in Personalized Content and Those Who Are Not? Liu Yang, Bowling Green State U, USA Itay Gabay, Bowling Green State U, USA Claire Youngnyo Joa, Bowling Green State U, USA Dinah Tetteh, Bowling Green State U, USA Mike Horning, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA 23. Evaluating the Credibility of Online Reviewers Brandon Van Der Heide, Michigan State U, USA Yue Dai, Michigan State U, USA Benjamin Prchal, Michigan State U, USA Soo Yun Shin, Michigan State U, USA David Beyea, Michigan State U, USA 24. Multilevel Connectedness to Social Media Storytelling Network and Advocacy Jin-Ae Kang, East Carolina U, USA Brittany Thompson, East Carolina U, USA 25. The Evolution of Digital Diplomacy: A Critical Analysis Eytan Gilboa, Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Global Communication and Social Change Interactive Poster Session Global Communication and Social Change Participants 26. Reporting Human Rights: A Study of News Representations and Journalist Practices Susana Sampaio-Dias, U of Portsmouth, UNITED KINGDOM 27. Knowing About Latin America in China: Information Sources, Media Portrayals, and Gratifications Yicheng Zhu, U of South Carolina, USA Zhao Chen, U of Tokyo, JAPAN 28. The Geographic Dimension of Citizenship in Digital Activism: Analysis of the Effects of Local and Global Citizenship and Social Networking Sites on Participation in the Occupy Movement Kanghui Baek, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 29. Entertainment-Education in a Saturated Media Environment: The Enduring Effects of an Ebola Puppet Safety Announcement Lee Shaker, Portland State U, USA Paul Falzone, Peripheral Vision International, USA Paul Sparks, Peripheral Vision International, UGANDA 30. Virtual Ties, Perceptible Reciprocity, and Real-Life Gratifications in Online Community Networks: QQ User Groups in China Zixue Tai, U of Kentucky, USA Xiaolong Liu, Guangdong Pharmaceutical U, CHINA 31. Power to the “Flowers” Jack Liu, Guangdong U of Foreign Studies, CHINA 32. Anime & Agonism: Politics, Parody, and Anime as Transnational Genre at Animecon/Finncon ’08 Mario George Rodriguez, Stetson U, USA 33. Untimely Globalization: The 11.11 Shopping Festival in the Global Culture Industry Sara X. T. Liao, U of Texas, USA 34. Meanings and Functions of Social Media to Migrant Students: Comparision Between Vietnamese Students in Korea and Singapore Soontae An, Ewha Womans U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sun Sun Lim, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE HANNAH LEE, Ewha Womans U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Becky Pham, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE 35. How to (Re)act? Moral Reflections of an Audience to Messages of Distant Suffering Eline Huiberts, Ghent U, BELGIUM 36. Digitally Mediated Political Activism: The Democratic Impacts of Internet Diffusion in the Asian Cultural Context Shin Haeng Lee, U of Washington, USA 37. Conceptualizing Social Enterprise in a Global Context Hyemi Lee, Ewha Womans U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Lalatendu Acharya, Purdue U, USA 38. Newspaper Portrayal of Chinese Investment in Latin American Newspapers: A Content Analysis Yicheng Zhu, U of South Carolina, USA Longxing Wang, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN 39. Motivating News Audiences: Shock Them or Provide Them With Solutions? Karen Elizabeth McIntyre, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Meghan Sobel, Regis U, USA 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Intercultural Communication Interactive Poster Session Intercultural Communication Participants 40. Communication Orientations of Privilege in Talk About Race: An Examination of Discourse Surrounding the Oklahoma Affirmative Action Ban Amendment Bobbi Van Gilder, U of Oklahoma, USA Roni Jackson, U of Oklahoma, USA 41. Movie Selection and eWOM Preference: A Cross-Cultural Perspective Leyla Dogruel, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Xiaoming Hao, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 42. Comparative Study of Intercultural Sensitivity of College Students in Two Distinctive Institutions in the US Eun-Jeong Han, John Carroll U, USA Yunying Zhang, Austin Peay State U, USA 43. A Digital Truce Line Between South and North Korea? : An Analysis of North Koreans’ Digital Access, Digital Literacy, and Media Use Bumgi Min, Pennsylvania State U, USA 44. Meet the Media Characters From Another Culture: Influence of Ethnocentrism on Parasocial Interaction Mu Hu, West Virginia Wesleyan College, USA Minghui Chen, Anhui U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Mengjie Li, Anhui U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zewen Yin, Anhui U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 45. Individualism, Collectivism, and Social Dominance as Predictors of HIV Stigma in China and the US Weirui Wang, Florida International U, USA Maria Elena Villar, Florida International U, USA 46. Portal News Usage, News Credibility, and Publicity Perception in Korea Sang Hee Kweon, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Younga Won, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Intergroup Communication Interactive Poster Session Intergroup Communication Participants 47. 'THIS IS NOT REAL, NO WAY!': The (Failed?) Ironic Utterance as a Social Segregation Tool Noam Gal, Hebrew U, ISRAEL 48. Predictors of Finnish Adolescent’s Prejudice towards Russian Immigrants and the Effect of Intergroup Contact Elvis Nshom Ngwayuh, U of Jyvskyl, FINLAND 49. Time Factors as an Influence on Intergroup Communication in the Workplace Ann M Rogerson, U of Wollongong, AUSTRALIA Interpersonal Communication Interactive Poster Session Interpersonal Communication Participants 50. Discrepancy Models of Belief and Confidence Change: A Test of Information Processing and Self-Validation Predictions Shinobu Suzuki, Hokkaido U, JAPAN 51. Interpersonal Discussions and Immigration Attitudes Antonis Kalogeropoulos, Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, Centre for Journalism, DENMARK 52. ”I Have Nothing to Hide”: Analyzing the Relation Between Privacy Needs and Integrity Tobias Dienlin, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Miriam Metzger, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 53. Perceptions of Appropriateness: Receivers’ Reactions to Message Design Logics Aileen Buslig, Concordia College-Moorhead, USA Anthony Ocana, Minnesota State U, Moorhead, USA 54. The Effect of Adoptive Status on Interpersonal Attraction and Source Credibility Kevin Pearce, Bryant U, USA Language and Social Interaction Interactive Poster Session Language & Social Interaction Participants 55. From “Whom to Blame” to “Nothing to Fear”: Voices, Documentary Narratives and Dependent Destigmatization of Severe Mental Patients (SMP) in Hong Kong Yungeng Li, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 56. Making History Together: Derogatory Online Comments on Chinese Mythic Plays as Echoes of Hegemonic Discourse Shangwei Wu, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Tabe Bergman, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Mobile Communication Interactive Poster Session Mobile Communication Participants 57. Apple and the Business of Mobile Maps Rowan Wilken, Swinburne U of Technology, AUSTRALIA 58. Social Values, Mobile Communication, and Engagement With Civic Affairs in South Korea Nojin Kwak, U of Michigan, USA Hoon Lee, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 59. [Im]mobility in the Age on [im]mobile phones Helen Thornham, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Edgar Gomez Cruz, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA 60. “Passing-by” at the Intersection of Mobility and Sociality Keiko Nishimura, U of North Carolina, USA Organizational Communication Interactive Poster Session Organizational Communication Participants 61. “Data is the Latest Buzz Around Here”: Navigating Expert Relationships in Analytics Joshua B. Barbour, U of Texas, USA Bradley Kolar, Avail Advisors, USA Lisa Callahan, Accenture, USA 62. Navigating Structure Paradoxes in Entrepreneurial Careers: A Ventriloqual Analysis of Women Business Owners’ Experiences in China, Denmark, and the United States Ziyu Long, Colorado State U, USA 63. Multichannel Management Strategies of Governmental Organizations Marloes Jansen, Northumbria U, UNITED KINGDOM Wolfgang Ebbers, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Lidwien van de Wijngaert, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Willem Jan Pieterson, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS 64. Visibility, Thresholds, and Threats as Antecedents to Networked Collective Action: A Case Study of Reddit’s 2011 Boycott of GoDaddy.com Leila Bighash, U of Southern California, USA 65. Working Longer: Punishment or Opportunity? Using Frames and Counterframes in Organizations’ Internal Communication Bart Vyncke, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Baldwin Van Gorp, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM 66. “Let Our Emotion Tell the Stories”: An Exploration of Emotion Management in Chinese Work Groups’ Socialization YIJIA GUO, U of Oklahoma, USA 67. CSR Communications and Stakeholder Perceptions: A Content Analysis of User Comments on YouTube Baobao Song, U of Florida, USA Jing (Taylor) Wen, U of Florida, USA 68. Go Beyond Disarray: An Study on Institutionalization of Food Safety Risk Communication of Chinese Government Shanquan Chen, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Qijun He, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Hoi Shan Kwan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 69. A Synthesized Theoretical Framework for Motors Driving Organizational Configurational Change Brian Christopher Britt, South Dakota State U, USA Sorin Adam Matei, Purdue U, USA 3427 Friday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Public Relations Interactive Poster Session Public Relations Participants 70. Evaluating the Facebook Message Effectiveness of Top 50 Shanghai Ranking Universities Jens Vogelgesang, U Hohenheim, GERMANY Michael Scharkow, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY 71. A Gamification Approach to Corporate Social Responsibility Communications Kateryna Maltseva, BI Norwegian Business School, NORWAY Christian Fieseler, Norwegian Business School (BI), NORWAY 72. Creating Consumer-Based Brand Equity With Brand Communication on Facebook Wolfgang Weitzl, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Sabine A. Einwiller, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Ardion Daroca Beldad, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Robert Zniva, Wirtschafts U Vienna, AUSTRIA 73. Retaining Affective Commitment: The Role of a Human Voice in Webcare Interactions Corne Dijkmans, NHTV Breda U of Applied Sciences, THE NETHERLANDS Peter Kerkhof, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Camiel J. Beukeboom, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 74. Powered by Public Relations? Journalists’ and PR Practitioners’ Perceptions of Their Relationships and PR Influence Thomas Koch, U of Mainz, GERMANY Magdalena Obermaier, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Claudia Riesmeyer, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY 75. Dialogic Communication in Lebanese NPOs’ Websites and Facebook Pages Nadine A. Yehya, American U of Beirut, LEBANON 76. Is it Worth It? Consumers' Willingness to Pay for Socially Responsible Practices Nicholas Browning, Indiana U, USA 77. Testing CSR as a Trust Driver Among Millennials and Nonmillennials in Developed and BRIC Countries Yi-Ru Regina Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Chun-ju Flora Hung-Baesecke, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Ben Boyd, Edelman, USA 78. Between Online and Offline Agenda Building: The Interplay Between Agendas of Organizations, Media, and Public Jeroen G.F. Jonkman, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Anne Cornelia Kroon, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Toni G.L.A. van der Meer, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Damian Trilling, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Piet Verhoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 79. Flash Trading: Stock Market Reactions to Reuters and Bloomberg Tweets Nadine Strauss, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rens Vliegenthart, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Piet Verhoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 80. Students’ Perceptions About Public Relations and Diversity-Related Issues Nancy W. Muturi, Kansas State U, USA Ge Zhu, Kansas State U, USA Respondent Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK 3472 Friday 12:30-13:45 Ocean Penthouse Feminist Media Studies Editorial Board Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Andrea Lee Press, U of Virginia, USA Mia L. Consalvo, Concordia U, CANADA Kirsten Drotner, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Dafna Lemish, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Linda C. Steiner, U of Maryland, USA Toby Miller, U del Norte, COLOMBIA Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA Karen Ross, Northumbria U, UNITED KINGDOM Larissa Hjorth, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA 3520 Friday 14:00-15:15 Argos C Computational Methods for Communication Research: What, Why, and How? Theme Sessions Participants What Computational Methods can help to Advance Communication Research? Robert Ackland, Australian National U, AUSTRALIA A Way Forward: The Formation of an International Network on Computational Social Sciences Frederik de Grove, Ghent U, BELGIUM Topic Modeling in Online Communication Research: New Possibilities and Challenges Sergei Koltcov, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Promoting Transparency and Replicability in Communication Research Katherine Ognyanova, Rutgers U, USA Bringing Time and Structure back to Communication Research Tai-Quan Winson Peng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE From Many, One: Communication Studies, Computational Social Science, Multimethodology, and Multidisciplinarity Nathaniel D. Poor, independent scholar, USA R as a (Free) Toolkit for Semantic Network Analysis and Corpus Analysis Kasper Welbers, Vrije U U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Wouter van Atteveldt, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS How to Embrace (Creatively and Critically) Computational Methods? Jonathan J.H. Zhu, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF This panel focuses on an emerging paradigm of research (“computational social science”) across social sciences in general and communication in particular. The panelists will address three W questions highlighted in the title of the panel: What are computational methods relevant to and useful for communication research? Why do we need to adopt and embrace computational methods? How can we equip ourselves with computational methods? In addition, the panelists will debate on “critical” questions that have been voiced: What are the shortcomings and limitations of computational methods? How can we blend computational methods with the traditional social science research methods? How can we deal with personal privacy, open-source research, and other legal/ethical dilemmas? 3521 Friday 14:00-15:15 Argos D Message Processing and Effects Information Systems Chair Saleem Elias Alhabash, Michigan State U, USA Participants The Suasory Force of Sticky Messages: A Case of Asymmetric Message Effects Franklin J. Boster, Michigan State U, USA Rain Wuyu Liu, Michigan State U, USA Ying Cheng, Michigan State U, USA Wonkyung Kim, Michigan State U, USA Sonia Jawaid Shaikh, U of Southern California, USA Effects of Message Discrepancy and Source on Information Processing: Evidence From a NON-WERID population Thanomwong Poorisat, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE The Effect of “Anonymous Consumer”: A Study of Anonymity, Affect Intensity and Message Valence in the Cyberspace Cheng Hong, U of Miami, USA Cong Li, U of Miami, USA The More the Better? Examining Multimedia Effect on Organizational Health Message Dissemination Fan Yang, U of Miami, USA You Scratch My Back, I’ll Scratch Yours: A Meta-Analysis of the Effect of Pregiving Messages Allison Zorzie Shaw, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Emily A. Dolan, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Briana Nichole DeAngelis, Michigan State U, USA Ryan Christopher Goei, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Rating the News: How Expert and Lay Opinion Influence Source Credibility David Wolfgang, U of Missouri, USA Samuel Matthias Tham, U of Missouri, USA E-Cigs and the “Wild West” of Advertising: Reaching Youth via Social Media and PSI Erika Katherine Johnson, U of Missouri, USA It’s Not About Who Says it, it is About Whether They Should Say it: Effects of Source Type and Congruence on Persuasiveness of Anti "Texting While Driving" PSAs on Facebook Chen Lou, Michigan State U, USA Saleem Elias Alhabash, Michigan State U, USA 3522 Friday 14:00-15:15 Argos E B.E.S.T.: Social and Collaborative Technologies in Organizational Communication Organizational Communication Chair Bart J. van den Hooff, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Modeling the Adoption of Social Media by Newspaper Organizations: An Organizational Ecology Approach Yu Xu, U of Southern California, USA Organizational Boundary Regulation Through Social Media Policies Michael Andreas Etter, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Scott G. Banghart, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Social Media Warrants: Signal Inconsistencies Between Corporate Websites and LinkedIn Discourage Minority Job Candidates Michael A. Stefanone, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Robyn Brouer, Canisius College, USA Rebecca Badawy, Youngstown State U, USA Social Media’s Dark Side: Inducing Boundary Conflicts Ward van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS “We Work in International Companies”: An Exploration of Social Media Uses in Chinese Employees’ Organizational Socialization Yijia Guo, U of Oklahoma, USA Sun Kyong Lee, U of Oklahoma, USA Michael W. Kramer, U of Oklahoma, USA “Welcome to Twitter, @CIA. Better Late Than Never”: Communication Professionals’ Views of Social Media Humor and Implications for Organizational Identity Joel Dag Rasmussen, Oslo and Akershus U College, SWEDEN Wikis and Work Groups: A Social Network Approach to Predicting Community Growth Jeremy Foote, Northwestern U, USA Aaron Shaw, Northwestern U, USA Benjamin Mako Hill, U of Washington, USA Collaboration Versus Cooperation: Shared Technology for Organizational Outcomes Jennifer Ihm, Kwangwoon U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Katherine R Cooper, Northwestern U, USA Respondents Chih-Hui Lai, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA B.E.S.T. sessions are "Brief Entertaining Scholarly Talks". In this format, each participant gives a 5 minute, high-energy, technology-enhanced presentation designed to excite the audience about the research. For the final 30 minutes of the session, presenters and audience members meet 2 or 3 small breakout groups to discuss ideas stimulated by that set of papers. 3523 Friday 14:00-15:15 Argos F CAM Research Escalator Session 1 Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Mapping the Invisible and Exploring Connections Between Young People, Technology, Place, and Well-Being Michelle Catanzaro, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Milissa Deitz, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Emma Keltie, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Tanya Notley, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Katrina Sandbach, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Amanda Third, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Effects From Smoking-Related Media Messages on Chinese Adolescent Smoking: Testing the Mediating Role of Perceived Descriptive Peer Norm Chun Zhou, U of Miami, USA The Power of Social Media Influencers: A Study of the Use of Influencers by Brands to Communicate With Adolescent Consumers Amy Jo Struthers, U of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA Mobile Phone Use and the Changing Values of the Young Igorot Dazzelyn Baltazar Zapata, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Presenting Ourselves Into Being: Exploring Social Media Use and Self-Concept Change for Adolescents Sarah Rose Marcus, Rutgers U, USA Understanding the Web Use Behavior of Our Youngest Internet Audience Fashina Alade, Northwestern U, USA Tethered Toddler, Distracted Toddler? Linking Preschoolers’ Attention-Deficiency to Task-Switching and Extraneous ProblemSolving When Using Tablets Stephanie Van Hove, iMinds-MICT-Ghent U, BELGIUM Respondents Agnes Lucy Lando, Daystar U, KENYA Amy Bleakley, U of Pennsylvania, USA Dafna Lemish, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Lee Humphreys, Cornell U, USA Mariek Vanden Abeele, Ghent U, BELGIUM Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin, USA The CAM research escalator sessions maximize the value our division puts on mentorship. The sessions focus on works-in-progress from junior scholars or scholars working in a new area area. Each project is paired with a mentor who reads the project before the conference. In the session, the scholars will present their project to the room in 2-3 minutes. Then mentors and scholars break off to receive feedback. Guests to the session are invited to join any pairing for the conversation. After 45 minutes, scholars give a 2minute presentation of what they took from the mentor to the room. 3524 Friday 14:00-15:15 Navis A Theorizing Journalism Journalism Studies Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Edson Tandoc, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participants Journalism Beyond Democracy: A New Look Into Journalistic Roles in Civic and Everyday Life Thomas Hanitzsch, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY Tim P. Vos, U of Missouri, USA Mapping the Space of Journalistic Labor in the New Media Environment: A Model Michael B. Karlsson, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Karin Fast, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Johan Eric Lindell, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Henrik Ornebring, Karlstad U, SWEDEN A Reconciliation With Objectivity Juliette De Maeyer, U de Montreal, CANADA Thomas Martine, U de Montreal, CANADA A Five-Level Theory of Journalistic Expertise Zvi Reich, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Yigal Godler, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Respondent Michael Schudson, Columbia U, USA 3525 Friday 14:00-15:15 Navis B Health Communication in Asia Health Communication Chairs Do Kyun Kim, U of Louisiana - Lafayette, USA Gary L. Kreps, George Mason U, USA Participants Health Communication in Japan: Past, Present and Future Akira Miyahara, Seinan Gakuin U, JAPAN Health Communication in China and Future Research Agenda: Case Studiesof HINTS-China and Survey on Essential Medicines Perception and Usage among Chinese Citizens Guoming Yu, Renmin U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Health Communication in South Korea: Lessons Learned From the MERS outbreak Hye-Jin Paek, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Changing Health Communication Scenario in India: Challenges and Prospects Suchi Gaur, Public Health Foundation of India, INDIA Respondents Do Kyun Kim, U of Louisiana - Lafayette, USA Gary L. Kreps, George Mason U, USA The history of health communication in Asia is not as long as the western countries’. However its importance is even higher due to the large population, discrepancy in health literacy and health care, conflict between western medicine and traditional vernacular, and the high number of outbreaks and health risks after natural disasters. This panel presents leading health communication scholars from China, Japan, South Korea, and India, where the health communication scholarship has been the most developed. 3526 Friday 14:00-15:15 Navis C Advertising and Privacy Communication and Technology Chair Rebecca A. Hayes, Illinois State U, USA Participants Empathic Media: Advertising, Soft Biometrics, and Intimacy (Instead of Privacy) Andrew McStay, Bangor U, UNITED KINGDOM Sponsored Adverting on Social Media: Consumer Privacy, Attitudes, and Purchase Intentions Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA Tonghoon Kim, U of Connecticut, USA “I Agree”: The Effect of Consumer Educational Programs on Consumers’ Online Behavioral Advertising and Cookie Perceptions Guda van Noort, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hilde Voorveld, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Verena Wottrich, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Risk Assessment in E-Commerce: How Seller Photo, Reputation, and Stake Influence Purchase Behavior and Decision Certainty Yue Dai, Michigan State U, USA Greg Viken, Michigan State U, USA Eunsin Joo, Michigan State U, USA Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY 3530 Friday 14:00-15:15 Nire Sexual Health Communication: Consent, Pledges, Safe Sex, Contraceptives Health Communication Chair Rowena Lyn Briones, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Participants Factors Associated With Intentions to Negotiate Sexual Consent: Media Effects and Integrative Model Stacey J. T. Hust, Washington State U, USA Jiayu Li, Washington State U, USA Framing Data With Emotional and Rational Appeals in Safer Sex Infographics Yi Wang, U of Louisville, USA Intentional or Incidental? Information Seeking, Scanning, and Contraception Use Among Young Women Jazmyne Sutton, U of Pennsylvania, USA Let’s Talk About Condoms: Incorporating Communication Into the Theory of Planned Behavior to Predict Condom Use Among African American Women Mengfei Guan, U of Georgia, USA Valerie Berenice Coles, U of Georgia, USA Jennifer A. Samp, U of Georgia, USA Jessica McDermott Sales, Emory U, USA Ralph J. DiClemente, Emory U, USA Jennifer L. Monahan, U of Georgia, USA Parental Sexual Beliefs and Experiences: Privacy Management in Multiadic Family Interviews About Purity Pledges Jimmie Manning, Northern Illinois U, USA 3531 Friday 14:00-15:15 Kusu News and Social Media Communication and Technology Chair Nathan Stolero, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Participants Tweeting and Commenting About Ferguson: National and Local Perspectives Joshua Hawthorne, U of Missouri, USA Esther Thorson, U of Missouri, USA Mitchell S. McKinney, U of Missouri, USA Kellie Stanfield, U of Missouri, USA Appetizer or Main Dish? Explaining the Use of Facebook News Content as a Substitute for Other News Sources Philipp Mueller, U of Mainz, GERMANY Pascal Schneiders, U of Mainz, GERMANY Svenja Schaefer, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY A Longitudinal Analysis of the Dynamic Agenda-Setting Process in the Social Media Pianpian Wang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Governing Hate Speech by Means of Counterspeech on Facebook Carla Schieb, Muenster U, GERMANY Mike Preuss, Muenster U, GERMANY 3532 Friday 14:00-15:15 Kashi 3D Printing as Communicative Practice: Emergent Affordances, Collaborative Relationships, and Social Implications Communication and Technology Chair Laura Forlano, Illinois Institute of Technology, USA Participants Entry-Level 3D Printers in the Maker Movement: Repairing, Fixing, and Adjusting Camille Bosque, Ensci-Les Ateliers, FRANCE When Things Communicate: A SNA based analysis of Thingiverse’s Object Oriented Networks Robbie Fordyce, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Making Things as “Social” Media Laura Forlano, Illinois Institute of Technology, USA Making, Piracy, Profit: Sharing 3D Printing Files Online as Disruptive Communication Practice Luke Justin Heemsbergen, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA 3533 Friday 14:00-15:15 Kaede Journalism as Practice: Values and Perceptions Journalism Studies Chair Matthew Powers, U of Washington, USA Participants Prestige Differentiation in Journalism: Exploring Journalists’ Perceptions of Media Elites Through a Social Hierarchy Perspective Hai Tran, DePaul U, USA Matthew Wade Ragas, DePaul U, USA Job Autonomy: How Kenyan Newspeople Perceive Their Journalistic Latitude Kioko Ireri, United States International U-Africa, KENYA Professional Impact and Job Satisfaction Among Chinese Journalists Liu Yi, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xiaoming Hao, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Nainan Wen, Nanjing U, CHINA Power, Truth, and Fetishistic Disavowal in Thai and Chinese Journalism Jesse Owen Hearns-Branaman, National Institute of Development Administration, THAILAND Respondent Jane B. Singer, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM 3540 Friday 14:00-15:15 Rigel Comparative Global Assessment of the Media Coverage of Japan’s “Comfort Women” Issue Global Communication and Social Change Chair Kaori Hayashi, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Participants The “Comfort Women” Issue and the Abe Administration Kaori Hayashi, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Conflicting “Realities” in-between Korea and Japan: The Meaning of Asahi’s Withdrawal of Reporting on “Comfort Women” in 2014 Kayoung Kim, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Jiyoon Kim, U of Tokyo, JAPAN “Comfort Women” in British and French Newspapers César Castellvi, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Omri Reis, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Domesticating the “Comfort Women” Issue: The Coverage of U.S. Newspapers Sunyoung Kwak, U of Tokyo, JAPAN This panel investigates how domestic or regional issues develop into global news in the age of globalization. We specifically focus on the following points: 1) identifying agenda setters of a regional controversy or/and how they assume control of the issues; 2) in what ways national/global media play a part in framing the issues; 3) whether or in what ways geographical proximities come into play and how the level of interconnectedness between the domestic and international politics matter. 3541 Friday 14:00-15:15 Vega Methodological Advances in Mass Communication Research Mass Communication Chair Jens Vogelgesang, U Hohenheim, GERMANY Participants Development of a New Research Method Using an Open Source Plugin for Web Analytics Software to Measure Online Selective Exposure in Naturalistic Settings Dominik Johannes Leiner, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Sebastian Scherr, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Anne Bartsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY How WEIRD are We? Sample Diversity in Premier Mass Communications Journals Carol M. Liebler, Syracuse U, USA Hanna Birkhead, Syracuse U, USA YaoJun Yan, Syracuse U, USA Our Research's Breadth Lives on Convenience Samples: A Case Study of the Online Respondent Pool “SoSci Panel” Dominik Johannes Leiner, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Too Fast, Too Straight, Too Weird: Post Hoc Identification of Meaningless Data in Internet Surveys Dominik Johannes Leiner, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY 3542 Friday 14:00-15:15 Kiku Politicized Communication: Movements, Ideology, and Modernity Communication History Chair Nicole Maurantonio, U of Richmond, USA Participants Beur Broadcasting and Minority Representation in Postcolonial France Annemarie Iddins, U of Michigan, USA From Propaganda to Realism and Humanism: Three Phases of Chinese Photojournalism, 1937-1988 Shi Li, Southern Illinois U - Edwardsville, USA Humour and Habermas: Problematizing Satire as Public Communication in France’s July Monarchy (1830-1835) (Top Paper) Hatty Liu, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Leading the Second Wave Into the Third Wave: Women Journalists and Discursive Continuity of Feminism Yong Z. Volz, U of Missouri, USA Teri Finneman, South Dakota State U, USA Respondent Nicole Maurantonio, U of Richmond, USA 3543 Friday 14:00-15:15 Ran Textual Analyses in Mass Communication Research Mass Communication Chair Jane O'Boyle, U of South Carolina, USA Participants Casting an ‘Outsider’ in the Ritual Centre: Two Decades of Performances of ‘Rural Migrants’ in CCTV’s Spring Festival Gala Yan Yuan, Huazhong U of Science and Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF On the Social Construction of Democracy: Modal Rhetoric in Postreunification Editorials by Former East vs. West German Journalists Carl W. Roberts, Iowa State U, USA Cornelia Zuell, GESIS – ZUMA, GERMANY Roel Popping, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, BELGIUM Only the Good Die Young: Music Lyrics Reflect Psychological Distress David Matthew Markowitz, Stanford U, USA Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA Third Party Critique and the Illusion of Objectivity in the Accountability News Interview Polly Keary, U of Washington, USA 3545 Friday 14:00-15:15 Sumire Citizenship, Community, and Civic Engagement Political Communication Chair Karolina Koc-Michalska, Audencia Business School, FRANCE Participants Alternative Citizenship Models: Mapping the New "Good Citizen" Neta Kligler-Vilenchik, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Political Participation in Nonpolitical Online Communities: The Role of Sense of Community SuMin Lee, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Unmasking the Crowd: Participants’ Motivation Factors, Expectations and Profile in a Crowdsourced Law Reform Tanja Katarina Aitamurto, Stanford U, USA Hélène Landemore, Yale U, USA Jorge Saldivar, U of Trento, ITALY We Live in an Imagined Community: Cross-Level Interaction Effects of Neighborhood Disadvantages With SNS Uses, ICSN, and Community Engagement Eui-Kyung Shin, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Ahra Cho, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Ji-Min Park, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yong-Chan Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF “Digital Citizenship” Revisited: The Impact of ICTs on Citizens’ Political Communication Beyond the Western State Martin J. Emmer, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Marlene Kunst, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY 3546 Friday 14:00-15:15 Koh Borders, Nations, and Cosmopolitanism Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA Participants Imagining Europe’s Borders: Commemorative Art on Migrant Tragedies Karina Horsti, Academy of Finland, FINLAND Global Solidarity and Cosmopolitan Agency: Online Public Discourses on Child Slavery Anne Vestergaard, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Having a Soul or Choosing a Face? Nation Branding, Identity, and Cosmopolitan Imagination Per Stahlberg, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Goran Bolin, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Circulating a Fashion: Performance of Nation Branding in Finland and Sweden Katja Valaskivi, U of Tampere, FINLAND 3547 Friday 14:00-15:15 Yoh 3548 Friday 14:00-15:15 Kei Powerful Communication Across Cultures: The Production and Distribution of Transnational Television Drama Popular Communication Participants Italian TV Drama Going Transnational Milly Buonanno, U of Rome, ITALY Other People’s TV: The Australian Experience of the Transnational Trade in the TV Crime Drama Susan Eiisabeth Turnbull, U of Wollongong, AUSTRALIA Spectrum of Engagement: Producers and Audiences for Crime Drama "The Bridge" Annette Hill, Lund U, SWEDEN From National to Transnational Production of Popular Series: New Co-production Strategies in Danish Television Drama Eva Novrup Redvall, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK The Costs of Transnational Success: How Netflix went from Companion to Competitor during the Production of "Lilyhammer" Vilde Sundet, Lillehammer U College, NORWAY Top Papers in Intercultural Communication Intercultural Communication Chair Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Participants A Taste of Europe: Eating/Reading Between the Lines of the German-Italian Failed Love Story Julia Khrebtan-Hoerhager, Colorado State U, USA Media, Perception, and Adaptation: Using Q-Methodology in Intercultural Research Clark Callahan, Brigham Young U, USA Global Radio: An Investigation of User Comments on Facebook Pages of Trinidad and Tobago’s Indian Music Format Radio Stations Shaheed Nick Mohammed, Pennsylvania State U, Altoona, USA Avinash Thombre, U of Arkansas - Little Rock, USA Lawn Bowling Together?: Race, Place, and Community Storytelling in a Californian Ethnoburbia Andrea Wenzel, U of Southern California, USA Nien-Tsu Nancy Chen, California State U, Channel Islands, USA Chi Zhang, U of Southern California, USA 3549 Friday 14:00-15:15 Board Room Forms of Power: Public Diplomacy and Government Relations Public Relations Chair Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants The Communitive Power of Narrative Battles Versus Identity Resilience in Public Diplomacy RS Zaharna, American U, USA Unpacking Public Sentiment Toward the Government: How Government Communication Strategies Affect Public Engagement, Cynicism, and Word-of-Mouth Behavior in South Korea Soojin Kim, Singapore Management U, SINGAPORE Arunima Krishna, Purdue U, USA The Rise and Fall of Nation Branding: A Literature Review of Conceptualizing, Legitimizing, and Contesting It Elena Alina Dolea, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA America’s Selfie: Two Years Later Ilan Manor, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM The Role of Cultural Congruency in Mediated Gastrodiplomacy: A Qualitative Framing Analysis of the U.S.-Japan Sushi Summit Derek Moscato, U of Oregon, USA Respondent Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK 3550 Friday 14:00-15:15 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: Tips, Tricks, and Hacks for Careers Inside Academia Sponsored Sessions Chairs Francois Allard-Huver, Paris Sorbonne U - CELSA, FRANCE Charlotte Loeb, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Paola Sartoretto, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Karin Fikkers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Holli Hitt Seitz, U of Pennsylvania, USA The aim of this Blue Sky Workshop is to provide PhD candidates and early-career scholars with effective advice from experts and senior or newly appointed scholars in order to prepare themselves for the academic job market as well as to successfully plan the first years of their academic career. It also aims to help young scholars navigate the complexity and variety of academic career paths around the world. The workshop will consist of two parts, short presentations from the panellists (experience, tips and advice) followed by an open group discussion between all participants. In addition, the workshop is meant to offer an opportunity to discuss and exchange ideas on key issues for young scholars and their integration in academia. 3551 Friday 14:00-15:15 Anzu Industry Change and Accommodation Media Industry Studies Chair Jacob Nelson, Northwestern U, USA Participants Business Strategies of Korean TV Players in the Age of Over-The-Top (OTT) Video Service Eun-A Park, U of New Haven, USA Industrial Convergence, Power, and Politics: The Persistent Structure of Media Industries in Indonesia Titik Rahayu, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA EU Platform Regulation and its Impact on the Media and Communication Industry Katharina Hoelck, Vrije U Brussel, BELGIUM Pieter Ballon, Vrije U Brussel, BELGIUM Slicing the Pie: The Search for an Equitable Recorded Music Economy Aram A. Sinnreich, American U, USA The Financialization of the Music Industry: Ownership, Equity, Data Andrew deWaard, U of California, Los Angeles, USA 3552 Friday 14:00-15:15 Hagi Governing Free Speech and Information in the 21st Century Communication Law & Policy Chair Sharon Strover, U of Texas, USA Participants The Taming of the Shrill: Justice Brennan’s Prophetic Dissent on the Chilling of Broadcast Satire Ian Case Punnett, Arizona State U, USA Neutral Reportage in English Common Law: Codified as the "Public Interest" Defense Kyu Ho Youm, U of Oregon, USA Beyond Admissibility: The Prosecutorial Affordances of Social Media Use Jeffrey Lane, Rutgers U, USA Fanny Anne Ramirez, Rutgers U, USA Merely Window Dressing? Accomplishments and Challenges in Enforcing China’s First Freedom of Information Law Yong Tang, Western Illinois U, USA 3553 Friday 14:00-15:15 Fuji Race and Ethnicity Across Learning Environments Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Anamik Saha, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Race is Not a Card: Student Images and Words Educating and Mobilizing Against Everyday Racism Diana Lee, U of Southern California, USA Factors That Influence Evaluation of Support Messages for Everyday Racial Discrimination: The Effect of Source Ethnicity, Interethnic Friendships, and Scenario Severity Uttara Manohar, Miami U, USA Susan Lee Kline, Ohio State U, USA The Power of Silence: How Whiteness Ideologies are Perpetuated Through Classroom Discourse Angela Putman, Pennsylvania State U - Brandywine, USA 3554 Friday 14:00-15:15 Sakura IAMCR: Memory, Commemoration, and Communication: Looking Back, Looking Forward Sponsored Sessions Chair Janet Wasko, International Assocation for Media and Communication Research, USA Participants Memory and Empire: Reflections on the Past through Mediated Genealogy Peter Lunt, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Remembering How Our Media Came to Be: A Japanese and American Comparison Victor W. Pickard, U of Pennsylvania, USA Cultural Amnesia: The Case of Ballet, Ballroom Dancing and the BBC Deborah Philips, U of Brighton, UNITED KINGDOM Contracts of Silence: The Political Economic Implications of Enforced Silence Randy Nichols, Bentley U, USA What is Media? @ IAMCR @ ICA Jeremy Swartz, U of Oregon, USA Assumptions in the Construction of a Global History Anabelle Sreberny, International Assocation for Media and Communication Research, UNITED KINGDOM Although scholars have long been interested in memory and culture, advancements in technologies are providing new and innovative opportunities to think about how it is created, preserved, passed on, and archived. Within academia, we have witnessed increased interest in cultural memory studies – from media representations of the past, oral history projects and growing interest in digitizing data leading to the history of everything. As a result, the growing interest in (mediations of) cultural memory provides a timely opportunity not only to look back at which memories get preserved or forgotten, but also to look forward to how cultural memories might be archived, remembered, (re)produced, storied, erased, modified and retold across time and space. 3560 Friday 14:00-15:15 Olive Information and Perceptions of Out Groups: Between Empathy and Conflict Political Communication Chair Jason C. Coronel, Ohio State U, USA Participants Giving the Underdog a Leg Up: A Counternarrative of Nonviolent Resistance Improves Sustained Third-Party Support of a Disempowered Group Emile Gabriel Bruneau, U of Pennsylvania, USA Daniel Lane, U of Michigan, USA Muniba Saleem, U of Michigan, USA Helping the Homeless: Empathy, Race, and Support for Homelessness in America Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington U, USA Julie Wronski, U of Mississippi, USA Robert M. Entman, George Washington U, USA I Saw You in the News: Mediated Contact With Outgroups Can Improve Outgroup Attitudes Above and Beyond Direct Contact Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rachid Azrout, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Je Suis Charlie? The Framing of Ingroup Transgression and the Attribution of Responsibility for the Charlie Hebdo Attack Nathan Walter, U of Southern California, USA Stefanie Demetriades, U of Southern California, USA Ruthie Kelly, U of Southern California, USA Traci Gillig, U of Southern California, USA 3561 Friday 14:00-15:15 Sage Mediated Close Relationships: Interpersonal Communication Online Interpersonal Communication Communication and Technology Chair Kristina M. Scharp, Utah State U, USA Participants Affectionate Communication and Relational Characteristics on Facebook Daniel Hans Mansson, Pennslyvania State U - Hazleton, USA How Other-Directed Facebook Use Affects Self-Views Eun-Ju Lee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Eugene Cho, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jeong-woo Jang, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Keeping Up Online Appearances: How Self-Disclosure on Facebook Affects Perceived Reputation and Likability Among Colleagues Anika Batenburg, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Jos Bartels, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sex, Lies, and Media Use: Communication Channel and Perceptions of Deception About Romantic Infidelity James Alex Bonus, U of Wisconsin, USA Catalina Laura Toma, U of Wisconsin, USA “We Talk Online Because We Are Close Offline”: Bridging Offline Uncertainty and Online Social Networking Yao SUN, U of Southern California, USA 3620 Friday 15:30-16:45 Argos C KACA & CCA Joint Research Paper Session: Complexity of Asian News: Government and Engagement Sponsored Sessions Chairs Eyun-Jung Ki, U of Alabama, USA Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA Participants Reciprocity of Government Restructuring/Policy Changes and the Convergent Environment in South Korea Eun-A Park, U of New Haven, USA How Partisan Newspapers Represented a Pandemic: The Case of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in South Korea Sangwon Lee, U of Wisconsin, USA Jihyun Esther Paik, U of Wisconsin, USA Questioning Premiers in China: Examining Journalists’ Aggressiveness at Chinese Premiers’ Press Conferences (1993-2015) Feng Wu, Jiangnan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yang Cheng, U of Missouri, USA HONG ZHAO, U of Missouri, USA The Influence of the Perception of Organizational Justice on Employee Engagement, Turnover Intention, and Employee Boosterism Minjeong Kang, Indiana U, USA MinJung Sung, Chung-Ang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Understanding the Relationship of Weibo TV viewing and Media Engagement in China Trisha T. C. Lin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Ziqi Liang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Yi-hsuan Chiang, Shih Hsin U, TAIWAN Issue Involvement, News Attention, Knowledge, and Third-Person Effect of Mainland China’s Anti-Corruption Movement News Lei Guo, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Chris Chao Su, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Hao Li, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondents Hyun Jung Yun, Texas State U, USA Esther Yook, George Mason U, USA 3621 Friday 15:30-16:45 Argos D Best Papers in Information Systems Division Information Systems Chair Kevin Wise, U of Illinois, USA Participants Measuring the Effects of Traditional vs. Satirical News on Moral Judgment: A Study With fMRI and Structural Equation Modeling (Top Student Paper) Yoomin Lee, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Dynamic Modeling in Communication Research Matt Irwin, Ohio State U, USA Zheng Joyce Wang, Ohio State U, USA Neural Correlates of Selecting and Sharing Information Elisa Baek, U of Pennsylvania, USA Christin Scholz, U of Pennsylvania, USA Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Pennsylvania, USA Emily Falk, U of Pennsylvania, USA Scared of the Dark: Examining Aversive Activation During a Virtual Navigation Task Joomi Lee, Michigan State U, USA Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA 3622 Friday 15:30-16:45 Argos E CAT Hybrid Session 1: ICTs, Divides, and Privacy Communication and Technology Chair Lee Humphreys, Cornell U, USA Participants Keeping Up With Society: A Critical Perspective on Older Active Users’ Understandings and Engagement with ICTs Magdalena Kania-Lundholm, Uppsala U, SWEDEN Educational Systems, Digital Learning & Literacy, and Inverted Funnel Paradigm: A Capabilities Approach to Understanding Gains Sonia Jawaid Shaikh, U of Southern California, USA Short-Term, Middle-Term, and Long-Term Effectiveness of Coping Strategies Among Adolescent Victims of Cyberbullying Sara Pabian, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Not Done Yet! Deep, Multilayered Digital Divides in an American Public Housing Community Wenhong Chen, U of Texas, USA Xiaoqian Li, U of Texas, USA Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas, USA Adolfo Rafael Mora, U of Texas, USA Tianca Crocker, U of Texas, USA Gejun Huang, U of Texas, USA Vinicio Sinta, U of Texas, USA Jeremiah P. Spence, U of Texas, USA Knowledge Gap Hypothesis and the Internet in Indonesia: The Influence of SES, Skills & English Proficiency Nadia Andayani, Florida State U, USA Where the Social and the Technical Meet: Learning Skills to Protect Privacy Online Eszter Hargittai, Northwestern U, USA Ashley Walker, Northwestern U, USA “You Have the Right to Privacy, Unless You Have Something to Hide!” Examining the Impacts of a Perceptual Difference Between Privacy and Secrecy on Online Privacy Concerns and Bystander Apathy Mike Z. Yao, U of Illinois - Urbana Champaign, USA Linz Daniel, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 3623 Friday 15:30-16:45 Argos F CAM Research Escalator Session 2 Children Adolescents and the Media Participants (Il)legal File Sharing, Downloading, and Streaming: User Types, Behavior, and Opinions Towards Piracy Among Adolescents Fabian Prochazka, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Could Interpersonal Communication be the Missing Link in Elimination Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV ?: The Impact of the Mentor Mother Programme in Homa Bay Kenya on Pregnant Women Living With HIV Evonne Mwangale Kiptinness, Daystar U, KENYA Crazy Cyber World: Construction of a Composite Index for Measuring Child Online Protection (COPI) Ada Sonia Peter, Covenant U, NIGERIA Tolulope Kayode-Adedeji, Covenant U, NIGERIA Leave Them Kids Alone: Children-Related Images Management and Adult Power in Web-Based Communicative Practices Diana Salzano, U of Salerno, ITALY Antonella Napoli, U of Salerno, ITALY Media Education: Core, Boundaries, and Affinities Ornat Turin, Gordon College of Education, ISRAEL Parent Engagement and New Media Communication Technologies in the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) Brandon Golob, U of Southern California, USA Power of Media: Exploring the Indirect Effects of Media on Genetic Testing Among Hispanic/Latino Children Jessica E Wendorf, U of Miami, USA Fan Yang, U of Miami, USA The Internet as a Sex Education Resource for Lebanese Adolescents: Its Impact on Attitude and Intended Sexual Behaviors Danijela Savaya, Notre Dame U, LEBANON Jessica El-Khoury, Notre Dame U, LEBANON Respondents Moniek Buijzen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Srividya Ramasubramanian, Texas A&M U, USA Steven Eggermont, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Sun Sun Lim, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Sven Joeckel, U of Erfurt, GERMANY 3624 Friday 15:30-16:45 Navis A Dialogues in Journalism Studies: An 'Affective Turn'? Journalism Studies Chair C.W. Anderson, CUNY- College of Staten Island, USA Participants Visualizing Emotions in Disaster Coverage: A Comparative Approach Folker Christian Hanusch, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Anger as a Political Emotion in Media Coverage of Protest Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM The Necropolitics of Affect: Imageries of 'Arriving' Refugees in European Press Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Twitter as Working-Through: Frontline Journalists’ Affective Management of Information War Mervi Pantti, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Respondent Zizi A. Papacharissi, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA This panel opens up a dialogue about how research on emotion in journalism can advance the field. Historically, emotion has been considered a “bad object” in journalism practice and scholarship. Normative approaches have leaned on a liberal democratic framework, which has understood emotion as the enemy of rational citizenship. Journalism, particularly in most Western democracies, has therefore been shaped by the allegiance to the ideal of objectivity, which valorizes dispassionate, impartial, disembodied and fact-centered discursive practices. Nonetheless, there has been a recent turn to questions of affect and emotion in journalism - both in terms of practices of journalistic storytelling and in examining the emotional labour of journalists themselves. 3625 Friday 15:30-16:45 Navis B Top Papers in Health Communication Health Communication Chair Kevin B. Wright, George Mason U, USA Participants Frame-Image Interplay in Influencing News Readers' Perceptions of Obesity Jiawei Liu, U of Wisconsin, USA Rachel Kornfield, U of Wisconsin, USA Yuhai Chen, U of Wisconsin, USA Chau Tong, U of Wisconsin, USA How Cancer Patients Use and Benefit From an Integrated eHealth System Jeong Yeob Han, U of Georgia, USA Robert P. Hawkins, U of Wisconsin, USA Timothy Baker, U of Wisconsin, USA Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA Suzanne Pingree, U of Wisconsin, USA David H Gustafson, U of Wisconsin, USA Psychological Reactance as Defensive Response of a Threatened Self Xuan Zhu, U of Minnesota, Twin-Cities, USA The Effect of Cultural Tailoring on Persuasion in Cancer Communication: A Meta-Analysis Yan Huang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Fuyuan Shen, Pennsylvania State U, USA 3626 Friday 15:30-16:45 Navis C Social Media, Discussion, Deliberation, and Public Opinion Communication and Technology Chair Homero Gil de Zuniga, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Participants Monitoring the Opinion of the Crowd: Media and Social Psychological Mechanisms Underlying Public Opinion Perceptions on Social Media German Neubaum, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Hostile Social Media Effect: Influences of Partisanship, Social Endorsement, and Outrage on Willingness to Engage in Online Discursive Activities Soojin Roh, Syracuse U, USA Tamara Makana Chock, Syracuse U, USA Social Media and Political Discussion: When Online Presence Silences Offline Conversation Keith N. Hampton, Rutgers U, USA Inyoung Shin, Rutgers U, USA Weixu Lu, Rutgers U, USA A Matter of Perspective: Experiences of Moderators in Online Policy Deliberation Dmitry Epstein, U of Illinois at Chicago, USA 3630 Friday 15:30-16:45 Nire Ethnicity & Race Across Eurasia Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Sudeshna Roy, Stephen F Austin State U, USA Participants Are Migrants All the Same? Mapping Attitudes to the Resettlers From Post-Soviet South in the Russian Blogosphere Svetlana S. Bodrunova, National Association of Mass Media Researchers, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Olessia Koltsova, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Sergei Koltcov, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Sergey I Nikolenko, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Hybrid Frenchness and Republican Citizenship: The Singer Ridan Calls Out "The Bastards" of French Politics Shazia Iftkhar, U of Michigan, USA "Fortress Europe," FRONTEX, and Readmission Agreement With Turkey Ilkin Mehrabov, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Communicating Antiracism: Social Movements, Nonprofit Organisations, and Their Mediated Claims-Making in Finland and Sweden Anna Camilla Haavisto, U of Helsinki, FINLAND 3631 Friday 15:30-16:45 Kusu Media Technology Industries: Online Journalism, On-Demand, and Streaming Services Communication and Technology Chair Ramon Lobato, Swinburne U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Both Sides of the Story: Communication Ethics and Media Accountability in Transition Tobias Eberwein, Alpen Adria U, AUSTRIA Colin Porlezza, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND The Differential Effects of External Versus Internal Communication Features in Digital Magazines Fabienne Rauwers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hilde Voorveld, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peter Neijens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Reading and Tracking: The Dynamics and Implications of a Digitized Reading Culture Anne-Mette Albrechtslund, Aalborg U, DENMARK Anders Albrechtslund, Aarhus U, DENMARK Unfairness by Design? Examining Institutionalized Inequality on Digital On-Demand Service Platforms Christian Fieseler, Norwegian Business School (BI), NORWAY Christian Pieter Hoffmann, U of Leipzig, GERMANY Eliane Leontine Bucher, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Looking at the River, Thinking of the Sea: A Cross-Industrial Comparison of Streaming Media Services Terje Colbjornsen, U of Oslo, NORWAY 3632 Friday 15:30-16:45 Kashi Language Use in Small Claims Court, Public Meetings, Consultations for Over-the-Counter Medicines, and Health Information Consumers' Online Comments Language & Social Interaction Chair Alena L. Vasilyeva, U of Massachusetts, USA Participants How the Language Style of Small Claims Court Judges Does Ideological Work Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA Mary Caron, U of Colorado, USA “To Be the City on the Hill”: Community Identity in Energy System Transformation Leah Sprain, U of Colorado Boulder, USA Lydia Reinig, U of Colorado Boulder, USA Selling and Caring in Consultations for Over-the-Counter Medicines: Exploring Tension in the Pharmacist–Client Interaction as the Dynamics of Frames of Communication Maija Gerlander, U of Tampere, FINLAND Language of Uncertainty: The Expression of Decisional Conflict Related to Skin Cancer Prevention Recommendations Yulia Strekalova, U of Florida, USA Vaughan James, U of Florida, USA 3633 Friday 15:30-16:45 Kaede Social Media and Cultural Adaptation Intercultural Communication Chair Kikuko Omori, St. Cloud State U, USA Participants News for Assimilation or Integration? Examining the Roles of the News Media in Shaping Acculturation Experiences of New Economic and Refugee Immigrants in the Netherlands and Spain Amanda Paz Alencar, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Mark Deuze, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Far From Home: The Role of Social Media in LDS Missionary Cross-Cultural Reentry Gavin Feller, U of Iowa, USA The Strategic Use of Social Media by Military Spouses for Identity Formation and Acculturation During Deployment Veronica de los Santos, Regent U, USA William J. Brown, Regent U, USA Effects of SNS Uses on International Students’ Socialization outcome: Focusing on Chinese Students in Korea Ting Yang, Southwest U of Political ScienceandLaw, CHINA Sangho Seo, Konkuk U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Power of WeChat and Acculturation: A Case Study of Mainland Migrant Workers in Macau Bei Ju, U of Macau, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Photographic Storytelling: Exploring the Acculturation Process and Mental Health of International Students in the USA Through Photovoice Zhaomeng Niu, Washington State U, USA Jeffery Chaichana Peterson, Washington State U, USA 3640 Friday 15:30-16:45 Rigel Top Papers in Global Communication and Social Change Global Communication and Social Change Chair Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Communication for Development and Social Change: Lessons Learned in Community Engagement in the Ebola Response Juliet Bedford, Anthrologica, UNITED KINGDOM Rafael A. Obregon Galvez, UNICEF, USA Savita Naqvi, UNICEF, SENEGAL Nance Webber, UNICEF, LIBERIA Kshitij Joshi, UNICEF, INDIA Rania Elessawi, UNICEF, INDIA Ketan Sudhakar Chitnis, unaffiliated, USA Visual Framing of the European Refugee Crisis in <i>Der Spiegel</i> and CNN International: Global journalism in Visual Reporting Xu Zhang, U of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA Lea C. Hellmueller, Texas Tech U, USA Masculinity, Transgressive Play, and Offline Action on Discussion Boards in the US, Taiwan, and Japan Joshua Cader, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Yi-Ren Lin, U of Tokyo, JAPAN The Case for Communication Rights: A Rights-Based Approach to Media Development Charu Uppal, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Paola Sartoretto, Stockholm U, SWEDEN David Cheruiyot, Karlstad U, SWEDEN 3641 Friday 15:30-16:45 Vega Advancing Theory Building in Mass Communication Research Mass Communication Chair Erik P. Bucy, Texas Tech U, USA Participants The Road to Rebuilding Media Theory: Computational and Network Approaches to Mass Communication Katherine Ognyanova, Rutgers U, USA Magical Thinking About Media Literacy Interventions W. James Potter, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Chan Le Thai, Nanyang Technological U/Telenor, SINGAPORE The Changing Research Landscape of Our Field: A Topic Model of 80 Years in Communication Science Journals Elisabeth Guenther, U of Muenster, GERMANY Emese Domahidi, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY What’s in a Name? Trends in the Design of Narrative Persuasion Studies, 2000-2013 Michael Field Dahlstrom, Iowa State U, USA Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell U, USA Lijing Gao, Iowa State U, USA Xiaowen Zhu, Iowa State U, USA 3642 Friday 15:30-16:45 Kiku Framing Environmental Messages: The Role of Space, Time, and Emotions Environmental Communication Chair Alison Anderson, Plymouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Frame Competition and Climate Change Communication Adeline Huilin Ong, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Wen Bin Nigel Lim, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Shirley S. Ho, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Here and There, Then and Now: How “Departure Dates” Influence Climate Change Engagement Laura N. Rickard, U of Maine, USA Jonathon P. Schuldt, Cornell U, USA Zheng Janet Yang, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Compassion and Support for Climate Change Mitigation Hang Lu, Cornell U, USA Jonathon P. Schuldt, Cornell U, USA Communicating Human-Black Bear Conflicts: Exploring the Role of Message Framing and Point of Reference Hang Lu, Cornell U, USA William Siemer, Cornell U, USA Meghan Baumer, Cornell U, USA Daniel Decker, Cornell U, USA 3643 Friday 15:30-16:45 Ran Selective Visuals: Politics, Metaphors, Narratives Visual Communication Studies Chair Anastasia Veneti, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Coverage of the Commander in Chiefs: Differences of Presidential Images Between the US and Korea Yung Soo Kim, U of Kentucky, USA Deborah S. Chung, U of Kentucky, USA The Construction of Ebola Narrative: Comparative Visual Analysis of Ebola Images on Newspapers and Twitter Young Rim Kim, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Seok-Kyeong Hong, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Selective Portrayal of Small-Scale Protests in Greece by Mainstream Newspapers Anastasia Veneti, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Visual Representations of Big Data Metaphors on the Web J.J. Sylvia IV, North Carolina State U, USA Visual Terror: Analysis of ISIS Propaganda Through Images Published in Dabiq Enkashi Roy, Ohio U, USA Nisha Garud, Ohio U, USA 3645 Friday 15:30-16:45 Sumire Instructional and Developmental Top Paper Panel Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Annie Beck, U of Kentucky, USA Participants The Role of Face-Saving and Communication Anxiety in Chinese EFL Students’ In-Class Participation: An Extension of the Theory of Planned Behavior Davide Girardelli, Wenzhou-Kean U, CHINA Vijay Patel, Wenzhou-Kean U, CHINA Xiaogao Zhou, Wenzhou-Kean U, CHINA Tingting Gu, Wenzhou-Kean U, CHINA Chinese Students Motives for Communicating With Professors Stephanie Kelly, North Carolina A&T State U, USA Liping Liu, North Carolina A&T State U, USA Zachary Denton, North Carolina A&T State U, USA Xinjuan Li, Henan Polytechnic U, CHINA Examining the Teacher Confirmation-Student Learning Relationship Through the Evaluation of Multiple Theoretical Explanations Zac W. Goldman, West Virginia U, USA CJ Claus, California State U, Stanislaus, USA Exploring the Relationship Between Teacher Confirmation, Student Motivation, and Student Emotional Interest: The United States and Finland Maziar Attarieh, JAMK U in Jyväskylä, FINLAND Diyako Rahmani, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Nerdinga Letule, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Elvis Nshom Ngwayuh, U of Jyvskyl, FINLAND Exerting Power and Expressing Disagreement: The Relationship Between Instructor Power and Instructional Dissent Marjorie Buckner, Texas Tech U, USA 3646 Friday 15:30-16:45 Koh Feminist Scholarship Division of ICA is 30: What Do We Gather From the Past and How Do We Plan for the Future? Feminist Scholarship Participants Histories are Made, Not Born: Feminist Interventions and Intersections in Communication Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA Back to the Future or the Importance of Documenting the (Her)stories of FSD Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Centripetal, Centrifugal, and Generally Complex and Contradictory Impulses: 30 Years of Feminist Media Research Linda C. Steiner, U of Maryland, USA A Safe Haven in the ICA Sea Dafna Lemish, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Mentorship, Community and Inclusion: Holding Open the Door Paula M. Gardner, McMaster U, CANADA Feminist Organizations and Web 2.0 Tools. Stine Eckert, Wayne State U, USA Strategic Initiatives for the Next 10 Years of FSD: Let’s Plan for the Next Anniversary! Natalia Rybas, Indiana U East, USA The participants of this discussion panel celebrate 30-year anniversary of Feminist Scholarship Division in International Communication Association. Former and current leaders gather to reflect on the past accomplishments and achievements of the division, identify gaps in the past activities, and/or suggest future directions and possibilities. 3647 Friday 15:30-16:45 Yoh Strategies and Tactics in Popular Politics Popular Communication Political Communication Chair Torgeir Uberg Naerland, U of Bergen, NORWAY Participants Image Capital and Identity Politics in the Age of Celebrity Raffi Sarkissian, U of Southern California, USA Glenn Beck and Affective Media Production Olivier Jutel, U of the South Pacific, FJ Producing Popular Politics: The Infotainment Strategies of American Campaign Consultants Michael James Serazio, Boston College, USA Animal Symbolism in Political Humor Revolutionary Egypt From “Laughing Cow” to “Roaring Lion” Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA 3648 Friday 15:30-16:45 Kei Communicating With Power: Stakeholders and Corporations Public Relations Chair Kim A. Johnston, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Exploring Practitioners’ Stresses From Managing Agency-Client Relationships at Hong Kong Public Relations Agencies Lei Vincent Huang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Determinants of Investor Relations on Corporate Websites Anna Mun, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jae-chul C. Shim, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Factors That Influence Crisis Perception From an Internal Stakeholder’s Point of View Erik Marinus Snoeijers, Royal Military Academy, BELGIUM Creating Shared Value vs. Corporate Social Responsibility: Revolution or Rhetoric? Jocelyn Hanna, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Bree Devin, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA CSR Narratives by Global Fashion Brands in Social Media after Rana Plaza Collapse in Bangladesh Suwichit Chaidaroon, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Angela Mak, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Rizwan Sharif, U of Liberal Arts Bangladesh, BANGLADESH Respondent Alison N. Novak, Rowan U, USA 3649 Friday 15:30-16:45 Board Room Top Papers in Organizational Communication Organizational Communication Chair Bart J. van den Hooff, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Frame Mismatch: How Framing Communication as Transmission Hinders Interdisciplinary Collaboration William C. Barley, U of Illinois, USA Kaitlyn Childs, U of Illinois, USA Hallie Workman, U of Illinois, USA Ly Dinh, U of Illinois, USA Organizational Dissent, Workplace Freedom of Speech, and Organizational Assimilation: Differences Between State-Owned, Private-Owned, and Foreign-Invested Enterprises in China Cheng Zeng, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Xuejun Cui, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Chen Hui, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Did You Receive What We Provided? A Study of the Coevolving Resource Networks after a Technological Disaster Chih-Hui Lai, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Chen-Chao Tao, National Chiao Tung U, TAIWAN Yu-Chung Cheng, Hsuan Chuang U, TAIWAN How Communication Impacts Team Performance: Exploring Collective Intelligence and Transactive Memory System as Mechanisms Young Ji Kim, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Ishani Aggarwal, FGV Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration, BRAZIL Anita Williams Woolley, Carnegie Mellon U, USA Respondent Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 3650 Friday 15:30-16:45 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: Media and Migration: Theory, Research, and Teaching Sponsored Sessions Chairs Cynthia Wang, U of Southern California, USA Sarah C Bishop, Baruch College, USA Kent A Ono, U of Utah, USA The goal of this workshop is to collaboratively create a collection of theories and methods to be applied to the research and teaching of the intersection of media and migration, and to address challenges unique to this subfield. Participants will also contribute to a reading list for research and teaching along these themes. 3651 Friday 15:30-16:45 Anzu Intergroup Communication Interest Group Top Papers Intergroup Communication Chair Janice Krieger, U of Florida, USA Participants Identity Continuity and Intergenerational Communication as Predictors of Young Adults’ Evaluations of Older Adults and Attitudes Toward Aging Jessica Gasiorek, U of Hawaii, USA Nurses’ Perceptions of Communicating With Minority Parents in a Neonatal Nursery: A Communication Accommodation Theory Approach Liz Jones, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA Nicola Sheeran, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA Hanna Lanyon, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA Karina Evans, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA The Role of Processing Fluency and Group Prototypicality in the Language Attitudes Process Marko Dragojevic, U of Kentucky, USA Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Unum and Pluribus: Ideological Underpinnings of the Public Discourse on Race and Ethnicity Young Yun Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA 3652 Friday 15:30-16:45 Hagi 3653 Friday 15:30-18:15 Fuji Sports Communication Business Meeting Sports Communication Review of activities, planning of new activities and initiatives, and recognition of top paper winners. Extended Session: LGBTQ Europe, US, and Networks Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Feminist Scholarship Mobile Communication Political Communication Communication and Technology Communication History Chairs Maria Teresa Soto-Sanfiel, U Autonoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Nicole Dahmen, U of Oregon, USA David Craig, U of Southern California, USA Participants Transnational Homosexuals in Socialist Poland: The Case of the Filo Zine (1986-1990) Lukasz Szulc, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Immigration, Desire, Social Media: Online Dating and Social Networks Among Gay Immigrants in Denmark Andrew Shield, Roskilde U, DENMARK Gay the Right Way Mundane Queer Flaming Practices When Discussing Politics Online Jakob Svensson, Uppsala U, SWEDEN Explicit Lesbian Sex in the Enjoyment of Movies Maria Teresa Soto-Sanfiel, U Autonoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Adriana Ibiti, U Autònoma de Barcelona, SPAIN From Stonewall to Tiffany’s Ernest Raymond Rice, U of Florida, USA The Transgender Body as Artistic Creation: Journalists' Aesthetic Evaluations of Transgender Identity Thomas J. Billard, U of Southern California, USA Defending the Family and Faith: The Proclamation on the Family, Plausibility Structures, and Mormon Identity David William Scott, Utah Valley U, USA Boyd Petersen, Utah Valley U, USA Comparing Public Will For and Against Same-Sex Marriage Charles T. Salmon, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Franklin J. Boster, Michigan State U, USA Thanomwong Poorisat, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE A “Picture Perfect” Union: Photographic Framing of the 2013 and 2015 U.S. Supreme Court Rulings on Marriage Equality Nicole Dahmen, U of Oregon, USA Kyle McDaniel, U of Oregon, USA David Morris II, U of Oregon, USA Negotiating Sexuality and Social Identity: An Analysis of Online Personal Ads in China Fangfang Gao, Zhejiang U, CHINA An Aggregated Interface of Xingtian Gods in Synopticon: Theorizing the Picture of Using Western Gay LBRTD App in a Chinese Perspective Cheng-Nan Hou, I-Shou U, TAIWAN “The Shade of It All ”: Affect, Resistance, and the RuPaul’s Drag Race Keyboard App (WORK IN PROGRESS) Kate Miltner, U of Southern California, USA “She’s Your Everything”: Depictions of the #lesbiancouple on Instagram Stefanie Duguay, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Don't Wait for the World to be Ready: The Rise of the LGBT Social Media Entrepreneur David Craig, U of Southern California, USA Stuart Duncan Cunningham, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA This extended session presents three fast sessions: 1. Flaming, Zines, Networks, and Desire: LGBTQ Europe; 2. Progress and Unrest: U.S. News and Politics; 3. Queerly Connected: Social Media and Mobile Apps 3654 Friday 15:30-16:45 Sakura Mediatization: Theoretical and Empirical Developments Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Melissa Aronczyk, Rutgers U, USA Participants Mediatization is Ordinary: A Cultural Materialist View of Mediatization Andre Jansson, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Mediatization: Reframing the Analysis of ‘Media Effects’ Stig Hjarvard, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK The Gamification of Society: The Use of Game Mechanics as an Expression of Mediatization Raul Ferrer Conill, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Reinhard Handler, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Where the Fluid and the Stable Meet: Making a Home in/With/Through the Media Maren Hartmann, U of the Arts Berlin, GWK, GERMANY 3660 Friday 15:30-16:45 Olive Political Communication: Where Have We Been, Where Are We going Political Communication Chair Peter Van Aelst, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Participants Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Robert M. Entman, George Washington U, USA Shanto Iyengar, Stanford U, USA Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Toril Aalberg, Norwegian U of Science and Technology - Trondheim, NORWAY Sebastian Valenzuela, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN What are the biggest accomplishments of political communication studies during the last decades? What are the main shortcomings and challenges? What are the main societal concerns that our field should address in the future? How is our field doing in terms of organization? Are we inclusive enough or does the Western bias remains as big as ever? … These and other relevant questions from the audience will be addressed by a panel of leading scholars in the field. 3661 Friday 15:30-16:45 Sage Open and Closed: Communication, Culture, and the Visibility of Power in the Cold War United States Communication History Participants The Emergence of Transparency in U.S. Politics, Media, and Society in the Cold War Era Michael Schudson, Columbia U, USA Journalism as Power: James Baldwin, Presidents, Protest, and Social Change Kathy Roberts Forde, U of Massachusetts, USA Computerized Credit Bureaus and the Rise of the Personal Information Economy Josh Lauer, U of New Hampshire, USA Missiles, Madness, and the Postwar Origins of the Media Conglomerate Richard K. Popp, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Respondent Victor W. Pickard, U of Pennsylvania, USA In the US during much of the Cold War, prevailing notions of power tended to characterize it as institutional in nature. Whether vested in interest groups – big business, big labor, big government – analyzed by political scientists, the alienating “system” called out by the New Left, or the meddlesome “New Class” that, according to neoconservatives, reigned supreme over media and education, power was generally understood as residing behind closed doors. Yet paradoxically, the postwar US was also scene to what historians have called a “democratic revolution.” From this perspective, power was increasingly up for grabs to those who would claim it. This panel explores how changes in media and communication shaped a cultural landscape striated by seemingly contradictory conceptions of power. 3720 Friday 17:00-18:15 Argos C CCA and KACA Joint Paper Session Sponsored Sessions Chairs Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA Eyun-Jung Ki, U of Alabama, USA Participants The Dual Impact of Social Media Under Networked Authoritarianism: Social Media Use, Civic Attitudes, and System Support in China Xueqing Li, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Francis L. F. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Location Speaks: Using GIS Approach and Weibo Check-In Data to Understand Information Communication in China Kun Xu, Temple U, USA Motivation for Social Media Use and Impact on Political Participation in China: A Cognitive and Communication Mediation Approach Zhuo Chen, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Michael Che Ming Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Effect of Congruence Between Consumers’ Ideal Self-Image and Celebrity Endorser’s Image on Advertising Effectiveness (KACA Top Faculty Paper) Qian Xu, Changzhou Daily Newspaper, , CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Doohwang Lee, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sungmin Kang, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Inventing Tradition, Branding Nation: Constructing South Korea’s National Identity in Historical Faction Dramas (KACA Top Student Paper) Kyung Sun Lee, U of Texas, USA Jennifer Minsoo Kang, U of Texas, USA How the Media Effects Schema and the Persuasion Schema Affect Responses to Antismoking Campaign Messages Hye-Jin Paek, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Thomas Hove, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Respondents Nan Yu, North Dakota State U, USA Ke Xue, Shanghai Jiao Tong U, CHINA Yan Yan, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 3721 Friday 17:00-18:15 Argos D 3722 Friday 17:00-18:15 Argos E Information Systems Business Meeting Information Systems For the Greater Good: New Approaches in Serious Games Game Studies Chair Ruud Jacobs, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants A Validation-Oriented Approach to Persuasive Games Ruud Jacobs, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jeroen Jansz, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Examining the Psychosocial Effects Between Exergames and Traditional Exercise on Older Adults With Subthreshold Depression Jinhui Li, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Yin-Leng Theng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Schubert Foo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Learning About the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Through Computerized Simulations: The Case of Global Conflicts Ronit Kampf, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Nathan Stolero, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Safety in Numbers: Online Community Sizes in Response to Digital Human Predation Nathaniel D. Poor, independent scholar, USA Testing the Effects of Administering a Pretest on the Effectiveness Assessment of a Hospital Fire Safety Game Anissa All, Ghent U, BELGIUM Barbara Plovie, U College West-Flanders, BELGIUM Elena Nunez Castellar, Ghent U, BELGIUM Jan Van Looy, Ghent U, BELGIUM 3723 Friday 17:00-18:15 Argos F Parenting, Family Communication, and Child Outcomes Interpersonal Communication Chair Haley Horstman, U of Missouri, USA Participants College Student Adjustment in the United States and Belgium: Family Communication Patterns, Advice, and Support Elizabeth Dorrance Hall, Utah State U, USA Jenna McNallie, West Virginia Wesleyan College, USA Kathleen Custers, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Elisabeth Timmermans, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Steven Robert Wilson, Purdue U, USA Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Communicated Meaning-Making in Foster Families: Relationships Between Foster Parents’ Entrance Narratives and Foster Child Well-Being Leslie Nelson, U of Missouri, USA Haley Horstman, U of Missouri, USA Is Parenting Everything in Family Communication?: The Association of Parenting Styles With Family Communication Patterns Ascan F. Koerner, U of Minnesota, USA Lucas Youngvorst, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA Uncertainty Issues, Management, and Transformation in Adult Children’s Stories of Their Estrangement With Their Parents Kristina M. Scharp, Utah State U, USA Rachel McLaren, U of Iowa, USA Verbal Versus Nonverbal Primacy: Children’s Response to Incongruent Parental Communication Tsfira Grebelsky-Lichtman, Hebrew U and Ono Academic College, ISRAEL 3724 Friday 17:00-18:15 Navis A Journalistic Roles: Perception, Performance, Identity Journalism Studies Chair David H. Weaver, Indiana U, USA Participants The Influence of Internet Adoption and Political Ideology on Media Role Perceptions: Another Look at Chinese Journalists in Social Transition Chuanli Xia, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Fei Chris Shen, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zhi'an Zhang, Sun Yat-sen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Tao Wu, Sun Yat-sen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Journalistic Roles and the Struggle Over Professional Identity: The Discursive Constitution of Journalism Thomas Hanitzsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Tim P. Vos, U of Missouri, USA Looking on From the Sideline: Perceived Role Congruity of Women Sport Journalists Michael Mudrick, York College of Pennsylvania, USA Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA The Networks of Journalistic Role Performances in Different Media Systems: The Co-Occurrence of Professional Roles and Journalistic Sources in Chile and the United States Lea C. Hellmueller, Texas Tech U, USA Claudia Mellado, Pontificia U Católica de Valparaiso, CHILE Respondent Mark Deuze, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 3725 Friday 17:00-18:15 Navis B Health Communication Business Meeting Health Communication Chair Kevin B. Wright, George Mason U, USA Participants Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA Nadine A. Yehya, American U of Beirut, LEBANON Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell U, USA Holley A. Wilkin, Georgia State U, USA 3726 Friday 17:00-18:15 Navis C Using Big Data to Examine Science Communication and Research Communties Communication and Technology Chair Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of Washington, USA Participants Temporal Patterns of Scientific Information-Seeking on Google and Wikipedia Elad Segev, Sapir Academic College, ISRAEL Aviv Sharon, Technion - Israeli Institute of Technology, ISRAEL Acquiring Science Knowledge From Social Media: An extension of the Cognitive Mediation Model Shirley S. Ho, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Xiaodong Yang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Amber Thanwarani, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Juliana Maria Chan, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Selling Science 2.0: What Scientific Projects Receive Crowdfunding Online? Mike S. Schaefer, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Julia Metag, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Digital Technologies in the Research Process: Lessons From the Digital Research Community in the UK Panayiota Tsatsou, U of Leicester - Department of Media and Communication, UNITED KINGDOM Stick or Carrot Grantseeking Motivation and Search Investment Bob Robbert Nicolai van de Velde, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Ivar Vermeulen, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 3730 Friday 17:00-18:15 Nire Erosion of Responsibilities: A Multiperspective Approach to the Assessment of Responsibility in Public Discourse Theme Sessions Chair Kerstin Thummes, U of Muenster, GERMANY Participants Challenges of Responsibility in Political Online Communication Patrick Donges, U of Leipzig, GERMANY Paula Nitschke, U of Greifswald, GERMANY Corporate Social Irresponsibility (CSI) and Media Companies Klaus-Dieter Altmeppen, Catholic U of Eichstatt-Ingolstadt, GERMANY Isabel Winkler, Catholic U of Eichstatt-Ingolstadt, GERMANY Public Discourse on the Responsibility of Corporations – the Perspective of Citizens Kerstin Thummes, U of Muenster, GERMANY Ulrike Roettger, U of Muenster, GERMANY Responsibilities of Recipients as Prosumers Alexander Filipovic, Munich School of Philosophy, GERMANY Respondent Diana Ingenhoff, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND 3731 Friday 17:00-18:15 Kusu Communication Infrastructure and the Social Shaping of Technology Communication and Technology Chair Elizabeth Newbury, Cornell U, USA Participants The Social Shaping of the Brazilian Internet: Historicizing the Interactions Between States, Corporations, and NGOs in Information and Communication Technology Development and Diffusion Stuart Davis, U of Texas, USA Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas, USA Martha Fuentes-Bautista, U of Massachusetts, USA Jeremiah P. Spence, U of Texas, USA Discrimination in Online Contracting: Evidence From Latin America Hernan Galperin, U of Southern California, USA Toward a New Framework for Digital Piracy: Technology and Network Beyond the “Social” Gwangseok Kim, U of Massachusetts, USA The Spaces of Digital Urbanism Aaron Shapiro, U of Pennsylvania, USA 3732 Friday 17:00-18:15 Kashi Language and Social Interaction Business Meeting Language & Social Interaction Chair Alena L. Vasilyeva, U of Massachusetts Amherst, USA Participants Jessica Sarah Robles, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM David Boromisza-Habashi, U of Colorado, USA Jimmie Manning, Northern Illinois U, USA 3733 Friday 17:00-18:15 Kaede Intercultural Communication Business Meeting Intercultural Communication Chair Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Participants Chia-Fang (Sandy) Hsu, U of Wyoming, USA Sorin Nastasia, Southern Illinois U, USA 3740 Friday 17:00-18:15 Rigel 3741 Friday 17:00-18:15 Vega 3742 Friday 17:00-18:15 Kiku Global Communication and Social Change Business Meeting Global Communication and Social Change Participants Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA William Lafi Youmans, George Washington U, USA Ying Wang, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Mass Communication Business Meeting Mass Communication Participants Shawnika Jeanine Hull, George Washington U, USA Young Mie Kim, U of Wisconsin, USA Smartphones (High-Density Session) Mobile Communication Chair Thilo von Pape, U Hohenheim, GERMANY Participants Boredom in Free Time: Relationships With Smartphone Activities, Flow Experience, and Multitasking Louis W. Leung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA Waiting for Recreation? The Impact of Smartphone Usage on Recovery Experiences and Cognitive Performance Diana Rieger, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Dorothee Hefner, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Lena Frischlich, U of Cologne, GERMANY Message Design Matters: The Effectiveness of Location Congruency and Openness in Smartphone Ads Paul Ketelaar, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Loes Janssen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Marnix Van Gisbergen, U of Applied Sciences Breda, THE NETHERLANDS Arief Huhn, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS Thabo J. Joshua van Woudenberg, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Jonathan Vantriet, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Stefan F. Bernritter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Yik Yak and the Site Specificity of Anonymity Jordan H. Frith, U of North Texas, USA Does Smartphone Make People Smart? A Conditional Indirect Effect of Smartphone Use for News on Political Knowledge Yonghwan Kim, U of Alabama, USA Hsuan-Ting Chen, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Bumsoo Kim, U of Alabama, USA Motivations and Habits of Mobile Micronews Consumption Donghee Yvette Wohn, New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA Changing the Setting: A Nudge Towards More Privacy in the App Market Leyla Dogruel, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Sven Joeckel, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Locked Down, Shielded From Danger: Developing Mobile App Icons to Prime Privacy and Security Thoughts Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Leyla Dogruel, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Sven Joeckel, U of Erfurt, GERMANY 3743 Friday 17:00-18:15 Ran 3745 Friday 17:00-18:15 Sumire 3746 Friday 17:00-18:15 Koh 3747 Friday 17:00-18:15 Yoh Visual Communication Studies Business Meeting Visual Communication Studies Participants Michael Grimm, Hans-Bredow-Institut für Medienforschung, GERMANY Catherine L. Preston, U of Kansas, USA Instructional and Developmental Communication Business Meeting Instructional & Developmental Communication Participants Aaron R. Boyson, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Stephanie Kelly, North Carolina A&T State U, USA Michelle T. Violanti, U of Tennessee, USA CJ Claus, California State U, Stanislaus, USA Feminist Scholarship Business Meeting Feminist Scholarship All are welcome to learn more about the Feminist Scholarship Division and how to get involved. What We Don't Yet Know About Satire Popular Communication Political Communication Participants The Forgotten History of Satire Research Stephen Harrington, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Satire 2.0: Exploring the Institutionalization of Political Satire in a Post-Stewart/Colbert Television Landscape Geoffrey Baym, Temple U, USA Embracing the Bile: The Political Purpose of Anger Jonathan Alan Gray, U of Wisconsin, USA Rapping about Rape: Towards a Feminist Perspective on Satire Amber Day, Bryant U, USA Viveca Greene, Hampshire College, USA In the Know: The Audience for Satire Susan Eiisabeth Turnbull, U of Wollongong, AUSTRALIA Satire's Production Cultures Nick Marx, Colorado State U, USA Satire has become a site of intense academic attention across several disciplines over the last decade, attracting curiosity regarding its social, cultural and – in particular – political functions around the globe. In spite of all this attention, however, research into satire has been limited in a number of ways: by disciplinary boundaries, geographic or temporal constraints, methodological weaknesses, or other factors which have prevented a more fulsome understanding of how satire works in our culture. This roundtable panel therefore brings together scholars from the field across the globe, and aims to interrogate the gaps in the research to date, and/or future directions for satire research. What don't we know yet? And, where should we go from here? 3748 Friday 17:00-18:15 Kei Top Student Papers in Public Relations Public Relations Chair Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants Pulling Together and Tearing Apart: Power Games in the Occupational Branding of Public Relations and the Management of Tainted Work Christina Grandien, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Advancing Agenda-Building: Exploring Causal Relationships Tiffany Lynn Schweickart, U of Florida, USA Lauren Furey, U of Florida, USA Examining Social Risks and NPOs in China: Applying the RISP Model to Publics’ Prosocial Intentions Anli Xiao, Pennsylvania State U, USA Holly Ott, Pennsylvania State U, USA Ruobing Li, Pennsylvania State U, USA Respondent Adam Saffer, U of North Carolina, USA 3749 Friday 17:00-18:15 Board Room Organizational Communication Business Meeting Organizational Communication Chair Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA Participants Jennifer L. Gibbs, Rutgers U, USA Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA Scott G. Banghart, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 3750 Friday 17:00-18:15 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: Crossing Boundaries: Integrating Multidisciplinary Research on User Comments Sections and Setting a New Research Agenda Sponsored Sessions Chairs Nina Springer, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY Marc Ziegele, U of Mainz, GERMANY Pablo B. Jost, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY The workshop brings together international scholars working on the phenomenon of user comments in different ICA divisions and with different theoretical and/or methodological approaches. Its aim is to initiate a discussion exceeding the boundaries of the various scientific fields, resulting in a synthesis of the individual projects’ findings. One aspect of this synthesis will be to provide answers to the questions whether user comments are beneficial or harmful for a) individual users (micro perspective), b) news organizations (meso perspective), and c) societal systems as a whole (macro perspective). The second aspect of the synthesis will focus on how synergies can be realized across the different areas of comment-related research that can lead to the raising of funds for new projects. 3751 Friday 17:00-18:15 Anzu 3752 Friday 17:00-18:15 Hagi Intergroup Communication Business Meeting Intergroup Communication Chair Janice Krieger, U of Florida, USA Ideas, Power, and Accountability in Media Policy Communication Law & Policy Chair Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Participants Bias, Silence, Capture: Communicative Power in Media Policymaking Christopher Ali, U of Virginia, USA Manuel Puppis, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND UNESCO and Universal Access to Cyberspace: Analysing the Role of Power and Ideas in the Emergence of International Policy Discourse Julia Pohle, WZB Berlin Social Science Center, GERMANY Measuring Media Accountability in Europe: A Comparative Study of Infrastructures of Media Self-Regulation in 30 European States Tobias Eberwein, Alpen Adria U, AUSTRIA Susanne Fengler, U Dortmund - Communication Studies Department, GERMANY Katja Kaufmann, Alpen Adria U, AUSTRIA Janis Brinkmann, U Dortmund - Communication Studies Department, GERMANY Matthias Karmasin, Alpen Adria U, AUSTRIA Governance by Algorithms: Reality Construction by Algorithmic Selection on the Internet Natascha Just, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Michael Latzer, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND 3754 Friday 17:00-18:15 Sakura The Power of Partnership: Communication Studies and U.S.-Japanese Collaborations in Higher Education Sponsored Sessions Chair Paaige Kelle Turner, Webster U, USA Participants Susan Sutton, Bryn Mawr College, USA Deborah Fields, Utah State U, USA Stephanie Weston, Fukuoka U, JAPAN Margot Carrington, U.S. Embassy- Tokyo, USA Hiroshi Ota, Hitotsubashi U, JAPAN Kosaku Dairokuno, Meiji U, JAPAN Respondent Eric W. Rothenbuhler, Webster U, USA 3760 Friday 17:00-18:15 Olive 3761 Friday 17:00-18:15 Sage 3820 Friday 18:30-19:45 Argos C Political Communication Business Meeting Political Communication Chair Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Communication History Business Meeting Communication History Chair Richard K. Popp, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA CCA Joint Reception With KACA, Peking University, and Xiamen University Sponsored Sessions Chair Bu Zhong, Pennsylvania State U, USA Respondents Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA Gang Han, Iowa State U, USA 3824 Friday 18:30-20:00 Navis A ICA Fellows Panel - I Sponsored Sessions Chair Akiba A. Cohen, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Participants Leveraging Computational Social Science to Address Grand Societal Changes Noshir S. Contractor, Northwestern U, USA Communication Power Shifts and the Rise of the Fifth Estate William H. Dutton, Michigan State U, USA The Role of Mass Media Before, During and After Critical Events Hans Mathias Kepplinger, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Science, Community, and Communication: A New Paradigmatic View Hak-Soo Kim, Sogang U - Seoul, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF ICA honors its new Fellows each year with a special panel that focuses on their life work and contributions to the field of communication. A reception will follow the session. 3825 Friday 18:30-19:45 Navis B Health Communication Reception Health Communication Chair Kevin B. Wright, George Mason U, USA Participants Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA Nadine A. Yehya, American U of Beirut, LEBANON Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell U, USA Holley A. Wilkin, Georgia State U, USA 3832 Friday 18:30-19:45 Kashi Language and Social Interaction Reception Language & Social Interaction Chair Alena L. Vasilyeva, U of Massachusetts, USA Participants Jessica Sarah Robles, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM David Boromisza-Habashi, U of Colorado, USA Jimmie Manning, Northern Illinois U, USA 3833 Friday 18:30-19:45 Kaede 3840 Friday 18:30-19:45 Rigel 3849 Friday 18:30-19:45 Board Room 3849 Friday 18:30-19:45 Board Room 3854 Friday 18:30-19:45 Sakura Intercultural Communication Reception Intercultural Communication Global Communication and Social Change Reception Global Communication and Social Change Participants Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA William Lafi Youmans, George Washington U, USA Ying Wang, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Organizational Communication and Public Relations Joint Reception Organizational Communication Public Relations and Organizational Joint Reception Public Relations Participants Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Elena Alina Dolea, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA Lee Edwards, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM The Power of Partnership: Reception Sponsored Sessions 3860 Friday 18:30-19:45 Olive 3861 Friday 18:30-19:45 Sage 3861 Friday 18:30-19:45 Sage 3861 Friday 18:30-19:45 Sage 3861 Friday 18:30-19:45 Sage Political Communication Reception Political Communication Chair Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Communication History, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Studies, Mobile Communication, and Sports Communication Joint Reception Communication History Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Sports Communication Mobile Communication Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, & Queer Studies/Communication History/Mobile Communication/Sports Communication Joint Reception Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Communication History Mobile Communication Sports Communication Mobile Communication/Communication History/Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, & Queer Studies Joint Reception Mobile Communication Communication History Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Sports Communication, Communication History, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies, and Mobile Communication Reception Sports Communication Communication History Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Mobile Communication Chair Andrew C. Billings, U of Alabama, USA 3971 ICA Student and Early Career Reception Friday 20:00-22:00 Bay Penthouse Sponsored Sessions 4071 ICA Fellows' Breakfast Saturday 07:00-08:30 Bay Penthouse Sponsored Sessions 4020 Alternative Inroads Into Web History: The Role of Videotext/Teletext and Other Developments in Europe and Asia Saturday 08:00-09:15 Argos C Chair Akiba A. Cohen, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Communication History Chairs Hilde Dy Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp - Department of Communication Studies, BELGIUM Hallvard Moe, U of Bergen, NORWAY Participants Blurred Lines: Fantasy, Anxiety, and Trust in the History of Technology Carolyn Marvin, U of Pennsylvania, USA Hidden In Plain Sight: The Role of European Teletext In the Development Of the Web Hilde Dy Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Hallvard Moe, U of Bergen, NORWAY Videotex and teletext in France: From Innovative Social Media to Objects of Technological and Cultural Memory. Lyombe S. Eko, Texas Tech U, USA Alternative Web Histories: Asia-Pacific Internets and Their Imaginaries Gerard Michael Goggin, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Mark McLelland, U of Wollongong, AUSTRALIA Haiqing Yu, U of New South Wales, AUSTRALIA Kwang-Suk LEE, Seoul National U of Science and Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Leslie M. Tkach-Kawasaki, U of Tsukuba, JAPAN Tamura Takanori, Hosei U, JAPAN Hamada Tadahisa, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Cesar A Albarran Torres, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA This panel aims to fill some of the gaps in the history of the web and digital media by focusing on the role of media like videotex and teletext and other developments that helped pave the way. To this end, it moves beyond the purely technological to include functions (services offered) and uses of various media, beyond old distinctions between mass media and telecommunications or broadcast communication and consultation; and beyond a U.S. focus by bringing together contributions from across the globe. 4021 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Argos D Advances in Audience Research Information Systems Chair Rachel L. Bailey, Washington State U, USA Participants From Labels to Explanations: An Integrative Framework for Attitudinal Media Effects Research (FrAMER) Lennert Coenen, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Healthy Food Identification: Food Cues, Health Claims, and Health Halos Adrienne Fayola Muldrow, Washington State U, USA Rachel L. Bailey, Washington State U, USA Impacts of a Character’s Morality on Audience Perspective Taking and Audience Explanations for Character Behavior Shuo Zhou, Cornell U, USA Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA Conceptual and Methodological Considerations for Information Engagement Research Lourdes Martinez, San Diego State U, USA Andy SL Tan, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard School of Public Health, USA Nehama Lewis, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Do Stereotypes in the Media Impair Members of Stereotyped Groups? A Meta-Analysis on Stereotype Threat Markus Appel, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Silvana Weber, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Electroencephalographic Reponses to Gay Imagery in Advertising Glenna Lee Read, Indiana U, USA Irene Ingeborg van Driel, Indiana U, USA Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA Nudging Our Way to a Healthier Population: The Effect of Calorie Labeling and Self-Control on Menu Choices of Emerging Adults Camella Rising, George Mason U, USA Nadine Bol, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Situational and Issue Involvement as Determinants of Search Engine Usage Behavior Julian Unkel, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY Alexander T. Haas, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY 4022 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Argos E CAT Hybrid Session 2: Virtual Experiences and Interaction Communication and Technology Chair Elizabeth Newbury, Cornell U, USA Participants Communication Channel and Social Presence in the Formation of Transactive Memory in Video Game Teams Adam S. Kahn, Western Michigan U, USA How Coping With Emotions Shapes Perceptions of Social Healthcare Robots Marloes Spekman, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Johan F. Hoorn, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS KITT, Please Stop Distracting Me: Examining the Effects of Communication in Cars and Social Presence on Safe Driving Rabindra A. Ratan, Michigan State U, USA Frank Verberne, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS Young June Sah, Michigan State U, USA Dave Miller, Stanford U, USA Rob Semmens, Stanford U, USA Will Renius, Michigan State U, USA The Effects of Thermal Feedback on Users’ Virtual Experiences in a Virtual Tour of the Solar System Doohwang Lee, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Young-Nam Seo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Minkyung Kim, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Wooyeong Kil, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Youngjin Choi, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Reimagining Disability in Virtual Worlds: Avatar Representation Through the Lens of Uses and Gratifications Donna Z. Davis, U of Oregon, USA Derek Moscato, U of Oregon, USA The Effects of Intuition-Based Real Hand Controller Interface on Users’ Virtual Experiences in a Virtual Jenga Game Doohwang Lee, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Young-Nam Seo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Minkyung Kim, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyobeom Seo, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jung-Min Park, Center for Robotics Research, Korea Institute of Science and Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Influence of Immersive System Features and Potential Interactions on User Presence Ketaki Shriram, Stanford U, USA James J. Cummings, Boston U, USA Soo Youn Oh, Stanford U, USA Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA Bireswar Laha, Stanford U, USA What You See is What You Get: Channel Dominance in the Decoding of Affective Nonverbal Behavior Displayed by Avatars Daniel Roth, U of Cologne, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Carola Bloch, U of Cologne, GERMANY Anne-Kathrin Wilbers, U of Cologne, GERMANY Marc Latoschik, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Kai Kaspar, U of Cologne, GERMANY Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY 4023 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Argos F Key Challenges in Qualitative Organizational Communication Research Organizational Communication Chair Boris H. J. M. Brummans, U of Montreal, CANADA Participants Reflexivity, Relevance, and Embeddness Ann Cunliffe, U of Bradford, UNITED KINGDOM Mixed Methods Research in Organizational Communication: Challenges and Opportunities Jody Jahn, U of Colorado, USA The Myth of Qualitative Methods in Organizational Communication Research Robert L Krizek, Saint Louis U, USA The Paradox of Longitudinality: Making External Decisions to Understand the Internal Dynamics of Organizational Phenomena Thomas Martine, U de Montreal, CANADA Represent, Re-present, Present Paaige Kelle Turner, Webster U, USA 4024 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Navis A Online Comments and the News Journalism Studies Mobile Communication Chair Daniel Kreiss, U of North Carolina, USA Participants Commenting on the News: Explaining the Degree and Quality of User Comments on News Websites Thomas Burton Ksiazek, Villanova U, USA Commenting User Networks: Two Case Studies on Interactions and Behavioral Self-Regulation in Comments Sections Nina Springer, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY Christian Nuernbergk, Ludwig Maximilians U - Munich, GERMANY User Experiences With Editorial Control in Online Comments Sections After the 2011 Terror Attacks in Norway Anders Sundness Loevlie, IT U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Karoline Andrea Ihlebaek, U of Oslo, NORWAY Anders Olof Larsson, Westerdals Oslo School of Arts, Communication and Technology, NORWAY Mind The Less Educated Extremist: What Motivates Engagement With Online News? Jan Boehmer, U of Miami, USA Armando Rubi III, U of Miami, USA Respondent Tanja Katarina Aitamurto, Stanford U, USA 4025 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Navis B Health Communication Advertising and Advertisements Health Communication Chair Arulchelvan Sriram, Anna U, INDIA Participants Creating Demand for Abortion Service: A Content Analysis of Chinese Television Abortion Advertisements Qinyu E, Communication U of China, CHINA Catherine Elise Goodall, Ohio State U, USA Exposure to Direct-to-Consumer Advertising for Statin Drugs is Associated With More Frequent Visits to Fast Food Restaurants and Exercise Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell U, USA Rosemary Jane Avery, Cornell U, USA Maxwell Kellogg, Cornell U, USA Alan D. Mathios, Cornell U, USA How Consumer Health Consciousness and Perceived Healthiness of Fast Food Restaurant Brands Influence Consumer Reactions to Nutrient Claimed Advertisements Hojoon Choi, U of Houston, USA Leonard Reid, U of Georgia, USA Three Pink Decades: Breast Cancer Coverage in Magazine Advertisements Niveen AbiGhannam, U of Texas, USA Lindsay Alfieri Chilek, U of Texas, USA Hyeseung Elizabeth Koh, U of Texas, USA Youth Receptivity to FDA’s "The Real Cost" Tobacco Prevention Campaign: Evidence From Message Pretesting Xiaoquan Zhao, George Mason U, USA Tesfa Alexander, U.S. Food & Drug Administration, USA Leah Hoffman, U.S. Food & Drug Administration, USA Chaunetta Jones, U.S. Food & Drug Administration, USA Amanda Berger, U.S. Food & Drug Administration, USA Matthew Walker, U.S. Food & Drug Administration, USA Emily Talbert, U.S. Food & Drug Administration, USA 4026 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Navis C Selfies and Self-Presentation Online Communication and Technology Chair Nicole Ellison, U of Michigan, USA Participants Managing the Online Self: Identity Shift and Dimensions of "Publicness" in Online Social Communication Sophie F Waterloo, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Dian Afina de Vries, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Understanding the Antecedents of Selfie-Posting on Social Networking Sites Eunice Kim, U of Florida, USA Jung-Ah Lee, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sejung Marina Choi, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yongjun Sung, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Selective Self-Presentation and Social Comparison Differences Among Women and Men via Photographs on Social Networking Sites Jesse Fox, Ohio State U, USA Megan Ashley Vendemia, Ohio State U, USA Selfies and Romantic Relationships: Self-Projection via Online Images Associated With Lower Quality of Romantic Relationships Daniel Halpern Halpern, Pontifical Catholic U of Chile, CHILE James E. Katz, Boston U, USA Addressing the Audience: Effects of Evaluation on Identity Shift in Computer-Mediated Environments Megan French, Stanford U, USA Jeff Hancock, Cornell U, USA 4030 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Nire College Health Promotion: Drinking, Substance Abuse, Sexual Assault Health Communication Chair YoungJu Shin, Indiana U Purdue U Indianapolis, USA Participants Attitude and Norm Accessibility: Predicting Drinking and Smoking Intentions Among First-Year College Students Sarah Thomas, Ohio State U, USA Bridget Potocki, Ohio State U, USA Nancy Rhodes, Michigan State U, USA Christopher Loiewski, Ohio State U, USA Kevin Collier, Brigham Young U, USA Lindsey Morr, U of San Diego, USA Prototypes of Drinkers and Injunctive Norms Predict College Drinking Nancy Rhodes, Michigan State U, USA Christopher Loiewski, Ohio State U, USA Rachel Ralston, Ohio State U, USA Bridget Potocki, Ohio State U, USA Sarah Thomas, Ohio State U, USA Kevin Collier, Brigham Young U, USA Lindsey Morr, U of San Diego, USA Social Mediation of Persuasive Media in Adolescent Substance Prevention William D. Crano, Claremont Graduate U, USA Eusebio Martins Alvaro, Claremont Graduate U, USA Jason T Siegel, Claremont Graduate U, USA Cara N. Tan, Claremont Graduate U, USA Understanding the Normative Mechanisms in the Theory of Normative Social Behavior in College Drinking: Considering the Role of Close vs. Distal Peer Injunctive Norms and Interdependent Self-Construal Bo Yang, U of Maryland, USA “When Colleges Fail Us All” Campus Sexual Assault: Formative Survey Research on College Student Perceptions Attribution of Responsibility, and Preventive Behaviors Jane O'Boyle, U of South Carolina, USA Jo-Yun (Queenie) Li, U of South Carolina, USA 4031 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Kusu Self-Disclosure and Privacy in Social Media Communication and Technology Chair Carmina Teresa Rodriguez Hidalgo, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants An Extended Privacy Calculus Model for SNSs: Analyzing Self-Disclosure and Privacy Behaviors in a U.S. Representative Sample Tobias Dienlin, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Miriam Metzger, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA How Cognitive Heuristics Influence Online Privacy: Mediating Effects of Behavior Rationales for Disclosure Jinyoung Kim, Pennsylvania State U, USA S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA Risks, Uses, and Habits of Self-Disclosure on Facebook: Examining the Privacy Paradox Using the Reasoned Action Approach Julia Niemann, Hanover U of Music, Drama and Media, GERMANY Why Self-Disclosure Despite Concern? Svenja Schaefer, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Helmut Scherer, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Balancing Privacy Concerns and Impression Management Strategies on Social Media Platforms Jessica Vitak, U of Maryland, USA 4032 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Kashi Covering Science and Health Journalism Studies Chair Avery E. Holton, U of Utah, USA Participants A Question of Newsworthiness: Identifying and Reasoning the Common Selection Criteria of Science Writers From Argentina, France, and Germany Lars Guenther, Stellenbosch U, SOUTH AFRICA Cecilia Rosen, Center for Studies on Science, Development and Higher Educacation, ARGENTINA Klara Froehlich, U of Paris 8, FRANCE Bridging a Gap? Mapping the Science Coverage of South African Newspapers Lars Guenther, Stellenbosch U, SOUTH AFRICA Marina Joubert, Stellenosch U/CREST, SOUTH AFRICA Peter Weingart, Stellenbosch U/CREST, SOUTH AFRICA Journalistic Role Perceptions in Public Health Crises Celine Klemm, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Enny Henrica Das, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Tilo Hartmann, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Scientific Evidence and Mass Media: Investigating the Journalistic Intention to Represent Scientific Uncertainty Lars Guenther, Stellenbosch U, SOUTH AFRICA Georg Ruhrmann, U of Jena, GERMANY Respondent Risto Kunelius, U of Tampere, FINLAND 4033 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Kaede Cultural Influence on Advertising and Corporate Communication Intercultural Communication Chair Cindy Ngai, Hong Kong Polytechnic U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Relationship Building on Sina Weibo: Exploring Cultural Influence on Chinese and German Companies' Communication Practices Cindy Ngai, Hong Kong Polytechnic U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Sabine A. Einwiller, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Communicative <3 Intimacies: Influencers and Perceived Interconnectedness Crystal Abidin, U of Western Australia, AUSTRALIA UGC in Brand-Related SNS Groups: Evidence From a Cross-Cultural Study of a Facebook Group and a Renren Group Xinyu Lu, U of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA Cultural Intelligence and an Individual’s Advertising Preference in the Lebanese Community Jessica BouAoun, Notre Dame U, LEBANON Jessica El-Khoury, Notre Dame U, LEBANON The Master Said, the Master Sold? Uses and Misuses of Confucius Icon in Chinese Commercial Advertising Giovanna Puppin, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Understanding Culture on the Effectiveness of Restaurant Servers’ Check-Back Style Hye Eun Lee, U of Hawaii, USA 4040 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Rigel Ethics and Social Change in Regional Media Powers: Analyzing Professional Practices in the BRICS Countries Global Communication and Social Change Chair Herman Wasserman, U of Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICA Participants Ethic Codes Analyses and Journalism in Brazil Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas, USA Fernando Oliveira Paulino, U of Brasilia, BRAZIL Marcos Santuario, U Feevale, BRAZIL The Complex Nature of Media Accountability in Modern Russia Elena Vartanova, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Images of BRICS in Chinese Social Media Changfeng Chen, Tsinghua U, CHINA Media Ethics, Social Change, and the Practices of Indian and Chinese Journalism Shakuntala Rao, State U of New York - Plattsburgh, USA China-Africa Relations and its Influence on Normative Perceptions in South Africa Herman Wasserman, U of Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICA The formation of the BRICS group of countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) has been taken as an indication of the way in which global power relations are shifting from the old, established metropoles of the West to the ‘Rest’ – the new rising regional powers Although this group of nations has been working to establish an alternative power bloc through, for instance, the founding of a BRICS bank, they are far from a unified group of countries. This panel attempts to chart the relationship of media, politics, economics and society in the different BRICS countries. 4041 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Vega What Generates News Content? (TOP STUDENT PAPER) Mass Communication Chair H. Denis Wu, Boston U, USA Participants Offline Political Engagement Leads to Online Political Voice Among Kyrgyzstan Bloggers Bahtiyar Kurambayev, Independent Researcher, KYRGYZSTAN Gina Marie Chen, U of Texas, USA Online News Creation, Trust in the Media, and Political Participation: Direct and Moderating Effects Alberto Ardevol-Abreu, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Catherine Hooker, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Homero Gil de Zuniga, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Subsidizing the News: Organizational Press Releases’ Influence on the Agenda and Content of News Media Jelle Boumans, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Who is Leading Whom in the General Motors Recall Crisis: Understanding Media Impacts on Public Relations Efforts, Public Awareness, and Financial Markets Yang Cheng, U of Missouri, USA 4042 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Kiku Protecting Water and Air: Examining Communication and Decision-Making Practices Environmental Communication Chair Xinghua Li, Babson College, USA Participants Running out of Water! Developing a Message Typology and Evaluating Message Effects on Attitude Toward Water Conservation Yuhua (Jake) Liang, Chapman U, USA Lauren Henderson, Chapman U, USA Kerk F. Kee, Chapman U, USA Using Theory to Inform Water Conservation in Business Communities: Formative Research From a Chamber Initiative Melanie Sarge, Texas Tech U, USA Samantha Daggett, Baylor All Saints Medical Center at Fort Worth, USA Risk, Affect, and Policy Support: Public Perception of Air Pollution in China Jialing Huang, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Zheng Janet Yang, State U of New York - Buffalo, USA The Uses of Scientific Discourse During an Intergovernmental Hearing on Hydrofracking Richard Buttny, Syracuse U, USA 4043 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Ran Communication in Online Relationships: Is the Medium the Relationship? Interpersonal Communication Communication and Technology Chair Jennifer S Priem, Wake Forest U, USA Participants Exploring Relationship Between Online Social Support and Individual Online Subjective Well-Being Among Young Adults Eiswein Wong, Hong Kong Shue Yan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Will Ma, Hong Kong Shue Yan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Online Data Collection Ethical Considerations: Negotiating Dialectic Tensions Joshua Hoops, William Jewell College, USA Robert Mejia, State U of New York - Brockport, USA Online and Offline Conversations About Alcohol: Comparing the Effects of Familiar and Unfamiliar Discussion Partners Hanneke Hendriks, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS Gert-Jan de Bruijn, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Orla Meehan, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Predicting Online Social Capital: The Implications of Facebook Intensity, Perceived Attractiveness of Contents, and Relationship Maintenance Strategies Chris Chao Su, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Ngai Keung Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Transitivity of Interpersonal (Dis)trust in an Online Setting Bob Robbert Nicolai van de Velde, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Ivar Vermeulen, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 4045 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Sumire Understanding Online Political Participation Political Communication Chair Kjerstin Thorson, U of Southern California, USA Participants Asian American Political Participation on the Internet: Acculturation, Enculturation, and Online Media Use Kevin Y. Wang, Butler U, USA Shengying Zhang, DePauw U, USA Dissenting Public or Engaged Citizen? Predictors of General and Issue-Specific Online Engagement in China Ki Deuk Hyun, Akita International U, JAPAN Mihye Seo, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Examining the Effects of Mobile and Social Media News on Political Participation: A Cross-National Analysis of Three Asian Societies Using a Communication Mediation Approach Michael Che Ming Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Hsuan-Ting Chen, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Francis L. F. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Pathways to Political Participation: Investigating the Role of SNS News Use and Politically Relevant Social Capital Jihyang Choi, Ewha Womans U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Political Facebook Use in Presidential Campaigns: Incivility and Political Participation Porismita Borah, Washington State U, USA Yiran Wang, Washington State U, USA 4046 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Koh Examining Democracy 2.0: Unconscious Publics, Political Legitimacy, and Democracy Without Deliberation Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Keiko Nishimura, U of North Carolina, USA Participants Robotic Public or Democratic Technology?: General Will 2.0 and the Politics of Technology Keiko Nishimura, U of North Carolina, USA Democracy 2.0 as Miscommunication in Database: Azuma’s General Will 2.0 Through Ontological, Postal and Otaku. Tomonori Teraoka, U of Pittsburgh, USA Constitutionalization of the General Will and the Legitimation Divide of Post-WWII Japan Keren Wang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Thinking seriously about mass media in General Will 2.0 Yasuhito Abe, Doshisha U, JAPAN Japanese philosopher and cultural critic Hiroki Azuma argues in his latest book General Will 2.0 for revisiting the notion of democracy, by proposing a method that integrates politically unmotivated people’s unconscious desires into the deliberation. This panel takes the Azuma’s work as a pivotal point and attempts to develop and examine his idea of “democracy 2.0” from both empirical and theoretical perspective. Four speakers speak from diverse background and interests, from media and cultural studies, rhetoric, philosophy to political and social thought. 4047 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Yoh Representation (Still) Matters Popular Communication Feminist Scholarship Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Nancy Thumim, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Technology and Textuality: The Political and Moral Significance of Representation in Digital Media Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM The Return to Representation: A Critique of the Networked Image Paul Frosh, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Visualizing Race LeiLani Nishime, U of Washington, USA Is There Still a “Dominant” in the Field of Feminist Media Studies? Andrea Lee Press, U of Virginia, USA Why do Women’s Everyday Practices of Self-Representation Matter? Nancy Thumim, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Why Representation Needs to be Unneutralized in News Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA Respondent Giorgia Aiello, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Following the conference theme, this roundtable invites a group of scholars to reflect on the suggestion that representation (still) matters for understanding how media power communicates, how people communicate with power via media, and how power communicates via media. While mass mediated forms continue to be produced and circulated, these are joined by images that are generated by people as they participate in digital culture. Digital culture joins poststructuralism in making it even more difficult to justify the study of representation; which representations should we study now, how should we approach them, and how can we say what they mean? 4048 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Kei Communicating With Power to Influence Negotiations and Decisions During Conflicts and Tensions: Exploring Public Relations Practice in Australasian Contexts Public Relations Global Communication and Social Change Chair Ray E. Hiebert, U of Maryland, USA Participants Tensions in transparency? Exploring the Voice of Public Relations in Multi-Agency Organizational Crisis Decision-Making in Australia Kate Delmo, U of Technology - Sydney, AUSTRALIA Power to the people? Perceived Community Influence in Public Decision Making Jannet Pendleton, U of Technology - Sydney, AUSTRALIA Communicating for Strategic Employee Engagement in the Transformation of Malaysia Airlines Kiranjit Kaur, U Teknologi MARA, MALAYSIA Conflicts in Mining Area: Whose Voices to be Heard? Gregoria Arum Yudarwati, U Atma Jaya Yogyakarta, INDONESIA This panel session addresses the challenges faced in public relations practice when dealing with power relations between different actors in managing conflicts, issues and crises, including practitioners' capacity to exert power to achieve their goals. On the other hand, the panel will also highlight limiting conditions when public relations is unable to communicate with power due to imbalances in negotiating for influence and interest with other actors in the field. 4049 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Board Room Communicating Power in the Diaspora: Ethnic Minorities Using Digital Media for Activism and Political Change Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Lori Kido Lopez, U Wisconsin - Madison, USA Participants Colorism, Racism, and Cyber-activism: The Affective Politics of South Asian Diasporic Narratives Radhika E. Parameswaran, Indiana U, USA Masculinity and Political Resistance in Hmong YouTube Communities Lori Kido Lopez, U Wisconsin, USA #MyanmarElection: Burma’s Ethnic Minorities in Diaspora Follow Political Campaign from Afar Emily Ann Ehmer, Texas State U, USA Unpacking Types of Turkish Diasporic Activism in Reaction to the Gezi Park Protests Leen S. J. d'Haenens, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Roya Imani Giglou, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Christine L. Ogan, Indiana U, USA Respondent Myria Georgiou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM 4052 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Hagi Contexts, Processes, and Outcomes of Outgroup Attitudes and Intergroup Contact Intergroup Communication Chair Ling Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Intergroup Contact in Deliberative Groups: Evidence From Three Deliberative Polls Nuri Kim, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE James S. Fishkin, Stanford U, USA Robert Luskin, U of Texas, Austin, USA Effects of Imagined Contact on Attitude Towards Death Chien-Yu Chen, U of Arizona, USA Jake Harwood, U of Arizona, USA Homophobia and Support for GLBT Marriage: An Integrated Threat Analysis Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Elsa Campbell, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Shawn Condon, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Noah Little, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Intergroup Contact on Facebook Groups and Intergroup Attitudes: Results From Two Longitudinal Studies Eleni Kioumi, Aristotle U of Thessaloniki, GREECE Antonis Gardikiotis, Aristotle U of Thessaloniki, GREECE The Preconditions for Positive Media Effects: Direct Outgroup Contact and Ingroup Identification Affect the Amount of Outgroup Exposure David Schieferdecker, U of Mannheim, GERMANY 4053 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Fuji 4054 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Sakura The Visual Communication of Identities and Values Across Cultures Visual Communication Studies Participants #Dustwarrior: Visual Representations of Native American Appropriation at Burning Man Ashley Cordes, U of Oregon, USA Communicating Eternal Love and Confucian Values via Visual and Cultural Images of Korean Historical Television Dramas Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA Suji Park, U of Connecticut, USA Complicating Visual Identities Post 9/11: Muslim Female YouTubers Speak Back Diane Watt, U of Ottawa, CANADA Looking Through Outdoor Advertising Images for Beauty in Argentina, Chile, Hungary, and Romania Pamela Kay Morris, Loyola U Chicago, USA Utopia, Nostalgia, and Femininity: Visually Promoting the Chinese Dream Zhen Sun, Macau U of Science and Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Interventions in Public Power: Australian and New Zealand Communication Association Panel Sponsored Sessions Chair Stuart Allan, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Statutory Underpinnings: The Search for a Balance Between Media Power, Regulation, and Accountability Post Leveson and Finkelstein Steven Maras, U of Western Australia, AUSTRALIA Power in Practice: How Media Reporting Can Transform Professional Practice Colleen Elizabeth Mills, U of Canterbury, NEW ZEALAND Opportunities in Research to Communicate With Power Alison Mary Henderson, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND ‘Turning the Tables’: Listening as an Intervention in Media Power Tanja Dreher, U of Wollongong, AUSTRALIA The Power of Twitter in New Zealand Donald Matheson, U of Canterbury, NEW ZEALAND 4060 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Olive Media & Democracy: Press Freedom and Censorship Political Communication Chair Susana Salgado, U of Lisbon, PORTUGAL Participants Does the Great Fire Wall Cause Self-Censorship? The Effects of Perceived Regulation and the Justification of Censorship Zhi-Jin Zhong, Sun Yat-Sen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Tongchen Wang, Sun Yat-Sen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Minting Huang, Sun Yat-Sen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Emerging Media and Press Freedoms as Determinants of Nonviolent and Violent Political Conflicts, 1990-2006 Jacob Groshek, Boston U, USA Britt D Christensen, Zayed U, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES Media and Attitudes About Electoral Malpractice: A Field Experiment in a New Democracy Devra C. Moehler, U of Pennsylvania, USA Jeffrey Conroy-Krutz, Michigan State U, USA Redesigning Media Freedom: A Two-Dimensional Framework for Comparative Analysis Antonio Ciaglia, U of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, SOUTH AFRICA 4061 Saturday 08:00-09:15 Sage Learning and Participation in the Changing Mediascape: Studying Youth, Equity, and Communicating With Power Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Melissa Brough, U of California, Irvine, USA Ioana Literat, Teachers College, Columbia U, USA Alicia Blum-Ross, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Neta Kligler-Vilenchik, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Samantha Anne Close, U of Southern California, USA Respondent Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM 4220 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Argos C Challenging the Narrative of a ’Neutral Past’ in WWII: Transnational Media Perspectives Communication History Chairs Isabel Maria Capeloa Gil, U Católica Portuguesa, PORTUGAL Nelson Costa Ribeiro, U Católica Portuguesa, PORTUGAL Participants Selling Neutrality to the Public: How the Media Were Used to Promote Salazar’s Neutral Dictatorship Nelson Costa Ribeiro, U Católica Portuguesa, PORTUGAL Gag Orders: Portuguese Neutrality and the Holocaust in the Aftermath of WWII Isabel Maria Capeloa Gil, U Católica Portuguesa, PORTUGAL Challenging Neutrality Without Success: Silenced Minority Reports by Exiled Germans Susanne Kinnebrock, Augbsurg U, GERMANY Narratives of a ’Neutral Past’ in a Postcolonial Ireland : Challenges During and Since WWII Paschal Preston, Dublin City U, IRELAND Cold War Mindedness, Again Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA After WWII neutrality became a discursive device to reimagine the nation within divergent political (Portuguese and Spanish authoritarianism), social (Scandinavian social model and Swiss economic development model), and cultural-political (Irish postcolonial setting) frameworks. Neutrality was a strategic construct of both political and media discourse and became supplemental to the dominant postbellum construction of cultural identity. Alongside once seemingly popular notions such as objectivity and balance, the modernist concept of ‘neutrality’ and ‘the neutral’ has been challenged by post-structuralist, postmodernist and constructivist modes of thought in more recent decades. This panel will discuss the uses of neutrality from a transnational media comparative perspective. 4221 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Argos D To Understand Communication and Social Networks Information Systems Chair Chen-Chao Tao, National Chiao Tung U, TAIWAN Participants Networks of Health Information Sharing and Diffusion on Twitter: Analysis of Replies, Retweets, and Mentions Surrounding Health Organizations During the National Diabetes Awareness Month Jae Eun Chung, Howard U, USA Seungyoon Lee, Purdue U, USA Namkee Park, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Convergence or Divergence: Exploring Different Mechanisms Driving NGOs’ Cross-Platform Interorganizational Networks Wenlin Liu, U of Southern California, USA Jieun Shin, U of Southern California, USA Janet Fulk, U of Southern California, USA Electronic Word-of-Mouth (e-WOM) Behaviors in Social Network Systems (SNS) Songyi Park, Northwestern U, USA How Do You Manage Your Privacy? Consumers’ Privacy Concern and Privacy Protection on Social Network Sites in the Era of Big Data Wenjing Xie, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Kavita Karan, U of Southern Illinois C., USA How the Depth and Breadth of Online Networks Define the Use of Facebook’s Privacy Settings Arun Vishwanath, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Weiai Xu, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Zed Ngoh, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Yu Jie Ng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Brynne Harrison, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Impact of Network Density on Computer-Mediated Social Support (CMSS) Group Participants’ Information Competence Kang Namkoong, U of Kentucky, USA Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA David H Gustafson, U of Wisconsin, USA Testing the Significance of Degree Centralization in Small, Directed Communication Networks Frank Tutzauer, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA When Do Consumers Buy The Company? Perceptions of Interactivity in Company-Consumer Interactions on Social Networking Sites Megan Ashley Vendemia, Ohio State U, USA 4222 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Argos E Antismoking/Antidrinking: High Density Panel in Health Communication Health Communication Chair Elisabeth Bigsby, U of Illinois, USA Participants Effects of Visuals and Arguments in Electronic Cigarette Ads on Smokers’ Perceptions of “Secondhand Vaping” Sijia Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Erin K. Maloney, U of Pennsylvania, USA Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA Message Persuasiveness and Audience Selection: How Argument Strength Shapes Smokers’ Selective Exposure to Antismoking Messages Hyun Suk Kim, U of Pennsylvania, USA Sungkyoung Lee, U of Missouri-Columbia, USA Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA Message Transmission Intent: Examining the Relationship Between Perceived Message Features, Perceived Norms and Personality Trait Mufan Luo, U of Illinois, USA Ningxin Wang, U of Illinois, USA Cabral A Bigman, U of Illinois, USA Neural Activity During Antismoking Message Exposure Predicts Subsequent Counterarguing Among Smokers Jiaying Liu, U of Pennsylvania, USA Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Pennsylvania, USA Emily Falk, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Lagged Effect of Cigarette and E-Cigarette Information Scanning on Intention to Initiate E-Cigarette Use Among Youth and Young Adults Kirsten Lochbuehler, U of Pennsylvania, USA Jiaying Liu, U of Pennsylvania, USA Qinghua Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Robert Hornik, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Roles of Message Framing and Social Influence in Interactive Social Media Campaigns for Reducing Binge Drinking Among College Students Hyojung Park, Louisiana State U, USA The Persuasive Effects of Framed Antismoking Warning Labels and Self-Efficacy Messages on Cigarette Packages. Saar Mollen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Luana Hererias Stade, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Eline Suzanne Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 4223 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Argos F Work-Life Balance and Flexible Work Organizational Communication Chair May Hongmei Gao, Kennesaw State U, USA Participants "If You Experience Noise, You Haven't Planned Your Work Well": Individualization and Regulation Within a Flexible Work Design Claartje L. ter Hoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Eva van Gemert, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Ideal Teleworker: Assessing Ideal-Worker Constructions and Dialectical Tensions in a Nonstandard Work Arrangement Millie Harrison, U of Texas, USA Expressing Work-Family Memorable Messages With Coworkers Brian L. Heisterkamp, California State U, San Bernardino, USA Christina Yoshimura, U of Montana, USA Making Sense of Working Role Transitions for Family Brian Perna, U of Southern Mississippi, USA Respondent Kumi Ishii, Western Kentucky U, USA 4224 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Navis A Robots, Machines, and Algorithms: Perspectives on Automated Journalism Journalism Studies Communication and Technology Chair Mike Joseph Ananny, U of Southern California, USA Participants "Our Audience is a Machine": Structured Stories and the Computation of Journalistic Context C.W. Anderson, CUNY- College of Staten Island, USA I, Robot. You, Journalist. Who is the Author? Tal Montal, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Zvi Reich, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Automated News: Better Than Expected? Mario Haim, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Andreas Graefe, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Risks and Opportunities in Automated Newsgathering: First Findings From the Frontline Neil James Thurman, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Stephen Schifferes, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA 4225 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Navis B Culture and Social Interaction: Language, Identity, Community, and Intercultural Communication Language & Social Interaction Chair Zohar Kampf, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Participants Language is Voiced: Unpacking the Meanings and Interpretations of Chinese Indonesian Language Discourse Todd L. Sandel, U of Macau, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Meanings of the Modern Day Chinese Identity in Malaysia (Top Paper) Ee Lin Lee, Western Washington U, USA "Transborder Conversation" and Diffusion of Social Movement Discourse Between Hong Kong and China: Oppositional Codes and the Mediatisation of a Transborder Speech Community (Top Student Paper) Guangsheng Huang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Rapport Building of a Korean-Immigrant Owned Beauty Supply Store in Black Community Sarah Cho, U of Massachusetts, USA 4226 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Navis C Communication and Technology Division Top Student Papers Communication and Technology Chair Lee Humphreys, Cornell U, USA Participants Ser Técnico: Localized Technology Transfer, Emerging Technical Actors, and the Brazilian Computer Industry Beatrice Choi, Northwestern U, USA I Read Your Updates, I Read You: Spontaneous Trait Inferences on Social Media Ana Levordashka, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Ruoyun Lin, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Track Me, Track Me Not: Support and Consent to State and Private Sector Surveillance Nili Steinfeld, Ariel U, ISRAEL The Role of Customization, Brand Trust, and Privacy Concerns in Advergaming Verena Wottrich, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 4230 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Nire The Power of Technology for Learning Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Hamlet Autman, Interactive College of Technology, USA Participants Cell Phones in the Classroom: Multitasking Magic or Multimedia Morass? BF F. Battistoli, Fairleigh Dickinson U, USA Learning About Sexual Health Online and In-School in Early Adolescence: Gender and Racial-Ethnic Differences Lisa B. Hurwitz, Northwestern U, USA Leanne Beaudoin-Ryan, Northwestern U, USA Reinventing the Role of Science Centers in Informal Science Engagement and Communication Debalina Dutta, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE The Effects of Social Networks in the Classroom on Student Learning Experience and Outcomes Seungcheol Austin Lee, Northern Kentucky U, US Stephen Edward Johnson, Northern Kentucky U, USA Patrick Flynn Ashley, Northern Kentucky U, USA Daniel Joseph Cieslak, Northern Kentucky U, USA The Power of Games: A Review of Research on Game-Based Learning (2010-2015) Maria da Conceicao Goncalves Costa, ULHT-CICANT, PORTUGAL Kathleen Tyner, U of Texas - Austin, USA Sara Henriques, Lusofona U, PORTUGAL Carla Galego, Lusofona U, PORTUGAL 4231 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Kusu Public Diplomacy Interest Group Organizational Business Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Diana Ingenhoff, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Participants Elena Alina Dolea, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA Spiro K. Kiousis, U of Florida, USA Jian Wang, U of Southern California, USA 4232 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Kashi Social Media, Political Mobilization, and Participation Communication and Technology Chair Sonja Utz, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Participants Event Mobilization in a Cross Media Era: Project X, Haren, THE NETHERLANDS Lidwien van de Wijngaert, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Jan A. G. M. Van Dijk, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Using Resource Mobilization Theory to Analyze March 18, 2014 Sunflower Student Movement in Taiwan Kenneth C. C. Yang, U of Texas - El Paso, USA Yowei Kang, Kainan U, TAIWAN Innovating Consultative Authoritarianism: Internet Votes as a Digital Tool to Stabilize Nondemocratic Rule Florian Toepfl, Free U of Berlin, GERMANY Bandwagon or Free Ride: The Effect of Social Media Normative Cues on Self-Efficacy, Perceived Likelihood of Success, and Intentions to Participate in a Collective Action Yu-Hao Lee, U of Florida, USA Carlin Littles, Georgetown U, USA The Social Media Participation Model: A Goal Systems Theory Perspective Johannes Knoll, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Raffael Heiss, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA 4233 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Kaede Media Coverage of Environmental and Scientific Issues: Effects on Attittudes, Perceptions, and Knowledge Environmental Communication Chair Sonny Rosenthal, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participants Media and Public Perceptions of Global Warming in India Jagadish J Thaker, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Xiaoquan Zhao, George Mason U, USA Anthony Leiserowitz, Yale U, USA Partisan Media and Their Climate Change Agenda-Setting Effects on Partisan Publics: Testing the Compelling Arguments Concept in the Age of Polarization Hong Vu, U of Kansas, USA Polarization and Mainstreaming Effects: The Role of Political Ideology, Media, and Elaborative Processing on Public Science Attitudes Hyoyeun Jun, U of Georgia, USA Michael Cacciatore, U of Georgia, USA Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Elizabeth A. Corley, Arizona Sate U, USA Dominique Brossard, U of Wisconsin, USA Michael Andrew Xenos, U of Wisconsin, USA Social Class, Environmental Knowledge, and Concern in China: The Difference Between New and Traditional Media Use Functions Xiaoxiao Cheng, Hohai U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Lun Meng, Hohai U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 4240 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Rigel Digital Surveillance and Citizenship Global Communication and Social Change Chair Arne Hintz, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The Snowden Revelations and the Mediapolis Adrienne Russell, U of Denver, USA Risto Kunelius, U of Tampere, FINLAND Living in Surveillance Society: From Regimes of Justification to Surveillance Realism Lina Dencik, Cardiff U - UNITED KINGDOM Arne Hintz, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Surveillance, Intelligence Agencies, Persuasion, Influence and Accountability: Problematic Silences in Civil Society Vian Bakir, Bangor U, UNITED KINGDOM Surveillance, Encryption and Citizenship Einar Thorsen, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Balancing Surveillance and Internet Freedoms: Brazil and Snowden's legacy 3 years on Debora Moura Medeiros, Free U of Berlin, GERMANY Digital surveillance affects the core of contemporary forms of citizenship, as the post-Snowden debates have demonstrated. It raises questions regarding the nature of civil rights in digital environments; highlights the challenges of online civic activities and political dissent; questions the nature of the security state; and complicates legal frameworks of national jurisdictions in a context of crossborder communication flows. In this panel we combine the research projects of different scholars who have all explored the implications of the Snowden leaks across a number of different themes and contexts that relate to questions of citizenship in contemporary society. 4241 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Vega Mass Communication Research at the Systems Level (TOP STUDENT PAPER) Mass Communication Chair Leo W. Jeffres, Cleveland State U, USA Participants Beyond Hallin and Mancini: A Media System Typology Based on 16 Nonwestern Countries Michael Meyen, U Munich, GERMANY Maria Karidi, U of Munich, GERMANY How do Sociodemographic and Structural Similarities Explain Viewing Pattern Similarity? Sujin Choi, Kookmin U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Antecedents of Internet Dependency and Its Consequences for Political Efficacy: An Analysis on a National Representative Sample in China Yu Xu, U of Southern California, USA Yajie Chu, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Understanding Asian Media Systems: How Has the Press Enhanced or Hindered Digitally Mediated Political Activism? Shin Haeng Lee, U of Washington, USA 4242 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Kiku Feminisms and Feminists From and in Asia Feminist Scholarship Chair Stine Eckert, Wayne State U, USA Participants Feminist Responses to Online Misogyny in India Kalyani Chadha, U of Maryland, USA Indian Feminism and the Communicative Network Sangita Gopal, U of Oregon, USA Analyzing the Use of Information Network by Stakeholders in Building Agenda on Rape and Sexual Assault of Women in India Pallavi Guha, U of Maryland, USA Women Journalists in Traditional and Alternative Media in Japan Kaori Hayashi, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Social Media as Spaces of Resistance for Women in Afghanistan Azeta Hatef, Pennsylvania State U, USA Beyond the Glitz: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Deepika Padukone’s My Choice Video Controversy Melanie Le Forestier, U Toulouse 2 - Jean Jaures, FRANCE A Transnational Political Imagination: China’s Feminist Five and Online Feminist Activism Sara X. T. Liao, U of Texas, USA Chinese Women’s Social Media Conversations on the End of China’s One Child Policy Boya Xu, U of Maryland, USA Rarely do we focus on feminisms in parts of the world such as the vast continent of Asia. Which media do feminists and women in different Asian countries employ to create campaigns, protests and resistances? Which issues are at stake for women and feminists of different backgrounds? Which theoretical and topical frameworks are used to analyze the intersections of feminisms and media? By learning from/about Asian countries this panel gives new impulses for collaborations and comparative research within Asia but also across the globe. The panel particularly addresses the contemporary challenges and possibilities of women and feminists in/with social media, film, broadcasting and news media in Japan, China, India and Afghanistan. 4243 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Ran 4245 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Sumire Media Industry Studies Business Meeting Media Industry Studies Chair Patricia Frances Phalen, George Washington U, USA News Exposure and Effects: Knowledge, Interest, and Behavior Political Communication Chair Erik Albaek, U of Southern Denmark, Centre for Journalism, DENMARK Participants Adolescents’ Development of Political Interest: A Communication Mediation Approach Using Five Waves of Panel Data Adam Shehata, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Erik Amna, Örebro U, SWEDEN How Citizens (Could) Turn Into an Informed Public: Explaining Information Attentiveness for European Parliamentary Elections Christiane Grill, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Hajo G. Boomgaarden, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Learning From News? An Eye-Tracking Experiment Sanne Kruikemeier, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Ming Boyer, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sophie Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The PFAD Model of News Exposure: Impacts of Personalization, Fragmentation, Authority-Disorder Bias, and Dramatization Cornelia Mothes, Ohio State U, USA Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Ohio State U, USA George Pearson, Ohio State U, USA The Power to Mobilize: Effects of First-Time Voters’ Political Social-Media Use on Electoral Behavior Jakob Ohme, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Erik Albaek, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK 4246 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Koh Global Migration: Current Topics and Research Interventions Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Saskia Witteborn, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Moving Bodies and Surfaces of Affect Radha S. Hegde, New York U, USA Connecting Europe: Digital Diasporas and Belonging Sandra Ponzanesi, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Refugees Journeys and Transient Connectivities Myria Georgiou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM The Enigma of Return Mirca Madianou, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Brain Drain Gholam Khiabany, IAMCR - International Assocation for Media and Communication Research, UNITED KINGDOM Abolition, in Digital Modes of Production Linchuan Jack Qiu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Multiplication of Media in the European "Humanitarian" Border Zone Karina Horsti, Academy of Finland, FINLAND The Autonomy of (Digital) Migration Saskia Witteborn, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The mass movement of people across borders is a defining reality of our times. A global audience witness new scales of trans-border movement enabled through media spectacles of people crossing into Europe and refugees coordinating their flight through GPS. Global economic structures and geopolitics have led Chinese migrants to build the infrastructure in African countries, highly skilled migrants to relocate to Japan or Singapore, Chinese and Indian students to fuel ailing educational sectors, and countries like Lebanon and Jordan to struggle with high numbers of displaced people. This panel speaks directly to the conference theme “Communicating with Power” and to the multi-leveled practices that constitute migration on a material and representational as well as a local, regional and global level. 4247 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Yoh Music, Sound, and Popular Culture Popular Communication Chair Lillian Boxman-Shabtai, Northwestern U, USA Participants The '90s, the Most Stunning Days of Our Lives: Retro Music, Nostalgia, Neoliberal Positive Psychology in Contemporary Korea Gooyong Kim, Cheyney U of Pennsylvania, USA Recognition Through Reception: Hip Hop Music and the Forging of Civic Bonds Among Minority Youth in Norway Torgeir Uberg Naerland, U of Bergen, NORWAY "Mom’s Voice” and Other Voices: Civil-Military Relations as a Media Ritual Oren Meyers, U of Haifa, ISRAEL In Living Sound: The Production and Management of Diasporic Connectivity Through Podcast Talk Lia Wolock, U of Michigan-Ann Arbor, USA 4248 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Kei Little Love for Lobbying? A Communication Practice Searching for its Place Public Relations Chair Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY Participants Claiming Lobbyism: Lobbyism, Public Relations and Social Capital Melissa Dawn Dodd, U of Central Florida, USA Comfortably Numb: Public Relations and Theories of Lobbying Oyvind Ihlen, U of Oslo, NORWAY The Worry About Lobbying: Legislative Moves Magda Pieczka, Queen Margaret U, UNITED KINGDOM Love at Last: Scandinavia as a Lobbyists’ Mecca? Ketil Raknes, Oslo Sch of Management, NORWAY Respondent Anu Marjaana Kantola, U of Helsinki, FINLAND How can lobbying be understood, criticized or defended? This panel explores lobbying as a communication practice within the field of public relations and its link to the larger setting of democratic societies. 4249 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Board Room Perception, Cognition, and Experience in Visual Communication Research Visual Communication Studies Chair Frank Biocca, Syracuse U, USA Participants A Mixed-Method Examination of the Effectiveness of Sustainability-Themed Print Media Visuals Carie Cunningham, Michigan State U, USA Serena Carpenter, , USA Bruno Takahashi, Michigan State U, USA Alisa Pamela Lertpratchya, Michigan State U, USA Experience of Suspense in Cliffhanger Situations Nicholas Hugo Mueller, Techincal U Chemnitz, GERMANY Making Older Art Interactive: Modality Alters Perception Frank Biocca, Syracuse U, USA Hyejin Kum, Sungkyunkwan U, USA The Invisible Power Beyond Visual Outlet of Billboard Advertisement Based on Analysis Through Eyetracker HyeonJu Jeong, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jung Sun Park, Korea Out of Home Advertising Center, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Visual Skill Acquisition Theory, Eye Tracking, and SSE: Theorizing How Visual Communication Enhances Visual Skill Kevin John, Brigham Young U, USA Jakob D. Jensen, U of Utah, USA Andy J King, Texas Tech U, USA Doug Grossman, U of Utah, USA 4252 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Hagi Online Social Capital Communication and Technology Chair Emese Domahidi, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Participants Bowling Alone in South Korea? The Implications of the Digital Divides for North Korean Refugees’ Social Capital in South Korea Bumgi Min, Pennsylvania State U, USA Social Media Social Capital, Offline Social Capital, and Political Participation: Exploring Asymmetrical Social Capital Effects Homero Gil de Zuniga, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Matt Barnidge, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Andres Scherman, U Diego Portales, CHILE Social Network Doping: Fake Fans as the New Social Capital Douglas Schules, Rikkyo U, JAPAN Hsin-Yen Yang, Fort Hays State U, USA The More the Better? Examining Self-Disclosure, Third-Party Endorsement, and Social Capital of Young Professionals on LinkedIn Xuan Wu, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Pengxiang Li, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Tian Yang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Yang Wang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE 4253 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Fuji Top Papers in Sports Communication Sports Communication Chair Tang Tang, The U of Akron, USA Participants Disparaging Trademarks and Social Responsibility Jasmine McNealy, U of Florida, USA Perceived Brand Personality Through Sports Sponsorship: Locating a Blurred Line Between Entertainment and Persuasion in Mediated Sports Po-Lin Pan, Arkansas State U, USA Joe Phua, U of Georgia, USA Chang Wan Woo, James Madison U, USA Watching Olympic Games With Three Different Media: An Application of Niche Theory Kihan Kim, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yunjae Cheong, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyuksoo Kim, Ball State U, USA “This Is Who We Are!” National Identity Construction and the 2014 FIFA World Cup Anita Atwell Seate, U of Maryland, USA Rong Ma, U of Maryland, USA Irina Alexandra Iles, U of Maryland, USA Thomas McCloskey, U of Maryland, USA Shawn Parry-Giles, U of Maryland, USA Respondent Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA 4254 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Sakura Kuuki, Public Mood, and Other Similar Concepts and Their Significance Sponsored Sessions Participants A Study on the Anti-Atomic Power Plant in Japan Youichi Ito, Akita International U, JAPAN A Study on the “Pouring Water” and the “Deliberation Priming” Functions of the Mass Media: Revision of Juvenile Law in Japan Tsuneo Ogawa, Tokai U, JAPAN An Empirical Study of the Anti-Korean Kuuki in Japan HongChun Lee, Tokyo City U, JAPAN Measuring Public Mood and Public Opinion: An Empirical Example Yue Tan, National Sun Yat-sen U, TAIWAN David H. Weaver, Indiana U, USA Respondents Toshio Takeshita, Meiji U, JAPAN Yoko Ogawa Nishiaki, Keio U, JAPAN 4260 Saturday 09:30-10:45 Olive Political News in Comparative Perspective Political Communication Journalism Studies Chair Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Cross-National and Cross-Temporal Changes in Political News: A Multigroup SEM-Model of Mediatized Politics Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Benjamin Fretwurst, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Explaining the Tone of Immigration News: The Importance of the Newspaper and Actor Environment in Comparative Perspective Andrea Masini, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Peter Van Aelst, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Rethinking Hallin and Mancini (2004) Beyond the West: An Analysis of Media Systems in Central and Eastern Europe Edda Humprecht, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Laia Castro Herrero, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Sven Engesser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Michael Brueggemann, U of Hamburg, GERMANY Florin Buechel, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND The Erosion of Trust in the Press as “Spill-over” Effect: A Comparative and Longitudinal Analysis Thomas Hanitzsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Arjen van Dalen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Nina Elvira Steindl, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY The Euro Crisis in German and Spanish Online News: Does a Common European Discourse Emerge? Johannes Kaiser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Katharina Kleinen-von Koenigsloew, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND 4261 Saturday 09:30-12:15 Sage 4320 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Argos C Extended Session: Parental Mediation Children Adolescents and the Media Participants A Matter of Style? The Differential Effects of Parental Mediation on Early Adolescents’ Media Violence Exposure and Aggression Karin Fikkers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Children’s Attitudinal and Behavioral Reactions to Product Placements: Do Parental Mediations and Family Conversations Matter? Brigitte Naderer, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Franziska Marquart, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Mira Mayrhofer, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Ines Spielvogel, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Game On: Refining the Parental Mediation Framework for a Video-Gaming Landscape Hee Jhee Jiow, Singapore Institute of Technology, SINGAPORE Sun Sun Lim, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Julian Lin, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Reversed Parental Television Mediation: Children’s Guidance of Their Parents’ Television Use and Parent-Child Television Conflict. Sara Nelissen, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM The Role of Parents on Children's Media Use: A Meta-Analysis of Parental Mediation Liang Chen, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Using Moral Foundations Theory and Parent Mediation to Understand the Effect of Child Exposure to Televised Moral Lessons on Transfer to Moral Situations Drew Cingel, Northwestern U, USA Marina Krcmar, Wake Forest U, USA Megan K. Olsen, Northwestern U, USA Francesca Pietrantonio, Northwestern U, USA Guiding Young Children’s Digital Media Use: Concerns and Competences Among Parents From Different Socioeconomic Backgrounds Peter Nikken, Youth Institute/Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Parents and TV as Socializers of 6- to 19-Year-Olds' Expressions of Emotion: Representative Data From Germany Sebastian Scherr, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin, USA Anne Bartsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Maya Goetz, IZI International Central Institute, GERMANY Rules, Role Model, or Attachment? The Impact of Parents on Their Children’s Problematic Mobile Phone Involvement Dorothee Hefner, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Karin Knop, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Stefanie Schmitt, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Theresa Sofie Abele, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Social Networking Sites and Materialism: Safeguarding Roles of Parents and Personal Traits Hillbun Ho, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Wonsun Shin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE May O. Lwin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE On the Technical Side of Digital Games Game Studies Chair Daniel Pietschmann, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Participants A Case Study in Newsgame Creation: Why Game Designers and Journalists are Still Learning to Work Together Lindsay Grace, American U, USA Flow and Mobile Gaming: The Effects of In-Game Purchases and Screen Size Matthew Hui, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Han Zhong Yeo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE It’s New, but is it Improved? Novelty and Learning Effects in the Use and Enjoyment of Naturally Mapped Video Game Controllers Benny Liebold, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Daniel Pietschmann, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY The Unexpected Comfort of Wearing Headphones: Emotional and Cognitive Effects of Headphone Use When Playing a Bloody Video Game Karyn E. Riddle, U of Wisconsin, USA Zhen Di, U of Wisconsin, USA Sunghak Kim, U of Wisconsin, USA Eunyoung Myung, U of Wisconsin, USA Swee Kiat Tay, U of Wisconsin, USA Fangxin Xu, U of Wisconsin, USA Measuring Flow Through Attentional Engagement During Game Play: Validation of a Novel Technique Elena Nunez Castellar, Ghent U, BELGIUM Jan-Niklas Antons, Quality and Usability Lab at Telekom Innovation Laboratories, TU Berlin, GERMANY Daniele Marinazzo, Ghent U, BELGIUM Jan Van Looy, Ghent U, BELGIUM 4321 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Argos D Motivated Cognition and Behavior Information Systems Chair Jennifer Rose Talevich, U of Southern California, USA Participants Reconceptualizing Coping Styles as an Arousal-based Motivational Bias During the Processing of Mediated Self-Threatening Messages Jingjing Han, Indiana U, USA Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA Trait Motivational Reactivity Across The Life Cycle Predicts News Media Use Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri, USA Conceptualizing Time Perception During Media Use From a Motivated Cognitive Perspective Tianjiao Wang, Washington State U, USA Rachel L. Bailey, Washington State U, USA Jiawei Liu, Washington State U, USA Applying Nontechnological Approaches to Examine Priming and Motivated Preparation as Mechanisms for the Proteus Effect Yuhua (Jake) Liang, Chapman U, USA Such a Bad Example! How a Failed Story Character Can Motivate Us Stefan Krause, U Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Reading News About Successful Versus Unsuccessful Students: Effects on Students’ Well-Being and Learning Motivation Matthias R. Hastall, Technical U Dortmund, GERMANY Denise Materna, Technical U Dortmund, GERMANY Ute Ritterfeld, Technical U Dortmund, GERMANY The Motivated Affective Behavioral System: A Neurocomputational Model of the Complex Psychological Dynamics of Communication Jennifer Rose Talevich, U of Southern California, USA Stephen J. Read, U of Southern California, USA Attaching Food Information to Biological Food Cues Rachel L. Bailey, Washington State U, USA Tianjiao Wang, Washington State U, USA Jiawei Liu, Washington State U, USA Adrienne Fayola Muldrow, Washington State U, USA Christopher Kaiser, Washington State U, USA 4322 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Argos E B.E.S.T.: Social Responsibility and Ethics in Communication Practice and Research Organizational Communication Chair Craig R. Scott, Rutgers U, USA Participants Talk and Action: Probing the Ideal of Consistency Between CSR Talk and CSR Practices Lars Thoeger Christensen, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Mette Morsing, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Ole Thyssen, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK CSR Communication in the Business-to-Business Context: An Exploratory Study Jordy Gosselt, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Suzanne Janssen, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Benthe Bemelman, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Communicating CSR: Navigating the CSR-Luxury Paradox Online through a Discourse of Balance and Convergence Jia Yun Wong, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Ganga Sasidharan Dhanesh, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Stakeholder's Pressure Towards Measurability in CSR Reporting: A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Six Asian Countries Gaelle Duthler, Zayed U, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES Pavel Slutskiy, Chulalongkorn U, THAILAND Inka Stever, Zayed U, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES Katharina Wolf, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA Shifting Responsibility While Still Being "Socially Responsible": Food Waste and Power in a Supply Chain Bree Devin, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Carol Richards, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Collaboration by Design: Stakeholder Engagement in GRI Sustainability Reporting Guidelines Svetlana (Yana) V. Grushina, Dartmouth College, USA "Did We Get It Right?": Navigating Emergent Tensions in Assessing the Impact of Engaged Organizational Communication Scholarship Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA Jasmine Linabary, Purdue U, USA Liliya Yakova, Purdue U, USA Arunima Krishna, Purdue U, USA Kai Kuang, Bloomsburg U of Pennsylvania, USA Neva Stumberger, Purdue U, USA Jessica Pauly, Purdue U, USA Agaptus Anaele, Ohio U, USA Advertisers’ Ethics Guido Zurstiege, U Tuebingen, GERMANY Markus Feiks, U Tuebingen, GERMANY Jutta Krautter, U Tuebingen, GERMANY Uta Mueller, U Tuebingen, GERMANY Respondents Michael Andreas Etter, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Margaret Ann Brunton, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND B.E.S.T. sessions are "Brief Entertaining Scholarly Talks". In this format, each participant gives a 5 minute, high-energy, technology-enhanced presentation designed to excite the audience about the research. For the final 30 minutes of the session, presenters and audience members meet 2 or 3 small breakout groups to discuss ideas stimulated by that set of papers. 4323 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Argos F The Power of CSR in Times of Crisis Public Relations Chair Piet Verhoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Examining the Effects of CSR Communication in Crises: The Role of Dispositional and Situational CSR Skepticism Chang-Dae Ham, U of Illinois, USA Jeesun Kim, Incheon National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Buffering Effects of CSR Reputation in Times of Product-Harm Crisis Yeonsoo Kim, James Madison U, USA Chang Wan Woo, James Madison U, USA Revenge of Cecil the Lion: Credibility in Third-Party Review Sites Alison N. Novak, Rowan U, USA The Power of Digital Comments: Case Study of Tesla Fire Crises Anna Kochigina, U of Oklahoma, USA Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA Explicating Corporate Social Responsibility: Defining CSR and Suggesting Theoretical Modes for Inquiry Nicholas Browning, Indiana U, USA Respondent Kate Delmo, U of Technology Sydney, AUSTRALIA 4324 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Navis A Disrupting Journalism: Challenging Key Concepts in Journalism Studies Journalism Studies Chair Henrik Bodker, Aarhus U, DENMARK Participants Entrepreneurial Journalism Studies: Understanding Disruption to Norms, Roles, and Economic Structures Jane B. Singer, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Does Reddit Afford Ethical Journalism? Jack Jamieson, U of Toronto, CANADA Challenging the Citizen-Consumer Dichotomy: A News Content Analysis of Audience Approaches in Chilean Journalism Claudia Mellado, Pontificia U Católica de Valparaiso, CHILE Arjen van Dalen, U of Southern Denmark, Centre for Journalism, DENMARK Boundaries, Aggregation, and Journalistic Authority: The Case of BuzzFeed and Gawker Konstantin Valerievich Toropin, U of Minnesota, USA Journalism's Fortune Tellers: Constructing the Future of News Wilson Hugh Lowrey, U of Alabama, USA Zhou Shan, U of Alabama, USA 4325 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Navis B Social Network Studies in Health Communication Health Communication Chair Weirui Wang, Florida International U, USA Participants Effects of Community-Level Economic and Medical Resources on Individual-Level Relationship Between Social Network and Health Ahra Cho, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yong-Chan Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Eui-Kyung Shin, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Ji-Min Park, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Evaluating a Norms-Based Abuse Prevention Campaign Targeted to Members of Fraternities and Sororities Erica Weintraub Austin, Washington State U, USA Bruce Pinkleton, Washington State U, USA Stacey J. T. Hust, Washington State U, USA Jason D. Wheeler, Washington State U, USA Network Structure and Received Social Support in an Online Health Social Network Jingbo Meng, Michigan State U, USA Minwoong Chung, Michigan State U, USA Jeff Cox, Michigan State U, USA Minyoung Choi, Michigan State U, USA Shuangqing Liu, Renmin U of China, CHINA Xiaoya Jiang, Michigan State U, USA Prostate Cancer-Related Stigma, Age, Weak-Tie Support Preference, Online Support, and Health Outcomes Camella Rising, George Mason U, USA Kevin B. Wright, George Mason U, USA Nadine Bol, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Amelia Burke-Garcia, George Mason U, USA The Effects of SNS Communication: How Expressing and Receiving Information Predict MERS-Preventive Behavioral Intentions in South Korea Woohyun Yoo, Dongguk U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Doo-Hun Choi, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Keeho Park, Nanyang Technological U/Telenor, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yongkuk Chung, Dongguk U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 4326 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Navis C Drowning in Data: Industry and Academic Approaches to Mixed Methods in “Holistic” Big Data Studies Communication and Technology Participants Scaling Ethnography: Studying Cases with Machine Learning and Interviews on reddit.com Alex Leavitt, U of Southern California, USA All Researchers are Mixed-Methodological Researchers: A Provocation R.Stuart Geiger, U of California-Berkeley, USA Big Data, Little Data: Scaling Social Science Research on Facebook Lauren Scissors, Northwestern U, USA Nicholas Aaron Ross Merola, Northwestern U, USA Wikipedia: Moving Between the Whole and its Traces Heather Ford, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM The Proficiency-Congruency Dilemma: Virtual Team Design and Performance in Multiplayer Online Games Alice Oh, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF This panel focuses on sociotechnical systems – social media platforms and online multiplayer games – where researchers can analyze data from every individual participant. By removing the constraints of data access and sampling, new questions around the process of using mixed research methodologies can be examined. The panelists will explore processes for observation, interviewing, surveying, and conducting advanced statistical analysis in concert with or in opposition to each other. When you have hundreds of millions of data points, where do you start, how do you explore, and why do you end up with a particular set of results? The panel brings together scholars to speak about their successes and failures working on projects that employ holistic data sources to understand social behaviors. 4330 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Nire Power, Privilege, and Erasure: Reflexivity and the (Im)possibilities of Listening to Voices in Health Communication Research Health Communication Participants Theorizing Power in Health Communication Research Mohan Jyoti Dutta, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Unpacking Power Through Self-Reflexivity: Researcher Violence on the Bodies of the New Subaltern Satveer Kaur-Gill, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Confronting My Privilege: Listening, Reflexivity, and the Limits of Solidarity With Participants of a Poverty Project in Singapore Naomi Tan, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Health, Development and the Ili: Fieldwork, Reflexivity, and Negotiations of/With Power Dazzelyn Baltazar Zapata, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Interplays of Power When Studying Patient-Provider Communication in the US in Physical Therapy and Among Palliative Care Patients With Their Families, on Deciding Withdrawal of Care Rebecca Imes, Carroll U, USA This panel begins with an understanding that as researchers, we occupy power-laden positions vis-à-vis the communities that we research, particularly in relationships with communities. We find important entry points to seek out ways to interrogate our own positionalities, and unmask sites of privilege where we reproduce the politics of representation in our research design. With reflexivity as a theoretical lens, we engage in critique to unpack our relationships with communities that are disenfranchised, connecting the micro to macro contexts. This panel seeks to examine the ways in which researchers interrogate their relationships with the “researched” through their fieldwork, as well as sharing the possibilities and impossibilities of listening to voices of those at the margins. 4331 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Kusu Emotion and Information Processing Communication and Technology Chair Nathan Stolero, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Participants Selective Use of News Cues: A Multiple-Motive Perspective on Information Selection in Social Media Environments Stephan Winter, U Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Miriam Metzger, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Andrew Flanagin, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA LMFAO! Humor as a Response to Fear: Decomposing Fear Control Within the Extended Parallel Process Model Eulalia Puig Abril, U of Illinois at Chicago, USA Glen Szczypka, Health Media Collaboratory, USA Sherry L Emery, U of Illinois at Chicago, USA To Fear or Not to Fear? Understanding the Role of Social Media in Risk Amplification Yu Jie Ng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Zheng Janet Yang, State U of New York - Buffalo, USA Arun Vishwanath, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA What’s in a Username? Civility, Group Identification, and Norms Myiah J Hutchens, Washington State U, USA Jay D. Hmielowski, Washington State U, USA David Silva, Washington State U, USA Vincent Cicchirillo, U of Texas, USA Using Multiplayer Online Battle Arenas to Revisit Social Information Processing Theory Adam S. Kahn, Western Michigan U, USA 4332 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Kashi Cross-Cultural studies on Family, Marriage, and Romantic Relationships Intercultural Communication Chair Uttara Manohar, Miami U, USA Participants Different or Similar? A Cross-Cultural Examination of Family Communication Patterns, Affection, and Conflicts Styles Xiaowen Guan, U of St. Thomas, MN, USA The Influences of Acculturation on Parenting Styles and Family Communication Patterns Among Chinese Mothers in the United States Chia-Fang (Sandy) Hsu, U of Wyoming, USA Zheng Ying, U of Wyoming, USA Cross-Cultural Validity Tests and Comparisons of the Grandchildren’s Received Affection Scale Daniel Hans Mansson, Pennslyvania State U, - Hazleton, USA Frantisek Marko, Pennslyvania State U, - Hazleton, USA Katarina Bachrata, U of Zilina, SLOVAKIA Zuzana Daniskova, Trnava U, SLOVAKIA Jaroslava Gajdosikova-Zeleiova, Trnava U, SLOVAKIA Vladimir Janis, Matej Bel U, SLOVAKIA Anatolii Sharov, Omsk State Pedagogical U, SLOVAKIA Examining Cultural and Gender Similarities and Differences in Value of Communication Skills in Romantic Relationships Ildo Kim, U of California, Davis, USA Bingqing Wang, U of California, Davis, USA JooYoung Jang, U of California Davis, USA Bo Feng, U of California, Davis, USA I am in China, but I am OK with Marrying an American in the Future: Globalization-Based Acculturation and Chinese’ Attitude Towards Intercultural Marriage Qingqing Hu, Arizona State U, USA Peng Pan, Arizona Sate U, USA Xiaochun Chen, Southwest U of Political Science and Law, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xiaoqin Liu, Chongqing Technology and Business U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Ting Yang, Southwest U of Political ScienceandLaw, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Exposure to TV Dramas From Different Regions and Its Association With Love Styles Zerui Liang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xigen Li, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 4333 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Kaede Communicating Nature, Sustainability, and Environmental Issues Using Online Media Channels Environmental Communication Chair Susan L. Jacobson, Florida International U, USA Participants Alliance of Antagonism: Counterpublics and Polarisation in the German-Language Online Climate Change Discourse Jonas Kaiser, Zeppelin U, GERMANY Cornelius Puschmann, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, GERMANY Organically Modified News Networks: Gatekeeping in Social Media Coverage of Genetically Modified Organisms Jacob Groshek, Boston U, USA 4340 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Rigel A BRICS Internet: ‘Balkanizing’ or Broadening the Digital Discourse? Global Communication and Social Change Chair Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Participants ‘Digital India’: The Hype and the Hope Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM China’s Internet as a Crossroads Guobin Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Runet as ‘Internet of Content’ Elena Vartanova, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION ICT adoption by Brazilian Social Scientists: The Impact of e-Research in Emerging Economies Carlos Arcila Calderón, U del Norte, COLOMBIA Fernando Oliveira Paulino, U of Brasilia, BRAZIL Social Media in a Bifurcated Public Sphere: The Internet and Society in South Africa Herman Wasserman, U of Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICA Respondent Colin Sparks, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF This panel will examine the growing visibility and influence of the Internet-related communication emanating from the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) nations, reflecting their growing economic power, and how this might affect the global digital communication. The panel suggests that in a dynamic and digitized 24/7 multi-media age, multilingual communication flows are increasing, in which the BRICS countries play a key role. What implications will such digital connectivity have for global news flows, information and communication agendas and for the battle for hearts and minds – intra-BRICS and beyond? As the world becomes increasingly mobile, networked and digitised, will such media flows Balkanize the Internet or will they contribute to broadening the global digital discourse? 4341 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Vega Media, Sex, and Porn (TOP FACULTY PAPER) Mass Communication Chair Jodi L. Whitaker, U of Arizona, USA Participants A Longitudinal Study on Exposure to Sexually Explicit Internet Material and Adolescents’ Sexual Performance Orientation Laura P. Vandenbosch, U of Leuven / U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Johanna M.F. van Oosten, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Different Domains of Disgust Differentially Predict the Perceived Negative Influence of—and Support of Censoring—Hate Speech and Pornography Jinguang Zhang, U of Hawaii, USA Sex Without Love? Commitment, Intimacy, and Passion in Popular Pornographic Internet Videos Marleen Johanna Elisabeth Klaassen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sexual Script in Online Sexual Explicit Materials: A Social Network Analysis Yanyan Zhou, Indiana U Bloomington, USA Vincent Malic, Indiana U Bloomington, USA 4342 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Kiku Women, Politics, and Power: Framing Them and Articulating Me Feminist Scholarship Participants Politics as Usual? Gender, the Internet Party and the 2014 New Zealand General Election Valentina Cardo, U of Auckland Dept of Film, TV and Media Studies, NEW ZEALAND The Power of Resurrection?* The ‘Crusher Collins’ Comeback Susan Fountaine, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Margie Comrie, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND “A Mixture of Elegant Feminine Charm and Steel”: Gendering Political Leadership in the British Press Emily Harmer, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Speaking in Our Own Voice: Women, Twitter, and the British General Election 2015 Karen Ross, Northumbria U, UNITED KINGDOM Tobias Burger, Northumbria U, UNITED KINGDOM Love and War: Metaphors, Gender and Power in News Coverage of Women Prime Ministers Linda Trimble, U, CANADA Despite the very real advances women have made in the political sphere over the past couple of decades, their presence and representation in mainstream media remains troubling. Despite this current decade seeing more women prime ministers and presidents than ever before and the prospect of seeing the US elect its first woman president, most parts of the media still refuse to acknowledge the political power women wield. On the other hand, women themselves are wresting some control over their representation and using both social and softer media to re-present themselves as they wish. This panel brings together five papers which all focus on the central relationship of women/politics/power but do so with different emphases in terms of medium and status. 4343 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Ran Messaging Apps And Mobile Social Media (High-Density Session) Mobile Communication Chair Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of Washington, USA Participants From “Connected Presence” to “Panoptic Presence”: Reframing the Parent-Child Relationship on Mobile Instant Messaging Uses Under the Chinese Translocal Context Qian Yu, Washington State U, USA Peiying HUANG, The Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Liming Liu, Communication U of China, CHINA Opportunities to Communicate With Power via Twitter: Content Analysis Findings About Gender-Based Violence in India Tilly Ann Gurman, Johns Hopkins U, USA Catherine Nichols, George Washington U, USA Elyssa Greenberg, George Washington U, USA Self-Disclosure Among Chinese Nationals on WeChat: Examining the Role of Motives of WeChat Uses and Gender Yashu Chen, Arizona Sate U, USA The Adoption and Use of Mobile Instant Messenger Among Middle-Aged Residents in Urban China Hanyun Huang, Xiamen U, CHINA Xiwen Zhang, Xiamen U, CHINA What Affects Hispanic Consumers to Adopt Mobile Social Media in the US? Kenneth C. C. Yang, U of Texas - El Paso, USA Yowei Kang, Kainan U, TAIWAN Microcoordination 2.0: Social Coordination in the Age of Smartphones and Messaging Apps Rich Ling, Nanyang Technological U/Telenor, SINGAPORE Chih-Hui Lai, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 4345 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Sumire Political Discussion and Deliberation: Theoretical and Methodological Issues Political Communication Chair Weiyu Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Participants A Conditional Model of Political Discussion: Anger, Informal Political Talk, and the Perceived Opinion Climate David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Sebastian Valenzuela, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Deliberation Across a “Space of Reasons”: A Study About the Use of Media Arguments on Divided Groups Rousiley Celi Moreira Maia, Federal U of Minas Gerais, BRAZIL Danila Gentil Rodriguez Cal, U of Amazonia (Unama), BRAZIL Vanessa Veiga de Oliveira, Federal U of Minas Gerais, BRAZIL Gabriela Hauber, Federal U of Minas Gerais, BRAZIL Patrícia Gonçalves Conceição Rossini, Federal U of Minas Gerais, BRAZIL Rafael Cardoso Sampaio, Federal U of Minas Gerais, BRAZIL Deliberation and Collective Decisions: Individual Changes in Structuring Single-Peaked Preferences in Deliberative Polls Rui Wang, Stanford U, CHINA Christian List, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Robert Luskin, U of Texas, USA James S. Fishkin, Stanford U, USA Measuring Political Thinking: Development and Validation of a Scale for “Deliberation Within” Carina Weinmann, U of Mannheim, GERMANY 4346 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Koh The Urban as an Emergent Key Concept for Media Theory Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Scott Rodgers, Birkbeck, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Theorizing Media Under Planetary Urbanization Scott Rodgers, Birkbeck, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Back to the City: Confronting the Next Generation of Media Studies Zlatan Krajima, U of Zagreb - Faculty of Political Science , Journalism Department, CROATIA Mediatization and the Urban: A Cultural Materialist Perspective Andre Jansson, Karlstad U, SWEDEN A Visual-Material Approach to the City: The Urban Built Environment as a Key Form/Force of Mediation and Mediatization Giorgia Aiello, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Media/Urbanism Eric Gordon, Emerson College, USA Urban Media Studies or Media Urban Studies? Myria Georgiou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Participants in this roundtable will discuss, question and perhaps explain the oscillation between ambiguousness and certainty in the use of the urban for theorizing media. This means, first, questioning how media theorists and researchers define the urban. Is it simply places above a certain density or population threshold, and thereby not rural? Or might urbanism be defined in more relational terms, as networked, globalized assemblages? Second, it means questioning what might be at stake for media theory in invoking the urban. Is it just another fashionable academic concept for theorizing media, soon to be superseded? Or, does it offer a new way of thinking about the mediated worlds we inhabit, with potentially far reaching implications? 4347 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Yoh K-Pop as a Trans/National Project Popular Communication Chair Hye Jin Lee, U of Southern California, USA Participants Transcultural Strategy for Trendy Popular Culture: K-Pop and the Industry Behind It Choonghee Han, Hope College, USA The Ethos of Collective Moralism: The Korean Cultural Identity of K-Pop Sujeong Kim, Chungnam National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Making a “Comeback”: Teasing the Audience as a Conventional K-pop Industry Practice Matt Taylor, U of Southern California, USA Hye Jin Lee, U of Southern California, USA K-pop Dance Trackers and Cover Dancers: Social Media, Global Cosmopolitanism and Local Spatialization Kai Khiun Liew, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Even before the phenomenal success of Psy’s “Gangnam Style” in 2012, K-pop artists such as BoA, Wonder Girls, and Girls’ Generation have attempted to penetrate the US market only to receive lukewarm response from the American audience. After the continuous failure of K-pop’s biggest stars in taking over the U.S. market, Psy’s record-breaking success brought great delight and national pride to the Korean public and media. This panel engages with the questions of Kpop’s identity, particularly as a culturally hybridized popular culture, in which its “local” and “national” identity and practices intersect with global forces in imagining K-pop as a global cultural product. 4348 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Kei Interpersonal Communication and Health Interpersonal Communication Health Communication Chair Timothy R. Levine, U of Alabama - Birmingham, USA Participants Capitalizing on Teachable Moments for Healthy Eating and Diabetes Prevention Among Low-Income Central American Immigrants Katherine Lee, Johns Hopkins U, USA Douglas Storey, Johns Hopkins U, USA Depression, Help-Seeking Perceptions, and Perceived Family Functioning Among Spanish-Dominant Hispanics and Non-Hispanic Whites Amanda Keeler, Claremont Graduate U, USA Jason T Siegel, Claremont Graduate U, USA Pathway Linking Patient-Centered Communication to Emotional Well-Being: Taking Into Account Patient Satisfaction and Emotion Management Shaohai Jiang, Texas A&M U, USA Sharing Health Content: Measurement Validation in the Context of Tobacco and E-Cigarette Behaviors Michelle Jeong, U of Pennsylvania, USA Understanding Interpersonal Communication and its Effects on Adolescents’ Binge-Drinking Determinants Elroy Boers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 4349 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Board Room Top Student Papers in ERIC Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Soumia Bardhan, Kansas State U, USA Participants Emerging Syrian Media and the Framing of Sectarianism in the Syrian Conflict Yazan Badran, Vrije U Brussels, BELGIUM Resisting Feminisms: Africana Womanism Versus African Feminism Lindani Mbunyuza-Memani, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA The Myth of Colorblindness Matthew Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara The “Failure” of Multiculturalism as Reported by the European Online Press: A Study on the Manifestation of Othering Discourses Shomik Chakrabarti, U of South Florida, USA 4352 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Hagi Perceptions and Effects of Messages: Group-Based Identity in Media, Mediated, and Health Communication Intergroup Communication Chair Srividya Ramasubramanian, Texas A&M U, USA Participants How News Media Influence Prejudice Against Immigrants: The Role of Perceived Morality and Moral Emotions Coen Wirtz, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Intergroup Dialogue, Group Power, and Social Media: Computer-Mediated Communication Between Israeli Jews and Palestinians Yiftach Ron, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Reciprocal Effects Among Right-Wing Extremists Katharina Neumann, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Narin Karadas, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Philip Baugut, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Multiple-Source Hate Tweets and Unhealthy Food Choice: The Buffering Role of Group Identification Roselyn J. Lee-Won, Ohio State U, USA Ji Young Lee, West Virginia U, USA Tiffany Nichole White, Ohio State U, USA Exploring the Intergroup Dimensions of Health Campaigns: Identity as a Framework for Developing Effective Messages for Medically Underserved Audiences Janice Krieger, U of Florida, USA Alyssa Jaisle, U of Florida, USA Dorothy Hagmajer, U of Florida, USA Kimberly Case, U of Florida, USA J. Robyn Goodman, U of Florida, USA Betsy Shenkman, U of Florida, USA 4353 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Fuji 4354 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Sakura Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, & Queer Studies Business Meeting Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Meet the Editors of ICA Publication Sponsored Sessions Chair Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA Participants Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA John A. Courtright, U of Delaware, USA Radhika E. Parameswaran, Indiana U, USA S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas, USA David R. Ewoldsen, Michigan State U, USA Michael J. West, International Communication Association, US This panel provides the ICA membership the opportunity to meet the editors of ICA's journals. This session is devoted to answering and addressing issues you may have about specific ICA publications. 4360 Saturday 11:00-12:15 Olive Election Debates: Exposure and Effects Political Communication Chair Lance Holbert, Temple U, USA Participants A Window Into Opinion Formation During Presidential Debates: Mediating Roles of Real-Time Evaluation and Involvement in the Process of Partisan Reinforcement Yoomin Lee, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Young Min, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Frank Biocca, Syracuse U, USA Critical Incident Analysis of Presidential Debates Erik P. Bucy, Texas Tech U, USA Shawn Hughes, Lubbock Christian U, USA Dual Screening During Presidential Debates: Political Nonverbals and Volume and Valence of Online Expression Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA Alex Hanna, U of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Erik P. Bucy, Texas Tech U, USA David Lassen, U of Wisconsin, USA Jack Thomme, U of Wisconsin, USA Kristen Bialik, U of Wisconsin, USA JungHwan Yang, U of Wisconsin, USA Jon Pevehouse, U of Wisconsin, USA Engaging to Influence: Why People Dual Screen Leaders Debates Ben O'Loughlin, Royal Holloway, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Cristian Vaccari, Royal Holloway, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Andrew Chadwick, Royal Holloway, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM The Influence of ‘Social Viewing’ on Televised Debate Viewers’ Candidate Evaluation: Bandwagon or Underdog Effects? Kyu S. Hahn, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hye-Yon Lee, U of Pennsylvania, USA Seyong Ha, U of Toronto, CANADA Seulgi Jang, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Joonhwan Lee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 4420 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Argos C Media’s Impact on Key Actors in Violent Conflicts Theme Sessions Chair Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Participants Escalation/Pacification of Vviolent Conflicts: The Role of Media on European Parliamentary Debates Rosa Berganza, ACOP - Asociacion de Comunicacion Politica, SPAIN Carlos Arcila Calderon, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Cristina López Navaz, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Beatriz Herrero, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Adolfo Carratala, U of Valencia, SPAIN Salvador Perelló, U King Juan Carlos, SPAIN Eva Lavín, U Camilo José Cela, SPAIN Pedro Echavarría, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN Relations and Interactions Between Journalists From Two Sides of a Conflict Yonatan Gonen, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Abit Hoxha, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Distributed, Discussed, or Discredited? Media Reflections in NGO Publication Marc Christian Wilhelm Jungblut, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Technological Narratives and Arab-Western Relations Omar Al-Ghazzi, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent Thomas Hanitzsch, LMU Munich, GERMANY Media’s performance in violent conflicts is of great interest in communication science. To analyze media’s potential impact on violent events, this panel focuses on the analysis of important question such as: How does the media communicate with power(ful) actors involved in violent conflicts? Can news reports contribute to escalation and de-escalation processes? What is the role of social media in the power struggle between elites and media? 4421 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Argos D Advertising and Branding Information Systems Chair Jacqueline Hitchon, U of Illinois, USA Participants Advertising Strategies for Hedonic vs. Utilitarian Brands: The Risk of Omitting Warmth or Competence Dimension Christina V. Peter, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Milan Ponzi, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Making a Name on Social Media: How Advertising With a Human Name Affects Product Attitudes in the Context of Electronic Word of Mouth Lotte Michaela Willemsen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Daniel G. Muntinga, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Marjo Van den Akker, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Does Sharing Matter? How Message, Sender, and Receiver Characteristics Influence Brand Attitudes on Social Media Theo Araujo, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Consumer Engagement With Video Advertisement on Social Media Jing Yang, Michigan State U, USA Xiaoyu Zhao, Michigan State U, USA The Mediating Effects of Presumed Influences on Taiwanese Consumers’ Skepticism Toward Celebrity Endorsed Advertising Po-Lin Pan, Arkansas State U, USA Juan Meng, U of Georgia, USA Pei-Ling Lee, Shih Hsin U, TAIWAN How Long Does Celebrity Meaning Transfer Last? Delayed Effects and the Moderating Roles of Brand Familiarity, Celebrity Liking, and Age Johannes Knoll, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Andrea Münch, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Migena Ostermann, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA The Arrogance Effect: Being Competent But Not Warm Deteriorates Brands’ Potential to Acquire Consumers’ Online Brand Engagement Stefan F. Bernritter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Theo Araujo, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Understanding the New Carrier of Brand Information: A Content Analysis of Brand-Selfies on Instagram Jung-Ah Lee, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sukyung Kang, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Qiaoxi Jin, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Il-Seog Oh, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Taeyoung Kim, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sejung Marina Choi, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yongjun Sung, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 4422 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Argos E Children’s and Young People’s Rights in the Digital Age (High Density Panel) Children Adolescents and the Media Participants A Networked Self: Tracing Young People’s Data, Agency, and Freedom via a Capability Approach Teresa Swist, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Philippa Collin, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Children’s Views on Their Rights in the Digital Age: A Download From Children Around the World Amanda Third, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Delphine Bellerose, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Emma Keltie, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Kari Pihl, Western Sydney U, AUSTRALIA Landscaping the Internet: Comparing US, South African and European policy approaches to protecting children online Brian O'Neill, Dublin Institute of Technology, IRELAND Patrick Burton, Centre for Justice and Crime Prevention, SOUTH AFRICA Elisabeth Staksrud, U of Oslo, NORWAY Monica E. Bulger, Harvard U, USA Children, Youth, and Digital Media in the Global South Neha Kumar, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA Global Kids Online: Researching Children′s Rights in a Global Digital Age Mariya Stoilova, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Jasmina Byrne, UNICEF Office of Research, UNITED KINGDOM Daniel Kardefelt-Winther, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Digital Rights and the Social Web: Issues and Prospects for Children and Adoptive Families Piermarco Aroldi, U Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, ITALY Nicoletta Vittadini, Catholic U of the Sacred Heart, ITALY Competing Constructions of Children’s Agency and Rights in the Australian Internet Filtering Debate Caroline Keen, U of Auckland, NEW ZEALAND Alan France, U of Auckland, NEW ZEALAND Surveillance and the Education of Children and Young People: Communications, Autonomy, and Privacy Issues Jo Ann Oravec, U of Wisconsin, USA “I Guess I Can Be Myself There, Instead”: U.S. Teens’ Media Migrations Within Adolescent Marginality Aimee N. Rickman, California State U, Fresno, USA From Textbook to E-Textbook: Challenges to Law and Policy Yoni Har Carmel, U of Haifa, ISRAEL This panel asks: How does a consideration of children compel a wider re-examination of the concepts both of the digital and of human rights? Since 1989, despite the emergence of significant literatures examining a) children’s rights and b) children’s digital practices, children’s rights in the digital age have yet to receive sustained attention. This panel unpacks the ways digital media are impacting –positively and negatively – children’s rights today, and reflects on the ways that children’s rights might provide a meaningful counterpoint from which to consider the role of ‘the digital’ in advancing human rights more broadly. It discusses the ways in which children’s rights – indeed rights generally – are being reconfigured by the uptake of digital networked technologies around the world. 4423 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Argos F How is Knowledge Coproduced in Dialogue Through the Harnessing of “Difference”? Investigating Dynamics of Inclusion and Exclusion in the “Co” of Coproduction Organizational Communication Chair Louise Phillips, U of Roskilde, DENMARK Participants Reflexivity in Narratives on Practice Helle Nordentoft, U of Åarhus, DENMARK Birgitte Olesen, U of Roskilde, DENMARK Students as Active Codesigners in an Online Learning Environment Jørgen Nielsen, Roskilde U, DENMARK Coconstructing Knowledge Through NGO-Driven Circle Work: A Venue for Rearticulating North-South Development? Jonas Agerbaek, Roskilde U, DENMARK Coproducing Knowledge Through Dialogue in an Interdisciplinary Team in “Person-Centred” Care for People With Dementia: Dynamics of Inclusion and Exclusion Louise Phillips, U of Roskilde, DENMARK This panel is about the “dialogic turn” in the production and communication of knowledge, a general societal tendency in which practices of cocreation are widespread across diverse fields of social practice as a means of generating knowledge, often with a view to practice change. In the dialogic turn, communication is configured as dialogue in which multiple social actors co-produce knowledge collaboratively across multiple knowledge forms and knowledge interests. Participants in dialogue, it is claimed, are empowered as self-directed colearners, coresearchers, or coproducers of knowledge, as opposed to clients, informants, consumers, students or target groups. According to dialogic ideals, expert knowledge is democratized as multiple ways of knowing are recognized as legitimate. 4424 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Navis A Algorithms, Power, and Accountability in Journalism Journalism Studies Chair Valerie Belair-Gagnon, Yale U, USA Participants Dealing With Digital Intermediaries: A Comparative Analysis of News Organizations’ Different Responses to the Rise of Search and Social Media Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Sarah Anne Ganter, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM The Role of Google and Search Engine Optimization in French News Production and Distribution Guillaume Sire, Institut Français de Presse / U Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, FRANCE News Algorithms and Journalistic Authority Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA Algorithmic Transparency Under the Freedom of Information Act Katherine Fink, Pace U, USA Beyond the Black Box: The Failures of Algorithmic Transparency Mike Joseph Ananny, U of Southern California, USA Kate Crawford, U of New South Wales, AUSTRALIA Respondent Seth C. Lewis, U of Oregon, USA Digital intermediaries, like search engines and social media, are increasingly important for the production, dissemination, and definition of news. Their rise simultaneously present citizens, journalists, political actors, and news media with new opportunities and new challenges, and are accompanied by important questions concerning algorithmic power and accountability. These issues calls for academic analysis and inter-disciplinary scrutiny, especially from journalism, media, and communications scholars. This panel brings together empirical analysis from a range of different countries and cases. It examines the relationship between digital intermediaries and journalism with an emphasis on how the intermediary-journalist relationship influences the connection between communication and power in a digital media environment. 4425 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Navis B Emotions in Health Narratives: Methods, Processes, and Interventions Health Communication Participants In the Mood to be Transported: Mood Effects on Transportation and Persuasion for Narrative and Rhetorical Health Messages Enny Henrica Das, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Narrative Insights Into Prevention Behavior: The Effect of Experience-Focused Narratives, Outcomes Frames and Discrete Emotions on Preventive Intentions Anja Kalch, Augsburg U, GERMANY Helena Bilandzic, Augsburg U, GERMANY The Role of Event-Congruent Emotions in Narrative Persuasion Markus Appel, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Constanze Schreiner, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Maj-Britt Isberner, U of Kassel, GERMANY Tobias Richter, U of Kassel, GERMANY New Methods in Narrative Persuasion Paul David Bolls, U of Missouri, USA Narrative Methods in Research and Interventions on Cyberbullying Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Narratives (stories) have rich potential to communicate with power, i.e., to persuade resistant or difficult to reach target audiences to change unhealthy habits and adopt health recommendations. At the same time, research in the past decades has revealed challenges in grasping the essence of a good narrative. Stories often include a narrative arc (e.g., health problem, conflict, and resolution), which implies different emotional responses at different points throughout a story (e.g., fear and happiness). Such emotional variations pose challenges for researchers and practitioners; they are key to the power of a story but also difficult to capture. This panel will discuss new findings, methods, and interventions that do justice to the role of emotions in health narratives. 4426 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Navis C Negative Effects of Social Media Communication and Technology Chair Cornelius Puschmann, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, GERMANY Participants Modes of Instagram’s Usage and Levels of Narcissism Penny Trieu, U of Michigan, USA “Facebocrastination”? Predictors of Using Facebook for Procrastination and its Effects on Students’ Well-Being Adrian Meier, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Christine E. Meltzer, U Mainz, GERMANY Leonard Reinecke, U of Mainz, GERMANY Ostracism in the Online World: Applying the Ostracism Online Paradigm to Investigate Social Media Effects Frank M. Schneider, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Britta Zwillich, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Melanie Bindl, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Frederic Hopp, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Sabine Reich, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY The Social Media Disorder Scale: Validity and Psychometric Properties Regina van den Eijnden, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Jeroen S Lemmens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Exploring the Relationships of Media Multitasking on Screen Device Addiction Among Internet Users in the United States and Taiwan Trisha T. C. Lin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Anastasia G Kononova, Michigan State U, USA Yi-hsuan Chiang, Shih Hsin U, TAIWAN 4430 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Nire Experimental Message Design in Health Health Communication Chair Amber Kelly Worthington, Pennsylvania State U, USA Participants Effects of Graphic Information and Health Consciousness on Improving Knowledge Jiyoon Lee, U of Minnesota, USA Sangil Jun, Korean Institute of Environment and Health, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF In-gyun Hwang, National Institute of Food and Drug Safety Evaluation, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Myungsil Hwang, National Institute of Food and Drug Safety Evaluation, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Increasing Blood Donation Intentions via Valence and Temporal Framing Ashley Elrick, U of Utah, USA Ye Sun, U of Utah, USA Influencing Organ and Tissue Donation: A Replication and Extension Christina Childs DeWalt, U of Oklahoma, USA Claude H Miller, U of Oklahoma, USA The Mediating Role of Temporal Considerations in the Effects of Self-Affirmation on Responses to Organ Donation Messages Xiao Wang, Rochester Institute of Technology, USA Xiaoquan Zhao, George Mason U, USA The Impact of Inoculation, Message Frames, and Language Variety on Psychological Reactance Xinzhi Zhang, The Hong Kong Polytechnic U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 4431 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Kusu Smartphone Studies Communication and Technology Chair Mariek Vanden Abeele, Ghent U, BELGIUM Participants Effects of Heuristic Cues on User Perceptions via Location Check-ins: An Approach to the Interplay of Dual Process and Persuasion Knowledge Models Hyang-Sook Kim, Towson U, USA Qian Xu, Elon U, USA Keunyeong (Karina) Kim, California State U, Dominguez Hills, USA Spatial Search and Spatial Inequality: Digital Representations Through Locative Media Jordan H. Frith, U of North Texas, USA Deprived of Willpower, Smartphone in Hand: The Effect of Ego Depletion on Smartphone Use Niklas Johannes, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Dian Afina de Vries, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Everyday Imagery: Conceptualizing Users’ Perspectives on Smartphone Cameras and Communication Chris Peters, Aalborg U, DENMARK Stuart Allan, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Communication Accommodation Theory in Text Messages: Sex, Liking, and Power as Predictors of Textisms Aubrie Serena Adams, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Victoria Tsai, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Jai Miles, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Alicia Christiansen, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Jessica Going, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Lori Ta, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA 4432 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Kashi Intergroup Contact, Communication Apprehension, and Cultural Adjustment Intercultural Communication Chair Lily A. Arasaratnam-Smith, Alphacrucis College, AUSTRALIA Participants Appraisal Models of Intercultural Communication Apprehension Among Americans Studying Abroad Rong Ma, U of Maryland, USA Dale Hample, U of Maryland, USA Intergroup Contact Theory and Acculturation: The Mediating Roles of Shared Cultural Identity and Individual and Group Levels of Communication Anxiety Makiko Imamura, Saint Mary's College of California, USA Racheal A. Ruble, Iowa State U, USA Yan Bing Zhang, U of Kansas, USA Socioeconomic Status of the Minority Groups and Communication Apprehension: An investigation of Kurdistan Diyako Rahmani, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Do Media Matter? Comparing the Generalization Effect of Intergroup Contact in Face-to-Face Interaction, Text-Based, and VideoBased Computer-Mediated Communication Bolin CAO, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Wan-Ying Lin, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF International Students’ Communication Accommodation on Facebook and Cross-Cultural Adjustment Sara Kim, U of Arizona, USA Margaret J. Pitts, U of Arizona, USA Predicting International Students’ Social Support and Adjustment Ying Cheng, Michigan State U, USA Jingbo Meng, Michigan State U, USA Shuangqing Liu, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 4433 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Kaede Public Opinion of Environmental Issues and Controversial Science Environmental Communication Chair John C. Besley, Michigan State U, USA Participants Perceptions About Scientific Agreement, Trust in Scientists, and the American Public’s Beliefs of Global Warming Soohee Kim, Stanford U, USA Jon A. Krosnick, Stanford U, USA Public Opinion on Nuclear Energy After Fukushima Silje Theresa T Kristiansen, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Heinz Bonfadelli, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Marko Kovic, ZIPAR, SWITZERLAND Review: Public Perceptions of Climate Geoengineering Christopher Cummings, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Sapphire Lin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE First-Person Perception of Environmental Exemplars Sonny Rosenthal, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Michael Field Dahlstrom, Iowa State U, USA 4440 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Rigel Panel: Online Entertainment: A New Wave of Media Globalization? Global Communication and Social Change Participants Online Entertainment Media: A New Wave of Media Globalization? Stuart Duncan Cunningham, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA David Craig, U of Southern California, USA Digital Media and the Making of Networked Publics in India, 1986-2014 Aswin Punathambekar, U of Michigan, USA Sriram Mohan, U of Michigan, USA Professionalising Amateur Practice and Platform Strategies in the Online Video Space in China Elaine Zhao, U of New South Wales, AUSTRALIA How Chinese Television Found its Way Out of the Box Michael Andrew Keane, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA “Upload Once, Commercialize Everywhere:” Local Talent, YouTube, and Globalization Patrick Vonderau, Stockholm U, SWEDEN This panel will consider the phenomena of global online screen entertainment platforms in the context of enduring debates in communication and media studies concerning media globalization. Versions of ‘weak’ rather than ‘strong’ globalisation have largely characterised recent discussion. However, a reassessment of this contingent settlement is timely in the light of a new wave of media globalisation based on what may appear to be the virtually frictionless, near-global reach of major digital content delivery platforms, pre-eminently YouTube, but also the “parallel universe” of major Chinese platforms YoukuToudo, TenCent, Alibaba, and the rapidly growing commitment to video entertainment content on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Vine and Periscope. This panel looks at the scale and significance of the ‘new screen ecology.’ 4441 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Vega Audience Engagement With News (TOP FACULTY PAPER AWARDEE) Mass Communication Chair David D. Perlmutter, Texas Tech U, USA Participants Active within Structures: An Integrated Model of Multiplatform Local News Consumption Tang Tang, The U of Akron, USA Roger Cooper, Ohio U, USA Likeminded News Exposure and Affective Polarization: Mediating Effects of Emotional Responses and Political Discussion Yanqin Lu, Indiana U, USA Jae Kook Lee, Indiana U, USA The Value of Sharing: A Neural Model of Self-Related and Social Processing in Value-Based Virality Christin Scholz, U of Pennsylvania, USA Elisa Baek, U of Pennsylvania, USA Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Pennsylvania, USA Emily Falk, U of Pennsylvania, USA To Share or Not to Share? How Emotional Frames Influence the Sharing of Online News Stories Theresa Marie de los Santos, Pepperdine U, USA Robin Nabi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 4442 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Kiku Social Media and Technology as New Playgrounds: Hashtags and Beyond Feminist Scholarship Participants If “Diversity” is the Answer, What is the Question? Understanding Diversity Advocacy in Amateur Technology Projects Christina Dunbar-Hester, U of Southern California, USA “You Can Start a Movement With a Hashtag”: An Exploration of Student-Led Social Media Activism Candace P. Parrish, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Rowena Lyn Briones, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Avina Ross, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Tremayne Robertson, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Alyssa Glace, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA DIY Feminism: Making the Personal Political - A Work-in-Progress Rosemary Clark, U of Pennsylvania, USA Feminist Uses of Social Media Stine Eckert, Wayne State U, USA Linda C. Steiner, U of Maryland, USA (Still) Making the Personal Political: #YesAllWomen, Digital Feminism, and New Dynamics of Social Change Bernadette Barker-Plummer, U of San Francisco, USA 4443 Saturday 12:30-15:15 Ran Extended Session: Let Me Entertain You! Digital Games, Driving Forces, and Experience Game Studies Chair James D. Ivory, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Participants Critical Acclaim and Commercial Success in Mobile Free-to-Play Games Kati Alha, U of Tampere, FINLAND Elina Koskinen, U of Tampere, FINLAND Janne Paavilainen, U of Tampere, FINLAND Juho Hamari, U of Tampere, FINLAND Effects of Soundtrack Music on the Gameplay Experience Christoph Klimmt, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Daniel Possler, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Hendrik Auge, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Anna-Lena Wolf, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Louisa Wanjek, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Effects of Digital Games on Hedonic, Eudaimonic, and Telic Entertainment Experiences Julian Unkel, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Anna Sophie Kuempel, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Psychological Triggers and Casual Gaming Behaviors Donghee Yvette Wohn, New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA Older Adults' Social Connectedness Through Digital Gaming Yu-Hao Lee, U of Florida, USA It's My Choice: The Effects of Virtual Moral Decision-Making on Narrative Game Engagement Arienne Ferchaud, Pennsylvania State U, USA Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Loaded With Fun? An Experimental Study Into Enjoyment and Cognitive Load as Determinants of In-Game Advertising Retention Tine Vyvey, Ghent U, BELGIUM Elena Nunez Castellar, Ghent U, BELGIUM Shared Experience and Creation: Motivations for Viewing Game Streaming, Need Satisfaction of Self-Determination, and Enjoyment Jih-Hsuan Lin, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN Chih-An Wan, , TAIWAN Social Capital in World of Warcraft: The Role of Introversion Felix Reer, U of Tuebingen, GERMANY The Effect of Moral Intuitions on Decisions in Video-Game Play: Temporary and Chronic Intuition Accessibility Ron Tamborini, Michigan State U, USA Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Lindsay S. Hahn, Michigan State U, USA Brian Klebig, Michigan State U, USA Clare Grall, Michigan State U, USA Eric R. Novotny, SUNY - U At Buffalo, USA Sujay Prabhu, Michigan State U, USA 4445 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Sumire News Approaches to Election Campaigns and Voting Behavior Political Communication Chair H. Denis Wu, Boston U, USA Participants Do Voting Advice Applications Narrow the Digital Divide? A Quasiexperiment Jasper van de Pol, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Naomi Kamoen, Utrecht U/ Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Andre Krouwel, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bregje Holleman, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Predicting U.S. College Students’ Presidential Voting Behavior, Online and Offline Political Participation, and Civic Engagement Hongwei Yang, Appalachian State U, USA Jean DeHart, Appalachian State U, USA Does Poll Coverage Help or Hurt Efforts to Get First-Time Voters Into the Ballot Box? Sjoerd Stolwijk, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Andreas Schuck, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS News-Seekers, News-Avoiders, and the Mobilizing Effects of Election Campaigns Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN U.S. Political Party Adaptation to Technology-Intensive Campaigning: A Network Analysis of Organizational Affiliation Daniel Kreiss, U of North Carolina, USA Adam J. Saffer, U of North Carolina, USA Kylah Jae Hedding, U of North Carolina, USA 4446 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Koh Masses, Crowds, Media Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Sharrona Pearl, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Targeted Killing and Pattern-of-Life Analysis. Changing approaches to “the mass” in Contemporary Warfare Nina Franz, Humboldt U Berlin, GERMANY The Mob and the Media Anne Kaun, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Aaron Shapiro, U of Pennsylvania, USA Rethinking Mass Communication in an Age of Mass Personalisation Goran Bolin, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Competition, Crowds and Class on Youtube Fredrik Stiernstedt, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Peter Jakobsson, Beckmans College of Design, SWEDEN This panel gathers papers that analyse, discuss and seek to explain the resurgence of the category of ”the mass” – and related concepts such as “mobs” and “crowds” – in contemporary media culture. Political, economic and ecological crises of our time are transforming the social landscape. One dimension of this is how the mass and the crowd is returning as a subject of heated debate, a perceived social agent and, at least for some, a meaningful social category. In this panel we analyse the uses (and abuses) of the concept of the mass in contemporary society, and its relationship to media technologies – digital and analogue, broadcast as well as personal media. 4447 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Yoh Mediated Street Life in Unequal Cities Popular Communication Global Communication and Social Change Participants Moral Geographies of Place: Street Art and Graffiti as Communication of Solidarity Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Boys and Girls on the Networked Streets of Harlem Jeffrey Lane, Rutgers U, USA #NeverLacking: Urban violence and Street Efficacy in the Digital Age Forrest Stuart, U of Chicago, USA What’s So Great About Conviviality? The Urban Complexities of the Physical and Digital Street Myria Georgiou, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Community Building and Public Places in the Mediatized City Andreas Hepp, U of Bremen - ZeMKI, GERMANY Piet Simon, U of Bremen, GERMANY Monika Sowinska, U of Bremen, GERMANY This panel links research in five cities in the global north around street life, inequality, and media. Our purpose is to examine multiple aspects of inequality through the social life of the street, where city people with different orientations relate to one another in person and digitally. We investigate inequality through graffiti practices in Stockholm, boy-girl interactions in Harlem (NYC), neighborliness in multiethnic London, community building in public in Bremen, and gang violence and social media use in Chicago. These urban contexts all exhibit concentrated but unequally distributed power and constellations of diverse racial, ethnic, and immigrant populations. The panel provides five urban settings in which to explore these interconnections and to understand the affordances of media in urban communication. 4448 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Kei The Power of Crisis Management: Understanding the Role of Public Relations Public Relations Chair Diana Ingenhoff, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Participants Being Honest in Crisis Communication: The Interplay Between Stealing Thunder, Persuasive Intent, and Brand Attachment Sang Yeal Lee, West Virginia U, USA To Be Blamed or To Be Protected During a Government Crisis Myoung-Gi Chon, Louisiana State U, USA The Impact of Contextual Factors on Social Mediated Crisis: Revisiting the Concept of “Modifier” in Situational Crisis Communication Theory Hui Zhao, Lund U, SWEDEN TEPCO's Image Repair Strategies and the News Reports on the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant Accident Tsuyoshi Oshita, Michigan State U, USA Manufacturing Dissent: Strategic Public Relations and Its Impact on the Climate Change Debate Mitchell Hobbs, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Respondent Melanie James, U of Newcastle, AUSTRALIA 4449 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Board Room Online Behavioral Advertising: An Interdisciplinary Panel About Privacy and Policy Communication Law & Policy Chair Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants What We Know About Consumer Responses to Online Behavioral Advertising Sophie Carolien Boerman, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Law regarding Online Behavioral Advertising in Europe Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Law regarding Online Behavioral Advertising in Japan Itsuko Yamaguchi, U of Tokyo, JAPAN The Personalization-Privacy Paradox in Marketing Communication Paul Ketelaar, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Joeri Troost, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Understanding Users' Perceptions About Privacy Jennifer Romano Bergstrom, Facebook, USA Corrupt Personalization: Theorizing Adversarial Human-Computer Interaction Christian Sandvig, U of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA Political Advertising Online: Microtargeting in Election Campaigns and What It Means for the Public Young Mie Kim, U of Wisconsin, USA This panel focuses on Online Behavioral Advertising (OBA), privacy issues regarding using personal data to personalize advertising, and the implications for law and policy. The use of OBA is rising. One website visit often leads to receiving tracking cookies of dozens of companies. However, many people feel that OBA threatens privacy and fairness. Therefore, the development of using personal data to target advertising has received a lot of attention of regulators, lawmakers, consumer protection organizations, and scholars. Often, the debate revolves around privacy issues and transparency. This panel aims to contribute to this debate, by bringing together experts in the field of OBA from all over the world, from different disciplines and fields. 4452 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Hagi Blue Sky Workshop: The Challenges of Journalism Education in China Sponsored Sessions Chairs Ruhan Zhao, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM This workshop aims to bring together scholars willing to exchange experience on how to deal with these structural and contextual changes in the way we organize journalism research and education. Although the focus of the workshop will be China, participants from other regions are strongly encouraged to attend so as to better understand what aspects of the transition are specific to China and how the experience in China can contribute to a better understanding of the challenges and strategies in the broader context. 4453 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Fuji Current Approaches to Photography's Changing Ontologies Visual Communication Studies Chair Paolo Favero, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Participants Communicating Life as a Piece of Visual Art: Case Study of Photography Application Zuji FotoPlace Xuan Xie, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Online Identity Practices Within Coercive Networks: The Case of Korean Mobile Instant Messenger KakaoTalk Steffie Kim, Indiana U, USA Shifting Codes: Locating the Intersections of the Real and the Virtual Cultures of Photography Ashwin Nagappa, CEI&AR, TISS, INDIA Time in Photography: Temporal-Punctum, Chronotope and Digital Aura Jacob Banuelos, Tecnologico de Monterrey-Campus Ciudad d, MEXICO Wearable Cameras and the Changing Meaning of Images in a Digital Landscape Paolo Favero, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 4454 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Sakura ICA Affiliate Journals: "Communication and Society“ and "Studies in Communication/Media“ - Presentation and Top Papers Sponsored Sessions Chairs Ven-Hwei Lo, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Wolfgang Schweiger, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Participants More Than Proximity and Harmony. Dimensions of the Relationship Between Local Politicians and Journalists in German Cities Philip Baugut, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Nayla Fawzi, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Carsten E. Reinemann, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Lee, Lap Fung, News Media as the Public Monitor in Social Movements: The Case of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong. Francis L. F. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Communication and Society in Hong Kong, China, and Studies in Communication/Media in Germany are the first two journals distinguished by the ICA as its affiliate journals. The panel will introduce both open-access journals in regard to their aims, scope, content, and editorial policies. Scholars from both countries will provide an overview of the academic situation, research activities and publications in Greater China and Germany/Europe. 4460 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Olive Digital Communication With Power: Digital Diplomacy and Online Disputes in Northeast Asia Political Communication Chair George A. Barnett, U of California - Davis, USA Participants China’s ‘info-web’: How Beijing Governs Online Political Communication About Japan Florien Schneider, U of Leiden, THE NETHERLANDS Social Media Diplomacy in Japan Leslie M. Tkach-Kawasaki, U of Tsukuba, JAPAN The “App-Gap” and the New Bipolar World: The Geopolitical Implications of Digital Platforms Randy Kluver, Texas AandM U, USA Like or Comment on South Korea: Networked Public Diplomacy Using Facebook Sejin Park, U of Tennessee, USA Han Woo Park, YeungNam U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Marc Smith, Social Media Research Foundation, USA Respondent George A. Barnett, U of California - Davis, USA As digital diplomacy initiatives have grown across northeast Asia, both governments and citizen groups are using digital technologies to build relationships among overseas audiences. These initiatives involve the use of video sharing sites, as well as online forums, chatrooms, and social media platforms to accuse, resist, or undermine one another, as in the "YouTube Wars," in which each of these nations post videos to support their claims over disputed islands. This panel will examine the development of both formal and informal "digital diplomacy" efforts across the northeast Asian region, primarily focused on how the Japanese, South Korean, and Chinese governments and peoples use digital technologies for geopolitical purposes. 4461 Saturday 12:30-13:45 Sage Consuming Media Media Industry Studies Chair Philip M. Napoli, Rutgers U, USA Participants Second Screening in Latin America: a Window for Added Engagement With TV Industry Victor Manuel Garcia-Perdomo, U of Texas, USA Vanessa de Macedo Higgins Joyce, Texas State U, USA Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA Adolfo Rafael Mora, U of Texas, USA Frenemies: Towards an Ethnography of Audience Engagement With Public Service Television in South Africa Viola Milton, U of South Africa, SOUTH AFRICA Understanding the Social in a Postmoviegoing Era of the Multiplex Lies Van de Vijver, Ghent U, BELGIUM Audience Currencies in the Age of Big Data Jacob Nelson, Northwestern U, USA James G. Webster, Northwestern U, USA The Competition of Television Ratings: Can New Measurement Break the Monopoly? Kuo-Feng Tseng, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN Understanding Multiplatform Media Consumers Sylvia Chan-Olmsted, U of Florida, USA Min Xiao, U of Florida, USA 4520 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Argos C Power From Without: Cultural Labor, Precarity, and the Future of Work Outside Institutions Theme Sessions Participants Writing the Romance: Cultural Production and the Rise of Digital Self-Publishing Christine Larson, Stanford U, USA Communication as Power: The Peer Economy as Virtual Workplace Gina Neff, U of Washington, USA Beyond Journalism Mark Deuze, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Emerging Agency in the Chinese Internet Industries Bingqing Xia, Macau U of Science and Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondent Annette Markham, Umea U, SWEDEN In keeping with this year’s theme, “Communicating With Power,” this panel reaches across five continents and four industries to explore power and communication in two senses. First, how do workers outside traditional institutions—often lacking in legal protections and professional status—communicate with the economic and cultural power represented by the institutions they orbit? Second, how do these outsiders leverage emerging technologies to communicate powerfully, and effect change in their circumstances? 4521 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Argos D Psychophysiological and Neuroscientific Perspectives in Communication Information Systems Chair Satoko Kurita, Mie U, JAPAN Participants Primary Biological Appeals in Food Advertisements: Food Cues, Sexual Appeals, and Their Influence on Specific and Generalized Appetitive Responses Rachel L. Bailey, Washington State U, USA Jiawei Liu, Washington State U, USA Tianjiao Wang, Washington State U, USA Christopher Kaiser, Washington State U, USA Relationships Between Neural Patterns During Picture Priming and Creative Thinking During Electronic Brainstorming Jingjing Han, Indiana U, USA William Liao, Indiana U, USA Randall Minas, U of Hawaii, USA Allan Dennis, Indiana U, USA Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA How Does Social Endorsement Influence Physiological Arousal? Affective Content as a Moderator Soo Youn Oh, Stanford U, USA Soohee Kim, Stanford U, USA Sharing for the (Social) Self and Others: Neural Mechanisms Driving Broad- and Narrowcasting Christin Scholz, U of Pennsylvania, USA Elisa Baek, U of Pennsylvania, USA Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Pennsylvania, USA Emily Falk, U of Pennsylvania, USA Neural Mechanisms Associated With Social Influence Predict Social Influence on Driving Risk Elizabeth C Beard, U of Pennsylvania, USA Christopher Cascio, U of Pennsylvania, USA Matthew Brook O'Donnell, U of Pennsylvania, USA C. Bingham, U of Michigan, USA Bruce Simons-Morton, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, USA Anuj Pradhan, U of Michigan, USA Jean Shope, U of Michigan, USA Farideh Almani, U of Michigan, USA Emily Falk, U of Pennsylvania, USA Breaks in Presence and Psychophysiology: Assessing a Broad Range of Measures in an Ecologically Valid Setting Benny Liebold, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Michael Brill, Wuerzburg U, GERMANY Daniel Pietschmann, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Frank Schwab, U Wuerzburg, GERMANY Peter Ohler, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY When Faces Blur the Uncanny Valley: Physiological and Cognitive Responses to Category Conflict Jakki Bailey, Stanford U, USA Examining Characteristics of Personality Measures in Physiological Responses During Emotional Stimuli and Risky Behaviors Satoko Kurita, Mie U, JAPAN Hirokata Fukushima, Kansai U, JAPAN Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA 4522 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Argos E Revisiting the Controversies: Histories of Communication Study Communication History Chair Susanne Kinnebrock, Augbsurg U, GERMANY Participants Drinking Water From Champaign: Sixty Years of Four Theories of the Press Terhi Rantanen, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Journalism Professors in the German Democratic Republic (GDR): A Collective Biography Michael Meyen, U Munich, GERMANY Thomas Wiedemann, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Media as Pharmakon: Revisiting the Bullet Theory Ghislain Thibault, U of Montreal, CANADA The Dewey Problem in Communication History: The Michigan Years Revisited Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA Respondent Susanne Kinnebrock, Augbsurg U, GERMANY 4523 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Argos F Public Diplomacy as Communicating With Power: Actors, Practices, and Discourses About Migrants and Refugees Public Relations Chairs Elena Alina Dolea, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA Diana Ingenhoff, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Participants Swiss Public Diplomacy as Enactment of “The Will of the People”: Legitimizing the Passing of the “Stop Mass Immigration” Initiative in February 2014 Diana Ingenhoff, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND “Sorry About the Mess Here in Sweden =(”. Theorising Anti-Immigration Political Advertising as Public Diplomacy James Pamment, Lund U, SWEDEN Marja Akerstrom, Lund U, SWEDEN Public Diplomacy Efforts of the EU and its Member States: Trying to Reach Consensus in Times of Crisis Alice Srugies, Ilmenau U of Technology, GERMANY Liane Rothenberger, Technische U Ilmenau, GERMANY The Rebellion of the Young Child: Romania Says NO to Refugees Elena Alina Dolea, U of Bucharest, ROMANIA Respondent Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA 4524 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Navis A Journalism and Social Media Journalism Studies Communication and Technology Chair Anders Olof Larsson, Westerdals Oslo School of Arts, Communication and Technology, NORWAY Participants Journalistic Branding on Twitter: An Exploratory Study of Australian Journalists Folker Christian Hanusch, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Axel Bruns, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA When Citizens and Journalists Interact on Twitter Effects Over Journalists’ Performance Expectations and Media-Bias Perceptions Homero Gil de Zuniga, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Trevor H Diehl, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Alberto Ardevol-Abreu, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Sung Woo Yoo, State U of New York - Cortland, USA ”I Shared the News Today, Oh Boy”: News Provision and Engagement on Facebook Anders Olof Larsson, Westerdals Oslo School of Arts, Communication and Technology, NORWAY Agenda-Building and Journalists’ Use of Political Tweets: From Information Subsidies to Perceived Influences Julia Metag, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Adrian Rauchfleisch, U of Zurich - IPMZ, SWITZERLAND The Varied Effects of Seeing Journalists on Social Media: An Assessment of Self-Disclosure, Perceived Objectivity, and Intention to Consume Jayeon (Janey) Lee, Lehigh U, USA Lance Holbert, Temple U, USA 4525 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Navis B Antismoking Health Messages Health Communication Chair Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, ASCoR, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Examining the Role of Parasocial Interaction, Metacognition, and Attitude Certainty in Persuasion Boni Cui, Texas Tech U, USA Melanie Sarge, Texas Tech U, USA Ignoring the Opportunity to Smoke: Future Orientation, Parents, and DNA Messages Help Protect At-Risk Adolescents Amna Al Abri, U of Connecticut, USA Leslie Snyder, U of Connecticut, USA The Impact of Controlling Language and Locus of Control on Psychological Reactance and Ad Effectiveness in Health Communication Jie Xu, Villanova U, USA The Effects of Graphic Warning Labels’ Vividness on Message Engagement and Intentions to Quit Smoking Yotam Ophir, U of Pennsylvania, USA Emily Brennan, Cancer Council Victoria, AUSTRALIA Erin K. Maloney, U of Pennsylvania, USA Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA Too Old to Quit Smoking? Exploring the Roles of Regret and Legacy in Antismoking Persuasion Jie Zhuang, Michigan State U, USA Mary Jiang Bresnahan, Michigan State U, USA Shaojing Sun, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yi Zhu, Michigan State U, USA Joshua Charles Nelson, Michigan State U, USA 4526 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Navis C Virtual Reality, Presence, and the Effects of Technology Communication and Technology Chair Tony Liao, Temple U, USA Participants Media are Social Actors: Expanding the CASA Paradigm in the 21st Century Kun Xu, Temple U, USA Matthew Lombard, Temple U, USA Avatar Face Recognition and Self-Presence young-nam seo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Younbo Jung, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Doohwang Lee, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Minkyung Kim, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyobeom Seo, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Chatting With a Machine: Do Anthropomorphic Cues and Message Interactivity Compensate or Violate Expectations? Eun Go, Western Illinois U, USA S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA The Computer Said I Should: How Does Receiving Advice From a Computer Differ From Receiving Advice From a Human? Andrew Prahl, U of Wisconsin, USA Lyn M. Van Swol, U of Wisconsin, USA 4530 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Nire Studies of Media Effects and Health Health Communication Chair Enny Henrica Das, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Explaining the Mechanisms Underlying the Communication Effects on Public Support for Government Actions to Reduce Health Disparities and on Personal Activism Chul-joo Lee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Xiaoquan Zhao, George Mason U, USA Cabral A Bigman, U of Illinois, USA Negative Influence of Exposure to Health Information in Mass Media on Patients’ Beliefs and Medication Regimen Adherence Heewon Im, U of Minnesota - Twin Cities, USA Jisu Huh, U of Minnesota, USA Specifying the Role of Threat and Efficacy Within the Extended Parallel Process Model Alexander Ort, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Andreas M. Fahr, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND The Influence of Chronic and Temporary Accessibility on Food Risk Perception Heewon Cha, Ewha Womans U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jungeun Yang, Pyeongtaek U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Soojin Kim, Ewha Womans U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Potential of Recovery Perspectives for Destigmatization Alexander Roehm, TU Dortmund U, GERMANY Matthias R. Hastall, TU Dortmund U, GERMANY Ute Ritterfeld, TU Dortmund U, GERMANY 4531 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Kusu Loneliness and Displacement on the Internet Communication and Technology Chair Erin Spottswood, Portland State U, USA Participants Smartphone-Mediated Communication vs. Face-to-Face Interaction as Ways to Cope With Loneliness: Comparison of Two Routes Leading to Perceived Social Support and Problematic Smartphone Use Jung-Hyun Kim, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Effects of Seniors' Smart Mobile Divide on Ego Integrity, Mediated by Loneliness Kisun Kim, Bowling Green State U, USA Displacement or Reinforcement? The Reciprocity of FtF, IM, and SNS Communication and Their Effects on Loneliness and Life Satisfaction Tobias Dienlin, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Philipp K. Masur, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Sabine Trepte, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY An Examination of Functional Difficulties From Internet Use: Displacement and Media Habit Theory Explanations Robert Shota Tokunaga, U of Hawai'i, USA 4532 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Kashi Using G/local Strategies Research for Change Language & Social Interaction Chair Trudy Milburn, Taskstream, USA Participants Change as the Way Saskia Witteborn, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF News and Media Strategies of Bhutan’s Cell Phone Generation Dorji Wangchuk, Royal Thimphu College, Bhutan, BURUNDI Cell Phone Repairs in Macao’s Mixed Linguistic Environment Todd L. Sandel, U of Macau, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Implementing Local Strategies Research Practices to Connect On-Line Culture Training with On-the-Ground Application in the U.S. Marine Corps Lauren Mackenzie, Bloomsburg U of Pennsylvania, USA Plans v. Situated Actions in an Online Networking Platform: How Users Navigate the (Effective) Use of LinkedIn Tabitha Hart, San Jose State U, USA. 4533 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Kaede Social Media Law in the Global 21st Century: An International and Comparative Perspective Communication Law & Policy Chair Kyu Ho Youm, U of Oregon, USA Participants Social Media Law In Australia—Some Parallels And Differences Mark Pearson, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA Social Media Law In South Korea: Reconciling Free Speech With National Security And Social Values Ahran Park, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Social Media Law: The U.S. Versus The World Eric Robinson, Louisiana State U, USA Social Media Law In The U.K.: Legal Gatekeeping, Self-Lawyering And Information Flow Judith Townend, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM 4540 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Rigel China and Russia: Communication and Power in Non-Western Societies Global Communication and Social Change Chair Daniela Stockmann, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Online Deliberation in China: Who Voices Opinions in Chinese Cyberspace? Ting Luo, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS Daniela Stockmann, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS A New Internet World, A Neo-Authoritarian Model of Internet Governance: A Chinese Perspective Min Jiang, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA Rewiring Authoritarianism: Internet Regulation and Political Control in Putin’s Russia Jackie Kerr, Georgetown U, USA Comparing Official Discourses on the Media and Politics in China and Russia Bingchun Meng, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Florian Toepfl, Free U of Berlin, GERMANY Critical Journalists and the State in China and Russia Maria Repnikova, U of Pennsylvania, USA Respondents Bingchun Meng, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Maria Repnikova, U of Pennsylvania, USA This panel represents a pioneering attempt at seriously distilling and comparing media and communication in Russia and China. Taking another step in the direction of de-Westernizing media studies and moving beyond the meta-level analysis of systems towards illuminating a multifaceted process of media-state relations, the panel not only presents new empirical studies but also a strong theoretical ambition that moves beyond the status quo of comparative research. 4541 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Vega Media-Related Health Communication Research (TOP FACULTY AND STUDENT PAPER) Mass Communication Chair Shawnika Jeanine Hull, George Washington U, USA Participants A Comparison of Disease Burden and News Coverage of Cancer in China Jie Wang, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Hua Fu, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Paul Crawford, U of Nottingham, UNITED KINGDOM Dispelling Fears and Myths of Organ Donation: How Narratives Including Information Reduce Ambivalence and Reactance Freya Sukalla, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Anna Wagner, Augsburg U, GERMANY Isabel Rackow, U of Augsburg, GERMANY Health Literacy and the Internet: An Exploratory Study With Implications for Theory and Practice Shaohai Jiang, Texas A&M U, USA Christopher E. Beaudoin, Texas A&M U, USA Media Exposure and Protective Behavior During a Public-Health Emergency Xigen Li, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 4542 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Kiku The Power of Emotion on College Student Learning and Success: Embracing Opportunities to Enhance Instructional Practices Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Jason Martin, U of Missouri-Kansas City, USA Participants Enhancing Instructional Practices through Social Support: Exploring Message Types and Effectiveness on Student Academic Emotion and Success Moyi Jia, Monmouth U, USA Li Li, U of Wyoming at Casper, USA Jose Maldonado, Monmouth U, USA The Role of Affectionate Communication on International College Students’ Friendship Satisfaction in the U.S. Yanqin Liu, Arizona Sate U, USA Use of Emotional Language in Medical Student Encounters with Standardized Patie Lindsay Neuberger, U of Central Florida, USA Daniel Topping, U of Central Florida, USA Sofia Hsu, U of Central Florida, USA Sabrina Ghim, U of Central Florida, USA Erica Landis, U of Central Florida, USA How do I Feel About This? Examining the Emotional Nature of Students’ Academic and Personal Lives Throughout the First-Year Experience Jason Martin, U of Missouri-Kansas City, USA Instructor Support of Student Emotional Expression: A Cooperative-Experiential Health Campaigns Project Andrew Craig Tollison, Merrimack College, USA Jacob Stephen Turner, Merrimack College, USA Emotional Quotient: The Power of Emotion and Communication Relating to College Student Learning and Success Jim Towns, Stephen F. Austin U, USA Strategies for Reducing Negative Emotional Reactions to International Teaching Assistants in U.S. College Classrooms Esther Yook, George Mason U, USA This panel seeks to proactively address concerns related to mental and emotional challenges that might arise in different stages and arenas of undergraduate and graduate students’ lives, as well as productive ways of coping with them. The discussion provides academic as well as practical support for both teachers and students on a journey of possibly being excited, fulfilled, stressful, or daunting. Our panel will discuss active efforts to enhance students’ emotional well-being through supportive communication, health campaigns, interpersonal interactions, or simply listening to their emotional stories to ultimately improve their college experiences. The panel aligns with the division’s history and mission of understanding developmental issues both in- and outside of the classroom. 4545 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Sumire Political Leaders and the Media Political Communication Chair Michaela Maier, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Participants Effects of Scandals on Top Politicians Hans Mathias Kepplinger, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Senja Post, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Dickhaus Maike, U of Mainz, GERMANY How Do the Media Shape Perceptions of Party Leaders? Jakob-Moritz Eberl, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Markus Wagner, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Hajo G. Boomgaarden, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Indirect Effects of Personalization in the Media: Whose Perceived Performance is Determined by Whom? Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Leaders and Followers: A Longitudinal Study of Strategic Political Communication and Interparty Relations in Election Campaigning Kajsa Larsson Falasca, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Christina Grandien, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN The National Exemplar Effect: Foreign Leader’s Perceived Personality and Attitudes Toward Their Countries and Citizenry Meital Balmas, Hebrew U, ISRAEL 4546 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Koh Data and Surveillance Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Helen Kennedy, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Incoded Counterconduct: What the Incarcerated Can Teach Us About Resisting Mass Surveillance Jessa Lingel, Microsoft Research, USA Aram A. Sinnreich, American U, USA The New Mass: Calibration and Schizophrenia Ben O'Loughlin, Royal Holloway, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Andrew Hoskins, U of Warwick, UNITED KINGDOM Programming Future Conduct: How Big Data Affects Subjectivation and Self-Care J.J. Sylvia IV, North Carolina State U, USA Data Citizenships: Platforms, Protocols, and Possibilities Alison Powell, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM 4547 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Yoh mHealth Mobile Communication Health Communication Chair Constanze Rossmann, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Participants Implementing a BYOD Mobile Device Use Policy in a Hospital: Boundary Barriers at the Individual, Unit, and Organizational Level Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA Yaguang Zhu, U of Texas, USA Millie Harrison, U of Texas, USA Meena Iyer, Seton Hospital, USA Terrie Hairston, Seton Hospital, USA John Luk, U of Texas, USA A Sociotechnical Analysis of Staff Nurses' Use of Personal Mobile Phones at Work: Perspectives From the Philippines John Robert Razote Bautista, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Trisha T. C. Lin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Using Ecological Momentary Assessment via Mobile Technology to Examine College Students’ Alcohol-Related Behaviors: A Feasibility Study Porismita Borah, Washington State U, USA Stepping Through Stages of Change: Considering the Effects of Tracking Monitors and Social Media Use for Achieving Health Goals Kim Baker, U of Alabama, USA Sarah Pember, U of Alabama, USA Xueying Zhang, U of Alabama, USA Kimberly Bissell, U of Alabama, USA 4548 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Kei Leadership in Organizational Communication Organizational Communication Chair Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA Participants Self-Perceived Leader-Member Dyadic Communication and Similarity on Group Member Behaviors: A Longitudinal Examination Hassan Abu Bakar, U of Utara - Malaysia, MALAYSIA Robert M. McCann, U of California – Los Angeles, USA The Relationships Among Supervisor Feedback Environment, Organizational Citizenship Behavior, and Workplace Deviant Behavior: The Mediating Effect of Leader-Member Exchange JC Peng, Saint John U, TAIWAN Julian Lin, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Explicating Managerial Coaching: A Communication Perspective Jihyun Esther Paik, U of Wisconsin, USA Tensions and Contradictions in Organizational Change: Managers’ Discursive Enactment of Control and Resistance Catrin E. Johansson, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Linda L. Putnam, U of California-Santa Barbara, USA Respondent Vernon D. Miller, Michigan State U, USA 4549 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Board Room Problematic Interactions: Arguments, Advice, and Other Contentious Issues in Interpersonal Relationships Interpersonal Communication Chair Jennifer A. Samp, U of Georgia, USA Participants Arguing About Others' Personal Issue: A Reconceptualization of Argument Type Yiwen Dai, U of Maryland, USA Mengqi Zhan, U of Maryland, USA Money, Sex, and Illegal Activity: An Experimental Study of Taboo Topics on Impression Formation and Task Evaluation Hye Eun Lee, U of Hawaii, USA Catherine Y Kingsley Westerman, North Dakota State U, USA Emi Hashi, U of Hawaii, USA Rejection Sensitivity and Serial Arguing: Implications for Conflict Resolution Sangeun Lee, Northwestern U, USA Michael E. Roloff, Northwestern U, USA The Effects of Gain- and Loss-Framing on Responses to Advice: The Mediating Role of Efficacy JooYoung Jang, U of California Davis, USA Bo Feng, U of California, Davis, USA The Relationship Between Interruptions, Resisting Topic Changes, and Perceptions of Dominance and Conversational Appropriateness Jeff Youngquist, Oakland U, USA 4552 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Hagi 4553 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Fuji Blue Sky Workshop: Innovations in Digital Inclusion Research, Policy and Practice Sponsored Sessions Chairs Wenhong Chen, U of Texas, USA Shelia Cotten, Michigan State U, USA William H. Dutton, Michigan State U, USA Yuli Patrick Hsieh, RTI International, USA Rich Ling, Nanyang Technological U/Telenor, SINGAPORE Bianca Christin Reisdorf, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Amit Schejter, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas, USA Sharon Strover, U of Texas, USA Asian and Asian American Concerns Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Shinsuke Eguchi, U of New Mexico, USA Participants Constructing ‘National Unity’: A Framing Analysis of Malaysian Government Advertising Siti Nor Amalina Ahmad Tajuddin, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Natalie Collie, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Yunxia Zhu, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Missed or Misguided Opportunities for Advertisers?: Content Analysis of Asian Americans in U.S. TV Commercials Debra Wetherhead, Wetherhead Communications, USA Noticing Difference in Noodle World: Contested Culinary Imaginaries in a Majority-Minority City Andrea Wenzel, U of Southern California, USA Martial Arts as Masculine Performance: How Asian American Men Interpret Filmic Representations of Asian Men Josephine Lukito, U of Wisconsin, USA Costly Signaling, Asian Americans and the Role of Ethnicity in the Willingness to Pay More for Socially Responsible Products Yoon-Joo Lee, Washington State U, USA 4554 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Sakura KACA Business Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Eyun-Jung Ki, U of Alabama, USA 4560 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Olive Social Media and Influence in Election Campaigns: Evidence From Europe and Asia Political Communication Chair Holli A. Semetko, Emory U, USA Participants Political Participation in a New Media Environment: Investigating the Effects of Traditional and Social Media Use on Political Participation in Sweden Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Measuring Social Media Effects in the UK 2015 Election Susan Banducci, U of Exeter, UNITED KINGDOM Iulia Cioroianu, U of Exeter, UNITED KINGDOM Travis Coan, U of Exeter, UNITED KINGDOM Dan Stevens, U of Exeter, UNITED KINGDOM Gabriel Katz-Wisel, U of Exeter, UNITED KINGDOM How Social Media Worked: Japan's 2013 "Internet Election" Kenichi Ikeda, Doshisha U, JAPAN Internet, Political Campaigning and Voting in Turkey’s Unconsolidated Democracy Ali Carkoglu, Koç U, TURKEY Erik C. Nisbet, Ohio State U, USA Kerem Yildirim, Koç U, TURKEY Social and Traditional Media Use and Influences on the Vote in India Holli A. Semetko, Emory U, USA Anup Kumar, Cleveland State U, USA Taberez Ahmed Neyazi, Centre for Culture, Media and Governance, INDIA Jonathan Mellon, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA Arash Sangar, U of Wisconsin, USA Respondent Jennifer Stromer-Galley, Syracuse U, USA 4561 Saturday 14:00-15:15 Sage Learning and Thinking Through/With/By Media Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Epistemological Dimensions on Screen: The Role of Television Presentations in Changing Conceptions About the Nature of Knowledge and Knowing Lars Guenther, Stellenbosch U, SOUTH AFRICA Sabrina Heike Kessler, Friedrich Schiller U Jena, GERMANY A Parental Perspective on Apps for Young Children Francette Broekman, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Economically Disadvantaged but Academically Focused: The Low-Income Chinese Immigrant Families’ Acculturation, Parental Involvement, and Parental Mediation Melissa MongShan Yang, Endicott College, USA From Hanging Out to Geeking Out: Socializing as a Pathway to Computational Thinking Samantha Shorey, U of Washington, USA Benjamin Mako Hill, U of Washington, USA Samuel C Woolley, U of Washington, USA A Meta-Analytic Review of Ready To Learn Media’s Effects on Young Children’s Literacy Lisa B. Hurwitz, Northwestern U, USA A Qualitative Study Informing the Educational Content of an Indian TV Program (Galli Galli Sim Sim) Dina L. G. Borzekowski, U of Maryland, USA Donna Howard, U of Maryland, USA Deepti Mehrotra, Policy Innovations, INDIA Measuring With Murray: Touchscreen Technology and Preschoolers’ STEM Learning Fashina Alade, Northwestern U, USA Leanne Beaudoin-Ryan, Northwestern U, USA Alexis Lauricella, Northwestern U, USA Ellen Wartella, Northwestern U, USA Not Feeling it, Not Getting it, Not Doing it: Noneffects of Prosocial and Affiliative TV Marie-Louise Mares, U of Wisconsin, USA James Alex Bonus, U of Wisconsin, USA Alanna L Peebles, U of Wisconsin, USA Literacy and Identity Links Forging Digital Inclusion? Critical Reflections and Signposts From a Qualitative Study Panayiota Tsatsou, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Gillian Youngs, U of Brighton, UNITED KINGDOM Carolyn Watt, U of Portsmouth, UNITED KINGDOM 4620 Saturday 15:30-16:45 Argos C International Communication Association Annual Awards and Presidential Address Sponsored Sessions Chair Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participant Hilde Dy Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer ICA Plenary Interactive Paper/Poster Session II Sponsored Sessions This year, ICA will again be presenting three separate plenary poster sessions. This session will feature presenters from Children, Adolescents and the Media, Environmental Communication, Game Studies, Health Communication, Information Systems, Instructional, Lesbian, Bisexual, Gay, Transgender, and Queer Studies; Mass Communication, Sports Communication, and Theme divisions and interest groups. Children, Adolescents, and the Media Interactive Poster Session Children Adolescents and the Media Chair Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA Participants 1. Evaluative and Descriptive Media Ratings and the Forbidden Fruit Effect Jordy Gosselt, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Joris J. Van Hoof, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Laura Haske, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS 2. Children Who Trust in the Real World Also Trust Characters in the Para-World Sarah F. Rosaen, U of Michigan - Flint, USA Nancy Jennings, U of Cincinnati, USA 3. Film Genre and Taste Cultures: A Survey Amongst Flemish Youth Aleit Veenstra, U Antwerpen, BELGIUM Philippe Meers, U of Antwerp - Department of Communication Studies, BELGIUM Daniël Biltereyst, Ghent U, BELGIUM 4. Can Insecurely Attached Dating Couples Get Compensated on Social Network Sites? —The Effect of Surveillance Kexin Wang, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zheng Zhang, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yixin Zhou, Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, CHINA Yangyi Song, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Mingjie Zhou, Chinese Acedemy of Sciences, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5. Can Online Social Network Foster Young Adults’ Civic Engagement? Jinyun Chen, Jinan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 6. Entertainment-Education and the Parent-Child Relationship (PCR) in China: Two Audience Investigations of “Babaqunaer” Zhihao Ma, U of Macau, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Jinping Ge, Zhejiang U of Media and Communications, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 7. Factors That Lead to a Second-Level Digital Divide of Children and Adolescents With Down Syndrome Nadja Zaynel, U of Muenster, GERMANY 8. Informing the Child Safety and Protection Content of an Indian Preschool TV Program Donna Howard, U of Maryland, USA Deepti Mehrotra, Policy Innovations, INDIA Dina L. G. Borzekowski, U of Maryland, USA 9. Personality and Emerging Adults’ Friend Selection on Social Network Sites Yixin Zhou, Chinese Academy of Sciences, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Mingjie Zhou, Chinese Academy of Sciences CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 10. The Effects of Personal and Socioeconomic Characteristics on the Sharing of Personal Information About School on Facebook Ellen Van Gool, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Joris Van Ouytsel, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Koen Ponnet, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Michel Walrave, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer Environmental Communication Interactive Poster Session Environmental Communication Participants 11. Do Conservative Media Provide a Forum for Skeptical Voices? The Link Between Ideology and the Coverage of Climate Change in British, German, and Swiss Newspapers Hannah Schmid-Petri, U of Bern, SWITZERLAND 12. Framing Reality: Portrayals of Climate Change in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, 1997-2014 Jason Holley, Cornell U, USA 13. The Paths Less Explored: From Mobile Technology Use, Information Seeking and Sharing, to Disaster Preparedness Chih-Hui Lai, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Rich Ling, Nanyang Technological U/Telenor, SINGAPORE Arul Chib, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 14. Hermeneutic Phenomenology as a Basis for Ecological Critical Discourse Analysis Craig Frayne, TU Freiberg, CANADA 15. Expert Statements and Distressing Pictures: Audiences Responses to Media Coverage of Animal Experimentation Elena Link, U of Music, Drama and Media (Department of Journalism and Communication Research), GERMANY Katharina Emde, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Christoph Klimmt, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY 16. A Meta-Analysis of the Effect of Political Variables on Environmental Concern Shannon Cruz, Michigan State U, USA Game Studies Interactive Poster Session Game Studies Participants 17. Exploring the Uses, Motivations, and Addictive Qualities of Mobile Gaming Karin Haberlin, U of Connecticut, USA 18. Girls and Science Education: Exploring Female Interests towards Learning with Serious Games: A Study of KS3 Girls in the Northeast of England Opeyemi Dele-Ajayi, Northumbria U, UNITED KINGDOM 19. Tongue-Tied Ties: Impact of Language Barriers and Goal Attainment on Intergenerational Bonding Through Wii Gaming Jeremy Sng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Younbo Jung, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 20. Will You Play to Beat the Blues? Subuhi Khan, U of California, USA Jorge Pena, U of California - Davis, USA 21. Rewards and Punishments in Video Games: A Quantitative Content Analysis Britney Nicole Craighead, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 22. Why Are Players Attracted to Counterstrike Clans? The Role of Need Satisfaction Perceived in Clan-Life and Perceived in Daily Offline Life Felix Reer, U of Tuebingen, GERMANY Health Communication Interactive Poster Session Health Communication Participants 23. Stressed Out Students: Examining Medical Student Communication With Calm and Hostile Standardized Patients Lindsay Neuberger, U of Central Florida, USA Daniel Topping, U of Central Floruida, USA Sabrina Ghim, U of Central Florida, USA Sofia Hsu, U of Central Florida, USA Erica Landis, U of Central Florida, USA 24. Applying Clinical Depression Knowledge to Persuasive Gain-and-Loss Health Message Framing: An Eye-Tracking Study Jennifer Lueck, U of Minnesota, USA Marco C. Yzer, U of Minnesota, USA 25. Discourse Analysis as Formative Research in Health Communication: The Case of “Let’s Drink Less by Half” Campaign Riina Raudne, Health Estonia Foundation, ESTONIA 26. Effects of Interactivity in Gain- and Loss-Framed Narratives on Promoting Influenza Vaccination Hye Kyung Kim, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Wonsun Shin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 27. Gaining Bystander Responsiveness: Effects of Gain and Loss Frames and Emergency-Related Danger on Helping Decisions Tino GK Meitz, Leibniz ScienceCampus Tuebingen, GERMANY Constanze Küchler, Augsburg U, GERMANY Anja Kalch, Augsburg U, GERMANY 28. How Do Uncertainty and Positive Feelings Affect Psychological Quality of Life? The Role of Social Support within a Korean Parkinson’s Disease Patients Online Community Surin Chung, U of Missouri, USA Eunjin Kim, Southern Methodist U, USA J. Brian Houston, U of Missouri, USA 29. Internalization of Idealized Body Image Among Young Males in Australia: An Integrated Approach Angela Mak, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Shuet Yan (Vivienne) Leung, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 30. Is It Good to Blame the Government for Epidemic Diseases? Hwalbin Kim, U of South Carolina, USA Seung Mo Jang, U of South Carolina, USA Sei-Hill Kim, U of South Carolina, USA Jeong-Heon Chang, Michigan State U, USA Jae-chul C. Shim, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 31. Perceived Credibility of Media Platforms and Information Sources on Hispanic Users’ Attitudes Toward, Beliefs About, and Practices of Healthy Behaviors: The Role of Hispanic-Unique Sociocultural Variables Kenneth C. C. Yang, U of Texas - El Paso, USA Yowei Kang, Kainan U, TAIWAN 32. Role of Information Seeking and Brand Medication Preference in Prescription Medication Consumption as a Response to Direct to Consumer Advertising Tae Joon Moon, U of Wisconsin, USA Zhen Di, U of Wisconsin, USA Rachel Kornfield, U of Wisconsin, USA Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA 33. The Effects of Theory-Based Messages on Cancer Patients’ Attitudes, Norms, and Intention to Express Concerns Kim Brandes, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Annemiek Linn, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Julia C.M. van Weert, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 34. The Influence of Trait Anger and Partner Trust on Depression, Fear of Condom Negotiation, and Sexual Activity Among African-American Women Jennifer A. Samp, U of Georgia, USA Valerie Berenice Coles, U of Georgia, USA Jennifer L. Monahan, U of Georgia, USA 35. The Persuasive Effects of Health Goal Compatibility and Mood Tae Hyun Baek, U of Kentucky, USA Seeun Kim, U of Tennessee, USA Chan Yun Yoo, U of Kentucky, USA 36. The Impact of Risk Perception on Responses to Misleading Food Label Claims Erika Katherine Johnson, U of Missouri, USA Sungkyoung Lee, U of Missouri, USA Namyeon Lee, U of Missouri, USA 37. Bringing a Recovered Drugs Addict Into the Classroom to Warn Against Drug Use: Good Idea or Bad Idea? Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Tessa Rutten, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Gert-Jan de Bruijn, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Anneke de Graaf, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 38. Effect of Evidence Based and Tested Messages Transmitted Through Community Stakeholders for Malaria Control and Prevention in Rural Ethiopia Sudhakar Narayan Morankar, Jimma U, ETHIOPIA Gemechis Etana Roro, Health Education and Behavioural Sciences, ETHIOPIA Abebe Lakew, Jimma U, ETHIOPIA Birehjanu Zewdie, Jimma U, ETHIOPIA Guda Alemayehu, USAID, ETHIOPIA 39. Nurses’ Use of Social Media: Perspectives From the Philippines John Robert Razote Bautista, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 40. The VITALS Campaign: Examining the Intended and Unintended Effects of an Anti-Binge-Drinking Campaign Amiso M. George, Texas Christian U, USA Wendy Macias, Texas Christian U, USA Adam S. Richards, Texas Christian U, USA Cornelius Pratt, Temple U, USA 41. “Just the Right Stuff for Just the Right Person”: Knowledge, Perceived Benefits, and Perceived Harms of Precision Medicine Among Caucasian and African-American Adults Jordan Neil, U of Florida, USA Kim B. Walsh-Childers, U of Florida, USA 42. “You Should Know Better:” Can Self-Affirmation Facilitate Information-Seeking Behavior and Interpersonal Discussion? Stefanie Demetriades, U of Southern California, USA Nathan Walter, U of Southern California, USA 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer Information Systems Interactive Poster Session Information Systems Participants 43. Assimilation and Contrast in Advertising: How Product Categories and Order of Presentation Affect People’s Attitude Towards Print Ads Shuoying Cui, U of Illinois, USA Patrick Vargas, U of Illinois, USA Kevin Wise, U of Illinois, USA 44. Assuaging Grief Through Mental Time Travel, Perspective Taking, and Digital Media James G Collier, Ohio State U, USA 45. Discrimination Index, Racist Events, and Their Effects on Behavioral and Evaluative Outcomes of Movie Posters With Black and White Protagonists Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA Lin Yang, Xi'an Jiatong U, CHINA 46. Does Negative Information About an Expert Endorser Harm the Promoted Product? Christina V. Peter, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY 47. Effects of Different Model Sizes in an Online Clothing Store on Self- and Product Evaluations Karolien Poels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Suzanne Overmars, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Shanice Engel, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 48. Examining a Susceptibility Threshold for High Sensation Seekers Lindsay Neuberger, U of Central Florida, USA Maria Knight Lapinski, Michigan State U, USA Katelyn Grayson, Michigan State U, USA Erica Landis, U of Central Florida, USA 49. Guilty Pleasures? Determining the Effectiveness of Entertaining Microbreaks for Recreational Purposes Kevin Koban, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Georg Valtin, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Sandra Rogenz, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY 50. I Should Say No but It Looks so Delicious: Cognitive Dissonance Experienced Through Evaluation of Nongay Friendly Food Brands Yijie Wu, Florida State U, USA Jaejin Lee, Florida State U, USA 51. Love Me Tinder: Untangling Emerging Adults’ Motivations for Using the Dating Application Tinder Sindy R. Sumter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 52. Sexist Comedy Reduces Women’s Intelligence Test Performance: Does it Hurt if it is Funny? Silvana Weber, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Markus Appel, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY 53. The Power of “No”: How Negative Frames Influence Empathy and Prosocial Behavior Soo Youn Oh, Stanford U, USA Soohee Kim, Stanford U, USA 54. The Relationship Between Cognitive Abilities, Self-Identified Biological Sex, and Video Game Preferences and Abilities Richard Wayne Huskey, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Britney Nicole Craighead, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Chelsea Lonergan, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 55. Word Travels: Comparing Psychological Antecedents of Opinion Leadership and Opinion Seeking in Travel and Tourism Charlotte Vonkeman, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peeter Verlegh, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Marieke L. Fransen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Claartje L. ter Hoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Instructional and Developmental Communication Poster Session Instructional & Developmental Communication Participants 56. Closing the Gender Gap in STEM With Male Instructors? On the Effects of Rapport Behavior and Gender of a Virtual Agent in an Instructional Interaction Nicole C. Kramer, U of Duisburg - Essen, GERMANY Bilge Karacora, U Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Gale M Lucas, U of Southern California, USA 57. 58. 59. 60. 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer Morteza Dehghani, U of Southern California, USA Gina Rüther, U Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Jonathan Gratch, U of Southern California, USA Mindfulness, Academic Resilience, and Positive Emotions Srividya Ramasubramanian, Texas A&M U, USA Predicting Civic Responsibility From Cultural-Related Diversity Engagement and Peer Civic Talk Among Final Year Undergraduates Ezhar Tamam, U Putra Malaysia, MALAYSIA Moniza Waheed, U Putra Malaysia, MALAYSIA Jusang Bolong, U Putra Malaysia, MALAYSIA Hanina Halimatusaadiah Hamsan, U Putra Malaysia, MALAYSIA Teaching Change by Changing Teaching: Introducing Participatory Methods of Teaching in Graduate and Undergraduate Seminars Davi Kallman, Washington State U, USA Joseph Hewa, Washington State U, USA Understanding YouTube Usage for Learning: The Social Cognitive Perspective Quan Zhou, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Chei Sian Lee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Sei-Ching Joanna Sin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, & Queer Studies Interactive Poster Session Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Participants 61. Lesbian Counterfactual Narratives in Coming Out Stories Jade Metzger, Wayne State U, USA 62. Predicament of Online Engagement: The Role of Local Politics and Confucianism in the Relation Between SelfCensorship and Gay Activism in China Yu Guo, Macau U of Science and Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yiwei Li, Keio U, JAPAN 63. School Involvement and Participation by Gay and Lesbian Parented Families Brian L. Heisterkamp, California State U - San Bernardino, USA Mass Communication Interactive Poster Session Mass Communication Participants 64. Do Photographs Speak A Thousand Words The Effects of Photographic and Textual Framing on Public Attitudes Toward Controversial and Noncontroversial Sciences Edmund W. J. Lee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 65. Does Diversity Hurt Students’ Feeling of Oneness? A Study of Social Trust, Internal Brand Identification, and Organizational Citizenship on Diversifying U Campuses Qingjiang (Q. J.) Yao, Lamar U, USA Mary Martin, Fort Hays State U, USA Scott Robson, Fort Hays State U, USA Hsin-Yen Yang, Fort Hays State U, USA 66. Effects of Exposure to and Presentation Format of News Reporting Conflicting Scientific Evidence on Perceived Issue Uncertainty Hui Zhang, Colorado State U, USA 67. Gender-Role Portrayals in Television Advertising Across the Globe Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Michael Prieler, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Karoline Adam, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA 68. Hispanic Families: Parenting Support and Social Networking Sites Alexis Lauricella, Northwestern U, USA Courtney Blackwell, Northwestern U, USA 69. Mind the Gender Gap: Differences in Liking and Purchase Intention After Viewing Advertisements of Same- and Different-Sex Couples Glenna Lee Read, Indiana U, USA Irene Ingeborg van Driel, Indiana U, USA Robert F. Potter, Indiana U, USA 70. Misperceptions as Political Conflict: Using Schattschneider’s Conflict Theory to Understand Rumor Dynamics Jill A. Edy, U of Oklahoma, USA Erin E. Baird, U of Oklahoma, USA 71. Moralism, Constructivism, Relativism: Identifying and Describing the Approaches of Research on Scandal Sebastian Pfluegler, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Philip Baugut, Ludiwg Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY 72. Positive Stereotype Associated With Accent and its Impact on Persuasion in the Context of Business Outsourcing Chun Yang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Ruobing Li, Pennsylvania State U, USA Fan Feng, Jinan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 73. Reliance on Direct and Mediated Contact and Public Policies Supporting Outgroup Harm Muniba Saleem, U of Michigan, USA Grace S. Yang, U of Michigan, USA Srividya Ramasubramanian, Texas A&M U, USA 74. Shock Tactics in Road Safety Spots and Fading Memory Effects for Risk Awareness Information Florian Arendt, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Hans-Bernd Brosius, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Alessia Coschignano, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY 75. Show Your Best Self(ie): An Exploratory Study on Typical Selfie-Makers and Their Selfie Behavior Nadia Bij de Vaate, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jolanda Veldhuis, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 76. Social Media, Body Image, and Culture: A Comparative Study Between Korea and the United States Ji Won Kim, Syracuse U, USA Carol M. Liebler, Syracuse U, USA Hua Jiang, Syracuse U, USA 77. Tablet Versus Paper Newspapers: Different Reading Styles? Different Learning? Peter Neijens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hilde Voorveld, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 78. The Myth of Genetically Modified Foods: Public Debates Over Risks, Opportunities, and Responsible Parties on Chinese Social Media Nan Yu, North Dakota State U, USA Qian Xu, Elon U, USA 79. “How to Get Beach-Ready?!” Sun Tan Ideals in Magazines and Sunbed Use Among Young Women Jolien Trekels, U of Leuven, BELGIUM 80. Examining Perceived Value of Location-Based Mobile Advertising Applications Among Taiwanese Smartphone Users Trisha T. C. Lin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE John Robert Razote Bautista, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Yi-hsuan Chiang, Shih Hsin U, TAIWAN Ri An Quek, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer Sports Communication Interactive Poster Session Sports Communication Participants 81. Does Contact Matter? How Playing On A Diverse Team Affects The Application Of Athletic Stereotypes Jan Boehmer, U of Miami, USA Patrick Ferrucci, U of Colorado-Boulder, USA 82. Fans Just Wanna Have Fun: A Sociology of Sport Approach to eSports in Semipublic Spaces Elizabeth Newbury, Cornell U, USA 83. Sabermetrics Over Time: Persuasion and Symbolic Convergence Across a Diffusion of Innovations Nathaniel Stoltz, U of Maryland, USA Michael David Hazen, Wake Forest U, USA Respondent Marie Hardin, Pennsylvania State U, USA 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer 84-85. Theme Interactive Poster Session: Images, Immersions, Investigations: Plurality of Perspectives on Hong Kong’s Umbrella Movement (2 Posters) Theme Sessions Chair Erica Ka-yan Poon, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Imaging the Umbrella Movement via Kracauerian Cinematic Realism Jose III Casem Gutierrez, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Social Media for Frontline Journalists: The Case of Occupy Central in Hong Kong 2014 Wing Lam Chan, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Citizen Movements as Sites of Elite Curations: The Case of Pakistan General Elections 2013 and Hong Kong Umbrella Movement 2014 Ayaz Siddiqui, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Who Are the Protesters? An Ethnographic Exploration of the Participants in Umbrella Revolution Florin C. Serban, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Title: A Detournement? The Hand Gesture in The Hunger Games and Umbrella Movement Erica Ka-yan Poon, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Joseph Ferrerosa, Santa Monica College, USA Manifestations: Documenting the Art of the Political in the Umbrella Movement Benjamin Henderson, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 4727 Saturday 17:00-18:15 Grand Foyer 86-87. Theme Interactive Poster Session: Transforming Communicative Power Through Evolving Electorates, Technologies, Communication, and Public Opinion (2 Posters) Theme Sessions Chair Carol Wan Ting Soon, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Participants Evolving Electorate and New Media in Electoral Authoritarianism Weiyu Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Significance of Offline-Social Media Opinion Climate Perceptions on Voting Behavior in Singapore and Hong Kong Elmie Nekmat, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Evolving Technologies: Using Social Media Use for Action in Singapore and Indonesia Natalie Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Posted and Shared: Personalized Communication and Knowledge Gap during Election Time Debbie Goh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Respondent Lars Willnat, Indiana U, USA 4824 Saturday 18:30-20:30 Navis A The Communication Landscape of Fukuoka: Urban Issues and Developments Sponsored Sessions Chair Peter Haratonik, The New School, USA Participants Hideo Koide, Seinan Gakuin U, JAPAN Akira Miyahara, Seinan Gakuin U, JAPAN Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Gary Gumpert, Urban Communication Foundation, USA Kyoko Matsuoka, Fukuoka Architecture Foundation, JAPAN A special ICA event in which community leaders from Fukuoka, Japan discuss their communication concerns with ICA Communication Scholars. This is part of an ongoing series in which The Urban Communication Foundation connects the host city of the ICA Conference with members of the local community focusing on urban issues and communication problems. As the cities of the world continue to urbanize the issues of community, infrastructure, health, aging, migration, design, and public space accelerate. This panel seeks to link the realities of Fukuoka with the world of communication scholarship. 4825 Saturday 18:30-19:45 Navis B The Life and Intellectual Legacy of Professor Tamar Liebes Sponsored Sessions Chair Andrea Lee Press, U of Virginia, USA Participants Peter Lunt, U of Leicester - Department of Media & Communication, UNITED KINGDOM Rivka Ribak, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Andrea Lee Press, U of Virginia, USA Bruce A. Williams, U of Virginia, USA Menahem Blondheim, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Zohar Kampf, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent Elihu Katz, U of Pennsylvania, USA This panel honors the intellectual legacy of Professor Tamar Liebes of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Professor Elihu Katz summarizes her legacy, indicating how Professor Liebes’ life work is emblematic of the development and scope of the communication field as it has developed throughout the twentieth century: the progression of her work encompasses the span of our field. An interdisciplinary scholar, Professor Liebes’ work spanned the public and private dimensions of communication scholarship, but always carried her political and intellectual commitment into every sector of her work. We then open the session for general discussion. 4923 Saturday 23:00-25:00 Argos F Dancing in Fukuoka Sponsored Sessions In addition to ICA members' various ways of interacting and communicating with each other at receptions and university parties, we are continuing our newest way of getting together: Dancing! We will have music of different styles so that each and everyone may find what suits her or him best. After long days of talking, presenting and listening, some appreciate the opportunity to also move. Casual dress; children and families welcome. 5071 ICA Past Presidents' Breakfast Sunday 07:00-08:30 Bay Penthouse Sponsored Sessions 5072 Administrators’ Breakfast: Leading Communication Programs in Higher Education Sunday 07:30-09:15 Ocean Penthouse Chair Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Sponsored Sessions Chair Dafna Lemish, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Many of us in leadership positions - deans, associate deans, directors, chairs - face similar challenges as we aspire to facilitate professional growth of our faculty and staff and prepare our students for the changing world of media organizations, contents, and audiences. Let us get together informally over breakfast to brainstorm about these issues, share experiences, and discuss a support network within ICA. A fee will be charged for those attending. 5020 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Argos C Cold War Histories of Global Media and Politics Communication History Chair Koichi Iwabuchi, Monash U, AUSTRALIA Participants The Fall of the Berlin Wall: The Making of a Cold War Icon Julia Sonnevend, U of Michigan, USA The History of il Manifesto and the Evolution of the Italian Left from the Prague Spring to the Arab Spring Elisabetta Ferrari, U of Pennsylvania, USA Making Blackness and the Foreign Serve China Robeson Taj Frazier, U of Southern California, USA China’s International Propaganda in the Cultural Revolution Qiong Xu, Hunan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Global Imaginary in China’s Red Guard Press, 1966-1968 Guobin Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA 5021 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Argos D New Opportunities Offered by Media Technologies Information Systems Chair Brian Christopher Britt, South Dakota State U, USA Participants The Effect of Mode Tailoring on Younger and Older Adults’ Recall of Online Health Information Minh Hao Nguyen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS When Ads Follow You Around: The Role of Regulatory Focus in the Acceptance of Retargeting Jongmin Lee, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jang Ho Moon, Sookmyung Women’s U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yongjun Sung, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Taejun Lee, Korea Development Institute, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Does it Matter How You Play? The Effects of Collaboration and Competition Among Players of Human Computation Games Ei Pa Pa Pe Than, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Dion Ho Lian Goh, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Chei Sian Lee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE The Consequences of One-Way and Two-Way Collaborative Processes in Online Knowledge-Construction Systems Brian Christopher Britt, South Dakota State U, USA Sorin Adam Matei, Purdue U, USA Understanding Collaborative Knowledge Production Online: A Collective Action Perspective Bei Yan, U of Southern California, USA Capturing Business Insights From Social Media: A Design Science Approach Joyce Lee, Yuan Ze U, TAIWAN Chin-Sheng Yang, Yuan Ze U, TAIWAN Shih-Yun Chen, Yuan Ze U, TAIWAN Jhong-Heng Wang, Yuan Ze U, TAIWAN Mobile Phones and Health Information Ecology of Low-Income Communities in the US Komathi Ale, U of Southern California, USA The Antecedents and Consequences of Charitable Donation Heterogeneity on Social Media Zhi-Jin Zhong, Sun Yat-Sen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Shujin Lin, Sun Yat-Sen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5022 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Argos E Organizational Communication Research Escalator - Extended Session (Part 1) Organizational Communication Chairs William C. Barley, U of Illinois, USA Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA Participants #InshAllahPolitics: The Role of Social Media Technologies in Enabling and Constraining Strategies of Activist NGOs Oana Brindusa Albu, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Michael Andreas Etter, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK A Case for the Female Leader Apology Alaina Zanin, U of Central Missouri, USA Carrisa S. Hoelscher, U of Oklahoma, USA A Preliminary Research Design: Relational Approach to Workplace Aggression From the Perpetrator’s Perspective Miwa Ito, Wayne State U, USA Social Hiring: How Organizations are Using Social Networking for Recruitment and Hiring Decisions Janice Gassam, Hofstra U, USA Shana Meganck, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Candace P. Parrish, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Social Responsibility as The Stranger: A Case Study of MIPCOM 2015 Ushma Chauhan Jacobsen, Aarhus U, DENMARK Improving Internal Communication by Social Media: An Approach Based on the Theory of Social Capital Felix Keldenich, Hanover U of Applied Sciences and Arts, GERMANY Communicating With Power in an Organizational Setting: A Comprehensive Discourse Analysis of an Executive Meeting Jo M. Katambwe, U du Quebec a Trois-Rivieres, CANADA Express-Assessment Method as an Indicator of Organizational Communication of Kazakhstan universities Bagila Abilmozhinovna Akhatova, Kazakh U of International Relations and World Languages, KAZAKHSTAN Vladimir Pavlenko, Kazakh U of International Relations and World Languages, KAZAKHSTAN Gulchehra Noruzova, Kazakh U of International Relations and World Languages, KAZAKHSTAN The Institutionalization of CCO Studies: Insights Into the Conversation-Text Dynamics of an Emerging Subfield Genevieve Boivin, U de Montreal, CANADA The Comparison of the Effectiveness of Sustainability Development Communication Between Nonprofits and For-Profits: An Expectancy Violation Perspective Moonhee Cho, U of Tennessee, USA Sun-Young Park, Rowan U, USA Soojin Kim, U of Florida, USA What’s the (Real) Communications Demand for Corporate Public Value Measurement? Organizational Power and Evidence-Based Corporate Humanity Shabnam Shalizi, U of Southern California, USA Social Media and Genres of Governance in Crisis Management: A Genre Analysis of Government Microblog Accounts on Weibo Hui Zhao, Lund U, SWEDEN Organizations Anonymous: Managing (In)visibility at the Alcoholics Anonymous International Convention Katie Kang, Rutgers U, USA The Power of Trivialization and the Rejection of Ideas Within Cancer Research Labs Slaheddine Mnasri, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM The Social Media Paradox: Identifying Technology Related Resources and Demands Ward van Zoonen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Between Accommodating and Activating: The Role of Employment Policies in Framing Workforce Aging Across Europe Anne Cornelia Kroon, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Martine van Selm, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS In Search of a “Dream Team”: The Influence of Team Dynamics on the Process of Innovation Sarah Fleur van der Land, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Separating the Quarrelers? The Relationship Between Advertising Sales Department and Newsroom Within Media Organizations Corinna Maria Lauerer, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Audience Representation vis-á-vis Public Service Media Organizations Christian Herzog, Leuphana U Lueneburg, GERMANY Daniela Zetti, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich and U Zurich, SWITZERLAND. 5023 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Argos F "Liar Press" - "Synchronized Mainstream Media" - "Corrupt Journalists": Causes, Forms, and Effects of Media Trust in Germany Sponsored Sessions Chair Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Participants Media Skepticism in Online Discourse. Exploring Allegations and Criticism Towards News Media in User Comments Fabian Prochazka, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Wolfgang Schweiger, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Ebola, the CIA, and Media Trust. Exploring the Determinants of Belief in a Conspiracy Theory Carsten E. Reinemann, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY “Shut Up Liar Press!” Exploring Consequences of Hostile Media Perceptions in the Context of the German Pegida Movement Marco Dohle, U of Duesseldorf, GERMANY Uli Bernhard, Hochschule Hannover, GERMANY Tilo Hartmann, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Low Media Trust = Low Political Trust? Exploring the Influence of Disenchantment With the Media on Political Attitudes Nayla Fawzi, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Respondent Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Pegida-protesters shout “liar press”, best-selling books criticize that journalists manipulate the public, and the media wonder what this is all about – for more than a year discontent with the media has been debated in Germany as intensively as never before. Both the German Pegida movement and the German discussion about media performance also received enormous international attention. The aim of this panel is to link the concepts analyzing perceptions and evaluations of the media to each other as well as their connection to political attitudes and potential consequences. All in all, the panel combines papers with different theoretical and methodological approaches and thus explores disenchantment with the media from a broad perspective. 5024 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Navis A News Audiences: Users, Consumers, Citizens? Journalism Studies Chair Johan Eric Lindell, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Participants What Clicks Actually Mean: Exploring Digital News User Practices Tim Groot Kormelink, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Irene Costera Meijer, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS An Exploratory Study of News Consumers’ Perceived Information Overload and News Consumption Sun Kyong Lee, U of Oklahoma, USA Kyun Soo Kim, Grambling State U, USA Cameron Wade Piercy, U of Oklahoma, USA When Does an Infographic Say More Than a Thousand Words? Audience Evaluations of Information Visualizations in the News Yael de Haan, U of Applied Sciences Utrecht, THE NETHERLANDS Sanne Kruikemeier, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sophie Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Gerard Smit, U of Applied Sciences Utrecht, THE NETHERLANDS Renee Van der Nat, U of Applied Sciences Utrecht, THE NETHERLANDS Extending Explications of News Overload: Effects of Content and Topic Specific Factors on Selective Scanning and News Avoidance Avery E. Holton, U of Utah, USA Angela M. Lee, U of Texas - Dallas, USA Victoria Y Chen, U of Texas at Austin, USA Getting Youngsters Hooked on News: The Effects of Narrative News on Processing, Appreciation, and Quality Perception in Different Age Groups Mariska Kleemans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Gabi Joachim Schaap, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Mitchel Suijkerbuijk, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS 5025 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Navis B Antismoking Health Messages and News Health Communication Chair Simon Zebregs, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Effects of Narrative vs. Nonnarrative Antismoking Messages: Examining the Moderating Role of Social Distance Zexin Ma, U of Maryland, USA Xiaoli Nan, U of Maryland, USA Effects of Reading Newspaper Articles about Smoking on Implicit and Explicit Attitudes Florian Arendt, Ludiwg Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Evaluating the Effectiveness of Four Antismoking Cartoon Posters With Humor and Threat Elements Vivian C. Sheer, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Tiffany Chan, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Dion Tse, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Fuyuan Shen, Pennsylvania State U, USA Real-World Data Help Contextualize Content Analysis Findings on Newspaper Editorial Characteristics About Tobacco Control Kellie Stanfield, U of Missouri, USA Shelly L. Rodgers, U of Missouri, USA Vapor and Mirrors: A Qualitative Framing Analysis of E-Cigarette Reporting in High-Circulation U.S. Newspapers Vaughan James, U of Florida, USA Paul Simpson, U of Florida, USA 5026 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Navis C New Communication Technologies: Issues of Privacy, Power, and Control Communication and Technology Chairs Jessica Vitak, U of Maryland, USA Lorraine G. Kisselburgh, Purdue U, USA Participants Challenging the locus of power: Wearable technologies, self-quantification, and the empowered individual Lorraine G. Kisselburgh, Purdue U, USA Parents, Tweens, and Technology: Negotiating Privacy Rules and Boundaries Jessica Vitak, U of Maryland, USA Privacy and Control in Mark Zuckerberg’s Discourse on Facebook Michael Zimmer, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA What Can We Learn About Privacy From Those With Zero Expectation of It? Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of Washington, USA Control: An Obsolete Paradigm in Understanding Privacy? Sabine Trepte, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Tobias Dienlin, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Philipp K. Masur, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY 5030 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Nire Mental Health and Depression Health Communication Chair John Robert Razote Bautista, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participants Influencing Help-Seeking for Depression With Public Service Announcements: Message Sidedness and Functional Matching Brianna Alyssa Lienemann, Claremont Graduate U, USA Jason T. Siegel, Claremont Graduate U, USA Online Support Groups for People With Depression in China: Mutual Help, Empowerment, and Destigmatization Renwen Zhang, The Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Social Support, Depression, and Quality of Life Among People Living With HIV in Guangxi, China Zhiwen Xiao, U of Houston, USA Xiaoming Li, Wayne State U, USA The Role of Cultural Identity and Media Use at Influencing Intentions to Seek Mental Health Information Among Chinese Adults Zhaomeng Niu, Washington State U, USA Jessica Fitts Willoughby, Washington State U, USA The Vicissitudes of Medical Discourse and Embedded Cultural Rationality: A Content Analysis of Health Reporting for Neurasthenia and Depressive Disorder in China Yungeng Li, The Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Deya Xu, The Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5031 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Kusu Social Support Online Communication and Technology Chair Jung-Hyun Kim, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Participants It’s the Audience, Stupid: Differences in Social Support Between Social Media Sites Rebecca A. Hayes, Illinois State U, USA Caleb T. Carr, Illinois State U, USA Donghee Yvette Wohn, New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA Online Support Forums: Willingness to Respond to a Support-Seeking Post Siyue Li, The Ohio State U, USA Reconsidering the Relationship Between Relational Closeness and Dimensions of Social Support: A Multinational Facebook Study Caleb T. Carr, Illinois State U, USA Anika Haupt, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Nicole C. Kramer, U of Duisburg - Essen, GERMANY Roles of Social Media in Social Support and Adjustment: A Study of International Students in the United States Hyunjin Seo, U of Kansas, USA Ren-Whei Joanna Harn, U of Kansas, USA Husain Ebrahim, U of Kansas, USA Jose Aldana, U of Kansas, USA 5032 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Kashi Communication Technology and Work Communication and Technology Chair Lei Vincent Huang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants ICTs, Messages, and Pressures From Others Matter in Everyday Life: Using a Q Methodology to Conceptualize Communication Overload Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA Dron M Mandhana, U of Texas, USA Jihye Kim, U of Texas, USA Xiaoqian Li, U of Texas, USA Elizabeth Glowacki, U of Texas, USA Ignacio Cruz, U of Southern California, USA Informational benefits From Professional Social Media Use: Results From a Longitudinal Study Sonja Utz, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Johannes Breuer, U of Cologne, GERMANY Making New Online Contacts That Help You Get a Job in the Internet Age: An Emerging Source of Inequality Uwe Matzat, Eindhoven U of Technology, THE NETHERLANDS Erik van Ingen, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Why Should I Help You? Man Up!: Bystanders’ Gender Stereotypic Perceptions of Workplace Cyberbullying Mathias Weber, U Mainz, GERMANY Christina Koehler, U of Mainz, GERMANY Anna Schnauber, U Mainz, GERMANY 5033 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Kaede International/Transnational Journalism Journalism Studies Chair Yusuf Kalyango, Jr., Ohio U, USA Participants How Fact-Checking Went Global: Mapping an International Movement in Professional Journalism Lucas Graves, U of Wisconsin, USA Transnational Journalism Networks as Drivers of Europeanization Annett Heft, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Brigitte Alfter, Journalist, DENMARK Barbara Pfetsch, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Transnational Professionalism? Key Journalists in the IPCC AR5 Coverage Risto Kunelius, U of Tampere, FINLAND Hillel Nossek, Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee, ISRAEL What are Your Sources for International News? The Source Type and its Transparency of AP and the New York Times Heungseok Koh, Dongguk U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF John Carpenter, U of Iowa, USA Respondent Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U, ISRAEL 5040 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Rigel The Evolving Structures, Dynamics, and Forces of Global Communication Global Communication and Social Change Chair Wenshan Jia, Chapman U, USA Participants Engaged Scholarship in West Africa with Cultural Humility: Dilemmas and Dialogic Possibilities for Multidisciplinary Collaborations Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA Between Nationalism and Cosmopolitanism: How China Deals with Cultural Globalization and Social Change Hongmei Li, Miami U, USA "Regardless of Frontiers”: The Rise, Decline and Renewal of Global Communication Monroe E. Price, U of Pennsylvania, USA Post-Globalization, Cultural Power and International Broadcasting Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA From Connectivity (Tong) to Harmony via Commonality (Tong) in All-Under-Heaven (Tianxia)- an Exploration of the Chinese Theory of Global Communication Wenshan Jia, Chapman U, USA Respondent Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM 5041 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Vega The Study of Political Entertainment Media Mass Communication Political Communication Chair Lance Holbert, Temple U, USA Participants Curving Entertainment: The Curvilinear Relationship Between Hedonic and Eudaimonic Experiences While Watching a Political Talk Show and its Implications for Information Processing Franziska Susanne Roth, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Carina Weinmann, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Frank M. Schneider, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Melanie Bindl, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Frederic Hopp, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Dramatically Entertained: Effects of Exposure to Fictional Political Entertainment and the Attitude Toward Female Politicians Azmat Rasul, Florida State U, USA Arthur A. Raney, Florida State U, USA News, Entertainment, or Both? Exploring Audience Perceptions of Media Genre in a Hybrid Media Environment Stephanie Edgerly, Northwestern U, USA Emily K Vraga, George Mason U, USA Online Grassroots Political Satire and Political Self-Efficacy in China Tianjiao Wang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA 5042 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Kiku Communicating Open Science: What the Communication Field Has to Offer to the Next Scientific Revolution Information Systems Chair Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of Florida, USA Participants Promoting Open Science Communication and Practice Melanie Sarge, Texas Tech U, USA Improving the Evidential Value of Communication Research with Open Science Tools and Practices Malte Elson, Ruhr U Bochum, GERMANY Scientific Epistemology as a Foundation for Realizing Open Science Nicholas L Matthews, Indiana U, USA Forgiving Ourselves is Progress: The Importance of an "Amnesty" Approach Toward Questionable Research Practices James D. Ivory, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State U, USA Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of Florida, USA Power and Inexperience as Challenges for Graduate Students in Supporting Open Science Teresa Lynch, Indiana U, USA This panel brings together an international group of emerging and senior communication scholars from a range of research backgrounds to discuss the absolute necessity of communicating about open research practices in a way that not antagonistic and accusatory, but encouraging, enlightening, and supportive of a healthy transition in research culture. 5043 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Ran How Online Popularity Cues Affect Users’ Selections, Public Opinion Perceptions, Personal Opinions, and Opinion Expressions Mass Communication Chair Pablo Porten-Chee, U of Duesseldorf, GERMANY Participants Likes Teaching the Eyes. Studying the Influence of Popularity Cues on News Selection Shira Dvir-Gvirsman, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Effects of Popularity Cues on Public Opinion Perception: Theoretical Approach and Findings of an Online Diary Study on Climate Change Christiane Eilders, U of Duesseldorf, GERMANY Pablo Porten-Chee, U of Duesseldorf, GERMANY Reading the Other Side: How User-Generated Comments Influence Perceptions of Public Opinion German Neubaum, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Fatma Camur, U of Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Can the Spiral of Silence Predict Social Media-Offline Collective Action? The Role of Different Opinion Climate Indicators and Cognitive Effort in the Process Elmie Nekmat, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Respondent Joseph B. Walther, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE This panel aims to examine the potential of popularity cues in public communication. It brings together papers on the perceptional shortcuts when selecting media content, monitoring the climate of opinion, on the effects on users’ opinions, and on the consequences for opinion expression. It thereby extends and deepens our understanding of the scope of the changes in public communication under online conditions. 5045 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Sumire Politicians in the News: With What Effect? Political Communication Chair Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Beyond Simple Valence: Discrete Emotions as Mediators of Political Communication Effects on Trust in Politicians Lukas Otto, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Heads of Parliament: How Perceptions of Politicians Moderate Political Agenda Setting Alon Zoizner, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Yair Fogel-Dror, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Tamir Sheafer, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL It's the Structure, Stupid: Measuring Media Coverage impact on Candidates' Electoral Success Using Semantic Networks Dror Walter, U of Pennsylvania, USA Sijia Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Politicians as Satirical Targets: Affective Disposition and the Differential Effects of Personal and Political Jokes Katharina Emde, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Spontaneous Trait Inferences From Candidates’ Visual Appearance in Campaign Communication Frank Marcinkowski, U Muenster - D, GERMANY Marco Luenich, Westfaelische Wilhelms-U Muenster, GERMANY Christopher Starke, U of Muenster, GERMANY 5046 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Koh Contours of the Digital: Late Breaking Research Roundtable Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Alison Hearn, U of Western Ontario, CANADA Participants Conceptualizing "Botness" Taina Bucher, Department of Media, Cognition and Commu, DENMARK From Net Neutrality to Net Equality John McMurria, U of California - San Diego, USA Discipline in Cyberspace: the Changing Discourse of Digital Illegality Fidele Vlavo, U de las Americas Puebla, MEXICO Digital Labor, the Sharing Economy, and the Uberization of Everything: A Comparison Between the French and American State Jen Schradie, Toulouse School of Economics, FRANCE Mediating Productivity: A Cultural History of New Media and Labor Management Michelle Rodino-Colocino, Pennsylvania State U, USA Framing Men, Framing Women: Gender and Celebrity in Political Activism Bimbisar Irom, Washington State U, USA Travels, Truths, and Television: Ethnography in/of the Archive Lars Lundgren, Södertörn U, SWEDEN This roundtable brings together junior and senior scholars to discuss 'late breaking research' projects that explore aspects of mediation and the relationship between the digital and the social. 5047 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Yoh Consumption and Identity in East Asia Popular Communication Chair Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Between Conformity and Transgression: Chinese Women’s Gendered Discourse of Fan Authenticity for European Football Yuan Gong, U of Massachusetts, USA Post-Mao Narratives of Individualism: A Case Study of Remixing Propaganda Posters in Contemporary China Mengjun Jun Guo, U of Washington, USA Soft With Chocolate Abs, and Genuinely Asian: A Discourse Analysis of Korean Masculinity in Taiwanese Men’s Fashion Hong-Chi Shiau, Shih-Hsin U, TAIWAN Producing in Hong Kong, Consuming in China: Cultural Identities and Comics Production Anthony Y.H. Fung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Boris Lok Fai Pun, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5048 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Kei Exploring the Power of Corporate Social Responsibility Public Relations Chair Peter Kerkhof, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants A Comparative Analysis of Business News Coverage of Corporate Social Responsibility in the United States and the United Kingdom From 2005 to 2014 Tae Ho Lee, U of North Carolina, USA Daniel Riffe, U of North Carolina, USA How Balanced is CSR Reporting? An Intercultural Comparison of Negative Disclosures Sabine A. Einwiller, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Craig E. Carroll, New York U, USA Does CSR Matter?: A Longitudinal Content Analysis of Product Reviews for CSR-Associated Brands Becky Robinson, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA What Influences Publics’ Reaction to CSR: The Role of Media Frames and Ethical Orientation KyuJin Shim, Singapore Management U, SINGAPORE Myojung Chung, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Effect of CSR Communication on the Core-Stigmatized Business Lili Wang, Shanghai Jiaotong U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Ke Xue, Shanghai Jiaotong U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Mingyang Yu, Shanghai Jiaotong U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xueer Yu, Washington U, USA Respondent Yi-Ru Regina Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5049 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Board Room Who We Are is How We Talk: Predicting Interpersonal Communication Processes Interpersonal Communication Chair Elizabeth Dorrance Hall, Utah State U, USA Participants Coping With Racial Discrimination With Collective Power: Differentiating the Benefits of Social Capital in Online and Offline Communication Contexts Fan Yang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Lisa Kiyomi Hanasono, Bowling Green State U, USA Dating Couples Congruence in Attachment and Relationship Quality: The Mediating Role of Communication Patterns Kexin Wang, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zheng Zhang, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Yangyi Song, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’s REPUBLIC OF Mingjie Zhou, Chinese Acedemy of Sciences, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Do Friends Make Us Happy or Does Our Happiness Bring Closer Friendship? Examining the Causal Relation Between Social Relationship and Life Satisfaction Min Gyu Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Predicting the Intent to Use Dating Apps to Look for Romance and Sex: Using the Integrative Model of Behavioral Prediction Lik Sam Chan, U of Southern California, USA Relationship Characteristics That Predict Relationship Talk and Topic Avoidance for Same-Sex and Opposite-Sex Couples Yachao Li, U Georgia, USA 5050 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: From Information Superhighways to Autonomous Vehicles: Considering Media Change Through the Prism of Cars Sponsored Sessions Chairs Thilo von Pape, U Hohenheim, GERMANY Steven Jones, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Gerard Michael Goggin, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Today, cars accommodate a wide spectrum of communication modes into one comprehensive communicative space. This involves cars’ own dashboards, surround sound systems and other control features, passengers’ mobile devices mediating both interpersonal communication and entertainment, and face-to-face communication between co-present passengers. We will discuss the heuristic value of researching communication in, through, and with the car as a microcosm and a testbed of these current evolutions in digital media and in communication research more generally. Through this, we aim to generate and structure axes of research along which future projects could be undertaken. 5051 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Anzu Cultural Adaptation, Developmental Communication, and Community Intercultural Communication Chair Pamela Aquino Custodio, U of the Philippines, PHILIPPINES Participants International Teaching Assistant (ITA) Perceptions of U.S. American Classrooms Aparna Hebbani, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Katherine G. Hendrix, U of Memphis, USA Daniel Angus, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA The Challenged Researcher? Ceremonial and Substantial Meanings of “Perceived and Articulated Cultural Otherness” in Academic Interview Situations Sarah Anne Ganter, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Covenant: Binding Participation in Development Projects Through Indigenous Communication Gretchen Mangahas, Benguet State U, PHILIPPINES Cultural Adaptability on Sojourners’ Mental Model Change and Psychological Adjustment Lin Zhu, U of Massachusetts-Boston, USA Minghui Fan, Emerson College, USA Storytelling the Santo Niño Ati-Atihan Festival in the Philippines: A Communication Infrastructure Approach and Implications on Sustainable Festival Tourism George Allen Onas Villanueva, Loyola U Chicago, USA “I Can See the Trust”: Building a Communication Infrastructure Jenna L. Currie-Mueller, North Dakota State U, USA Robert Littlefield, North Dakota State U, USA Emory Daniel, North Dakota State U, USA Noor Ghazal-Aswad, North Dakota State U, USA James Garrett, North Dakota State U, USA 5052 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Hagi Technology Demonstrations Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Stephanie Kelly, North Carolina A&T State U, USA Participants Technology Demonstration: KODU-A Game Design Tool to Equip Future Teachers With Ugur Kale, West Virginia U, USA Mete Akcaoglu, Georgia Southern U, USA Technology Demonstration: Using Open-Source Software to Teach Introductory Network Concepts Jeffrey D Proulx, U of Illinois, USA Technology Demonstration: Using Pi Smartphone App for Classroom Communication and Engagement Rowena Lyn Briones, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA 5053 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Fuji Identity Matters in Social Interaction Language & Social Interaction Chair Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA Participants Stereotypes as a Practice for Managing Gender Accountability Anastacia D Kurylo, St. Joseph’s College, USA Jessica Sarah Robles, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Reexamining the Use of Tentative Language in Emails: The Effects of Gender Salience and Typicality Rong Ma, U of Maryland, USA Anita Atwell Seate, U of Maryland, USA Examining LGBTQ Issues in Taiwan With Critical Discourse Analysis: The Power of Heteronormativity, Homonormativity, and Compulsory Marriage JhuCin Rita Jhang, U of Texas, USA From “Super-Parent” to “Super-Predator”: The Power of Language in Juvenile Justice Brandon Golob, U of Southern California, USA 5054 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Sakura Political Communication and Citizen Mobilization Sponsored Sessions Chair Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Participants Political Identities and Media Systems in Spain: Exploring the Consequences of Activism in an Online Electoral Campaign Miguel Vicente-Marino, U of Valladolid, SPAIN Eva Campos-Dominguez, U of Valladolid, SPAIN Contentious Responses to the Crises in Spain: Emphasis Frames and Public Support of Protest in Twitter and the Press Camilo Cristancho, U Autònoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Silvia Majo-Vazquez, Internet Interdisciplinary Institute UOC, SPAIN Digital Media Journalists as Citizens' Mobilizers: A Study of Attitudes and Professional Practices During Election and Nonelection Periods. Rosa Berganza, ACOP - Asociacion de Comunicacion Politica, SPAIN Karen Sanders, CEU San Pablo U, SPAIN Salvador Perelló, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Carlos Arcila Calderon, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN How is a Candidate Using Twitter for Campaigning? Twitter as a Mobilization Tool to Frame the Political Discourse Rocio Zamora, U of Murcia, SPAIN Paloma del Henar Sánchez, U of Murcia, SPAIN Helena Martínez, U Católica San Antonio de Murcia, SPAIN Los Votantes Olvidados José Luis Hernández Olmedo, U Autónoma de Chiapas, MEXICO This panel addresses issues related to citizen mobilization as new social contexts emerge for political deliberation, participation and action in online and offline environments. Panellists take up the challenges posed by transformations of the media environment that require scholars to be both innovative in exploring the new emerging channels and arenas and critical toward the implications for traditional theoretical approaches applied to questions linked to the emergence of a multiaxial world. From a range of theoretical, empirical and cultural perspectives, panellists examine aspects of citizen mobilization and political communication from the point of view of political actors, journalists and citizens in election and non-election periods. 5060 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Olive Collective Action in the Digital Era Political Communication Chair Aaron S. Veenstra, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Participants A "Two-Level Social Capital Analysis" of the Role of Online Communication in Civic Activism: Lessons From the Role of Facebook in the Sunflower Movement Panayiota Tsatsou, U of Leicester - Department of Media and Communication, UNITED KINGDOM Yupei Zhao, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Collective Action Recruitment: A Typology of Organizations and Their Filtering Behavior in a Digital Age Tamar Ashuri, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Yaniv Bar-Ilan, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Connecting the Conference Room to the Living Room: Earth Hour, Digital Media, and the Global “Open-Source Campaign” Luping Wang, U of Southern California, USA Kjerstin Thorson, U of Southern California, USA Digital Democracy in Asia: Understanding the Impacts of the Asian Internet on Political Participation Shin Haeng Lee, U of Washington, USA Old Concept With New Power: Why Digital and Unconventional Activities Can be Political Participation Jakob Ohme, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Erik Albaek, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5061 Sunday 08:00-09:15 Sage Self-Presentation and Appearance Issues of Youth in Media Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Dysfunctional Appearance Beliefs Among Tweens: The Role of Beauty-is-Good Messages and the Peer Appearance Culture Jolien Trekels, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Preteens’ Reliance on and Internalization of Media Appearance Ideals: Triggers and Consequences Ann Rousseau, U of Leuven, BELGIUM The Role of Heterosexual Expectations in the Relationship Between Early Adolescents’ Media Exposure and the Endorsement of Dysfunctional Appearance Beliefs Laurens Vangeel, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Jolien Trekels, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Steven Eggermont, U of Leuven, BELGIUM The “Good Girls”: Exploring Features of Female Characters in Children’s Animated Television Sarah Pila, Northwestern U, USA Julie Dobrow, Tufts U, USA Calvin Gidney, Tufts U, USA Jennifer Burton, Tufts U, USA Hypergender Teens on Social Networking Sites: Investigating Reciprocal Relationships Between Gender Role Orientations and Sexy Online Self-Presentations Johanna M.F. van Oosten, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Laura P. Vandenbosch, U of Leuven / U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Joris Van Ouytsel, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 5220 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Argos C The Balance of Social Power in a Digital World Theme Sessions Participants Klaus Bruhn Jensen, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Eszter Hargittai, Northwestern U, USA Matthew Scott Hindman, George Washington U, USA Dhavan Shah, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, USA This panel will address the evolving character of the digital public sphere. When are critical voices heard? When are such voices muffled or distorted? How does ubiquitous electronic connectivity affect the prospect of protest, collective behavior and collective action? How does dependence on social media for news affect public awareness and public opinion? How do the new dynamics of viral communication influence public perceptions of political authority and of political conflict? Our organizing theme is an interrogation of the dynamic balance of power between central authorities and communities of concern in modern nation states and in the global system of those states and the interconnected publics of which those states are comprised. 5221 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Argos D Processing Social Information Information Systems Chair Benjamin K. Johnson, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Developing a Confluence Model of Rampage Killings: The Cultural Transmission of Despair-Aggress-Suicide Scripts and Guilt as Social Contagion Mark A. Hamilton, U of Connecticut/Chulalongkorn U, THAILAND “Let Me Take a Selfie” Exploring the Psychological Effects of Posting and Viewing Selfies and Groupies on Social Media Ruoxu Wang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Fan Yang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Michel M. Haigh, Pennsylvania State U, USA Examining the Role of Social Norms in Mental Health Help-Seeking Among Young Adults Danyang Zhao, Florida State U, USA Juliann Cortese, Florida State U, USA So Close and Yet So Far: Adolescents’ Social Comparison With Social Media Stars Cynthia Meissner, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Constanze Rossmann, U of Erfurt, GERMANY The Role of Tie-Strength and Chance of Participation on Responses to Exercise Posts in Social Media Wonkyung Kim, Michigan State U, USA Taiwoo Park, Michigan State U, USA Does Online Social Capital Aid or Abet User Susceptibility to Social Media Phishing? Brynne Harrison, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Arun Vishwanath, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Yu Jie Ng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE How Deliberation Leads to Collective Efficacy in Social Media: An Experiment From the Field Daniel Halpern, Pontifical Catholic U of Chile, CHILE James E. Katz, Boston U, USA Self-Control and Need Satisfaction in Primetime: Television, Social Media, and Friends Can Enhance Regulatory Resources via Perceived Autonomy and Competence Benjamin K. Johnson, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Allison Eden, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Leonard Reinecke, U of Mainz, GERMANY 5222 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Argos E Organizational Communication Research Escalator - Extended Session (Part 2) Organizational Communication Chairs William C. Barley, U of Illinois, USA Stacey L. Connaughton, Purdue U, USA Participants Impact of the Use of Communication Technologies on Intergenerational Communication: A Study of Thai Organizations Papassara Chaiwong, Chulalongkorn U, THAILAND Roong Sriussadaporn, Chulalongkom U, THAILAND Group and Individual Network Measures Predict Individual Performance in an MMOG Grace Ann Benefield, U of California, Davis, USA Cuihua Shen, U of California, Davis, USA Negative Spillover in Corporate-Nonprofit Partnerships and Response Strategies Sun Young Lee, Texas Tech U, USA Hyejoon Rim, U of Minnesota-Twin Cities, USA Attempts to Bridge the Gap Between Authority of Expertise and Authority of Position Therese Eva Maria Hedman Monstad, Uppsala U, SWEDEN Constituting Ethical Organizations: A Model of Ethical Leadership and the Four Flows of Communication Lei Vincent Huang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Pok Man Tang, Lingnan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Interprofessional Communication During Multidisciplinary Team Meetings: How Treatment Decisions are Made for Older Patients Sifra Bolle, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Julia C.M. van Weert, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Ellen M.A. Smets, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Marije Hamaker, Department of Geriatric Medicine, Diakonessenhuis, THE NETHERLANDS Johanneke Portielje, HAGA Hospital, THE NETHERLANDS Power to the People: Discursive Tensions Between Corporate and End-User Discourses Claire Burlat, Audencia Business School, FRANCE Selling Goodwill Overseas: Adapting a Construal-Level Perspective on CSR Communication Gain Park, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyun Soon Park, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Lost in Translation: Institutional and Individual Barriers to Translating Evidence-Based Medical Research in the US Katherine Elder, U of Southern California, USA Image Analysis of the EIN-GV in Rural Community Griselda Guillen, U Autónoma de Baja California, MEXICO Roberto Burgueño, U Autónoma de Baja California, MEXICO Leticia De la Torre, U Autónoma de Baja California, MEXICO Identity-Dynamics, Communication Modes and Ambiguity: The case of the Social Enterprise Fairphone Jeroen G.F. Jonkman, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Friederike Schultz, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Joep Cornelissen, Erasmus U, THE NETHERLANDS The Demands of Communication Media Use and Employee Well-Being: The Role of Personality Claartje L. ter Hoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Helen Vossen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Locking the Gate: Citizens Communicating With Power in Rural Australia Alana Margaret Mann, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA E-Indigenous: Towards a Theory of Modern Communication Practices With Māori Steven Elers, Massey U Phoebe Frances Elers, Auckland U of Technology, NEW ZEALAND Building Microcredit as an International Cause: Representations and Symbolic Power Odile Vallee, Audencia Business School, FRANCE Structural Balance and Trust in Multiteam Systems Ly Dinh, U of Illinois Urbana Champaign, USA Whose Change is It? Connecting Cognition, Frames, and Identities in Processing of Organizational Change Message Mrittika Sen, Northwestern U, USA Communication and Corporate Culture in the Postindustrial Society. From the Fordist Factory to the Living Organization Hilda Gabriela Hernandez Flores, Benemérita U Autónoma de Puebla, MEXICO J. Roberto Sanchez Reina, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN Exploring the Mediation Effects of Social Media Use on Perceived Organizational Support and Word-of-Mouth Communication Yuan Wang, U of Alabama, USA 5223 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Argos F Mobile Gaming in Asia: Politics, Culture, and Emerging Technologies Game Studies Chair Dal Yong Jin, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Participants Games of Being Mobile: The Unruly Rise of Mobile Gaming Larissa Hjorth, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA Ingrid Richardson, Murdoch U, AUSTRALIA Mobile Games in China: Persistence, Permutations, and Prospects Tai Zixue, U of Kentucky, USA The Gamification of Smartphone Communication among Korea’s Young Smartphone Users Dal Yong Jin, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Kyong Yoon, U of British Columbia, CANADA Toward Individualistic Cooperative Play in Japanese Mobile Social Game Akiko Shibuya, Soka U, JAPAN Mizuha Teramoto, Ochanomizu U, JAPAN Akiyo Syouun, Ochanomizu U, JAPAN Gaming Addiction in Asia: Present & Future Jae Sik Ha, U of Illinois-Springfield, USA Respondent Larissa Hjorth, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA This session looks into a hitherto neglected focus of inquiry, a localized mobile landscape emerging with the smartphone and its apps, with particular reference to Asians’ engagement with mobile gaming. It focuses on not only the celebratory achievement of local mobile games, but also the significance of the social milieu in the development of Asian mobile gaming culture and its side effects. It also investigates several dimensions in the growth of mobile game technologies and culture, including government policy. The panel analyzes how smartphones have taken shape within the context of Asia’s particular mobile game and mobile culture. 5224 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Navis A The Many Faces of "Commercialization" Journalism Studies Media Industry Studies Chair Laura Ahva, U of Tampere, FINLAND Participants Why Drop a Paywall? Mapping Decommodifications of Online News Mike Joseph Ananny, U of Southern California, USA Leila Bighash, U of Southern California, USA Reality Check: The Performance Gap Between U.S. Newspapers’ Print and Online Products, 2007–2015 Hsiang Iris Chyi, U of Texas, USA Ori Tenenboim, U of Texas, USA Native Advertising in Digital Journalism: An Explorative Study of the Blurring Boundaries Between Editorial and Commercial Content Raul Ferrer Conill, Karlstad U, SWEDEN When Public Opinion Data is Sponsored: Who Pays for Poll Results in the News Benjamin J Toff, U of Wisconsin, USA Money Matters? Journalists’ Perception of the Effects of a Weak Market Orientation Patrick Ferrucci, U of Colorado, USA 5225 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Navis B Vaccine Communication: Childhood, Flu, HPV Health Communication Chair Rebecca Britt, South Dakota State U, USA Participants College Males’ Perceptions of Benefits and Barriers to the HPV Vaccine Margaret J. Pitts, U of Arizona, USA Samantha Stanley, U of Arizona, USA Sara Kim, U of Arizona, USA Immunize the Vaccine Rumors: Effects of Inoculation Messages and Tone of Voice on HPV Vaccine Compliance Eun Hae Park, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Glen T. Cameron, U of Missouri, USA The Silver Lining of Shame: Framing HPV to Influence Disclosure and Vaccination Zheng Janet Yang, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA McKenzie Pittman, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Effects of Health Information Inoculation Against Misperceptions About Flu SangHee Park, Bowling Green State U, USA Gi Woong Yun, Bowling Green State U, USA Unspiraling the Silence: Online Incivility and Likelihood to Speak Out About Safety of Childhood Vaccines Gina Marie Chen, U of Texas, USA Deepa Fadnis, U of Texas, USA Shuning Lu, U of Texas, USA 5226 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Navis C Empowering Consumers in the Age of Social Media: An Empirical Analysis of EWOM Creation, Consumption, Perception, and Influence Communication and Technology Chair Hairong Li, Michigan State U, USA Participants When Do Reviews Matter? An Investigation of Moderating Variables Ewa Maslowska, Spiegel Digital and Database Research Center / Northwestern U, USA Edward Malthouse, Northwestern U, USA Rate the Rating: An Empirical Analysis of Factors that Influence the Perception of Review Helpfulness Su Jung Kim, Iowa State U, USA The Hidden Costs of Paying Your Reviewers: How Incentives Affect the Content, Perceived Usefulness and Credibility of Online Reviews Lotte Michaela Willemsen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peeter Verlegh, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Eline Zwinkels, BTC Mediatest, THE NETHERLANDS What Makes Corporations’ Postings More Viral: A Predictive Model of Word of Mouth for Corporations’ Postings on Facebook Taemin Kim, U of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA Yunhwan Kim, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jhih-Syuan Lin, U of Georgia, USA Hyejin Kim, U of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA Respondent Hairong Li, Michigan State U, USA Electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM) has become one of the most influential forms of persuasive communication in human communication. This panel is an attempt to understand the process of eWOM creation, consumption, perception and influence. The panelists present four empirical studies that examine the creation, consumption, perception, and effect of consumers’ eWOM in the United States, the Netherlands, and a global context. This panel will give us an opportunity to see what motivates consumers to read other consumers’ eWOM and use it for their purchase decision, how eWOM is perceived as a helpful and credible source of information by its readers, and how company actions can influence the creation of eWOM. 5230 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Nire Holistic, Complementary, and Alternative Medicine and Therapies Health Communication Chair Evelyn Y. Ho, U of San Francisco, USA Participants Constituting Expertise: Constructing Holistic Health in Complementary and Alternative Medicine Vinita Agarwal, Salisbury U, USA Framing and Narrative Structure of Alternative Birth Options Published in American Newspapers Carmen Stitt, California State U, Sacramento, USA Ashley Perron, California State U, Sacramento, USA Medicine, Culture, or Myth? Analyzing News Coverage of Chinese Medicine in Chinese Print Media Li Chen, U of Iowa, USA The Role of Doulas in Enhancing Patient-Provider Communication Gabriela Renteria-Poepsel, Health Literacy Missouri (HLM), USA Wai Hsien Cheah, Southern Illinois U - Edwardsville, USA Mark Anthony Poepsel, Southern Illinois U Edwardsville, USA Sun Exposure, Tanning Beds, and Herbs That Cure: How Skin Cancer is Portrayed on Pinterest Lu Tang, U of Alabama, USA Sung Eun Park, U of Alabama - Tuscaloosa, USA Jane Stuart Baker, U of Alabama, USA 5231 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Kusu New Methods in Communication and Technology Communication and Technology Chair Drew Berkley Margolin, Cornell U, USA Participants Developing and Testing the Facebook Usage Questionnaire (FUQ) and the Perceived Facebook Usage Questionnaire (P-FUQ) Jessica Trixa, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, GERMANY Julia Kneer, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Studying Communication Networks by Merging Mobile Log and Self-Report Data: Enhancing the Name Generator Approach Jeffrey Boase, U of Toronto, CANADA Guang Ying Mo, U of Toronto, CANADA Cyber Resilience Preparedness Index Ada Sonia Peter, Covenant U, NIGERIA Scale, Time, and Activity Patterns: Advanced Methods for the Analysis of Online Networks Sandra Gonzalez-Bailon, U of Pennsylvania, USA 5232 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Kashi Technology Use Within the Family and Across the Lifespan Communication and Technology Chair Erin Flynn Klawitter, Northwestern U, USA Participants Examining the Role of Haptic Feedback in Parent-Child Joint Reading Experiences Drew Cingel, Northwestern U, USA Anne Marie Piper, Northwestern U, USA Between Association and Dissociation: How Parents Influence Media Innovativeness at Later Life Stages Philipp Mueller, U of Mainz, GERMANY Josephine Schmitt, U of Cologne, GERMANY Benjamin Kramer, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY From Empty Nest to Social Networking Site: What Happens in Cyberspace When Children are Launched From the Parental Home? Martin Tanis, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Moniek Buijzen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Mulitasking Across the Lifespan: The Relationships Between Age, Generation, and Life Circumstances Alice E. Hall, U of Missouri - St. Louis, USA Lara Zwarun, U of Missouri - St. Louis, USA Linking ICT Use at Home, Flexibility, Permeability, and Work-Family Conflict to Technostress and Telecommuting Louis W. Leung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Renwen Zhang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5233 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Kaede Reporting on Disaster and Conflict Journalism Studies Chair Lea C. Hellmueller, Texas Tech U, USA Participants Journalists are Humans, Too: A Phenomenology of Covering the Strongest Storm on Earth Edson Tandoc, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Bruno Takahashi, Michigan State U, USA Constructing Cholera: Exploring the Powerful Potential of Citizen Journalism during the Haitian Cholera Epidemic Joanna Krajewski, U of Iowa, USA Brian Ekdale, U of Iowa, USA When Societies Crash: The Emotional Role of News Media in the Aftermath of National Disasters Stijn Joye, Ghent U, BELGIUM Evolving Alignments: A Longitudinal Comparative Study of Intermedia Similarity and Diversity in the Coverage of the IsraeliPalestinian Conflict Christian Baden, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Respondent Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA 5240 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Rigel Social Movements Around the World Global Communication and Social Change Chair Michael Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Layers of Myth and Magic: The “Artist Class” in Brazilian Technology and Myths of Use-Neutrality Beatrice Choi, Northwestern U, USA Protest Theming as Safe Authoritarian Audience Costs Strategy: Calls for Boycott During the 2012 China Anti-Japanese Demonstrations Joshua Cader, U of Tokyo, JAPAN Internet Censorship in Digital Divide: Why Chinese Labor Activists Do Not Use ICT in Activism Yining Zhou, U of California, Davis, USA Mobilization as Communication: A Latin American Perspective to the Study of Social Movements Paola Sartoretto, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Understanding Globalization From the Tea Party Movement’s Perspective Hao Cao, U of Texas, USA 5241 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Vega Network Analysis in Mass Communication Research Mass Communication Chair Nathan Stolero, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Participants How Institutions and Culture Shape Global Web Use? Harsh Taneja, U of Missouri, USA James G. Webster, Northwestern U, USA Network Dynamics of Adolescents’ Media Use: Social Selection and Influence Processes of TV and YouTube Thomas N. Friemel, U of Bremen, GERMANY Matthias Bixler, U of Bremen, GERMANY Selection or Influence? A Study of News Media’s Effects on Social Networks and Power Dynamics Among Religious Group Members Soo-Kwang Oh, William Paterson U, USA The World Through the Eyes of the New York Times and People’s Daily: A Network Agenda-Setting Analysis of Psychological Geography Maxwell McCombs, U of Texas, USA Pei Zheng, U of Texas, USA Paro Pain, U of Texas, USA 5242 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Kiku Muslim Media-Making Beyond Terrorism, Sermons and the Travails of Diaspora: New Intersectional Approaches to Everyday Islam and Mediated Communication Global Communication and Social Change Chair William Lafi Youmans, George Washington U, USA Participants Post-Islamist Sounds: Music, Devotion and Muslim Modernities Nabil Echchaibi, U of Colorado, USA Launching their (Cyber)Revolutions: Muslim Women, "Cyberfeminism," and Socio-Political Transformation Sahar Mohamed Khamis, U of Maryland, USA Understanding Hijab: Muslim Women’s Motivations for Communicating on Tumblr Ammina Kothari, Rochester Institute of Technology, USA Cosmopolitan Islam in Practice: The Case of Tempo Magazine Janet Ellen Steele, George Washington U, USA Respondent Lawrence Pintak, Washington State U, USA 5243 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Ran Advances in the Study of Film Mass Communication Chair Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Participants Communicating a Relationship: Pakistan Through the Lens of Hindi Cinema Amit Ranjan, Indian Council of World Affairs, INDIA Charu Uppal, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Predicting the Popularity of Mass-Market Films Using Enjoyment and Appreciation Appraisals Robert Joel Lewis, U of Texas at Austin, USA Matthew N Grizzard, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Pei Ling Wang, U of Texas at Austin, USA Science Fiction Provides Meaning for Alien Technologies Markus Appel, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Stefan Krause, U Koblenz-Landau, Campus Landau, GERMANY Ulrich Gleich, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Martina Mara, Ars Electronica Futurelab, AUSTRIA South Korean Hostess Film and Film Censorship During Park Chung Hee's Military Regime (1960-1979) Molly Hyo Kim, U of Illinois, USA 5245 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Sumire Populist Parties, Populist Appeals, and Media Populism Political Communication Chair Toril Aalberg, Norwegian U of Science and Technology - Trondheim, NORWAY Participants Drivers of Populism: A Four-Country Comparison of Party Communication in the Run-Up to the 2014 EP Elections Franzisca Schmidt, IKMB U of Bern, SWITZERLAND Emotional and Persuasive? An Empirical Test of Common Assumptions About Populist Appeals Dominique Stefanie Wirz, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Media Coverage and Issue Expansion of Right-Wing Populist Parties Linda Bos, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jonas Lefevere, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Roos Thijssen, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Penelope Helen Sheets, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS On Media Populism: Exploring the Relationship Between Media Preferences and Citizens’ Populist Attitudes Michael Hameleers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Linda Bos, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5246 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Koh Cultural Influence on Friendship, Intimacy, and Conflict at Work Intercultural Communication Chair Hassan Abu Bakar, U of Utara - Malaysia, MALAYSIA Participants Easily Connected but Difficult to Get Close: Intercultural Friendship on Social Media Among Taiwanese Sojourners in the United States Hong-Chi Shiau, Shih-Hsin U, TAIWAN Self-Presentations on Gay Networking Apps: Comparing American and Chinese Guys Who Meet Guys on Jack’d Lik Sam Chan, U of Southern California, USA What Should Friends Do? Friendship Obligations for Business and Close Friends in US and Russia Jacqueline J. Schmidt, John Carroll U, USA Deborrah Uecker, Wisconsin Lutheran College, USA Four-Tier Intimacy Levels and Direct and Indirect Communication Strategies: A Japan-US Comparison Jiro Takai, Nagoya U, JAPAN Peter S. Lee, California State U - Fullerton, USA Tenzin Dorjee, California State U - Fullerton, USA Matej Koprda, Nagoya U, JAPAN Reina Takamatsu, Nagoya U, JAPAN Wenzhen Xu, Nagoya U, JAPAN Akira Miyahara, Seinan Gakuin U, JAPAN Stella Ting-Toomey, California State U, Fullerton, USA John M. Wiemann, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Communication Issues in Intercultural Teams: The Effects of Team Member Diversity Vivian Hsueh Hua Chen, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE When Culture Meets Work: A Preliminary Overview of Intercultural Conflicts in International Workplaces Yijia Guo, U of Oklahoma, USA 5247 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Yoh Representing Difference and Deviance Popular Communication Chair Sharrona Pearl, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Texting and the Metrolink Train Crash: A Pathological Approach to Critical Media Studies Travers Scott, Clemson U, USA A Date With 'The Undateables': An Analysis of the Mediated Public Debate Surrounding the Television Programme 'The Undateables' Susan Vertoont, Ghent U, BELGIUM Class Shaming in Postrecession U.S. Advertising Matthew P. McAllister, Pennsylvania State U, USA Anna Aupperle, Pennsylvania State U, USA 5248 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Kei The Power of Social Media Public Relations Mobile Communication Chair Kiranjit Kaur, U Teknologi MARA, MALAYSIA Participants From Fun to Fan: Examining Relationship Building and Public Engagement on Company Facebook Pages by Using a Uses and Gratifications Approach Jiangmeng Liu, U of Miami, USA Michael North, U of Miami, USA Cong Li, U of Miami, USA Corporate WeChat Communication in China: Examining Institutional Factors, Media Richness, Content Type, and Public Engagement Yi-Ru Regina Chen, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yang Cheng, U of Missouri, USA Yan Jin, U of Georgia, USA Chun-ju Flora Hung-Baesecke, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Chun-xiao Li, South China Morning Post, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Effect of Online Comments and Public Opinion Polls on Individuals’ Attitude Change and Willingness to Speak Out on Social Media Moon J Lee, U of Florida, USA Jung Won Chun, U of Florida, USA Motivations and Reservations in Self-Presentation in Social Media: Implications for Public Relations Ying Xiong, U of Oklahoma, USA Reddit As A New Platform for Public Relations: Organizations’ Use of Dialogic Principles and Their Publics’ Responses in the Subreddit IAmA Phuong Hoan Le, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Yuping Mao, California State U, Long Beach, USA Respondent Chun-ju Flora Hung-Baesecke, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND 5249 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Board Room Data Visualization as Communicative Power? Visual Communication Studies Chair Giorgia Aiello, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The Art of Disclosure Nathaniel Tkacz, U of Warwick, UNITED KINGDOM Data Visualization and Critical Digital Methods Jean Burgess, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Data Visualization as Problem-Posing Rowan Wilken, Swinburne U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Visualisation, Conventions, Power Helen Kennedy, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM The ‘Smart’ Mandate: A Speculative History Orit Halpern, The New School for Social Research, USA Data Visualization’s Unequal Terrain Anna Feigenbaum, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Following the conference theme, this roundtable focuses on the entanglements of an emergent form of communication, data visualization, with different types and manifestations of power. As data become more abundant and inform decision-making that affects all of our lives, the main way that most people get access to data is through their visualization. The roundtable puts data visualization on the agenda of communications research and interrogates it as a keyword in communication studies today. 5250 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: Continuity and Change in the Theoretical Underpinnings of Media Psychology Sponsored Sessions Chair Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL This Blue Sky workshop will bring together scholars of media psychology to discuss the intersection of media psychology and media effects research given development in media technology, media consumption and new research findings. Our discussion will focus on the conceptual level and ask whether traditional concepts and theories of media effects are still relevant or whether they should be replaced to allow new and relevant questions to emerge. 5251 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Anzu The Role of Language, Narratives, and Framing in Intergroup Relations Intergroup Communication Chair Ji Pan, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Examining the Effects of Ethnic Identity on linguistic intergroup bias and prejudice in Hong Kong/China relations Michael Che Ming Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF How Ironic Remarks About Social-Category Members Contribute to Stereotype Formation Camiel J. Beukeboom, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Christian Burgers, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Communicating Collective Victimhood: Legitimizing Violence by Uncertain Groups and Perceived Group Entitativity Sucharita Belavadi, Claremont Graduate U, USA Michael A Hogg, Claremont Graduate U, USA Partisan Code Words Affect Policy Opinions and Group Demographic Estimation Becky Robinson, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Scott A. Reid, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA The Power of Stories: Narrativity in Videos Against Extremism and its Effect on Persuasive Processing and Behavioral Intentions Lena Frischlich, U of Cologne, GERMANY Diana Rieger, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Anna Morten, U of Cologne, GERMANY Gary Bente, U of Cologne, GERMANY 5252 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Hagi Requiring Passports for Ideas: Internet Sovereignty, Strategic Communications, and Public Diplomacy Communication Law & Policy Chair Monroe E. Price, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Lokman Tsui, , CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Shawn Powers, Georgia State U, USA Ko Fujii, Makaira, USA Min Jiang, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA Amelia Hardee Arsenault, Georgia State U, USA Reigning concepts of freedom of expression and their circulation "regardless of frontiers" have been increasingly challenged over the past decade by various techniques for informational segmentation and filtering. Battles over these issues of "how free?" and "how borderless?" occur at the broad conceptual level at multilateral fora such as the UN's Internet Governance Forum (IGF) and traditional multilateral settings such as the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). How are these international media policy events and debates affecting communications research? What will be the impact on international norms of freedom of expression, sovereignty, and information transfer? What are alternate ways of framing various competing national perspectives and rising ideologies? 5253 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Fuji Media, Ferguson, and #BlackLivesMatter Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Shilpa Dave, U of Virginia, USA Participants Voices of the Marginalized Osita Iroegbu, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA How #BlackLivesMatter: Exploring the Role of Hip-Hop Celebrities in Constructing Racial Identity on Black Twitter Summer Harlow, Florida State U, USA Anna Benbrook, Florida State U, USA "Broken Windows" in the Ferguson Era: Original Theory and Contemporary Discourse Elena Rosa Maris, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Ballot or the Bullet 50 Years Later: Examining the Ferguson Protests Through the Words of Malcolm X Fred Jennings, U of Missouri, USA 5254 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Sakura Communicating With Power for the Media Sponsored Sessions Participant Sissel McCarthy, Hunter College, USA ICA member & former CNN Anchor Sissel McCarthy will give practical advice on how to present your research to a lay audience. 5260 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Olive Frames in the News: Where Do They Come From? Political Communication Journalism Studies Chair Robert M. Entman, George Washington U, USA Participants Do Pictures Tell a Different Story? A Multimodal Frame Analysis of the 2014 Israel-Gaza Conflict Marc Christian Wilhelm Jungblut, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Ieva Zakareviciute, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Networks of News Production: An Interdependent Approach to Understanding Framing and Source Use Bethany Anne Conway, California Polytechnic State U, USA Political Polarization and the Framing of Income Inequality in News Media and Social Media Christopher Frear, U of South Carolina, USA Anan Wan, U of South Carolina, USA Seung Mo Jang, U of South Carolina, USA Towards a Typology of Conflict Frames: Substantiveness and Interventionism in Dutch Political Conflict News Guus Bartholome, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5261 Sunday 09:30-10:45 Sage 5320 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Argos C Sex, Sexting, Sexuality Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Boundaries of Sexual Communication: A Mixed-Method Study Exploring Chinese Young Adults' Engagement With Online Sexual Health Information Jingwen Zhang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Chloe Nurik, U of Pennsylvania, USA Do Media Light Their Fire? The Dual Role of Sexualizing Media in Adolescent Sexual Behavior Ann Rousseau, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Ine Beyens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Steven Eggermont, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Dutch Adolescents' Motives, Perceptions, and Reflections Toward Sex-Related Internet Use: A Web-Based Focus Group Study Suzan Doornwaard, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Ine Vanwesenbeeck, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Carol van Nijnatten, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Laura Baams, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Tom ter Bogt, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Regina van den Eijnden, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Exploring the Explanatory Roles of Perceived Utility and Instrumental Attitudes in the Relationship Between Sexually Explicit Internet Material and Casual Sex Laura P. Vandenbosch, U of Leuven / U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sexting, Snapchat, and Social Norms: Because Everybody is Doing It? Andrea Gudmundsdottir, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jeroen Jansz, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sexting: Adolescents' Perceptions of the Motives and Consequences of Engaging in the Behavior Joris Van Ouytsel, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Ellen Van Gool, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Michel Walrave, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Koen Ponnet, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Visiting Chat Rooms, Dating Websites, and Erotic Contact Websites Predicts Adolescents’ Romantic and Sexual Activity Ine Beyens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Laurens Vangeel, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Steven Eggermont, U of Leuven, BELGIUM ICA Publication Strategic Planning Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Paula M. Gardner, McMaster U, CANADA Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Francois Heinderyckx, U Libre de Bruxelles, BELGIUM Cynthia Stohl, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Elisia L. Cohen, U of Kentucky, USA Silvio R. Waisbord, George Washington U, USA John A. Courtright, U of Delaware, USA Radhika E. Parameswaran, Indiana U, USA S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas - Austin, USA David R. Ewoldsen, Michigan State U, USA Michael J. West, International Communication Association, USA John Paul Gutierrez, International Communication Association, USA Laura Sawyer, International Communication Association, USA Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA Eun-Ju Lee, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Leonard Reinecke, U of Mainz, GERMANY Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Robin Nabi, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 5321 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Argos D Online Communities and Media Technologies Information Systems Chair Anika Batenburg, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Digital Innovation in eScience: The Effect of Digital Practice on Traditional Citation-Based Scientific Recognition Sorin Adam Matei, Purdue U, USA Sabine Brunswicker, Purdue U, USA Michael Zentner, Purdue U, USA Lynn Zentner, Purdue U, USA Gerhardt Klimeck, Purdue U, USA Healthcare Workers Sharing Knowledge Online: Motivations and Consequences of Participating in Virtual Communities of Practice Anika Batenburg, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Mediated Grief on Social Media: The Case of Mourning Lee Kuan Yew’s Passing in Singapore Yu Jie Ng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Weiai Xu, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Arun Vishwanath, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Information Communication Technologies and Economic Performance Hyunjin Seo, U of Kansas, USA Stuart Thorson, Syracuse U, USA How Website Formats Shape Public Attention on the World Wide Web? Harsh Taneja, U of Missouri, USA Angela Xiao Wu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Playing Versus Watching a Sexualized Female Avatar Under Varied Cognitive Load Glenna Lee Read, Indiana U, USA Teresa Lynch, Indiana U, USA Nicholas L Matthews, Indiana U, USA “I’ll Present to the Human”: Effects of a Robot Evaluator on Anticipatory Public Speaking Anxiety Chad Edwards, Western Michigan U, USA Brett Stoll, Cornell U, USA Autumn Payge Edwards, Western Michigan U, USA Patric R. Spence, U of Kentucky, USA Andrew James Gambino, The Pennsylvania State U, USA An Experiment in Transmedia Publishing and News Engagement Andrea Allen Hickerson, Rochester Institute of Technology, USA Elena Fedorovskaya, Rochester Institute of Technology, USA 5322 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Argos E CAT Hybrid Session 3: Social Media, Interactions, and Self-Presentation Communication and Technology Chair Nicole Ellison, U of Michigan, USA Participants Why Do We Share? Exploring Monetary, Moral, and Social-Hedonic Motives for Internet-Mediated Sharing Eliane Leontine Bucher, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Christian Fieseler , BI Norwegian Business School, NORWAY Christoph Lutz , BI Norwegian Business School, NORWAY “Selfiessism” or “Narcissism”?: A Cross-Lagged Panel Answer Daniel Halpern Halpern, Pontifical Catholic U of Chile, CHILE Sebastian Valenzuela, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE James E. Katz, Boston U, USA Click Here to Look Clever: Self-Presentation via Selective Sharing of Music and Film on Social Media Benjamin K. Johnson, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Giulia Ranzini, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS From Sexy to Sexting: Investigating the Relationship Between Sexy Self-Presentation in Social Media and the Willingness to Engaging in Sexting Johanna M.F. van Oosten, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jochen Peter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Motives for Online Friending and Following: The Dark Side of Social Network Site Connections Jaap W. Ouwerkerk, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Benjamin K. Johnson, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Self-Disclosure on SNS: The Function of Disclosure Intimacy and Narrativity on Perceived Closeness Ruoyun Lin, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Sonja Utz, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Ana Levordashka, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY The Effects of Facebook Usages, Posts and Replies on Network Heterogeneity and Social Resources Yuli Patrick Hsieh, RTI International, USA Shu-Fen Tseng, Yuan Ze U, TAIWAN Yen-Ching Wu, Yuan Ze U, TAIWAN “Swipe to the Right”: Assessing Self-Presentation in the Context of Mobile Dating Applications Sarah Rose Marcus, Rutgers U, USA 5323 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Argos F Flashlights Game Studies Division Game Studies Chair Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Participants Can Video Games Make You Sexist? Hugo Aranzaes, The Hero Archetype, PERU Play it Again?! Nostalgia and the Motivation to Replay Video Games Tim Wulf, U of Cologne, GERMANY Play to Win Over: About the Effects of Persuasive Games Ruud Jacobs, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Animation of Gamers and Gamers as Animators in the Sierra Online Graphic Adventures Raz Greenberg, Hebrew U, ISRAEL The Goals of Game Design and the Consequences for Games Isaac Knowles, Indiana U, USA Towards a Theoretical Approach to Analyze, Understand, and Design the Induction of Emotions in Videogames Sylvain Payen, Concordia U, CANADA The Study of Interpersonal Communication Using Virtual Environments and Digital Animation: Approaches and Methodologies Daniel Roth, U of Cologne / U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Did you ever wonder what the strange people of the Games Division do? Please feel welcome to join us and listen to seven of our youngsters giving you an insight on this question. Step away of the theoretical and study based discussions and enjoy seven five minutes talks on game research, virtual environments, and simulations which summarize in a fun way what is happening nowadays in our field. Maybe it will help you to get some ideas how to use our approaches for your own field? We need you after all: the audience will vote for the best Flashlight presentation at the end of this session. 5324 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Navis A Worlds of Journalism: Comparing Journalistic Cultures in Sixty Countries Journalism Studies Chair Thomas Hanitzsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Participants Professional Identities and Roles of Journalists Tim P. Vos, U of Missouri, USA Liesbeth E.A.H.M. Hermans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Jan Fredrik Hovden, U of Bergen, NORWAY Perceived Influences on the News and Factors that Drive News Production Thomas Hanitzsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Jyotika Ramaprasad, U of Miami, USA Jesus Antonio Arroyave, U del Norte, COLOMBIA Journalistic Trust in Public Institutions Arjen van Dalen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Rosa Berganza, ACOP - Asociacion de Comunicacion Politica, SPAIN Morten Skovsgaard, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Nina Elvira Steindl, Ludwig Maximilians U, GERMANY Transformation of Journalism in a Global Context Folker Christian Hanusch, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Edson Tandoc, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Dimitra Dimitrakopoulou, Aristotle U of Thessalonik, GREECE Nurhaya Muchtar, Indiana U of Pennsylvania, USA Vittoria Sacco, U of Neuchatel, SWITZERLAND Respondent Lars Willnat, Indiana U, USA This panel reports first comparative findings from the second wave of the Worlds of Journalism Study. Carried out as a collaborative effort of researchers from around the globe, the study gathered data using questionnaires with a representative sample of journalists in about 60 countries between 2012 and 2015. The panel specifically highlights four central areas of interest: (1) Professional identities and the roles of journalists in the surveyed countries, (2) perceived influences on the news and factors that drive news production, (3) journalistic trust in social institutions with particular emphasis on trust in politics, and (4) the transformation of journalism as seen through the eyes of the interviewed journalists. We discuss conceptual and methodological challenges faced in the research process. 5325 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Navis B Qualitative Studies of Provider-Patient Communication Health Communication Chair Liz Jones, Griffith U, AUSTRALIA Participants Breaking Bad News: A Challenge for a Doctor's Communication Tuula Artkoski, U of Tampere, FINLAND Marja-Leena Hyvarinen, U of Eastern Finland, FINLAND Patients’ Lived Experiences With Chronic Pain: A Qualitative Interview-Based Study Roma Subramanian, U of Missouri, USA Abby Rolbiecki, U of Missouri, USA Ben Crenshaw, U of Missouri, USA Mildred Frances Perreault, U of Missouri, USA Kyung Jung Han, U of Missouri, USA Daniel Vinson, U of Missouri, USA Glen T. Cameron, U of Missouri, USA Perspectives of Patient Portals: Insights From New Zealand Doctors Phoebe Frances Elers, Auckland U of Technology, NEW ZEALAND Reducing Early Elective Deliveries: Obstetricians’ Perceptions of National Interventions on Their Clinical and Communicative Practices Kathryn Elizabeth Anthony, U of Southern Mississippi, USA Julie Lasslo, U of Kentucky, USA To Be (or Not) a Guinea Pig: Patients’ Knowledge and Beliefs About Cancer Clinical Trials Mugur Valentin Geana, U of Kansas, USA Joseph Erba, U of Kansas, USA 5326 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Navis C Big Data & Networks: Connecting Communities, Organizations, and Reviews Communication and Technology Chair Nathaniel D. Poor, independent scholar, USA Participants Why Do Organizations Follow Other Organizations on Twitter? A Longitudinal Study Jiawei Sophia Fu, Northwestern U, USA When Internet Really Connects Across Space: Communities of Software Developers in Vkontakte Social Networking Site Olessia Koltsova, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Sergei Koltcov, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Yadviga Sinyavskaya, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Game of Cues: The Interplay between Star Ratings, Number of Reviews, and Product Reviews in Online Shopping for Health Products Seoyeon Hong, Webster U, USA Zongyuan Wang, U of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, USA Shelly L. Rodgers, U of Missouri at Columbia, USA You Write What You Eat: Linguistic Style, Ratings, and Locale of Yelp Reviews Drew Berkley Margolin, Cornell U, USA David Matthew Markowitz, Stanford U, USA Information Processing Style Moderates the Effect of Input Device on Pre- and Postpurchase Product Evaluations Suzanne Overmars, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Karolien Poels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 5330 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Nire Online Health Literacy, Information Processing, and Seeking Health Communication Chair Gang Han, Iowa State U, USA Participants A Replication of Channel Complementarity Theory Among Internet Users in India Julian Lin, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Mohan Jyoti Dutta, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Digital Divides in Health-Related Internet Use in Europe Marko Bachl, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY How Health Literacy Influences Online Health Information Processing: Revealing the Underlying Mechanisms Corine S. Meppelink, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Nicola Diviani, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Julia C.M. van Weert, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Trusted Sources and Channels for Health Information: Exploring Differences in Sociodemographics and eHealth Literacy Samantha Paige, U of Florida, USA Janice Krieger, U of Florida, USA Michael Stellefson, U of Florida, USA A Matter of Ability and Motivation? Older Cancer Patients’ Recall of Online Cancer Information Nadine Bol, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Ellen M.A. Smets, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jacobus Burgers, Netherlands Cancer Institute, THE NETHERLANDS Suzy Samii, Deventer Hospital, THE NETHERLANDS Hanneke C.J.M. de Haes, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Eugène F. Loos, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jesse Jansen, U of Sydney, AUSTRALIA Julia C.M. van Weert, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5331 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Kusu Online Dating: The Beginning, Middle, and End Communication and Technology Chair Mariek Vanden Abeele, Ghent U, BELGIUM Participants A Preliminary Exploration of Networked Intimacy: Gay Asian Americans’ Experiences of Using Dating Apps Lik Sam Chan, U of Southern California, USA James Lee, U of Southern California, USA Behavioral Adaptation and Idealization Processes in Long-Distance Dating Relationships: Evidence From Self-Reported and Linguistic Data L.Crystal Jiang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Hyperpersonal Effect in Online Dating: Do We Still Like Each Other When We Meet Face-to-Face? Marjolijn L. Antheunis, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Joseph B. Walther, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Alexander Peter Schouten, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Emmelie Hense, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Sharing a Breakup With Friends and Family: Patterns and Effects of Interpersonal Media Use on Personal Growth Mina Choi, U of Wisconsin, USA Catalina Laura Toma, U of Wisconsin, USA 5332 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Kashi Arguments, Argumentation, and Language Competence Intercultural Communication Chair Ee Lin Lee, Western Washington U, US Participants Argumentation in Malaysia and How It Compares to the US, India, and China Moniza Waheed, U Putra Malaysia, MALAYSIA Dale Hample, U of Maryland, USA Modeling the Serial Argument Process in the Case of Asians, African-Americans, and Caucasians in the United States Ioana A. Cionea, U of Oklahoma, USA Bobbi Van Gilder, U of Oklahoma, USA Jacqueline S. Bruscella, U of Oklahoma, USA Exploring the Relationships Among Message Features, Cognitive Appraisal, and Aroused Emotions of Guilt and Shame: A CrossCultural Study Jounghwa Choi, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jiyeon So, U of Georgia, USA Hyunyi Cho, Purdue U, USA English Language Competence and Self-Construal Joseph Oliver, Illinois State U, USA English Language Proficiency as Cultural Capital in South Korea Hoyoung Kim, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Intercultural Communication Competence and Bilingualism: A New Investigation Lily A. Arasaratnam-Smith, Alphacrucis College, AUSTRALIA 5333 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Kaede Letters to the Editor in Historical and Comparative Contexts Journalism Studies Chair John Steel, U of Sheffield, Department of Journalism Studies, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Letters to the Editor in African American Newspapers Brian Thornton, U of North Florida, USA From Integration to Segregation and Back Again: The Historical Rvolution of Letters to the Editor and Audience Comments Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Outlining the Colombian Soul: Letters to the Editor as a Medium to Trace Colombians Emotional Repertoires Marta Milena Barrios, U del Norte, COLOMBIA Letters to the Editor and Online Readers’ Comments: Self- and Cross-Perceptions of Audiences and News Organizations Marisa Torres da Silva, U Nova de Lisboa, PORTUGAL Appropriation or Negotiation?: Letters to the Editor as a Challenge to the News Agenda John Steel, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM Allison Cavanagh, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Letters to the editor have been an under used resource in scholarly research within journalism studies. Often understood merely in Habermasian terms, as an ornament of the public sphere, or treated either as a simple reflection of editorial policy or of ‘public opinion’, we suggest that letters have not been granted the academic attention they deserve. This international panel therefore explores important questions concerning the enduring role and significance of letters to the editor. The panel is especially concerned to understand the ways in which news environments, political systems and readerships interact in the production of rival understandings of the affordances of letters to the editor as a sphere. 5340 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Rigel The Power of Bollywood: Prospects for Indian Soft Power in the Asian Century Global Communication and Social Change Chair David J. Schaefer, Franciscan U, USA Participants Bollywood and American Media: Implications for Indian Soft Power David J. Schaefer, Franciscan U, USA Dhoom, Rang Fab, Bombay Café: Bollywood Media Assemblages in Singapore Anjali Roy, Indian Institute of Technology-Kharagpur, INDIA Stumbling to Bollywood’s Power: A Critical Analysis of Hollywood’s (Mis)adventures in the Indian Culture Market Azmat Rasul, Florida State U, USA Stephen D. McDowell, Florida State U, USA Barbara Corley Robinson, Florida State U, USA Mudassir Mukhtar, National U of Modern Languages, PAKISTAN Defne Bilir, Florida State U, USA The Political Power of Indian Cinema- An Analysis of “Political” Bollywood films. Kavita Karan, U of Southern Illinois C., USA Networked Bollywood: Award-winning families Sunitha Chitrapu, Sophia Polytechnic, INDIA Respondent Daya Thussu, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM In the second decade of the new millennium, the diffusion of Bollywood cinema around the world is widely evident. From Hindilanguage cable channels hawking the latest Bollywood blockbuster in the Americas, to Indian grocery stores playing Bollywood pop songs at top volume throughout the U.K. and Europe, to fan blogs and streaming movie sites touting the latest Bollywood gossip and soaps in South Africa and Asia, one can see the artifacts of “Bollywood” wherever one looks. This panel brings together scholars representing a range of methodological approaches to tackle questions regarding the nature of Bollywood’s contemporary global power. 5341 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Vega The Study of Framing in the Context of Politics Mass Communication Political Communication Chair Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants A Time Paradox in Framing Changes in Income Inequality: When Duration Frames Increase, Undermine, and Polarize Redistributive Policy Preferences Sungjong Roh, Singapore Management U, SINGAPORE Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell U, USA Conflict Framing Effects on Political Polarization: A Test of Self-Categorization Theory Jiyoung Han, U of Minnesota, USA Daniel B. Wackman, U of Minnesota, USA Covering the Economic Crisis: Over-Time and Interoutlet Differences in Salience and Framing Alyt Damstra, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rens Vliegenthart, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS What Changed Public Opinion on the Same-Sex Marriage Issue? New Implications of Attributes in Media Agenda Setting Victoria Y Chen, U of Texas at Austin, USA Paro Pain, U of Texas, USA 5342 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Kiku Promising Student Papers Information Systems Chair Zheng Joyce Wang, Ohio State U Participants Control Your Facebook: An Analysis of Online Privacy Literacy Miriam Bartsch, U Hamburg, GERMANY Tobias Dienlin, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Variation in Probe Tone Frequency Affects Secondary Task Reaction Time Edgar Jamison-Koenig, Indiana U, USA Joshua D. Sites, Indiana U, USA Me(n)tal Health: Social Identity Mediates Psychological Recovery Effects of Music Listening Sabine Reich, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Katharina Knop-Huelss, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY 5343 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Ran The Study of Emotion and Entertainment Media Mass Communication Chair Alice E. Hall, U of Missouri - St. Louis, USA Participants Insensitive Players? Playing Violent Video Games Relates to Impaired Recognition of Negative Emotions Ewa Miedzobrodzka, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jacek Buczny, SWPS U of Social Sciences and Humanities, POLAND Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Lydia Krabbendam, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Is Seeing Really Believing? The Underlying Processes of Involvement Across Print and Audiovisual Narratives Nathan Walter, U of Southern California, USA Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA Lauren B. Frank, Portland State U, USA Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati, U of Southern California, USA To Forgive, or Not to Forgive, That is the Question: The Influence of Severity, Blameworthiness, and Commitment on Audiences’ Forgiveness of Media Figures Mu Hu, West Virginia Wesleyan College, USA James Young, West Virginia Wesleyan College, USA “I Love It Even Though It’s Terrible!”: Dimensions of Media Entertainment as Guilty Pleasure Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Arienne Ferchaud, Pennsylvania State U, USA Erica Bailey, Pennsylvania State U, USA Chun Yang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Meghan Shara Sanders, Louisiana State U, USA 5345 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Sumire Studying News Exposure in the Digital Era Political Communication Chair Shira Dvir-Gvirsman, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Participants Measuring Media Diet in a High-Choice Environment: Testing the List-Frequency Technique Kim Andersen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Erik Albaek, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Online Media Networks and Audience Flow: Fragmentation in the Production and Consumption of News on the Web Silvia Majo-Vazquez, Internet Interdisciplinary Institute UOC, SPAIN Ana Cardenal, U Oberta de Catalunya, SPAIN Sandra Gonzalez-Bailon, U of Pennsylvania, USA Persistent Civic Virtue of Online News Exposure: A Field Experiment Using a Popular Portal Website Tetsuro Kobayashi, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Takahiro Hoshino, Keio U, JAPAN Takahisa Suzuki, the Graduate U for Advanced Studies, JAPAN The Stubborn Pervasiveness of Television News in the Digital Age and the Field’s Attention to the Medium, 2010-2014 Nicholas Robinson, Temple U, USA Chen Zeng, Temple U, USA Lance Holbert, Temple U, USA Understanding Political News Media Choice and Effects: Evidence From a Field Experiment Sophie Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5346 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Koh Environmental Narratives: Gender Roles, Citizen Engagement, and Storytelling Environmental Communication Chair Richard Buttny, Syracuse U, USA Participants Overcoming Silence Through the Neighborhood Storytelling Network: A Community Facing Controversies Over the Reopening of a Nuclear Plant in Japan Joo-Young J. Jung, International Christian U, JAPAN Risa Maeda, International Christian U, JAPAN Promoting Faith-Based Climate Activism Through Multilevel Narrative Repetition Pauline Hope Cheong, Arizona Sate U, USA Boris H. J. M. Brummans, U of Montreal, CANADA Jennie M. Hwang, U of Montreal, CANADA "Out of the Dome": An Exploratory Study of Female's Perception of Environmental Health Risk Yanni MA, Washington State U, USA Ying Roselyn Du, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Lei Vincent Huang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Ecomasculinity and Ethics of Daring: Bollywood Through an Ecocritical Lens Saayan Chattopadhyay, Jadavpur U, INDIA Sushmita Pandit, Jadavpur U, INDIA 5347 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Yoh Media Life: Markets and Ethics Popular Communication Chair Anthony Y.H. Fung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Assembling Infant Mobile Communication: Accidental, Assisted, Automated Bjorn Nansen, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Darshana Jayemanne, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Telemarketing, 800-Numbers, and the Making of the Perpetual Marketplace Richard K. Popp, U of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, USA Ethics, Evolved: An International Perspective on Copying in the Networked Age Aram A. Sinnreich, American U, USA The Changing Format Industry in South Korea: From Illegal Copying to Licensed Formats Jennifer Minsoo Kang, U of Texas, USA 5348 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Kei Technologies at Work Organizational Communication Chair Jeffrey William Treem, U of Texas, USA Participants So Many Communication Technology Options: Communication Media Repertoires as Reifying Hospital Interprofessional Roles Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA Millie Harrison, U of Texas, USA Yaguang Zhu, U of Texas, USA Joshua B. Barbour, U of Texas, USA Meena Iyer, Seton Hospital, USA Terrie Hairston, Seton Hospital, USA John Luk, MD, U of Texas, USA The Dual Role of Mobile Technology in Relation to Autonomy and Control Amanda J. Porter, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bart J. van den Hooff, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Camille van der Harten, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Tom Wijman, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Cyberinfrastructure as a Framework for Electronic Health Records (EMR) Diffusion: A Research Agenda Yaguang Zhu, U of Texas, USA Kerk F. Kee, Chapman U, USA In The Wake Of New Media: Strategic Action As Relational Agency Ib T. Gulbrandsen, Roskilde U, DENMARK Sine N. Just, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK Respondent Janet Fulk, U of Southern California, USA 5349 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Board Room Powerful Explorations: Public Relations Theory Public Relations Chair Dean Kruckeberg, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA Participants Making Sense of Competence Frameworks in Public Relations and Communication Management: Gaps in Knowledge Magda Pieczka, Queen Margaret U, UNITED KINGDOM Mandy Powell, Durham U, UNITED KINGDOM Strategic Ambiguity, Equivocation Theory, and DeflateGate David Edward Clementson, Ohio State U, USA The Organizational Power in Reality Construction. Building a Theory of CSR Communication on Meso and Macro Level Stefan Jarolimek, German U of Police, GERMANY Pluralistic Ethics and the Dynamics of Public Relations Ethical Dilemmas Thomas Hove, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hye-Jin Paek, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Psychological Distance in Public Relations Campaigns Ah Ram Lee, U of Florida, USA Linda Hon, U of Florida, USA Jungyun Won, U of Florida, USA Respondent Dean Kruckeberg, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA 5350 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: Digital Activism Sponsored Sessions Chairs Anne Kaun, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Julie Uldam, Roskilde U, DENMARK Participants Guobin Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Maria Repnikova, U of Pennsylvania, USA Kecheng Fang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Julia Velkova, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Katerina Girginova, U of Pennsylvania, USA Rosemary Clark, U of Pennsylvania, USA This Blue Sky Workshop is dedicated to digital activism, which is studied within diverse disciplines such as anthropology, sociology, political science, media and communication studies as well as art and design studies. The field hence comprises a rich and at the same time disparate body of knowledge. Research on digital activism often remains grounded in one particular discipline, adopting the focal points and assumptions of that discipline. The workshop aims to bring different perspectives on digital activism together in order to further our understanding of new forms of activism enabled by emerging media technologies. The workshop topic will be introduced by members of the DigAct network that gathers research on digital activism in Scandinavia, China and the USA. 5351 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Anzu Privacy, Copyright, and Piracy Media Industry Studies Communication Law & Policy Chair Julian Thomas, Swinburne U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Powerful Displays: Digital Media Platforms, Cybersecurity, and Trade Policy Aynne Kokas, U of Virginia, USA Copyright and the Government’s Market Control: Video Website Copyright Regulation in China Wei-Ching Wang, National Taiwan Normal U, TAIWAN Shule Cao, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Jia Dai, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zimuzu, Volunteerism, and Media Industry in China Darrell Davis, Lingnan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Emilie Yeh, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Predicting the Use of Online Video Platforms: Relating Attitudes Towards Digital Piracy to Consumer Preferences and Willingness to Pay Claudia Wilhelm, U of Erfurt, GERMANY 5352 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Hagi Exploring the Innovative Use of Digital Technologies in the Global Context of Digital and Media Literacy Education Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Renee Hobbs, U of Rhode Island, USA Participants Using IPad Apps for Media Literacy Education Jie Zhang, Communication U of China, CHINA Mind Over Media: A Tool for Advancing Media Literacy Education Renee Hobbs, U of Rhode Island, USA The Use of iMovie Promotes Intercultural Understanding through Media Literacy Education Yonty Friesem, Central Connecticut State U, USA Media Breaker: A Tool for Media Literacy Education Katherine Fry, CUNY - Brooklyn College, USA LMS for Media Literacy Education Silke Grafe, Ruhr U, Bochum, GERMANY Media Production Tools that Advance Media Literacy Sirkku Kotilainen, U of Tampere, FINLAND FlipGrid Enhances Discussion-Based Online Learning in Media Literacy Education Michael RobbGrieco, Temple U, USA Screencasting for Media Literacy Sait Tuzel, Canakkale Onsekiz Mart U, TURKEY This session features an invited group of global scholars who specialize in offering training and professional development to those working in elementary, secondary and higher education contexts to advance digital and media literacy competencies. In this fastpaced session, panel members briefly demonstrate a particular digital technology text, tool or technology that supports their work with learners, contextualize their use of it within their national and situational context, and identify the most significant opportunity and challenge associated with it. After demonstrating a particular technology tool they have used for digital and media literacy education, participants identify the most significant opportunity and challenge associated with its use. 5353 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Fuji The Visual Powers of Place, Space, and Landscape Visual Communication Studies Chair Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants The Indignados Social Movement and the Globalisation of the Image of the Occupied Square (Top Paper) Maria Rovisco, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM The City as Medium of Revolution? Beirut Graffiti and the Syrian Uprising Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Strange Case of Seattle's Lenin: The Temporal and Spatial Boundaries of Public Art Engagement Samantha Oliver, U of Pennsylvania, USA The Tragedy of Landscape: Walking the Migrant Path from Italy to France Karina Horsti, Academy of Finland, FINLAND The Visual and Cultural Identity of Urban Settings: Starbucks at the Heart Pamela Kay Morris, Loyola U Chicago, USA 5354 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Sakura Computational Methods Interest Group Organizational Business Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Jonathan J.H. Zhu, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Tai-Quan Winson Peng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Wouter van Atteveldt, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The interest group focuses on the methods of computational social science (see, for example, Lazar et al., 2009; Watts, 2014) used in communication research. In particular, computational methods cover computerized tools and algorithms for collecting, processing, analyzing, and visualizing online data from social media (e.g., BBSs, blogs, microblogs, online social networks, photo-/video sharing sites, etc.). As such, the group distinguishes from other divisions/groups of ICA (e.g., Communication and Technology, Mobile Communication, Mass Communication and Society, etc.) that deal with conceptual issues of social media whereas this group is exclusively oriented to methodological issues. 5360 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Olive The Agenda-Setting Role of Old and New Media Political Communication Chair Toshio Takeshita, Meiji U, JAPAN Participants Attribute Agenda-Setting and Affective Priming in the 2011 Seoul Mayoral Election: How Media Descriptions of Candidate Attributes Affect Political Decision-Making Yoomin Lee, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Young Min, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Function of TV News Agenda Setting in the Process of Issue Voting and Vote Choice Soo Jung Moon, U of West Georgia, USA Minimal or Just Difficult to Measure? A Panel Study of Agenda-Setting Effects at the Individual Level Kajsa Larsson Falasca, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN Who Sets the Cyber Agenda? Intermedia Agenda-Setting Online: The Case of NSA Mario Haim, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Gabriel Weimann, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Hans-Bernd Brosius, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY 5361 Sunday 11:00-12:15 Sage News, Journalism, and Information Literacy Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Unveiling Information Literacy of Digital Natives in Secondary Schools: A Swiss Example Katarina Stanoevska-Slabeva, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Severina Mueller, U of St.Gallen, SWITZERLAND Sabine Seufert, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Nina Scheffler, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND What Makes Adolescents More Engaged Citizens?: The Effects of Skill, Information, and Creation Literacies Eun-Mee Kim, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Soeun Yang, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Journalism for Children: From Kids to Pirates and Princesses? Kristin Orgeret, Oslo and Akershus U College, NORWAY What Makes the Young Read the News? Exploring Factors That Influence Adolescents’ Offline and Online News Reading Behavior Sacha Sillekens, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Daniel Toebes, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Mariska Kleemans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Natascha Notten, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent William R. Davie, U of Louisiana, USA 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer ICA Plenary Interactive Paper/Poster Session III Sponsored Sessions This year, ICA will again be presenting three separate plenary poster sessions. This session will feature presenters from Communication History, Communication Law and Policy; Ethnicity and Race in Communication, Feminist Scholarship; Journalism Studies; Media Industry Studies; Philosophy, Theory, and Critique; Political Communication; Popular Communication; and Visual Studies divisions and interest groups. This session will feature presenters from Communication History, Communication Law and Policy; Ethnicity and Race in Communication, Feminist Scholarship; Journalism Studies; Media Industry Studies; Philosophy, Theory, and Critique; Political Communication; Popular Communication; and Visual Studies divisions and interest groups. Communication History Interactive Poster Session Communication History Chair David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA Participants 1. Collective Memory of Comfort Women During the Japanese Colonial Rule Hwalbin Kim, U of South Carolina, USA Claire Claire Lee, U of Texas at Austin, USA 2. Star Power and the Cultural Politics of Authority in World War Sue Collins, Michigan Technological U, USA 3. “A Passion for Novelty, and Excitement, and Display”: Press Coverage of Baby Shows, 1853-1855 Richard Lewis, U of Southern Mississippi, USA 4. Developing Style: How the Washington Post Sparked a Cultural Revolution Thomas R. Schmidt, U of Oregon, USA 5. Players and Contestation Mechanisms in the Journalism Field: A Historical Analysis of Journalism Awards, 1960s-2000s Joy Michelle Jenkins, U of Missouri, USA Yong Z. Volz, U of Missouri, USA 6. Women War Correspondents of the First World War: Alice Schalek on the Italian Front, 1915-1917 Stephanie Seul, U of Bremen, GERMANY Respondents Nicole Maurantonio, U of Richmond, USA Michael Meyen, U Munich, GERMANY David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Communication Law and Policy Interactive Poster Session Communication Law & Policy Chair Seamus Simpson, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM Participants 7. Big Data, Consumer Analytics, and Real-Time Bidding (RTB) Advertising: Emerging Policy and Regulatory Issues on Consumer Privacy Kenneth C. C. Yang, U of Texas - El Paso, USA Yowei Kang, Kainan U, TAIWAN 8. The Demise of Communication Policy: The Case of WHUT's Fight for Survival Alisa Valentin, Howard U, USA Jean-Louis Ntang-Beb, Howard U, USA 9. Open Data for Transparency and/or Economic Growth? The Quiet Private Takeover of a Public Resource Robyn Caplan, Rutgers U, USA 10. The Making and Unmaking of Spatial Opportunity Structure in the Occupy Wall Street Movement Hao Cao, U of Texas, USA 11. “Your Privacy Is Very Important to Us”: American Mobile Ventures’ Privacy Management Wenhong Chen, U of Texas, USA Gejun Huang, U of Texas, USA Joshua Miller, U of Texas, USA Kye-Hyoung Lee, U of Texas, USA Daniel J. Mauro, U of Texas, USA Bryan Stephens, U of Texas, USA Xiaoqian Li, U of Texas, USA 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Ethnicity and Race in Communication Interactive Poster Session Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Norma Jones, Kent State U, USA Participants 12. Marco Rubio’s Prospective Presidentiality: Latin@ Politics, Race/Ethnicity, and the Presidency Josue David Cisneros, U of Illinois, USA 13. “You Have to Pick One”: Exploring the Discursive Processes of Identity Development Among Multiethnic-Racial Individuals Audra Kate Nuru, Fairfield U, USA 14. Examining Pictorial Information and Bandwagon Effect: Does What We See Influence What We Give? Enica Castañeda, Pennsylvania State U, USA Anli Xiao, Pennsylvania State U, USA 15. Not Who You Are but Where You Are: Hispanics’ Behavioral Intentions Towards Energy Conservation Bruno Takahashi, Michigan State U, USA Ran Duan, Michigan State U, USA Anthony Van Witsen, Michigan State U, USA 16. Negotiating Digital Marginalization: A Study of New Computer Users in Newark, New Jersey Camille Marie Reyes, Trinity U, USA 17. Ethnic Media, Self-Categorization Theory, and Self-Esteem Srividya Ramasubramanian, Texas A&M U, USA Marissa Joanna Doshi, Hope College, USA Muniba Saleem, U of Michigan, USA Respondent Norma Jones, Kent State U, USA 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Feminist Scholarship Interactive Poster Session Feminist Scholarship Participants 18. Ada's Algorithm: Reimagining the Machine as Texts Micky Lee, Suffolk U, USA 19. Breaking the Silence: Women Behind Bars Tamanika Ferguson, Howard U, USA 20. Perceptions of Gender Issues in the Public Relations Field Nancy W. Muturi, Kansas State U, USA Ge Zhu, Kansas State U, USA 21. “I am More Than Just Big Freedia”: Trans* Queer Hip Hop and Pathways of Seeing Andre Cavalcante, U of Virginia, USA Greg Lewis, U of Virginia, USA 22. Girls, Gender, Celebrity, and the Contemporary Blockbuster Film Franchise Sarah Projansky, U of Utah, USA 23. Getting Noticed: Feminist Scholarship in Top-Ranked Communication Journals (1990-2015) Ingrid Bachmann, Pontificia U Católica de Chile, CHILE Dustin M. Harp, U of Texas - Arlington, USA Jaime Loke, U of Oklahoma, USA Journalism Studies Interactive Poster Session Journalism Studies Participants 24. Why Contribute to the Online Public Sphere? The Effect of Communication Infrastructure on Citizen Journalism Seungahn Nah, U of Kentucky, USA Masahiro Yamamoto, U of Wisconsin-La Cross, USA 25. A General Pattern of Newsworthiness? Analyzing News Factors in Tabloid, Broadsheet, Financial, and Regional Newspapers Mark Boukes, U of Amsterdam / ASCoR, THE NETHERLANDS Rens Vliegenthart, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 26. Contextualizing Journalism Ethics: A Cross-Cultural Study of Plagiarism and Attribution Between U.S. and Chinese Journalists Fan Yang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Bu Zhong, Pennsylvania State U, USA Norman P. Lewis, U of Florida, USA Yong Zhou, Renming U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 27. Exploring Participatory Journalistic Content Merel Borger, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Anita M. J. van Hoof, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS José Sanders, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS 28. Interactivity in Egyptian Newspapers Ahmed Mohamed El Gody, Umea U, SWEDEN 29. It’s Catchy, but it Gets You F*cking Nowhere: How Users Experience Current Affairs TV Tim Groot Kormelink, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Irene Costera Meijer, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Martijn Kleppe, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 30. More or Less Diverse: An Assessment of the Effect of Attention to Media Salient Company Types on Media Agenda Diversity in Dutch Newspaper Coverage Between 2007 and 2013 Jeroen G.F. Jonkman, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Damian Trilling, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Piet Verhoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 31. Networked News Time: How Slow—or Fast—Do Publics Need News to Be? Mike Joseph Ananny, U of Southern California, USA 32. Private Responses to Public Goods: Database Journalism in the Historical Context of Privatization Andreas Katsanevas, Stanford U, USA 33. Pushy or a Princess? Women Experts and UK Broadcast News Lis Howell, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Jane B. Singer, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM 34. Replacement or Complement: A Niche Analysis of Yahoo news, Television News, and Electronic News Shu-Chu Sarrina Li, National Chiao Tung U, TAIWAN 35. Scandals Online: The Effects of Valenced Reader Comments on Recipients’ Demand for Punishment and Their Understanding of Personalized Scandals Christian von Sikorski, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA 36. Social Science Done on Deadline: Data Journalism and its Impact on the Reading Experience and Perceived Credibility Elena Link, Hanover U of Music, Drama and Media, GERMANY Daniel Possler, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY 37. The Changing Discursive Practices of Chinese Journalistic Community Fangzhou Ding, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 38. The Role of User-Generated Criticism in Mainstream Media Coverage: How Journalists Cover Online Firestorms Sabine A. Einwiller, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Sascha Himmelreich, U of Mainz, GERMANY Benno Viererbl, U of Mainz, GERMANY 39. Understanding Believability of Entertainment vs. Science Satirical News Online in Context of Level of Satire and Source Reputability Nisha Garud, Ohio U, USA 40. When Ideology Meets National Interest: How Terrorist Attacks are Framed in China, Russia, and US Ying Roselyn Du, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Lulu Li, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondent Daniel A. Berkowitz, U of Iowa, USA 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Media Industry Studies Interactive Poster Session Media Industry Studies Participants 41. Relationship Between Advertising and Economy in China: The Roles of Consumption, Economic Development, and Media Sylvia Chan-Olmsted, U of Florida, USA Linsen Su, Beijing Jiaotong U, CHINA 42. Toward the Bottom of the Pyramid? Rediscovering the Role of the PSB in India Subin Paul, U of Iowa, USA 43. The e-Commerce Revolution: Ensuring Trust and Consumer Rights in China Ming Cheung, U of Adelaide, AUSTRALIA Philosophy, Theory, and Critique Interactive Poster Session Philosophy, Theory and Critique Participants 44. Deleuzian Reading of Simulacra Experience and Punctum: Proposing a New Concept, Punctum-Affect Sookyong Ko, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 45. Wittgenstein and the Critique of Cultural Discourse Craig Frayne, TU Bergakademie Freiberg, GERMANY 46. Narrative Experience, Explicated: A Synthesis of Narrative Transportation and Character Identification Literature Andrew Yee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE May O. Lwin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Charles T. Salmon, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 47. Trading Cultural Capital for Cosmopolitan Capital: Media Practice as Reconversion Work in a Globalizing World Johan Eric Lindell, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Martin Danielsson, Halmstad U, SWEDEN 48. Audiences, Users, and a Hermeneutic Promise in the Internet Age Ranjana Das, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Political Communication Interactive Poster Session Political Communication Participants 49. How News Type Matters: Indirect Effects on Political Participation Through Knowledge and Efficacy Kim Andersen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Camilla Bjarnoee, Aarhus U, DENMARK Erik Albaek, U of Southern Denmark, Centre for Journalism, DENMARK Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 50. Media Consumption and Asian Values as Predictors of Attitudes Towards Media Freedom in East and South East Asia Dani Madrid-Morales, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 51. The Fact of Experience: Rethinking Political Knowledge and Civic Competence Katherine J. Cramer, U of Wisconsin, USA Benjamin J Toff, U of Wisconsin, USA 52. Amalgamating Trade and Development: A Mythology of Coherence in Democratic Governance Byron Hauck, Simon Fraser U, CANADA 53. Citizen Production and Civic Participation: Testing a Moderated Mediation Effect of Political Discussion Seungahn Nah, U of Kentucky, USA Masahiro Yamamoto, U of Wisconsin-La Crosse, USA 54. Gender-Empathic Constructions, Empathy, and Support for Compromises in Intractable Conflict Yossi David, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Nimrod Rosler, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Ifat Maoz, Hebrew U, ISRAEL 55. How Exposure to Counterattitudinal Messages From the Same Party Influences Online Information-Seeking and Attitude Change Sangwon Lee, U of Wisconsin, USA Jihyun Esther Paik, U of Wisconsin, USA 56. Influencing the News Through Social Media: Online Agenda Building and Normalization During a Pre-Electoral Campaign Period Matti Nelimarkka, Helsinki Institute for Information Technology, FINLAND Salla-Maaria Laaksonen, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Mari Marttila, U of Helsinki, FINLAND Arto Kekkonen, Helsinki Institute for Information Technology, FINLAND Mari Tuokko, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Mikko Villi, U of Helsinki, FINLAND 57. Measuring Public Will: The Case of Michigan Religious Freedom Restoration Act Thanomwong Poorisat, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Franklin J. Boster, Michigan State U, USA Charles T. Salmon, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 58. Modeling Partisan Media Effects in the 2014 U.S. Midterm Elections Benjamin Ryan Warner, U of Missouri, USA 59. Negative Advertising Effects on Presidential Support Rates: A Hierarchical Linear Modeling and Serial Dependency Study Tao (Jennifer) Ma, U of Connecticut, USA David J. Atkin, U of Connecticut, USA 60. Overcoming the Perceptual Obstacles to Deliberation Preparedness: The Role of Ambivalence in Mitigating Perceptions of Bias Wenjie Yan, Washington State U, USA 61. Perceptual Processes and Political Participation: Do Presumed Reach and Presumed Influences of Online Media Affect Political Online Activities? Uli Bernhard, Hochschule Hannover, GERMANY Marco Dohle, U of Duesseldorf, GERMANY Gerhard Vowe, U of Duesseldorf, GERMANY 62. Responsive Government? Public Opinion and Government Policy Preference in Post-Handover Hong Kong Chuanli Xia, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Fei Chris Shen, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 63. Rethinking MSD Theory in Social Media Era: Chinese International Students’ Sense-Making of Political News Xiaoyan Fu, Nanjing U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yuan Wang, U of Alabama, USA 64. The Dream of Statehood and the Reality of Conflict: Local and International Coverage of the Palestinian UN Bid for Statehood Yuval Karniel, Interdisciplinary Center, ISRAEL Amit Lavie-Dinur, IDC Herzliya, ISRAEL Tal Samuel-Azran, IDC Herzliya, ISRAEL 65. The Effects of Politicians Dodging Questions: Trustworthiness, Suspicion, Rumination, and Perceptions of Dodging David Edward Clementson, Ohio State U, USA 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer 5427 Sunday 12:30-13:45 Grand Foyer Popular Communication Interactive Poster Session Popular Communication Participants 66. A Very Special Makeover: Face Transplants on Television Sharrona Pearl, U of Pennsylvania, USA 67. Antifandom, Moral Panic, and Singapore’s Celebrity Blogger, Xiaxue Hattie Liew, The Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 68. Binge-Watching Motivates Change: How the Uses and Gratifications of Streaming Video Viewers are Challenging Traditional Audience Research Emil Steiner, Temple U, USA kun xu, Temple U, USA 69. How to Laugh at a Dead Terrorist: The Communicative Paradoxes of Post 9/11 Standup Comedy Bimbisar Irom, Washington State U, USA 70. On Ilbe Storehouse: Who Needs a Subculture? Hojeong Lee, Temple U, USA Jaehyeon Jeong, Temple U, USA 71. Spanish Queens and Jesters: A Rhetorical Analysis of the Video Blog (“Vlog”) Spanish Queens Liliana P. Acevedo Callejas, Ohio U, USA Michelle L. Acevedo Callejas, U of Iowa, USA 72. Trans Baby Boom: Documenting the Pregnant Man Traci Abbott, Bentley U, USA 73. What is Objectification Without Sex? A Reading of Sexual and Nonsexual Objectification in Preteen-Popular TV Shows Annebeth Bels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Hilde Dy Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Visual Communication Studies Interactive Poster Session Visual Communication Studies Participants 74. Empowering the Mentally Ill: From Visual Competence to Social Capital Yan Yan Lam, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 75. Marketing Visual Fidelity for The Peanuts Movie: Maintaining Consumer Confidence Despite Visual Change Stephen Lind, Washington and Lee U, USA 76. Neoliberal Gaze and Digital Image in Tetsuya Nakashima’s Films Mi Young Park, Southern Ilinois U - Carbondale, USA 77. Nonsuicidal Self-Injury in Japanese Manga Culture: A Preliminary Analysis Yukari Seko, Guelph U, CANADA Minako Kikuchi, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, JAPAN 78. The Ambivalent Image Factory of Chinese Independent Animation Weihua Wu, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 79. The Semiotic Functions of Face Masks in Antismog Campaigns Anli Xiao, Pennsylvania State U, USA 5471 International Encyclopedia Advisory Board Sunday 12:30-13:45 Bay Penthouse Sponsored Sessions Participants Akiba A. Cohen, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Charles R. Berger, U of California - Davis, USA Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Denis McQuail, unaffiilated, UNITED KINGDOM Joanne Cantor, U of Wisconsin, USA Joseph N. Cappella, U of Pennsylvania, USA Joseph M. Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Karen Ross, Northumbria U, UNITED KINGDOM Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN Paolo Mancini, U di Perugia, ITALY Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Robert T. Craig, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA Robin Elizabeth Mansell, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Youichi Ito, Akita International U, JAPAN John Nguyet Erni, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Janet Wasko, U of Oregon, USA Kyu Ho Youm, U of Oregon, USA K. Viswanath, Harvard U, USA Klaus Bruhn Jensen, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas - Austin, USA Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rebecca B. Rubin, Kent State U, USA Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Cynthia Luanne Carter, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM John O. Greene, Purdue U, USA Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA John D.H. Downing, Northwestern U in Qatar, USA Kevin G. Barnhurst, U of Illinois at Chicago, USA Karen Tracy, U of Colorado, USA Carroll J. Glynn, Ohio State U, USA Hans Mathias Kepplinger, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Stuart Allan, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas - Austin, USA Juergen Wilke, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Katherine Miller, Texas A&M U, USA Winfried Schulz, U of Erlangen-Nuernberg, GERMANY Debra L. Merskin, U of Oregon, USA Hans-Bernd Brosius, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Robert N. Gaines, Ars Rhetorica, USA Betteke A.A. Van Ruler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Robert L. Heath, U of Houston, USA Michael S. Griffin, Macalester College, USA Young Yun Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA 5520 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Argos C Funding for Communication Scholars: Opportunities at the European Research Council Sponsored Sessions Chair Frank Kuhn, European Research Council, BELGIUM Participants Thorsten Quandt, U of Muenster, GERMANY Patti Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sonja Utz, Liebniz-Institut für Wissensmedie, GERMANY ERC funds the very best researchers from around the world to investigate topics of their own choosing at the frontier of knowledge. Projects should have the potential to substantially transform their scientific area. Scholars with a PhD older than 2 years and willing to work for part of the time at a host institution in the EU or countries associated with the Framework Programme H2020 (e.g. Switzerland, Norway, Israel, Turkey, etc.) can apply. There are no restrictions on research topic, researcher nationality, current affiliation or age as ERC would like to attract the best researchers to come to Europe for projects of up to 5 years with a funding level between 1.5 and 3.5 million EUR (depending on the call). 5521 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Argos D Cognition, Attitude, and Persuasion Information Systems Chair Janet R. Meyer, Kent State U, USA Participants Threat Appeals: The Fear-Persuasion Relationship is Linear and Curvilinear James Price Dillard, Pennsylvania State U, USA Ruobing Li, Pennsylvania State U, USA Yan Huang, The Pennsylvania State U, USA Objective and Perceived Similarity in Persuasion: Smoker-Audience Similarity in Antismoking Campaigns Minji Kim, U of Pennsylvania, USA Becky Lau, U of Chicago, USA Emily Falk, U of Pennsylvania, USA Understanding Age Segmentation in Persuasion: The Interplay of Material and Experiential Purchases and Ordinary and Extraordinary Frames Jing (Taylor) Wen, U of Florida, USA Naa Amponsah Dodoo, U of Florida, USA Linwan Wu, U of Florida, USA Ilyoung Ju, U of Florida, USA Jieun Chung, U of Florida, USA Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of Florida, USA Effects Of Brand Feedback, Stability, and Controllability of the Cause of the Problem on Brand Attitudes And Purchase Intentions Manu Bhandari, Arkansas State U, USA Shelly L. Rodgers, U of Missouri, USA Belief Accessibility and Attitudes Toward Political Candidates Janet R. Meyer, Kent State U, USA Back to the Future: Implicit Attitudes as Expressions of Directional Behavioral Response Yijie Wu, Florida State U, USA Anthony Almond, Indiana U, USA Annie Lang, Indiana U, USA Motivational Relevance of Attitude Object Moderates Implicit-Explicit Attitude Correlation Yijie Wu, Florida State U, USA Cognitive Threshold of Viewers' Online News Reading: Interaction Effects of Heuristic Cues and Involvement on Audiences' Attitudes Hocheol Yang, Temple U, USA Edward Horowitz, Cleveland State U, USA Cheryl Campanella Bracken, Cleveland State U, USA Gary R. Pettey, Cleveland State U, USA 5522 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Argos E Communication and Media Challenges in Africa (High Density) Sponsored Sessions Chair Agnes Lucy Lando, Daystar U, KENYA Participants An Investigation of How Two Kenyan Newspapers Have Framed Islam in Pre (August 1998-August 2008) and Post Terrorism (August 2008-August 2017) Kenya Joy Kibarabara, Daystar U, KENYA Evaluating Effectiveness of Hiv Risk Communication In Kenya: A Correlation Between Construction of Meaning, Interpretation and Hiv Risk Decision Making Among Adolescents in Homabay County Mercy Khasiani, Daystar U, KENYA Communication Research in Africa: What is Happening, Where it is Happening, and Why it is Not Always Happening as it Should Dorothy W. Njoroge, , KENYA The Role of Dc3 (Daystar University Compassion and Care Centre) in the Uptake of Breast Cancer Screening Among Continuing Education Female Students Eunice Ndungu, Daystar U, KENYA The Influence of Social Media on Youth Towards Political Participation in Tanzania John Britto Rajendran, Daystar U, KENYA Integrating Participatory Communication into Slum Upgrading in Kibera: The Case of the Kenya Slum Upgrading Programme Communication Strategy Lilian Kimeto, Daystar U, KENYA Michael Bowen, Daystar U, KENYA The Efficacy of the Social Learning Theory in Unlearning the Dehumanizing and Aggravating Effects of Stereotyping Caused by the Christian Religion Anthony Okuku, Daystar U, KENYA Conceptualizing the Ethics of Citizen Journalism in Kenya Miriam Ayieko, Daystar U, KENYA Media Therapy: Understanding Why Kenyan Women Self Disclose Their Love Challenges on Television and Radio Agnes Lucy Lando, Daystar U, KENYA Stella Mwangi, Daystar U, KENYA Why ICAfrica is Important for Africa: An Examination of Why African National, Regional and Continental Communication Academic Bodies Still Limp Bala A. Musa, Azusa Pacific U, USA Africa is continent that is not only geographically vast but also one that is gigantic in varied communication issues such as training of journalists or communication practice. In order to have a foretaste of these various, the following 10 abstracts each present a unique scenario of communication and media challenges and angles in Africa in general and Kenya in particular. 5523 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Argos F The Power of Trust in Public Relations Public Relations Chair Petra Theunissen, Auckland U of Technology, NEW ZEALAND Participants The Impact of Trust on Public Relations Practitioners’ Job Satisfaction: A Moderated Multiple Mediation Analysis Juan Meng, U of Georgia, USA Bruce K. Berger, U of Alabama, USA Reconceptualizing Trust in the Context of OPR: An Interdisciplinary and Synthetic Approach Qing Huang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF What Does Trust Mean in Public Relations Research? A Reflection on the Vision of Public Relations Qing HUANG, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Network Analysis of Agenda Building in NFL Crisis Situation Ji Young Kim, U of Hawaii, USA Tiffany Lynn Schweickart, U of Florida, USA Jordan Neil, U of Florida, USA Tianduo Zhang, U of Florida, USA Liudmila Khalitova, U of Florida, USA Barbara Myslik, U of Florida, USA Craig E. Carroll, New York U, USA Spiro K. Kiousis, U of Florida, USA Information Flow and Leadership Challenges: A Global Study on Effective Responsive Strategies in Public Relations Practice Juan Meng, U of Georgia, USA Michael Cacciatore, U of Georgia, USA Bruce K. Berger, U of Alabama, USA Respondent RS Zaharna, American U, USA 5524 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Navis A Dialogues in Journalism Studies: Structuring Public Understanding of Journalism Through Metajournalism Journalism Studies Chair Stephanie L. Craft, U of Illinois, USA Participants Metajournalistic Discourse as Boundary-Making Dialogue Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA Metajournalism and Media Ethics Stephanie L. Craft, U of Illinois, USA Ryan James Thomas, U of Missouri, USA Metajournalistic Discourse Through the Lens of Actor-Network Theory Juliette De Maeyer, U de Montreal, CANADA Metacoverage and the Mediatization of Politics: How Changes in News Logic Affect Campaign Logic Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Paul D'Angelo, College of New Jersey, USA Reflexive publicity: Metajournalism and the Public Sphere Luke Goode, U of Auckland, AUSTRALIA In the context of the greatly increased opportunities for public participation in shaping journalism in the digital age, the significance of metajournalism – discourse in and around journalism, about journalism –has likewise increased. This panel brings together scholars who approach metajournalism and metacoverage from a number of theoretical perspectives, including boundary work and paradigm repair, actor-network theory, mediatization, the public sphere, and media ethics. Panelists will address where and how their conceptual and operational definitions overlap (or don't), how each theoretical approach has contributed to greater understanding of metajournalism, methodological issues in identifying and analyzing metajournalistic discourse, and promising avenues for future research. 5525 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Navis B Provider-Patient and Other Hospital-Based Health Communication Health Communication Chair Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Participants A Self-Determination Perspective of Online Health Information: The Internet vs. Face-to-Face Office Visits With Physicians Seow Ting Lee, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Julian Lin, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE How Nurse Station Design Shapes Communication, Patient Care Processes, and Patient Outcomes Kevin Real, U of Kentucky, USA Temporal Dynamics in the Daily Lives of Health Practitioners Cynthia Wang, U of Southern California, USA The Role of Phatic Communication Between Diabetes Patients and Their Physicians Elizabeth Glowacki, U of Texas, USA William A Donohue, Michigan State U, USA The Strength and Form of L1 Discursive Features of HIV/AIDS Consultations in South Africa Diana Benyuei Njweipi-Kongor, St Jerome Catholic U Institute- Douala, CAMEROON 5526 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Navis C Varying Visibilities in Social Media Communication and Technology Chair Elizabeth Newbury, Cornell U, USA Participants Anonymous Online Communication Between Disinhibition, Self-Disclosure, and Social Identity: A Complementary Mixed-Method Study Fabian Wiedel, Passau U, GERMANY Michael Johann, Passau U, GERMANY Julian Windscheid, U of Passau, GERMANY Katrin Tonndorf, Passau U, GERMANY Anonymous Online Interaction and its Benefits for Adolescents Nicole Ellison, U of Michigan, USA Lindsay Blackwell, U of Michigan, USA Penny Trieu, U of Michigan, USA Cliff Lampe, U of Michigan, USA Tsubasa Morioka, independent scholar, USA "Beyond Pseudonymity": The Sociotechnical Structure of Online Military Forums Sarah Maltby, U of Sussex, UNITED KINGDOM Helen Thornham, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Visible if You Do, Visible if You Don’t: How Social Media Complicates Concealment and Disclosure of Stigmatized Political Beliefs in an Authoritarian Setting Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of Washington, USA Jessica Vitak, U of Maryland, USA 5530 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Nire Health Communication in/on Social Media Health Communication Chair Minsun Shim, Inha U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Participants Beyond Words: Amplification of Cancer Risk Communication on Social Media Yulia Strekalova, U of Florida, USA Does Liking Social Media Health Messages Lead to Changes in Attitude Toward a Health Behavior? Ji Young Lee, West Virginia U, USA Michael D. Slater, Ohio State U, USA Message Framing and Credibility Assessment: Examining the Role of Social Endorsement in Facebook SHUANG LIU, Washington State U, USA Porismita Borah, Washington State U, USA Predicting Well-Being of College Students: The Roles of Facebook Communication, Social Support, Stress, and Self-Esteem Yixin (Cindy) Chen, Sam Houston State U, USA Jian Rui, Lamar U, USA Richard Bello, Sam Houston State U, USA Thinsperation vs. Thicksperation: Comparing Proanorexic and Fat Acceptance Image Posts on Photo-Sharing Sites Sarah Rose Marcus, Rutgers U, USA 5531 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Kusu Motivations for Technology Adoption and Use Communication and Technology Chair Weiyu Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Participants Facilitating Communication With Power? Text Messaging Gratifications Among College Students in the US and Japan Kumi Ishii, Western Kentucky U, USA Tyler Rife, Western Kentucky U, USA Naomi Kagawa, Shimane U, JAPAN Why Do People Blog? A Q-Analysis of Motivations for Blogging Clark Callahan, Brigham Young U, USA Tom Robinson, Brigham Young U, USA Jason Freeman, Brigham Young U, USA Yingying Li, Brigham Young U, USA Enjoyment of New Social Q&A Websites Using Di Cui, Florida State U, USA Qihao Ji, Florida State U, USA Is Smartwatch an IT Product or Fashion Product? Factors Affecting the Intention to Use Smartwatch Jaewon Choi, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF To Gamificate or Not to Gamificate? An Experimental Study of the Influence of Badges on Motivation and Behavior in an Online Learning Course Elias Kyewski, U Duisburg - Essen, GERMANY Nicole C. Kramer, U of Duisburg - Essen, GERMANY 5532 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Kashi Images of Women Across Cultures Intercultural Communication Chair Maria Teresa Soto-Sanfiel, U Autonoma de Barcelona, SPAIN Participants Colonial Diva and Unclaimed Memory: The Unheard Voice of a Modern Girl as Cultural Icon Yongwoo Lee, New York U, USA Women’s Empowerment: A Case Study of an Educational Program in Rural India Purba Das, Ohio U Southern, USA Jeffery Chaichana Peterson, Washington State U, USA Rashmi Sharma, Ohio U, USA Achieving Cultural Pluralism? Selective Inclusion of Female Muslim Figures in the News Lindsey Erin Blumell, Texas Tech U, USA Culturally-Situated Femininity: Language, Identity, and Gender Role Negotiation in Taiwan Hsin-I Sydney Yueh, Northeastern State U, USA A Cross-National Comparison in the Relationship Between Habitual Media Use and the Perception of "Healthy" and "Frail" Thin Ideals Across US and Korean College Students Kyungbo Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Between Two Worlds: Women in Ultraorthodox Media Sharon Avital, Tel-Aviv U, ISRAEL 5533 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Kaede What is "News Content"? Perspectives on Texts and Production Journalism Studies Chair Arjen van Dalen, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Participants A Gatekeeper Among Gatekeepers: The Impact of One News Agency on Political News in the Netherlands Kasper Welbers, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Wouter van Atteveldt, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Nel Ruigrok, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Economic News for the Public Interest or Promotion of Commercial Interests? Changes in Economic News Over the Past 20 Years in South Korea Nayeon Lee, Sungshin Women's U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Kanghui Baek, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Journalism as Multichannel Communication: A Study on the Use of Social Media in German Newsrooms Christoph Neuberger, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Susanne Langenohl, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Christian Nuernbergk, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY The Multifaceted Role of User-Generated Content in News Websites: A Conceptual Framework Idit Manosevitch, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Ori Tenenboim, U of Texas, USA Beget the Error? A Quasiexperimental Study of Corrections at Five Newspapers Before and After Outsourcing of All Copy Editing Justin D. Martin, Northwestern U in Qatar, QATAR Ralph Martins, Northwestern U in Qatar, QATAR 5540 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Rigel Collective Action and Digital Advocacy Global Communication and Social Change Chair Priya Kapoor, Portland State U, USA Participants Algorithms and Collective Action: Between Collective Identity and Visibility Stefania Milan, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS "Fake" Accounts, Real Activism: Political Faking and User-Generated Satire as Activist Intervention Elisabetta Ferrari, U of Pennsylvania, USA Advocacy Repertoires and the Contentious Politics of Network Neutrality James Losey, Stockholm U, SWEDEN The Strategic Advocate in the Digital Storm: How International NGOs Pursue Publicity Online Matthew Powers, U of Washington, USA Alternative Media, Video Activism, and the Proliferation of Unintentional Surveillance in Turkey Ilkin Mehrabov, Karlstad U, SWEDEN 5541 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Vega Advances in Third-Person Effects Research Mass Communication Chair Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participants Bandwagon for Them and Underdog for Me? Examining Third-Person Perceptions of Pre-Election Polls Stella C. Chia, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Media Beliefs and Third-Person Perception: A Perspective Revised Thorsten Naab, Augsburg U, GERMANY Not All Perceptual Gaps Were Created Equal: Explicating the Third-Person Perception (TPP) as a Cognitive Fallacy Lijiang Shen, Pennsylvania State U, USA Ye Sun, U of Utah, USA Zhongdang Pan, U of Wisconsin, USA Perceived Audiences, Efficacy Beliefs, and Third-Person Perceptions Sonny Rosenthal, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 5542 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Kiku Participation and Governance Processes in Social Change Global Communication and Social Change Chair Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas - Austin, USA Participants Scalar Politics and the Question of Fit in a Mediatized World: Towards a Critical Geopolitics of Arctic Governance Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U / Royal Institute of Technology(KTH), SWEDEN Annika Nilsson, Stockholm Environment Institute, SWEDEN The Great British Property Scandal: Transmedia Strategies for Social Change Renira Rampazzo Gambarato, National Research U Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Productive Tensions Between Institutional and Grassroots Participation: The Case of Medellin’s Participatory Budgeting Melissa Brough, U of California, Irvine, USA Green Public Diplomacy and Global Governance: The Evolution of the US-China Climate Collaboration Network, 2008-2014 Aimei Yang, U of Southern California, USA Rong Wang, U of Southern California, USA Jian Wang, U of Southern California, USA Discourses of Power, Altruism and the 'Self' Within the Practice of International Volunteerism Nathaniel John Laywine, McGill U, CANADA 5543 Media, Race, Ethnicity, and Stereotypes Sunday 14:00-15:15 Ran Mass Communication Chair Lance Holbert, Temple U, USA Participants Cultivation of Attitudes Toward African Americans: Sports, News, and Situation Comedies Morgan E. Ellithorpe, U of Pennsylvania, USA David R. Ewoldsen, Michigan State U, USA Examining the Preference of Gender Over Race in Judging Suspects in Stand Your Ground Incidents Lanier Frush Holt, Ohio State U, USA Osei Appiah, Ohio State U, USA Katherine R. Dale, Florida State U, USA Tiffany Nichole White, Ohio State U, USA Moral Cleansing and Moral Licensing Through Media Sven Joeckel, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Leyla Dogruel, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Allison Eden, VU U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Effects of Subtle Visual (Dis)similarity Cues on Evaluation of Controversial Sociopolitical Messages Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rachid Azrout, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Amanda Paz Alencar, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5545 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Sumire Young Citizens, Social Media, and (Online) Political Participation Political Communication Chair Brian E Weeks, U of Michigan, USA Participants Tune-in Tune-Out Political Engagement: Porous Boundaries, Low Thresholds, and the Development of Online Political Engagement Mats Erik Ekstrom, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Adam Shehata, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN A New Generation of Chinese Digital Citizens Coming of Age: Political Socialization Towards Civic Engagement Mengyang Zhao, U of Washington, USA Blasting and Posturing: A Gender Divide in Young Facebook Users’ Online Political Participation Christian Pieter Hoffmann, U of Leipzig, GERMANY Christoph Lutz, BI Norwegian Business School, NORWAY Robin Poell, U of St. Gallen, SWITZERLAND Mobilizing Youth in the 21st Century: How Digital Media Use Fosters Civic Duty, Information Efficacy, and Political Participation Judith Moeller, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rinaldo Kuehne, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Social Media Use and the Structure of Young People's Public Affairs Participation in China Peiying Huang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Francis L. F. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5546 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Koh The Quantified/Qualified Self Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Sun ha Hong, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Verified: Twitter, Identity Management, and the ’Quantified Self’ Alison Hearn, U of Western Ontario, CANADA Social Media and the Qualified Self Lee Humphreys, Cornell U, USA Intimacy, Objectivity and Morality in the Quantified Self Sun ha Hong, U of Pennsylvania, USA House, schoolhouse, jailhouse: The other Internet of Things Jessa Lingel, Microsoft Research, USA The quantification and qualification of selves is a central tendency in contemporary new media technologies. Consider the recent uproar over Peeple – a ‘Yelp for people’ that promises to let people rate other people by their personality, suitability for dating, and more. This panel examines the many such ways in which quantification and qualification intersects vis-à-vis the idea, feeling, and practice of the ‘self’. It analyses a diverse set of empirical contexts where the quantified and qualified are entangled. We consider social media, self-tracking, online identity management and the Internet of Things, focusing on the deployed parameters of each situation or platform while pointing to the broader conceptual connections. 5547 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Yoh Fandom in Transition: Fan Adaptations to Changes in Media Texts and Celebrities' Lives Popular Communication Participants Reading Rewritten: Ambiguously Gendered Characters and American Anime and Manga Fandom Casey Brienza, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM “Creature” Hair and Teddy Bears: Discussions of Femininity and Sexuality in Miley Cyrus’ 2013 MTV VMA Performance Caitlin Elizabeth Lawson, U of Michigan, USA Queer Yet Straight? The Complexities of (Re-)Negotiation Bruce and Caitlyn Jenner’s Fan Base Hilde Dy Van den Bulck, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM The Aftermath of Loss in Fandom Denise D. Bielby, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA C. Lee Harrington, Miami U, USA Loving Finn and Mourning Cory: Fan Reaction to the Sudden Death of Cory Monteith Melissa A. Click, U of Missouri, USA Hyunji Lee, U of Missouri, USA Building on recent scholarship that aims to explore the cyclic nature of fandom, fan reaction to endings and deaths of fan objects, and fandom over the lifecourse (Harrington and Bielby 2014), the diverse collection of projects that compose this panel aims to explore fans and fan communities that have been impacted by changes—whether through translation, transition, or death—in the media texts and celebrities they enjoy. The panel’s focus on the understudied topic of how and why fans adapt to changes in media texts and celebrities will help us more fully understand how fans utilize their fandom to make sense of themselves and the world. 5548 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Kei Identity and Power Relations in Organizations Organizational Communication Chair Vernon D. Miller, Michigan State U, USA Participants Communicating With Power in Organizations: Discursive Meanings of Leadership for Women in STEM Careers Debalina Dutta, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Mediated Identity Regulation and its Promoid and Paranoid Responses Sanne Frandsen, Lund U, SWEDEN Mette Morsing, Copenhagen Business School, DENMARK To Come Out or Not To Come Out: Managing Minority Religious and Spiritual Identity in the American Workplace Piyawan Charoensap-Kelly, U of Southern Mississippi, USA Why Does Employee Communication Matter in Employee-Organizational Relationships? Exploring the Linkages Among Employee Communication, Relational Trust, and Ethical Organizational Climates Soo-Yeon Kim, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Daewook Kim, Hanyang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Respondent Joel Dag Rasmussen, Oslo and Akershus U College, SWEDEN 5549 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Board Room On the Edge of Tomorrow: Media Studies, the Obsession With Change, and History Communication History Chair Sonja Donata Kretzschmar, U of the Federal German Army, GERMANY Participants What Difference Does it Make? Continuity and Change as Sensitizing Concepts for Communication Studies and Communication History Christian Schwarzenegger, Augsburg U, GERMANY Susanne Kinnebrock, Augsburg U, GERMANY Revolutionizing Society through Technology: Utopian Views on New Media Nelson Costa Ribeiro, U Católica Portuguesa, PORTUGAL Nothing Really Changes vs. Everything is Constantly Changing. Reflections on Two Determinisms Gabriele Balbi, U of Lugano, SWITZERLAND Change in Two Registers: Media Change and Communication Study Change David W. Park, Lake Forest College, USA Respondent Jiang Chang, Renmin U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Communication scholarship somehow appears to be obsessed with change: It has become common place to see profound and fundamental changes in social and cultural life as related to changing media environments. Nevertheless, change is often a vague concept related to the latest media innovations; it lacks theoretical clarity about its very notion that can be linked to similar yet different understandings of change like revolution, evolution, disruption, progress or development; and finally its diachronic dimension (“change over time”), even if at the core of the subfield “communication history,” has ever been understudied. The panel aims to fill this gap and assembles historical and theoretical reflections. 5550 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: International Cooperation for Early-Career Scholars Sponsored Sessions Chairs Francois Allard-Huver, Paris Sorbonne U - CELSA, FRANCE Charlotte Loeb, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Paola Sartoretto, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Karin Fikkers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Holli Hitt Seitz, U of Pennsylvania, USA The aim of this Blue Sky Workshop is to provide PhD candidates and early-career scholars with the knowledge necessary to navigate through internationalization initiatives and build international cooperation. The workshop will also be an initial forum to discuss how PhD candidates and early-career scholars can develop an international career. The topics that will be addressed in the workshop include: grants and scholarships available for internationalization in different countries/regions, best-practice examples in doing research internationally, internationalization opportunities for PhD candidates and early career scholars. 5551 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Anzu Work Processes and Production Practices in the Media Industry Media Industry Studies Chair Patricia Frances Phalen, George Washington U, USA Participants A Case of Constraints: Implications of Industrial Norms and Practices for Linguistic Adaptation Laurena Elizabeth Nelson Bernabo, U of Iowa, USA Words Selling Images: International News Pictures’ Production and the Word Force Dedicated to Their Commercial Success jonathan ilan, Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL Media Industry Meets Education Industry: A Study in Digital Disruption Ben Goldsmith, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Stuart Duncan Cunningham, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Michael Dezuanni, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA “Boundaryless” in the Creative Economy: Assessing Freelancing on oDesk Pawel Popiel, U of Pennsylvania, USA Runaway Productions and Labour Practices in Croatian Audio-Visual Industry Jaka Primorac, Institute for Development and International Relations, CROATIA 5552 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Hagi Studies of Talk-in-Interaction: Achieving Misalignment Stance, Indexing Membership, Managing Category Work, and Telling Stories Language & Social Interaction Chair Jessica Sarah Robles, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Adjacency Pairs, Dialogic Syntax, and Creative Resonance: Achieving Misalignment Stance in Hebrew Interaction Gonen Dori-Hacohen, U of Massachusetts, USA Indexing Membership via Responding to Irony: Communication Competence in Israeli Radio Call-In Shows Zohar livnat, Bar-Ilan U, ISRAEL Gonen Dori-Hacohen, U of Massachusetts, USA Formulation Sequence in Korean TV Talk Shows: Presequence as Consensual Grounds for Managing Category Work Kyu-hyun Kim, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Kyung-Hee Suh, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Storytelling in Chinese Conversation: Resources for Story Entry and Action Construction Wei Zhang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xin Peng, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF “Can You Do Me a Favor and Send Me an Ambulance?” On the Request of Help in calls to the 9-1-1 Costa Rica Alexa Bolanos-Carpio, Rutgers U, USA 5553 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Fuji Researching the Effects of Visual Communication Visual Communication Studies Chair Tom Powell, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Investigating Mechanisms of Visual and Textual Framing Effects Tom Powell, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hajo G. Boomgaarden, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Knut De Swert, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Persuasive Effects of Multimodal News Frames? The Limited Power of Visual and Textual Gain and Loss Frames on Climate Change Attitudes Lutz Hofer, U of Mannheim / U of Amsterdam, GERMANY Hartmut Wessler, U Mannheim, GERMANY Helena Bilandzic, Augsburg U, GERMANY The Effect of Modality in Cross-Valence Conditions Xiaoye Zhou, Pennsylvania State U, USA Na Sun, Pennsylvania State U, USA Nia Sherony, Pennsylvania State U, USA The Effects of Body Size Discrepancy on Ad Effectiveness: Moderating Role of Self-Esteem A-Reum Jung, Louisiana State U, USA Jun Heo, Louisiana State U, USA The Effects of Visual Isolation on the Perception of Scandalized Politicians in Mediated Scandals Christian von Sikorski, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Mark Ludwig, German Sport U, GERMANY 5554 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Sakura ECREA Panel: A Postnationalist European Public Sphere: Cosmo Chic and Bare Life Sponsored Sessions Participant Nick Couldry, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Participants A Post-Nationalist Europe? The Contested Communicative Construction of Europe Andreas Hepp, U of Bremen - ZeMKI, GERMANY Potential Citizenry: The Refugee Crisis, the Media and the Trials of Postnational Europe Isabel Maria Capeloa Gil, U Católica Portuguesa, PORTUGAL Imagining European Identity as Diversity or Cosmopolitanism? Insights from the European Capital of Culture Giorgia Aiello, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM The Holocaust as universalist symbol of the violation of human rights marks the foundational moment of modern Europe, based on a multiculturalism that writes back against recent memory. Heir to this legacy, European Communication Studies are permeable to a culturalist perspective that is critical of stable identities, in accordance with the objectives of a ‘postnationalist’ and cosmopolitan European public sphere that decentralises the particularities contrary to European universalism. This panel will explore the various contexts of cosmopolitan hybridity in Europe and the discursive legitimations offered for ‘desirable’ hybridities. 5560 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Olive Between Partisan Media and Partisan Opinions Political Communication Chair Eike Mark Rinke, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Participants News Effects on Partisan Identity Salience and Validation Tests of Salience Measures Jiyoung Han, U of Minnesota, USA Marco C. Yzer, U of Minnesota, USA Politics of Self-Inflicted Pain: Inequality and Asymmetric Partisan Communication Competence Robert M. Entman, George Washington U, USA Julie Wronski, U of Mississippi, USA The Partisan Proving Ground: How Survey Respondents Use Media Self-Reports to Affirm Their Partisan Identity Rebecca J Weiss, Stanford U, USA Yphtach Lelkes, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Winners, Losers, and the Press: The Relationship Between Political Parallelism and the Legitimacy Gap Yphtach Lelkes, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 5561 Sunday 14:00-15:15 Sage 5620 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Argos C Expectations, Strategies, and Issues of Youth Social Media Use Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Extending The Social Cognitive Model: Examining External and Personal Antecedents of Social Network Sites Use Among Singaporean Adolescents Edmund W. J. Lee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Shirley S. Ho, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE May O. Lwin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE “I Feel … #happy #annoyed”: Experiencing and Regulating Emotions on Social Media Anne Vermeulen, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Wannes Heirman, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Developing a Framework for Researching Children’s Online Risks and Opportunities in Europe Giovanna Mascheroni, U Cattolica of Milano, ITALY Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Elisabeth Staksrud, U of Oslo, NORWAY Exploring Adolescents’ Views on Social Networking Sites’ Role Within Adolescent Romantic Relationships and Dating Experiences Joris Van Ouytsel, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Ellen Van Gool, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Michel Walrave, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Koen Ponnet, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Picture Perfect: The Direct Effect of Manipulated Instagram Photos on the Body Image of Adolescent Girls Mariska Kleemans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Serena Daalmans, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Ilana Carbaat, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Doeschka Anschutz, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS The Effect of Social Media on Positive Youth Development Ah Ram Lee, U of Florida, USA Jungyun Won, U of Florida, USA Adolescents’ Expectations About Their Friends' Online Behavior Annabel Draaijers, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jeroen Jansz, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS College Students’ Positive Strategic Social Media Use and Stress Coping Ling Fang, Bowling Green State U, USA Louisa Ha, Bowling Green State U, USA The Power of Digital Research Theme Sessions Chairs Eszter Hargittai, Northwestern U, USA Christian Sandvig, U of Michigan, USA Participants Jean Burgess, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Aniko Hannak, Northeastern U, USA Anders Olof Larsson, Westerdals Oslo School of Arts, Communication and Technology, NORWAY Angela Xiao Wu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Homero Gil de Zuniga, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA It seems possible that powerful digital methods are transforming the potential capabilities of research about human communication. At the same time, other voices warned that this was the rise of a new digital “mythology” laden with ethical and privacy concerns as well as methodological challenges. This session convenes a diverse group of expert practitioners at the leading edge of digital media research who will assess the state of this possible metamorphosis. 5621 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Argos D Risk Information and Risk Behaviors Information Systems Chair Celine Klemm, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Exploring the Role of Efficacy Accessibility in Risk Behavior Rachel Ralston, Ohio State U, USA Nancy Rhodes, Michigan State U, USA Susan L Mello, Northeastern U, USA David R. Ewoldsen, Michigan State U, USA Information Seeking Upon Exposure to Risk Messages: Predictors, Outcomes, and Mediating Roles of Health Information-Seeking Behaviors Jiyeon So, U of Georgia, USA Kai Kuang, Bloomsburg U of Pennsylvania, US Hyunyi Cho, Purdue U, USA Predicting Information Seeking in the Context of Earthquake Risk: Development of a Cognitive Model Yiwei Li, Keio U, JAPAN Yu Guo, Macau U of Science and Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Sensationalizing Epidemic Outbreaks: Illuminating the Interplay of Actual Risk, Factual Risk Information, and Sensational Formal Features Celine Klemm, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sharing Nuclear Accident Online: A Comparison of Risk Information Sharing Between Korea and the US Jiyoun Kim, U of Kenctucky, USA Kang Namkoong, U of Kentucky, USA News and the Economy: The Impact of Economic Messages on Risk Taking Diamantis Petropoulos Petalas, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Hein van Schie, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Paul G. HendriksVettehen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Does Subjective Knowledge Influence Information Seeking Online and Behavior Concerning Palm Oil-Free Products? Josephine Schmitt, U of Cologne, GERMANY Frank M. Schneider, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Carina Weinmann, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Franziska Susanne Roth, U of Mannheim, GERMANY I Will Follow My Heart: Examining the Role of Beliefs on Cancer-Information-Seeking Behaviors Fan Yang, U of Miami, USA 5622 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Argos E Best Papers in Game Studies Division Game Studies Chair Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Participants Tandem Play: Theorizing Sociality in Single-Player Gameplay Mia L. Consalvo, Concordia U, CANADA Jason Begy, Concordia U, CANADA Sarah Ganzon, Concordia U, CANADA Rainforest Scully-Blaker, Concordia U, CANADA Relating Video Game Exposure, Sensation Seeking, and Aggression to Adolescents’ School Performance Vivian Hsueh Hua Chen, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Claudia Wilhelm, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Sven Joeckel, U of Erfurt, GERMANY I Hate it, but I Can’t Stop: Addictive Tendencies as a Mediator for Negative Game Experience in a Mobile Trivia Game Kevin Koban, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY Peter Ohler, Chemnitz U of Technology, GERMANY 5623 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Argos F Empowering the World: Global Public Relations Public Relations Global Communication and Social Change Chair Dean Kruckeberg, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA Participants CSR as ‘Bread’ or ‘Perfume’? A Critical Analysis of CSR Perceptions Between Local Companies and MNCs in Vietnam Hue Duong, RMIT International U Vietnam, VIETNAM Marianne D. Sison, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA Ideal PR Practitioner in China: Exploring Professionalism, Guanxi, and Antecedents Through PR Recruitment Advertisement Qijun He, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF News Media and Corporate Representation of CSR in India Rajul Jain, DePaul U, USA Maria De Moya, DePaul U, USA Professionalization of Public Relations in Latin America: A Longitudinal Comparative Study Juan-Carlos Molleda, U of Florida, USA Angeles Moreno, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Cristina Navarro, Gulf U for Science and Technology, KUWAIT Gabriel Stephen, U of Florida, USA The Personal Influence Model and “Public” Relations: Evidence From Italy Krishnamurthy Sriramesh, Purdue U, USA Chiara Valentini, Aarhus U, DENMARK Respondent Gaelle Duthler, Zayed U, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES 5624 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Navis A Dialogues in Journalism Studies: Cultural Sociologists and Communication Scholars Interrogate the “Crisis of Journalism” Journalism Studies Chair Elizabeth Breese, Panorama Education, USA Participants Confronting Crisis through Normative Reassurance Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA News Innovations and Enduring Commitments: Spanish News Startups Embrace Professional Journalistic Codes Maria Luengo, U Carlos III de Madrid, SPAIN As Public Life Goes, So Goes the News: The Transformation of Journalism and American Public Life David M. Ryfe, U of Iowa, USA The Crisis in News: Can You Whistle a Happy Tune? Michael Schudson, Columbia U, USA In conversation across disciplines, this panel brings a dramatically different perspective to bear on the “crisis.” Most of the recent literature devoted to the crisis of journalism has been one-sidedly focused on technology and economics. The scholars on the panel will discuss how cultural codes driving new journalistic practices offer creative pathways to be discovered for sustaining democratic commitments through new technologies and organizational forms. Panelists will discuss the ways in which cultural codes not only trigger sharp anxiety about technological and economic changes, but provide pathways to control them, so that the democratic practices of independent journalism can be sustained in new forms. 5625 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Navis B Social Support for Health: Information Seeking, Obesity/Eating, Cancer Health Communication Chair Martine van Selm, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Social Support, Trust, and Health Information Seeking Behavior (HISB): A Study Using the 2012 Annenberg National Health Communication Survey (ANHCS) Qinghua Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Yixin (Cindy) Chen, Sam Houston State U, USA Jessica E Wendorf, U of Miami, USA Online Social Support, Attitude, Social Norms, and Perceived Behavioral Control Associations With Individual’s Healthy Eating Behavior Intentions Jungyun Won, U of Florida, USA Robert Wells, U of Florida, USA The Benefits of Forum Activity in Online Social Support Groups for Obese Adults Doreen Reifegerste, U of Music, Drama and Media, GERMANY Katrin Wasgien, U of Dresden, GERMANY Lutz M. Hagen, Technical U Dresden, GERMANY Talking About Communication: An Exploration of the Communication Networks of Men With Prostate Cancer Dorothy Brown, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Steven Miller, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND John Oetzel, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND The Bigger Picture: Do Peer-Led Online Support Communities Contribute to Breast Cancer Patients’ Psychological Well-Being? Anika Batenburg, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS 5626 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Navis C Communication and Technology Division Top Papers Communication and Technology Chair Lee Humphreys, Cornell U, USA Participants Cross-Sectoral Hyperlink Network and Issues Management: A Cross-National Study Aimei Yang, U of Southern California, USA Wenlin Liu, U of Southern California, USA Cultural Implications of Mobile Texting in China Yun Xia, Rider U, USA “I Shut the Door”: Interactions, Tensions, and Negotiations From a Location-Based Social App Colin Fitzpatrick, Northwestern U, USA Jeremy Birnholtz, Northwestern U, USA Virtually Old: Embodied Perspective Taking and the Reduction of Ageism Under Threat Soo Youn Oh, Stanford U, USA Jeremy N. Bailenson, Stanford U, USA Erika Weisz, Stanford U, USA Jamil Zaki, Stanford U, USA 5630 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Nire Suicide and Stigma Studies in Health Communication Health Communication Chair Jie Zhuang, Michigan State U, USA Participants Abyss or Shelter? On the Relevance of Web Search Engines' Search Results When People Google for Suicide Mario Haim, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Florian Arendt, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Sebastian Scherr, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Assessing the Effects of Educative Suicide Prevention Websites on Users’ Knowledge of Suicidality and Risk Factors for Suicide Benedikt Till, Medical U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Ulrich Tran, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Thomas Niederkrotenthaler, Medical U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Autism in the Media: A Longitudinal Study of Stigma Cues and Framing of Attribution Laura Farrell, Longwood U, USA Nan Yu, North Dakota State U, USA Life Events Effects on Aggression and Suicide: Testing a Confluence Model With Big Data Mark A. Hamilton, Chulalongkorn U, THAILAND Zhan Xu, U of Connecticut, USA Self-disclosure and Family Responsiveness: Improving Ostomates’ Perceived Psychological and Social Quality of Life Carrie Reif, U of Southern Mississippi, USA Steven James Venette, U of Southern Mississippi, USA Kathryn Elizabeth Anthony, U of Southern Mississippi, USA 5631 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Kusu Mobile Social Media Mobile Communication Chair Rich Ling, Nanyang Technological U/Telenor, SINGAPORE Participants A Study of the Relationship Between Narcissism, Extraversion, Drive for Entertainment, and Narcissistic Acts on SNS Di Wang, Macau U of Science and Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Digital Mundane: Social, Mobile Media, and the Military Sarah Maltby, U of Sussex, UNITED KINGDOM Helen Thornham, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM What's So Different About "Mobile" Facebook Use? Motivations, User Experiences, and Implications for Social Connections Ozan Kuru, U of Michigan, USA Joseph Bayer, U of Michigan, USA Joshua M. Pasek, U of Michigan, USA Scott W. Campbell, U of Michigan, USA The Design of Social Hyper-Connectivity: Video-Ethnography of the Uses of Mobile Social Network Sites Julien Figeac, National Center For Scientific Research, FRANCE Johann Chaulet, National Center For Scientific Research, FRANCE 5632 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Kashi Histories of Communication Technology: Infrastructures and Flows Communication History Chair David Charles Goodman, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Participants The Electrical Banal: The Technologization of Anderson, S.C., "The Electric City" Travers Scott, Clemson U, USA Decentralization and the Underground Press in 1960s America Jonathan Pace, U of Pennsylvania, USA Geographies of Liveness: The ‘Our World’ Broadcast and Satellite Networks as Infrastructures of Live Television Lars Lundgren, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Christine Evans, U of Wisconsin Milwaukee, USA Restoring a Lost Web Domain: The History of the National Web of Yugoslavia, 1996-2010 Anat Ben-David, Open U of Israel, ISRAEL Respondent David Charles Goodman, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA 5633 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Kaede Top Four Papers in Interpersonal Communication Interpersonal Communication Chair Jennifer A. Samp, U of Georgia, USA Participants Family Communication Patterns and Emerging Adult Consumer Outcomes: Revisiting the Consumer Socialization Model Allison Thorson, U of San Francisco, USA Haley Horstman, U of Missouri, USA The Theory of Motivated Information Management and Posttraumatic Growth: Emerging Adults’ Uncertainty Management in Response to Adversity Xi Tian, Pennsylvania State U, USA Paul Schrodt, Texas Christian U, USA Kristen Carr, Texas Christian U, USA When Communication Accommodation Backfires: Interpersonal Effects of Social Power and Linguistic Style Accommodation in Computer-Mediated-Communication Kate Muir, U of Bath, UNITED KINGDOM Adam Nicholas Joinson, U of Bath, UNITED KINGDOM Rachel Cotterill, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM Nigel Dewdney, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM “So That’s How She Do”: Supportive Messages Female Offenders Receive From Parole Officers Amanda J. Holmstrom, Michigan State U, USA Elizabeth Adams, Michigan State U, USA Merry Morash, Michigan State U, USA Sandi W. Smith, Michigan State U, USA Deborah Kashy, Michigan State U, USA Jennifer Cobbina, Michigan State U, USA Respondent Ascan F. Koerner, U of Minnesota, USA 5640 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Rigel Projections of Soft Power: Global Investment in the Chinese Media Industries Global Communication and Social Change Participants Connections and Restrictions: Chinese Soft Power Influence on Foreign Streaming Media Platforms Aynne Kokas, U of Virginia, USA Paradoxes of Soft Power in a Post-Globalization Era Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Revisiting the Power of Media in China’s Internet Era Weiyu Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Lize Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Charming, Charmed, Mark Zuckerberg and China’s Soft Power Wenhong Chen, U of Texas - Austin, USA Shuning Lu, U of Texas at Austin, USA This panel will explore the development of Chinese media soft power through global digital media platforms, television, and education with a particular emphasis on global investment both by Chinese media entities abroad and by foreign companies seeking to enter the Chinese market. The panel will both examine how media soft power is leveraged by the Chinese government, and the ways in which this projection of soft power paradoxically fails to achieve its stated policy outcomes. From a theoretical vantage point, the panel will explore what it means when ideas of media power travel, particularly when concepts take on new importance in non-Western contexts. 5641 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Vega The Study of Framing in the Context of Health Mass Communication Health Communication Chair Patrick Roessler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Participants A Long Way to Go: Framing Analysis of Chinese Newspaper Coverage of Organ Donation Shortage and Barriers, 2000-2015 Jiun-Yi Tsai, Arizona State U, USA Yanqin Liu, Arizona State U, USA Yashu Chen, Arizona State U, USA A Matter of Degree: Testing an Alternative Approach to Content Analysis in Media Framing Research Steven R. Corman, Arizona State U, USA Jiun-Yi Tsai, Arizona State U, USA Gene Brewer, Arizona State U, USA Framing and Agenda Interaction of the Ebola Virus Disease Under the Globalization Era: A Cross-National Study of News Coverage in China, US, Japan, and UK Qian Yu, Washington State U, USA Li Zhou, Central China Normal U, CHINA The Effects of News Framing and Issue Attribution on Chinese College Students’ Responses to Depression Coverage Yan Jin, U of Georgia, USA Yuan Zhang, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Yen-I Lee, U of Georgia, USA Yunbing Tang, Fudan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5642 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Kiku Ecology and Technology Environmental Communication Chair Xinghua Li, Babson College, USA Participants Technology as Narcissism: How Media Environments Alienate us From Natural Environments Xinghua Li, Babson College, USA New Media Activism in Old-Growth Rainforest: The Rise of Drone Videography as a Means to Environmental Conservation in British Columbia’s Central Walbran Valley Derek Moscato, U of Oregon, USA Aboriginal Voices 2.0 Jennifer Good, Brock U, CANADA Perceptions and Discourses About the Environmental Impacts of ICT Usage Among Scholars and Activists in Spain Miguel Vicente-Marino, U of Valladolid, SPAIN Fernando Tucho, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN José de Madariaga, U Rey Juan Carlos, SPAIN Social Media as Pharmakon In China: Enabling Environmental Activism, Promoting Daily Disconnect Kevin DeLuca, U of Utah, USA Elizabeth Ann Brunner, U of Utah, USA 5643 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Ran Focus on Asia: Media Receptions, Productions, and Activisms in China, South Korea, and Bangladesh Feminist Scholarship Participants Decoding Xiao Hong in The Golden Era (2014): A Reception Analysis of Chinese Women Audience Members’ Film-Viewing Experiences Li Chen, Syracuse U, USA Smashing Patriarchy With Cell Phones? Technofeminist Critique on Mobile Phone-Enabled Women’s Empowerment Programmes in Bangladesh Iris Segers, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Payal Arora, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Gendering ‘Authenticity’ of Military Experience: How Male Audiences of Korean Celebreality Show Real Men Reconstruct Hegemonic Masculinity Woori Han, U of Massachusetts Amherst, USA Claire Claire Lee, U of Texas, USA Ji Hoon Park, Korea U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF South Korean Hostess Film and Censorship During the Military Regime (1960-1979) Molly Hyo Kim, U of Illinois, USA What Happened to Those Tomboys Several Years Later? Empowerment From Super Girls’ Voice for Girls in China (2007-2015) Li Cui, Southwest U, CHINA Xinzhi Zhang, Hong Kong Polytechnic U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Communication for the Empowerment of Women in China: Group Actors, the Internet’s Communicative Affordances, and Collective Civic Action Xiao Han, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Blogging for the Self-Empowerment of Chinese Women: Voice as Communication to Negotiate Change Xiao Han, U of Westminster, UNITED KINGDOM Producing Gendered Migration Narratives in China: A Case Study of Dagongmei Tongxun by a Local NGO Siyuan Yin, U of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA 5645 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Sumire New Approaches to Researching Conflict News Political Communication Chair Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Participants How the News Comes Into Being: Researching Conflict News Production Through Retrospective Reconstruction Interviews Abit Hoxha, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Thomas Hanitzsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY This Means War: Identifying Patterns of Escalation in Conflict News Using Quantitative Discourse Analysis and Comparative Semantic Networks Christian Baden, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Exploring the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Through the Lens of Social Media: A Multimethodical Approach Dimitra Dimitrakopoulou, Aristotle U of Thessaloniki, GREECE Salome Boukala, Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy, GREECE Youth Narratives of the EU From Conflict Zones: A Q-Sort Study in Ukraine and Israel Ben O'Loughlin, Royal Holloway, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Respondent Jill A. Edy, U of Oklahoma, USA This panel presents four innovative methodological approaches to the study of conflict news that contribute to linking the rich, but case-bound knowledge generated by qualitative research to the comparative, quantitative study of recurrent patterns in conflict news. It spans the process from the production of conflict coverage, over its dissemination and in the news and renegotiation in online environments, to its reception by audiences inside conflict areas themselves. 5646 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Koh Social Media and Social Movements Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Daniel C. Hallin, U of California - San Diego, USA Participants Discourse and Framing in Social Movement Theory: Connecting the Nodes Bart Cammaerts, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM The Medium is the Mob Aaron Shapiro, U of Pennsylvania, USA Networked Narratives of Social Movements: Moving Beyond the Overdetermination of Social Media Maria Francesca Murru, U Cattolica del Sacro Cuore - Milan, ITALY Anne Kaun, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Between Visibility and Surveillance: Challenges to Anticorporate Activism in Social Media Julie Uldam, Roskilde U, DENMARK 5647 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Yoh Snap, Tweet, and Vlog: The Burgeoning World of Social Media Content Innovation Popular Communication Communication and Technology Chairs Stuart Duncan Cunningham, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA David Craig, U of Southern California, USA Participants Communitainment: Discourses of Authenticity and Communion in Social Media Entertainment Stuart Duncan Cunningham, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA David Craig, U of Southern California, USA Can Corporate Social Media Open TV?: Independent Platform Development as Method in Critical Data Studies Aymar Jean Christian, Northwestern U, USA Affinity Space and Multimodal Literacy: A Case Study of 100 Most in Hong Kong Donna SC Chu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF New Little Texts: The Form and Formats of New Media Jonathan Alan Gray, U of Wisconsin, USA Watch, Rinse, Repeat, Repeat, Repeat: Discussing The GIF Economy Kate Miltner, U of Southern California, USA The Overlapping Mediascapes and the User as Cocreator Erika Pearson, U of Otago, NEW ZEALAND The Socialisation of Professionally Produced Online Social Media Content in China Elaine Zhao, U of New South Wales, AUSTRALIA This roundtable discussion engages with the innovation of content across social media that has contributed to the rise of new genres and formats. This innovation is informed by the proliferation and unique technological affordances of social media platforms. To account for these phenomena, social media researchers have engaged in innovative scholarship, introducing new multidisciplinary theoretical frameworks and methodologies, e.g., visual rhetoric or digital netnography. 5648 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Kei Knowledge and Expertise in Organizations Organizational Communication Chair May Hongmei Gao, Kennesaw State U, USA Participants Knowledge System Coherence as a Moderator of Organizational Change and Learning Kim A. Johnston, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA James L Everett, Coastal Carolina U, USA Obstacles for Knowledge Sharing in a Multinational Organization Wei Shi, Rutgers U, USA Teis Moeller Kristensen, Rutgers U, USA Expertise Judgments per Communication Styles: A China-US Comparative Study Y. Connie Yuan, Cornell U, USA Wang Liao, Cornell U, USA Natalya N. Bazarova, Cornell U, USA Technical, Arcane, Interpersonal, and Embodied Expertise Joshua B. Barbour, U of Texas, USA Paul Sommer, Texas A&M U, USA Rebecca Gill, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Respondent Noshir S. Contractor, Northwestern U, USA 5649 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Board Room Top Faculty Papers in ERIC Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Anamik Saha, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Minority Groups and Strategies of Display and Dissent: Exploring the Intersections of Physical and Digitally Mediated Activism Cheryll Ruth Reyes Soriano, De La Salle U, PHILIPPINES Ruepert Jiel Cao, De La Salle U, PHILIPPINES Entrapment as a Threat to Community Peace in the Global War on Terror: An Analysis of Discourse in Local Press Priya Kapoor, Portland State U, USA Adam Testerman, Portland State U, USA Alexander O Brehm, Portland State U, USA Problematizing Japanese Nationalism and Racism in Everyday Communication Yuko Kawai, Rikkyo U, JAPAN Feeling (Dis)connected: Diasporic LGBTQs, Identifications, and Digital Media Alexander Dhoest, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 5650 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Akane Blue Sky Workshop: Uses and Effects of Inspiring Media Content: Developing a Subfield of Positive Media Psychology Sponsored Sessions Chair Arthur A. Raney, Florida State U, USA Participants Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Sophie H Janicke, U of Arkansas, USA Katherine R. Dale, Florida State U, USA Only recently have scholars begun exploring the uses and effects of media content that inspires moral and self-transcendent emotions, such as awe, elevation, hope, and gratitude. Such experiences are theoretically linked with psychological well-being, character development, and prosociality. This workshop offers participants an opportunity to join in a discussion of research in this emerging subfield of positive media psychology. The organizers are currently spearheading a three-year research project on inspiring media, funded by the John Templeton Foundation. They will discuss their current work; others are encouraged to do the same. 5651 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Anzu Fandom: Behaviors, Attitudes, Values Sports Communication Chair Alyssa Appelman, Northern Kentucky U, USA Participants A Longitudinal Study of Watching Televised Megasporting Events: Motives of Women and Men Christiana Schallhorn, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Johannes Knoll, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Holger Schramm, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Coping With Dilemma: How Sport Media Users Respond to Sport Megaevents in Autocratic Countries Felix Flemming, U of Muenster, GERMANY Marco Luenich, Westfaelische Wilhelms-U Muenster, GERMANY Frank Marcinkowski, U of Muenster, GERMANY Christopher Starke, U of Muenster, GERMANY Fan Engagement on Facebook: Cognitive/Emotional Intensity and Intention-Sharing as Predictors of Ticket Purchase Behavior Michel Ballings, U of Tennessee, USA Thomas Burton Ksiazek, Villanova U, USA Matthijs Meire, Ghent U, BELGIUM Edward Malthouse, Northwestern U, USA Dirk Van den Poel, Ghent U, BELGIUM Fleeting or Forever: Changes in Sport Fanship Across the Adult Life Span Walter Gantz, Indiana U, USA Nicky Lewis, U of Miami, USA Respondent Kihan Kim, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 5652 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Hagi Communication and Asian Queer Studies: Theorizing Connections Among Nonheteronormative Sexualities, Politics, and Globalization Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Global Communication and Social Change Chair Ronald L. Jackson II, U of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign, USA Participants Identity Politics and Affective Economy in Contemporary China Shuzhen Huang, Arizona State U, USA “I Don't Hate Myself For Staying In The Closet”: Perspectives from Gay Malaysians and Implications For Communication Scholars and Mental Health Professionals Wai Hsien Cheah, Southern Illinois U - Edwardsville, USA Helma Singaravelu, Webster U, USA From Homo to Iban to Top Gay: Hong Seok-cheon, Gay Celebrity, and Korean Queerness Jungmin Kwon, U of Portland, USA Ethnography of (Im)migrant Asian Bears in USAmerican Wilderness: Pandas among Bears, Otters, and Wolves Satoshi Toyosaki, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Remaking Sticky Rice: A Call for Queer Politics of Disruption in Transnational Asia Shinsuke Eguchi, U of New Mexico, USA In this panel, participants call for intersecting communication and Asian queer studies as a way to examine the complexity and multiplicity of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) lives, experiences, and identities in Asia and/or Asian diasporas. Grounded in critical/cultural/qualitative methodologies or viewpoints, they interrogate usually undisrupted connections among non-heteronormative sexualities, politics, and globalization. The panel participants address how global-local circulations of Western gay imperialism affect productions and constitutions of “Asian” queer subjectivities in various cultural and communicative contexts. 5653 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Fuji Policy Perspectives on Internet Rights for Citizens and Consumers Communication Law & Policy Chair Manuel Puppis, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Participants One in Three: Internet Governance and Children’s Rights Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM John Carr, CHIS, UNITED KINGDOM Jasmina Byrne, UNICEF Office of Research, UNITED KINGDOM What “The Internet Requires”: The Discourse Of Internet Exceptionalism In The Italian Declaration Of Internet Rights Elisabetta Ferrari, U of Pennsylvania, USA “We Ain’t Come to Play SCHOOL”: The First Amendment Implications of Limiting Student Athletes' Use of Social Networking Sites Michael K Park, Syracuse U, USA Conflict in the Network of Networks: How Internet Service Providers Have Shifted From Partners to Adversaries Robert M. Frieden, Pennsylvania State U, USA 5654 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Sakura CCA: Communicating With Power: The ICT Impact on Regional Responses to Hot-Button Issues in East Asia Sponsored Sessions Chair Bu Zhong, Pennsylvania State U, USA Participants Clashes Between “We” and the “Other”: Coorientation Between Hong Kong and Mainland Chinese Journalists in the Wake of the “Umbrella Revolution” Zhou He, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Power Shift in China's Media Convergence Zhengrong Hu, Communication U of China, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Power, Coercive Diplomacy, and Coercive Media: The Case of CNN’s Coverage of the U.S. Freedom of Navigation Operations in the South China Sea Wenshan Jia, Chapman U, USA Big Data, Media and Consumer: Market Competition and Privacy Protection for Consumers Yu-li Liu, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN Discussion Networks and Collective Memory Buiding on Weibo Yunya Song, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Ran Xu, Michigan State U, USA Jingyu Li, U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Effects of WeChat User Behavior on Individual Social Capital Xinzhou Xie, Peking U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Analysis of Campaign Films of 2012 Taiwan Election Lifeng Yan, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Tao Zhang, Xiamen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Alibaba’s Bazaar: The Role of the Internet for Constructing the World’s Largest Online Market Elaine J. Yuan, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Respondent Yu Huang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The panel, consisting of communication scholars from the United States, mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, will explore how East Asian communities communicate their messages with power, in which their unique cultural, racial, religious, and national identities may play a pivotal role. The panelists will present the latest research concerning reginal clashes in Hong Kong and South China Sea, media convergence, social networking enhancing interpersonal communication, social capital and businesses in East Asia. 5660 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Olive Mediatization, Autonomy, and Public Sector Organisations Political Communication Chair Josef Pallas, Uppsala U, SWEDEN Participants Tracking the Mediatization of Government Nick Couldry, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Ruth Garland, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Damian Tambini, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Media Attention and Media Orientation: Explaining Differences Between Public and Private Organizations Sandra Jacobs, ASCOR, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Anke Wonneberger, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Translating (Media) Autonomy Into Public Sector Organizations Josef Pallas, Uppsala U, SWEDEN Magnus Fredriksson, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Storytime: Theorizing Bureaucratic Autonomy in the Time of Personalized Media Kjersti Thorbjornsrud, U of Oslo, NORWAY Tine Ustad Figenschou, U of Oslo, NORWAY Mediatization Inside Governmeny: Results From a Survey Thomas Schillemans, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Stig Hjarvard, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK How does mediatization influence different types of autonomy? How are different types of autonomy influencing the level to which public sector organizations become mediatized? What are organizational responses to mediatization under different autonomy conditions? How is mediatization related to the politization (or depolitization) of public bureaucracies? How do political actors react to different forms of autonomy exercised by agencies through mediatized communication? The panelists will discuss and reflect on these and related issues. 5661 Sunday 15:30-16:45 Sage Children, Adolescents, and the Media Business Meeting Children Adolescents and the Media Chair Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA Participants Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Karin Fikkers, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Laura P. Vandenbosch, U of Leuven / U of Antwerp), BELGIUM 5720 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Argos C Messages That Move Theme Sessions Chair Cherian George, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants Cross-Pressuring Conservative Catholics? The U.S. Public’s Reaction to Pope Francis’ Encyclical on Climate Change Joseph Hilgard, U of Pennsylvania, USA Nan Li, U of Wisconsin, USA Dietram A. Scheufele, U of Wisconsin, USA Kenneth Michael Winneg, U of Pennsylvania, USA Kathleen Hall Jamieson, U of Pennsylvania, USA How to Have a Theory of Social Media in the Sunflower Student Movement Poyao Huang, U of California San Diego, USA Communicating With Power, but Always Failing? The Seeming Impotence of Antiwar Movement Media John D.H. Downing, Northwestern U in Qatar, QATAR We Know How to Communicate With Power; We Just Don't Do It. Nonrepresentational Theory Can Help Perry Parks, Michigan State U, USA Respondent Marko M. Skoric, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5721 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Argos D Processing Political and News Information in an Age of Entertainment and Overload Information Systems Chair Stephanie Edgerly, Northwestern U, USA Participants I Don’t Care About Politics, I Just Like That Guy! Carina Weinmann, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Franziska Susanne Roth, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Frank M. Schneider, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Tanja Krämer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Frederic Hopp, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Melanie Bindl, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Eudaimonic Entertainment Experience in Political Dramas: A Multiple Mediation Analysis Focusing on the Influence of Affected State and Cognitive Elaboration on Discussion, Sharing, and Concern Over U.S. Drone Strike Policy Heather LaMarre, Temple U, USA Chen Zeng, Temple U, USA (Unintended) Effects of Pop Culture References on the Perception of Politicians Christina V. Peter, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Adrian Meier, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Thomas Koch, U of Mainz, GERMANY Politically Informed in a Complex World? Time Affluence, Information-Related Self-Efficacy, and Need for Cognition as Predictors of Political Media Use and Political Knowledge Laura Loy, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Philipp K. Masur, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Josephine Schmitt, U of Cologne, GERMANY Cornelia Mothes, Ohio State U, USA Sabine Trepte, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Too Much Information? Predictors of Information Overload in the Context of Online-News Exposure Josephine Schmitt, U of Cologne, GERMANY Christina Debbelt, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Less Time and Better Memory? Sure! Exploring Effects of Online News Structure on Information Processing Tessa DeAngelo, U of California, Davis, USA Narine S. Yegiyan, U of California - Davis, USA Temporal/Spatial Abuse in Online News Flow and Credibility Sujin Choi, Kookmin U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jeong Seob Kim, Sungshin Womens U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF How New Is the Millennial News Landscape? Exploring the Generational Divide in Digital News Consumption Stephanie Edgerly, Northwestern U, USA Harsh Taneja, U of Missouri, USA Angela Xiao Wu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5722 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Argos E 5723 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Argos F Game Studies Business Meeting Game Studies Chair Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Crisis Communication in the Health Contexts Public Relations Health Communication Chair Franzisca Weder, U of Klagenfurt, AUSTRIA Participants African Union Commission’s Multinational Ebola Campaign Informed by and Against the Decision-Making Model for Localization Juan-Carlos Molleda, U of Florida, USA Toluwani Oloke, U of Florida, USA Linking Issue Management, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Crisis Communication: Applying Balance Theory in Crisis and Issue Management Xiaochen Zhang, Kansas State U, USA Jonathan Borden, Syracuse U, USA Responding to a Health Crisis on Facebook: The Effect of Response Timing and Message Appeal Yan Huang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Marcia DiStaso, Pennsylvania State U, USA Self-Deception in Public Relations: A Psychological and Sociological Approach to the Challenge of Conflicting Expectations Jens Seiffert-Brockmann, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Kerstin Thummes, U of Muenster, GERMANY Consumers’ Prosocial Engagement in CSR: Why Should They Care and What Does it Mean to Them? Baobao Song, U of Florida, USA Mary Ann Ferguson, U of Florida, USA Respondent Hyunmin Lee, Saint Louis U, USA 5724 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Navis A 5725 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Navis B Journalism Studies Business Meeting Journalism Studies Participant Matt Carlson, Saint Louis U, USA Health Communication Challenges and Opportunities in Urban Areas Health Communication Participants How Do the Places We Live In Impact Our Health? Challenges for, and Insights from, Communication Research Matthew D. Matsaganis, State U of New York - Albany, USA The Golden Years: Urban Health Communication Challenges for an Aging Population Gary Gumpert, Urban Communication Foundation, USA Susan Drucker, Hofstra U, USA Social Support and Coping with Stress in the Urban Environment: The Role of New Communication Technologies Kevin B. Wright, George Mason U, USA Effective Communication and Engagement to Enhance Asian American Health Lan Ni, U of Houston, USA Strategic Communication Programs for Promoting Urban Health Gary L. Kreps, George Mason U, USA This panel will examine the tremendous relevance of health communication inquiry to promoting urban health. Strategic urban communication policies, systems, and practices can have profound influences on public health promotion. Barriers to effective dissemination of relevant health information inevitably lead to serious health problems for urban dwellers, particularly among underresourced and vulnerable urban populations. This panel of noted experts, convened by the Urban Communication Foundation, will examine and illustrate how health communication inquiry can provide the data needed for guiding development and use of evidencebased health communication interventions to improve health outcomes for at-risk urban populations. 5726 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Navis C Communication and Technology Business Meeting Communication and Technology Chair James A. Danowski, U of Illinois at Chicago, USA Participants Lee Humphreys, Cornell U, USA Marjolijn L. Antheunis, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS 5730 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Nire The Power of Transformative Learning: Ways to Engage and Develop Faculty and Students Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair Deanna Dee Sellnow, U of Central Florida, USA Participants Transformative Learning in the Chinese Classroom Carla C Bevins, U of Kentucky, USA Listening to the Homeless: Empowering Undergraduate Students and the Homeless through Field-Based Activities Elaine Hsieh, U of Oklahoma, USA Which Color Box Do You Tick? Using Transformative Education to Teach about ‘Race’ and (‘Racial’) Discrimination Flora Keshishian, St. John’s U, USA Transformative Learning and the College Experience: An Analysis of Students’ Perceptions about the Communication Capstone Class and Majoring in Communication Jason Martin, U of Missouri-Kansas City, USA Michael Strawser, Bellarmine U, USA Transformative learning of foreign-born Asian female scholars in American higher education Eun-A Park, U of New Haven, USA Students’ Intuitive Models of Communication and Their Relationship to Communication Instruction in the Introductory Course Cindy H. White, U of Colorado, USA Amy S. Ebesu Hubbard, U of Hawaii, USA Respondent Deanna Dee Sellnow, U of Central Florida, USA This panel examines a variety of ways transformative learning may be used to engage and develop students and faculty. Specifically, it explores how transformative learning experiences have been utilized to: (a) improve English proficiency and active learning classroom strategies of faculty members at a Chinese university; (b) gain new insights about one’s worldview after conducting fieldwork and interacting with homeless people; (c) teach about race and racial discrimination; (d) evaluate students’ perceptions about the communication capstone class and majoring in communication; (e) examine the experience of foreign-born Asian female scholars in American higher education; and (f) understand how student’s preconceptions about a phenomenon influences their sensemaking of course material and ability to acquire new knowledge. 5731 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Kusu Mobile Communication Business Meeting Mobile Communication Chair Veronika Karnowski, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Participants Thilo von Pape, U Hohenheim, GERMANY Colin Agur, Yale U, USA 5732 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Kashi Exploring the Meaning of Sharing, Citizenship, Communication, and Complaining in Cultural Discourses Language & Social Interaction Chair Todd L. Sandel, U of Macau, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Participants What We Need is Communication, Done Well: Vernacular Globalization in Hungarian Citizens’ Assessments of Political “Communication” David Boromisza-Habashi, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA When Sharing Became Caring: A Historical Analysis Nicholas A. John, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL “We’ll Never Get Better!”: Oplakvane (Complaining), Journalism, and Cultural Understandings of Agency Nadezhda Mihaylova Sotirova, U of Minnesota Morris, USA Who are China’s Citizens? A Membership Categorization Analysis of Chinese Online Discourse Bingjuan Xiong, U of Colorado, USA 5733 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Kaede 5740 Sunday 17:00-19:45 Rigel Interpersonal Communication Division Business Meeting Interpersonal Communication Participants Jennifer A. Samp, U of Georgia, USA Keli Ryan Steuber, U of Iowa, USA Ascan F. Koerner, U of Minnesota, USA Authoritarian Populism: Closed Media Systems in an Open World Global Communication and Social Change Chair Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Mark Princi Hannah, U of Southern California, USA Mel Jane Bunce, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Philip Howard, U of Washington, USA Soomin Seo, Columbia U, USA This panel investigates the media ecologies of relatively “closed” journalism cultures around the world. Authoritarian regimes seek to monopolize and regulate news production on the one hand, but also seek to meet popular demands for news consumption on the other. In an increasingly interconnected world, these tensions create significant pressures, as well as opportunities, for news organizations and individual journalists. How - if at all - have authoritarian states developed their media strategies to combat the porous borders of the digital landscape? To what extent are we witnessing sensitivities to commercial and/or populist imperatives within state-owned media enterprises, and how do the “foreign” media with ground presence in these countries come into the picture? 5741 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Vega The Study of Adolescents in Mass Communication Research Mass Communication Chair Morgan E. Ellithorpe, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Examining Preteens’ Development of an Objectified Self-Concept: A Cross-Lagged Model of Media Internalization and Peer Appearance Talk Ann Rousseau, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Media Effects on Adolescents’ Cognitive Set of Occupations: Another Look at Media and Cognitive Accessibility Volker Gehrau, Westfaelische Wilhelms-U of Muenster, GERMANY Plasticity of News Consumption During Transition From Early to Middle Adolescence: Family and Peer Influences Katharina Emde, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Christoph Klimmt, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Daniela M. Schluetz, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Time for Slime: Reinforcement of Hegemonic Equilibrium Through Compensatory Fiction Tyler Brunette, U of Pittsburgh, USA 5742 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Kiku 5743 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Ran Environmental Communication Business Meeting Environmental Communication Chair Richard J. Doherty, New England College, USA Gendering Politics and Political Activisms Feminist Scholarship Political Communication Participants What's in a Label? Gender Marking Political Leadership Linda Trimble, U of Alberta, CANADA Gendered Campaign Tweets: The Cases of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump Jayeon (Janey) Lee, Lehigh U, USA Young-shin Lim, Ohio State U, USA Body Blows Art, Activism, and Nudity in Times of Revolution Marwan M. Kraidy, U of Pennsylvania, USA Agency as a Responsive Creation: Arab Women, Revolutions, and Gaze Soumia Bardhan, Kansas State U, USA #LifeOfAMuslimFeminist: The Political Efficacy of Online Community Building Laura E Strait, U of Oregon, USA 5745 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Sumire The Effects of Frames Political Communication Chair Christian Baden, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Participants Heed Not the Cynics and the Uber Interested: Effects of Competitive Framing on Support for Government Policy Tracy Loh, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Ganga Sasidharan Dhanesh, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE The Effects of Media Framing of Domestic Surveillance of Activist Groups Hyesun Choung, U of Wisconsin, USA Douglas M. McLeod, U of Wisconsin, USA The Effects of Metaphorical Frames on Attitudes: The Euro Crisis as War or Disease? Willem Joris, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Leen S. J. d'Haenens, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Baldwin Van Gorp, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Time to Change: How Temporal Framing of Income Inequality Shapes Redistributive Policy Preferences Sungjong Roh, Singapore Management U, SINGAPORE 5746 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Koh Philosophy, Theory, and Critique Business Meeting Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chairs Alison Hearn, U of Western Ontario, CANADA Mirca Madianou, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Participant Julia Sonnevend, U of Michigan, USA 5747 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Yoh 5748 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Kei Popular Communication Business Meeting Popular Communication Participant Melissa A. Click, U of Missouri, USA National and Organizational Culture and Communication Organizational Communication Chair Francois Cooren, U de Montreal, CANADA Participants Chinese Post-'80s Generational Resilience: Implications of Chengyu (成语) as Guides for Constituting Harmonious Careers Ziyu Long, Colorado State U, USA Patrice M. Buzzanell, Purdue U, USA Kai Kuang, Bloomsburg U of Pennsylvania, USA Paramilitary Police Joseph Oliver, Illinois State U, USA Surveillance With Chinese Characteristics: Analysis of Government Expenditure on Data-Driven Online Public Opinion Monitoring Bo Mai, U of Pennsylvania, USA Tao Wu, Sun Yat-sen U, CHINA “Motivation is Going Down”: Salaryman Subjectivities and the Ideological Variegation of Neoliberalism in Japan Iain Donald Macpherson, MacEwan U, CANADA Respondent Vivian C. Sheer, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 5749 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Board Room 5750 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Akane Ethnicity and Race in Communication Division Business Meeting Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Federico Subervi, unaffiliated, USA Blue Sky Workshop: Moving from PhD Thesis to Book Manuscript to Published Book Sponsored Sessions Chair Alice Srugies, Ilmenau U of Technology, GERMANY This proposed workshop centers on the process of turning a doctoral thesis that caters to the requirements of a PhD committee into a manuscript that captures the attention and the interest of the academic community in a specific field of study. It brings doctoral candidates, editors of renowned academic publishers as well as authors who have successfully completed the publishing process together to discuss challenges of editing a thesis, including questions on structure and style. 5751 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Anzu Interacting With Fans: Media, Athletes, Sponsors, Teams Sports Communication Chair Nicky Lewis, U of Miami, USA Participants Experimentally Examining Sports Sponsorships: Delineating Exposure Effects, Sponsor Types, and the Impact of Gender on Evaluations Michael Devlin, DePaul U, USA Andrew C. Billings, U of Alabama, USA Pervasively Offside: An Examination of Consumer Perceptions of Female Sportscasters Michael Mudrick, York College of Pennsylvania, USA Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA “Never Quit, You’ll Be A Winner”: Athletes As Sources Of Emotional Social Support On Twitter Jan Boehmer, U of Miami, USA Galen Clavio, Indiana U, USA Michael North, U of Miami, USA Beyond Touchdown: College Students’ Sports Participation, Social Media Use, College Attachment, and Psychological Well-Being Yiben Liu, U of Alabama, USA Zhou Shan, U of Alabama, USA Yonghwan Kim, U of Alabama, USA Respondent Kihan Kim, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 5752 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Hagi From Hip-Hop to Yaoi: Queer Media Cultures Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Feminist Scholarship Sports Communication Popular Communication Chair Elena Rosa Maris, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Yaoi Manga Fandom and Queer Fantasy Spaces Simon Turner, Chulalongkorn U, THAILAND Queerly Ordinary: Transgender Audiences, Media Culture, and The Negotiation of Boundaries and Binaries Andre Cavalcante, U of Virginia, USA Sports and the Corporatization of “Coming Out” Evan Brody, U of Southern California, USA Fostering Support for LGBTQ Youth: The Effects of Adolescent LGBTQ Media Characters on Young Viewers Traci Gillig, U of Southern California, USA Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA Queering Hip-Hop: The Nicki Minaj Playlist Elena Rosa Maris, U of Pennsylvania, USA 5753 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Fuji 5754 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Sakura 5760 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Olive Communication Law and Policy Business Meeting Communication Law & Policy Chair Seamus Simpson, U of Salford, UNITED KINGDOM CCA Business Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chairs Bu Zhong, Pennsylvania State U, USA Shuhua Zhou, U of Alabama, USA Between Propaganda and Government Communication Political Communication Chair Shannon C McGregor, U of Texas, USA Participants Alfaro, Homeland, and Revolution: The Myth as a Strategic Element of Government Communications Caroline Avila, U del Azuay, ECUADOR Authoritarian Co-optation Of Urban Protests in China Fanxu Zeng, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Jia Dai, Tsinghua U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Towards the Tool of Propaganda: Official Microblogs in China: A Case Study of People's Daily, CCTV, and Xinhua News Agency Ke Li, U of Illinois, USA Zongyuan Wang, U of Illinois, USA Two Stories for Two Nations: Public Diplomacy in the Israeli–Palestinian Conflict Moran Yarchi, Interdisciplinary Center, ISRAEL 5761 Sunday 17:00-18:15 Sage JOCAM NEXT: A Forward-Looking Agenda for CAM Research Children Adolescents and the Media Chair Dafna Lemish, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Participants What Kind of Adults Will our Children Become? The Impact of Growing Up in a Media-Saturated World Ellen Wartella, Northwestern U, USA Through the Tablet Glass: Transcendent Parenting in an Era of Mobile Media and Cloud Computing Sun Sun Lim, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE What’s Next for Research on Young Children’s Interactive Media? Colleen Elizabeth Russo, Vanderbilt U, USA Reframing Media Effects in Terms of Children’s Rights in the Digital Age Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM The Child-Effect in the New Media Environment: Challenges and Opportunities for Communication Research Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Introducing Positive Media Psychology to the Field of Children, Adolescents, and Media Moniek Buijzen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Librarians as Stakeholders in the Children and Media Community: A Dialogue Renee Hobbs, U of Rhode Island, USA Moved Into Action: Media Literacy as Social Process Senta Pfaff-Ruediger, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Claudia Riesmeyer, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Media Effects as Health Research: How Pediatricians Have Changed the Study of Media and Child Development David S. Bickham, Harvard U, USA Jill R. Kavanaugh, Harvard U, USA Michael O. Rich, Harvard U, USA Building Meaningful Cross-Sector Partnerships for Children and Media Initiatives: A Conversation Café With Scholars and Activists From Around the World Srividya Ramasubramanian, Texas A&M U, USA Aya Yadlin-Segal, Texas A&M U, USA Respondents Amy B. Jordan, U of Pennsylvania, USA Vicky Rideout, VJR Consulting, USA This high density panel celebrates the 10th anniversary double issue of the Journal of Children and Media by presenting cuttingedge, “big picture” ideas of what the field has accomplished and by envisioning opportunities for advancement as we look ahead to the next decade. 5824 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Navis A 5825 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Navis B Journalism Studies Reception Journalism Studies ICA Fellows Panel - II Sponsored Sessions Chair Akiba A. Cohen, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Participants Appreciation, Gratitude, and Meaningfulness in Media Communication Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Relationships Beyond Relationships: The Interplay of Personal Experience and Social Networks Malcolm R. Parks, U of Washington, USA Influence and Identities: Managing Multiple Goals and Dilemmas in Personal and Professional Relationships Steven R. Wilson, Purdue U, USA ICA honors its new Fellows each year with a special panel that focuses on their life work and contributions to the field of communication. A reception will follow the session. 5826 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Navis C Communication and Technology, Game Studies, and Information Systems Joint Reception Communication and Technology Game Studies Information Systems Chair James A. Danowski, U of Illinois at Chicago, USA 5826 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Navis C 5826 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Navis C 5842 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Kiku 5849 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Board Room 5849 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Board Room 5849 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Board Room Information Systems/Communication and Technology/Game Studies Joint Reception Information Systems Communication and Technology Game Studies Game Studies/Communication and Technology/Information Systems Joint Reception Game Studies Communication and Technology Information Systems Environmental Communication Reception Environmental Communication Ethnicity and Race in Communication/Feminist Scholarship/Philosophy, Theory, and Critique/Popular Communication/Visual Communication Joint Reception Ethnicity and Race in Communication Feminist Scholarship Philosophy, Theory and Critique Popular Communication Visual Communication Studies Feminist Scholarship/Ethnicity and Race in Communication/Philosophy, Theory, and Critique/Popular Communication/Visual Communication Joint Reception Feminist Scholarship Ethnicity and Race in Communication Philosophy, Theory and Critique Popular Communication Visual Communication Studies Philosophy, Theory, and Critique/Ethnicity and Race in Communication/Feminist Scholarship/Popular Communication/Visual Communication Joint Reception Philosophy, Theory and Critique Ethnicity and Race in Communication Feminist Scholarship Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Popular Communication Visual Communication Studies 5849 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Board Room Popular Communication/Ethnicity and Race in Communication/Feminist Scholarship/Philosophy, Theory, and Critique/Visual Communication Joint Reception Popular Communication Ethnicity and Race in Communication Feminist Scholarship Popular Communication Visual Communication Studies Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Stephen Harrington, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA 5849 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Board Room 5853 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Fuji 5860 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Olive Visual Communication/Ethnicity and Race in Communication/Feminist Scholarship/Philosophy, Theory, and Critique/Popular Communication Joint Reception Visual Communication Studies Ethnicity and Race in Communication Feminist Scholarship Philosophy, Theory and Critique Popular Communication Visual Communication Studies Communication Law and Policy Reception Communication Law & Policy Remembering Wolfgang Donsbach Sponsored Sessions Chair Yariv Tsfati, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY This special session is dedicated to the memory of Wolfgang Donsbach, former professor at the University of Mainz, and founding professor of the Institute of Communication Science at the Technical U of Dresden. Donsbach served as president of the World Association for Public Opinion Research, ICA president, editor of the International Journal of Public Opinion Research, and editor of ICA’s International Encyclopedia of Communication. Above all, Wolf was a giant scholar, whose work has had a tremendous impact on the fields of public opinion, media effects and journalism studies. Friends, colleagues and students are invited to share memories of Prof. Donsbach and thoughts about his contributions to the discipline. 5861 Sunday 18:30-19:45 Sage Children, Adolescents, and the Media/ JOCAM Reception Children Adolescents and the Media Chair Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA 6020 Monday 08:00-09:15 Argos C Exploring Intersectionality: Media Representations of Women and its Impact on Community and Academia Ethnicity and Race in Communication Chair Rowena Lyn Briones, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Participants Critical Race Feminism, Resistance, and Revolution: Case Studies of Black Women as Victims in the Media Kristal Zook, Hofstra U, USA From Historical Contexts to Current Trends in Representing Women, Power and Oppression Laurena Elizabeth Nelson Bernabo, U of Iowa, USA In Their Words: Expressions of Experiences and Empowerment Osita Iroegbu, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA What’s Next? Brainstorming Solutions for a Brighter Future Rowena Lyn Briones, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA. 6021 Monday 08:00-09:15 Argos D Emerging Problems Associated With Media Use Information Systems Chair Matthias R. Hastall, Technical U Dortmund, GERMANY Participants Permanently Online and Permanently Procrastinating? The Mediating Role of Internet Use for the Effects of Trait Procrastination on Psychological Well-Being Leonard Reinecke, U of Mainz, GERMANY Adrian Meier, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Stefan Aufenanger, U of Mainz, GERMANY Manfred Beutel, U of Mainz, GERMANY Michael Dreier, U of Mainz, GERMANY Oliver Quiring, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Birgit Stark, U of Mainz, GERMANY Klaus Woelfling, U of Mainz, GERMANY Kai Mueller, U of Mainz, GERMANY Stressed by Smartphone Use? The Interplay of Motivation and Mindfulness During Instant Messaging Laura Loy, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Arne Bauer, U of Cologne, GERMANY The Associations of Adolescents’ Fear of Missing Out With Social Needs, Facebook Use, and Stress Ine Beyens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Eline Frison, U of Leuven, BELGIUM App Users Unwittingly in the Spotlight: Privacy Knowledge, Concerns, Self-Efficacy, and Protection Behavior in Mobile Apps Verena Wottrich, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Predicting Information Disclosure on Facebook: The Role of Self-Monitoring and Concern for Privacy Yeuseung Kim, DePaul U, USA Yongick Jeong, Louisiana State U, USA Primacy and Recency Effects of Positive and Negative Cues About Online Privacy Eun Go, Western Illinois U, USA S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA Processing Online Privacy: Which Heuristics Matter Most? Jinyoung Kim, Pennsylvania State U, USA S. Shyam Sundar, Pennsylvania State U, USA Unintended, Unnoticed, Troublesome: Accidental Stigmatization as Exemplar Effect Matthias R. Hastall, Technical U Dortmund, GERMANY Jan Finzi, Technical U Dortmund, GERMANY Ute Ritterfeld, Technical U Dortmund, GERMANY 6022 Monday 08:00-09:15 Argos E Language, Behavior, and Cognition and Their Influences on Perception and Communication Behaviors Interpersonal Communication Chair Min Gyu Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Participants A Critical Look at Meta-Analytic Evidence for the Cognitive Approach to Lie Detection: A Reexamination of Vrij, Fisher, & Blank (2015) Timothy R. Levine, U of Alabama - Birmingham, USA Cultivating Attachment: The Associations Between Past Television Exposure and Adult Attachment Jenna McNallie, West Virginia Wesleyan College, USA Factors That Shape Cognitive and Behavioral Coping Among Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes: Features of Illness Versus Features of Romantic Relationships John Leustek, Rutgers U, USA Jennifer A. Theiss, Rutgers U, USA Politeness and Language: Examining the Linguistic Content of Face Threatening Acts Using the Meaning Extraction Method Emily A. Dolan, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Kate Blackburn, U of Texas, USA Allison Zorzie Shaw, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA Catherine Masterson, SUNY - U at Buffalo, USA The Motivated Affective Behavioral System: A Mediational Process Model in the Attachment Domain Jennifer Rose Talevich, U of Southern California, USA 6024 Monday 08:00-09:15 Navis A Digital News: What It Is and How To Understand It Journalism Studies Chair Michael B. Karlsson, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Participants The Circulation of Communicative Objects Christoph Raetzsch, Free U of Berlin, GERMANY Henrik Bodker, Aarhus U, DENMARK Mapping Digital Journalism: Comparing 48 News Websites From Six Countries Edda Humprecht, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Connect and Engage: Civic Journalism Values and Newsroom Norms in the Digital Era Melissa Tully, U of Iowa, USA Shawn Harmsen, U of Iowa, USA Jane B. Singer, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Brian Ekdale, U of Iowa, USA Unambiguous Burstiness: Towards Explaining the Dynamics of Digital News Flows From Opportunity Structures, News Factors, and Topics Florian H Buhl, U of Muenster, GERMANY Elisabeth Guenther, U of Muenster, GERMANY Thorsten Quandt, U of Muenster, GERMANY Respondent Michael Opgenhaffen, U of Leuven, BELGIUM 6025 Monday 08:00-09:15 Navis B Obesity and Promoting Healthy Eating Health Communication Chair J. Roberto Sanchez Reina, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN Participants How Movie Characters’ Eating Influences Viewers’ Eating: Effects of Unconscious Goal Contagion and Satiation Shuo Zhou, Cornell U, USA Michael A. Shapiro, Cornell U, USA Motivation for Obesity Reduction Among Adolescents in Low-Income Communities in Three U.S. States Nancy W. Muturi, Kansas State U, USA Tandalayo Kidd, Kansas State U, USA Erika Lindshield, Kansas State U, USA Kendra Kattelman, South Dakota State U, USA Promoting Healthy Eating on YouTube: A Content Analysis of PSAs Xueying Zhang, U of Alabama, USA Kim Baker, U of Alabama, USA Sarah Pember, U of Alabama, USA Kimberly Bissell, U of Alabama, USA Targeting Physical Inactivity: Effects of Three Consequence Frames on Subgroups’ Health-Related Perceptions and Behavioral Intentions Anna Wagner, Augsburg U, GERMANY Freya Sukalla, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY The Effects of Perceived Threat and Efficacy on Parents’ Health Information Seeking Guido Zurstiege, U Tuebingen, GERMANY Alexander Ort, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Genevieve Mulack, U Tuebingen, GERMANY 6026 Monday 08:00-09:15 Navis C Exploring Technological Affordances Communication and Technology Chair Aram A. Sinnreich, American U, USA Participants Looking Back to Look Forward: Tracing the History of Affordances to Develop a Framework for Understanding Communication Technology Jeffrey William Treem, U of Texas, USA Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of Washington, USA Sandra K. Evans, California State Polytechnic U - Pomona, USA Jessica Vitak, U of Maryland, USA Andrew Schrock, Independent Researcher, USA Kristen Barta, U of Washington, USA Jacob Stuart Ford, U of Texas, USA Samantha Shorey, U of Washington, USA Social Media, Relational Closeness, and Interpreting Social Support From Paralinguistic Digital Affordances Caleb T. Carr, Illinois State U, USA Donghee Yvette Wohn, New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA Rebecca A. Hayes, Illinois State U, USA Technological Affordance-Based Gratifications and Their Impact on Media Selection Chun Yang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Erica Bailey, Pennsylvania State U, USA Fan Feng, Jinan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The Affordances Test: A Conceptual Model for Understanding Affordances in Communication Research Sandra K. Evans, California State Polytechnic U - Pomona, USA Katy Elizabeth Pearce, U of Washington, USA Jessica Vitak, U of Maryland, USA Jeffrey William Treem, U of Texas, USA 6030 Monday 08:00-09:15 Nire Health Risks: Ebola, Polio, Violence, Emergencies Health Communication Chair Avery E. Holton, U of Utah, USA Participants College, Mental Health, and a Violent Student: Employing Numerical Formats to Communicate Risk on Campus Christine Skubisz, Emerson College, USA Exploring Factors That Influence the Speed of Public Response to Health Emergencies on Microblogging Sites Lun ZHANG, Beijing Normal U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Linjia Xu, Chinese Academy of Sciences, CHINA, PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Measuring Perceived Susceptibility: Conditional Versus Unconditional Phrasing Jessica M. Hample, Purdue U, USA The "New Public" and the "Good Ol' Press": Evaluating Online News Sources During the 2013 Polio Outbreak in Israel Anat Gesser-Edelsburg, Haifa U, ISRAEL Nathan Walter, U of Southern California, USA Yaffa Shir Raz, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Manfred Green, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Too Far to Care? The Role of Psychological Proximity in Public Attention and Fear for Ebola Liza Van Lent, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Hande Sungur, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Enny Henrica Das, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS 6031 Monday 08:00-09:15 Kusu Understanding Digital Health Communication and Technology Chair Jung-Hyun Kim, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Participants A Systematic Review of Information and Communication Technology-Based Psychoeducational Interventions for Depression Danyang Zhao, Florida State U, USA Mia Liza A. Lustria, Florida State U, USA Joshua Hendrickse, Florida State U, USA Technologies of Self-Persuasion: Mobile Apps for Health Behavioral Change Carmen D. Stavrositu, U of Colorado - Colorado Springs, USA Jinhee Kim, Pohang U of Science and Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyeseung Yang, Kyungsung U, KOREA, DEMOCRATIC PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Understanding Health Slacktivism: A Structural Equation Modeling Approach to Health “Slacktivists” on Social Media Chihwei Hu, U of Southern California, USA Website Model Pictures and Online Persuasive Messages Affect The Linguistic Content of Weight-Related Support Messages Jorge Pena, U of California, Davis, USA Wenjing Pan, U of California, Davis, USA 6032 Monday 08:00-09:15 Kashi Making Journalism: How Journalists Produce the News Journalism Studies Chair Claudia Mellado, Pontificia U Católica de Valparaiso, CHILE Participants How the Political Leanings of Journalists are Related to the Acceptance of Questionable Reporting Practices Philip Baugut, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Sebastian Scherr, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY The GamerGate Scandal and Journalistic Paradigm Maintenance Gregory Pearson Perreault, Appalachian State U, USA Tim P. Vos, U of Missouri, USA Being There? What's Left of Journalistic Legwork in the Digital Environment Yigal Godler, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Zvi Reich, Ben-Gurion U of the Negev, ISRAEL Whose Story is This, Anyway? Four Key Differences in How Journalists and Their Subjects Understand News Production Ruth A. Palmer, IE U, SPAIN How Journalists’ Mindsets Influence Their News Stories: Evidence From a Multilevel Analysis of Climate Communication Sven Engesser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Michael Brueggemann, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND 6033 Monday 08:00-09:15 Kaede Using the Science of Language to Improve Translation of the Language of Science Sponsored Sessions Chair Janice Krieger, U of Florida, USA Respondent Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA This panel, in collaboration with the International Association of Language and Social Psychology (IALSP) Science Communication Task Force, examines the role of language in translational communication about science, health, and technology around the globe. Panelists will present manuscripts that address translational communication concerns that arise in scientific discourse among different stakeholders, including scientists, the public, and policy makers. Papers address the various forms of conflict that exist, as well as how language might serve as a bridge to encourage cooperation among stakeholders by identifying and facilitating common goals. The goal of the panel is to create a meaningful roadmap for how the science of language can inform how we translate the language of science for various stakeholders. 6040 Monday 08:00-09:15 Rigel Postcolonial Interrogations of Global Media, Culture, and Space Global Communication and Social Change Chair Shakuntala Rao, State U of New York - Plattsburgh, USA Participants Twice Removed Diaspora: Where Would Bollywood be in the Lives of Fiji-Indian Diaspora? Charu Uppal, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Bollywood-Religion-Globalization: Tracking Spirituality in Postcolonial Popular Hindi Cinema David J. Schaefer, Franciscan U, USA Kavita Karan, U of Southern Illinois Carbondale, USA Producing Informal Space Through Communication Practices in a Global City: A Case of Hong Kong Ngai Keung Chan, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Hollywood Narrative in U.S. Development in the Middle East Karin Gwinn Wilkins, U of Texas, USA Media Studies and Postcolonial Studies: Mutual Interruptions Raka Shome, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE 6041 Monday 08:00-09:15 Vega The Study of Biases and News Mass Communication Journalism Studies Chair John C. Pollock, The College of New Jersey, USA Participants Biased Objectivity and Journalistic Professionalism: Objectivity Indicators in Journalists’ and Nonjournalists’ Information Behaviors Cornelia Mothes, Ohio State U, USA The Effects of News Bias-Induced Anger, Anxiety, and Issue Novelty on Subsequent News Preferences Yi-Hsing Han, Christ's College Taipei, TAIWAN Laura M. Arpan, Florida State U, USA The Reason for the Season: Network Audiences in the War(s) on Christmas Alison N. Novak, Rowan U, USA What Comes After the First Click? A New Way to Look at Selective Exposure JungHwan Yang, U of Wisconsin, USA David Wise, U of Wisconsin, USA Albert C. Gunther, U of Wisconsin, USA 6042 Monday 08:00-09:15 Kiku Building “Digital Asia” for Post-2008 Economic Recovery: Contradictions and Contestations Global Communication and Social Change Chair Yu Hong, U of Southern California, USA Participants Harnessing the Internet for Sustainable Economic Recovery: China’s New Communication Agenda and Its Trials Yu Hong, U of Southern California, USA Embracing High-tech Productivity: The Three-phase Informational Strategies in China’s Finance Sector since the 1990s Jing Wang, Rutgers U, USA The Making of "Creative Infrastructure" as a Tool for Urban Regeneration and its Discontents: The Case of the Dongdaemun Design Plaza and Park Changwook Kim, U of Massachusetts, USA “Techies Support Digital India”: Transnational IT Professionals and the Making of “Digital India.” Sreela Sarkar, Santa Clara U, USA Respondent Dal Yong Jin, Simon Fraser U, CANADA This panel explores relationships between the digital and development in different, interrelated ways—as new forms of economic policy and finance, smart city projects, and new transnational coalitions. The desire is not to present a homogenized model of “Digital Asia,” but to open up its multifarious agents and directions, while documenting and analyzing major policy and institutional transformations in the context of international and domestic politics. 6043 Monday 08:00-09:15 Ran The Study of Media and Persuasion Mass Communication Chair Hans Hoeken, Utrecht U, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Communication Strategies Predict Success of Crowdfunding Campaigns Tsfira Grebelsky-Lichtman, Hebrew U and Ono Academic Colledge, ISRAEL Gil Avnimelech, Ono Academic College, ISRAEL Does Nonnarrative Message Engagement (NNME) lead to Persuasion? Effects of Distraction on Engagement and Attitudes Nehama Lewis, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL The Influence of Source Information on Psychological Reactance Hyunjung Kim, Keimyung U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 6045 Monday 08:00-09:15 Sumire Parties and NGO's as Strategic Actors Political Communication Chair Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN Participants Interplay Between Parties and Media in Putting EU Issues on the Agenda: A Temporal Pattern Analysis Michaela Maier, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Patrick Bacherle, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Silke Adam, U Bern, SWITZERLAND Melanie Leidecker-Sandmann, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Issue Competition in Election Times: Parties’ Issue Strategies in Different Channels and Their Media Coverage Caroline Dalmus, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Regula Haenggli, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Laurent Bernhard, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND NGO Publicity and Parallel Path Dependencies: Explaining the Persistence of Media-Centered Publicity Strategies Matthew Powers, U of Washington, USA Offline Advantages Online? Contrasting Activities of Swiss Politicians and Parties on Different Social Media Platforms Tobias Keller, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Katharina Kleinen-von Koenigsloew, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Online Communication Repertoires of International NGOs: An Analysis of Organizational Characteristics and Online Activities Paula Nitschke, U of Greifswald, GERMANY Patrick Donges, U of Leipzig, GERMANY 6046 Monday 08:00-09:15 Koh Japan’s Cultural Diversity: Communicating Uncertain, Shifting, and Powerful Moments for the Future Intercultural Communication Chairs Satoshi Toyosaki, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Shinsuke Eguchi, U of New Mexico, USA Participants It’s a Wonderful Single Life: Representations of Female Singleness in Japan’s Contemporary josei dorama Kristie Collins, U of Tsukuba, JAPAN The Affective Politics of the Feminine: An Interpassive Analysis of Gender, Comedy, and Nation Sachi Sekimoto, Minnesota State U, Mankato, USA Yusaku Yajima, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA “I Never Wanted to Be Famous”: Whiteness, English Hegemony, and Foreign English Language Teachers in Japan Nathaniel Simmons, Western Governors U, USA Yea-Wen Chen, Ohio U, USA “A Dialectic between Nationalism and Multiculturalism: An Analysis of the Internationalization Discourse in Japan” Ako Inuzuka, U of Pittsburgh at Johnstown, USA Japan’s “Otherness” in Chinese Political Discourses: Communicating National Identities in the Global-Local Dialectic Bin Zhang, South Puget Sound Community College, USA The Push-and-Pull of J-Pop and K-Pop in Taiwan: Pop Culture Transition, Cultural Images, and Identity Co-optation Hsun-Yu Chuang, Southern Illinois U Carbondale, USA Japanese Male-Queer Femininity: An Autoethnographic Reflection on Matsuko Deluxe as an Onē-Kei Talent Shinsuke Eguchi, U of New Mexico, USA Japan is betwixt and among various shifting and uncertain landscapes politically, socially, culturally, naturally, and technologically. Such shifting landscapes become legible in the discursive dialectics of Japan’s homogeneity and heterogeneity. Shifting national/cultural identity takes its shape in the relational dialectics betwixt its homeostasis and instability. This panel, collectively, interrogates the coconstructive nature of Japan’s homogeneity and heterogeneity—its discursive push-and-pull—at various cultural fronts in order to understand Japan’s shifting cultural politics. Panelists employ various critical intercultural communication research methodologies so that they can get at the complex and nuanced nature of these shifting cultural landscapes. 6047 Monday 08:00-09:15 Yoh Media Work in the Digital Age Popular Communication Chair Vilde Sundet, Lillehammer U College, NORWAY Participants Making a List, Aggregating it at Least Twice: The Work of Online Music Critics Benjamin Andrew James Pearson, U of Michigan, USA The Mediatization of Fashion: The Case of Fashion Blogs Nete Noergaard Kristensen, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Christa Lykke Christensen, Copenhagen U, DENMARK The Practice of Parodying on YouTube Lillian Boxman-Shabtai, Northwestern U, USA Selling Out: Musicians, Autonomy, and Compromise in the Digital Age Bethany Klein, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Leslie M. Meier, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Devon Powers, Drexel U, USA 6048 Monday 08:00-09:15 Kei Understanding the Power of Stakeholders Public Relations Chair Adam Saffer, U of North Carolina, USA Participants Two-Way Communication Between Scientists and the Public: A View From Science Communication Trainers Shupei Yuan, Michigan State U, USA Tsuyoshi Oshita, Michigan State U, USA Niveen AbiGhannam, U of Texas, USA Hyeseung Elizabeth Koh, U of Texas, USA Anthony David Dudo, U of Texas, USA John C. Besley, Michigan State U, USA The Determinants of the Amount of Donation: Membership Association Case Eyun-Jung Ki, U of Alabama, USA Jeyoung Oh, U of Alabama, USA An Experimental Test of Corporate Political Giving on Attitudes and Reactions to Companies Whitney Walther-Martin, U of Minnesota, USA Daniel B. Wackman, U of Minnesota, USA Jennifer Williams, U of Minnesota, USA Heather LaMarre, Temple U, USA Shaurav Raj Adhikari, U of Minnesota, USA Why Do Online Comments and Corporate Replies Matter in CSR Communication? Mediating Roles of Perceived Interactivity and Transparency in Increasing Word-of-Mouth Soo-Yeon Kim, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyojung Park, Louisiana State U, USA Shareholders as Social Actors: Pushing an Environmental Responsibility-Issue Agenda Through Shareholder Activist Networks Aimei Yang, U of Southern California, USA Nur Uysal, Marquette U, USA Maureen Taylor, U of Tennessee, USA Respondent Theo Araujo, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 6049 Monday 08:00-09:15 Board Room GIFTS: Great Ideas for Teaching Students Instructional & Developmental Communication Chair CJ Claus, California State U, Stanislaus, USA Participants GIFTS. Submission: Make a Hollywood Movie in 15 minutes Doron Taussig, U of Pennsylvania, USA GIFTS: Teaching Crisis Preparedness with the Anticipatory Model of Crisis Management (AMCM) Bolanle A. Olaniran, Texas Tech U, USA GIFTS: Learning to Respond to Critiques of Communication Campaigns: A "Speed Dating" Approach Maria Leonora G. Comello, U of North Carolina, USA GIFTS: Making Assessment Fun for Students and Building Group Cohesion Michelle T. Violanti, U of Tennessee, USA Michelle Epstein Garland, U of Tennessee, USA GIFTS - Global Rebranding: The Pragmatics of International Persuasion Robert Allen, California State U, Los Angeles, USA Jillian Kwong, U of Southern California, USA GIFTS for Traveling Abroad: The International Travel Fair Nathalie Desrayaud, Florida International U, USA GIFTS: Embracing Vanishing Content Through the use of SnapChat in the Classroom L. Meghan Mahoney, West Chester U, USA GIFTS: Developing Collaborative Projects Yulia Strekalova, U of Florida, USA GIFTS: Student Participation in Sponsored Applied Research Projects Yulia Strekalova, U of Florida, USA Tom Kelleher, U of Florida, USA Robert Norberg, U of Florida, USA Debbie Treise, U of Florida, USA GIFTS: Teaching Future Scientists and Healthcare Professionals to Communicate Effectively With Public Audiences Melissa Bender, U of California - Davis, USA GIFTS: Teaching Identity With Selfies in an Interpersonal Communication or Social Media Class Jennifer E Kienzle, U of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA GIFTS: Teaching Journalism Using Technology and Social Media Ee Lyn Tan, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE GIFTS: The Power to Navigate the Internet Safely: A Hands-on Approach to Learn About Online Safety Using Protection Motivation Theory Carie Cunningham, Michigan State U, USA Mengtian Jiang, Michigan State U, USA Tom Day, Michigan State U, USA Saleem Elias Alhabash, Michigan State U, USA Shelia Cotten, Michigan State U, USA Nora J Rifon, Michigan State U, USA Robert Larose, Michigan State U, USA Kabine Diane, Michigan State U, USA Alex Gorbachenko, Pennsylvania State U, USA GIFTS: “Dented Helmet vs. Spambot": Gamifing Impromptu Speech for ESL/ESF Students Davide Girardelli, Wenzhou-Kean U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Patrizia Barroero, Wenzhou-Kean U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 6053 Monday 08:00-09:15 Fuji Communication and Power in the Changing Societies of Russia and Eurasia Sponsored Sessions Chair Michael David Hazen, Wake Forest U, USA Participants Kyrgyz Press and Influence of Russian Media Elira Turdubaeva, American U of Central Asia, KYRGYZSTAN Business Communicating With Power: Axiological Paradigm of Post-Soviet Russia in Intercultural Aspect Maria Pilgun, Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Between the Everyday and the Extraordinary: Perceived Affordances of ICTs for Communicating Dissent Tetyana Lokot, U of Maryland, USA The Nation and the Citizens: Exploring the Functions of Communications in Russian People's Perception of the Political and Economic Transitions Qingjiang (Q. J.) Yao, Lamar U, USA Communicating With Power Through Internet: e-Services and e-Complaints in Russia Anna Trakhtenberg, Ural State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Entering the Debate: Mongolian Pastoral Nomadic Womens' use of Cell Phones and SMS in National Referendum Votes Allison Hahn, Baruch College, USA The Power and Gender Discourse in the Post-Soviet Space and Today Elena Borisovna Ponomarenko, People’s Friendship U of Russia, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Respondent Michael David Hazen, Wake Forest U, USA This program, sponsored by the Russian Communication Association, explores the changes in communication in the evolving societies of Russia and Eurasia (the former Soviet bloc). The continuing relationships between these societies are explored in terms of the nature of the public realm of communication, the pervasive influence of new media in these changes, and the relationship of communication to values in these societies. These societies are related by their Soviet heritage and the resulting issues of conflict and cooperation about various issues in their evolving cultures. In addition to Russia, this program includes papers dealing with the Ukraine (Lokot), Kyrgyzstan (Turdubaeva & Lehtisaari), and Mongolia (Hahn). 6054 Monday 08:00-09:15 Sakura Transforming Mediascapes Through Critical Practice, Policy, and Pedagogy Feminist Scholarship Chair Sandra Jeppesen, Lakehead U Orillia, CANADA Participants Academic Participation in Canadian Community Television Policy: A Case Study in Communicating with Power David Skinner, York U, CANADA Academia as a Stakeholder: Communicating With Power(s) in Internet Governance Stefania Milan, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participatory Action Research with Grassroots Media Activists: Challenging Power Through Alternative Journalism Practices Sandra Jeppesen, Lakehead U Orillia, CANADA Developing Communicative Power: Experiential Learning as Critically Reflexive Pedagogy In and Out of the Classroom Patricia Mazepa, York U, CANADA Teaching to/about Work in the Communication Industries Tanner F Mirrlees, U of Ontario Institute of Technology, CANADA There are sometimes disconnects between academic media research and the information utilized by media policy makers in their decisions; university curriculum and pedagogy and the practical dimensions of media work; and the relationships between academics and radical activist organizations. How do we navigate these disjunctures while creating critical, transformative practices, policies and pedagogies? This panel explores a number of initiatives that address these disjunctures and gaps. 6060 Monday 08:00-09:15 Olive Balance and Bias in News Exposure Political Communication Chair Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA Participants Desired vs. Correct Conclusions: The Motivated Selection of Balanced Content and Numerical vs. Narrative Evidence Carlos Manuel Brenes Peralta, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Magdalena E. Wojcieszak, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Yphtach Lelkes, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Electrophysiology Reveals the Dynamics of Attentional Biases to Negative and Positive Information During Candidate Evaluation Jason C. Coronel, Ohio State U, USA Friendly Parties Benefit From Friendly Media Because of Hostile Media Perceptions Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Tilo Hartmann, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Martin Tanis, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Anita M. J. van Hoof, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Negativity Biases in Reactions to Network News: A Cross-National, Psychophysiological Pilot Study Stuart Soroka, U of Michigan, USA Patrick Fournier, U de Montreal, CANADA Lilach Nir, Hebrew U, ISRAEL 6061 Monday 08:00-09:15 Sage Advances and Challenges in Media Literacy Scholarship Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Conceptual Challenges in Designing Measures for Media Literacy Studies W. James Potter, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Transmedia Literacy: Rethinking Media Literacy in the New Media Ecology Carlos Alberto Scolari, U Pompeu Fabra, SPAIN The Development of a School-Based Intervention to Empower Children to Cope With Advertising Esther Rozendaal, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Impact of Internet Literacy, Internet Addiction Symptoms on Quality of Life Wenying Wu, Dalian U of Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Qiaolei Jiang, Dalian U of Technology, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondent Claudia Riesmeyer, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY 6070 Monday 08:00-10:45 Tower Penthouse 2016 San Diego Conference Planning Meeting Sponsored Sessions Chair Paula M. Gardner, McMaster U, CANADA Participants Sahara Byrne, Cornell U, USA Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Lee Humphreys, Cornell U, USA Nicole Ellison, U of Michigan, USA Nicole Maurantonio, U of Richmond, USA Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Xinghua Li, Babson College, USA Anamik Saha, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Stine Eckert, Wayne State U, USA Julia Kneer, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Shiv Ganesh, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND Jeff Niederdeppe, Cornell U, USA Rachel L. Bailey, Washington State U, USA Stephanie Kelly, North Carolina A&T State U, USA Chia-Fang (Sandy) Hsu, U of Wyoming, USA Jordan E. Soliz, U of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA Jennifer A. Samp, U of Georgia, USA Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Jessica Sarah Robles, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Eve C. Ng, Ohio U, USA Travers Scott, Clemson U, USA Young Mie Kim, U of Wisconsin, USA Patricia Frances Phalen, George Washington U, USA Veronika Karnowski, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Bart J. van den Hooff, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Mirca Madianou, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Kimberly A. Gross, George Washington U, USA Stephen Harrington, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA Tang Tang, U of Akron, USA Catherine L. Preston, U of Kansas, USA Adrienne Shaw, Temple U, USA Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Tai-Quan Winson Peng, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Jonathan J.H. Zhu, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Laura Sawyer, International Communication Association, USA Michael L. Haley, International Communication Association, USA John Paul Gutierrez, International Communication Association, USA Jennifer Le, International Communication Association, USA Diana Ingenhoff, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND 6220 Monday 09:30-10:45 Argos C Mass Communicating With Power: Exploring Media’s Capacity to Promote Moral Emotions and Inspire Prosociality Mass Communication Participants Mapping the Anatomy of Inspiration: Identifying and Analyzing Elicitors of Self-Transcendent Emotions in Media Katherine R. Dale, Florida State U, USA Arthur A. Raney, Florida State U, USA Sophie H Janicke, U of Arkansas, USA When We are the Creators: Implications of User Generation of Inspiring Media Messages Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Arienne Ferchaud, Pennsylvania State U, USA Keunyeong (Karina) Kim, California State U, Dominguez Hills, USA Ruoxu Wang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Fan Yang, Pennsylvania State U, USA Thomas Franklin Waddell, Pennsylvania State U, USA Tsai-Wei Chen, Pennsylvania State U, USA Examining Video Games’ Power to Inspire Prosociality through Self-Transcendent Emotions Daniel Possler, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Courage to Face the Truth: Positive, Negative and Mixed Affect as Predictors of Individuals’ Acceptance of Ego-Threatening Information in Prosocial Media Messages Anne Bartsch, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Johanna Keppeler, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Andrea Kloss, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Lukas A. Angerer, Erfurt U, GERMANY Miriam Humml, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Theresa Leitner, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Self-Construal and Elevation: Intercultural Differences in Transported Values Through Mass Media Content Diana Rieger, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Lena Frischlich, U of Cologne, GERMANY Mary Beth Oliver, Pennsylvania State U, USA Moral Emotions in Pro-Environmental Messages Laura M. Arpan, Florida State U, USA Arthur A. Raney, Florida State U, USA Zihan Wang, Florida State U, USA Exploring the “Spirit” of Inspiring Media Sophie H Janicke, U of Arkansas, USA The mass communication canon is filled with studies probing the deleterious effects of media content and technology on individuals and society as a whole. In recent years, though, scholars have increasingly explored ways that the power of media communication can be harnessed to promote personal well-being and human flourishing and to inspire prosocial and others’ benefitting behaviors. Reflecting on the conference theme of “Communicating with Power,” scholars from eight different institutions in the United States and Germany will discuss their ongoing efforts to examine the ways that media content has the power to trigger moral emotional reactions and how those reactions may (or may not) be associated with beneficial personal and social outcomes. 6221 Monday 09:30-10:45 Argos D Innovative Approaches and New Measures Information Systems Chair Petro Tolochko, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Participants Newsflow: An R Package for Analyzing Content Homogeneity and News Diffusion Using Computational Text Analysis Kasper Welbers, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Wouter van Atteveldt, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS On the Bubble: An Internet-Scale Investigation of Location-Based Algorithmic Filtering to Political Content Rebecca J Weiss, Stanford U, USA Charles Berret, Columbia U, USA Determining Political Text Complexity: An Analysis of Measures and Applications Petro Tolochko, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Hajo G. Boomgaarden, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Development and Validation of a Scale to Measure Flow Experience During Radio Reception Benedikt Spangardt, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Nicolas Dominik Karl Ruth, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Holger Schramm, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Same Same but Different: Testing the Invariance of Measurements of Entertainment Experiences Across Media Formats Carina Weinmann, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Franziska Susanne Roth, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Frank M. Schneider, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Melanie Bindl, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Peter Vorderer, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Towards a Preliminary Self-Report Measure of Cognitive Dissonance for Communication Research Yuhua (Jake) Liang, Chapman U, USA Seungcheol Austin Lee, Northern Kentucky U, USA Generally Speaking: Theorizing and Measuring Abstract vs. Concrete Thinking About Mediated Health Messages and its Effects Sabine Reich, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Evaluation of Spitzberg’s Meme Diffusion Model: Bridging the Scientific Divide Between Communication and Computer Science Ly Dinh, U of Illinois, USA Mufan Luo, U of Illinois, USA Christofer Skurka, Cornell U, USA 6222 Monday 09:30-10:45 Argos E The Power of Discussion Among Public Relations Scholars (HIGH-DENSITY SESSION) Public Relations Chair Shannon A. Bowen, U of South Carolina, USA Participants Social Media Communication Preferences Among Stakeholders of Business-to-Business Companies Matthes Fleck, Lucerne U of Applied Sciences and Arts, SWITZERLAND Anja Janoschka, Lucerne U of Applied Sciences and Arts, SWITZERLAND Exploring Practitioners’ Stresses From Managing Agency-Client Relationships at Hong Kong Public Relations Agencies Lei Vincent Huang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Clients in Interaction: An Alternative Perspective on Public Relations Consulting Clarissa Schoeller, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Hybrid Strategy: Integration or Interference? How Corporate Communication Impacts Consumers’ Memory and Company Evaluation Zifei Chen, U of Miami, USA Weiting Tao, U of Miami, USA Communicating Tobacco-Free Policies in the Tobacco Belt: The Influence of Culture on Public Relations Laura E Young, Butler U, USA Rachael A Record, San Diego State U, USA 6224 Monday 09:30-10:45 Navis A Credibility and Trust in News Journalism Studies Chair Hillel Nossek, Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee, ISRAEL Participants The Impact of Trust on Online News Consumption and Participation Richard Fletcher, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Sora Park, U of Canberra, AUSTRALIA Effects of Editorial Media Bias Perception and Media Trust on the Use of Traditional, Citizen, and Social Media News Alberto Ardevol-Abreu, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Homero Gil de Zuniga, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA The Depiction of Problems of Trust in the News: An Explorative Study to Disclose Trust Frames Katherine Marie Grosser, Research Training Group "Trust and Communication in a Digitized World", U of Muenster, GERMANY Through the Truth Goggles: An Experimental Investigation of Perceived Credibility and Quality With the Use of A Fact-Checking Prototype Heather Shoenberger, U of Oregon, USA Glenn M. Leshner, U of Oklahoma, USA Esther Thorson, U of Missouri, USA When Politicians Go Native: Consequences of Political Native Advertising for Citizens’ Trust in Political News Erik Knudsen, U of Bergen, NORWAY Magnus Hoem Iversen, U of Bergen, NORWAY 6225 Monday 09:30-10:45 Navis B Communication and Health Disparities in Migrant, Low-Income, and Digital Communities Health Communication Chair Jeffery Chaichana Peterson, Washington State U, USA Participants Food Insecurity in Singapore: How the Low-Income Negotiate Health, Structure, and the Paradox of Choice Naomi Tan, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Satveer Kaur-Gill, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Mohan Jyoti Dutta, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Nina Venkataraman, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Health, Communication, and the Digital: Untangling Digital Communication in Contemporary Health-Related Practices Stefania Vicari, U of Leicester - Department of Media and Communication, UNITED KINGDOM Listening and Health: Voice of Bangladeshi Expatriate Workers From the Middle East Raihan Jamil, Zayed U, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES Habibul Khondker, Zayed U, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES The Support Relationship Between Caregivers of Dementia Patients and Live-In Foreign Domestic Helpers in Singapore Iccha Basnyat, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Leanne Chang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Understanding Immigrants and Minorities’ Avoidance of Seeking Medical Treatment in a Host Country: A Case Study with Foreign Workers in Japan Sachiko Terui, U of Oklahoma, USA 6226 Monday 09:30-10:45 Navis C Experimental Studies of Robots and Agents Communication and Technology Chair Tony Liao, Temple U, USA Participants In a Robot’s Body: Illusory Bilocation of the Self During Artificial Body Reduplication Laura Aymerich-Franch, CNRS-AIST Joint Robotics Laboratory, JAPAN Damien Petit, CNRS-AIST Joint Robotics Laboratory, JAPAN Gowrishankar Ganesh, CNRS-AIST Joint Robotics Laboratory, JAPAN Abderrahmane Kheddar, CNRS-AIST Joint Robotics Laboratory, JAPAN Look Into My Blinking Red Eye! The Effects of Humanlike and Robot-Specific Nonverbal Behavior on Perception, Emotion, and Behavior Astrid Marieke Rosenthal-von der Puetten, U of Duisburg Essen, GERMANY Jonathan Herrmann, U Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Touching a Mechanical Body: Tactile Contact With Intimate Parts of a Human-Shaped Robot is Physiologically Arousing Jamy Li, Stanford U, USA Wendy Ju, Stanford U, USA Byron Reeves, Stanford U, USA Social Snacking With a Virtual Agent: On the Interrelation of Need to Belong and Social Effects of Rapport When Interacting With Artificial Entities Nicole C. Kramer, U of Duisburg - Essen, GERMANY Gale M Lucas, U of Southern California, USA Lea Schmitt, U Duisburg-Essen, GERMANY Jonathan Gratch, U of Southern California, USA 6230 Monday 09:30-10:45 Nire Gaming and Health Communication Health Communication Chair Dennis Frohlich, Bloomsburg U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants A Puzzle of Adherence to Exergames: Assessing Self-Centered and Environment-Driven Factors Hyang-Sook Kim, Towson U, USA Youjeong Kim, New York Institute of Technology, USA Hypervideo for the Support of Physical Exercises: A Long-Term Evaluation in a Rehabilitation Scenario Katrin Tonndorf, Passau U, GERMANY Cancer Survivors Who Play Recreational Computer Games: Motivations for Playing and Associations With Beneficial Psychological Outcomes Maria Leonora G. Comello, U of North Carolina, USA Diane B. Francis, U of North Carolina, USA Laura H Marshall, U of North Carolina, USA Deanna Puglia, U of North Carolina, USA The Narrative Impact of Active Video Games (AVG) on Physical Activities (PA) Among Children Amy Shirong Lu, Northeastern U, USA Thomas Baranowski, Baylor College of Medicine, USA S. L. Hong, Ohio U, USA Richard Buday, Archimage, Inc, USA Debbe Thompson, Baylor College of Medicine, USA A Beltran, Baylor College of Medicine, USA H. Dadabhoy, Baylor College of Medicine, USA T Chen, Baylor College of Medicine, USA 6231 Monday 09:30-10:45 Kusu Internet-Mediated Communication and Politics in the Post-Soviet World Communication and Technology Participants Breaking the Stalemate of Leaderless Protest: Internet Elections as a Digital Tool to Centralize Collective Action in Russia Florian Toepfl, Free U of Berlin, GERMANY Political Communication in Russian New Media: “Opinions” vs. “News” Elena Vartanova, Lomonosov Moscow State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Patterns of political behavior on social networking platforms in Russia: Facebook vs. Vkontakte Anna Litvinenko, Free U of Berlin, GERMANY Svetlana S. Bodrunova, National Association of Mass Media Researchers, RUSSIAN FEDERATION The Use of Facebook by Ukrainian Journalists in the Post-EuroMaidan Ukraine: From Public Space to Public Sphere? Dariya Orlova, National U of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, UKRAINE The recent societal developments and changes in the media systems in the post-Soviet states (Russia, Ukraine and Belarus in particular) raise the question whether the rapid spread of internet-mediated communication in non-democratic states in the past two decades has empowered democratic forces – or rather played in the hand of ruling elites? While speculation on this question has recently been pervasive both in academic journals and the mass media, according to leading scholars in the field, a strong body of academic research on this question is only in the emerging. Within the current debate, there is a surprising scarcity of case-based, cross-national perspectives. This is precisely the gap that this panel hopes to contribute to fill in. 6232 Monday 09:30-10:45 Kashi Social Media Gratifications Communication and Technology Chair Erin Flynn Klawitter, Northwestern U, USA Participants Overgratified, Undergratified, or Just Right?: Applying the Gratification Discrepancy Approach to Investigate Recurrent Facebook Use Shelby Rokito, U of Pennsylvania, USA Natalya N. Bazarova, Cornell U, USA Uses and Gratifications of Social Networking Sites for Social Capital: Comparing Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat Joe Phua, U of Georgia, USA Seung-A Annie Jin, Boston College, USA Jihoon (Jay) Kim, U of Georgia, USA Social Media Heterogeneity and Life Satisfaction Bumsoo Kim, U of Alabama, USA Jeyoung Oh, U of Alabama, USA Yonghwan Kim, U of Alabama, USA Benefits and Harms From Internet Use: A Differentiated Analysis in the UK Grant Blank, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Christoph Lutz, BI Norwegian Business School, NORWAY 6233 Monday 09:30-10:45 Kaede 6240 Monday 09:30-10:45 Rigel Negotiations and Portrayals of Motherhood in Media Discourses Around the World Feminist Scholarship Participants The Comparative News Framing of Postnatal Care: Differences Between The United States and South Korea Heeyoung Jung, Temple U, USA Nicole Henninger, Temple U, USA Taking Care, Bringing Life: A Poststructuralist Feminist Analysis of Knowledge and Power Discourses of Maternal Health in an Urban Basti in India Vinita Agarwal, Salisbury U, USA Ideologies of Motherhood in Contemporary Israeli TV Commercials Sigal Barak-Brandes, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Feminist Agency and Social Activism: Mother-Daughter Discourse in a Campaign by Dove in Israel Einat Lachover, Sapir College, ISRAEL Sigal Barak-Brandes, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Good Green Mothers: First-Time Mothers Explore Their Environmentalism Against Their Transition to Motherhood Niveen AbiGhannam, U of Texas, USA Lucy Atkinson, U of Texas, USA Changes in Broadcasting and News Systems Global Communication and Social Change Chair Suda Ishida, Hamline U, USA Participants The Transnationalization of Television in China: Processes and Dynamics, 1992-1996 Hong Zhang, Zheijang U, CHINA Controlling Affect in Hybrid Media System: Articulating and Circulating Emotion During a Disruptive Media Event Anna Rantasila, U of Tampere, FINLAND Nai-Wen Hong, Waseda U, JAPAN Katja Valaskivi, U of Tampere, FINLAND Risto Kunelius, U of Tampere, FINLAND Mikihito Tanaka, Waseda U, JAPAN The Shifting Paradigm of Korean Public Television: From National Propaganda to East Asian Hub Ju Oak Kim, Temple U, USA The Social, Political, and Economic Contexts Shaping the FM Dial in Amman, Jordan Gretchen Beth King, U of Ottawa, CA Why Audiences Stay Loyal to National Broadcast Television Joseph D. Straubhaar, U of Texas, USA Vanessa de Macedo Higgins Joyce, Texas State U, USA Jeremiah P. Spence, U of Texas, USA Vinicio Sinta, U of Texas, USA 6241 Monday 09:30-10:45 Vega The Study of Online Opinion Expression Mass Communication Chair Kyu Ho Youm, U of Oregon, USA Participants Bystander Intervention Against Uncivil User Comments: Do Intervention Information and User Responses Motivate Flagging? Anja Kalch, Augsburg U, GERMANY Teresa K. Naab, Augsburg U, GERMANY Tino GK Meitz, Leibniz ScienceCampus Tuebingen, GERMANY Communicating Policy to the Public: Influence of Online News Coverage and User-Generated Comments Rui Shi, U of Pennsylvania, USA It’s Different When It’s Real: Evaluating the Hypothetical Scenario Technique as a Measure of Opinion Expression Online Yu Won Oh, Purdue U, USA Trolling the Outspokenness: Exploring the Effects of Incivility on Spiral of Silence in News Comment Websites Shuning Lu, U of Texas, USA Gina Marie Chen, U of Texas, USA Deepa Fadnis, U of Texas, USA 6242 Monday 09:30-10:45 Kiku Digital Contention: Reflections on Two Generations of Activist Communication and Global Social Movements Global Communication and Social Change Chair Anna Feigenbaum, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Participants The Contemporary Epoch of Struggle: From the Global Justice Movement to the “Real Democracy” Movement Peter Funke, U of South Florida, USA Todd Wolfson, Rutgers U, USA Networked politics in the 21st Century: How the Very Strengths of Digital Technology Can Threaten Movement Survival Zeynep Tufekci, U of North Carolina, USA Criminalizing Dissent: State Repression, Video Activism, and Counter-Summit Protesting Chris Robe, Florida Atlantic U, USA Alternative video and activist television practices - connecting the past and the present Tina Askanius, Lund U, SWEDEN Respondent Anna Feigenbaum, Bournemouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Through an examination of activist media practices at select case studies from around the world, this panel will examine the evolution of the role of alternative media in an oversaturated media environment. It will look at the tensions and exchanges between traditions of autonomous media production and the increasing use of corporate-owned social media platforms that have come to dominate the digital activism scenario. Drawing out the underlying logics of movement politics informing these waves of protests, the panel will debate how activists’ digital communications can best conceptualized across time and place, emphasising the importance of not only describing, but understanding the interpersonal and infrastructural exchanges that make visible networked communications. 6243 Monday 09:30-10:45 Ran Public Service Media: An Idea of the Enlightenment? (Panel of the Polish Communication Association) Sponsored Sessions Chair Iwona Hofman, Marie-Curie Skłodowska U in Lublin, POLAND Participants “Amongst Partners and Competitors….”: The Value of an Ecosystem Approach to Define Public Service Broadcasting’s Remit and Legitimacy Tim Raats, Free U of Brussels, BELGIUM Karen Donders, Vrije U Brussel, BELGIUM Regulating Public Service Media in a Changing Media Ecology: A Comparative Analysis of 18 Media Systems Manuel Puppis, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Corinne Schweizer, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Laia Castro Herrero, U of Fribourg, SWITZERLAND Public Service Media and Quality Local Information Provision Henrik Ornebring, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Path-Dependency in the Evolution of Eastern European Public Service Media Peter Gross, U of Tennessee, USA Inside Public Service Media Firms: Challenges to Researching Organisational Cultures Lizzie Jackson, London South Bank U, UNITED KINGDOM Michal Glowacki, U of Warsaw, POLAND This panel brings together a range of scholars able to draw together a diversity of theoretical and methodological approaches to interrogate the idea of Public Service Media (PSM) in a post-enlightenment, post-mass media, global ecology. The panel will explain the necessary shifts in the traditional public broadcasting model. They will also be tasked with exploring the ways in which public service media enterprises organise and might re-organise internal structures and production processes in order to become more adaptive to external factors. 6245 Monday 09:30-10:45 Sumire Politicians on Social Media Political Communication Chair Jennifer Stromer-Galley, Syracuse U, USA Participants Effeminate Speech on New Media: @HillaryClinton’s Public Intimacy Through Relational Labor Flemming Schneider Rhode, U of Southern California, USA Tisha Dejmanee, U of Southern California, USA Michelle Obama, the First Lady of Social Media: The Symbolic Convergence of Social Media Visuals Newly Paul, Appalachian State U, USA Gregory Pearson Perreault, Appalachian State U, USA Mobilizing for Some: The Effects of Politicians’ Participatory Facebook Posts on Young People’s Political Efficacy Raffael Heiss, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Thanks for (Actually) Responding! How Citizen Demand Shapes Politicians’ Interactive Practices on Twitter Rebekah Tromble, Leiden U, THE NETHERLANDS The Social Media Logic of Political Interaction: Exploring Citizens’ and Politicians’ Relationship on Facebook and Twitter Bente Kalsnes, U of Oslo, NORWAY Anders Olof Larsson, Westerdals Oslo School of Arts, Communication and Technology, NORWAY Gunn Enli, U of Oslo, NORWAY 6246 Monday 09:30-10:45 Koh Communication and Technology: Philosophical and Historical Approaches Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Larry Gross, U of Southern California, USA Participants Communication and Moral Standing: Davidson and Kant Eli Dresner, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL "Communication" as a Deeply Contestable Concept Mats V. Bergman, U of Helsinki, FINLAND The Handshake of New Media and Theology: ICTs as Religious Constructs, Metaphors, and Experiences Menahem Blondheim, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Hananel Rosenberg, Hebrew U of Jerusalem / Ariel U, ISRAEL Rearticulating the Phonographic Archive Ella Klik, New York U, USA 6247 Monday 09:30-10:45 Yoh Revealing Hidden Bright Vectors: Undersung Communications and Policy Supports in Crises and Emergencies Theme Sessions Participants Between Help and High Water: ‘Ham Radio’ as Last-Line Resilience in Disaster Communications Iain Donald Macpherson, MacEwan U, CANADA Digital Self-Determination and Emergency Communications: Building and Advocating for Indigenous Telecommunications in Remote Northern Canada Rob McMahon, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Calling on the Crowd: Assessing the Opportunities and Challenges of Crowdsourced Information for Risk Reporting and Crisis Response Gordon Gow, U of Alberta, CANADA This panel presents its participants’ investigations into the ‘hidden vectors’ of communication utilized by community-based groups in peripheral and emergent spaces. The panelists discuss their examination of liminal ICT infrastructures that are put into action during crises and emergencies. Panelists also draw attention to the role that policy and regulatory frameworks play to either support or constrain the effective use of such tools and channels. Panelists report on their empirical research in this area, traversing a wide range of locales: North American suburban basements, First Nations communities of northern Canada, and the hallways of a Canadian university campus. Each presentation examines how community groups leverage ‘hidden vectors’ of crisis or emergency communication, often in adaptation to resource or policy constraints. 6248 Monday 09:30-10:45 Kei Culture, Politics, and Religion Intercultural Communication Chair Sorin Nastasia, Southern Illinois U, USA Participants Direct and Mediated Intercultural Contact: A Study of Attitudes Towards North Korea Dani Madrid-Morales, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Bolin Cao, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF From “Poison” to “Seeder”: The Gap Between Propaganda and Xuanchuan is Cultural Chunfeng Lin, U of Illinois, USA “Christmas is Now Cultural and There’s Nothing Discriminatory About It”: "Culture" as Legitimation Strategy in Discourses of Laïcité Melodine Chloe Sommier, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND En-countering Governmentality: The 'Quality' of Neoliberalism in China Byron Hauck, Simon Fraser U, CANADA Media Discourse: Clash of Civilization in Syrian Refugee Crises Sheida Shirvani, Ohio U - Zanesville, USA Purba Das, Ohio U Southern, USA 6249 Monday 09:30-10:45 Board Room Interpersonal Communication in Families Interpersonal Communication Chair Ashley Elrick, U of Utah, USA Participants A Grounded Theory of Familial Favoritism Jimmie Manning, Northern Illinois U, USA Andrea Lambert, Northern Kentucky U, USA Let’s Talk About Sex: An Examination Into Parent/Child Communication and College Students’ Sex Conversations Kellie Stanfield, U of Missouri, USA That's What She Said: Parent-Child Communication About Sex Lucy Niess, California State U, Fullerton, USA The Process of Family Member Marginalization: Examining Turning Points Experienced by Black Sheep Elizabeth Dorrance Hall, Utah State U, USA Like Mother, Like Daughter? A Cross-Generational Analysis of the Intergenerational Effects of Mothers’ Conflict Styles on Daughters’ in the Mother-Daughter Dyad Qin Zhang, Fairfield U, USA Maggie Wills, Fairfield U, USA 6253 Monday 09:30-10:45 Fuji Copyright, Digital Cultures of Use, and Democracy Communication Law & Policy Chair Sandra Braman, Texas A&M U, USA Participants Fundamental incompatibility Between Fans and Intellectual Property? Dōjinshi Creation, Anime Fansubbing, and Copyright Laws in Japan and the United States Thiam Huat Kam, Rutgers U, USA Digital Music Licensing: Using Statutory and Extended Collective Licensing to Solve Inequality and Inefficiency Ian Dunham, Rutgers U, USA The Politics of E-Books Yoonmo Sang, Howard U, USA Toward Cultural Democracy: Digital First Sale Doctrine and Copyright Yoonmo Sang, Howard U, USA 6254 Monday 09:30-10:45 Sakura Conflict Coaching and ADR Processes in Federal and State Government Agencies Organizational Communication Chair Martin Remland, West Chester U, USA Participants Conflict Coaching And Workplace Mediation: Issues And Recommendations For Intelligent Dispute System Design Tricia Suzanne Jones, Temple U, USA Adapting a Brief Conflict Coaching Model to a Two-Culture Workplace (American and Japanese) Merri Hanson King, Peninsula Mediation and ADR, AUSTRALIA Meredith Eckles, Sacred Heart U, USA Building Conflict Coaching in New York State Court System CRDCs Tricia Suzanne Jones, Temple U, USA Timothy Hedeen, Kennesaw State U, USA Cheryl Cutrona, Temple U, USA Respondent Deborah A. Cai, Temple U, USA Conflict coaching is a dispute resolution process, with the emphasis on conflict analysis and intervention rather than a general or executive coaching purpose. As such, it is critical that conflict coaches are knowledgeable about conflict dynamics and a variety of dispute resolution interventions. Understandably, conflict coaching was initially understood as a supplement to a mediation program. Eventually, conflict coaching became recognized as a stand-alone dispute resolution mechanism effective for a variety of workplace disputes, especially identity-based conflicts like affirmative-action and equal employment opportunity claims. This panel presents insights about conflict coaching as an ADR mechanism that has great promise for Organizational Dispute System Design. 6260 Monday 09:30-10:45 Olive Look Who’s Talking (Now) About Europe. Parties, Media, and Voters Between Financial Crisis and Euroskepticism Political Communication Chair Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Participants The End of Silencing Strategies Towards EU Integration? An Analysis of Parties’ Communication in the Run-Up to the EP Elections 2014 Michaela Maier, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Melanie Leidecker-Sandmann, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Franzisca Schmidt, IKMB U of Bern, SWITZERLAND Carlos Jalali, U of Aveiro, PORTUGAL Invisible Europe? Analysing Agenda Setting Regarding the EU in Party Communication During the 2014 EP Election Campaign on Facebook in the Czech Republic Vaclav Stetka, U of Prague, CZECH REPUBLIC Jan Svelch, U of Prague, CZECH REPUBLIC Faces of Euroskepticism in the mass media – A seven country analysis of mass media communication in the run-up to the EP elections 2014 Silke Adam, U of Bern, SWITZERLAND Beatrice Eugster, U of Bern, SWITZERLAND Eva Antl-Wittenberg, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Sylvia Kritzinger, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA EU attitudes in times of the economic crisis. News media’s potential to shape public opinion about EU performance Claes H. De Vreese, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Andreas Schuck, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The 2014 European Parliament (EP) elections took place under special conditions. Never before has the European integration project been as contested. Strong Euroskeptic sentiments on the side of citizens were accompanied by an unprecedented success of Euroskeptical parties – both fueled by the ongoing crisis of the Union regarding bailout, threatening breakdown of the Eurozone, and disputed austerity measures. In this panel we ask, 1) how parties campaign in times of this Euroskeptic challenge, i.e. whether proEuropean parties remain silent leaving the floor to Euroskeptics, 2) how mass media deal with this Euroskeptic challenge and 3) how citizens are affected by the information provided during the campaign. 6261 Monday 09:30-10:45 Sage Blue Sky Workshop: Social Media and Mobile Media as Survey Research Tools Sponsored Sessions Chair Louisa Ha, Bowling Green State U, USA Social Media and Mobile Media are penetrating into almost everyone’s daily lives and have become important media for survey research dissemination and data collection. However, not many academic researchers received training on using these media for survey research or know how to utilize the media creatively to conduct their survey research to maximize response rate and response quality. This workshop provides opportunity for fellow survey researchers both in the industry and in academe to share their experience and develop roadmaps on how to establish best practices for using these media for survey research. Participants should either have experience in using mobile media and social media in collecting survey/experiment data or at least large scale survey research experience. 6320 Monday 11:00-12:15 Argos C Communicating With and To Power: Building Communication Capacity to Tackle Wicked Problems Theme Sessions Chair Patricia Riley, U of Southern California, USA Participants The Role of Communication in the Political World Michael Delli Carpini, U of Pennsylvania, USA Communication for Effective Reforms Sina Odugbemi, World Bank Group, USA The Power of Global Media: Visual Arguments and Government Stories Thomas Hollihan, U of Southern California, USA The Power of Stories—Lessons From Health Campaigns Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA Social Media Campaigns and Big Data: Measuring Impact Francois Bar, U of Southern California, USA Strategic Narratives: A Video Advocacy Toolkit Sandra Ristovska, U of Pennsylvania, USA Global Strategic Communication—Governments, Advocacy and Power Monroe E. Price, U of Pennsylvania, USA New Approaches to Leading Change and Innovation Ernest J. Wilson III, U of Southern California, USA Scenarios: the Power of the Future Christina Hagen, U of Southern California, USA Respondent Xin Cui, China Development Research Foundation, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The World Bank-Annenberg Schools Summer Institute in Reform Communication was created for leaders in the World Bank, NGOs, IGOs, Government Ministries in LDCs, and Community Based Organizations. Its theoretical approach conceives of communication as both a process that is constitutive of the interactions that produce and reproduce the power structures that maintain the intractability of problems that challenge reforms, but also conceives of communication as a set of powerful skills and capabilities that can build the capacity for change in individuals, teams, organizations, networks, and cultural systems. This panel is a hybrid discussion where the background and framework for the Institute will be presented followed by quick 5-minute overviews of their modules by nine of the instructors at the Institute. 6321 Monday 11:00-12:15 Argos D Attention and Divided Attention Information Systems Chair Richard Wayne Huskey, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Participants Jack of All Trades In The Era Of Media: Multitasking and Attentional Influences on Advertising Effectiveness Anlan Zheng, U of Illinois, USA Brittany R. L. Duff, U of Illinois, USA Pick a Carrot: The Effects of Multitasking With Screen Devices on Snack Food Choices Anastasia G Kononova, Michigan State U, USA Anna R. McAlister, Michigan State U, USA Hyun Jung Oh, Michigan State U, USA Wonkyung Kim, Michigan State U, USA Nagwan Refaat Zahry, Michigan State U, USA Sean Cash, Tufts U, USA Chen Qi, Michigan State U, USA Xinrui Gao, Michigan State U, USA Luiz Figueira, Michigan State U, USA Xueyiting Li, Michigan State U, USA Media Multitasking With Music: Examining the Role of Sensation Seeking Jonghwan Baek, Michigan State U, USA The Mood Regulatory Function of Media Multitasking Nicole Neda Zamanzadeh, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Linz Daniel, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA The Two-Screen Experience: Examining the Interplay Between Multitasking and Involvement on User Perceptions of Television Programs Jacqueline Y Borrett, U of North Carolina, USA Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of Florida, USA An Eye-Tracking Study Into Multiscreening: Viewing Behavior, Reporting, and Effects Claire Monique Segijn, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Hilde Voorveld, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Lisa Vandeberg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS A Watched Pot Never Boils During Multitasking Ranran Zhu, U of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Prabu David, Michigan State U, USA Developing and Validating an Unobtrusive and Online Measure of the Attentional Component of Flow Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Richard Wayne Huskey, U of California Santa Barbara, USA Britney Nicole Craighead, U of California, Santa Barbara, USA Magnum Terrazas, U of California Santa Barbara, USA 6322 Monday 11:00-12:15 Argos E In the Digital Mirror: Avatars in Games Game Studies Chair Jaime Banks, West Virginia U, USA Participants The Effect of Avatars’ Transformed Facial Similarity on Users’ Sense of Copresence Doohwang Lee, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jung-Gyo Lee, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Young-Nam Seo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Minkyung Kim, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Wooyeong Kil, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sungmin Kang, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyobeom Seo, Kyung Hee U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Many Faces of Identification: Validating a Polythetic Metric for Assessing Player-Avatar Identification in Video Games Edward Downs, U of Minnesota - Duluth, USA Nicholas David Bowman, West Virginia U, USA Jaime Banks, West Virginia U, USA Variation in Player-Avatar Relationships: Towards a Genre-Independent Typology Daniel Possler, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Christoph Klimmt, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Natascha Carnol, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Ina Weber, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Arthur A. Raney, Florida State U, USA Avatarifying Communication in Education: Using Avatars to Enhance Student Self-Efficacy and Performance Rabindra A. Ratan, Michigan State U, USA Young June Sah, Michigan State U, USA R.V. Rikard, Michigan State U, USA 6324 Monday 11:00-12:15 Navis A Dialogues in Journalism Studies: The New Gatekeepers Journalism Studies Participants The rise of expert amateurs in the realm of knowledge production: The case of Wikipedia’s newsworkers Heather Ford, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Informational and social aspects of news dissemination on Facebook and Twitter Elizabeth Dubois, U of Ottawa, CANADA Trending this moment: Examining social media platforms as information gatekeepers through Facebook’s Trending topics and Twitter’s Moments Stefanie Duguay, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Second-Order Objectivity and the Outsourcing of Professional News Judgement C.W. Anderson, CUNY- College of Staten Island, USA Respondent Stephen D. Reese, U of Texas - Austin, USA In 1950, David Manning White applied Kurt Lewin’s social-psychological theory of gatekeeping to the process by which newswire editors decide which stories will make it to print and which will not. Since then, gatekeeping theory has become a foundational premise for understanding media and communication. The panel will respond to early conceptions of gatekeeping theory in order to understand how news, information and knowledge are mediated today. In doing so, we hope to contribute to the emerging scholarly understanding of how networks are serving to catalyse a major reconfiguration of the groups and individuals who have significantly greater power to represent the world than others. 6325 Monday 11:00-12:15 Navis B Antidrinking/Antialcohol Health Communication Health Communication Chair Riina Raudne, Health Estonia Foundation, ESTONIA Participants Assessing Drinking Norms From Offline Experience and Social Network Site Use Jian Rui, Lamar U, USA The Enduring Impact of Parental Communication on Future Binge Drinking and Arrests: A Longitudinal Analysis Candice Danae Donaldson, Claremont Graduate U, USA Lindsay Handren, Claremont Graduate U, USA William D. Crano, Claremont Graduate U, USA The Influence of Affective, Cognitive, and Overall Attitude on Adolescents’ Intention to Drink Alcohol Simon Zebregs, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Anneke de Graaf, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jeroen Lammers, Trimbos Institute Netherlands Institute for Mental Health and Addiction, THE NETHERLANDS Peter Neijens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Consuming Alcohol to Prepare for Adulthood: An Event History Analysis of Chinese College Students’ Drinking Behavior Yi Mou, Shanghai Jiao Tong U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Carolyn A. Lin, U of Connecticut, USA 6326 Monday 11:00-12:15 Navis C The Politics of Social Media in China Communication and Technology Chair Weiyu Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Participants Do Circumvention Tools Promote Democratic Values? Exploring the Correlates of Anticensorship Technology Adoption in China Fei Chris Shen, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Zhi’an Zhang, Sun Yat Sen U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Does Site Architecture Matter? Political Implications of Public- vs. Private-Oriented Social Network Sites in China Chris Chao Su, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Francis L. F. Lee, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Political Information Use on Mobile SNS and Political Discussion in China: The Role of WeChat Users’ Social Networks Aimei Yang, U of Southern California, USA Linjuan Rita Men, U of Florida, USA WeChat as a Semipublic Alternative Sphere: Exploring the Use of WeChat Among Chinese Older Adults Lei Guo, Boston U, USA 6330 Monday 11:00-12:15 Nire Framing Health Risk: Environment, Cancer, Genetics Health Communication Chair Nakia Mariah Matthias, Ohio U, USA Participants Business and Breakthrough: Framing (Expanded) Genetic Carrier Screening for the Public Avery E. Holton, U of Utah, USA Heather Elaine Canary, U of Utah, USA Bob Wong, U of Utah, USA Illness Uncertainty and Uncertainty Management in Carriers and Individuals With Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency Amber Kelly Worthington, Pennsylvania State U, USA Roxanne Parrott, Pennsylvania State U, USA Rachel A. Smith, Pennsylvania State U, USA Interplay of Threat, Efficacy, and Uncertainty in Cancer News Coverage: Analysis of News Content and Effects in South Korea Minsun Shim, Inha U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Yong-Chan Kim, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Keeho Park, Nanyang Technological U/Telenor, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Predictors of Cancer Risk Perception: Do Generational Differences and Emotion Matter? Yen-I Lee, U of Georgia, USA Jeong Yeob Han, U of Georgia, USA Who is to Blame? Media Framing of Responsibility for Pediatric Environmental Health and Mothers’ Perceptions of Accountability Susan L Mello, Northeastern U, USA Andy S.L. Tan, Harvard U, USA 6331 Monday 11:00-12:15 Kusu Exploring Online Communites Communication and Technology Chair Carmina Teresa Rodriguez Hidalgo, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Enhancing Effectiveness of Computer-Mediated Collaborative Learning Through Social Dynamics Jeremy Ong, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Investigating the Factors in Recruiting Participants to CSR Online Communities Sun Young Lee, Texas Tech U, USA Jaeki Song, Texas Tech U, USA Jason Triche, U of Montana, USA Sangmi Chai, Ewha Womans U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Reimagining Internet Geographies Through Usage: An Ethnological Approach Harsh Taneja, U of Missouri, USA The Wikipedia Adventure: A Field Experiment Evaluating an Interactive Tutorial for Newcomers Sneha Narayan, Northwestern U, USA Jake Orlowitz, Wikimedia Foundation, USA Jonathan Morgan, Wikimedia Foundation, USA Benjamin Mako Hill, U of Washington, USA Aaron Shaw, Northwestern U, USA 6332 Monday 11:00-12:15 Kashi Framing and Logics Surveillance and Privacy Communication and Technology Chair Aram A. Sinnreich, American U, USA Participants Trading Password for Chocolate? Reciprocity Increases the Willingness to Communicate Personal Data Christian Happ, U Trier, GERMANY Andre Melzer, U of Luxembourg, LUXEMBOURG Georges Steffgen, U of Luxembourg, LUXEMBOURG Framing the Field of Online Self-Disclosure in Mainstream News Media Tamar Ashuri, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Ruth Halperin, IDC, ISRAEL Between the "Right to be Forgotten" and the “Celebrity Hack” Press Coverage on Digital Privacy Thilo von Pape, U Hohenheim, GERMANY Sabine Trepte, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Cornelia Mothes, Ohio State U, USA The Logic of Connective Surveillance: Distributed Social Movements and the Role of Centralized Communication Infrastructures Tim Libert, U of Pennsylvania, USA 6333 Monday 11:00-12:15 Kaede Interactional Affordances of Mediated Communication: The Analysis of Mobile Phones Use, Web TV Interviews, Webcast Football Talk, and Microblog Posts Language & Social Interaction Communication and Technology Chair Nadezhda Mihaylova Sotirova, U of Minnesota - Morris, USA Participants Intertextuality and Nationalism Discourse: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Microblog Posts in China Mengjun Jun Guo, U of Washington, USA Mobile Phones as an Interactional Resource in Assessment Activities Joshua Raclaw, U of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Jessica Sarah Robles, Loughborough U, UNITED KINGDOM Stephen DiDomenico, Rutgers U, USA Webcast Football Talk and the Performance of ‘Super-Liveliness’ Goran Eriksson, Oslo and Akershus U College, SWEDEN ’They Thought It was a Mistake All the Time’. Web TV Interviews With Politicians: A Fuzzy Communicative Activity Type Asa Kroon, Oslo and Akershus U College, SWEDEN 6340 Monday 11:00-12:15 Rigel Class, Gender, and Power Dynamics in Global Virtual Work Global Communication and Social Change Chair Wing Fai Leung, U College Cork, IRELAND Participants Crowdsourced Paid Work to India: Exploring an Emergent Form of Virtual Offshoring Premilla D'Cruz, Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, INDIA Ernesto Noronha, Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, INDIA Uber and Labour Issues: Challenges and Continuity in Virtual Work Wing Fai Leung, U College Cork, IRELAND Virtual Work as a Route to Overcoming Inequalities in the Hollywood Organisational Model? Keith Randle, U of Hertfordshire, UNITED KINGDOM Virtual Work as Feminised Work Juliet Webster, Internet Interdisciplinary Institute UOC, SPAIN. 6341 Monday 11:00-12:15 Vega Transportation and Media Entertainment Mass Communication Chair Jonathan Cohen, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Participants Toward a Dynamic Model of Empathy, Narrative Transportation, and Autobiographical Memory James G Collier, Ohio State U, USA John Tchernev, Miami U, USA Zheng Joyce Wang, Ohio State U, USA Jennifer Tyrawski, Ohio State U, USA Narrative as a Moral Trainer: Building Moral Character Through Stories Barbara Maleckar, Augsburg U, GERMANY Helena Bilandzic, Augsburg U, GERMANY The Cultivation of Moral Reasoning: A Prolonged Exposure Experiment Cornelia Schnell, Augsburg U, GERMANY Helena Bilandzic, Augsburg U, GERMANY Transporting to the Dark Side: The Role of Transportation Plays in Enjoyment of Horror Movies Yan Luo, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA 6342 Monday 11:00-12:15 Kiku New/Emerging Information and Communication Technologies in Environmental Collaboration Environmental Communication Chair Jennifer Good, Brock U, CANADA Participants Cyberspace and Conferencing in the Era of Climate Change: Best Practices, Limitations and Ways Forward Jennifer Good, Brock U, CANADA It Takes a Village to Build a Sea Level Rise App: Informing Citizens About Climate Change in Miami Susan L. Jacobson, Florida International U, USA Juliet Gill Pinto, Florida International U, USA Robert Gutsche Jr, Florida International U, USA Knowledge Empowered: Social Media and Scientists’ Public Engagement in China’s Environmental Movement Xiaole Ni, State U of New York - College of Environmental Science and Forestry, USA David Sonnenfeld, State U of New York - College of Environmental Science and Forestry, USA Activism via ICTs: Indigenous Messages in Today’s Global Environmental Movements Nancy A. Van Leuven, California State U, East Bay, USA Thomasena Shaw, Bridgewater State U, USA Danielle Newton, California State U - Sacramento, USA 6343 Monday 11:00-12:15 Ran The Study of News and Social Media Mass Communication Chair Jayeon (Janey) Lee, Lehigh U, USA Participants Not Funny! The Effects of Objective Versus Humorous Journalistic Responses to Uncivil User Comments Marc Ziegele, U of Mainz, GERMANY Pablo B. Jost, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Recommender System Cues and Co-Orientation in Users’ Online News Selection Ines Engelmann, Friedrich Schiller U Jena, GERMANY Manuel Wendelin, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Social Media Embeddedness in the Newsroom: Institutional Arrangements and Gatekeeping Adjustments Clarissa C. David, U of the Philippines, PHILIPPINES Edson Tandoc, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Evelyn Katigbak, U of the Philippines, PHILIPPINES Twitter Me This: Does News Media Reliance on Quoting From Twitter Affect Credibility and Quality Judgments? Michael Schmierbach, Pennsylvania State U, USA Anne Oeldorf-Hirsch, U of Connecticut, USA Michael P. Boyle, West Chester U, USA Alyssa Appelman, Northern Kentucky U, USA 6345 Monday 11:00-12:15 Sumire Survey Research and Media Effects Political Communication Chair Michael F. Meffert, Leiden U, NL Participants Attitude Strength and Weaknesses: A Comprehensive Study on Effect Sizes of Attitude Attributes on Opinion Change Dominik Johannes Leiner, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY It’s Not Only the Economy, Stupid! It’s the Media, Too! Christina Koehler, U of Mainz, GERMANY Mathias Weber, U Mainz, GERMANY Oliver Quiring, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Let’s Talk About Reliability: Question Order and the Vulnerability of Political Talk Frequency Measures Mark Boukes, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Alyssa C Morey, State U of New York - Albany, USA Messages Mismeasured: Minimal Media Effects as a Consequence of Unreliable Measurement Michael Scharkow, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Marko Bachl, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY 6346 Monday 11:00-12:15 Koh Media Logics in the Age of New Media: Critical Reflections on a Concept Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Stig Hjarvard, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Participants Media logics: Translating a Media Concept to a Sociological Vocabulary Stig Hjarvard, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK Algorithms, Big Data, and the Role of Network Media Logic Ulrike Klinger, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Jakob Svensson, Uppsala U, SWEDEN Media Logics, Technology and Media Grammar: New Perspectives on the Relation Between Technology, Organisations, and Power Structures Mario Anastasiadis, U of Bonn, GERMANY Caja C. Thimm, U of Bonn, GERMANY Changing Media Technologies, Changing News Media Logic: Understanding the Changing Dynamics of the Mediatization of Politics Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Frank Esser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Respondent David L. Altheide, Arizona State U, USA This panel aims to critically examine the problems and possibilities of developing the concept of ‘media logics’ in the age of new media, in particular social network media. This involves a careful examination of the different dimensions or layers of logics, including technological, commercial, social, and semiotic dimensions. Furthermore, we need to develop an understanding of media logics that allow us to understand the functioning of media at the level of both societal structure and individual agency. The panel participants have all contributed extensively to the research on media logics and the respondent is the co-founder of the concept. 6347 Monday 11:00-12:15 Yoh Online Memorialization, Mourning, and the Posthumous Management of the Digital Self Popular Communication Communication and Technology Chair Mirca Madianou, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Stewarding Someone Else’s Self: Managing Postmortem Digital Identities on Facebook Jed R Brubaker, U of Colorado Boulder, USA Visual Afterlife: A Case Study of Posthumous Camera Phone Practices Larissa Hjorth, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA Jung Moon, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Mobile-Mediated Companionship in Grief Kathleen Mae Cumiskey, CUNY- College of Staten Island, USA ‘We Hope They Might Reply to Us One Day’: Coping With Extreme Loss Through Social Media in the Aftermath of Disaster Mirca Madianou, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Jonathan Corpus Ong, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Social media in the Funeral Industry: Surveying Adoption and Adaptation Bjorn Nansen, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Michael Arnold, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Martin Gibbs, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Tamara Kohn, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Luke van Ryn, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA This panel draws together a group of international scholars in order to develop a multidisciplinary dialogue about digital afterlife and the popular practices of memorialization and coping with loss. In so doing the panel brings together approaches which are often kept separate in this emerging but urgent area of inquiry. Departing broadly from a sociotechnical perspective on understanding the social consequences of communication technology, the participants bring contrasting perspectives and research foci into conversation. At the heart of this popular culture inquiry on the role of technology, death and memorialization are questions of agency and power: the power of technology to shape experiences of loss but also the agency of individuals and communities in appropriating platforms in potentially expansive ways. 6348 Monday 11:00-12:15 Kei Cultural Identity and Social Identity Intercultural Communication Chair Aparna Hebbani, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Participants Powerful Uncertainty for the Future of Japan’s Cultural Diversity: Theorizing Japanese Homogenizing Discourses Satoshi Toyosaki, Southern Illinois U - Carbondale, USA Shinsuke Eguchi, U of New Mexico, USA The Dual Factor Relational Framework Yi-Hui Huang, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Olwen Bedford, U of Macau, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yin Zhang, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA Island’s Sunrise (島嶼天光): Performing Taiwan's Independent Identity Hui-Ching Chang, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Subject of a Difference: Regional Cinema in India and the Margins of National Imaginary Sushmita Pandit, Jadavpur U, INDIA Saayan Chattopadhyay, Jadavpur U, INDIA Jewish Identity in the Diaspora: A Study of Diasporic Jews in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Alan M Teitleman, Wake Forest U, USA Social Identity of Israeli Ethiopians As Reflected in Their Responses to Media Coverage of Terrorism Vered Reich, Achva Academic College, ISRAEL 6349 Monday 11:00-12:15 Board Room Histories of Television: Practices, Cultures, and Institutions Communication History Chair Lars Lundgren, Södertörn U, SWEDEN Participants "Please Send us Your Money": The BBC’s Evolving Relationship With Charitable Causes and Fundraising Suzanne Franks, City U, UNITED KINGDOM Television in Ireland: A History From the Mediated Centre Edward Brennan, Dublin Institute of Technology, IRELAND “Teevee Jeebies”: Gender, Taste, and Playboy’s Uneasy Relationship With Television as Mass Culture, 1954-1972 Monique Bourdage, U of Michigan, USA Early Japanese Television Discourse in Kinema Junpō 1953 – 1958 Yuki Nakayama, U of Michigan, USA Respondent Lars Lundgren, Södertörn U, SWEDEN 6353 Monday 11:00-12:15 Fuji The Future of Instructional and Developmental Communication Instructional & Developmental Communication Participants Stephanie Kelly, North Carolina A&T State U, USA Michelle T. Violanti, U of Tennessee, USA Annie Beck, U of Kentucky, USA Hamlet Autman, Interactive College of Technology, USA CJ Claus, California State U - Stanislaus, USA This division has undergone substantial changes in the last several years. The purpose of this discussion panel is to brainstorm the future direction of the division in terms of focus, recruitment, and bylaws. Anyone interested in instructional communication, developmental communication, or the broad topics of communication related to information behaviors are welcome to come and share their ideas with the leadership team. 6354 Monday 11:00-12:15 Sakura Power [and, in, of] Public Relations Public Relations Chair Tracy Loh, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Participants Exploring a Positive Form of Power: Public Relations and Institutional Agency in an Authoritarian Context Jenny Zhengye Hou, Massey U, NEW ZEALAND The Power of Electronic Word of Mouth: Impact on Credibility, Organization-Public Relationships, and Reputation Kristin Rosevear, Collaborations: Teachers and Artists, USA Hongmei Shen, San Diego State U, USA The Role of Stakeholder Engagement in the Context of Community Health: A Qualitative Study on Strategic Communication and Community Empowerment Lan Ni, U of Houston, USA Zhiwen Xiao, U of Houston, USA Qian Lu, U of Houston, USA Beverly Gor, Houston Health Department, USA Bingyang Ji, U of Houston, USA Yan Cui, Nanjing Forestry U, CHINA When CEOs Cry: How CEOs’ Emoting Impacts Stakeholder Perceptions of Organization May O. Lwin, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Augustine Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Mano Vikneshwaran, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Yanpeng Yeo, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Jinghui Xu, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Lee Hui Zyi, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Benjamin Ho, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Ambient Power and Relationships in Public Relations Petra Theunissen, Auckland U of Technology, NEW ZEALAND Helen Sissons, Auckland U of Technology, NEW ZEALAND Respondent Erich James Sommerfeldt, U of Maryland, USA 6360 Monday 11:00-12:15 Olive Check It Out: Fact Checking on Old and New Media Political Communication Chair Drew Berkley Margolin, Cornell U, USA Participants Get Your Facts Straight: The Effectiveness of Corrective Information on Facebook Fred Jennings, U of Missouri, USA Rocío Galarza, U of Missouri, USA Brittney Monroe, U of Missouri, USA Political Fact Checking on Twitter: When Do Corrections Have an Effect? Drew Berkley Margolin, Cornell U, USA Aniko Hannak, Northeastern U, USA Ingmar Weber, Qatar Computing Research Institute, HBKU, QATAR Political Fact-Checking as Persuasion: How Corrective Messages Can Reduce Political Misperceptions Brian E Weeks, U of Michigan, USA What Drives Political Fact-Checking? Understanding the Growth of a New Genre of News Lucas Graves, U of Wisconsin, USA Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College, USA Jason Reifler, Exeter U, UNITED KINGDOM 6361 Monday 11:00-12:15 Sage Distracted, Dissatisfied, Drunk, and Other Disorders: Youth, Media, and Well-Being Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Causes and Consequences of Internet Gaming Disorder Sophie F Waterloo, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Jeroen S Lemmens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Effects of Advertising Exposure on Children’s Materialism, Psychological Well-Being, and Life Satisfaction Suzanna Johanna Opree, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Moniek Buijzen, Radboud U Nijmegen, THE NETHERLANDS Eva van Reijmersdal, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Dealing With Media Distractions: An Observational Study on Computer-Based Multitasking Among Children and Adults Susanne E. Baumgartner, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sindy R. Sumter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Winneke van der Schuur, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Media Multitasking and Sleep Problems: A Longitudinal Study Among Adolescents Winneke van der Schuur, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Susanne E. Baumgartner, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sindy R. Sumter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Patti M. Valkenburg, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Charisse L'Pree Corsbie-Massay, Syracuse U, USA 6420 Monday 12:30-13:45 Argos C ICA Fukuoka Closing Plenary: Surveillance, Power, and Communication Sponsored Sessions Chair Peng Hwa Ang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Participant Robin Elizabeth Mansell, London School of Economics and Political Science, UNITED KINGDOM Is digital communication becoming ungovernable? Perspectives on governance issues differ and actions following from these differences have major consequences for the future of mediated life. The first part of the lecture will compare and contrast disciplinary assumptions about the way people engage within an algorithmic culture or ‘big data’ ecology. The second part will examine perspectives on surveillance and privacy protection, giving particular attention to the way power is presumed to operate and to whether this is consistent with a notion of ethical governance. 6520 Monday 14:00-15:15 Argos C Capturing Sight and Sound: Histories of Documentation Communication History Chair Travers Scott, Clemson U, USA Participants Erich Salomon, the Candid Camera, and the Consolidation of Photojournalism, 1928-1933 Annie Rudd, Columbia U, USA The Scrutiny of the Lens: Press Photography of Parliaments and the Unique Case of the Australian Parliament Sally Young, U of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Recording Intimacy, Reviewing Spectacle: The Emergence of Video in the American Home (Top Student Paper) Hannah Spaulding, Northwestern U, USA The Orientalized Phonograph: The Mechanical Recording of Oral Jewish Tradition Ido Ramati, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Respondent Travers Scott, Clemson U, USA 6521 Monday 14:00-15:15 Argos D Processing Stories, Films, and Music Information Systems Chair Allison Zorzie Shaw, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Participants Self and Stories: The Implicit Nature of Identification Stefan Krause, U Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY An Application of the Dual Coding Landscape Model of Comprehension to Full-Length Feature Films Courtney E. Anderegg, Ohio State U, USA Fashina Alade, Northwestern U, USA David R. Ewoldsen, Michigan State U, USA Findings From a Longitudinal Experiment Examining the Impact of Romantic Films on Romantic Beliefs Allison Zorzie Shaw, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Matthew N. Grizzard, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Jacob Neiheisel, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Emily A. Dolan, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Jialing Huang, SUNY – U at Buffalo, USA Memories From a Binger: An Experimental Investigation of Viewing Experience and the Impact on Product Placement Recall Heather Shoenberger, U of Oregon, USA Adopting the Sexual Gaze: Exposure to Sexually Objectifying Music Videos and Visual Attention Toward Women Kathrin Karsay, U of Vienna, Department of Communication, AUSTRIA Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Phillip Platzer, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Myrna Plinke, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Do Lyrics of Pop Songs Matter for Message Processing? Anja Kalch, Augsburg U, GERMANY Tino GK Meitz, Leibniz ScienceCampus Tuebingen, GERMANY Carolin Mengele, Augsburg U, GERMANY It's No Game: Testing if Generative Music Systems in Video Games Increase Flow in Players Joshua D. Sites, Indiana U, USA Do Attentional and Reward Networks Synchronize During Media Induced Flow Experiences? A Test of the Synchronization Theory of Flow Richard Wayne Huskey, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Britney Nicole Craighead, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA 6522 Monday 14:00-15:15 Argos E CAT Hybrid Session 4: Collaboration, Work, and Organizations Communication and Technology Chair Drew Berkley Margolin, Cornell U, USA Participants Slacking by Checking? A Study of Employees’ Perceived Internet Checking Habit in Relation to Their Perceived Work Efficiency. Mariek Vanden Abeele, Ghent U, BELGIUM Alexander Peter Schouten, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Karel Verbrugge, iMinds-MICT-Ghent U, BELGIUM Marlies Van de Pas, Tilburg U, THE NETHERLANDS Modeling Interactive Discourses to Understand Ethical Reasoning Development in Online Teams Lorraine G. Kisselburgh, Purdue U, USA Breaking into the Blackbox: The Effects of Communication on Quality of Peer Knowledge Production Ruqin Ren, U of Southern California, USA Bei Yan, U of Southern California, USA A Connected Lives Perspective on How Independent Artists Leverage Social Media to Create Intimacy With Buyers Erin Flynn Klawitter, Northwestern U, USA Chasing the “Bottom Billion”: Tech Companies and the Selling of Global Connectivity Benjamin Andrew James Pearson, U of Michigan, USA Seyram Avle, U of Michigan, USA (Re)Framing the News: The Effects of Framed Online Comments: A Process Model and Empirical Test Christian von Sikorski, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA A Goal-Based Framework of Media Choice Yoram M. Kalman, Open U of Israel, ISRAEL Keri Keilberg Stephens, U of Texas, USA Dron M Mandhana, U of Texas, USA 6524 Monday 14:00-15:15 Navis A Journalism as Political Communication Journalism Studies Political Communication Chair Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, U of Oxford, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Interpreting the Intermedia Agenda-Setting Power of the UK Press on TV During the 2015 UK Election Stephen Cushion, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Allaina Kilby, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Richard Thomas, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Marina Morani, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Richard Sambrook, Cardiff U, UNITED KINGDOM Comparing Political Parallelism of German and Spanish Online News During the Euro Crisis Johannes Kaiser, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Katharina Kleinen-von Koenigsloew, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND The Softening of Journalistic Political Communication – A Critical Review of Concepts and a Comprehensive Framework Model Lukas Otto, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Isabella Glogger, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Mark Boukes, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Mediatization as an Indicator of Convergence of Media Systems: Campaign Coverage on Austrian Television, 1983–2013 Josef Seethaler, Austrian Academy of Sciences, AUSTRIA Gabriele Melischek, Austrian Academy of Sciences, AUSTRIA New Parties in the News: The Effect of New Parties Entering Parliament on Their Visibility in News Media Coverage Joost van Spanje, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Elias Dinas, U of Nottingham, UNITED KINGDOM Bjoern Burscher, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS 6525 Monday 14:00-15:15 Navis B Online/Internet Health Information Seeking Health Communication Chair Fan Yang, U of Miami, USA Participants A Longitudinal Study on the Reciprocal Relationship Between Health Anxiety and Online Health Information Seeking Fam te Poel, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Susanne E. Baumgartner, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Tilo Hartmann, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Martin Tanis, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS An Examination of the Gatekeeping Process of Health Information on Weibo Yujie Duan, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Examining Factors Influencing Health-Related Internet Activities and its Outcome: Trusts, Health-Related Internet Activities, and Patient-Provider Relationship Sun Young Lee, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jounghwa Choi, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Ghee-Young Noh, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Predictors of Adolescent Health Information Seeking on Social Media and Associated Psychological and Behavioral Outcomes Heather Zupancic-Montague, Northwestern U, USA Drew Cingel, Northwestern U, USA Alexis Lauricella, Northwestern U, USA Ellen Wartella, Northwestern U, USA 6526 Monday 14:00-15:15 Navis C Sex, Gender, and Technology Communication and Technology Chair Elizabeth Newbury, Cornell U, USA Participants Immaterial Labour, Gender, and Identity: Recoding Female Engineers in China Ping Sun, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA Michelangelo Magasic, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA Blogging for Women's Economic Empowerment: Exploring the Role of Sharing Idit Manosevitch, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Yonit Tzuk, Netanya Academic College, ISRAEL Sexual Selves on Social Media: Contextualizing Facebook Uses by Diasporic Gay Men Alexander Dhoest, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Lukasz Szulc, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Reputational Economies and the Business of Online Shame: A Case Study of Revenge Porn Ganaele Langlois, York U, CANADA Andrea Slane, U of Ontario Institute of Technology, CANADA 6530 Monday 14:00-15:15 Nire Mediated Views of Health: Food, Size, Weight Health Communication Chair Davi Kallman, Washington State U, USA Participants About Frankenfood and Salmonella: Framing Food Safety in U.S. News Media and Online Issue Networks Barbara Pfetsch, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Daniel Maier, Free U of Berlin, GERMANY Peter Miltner, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Annie Waldherr, Freie U Berlin, GERMANY Food Reasoning: The Influences of Emotional Framing, Food Knowledge, and Media Exposure on Food Judgments Jiawei Liu, Washington State U, USA Rachel L. Bailey, Washington State U, USA Model Pictures and Weight-Related Persuasive Messages Affecting Online Forum Users' Weight Loss Intention Wenjing Pan, U of California - Davis, USA Jorge Pena, U of California - Davis, USA Privilege Acknowledged and Reinforced: Manifestations of the Possible Self in Women’s Health and Fitness Magazines Lara Elmayan, State U of New York - Geneseo, USA Atsushi Tajima, State U of New York - Geneseo, USA The Politics of Source Credibility: Examining the Relationship Between a Political Representative’s Physical Size and Race. David Morin, Utah Valley U, USA Mark Allen Flynn, Coastal Carolina U, USA 6531 Monday 14:00-15:15 Kusu Digital Advertising Communication and Technology Chair Rebecca A. Hayes, Illinois State U, USA Participants Can You See? An Eye-Tracking Approach to Examine the Effectiveness of Native Advertisements on Social Networking Sites Yongick Jeong, Louisiana State U, USA Lance Vardaman Porter, Louisiana State U, USA Kasey Windels, Louisiana State U, USA Rui Wang, Louisiana State U, USA A-Reum Jung, Louisiana State U, USA Jun Heo, Louisiana State U, USA Consumers' Cognitions of and Attitudes Toward Digital Signage Advertising Heejun Lee, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Chang-Hoan Cho, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Young Women’s Cognition of Commercial Digital Signage in Shopping Malls: A Situated Action Approach Becky Pham, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Weiyu Zhang, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Effects of 3-W Movie Screen Advertising on Viewers' Perceived Pleasure, Arousal, and Advertisement Evaluation Namkee Park, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Kiseul Suh, Advanced Institute of Science & Technology, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Seohee Sohn, Yonsei U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 6532 Monday 14:00-15:15 Kashi Framing the News: International Perspectives Journalism Studies Political Communication Chair Neil James Thurman, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Participants An Insidious Poison or a Door to the Story? Journalists’ Interpretations of Framing and Newsroom Strategies of Counterframing Jan Boesman, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Baldwin Van Gorp, Katholieke U Leuven, BELGIUM Framing Terror: A Content Analysis of Media Frames Used in Covering ISIS Kris Boyle, Brigham Young U, USA Jordan Mower, Brigham Young U, USA International Framing of Occupy Central Lijing Gao, Iowa State U, USA Raluca Cozma, Iowa State U, USA Journalism Culture and its Impact on the Contextualization of Reality: A Qualitative Narrative and Framing Analysis of the Political Foreign News in German and British Newspapers Marc Christian Wilhelm Jungblut, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Ursula Ohliger, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Talking About Marijuana: News Framing of Marijuana Legalization Stories in the United States Hwalbin Kim, U of South Carolina, USA 6533 Monday 14:00-15:15 Kaede Discursive Features of Condemnation, Blame Avoidance, Stancetaking, and Positioning in Political Communication Language & Social Interaction Political Communication Chair David Boromisza-Habashi, U of Colorado - Boulder, USA Participants Political Condemnations: Public Speech Acts and the Moralization of Discourse Zohar Kampf, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Tamar Katriel, U of Haifa, ISRAEL Anticipative Blame Avoidance in Government Communication Guidelines: A Discourse-Historical Analysis Sten Hansson, Lancaster U, UNITED KINGDOM Online Discourse of Radical Movements: Exploring Stance in Nigerian Islamist Groups’ Web Discourses Innocent Chiluwa, Covenant U, NIGERIA Ada Sonia Peter, Covenant U, NIGERIA Positioning in Narratives-in-Interaction: An Analysis of YouTube Video Comments During the 2014 Hong Kong Protest Luling Huang, Temple U, USA 6540 Monday 14:00-15:15 Rigel New Contexts and Methods for Social Change: Crises, Campaigns, and Corporate Social Responsibility Global Communication and Social Change Chair Ying Wang, U of Waikato, NEW ZEALAND Participants Communication for Development and Social Change in Montenegro: Lessons From a Campaign to Influence Social Norms for an Inclusive Society Rafael A. Obregon Galvez, UNICEF, USA Jelena Perovic, UNICEF, MONTENEGRO Corporate Sustainability Framework as a Conception of CSR: Conceptual Explication S. Senyo Ofori-Parku, U of Alabama, USA A Culture-Centered Campaign With Foreign Domestic Workers (FDWs) in Singapore Mohan Jyoti Dutta, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Asha Rathina Pandi, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Satveer Kaur-Gill, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Accountability to Whom? Humanitarian Action, New Communication Technologies, and Power Asymmetries in Disaster Recovery Mirca Madianou, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Jonathan Corpus Ong, U of Leicester, UNITED KINGDOM Liezel Longboan, Goldsmiths, U of London, UNITED KINGDOM Jayeel Cornelio, Ateneo de Manila U, PHILIPPINES NGO, CSR, and Corporate Engagement: Perspectives From Vietnam Marianne D. Sison, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA Hue Duong, RMIT International U, VIET NAM 6541 Monday 14:00-15:15 Vega Advances in the Study of Science Communication Mass Communication Chair Teresa Lynch, Indiana U, USA Participants Can Facebook Facilitate Public Engagement With Science? The Moderating Role of Information Literacy and Discussion YI-TSEN CHIU, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN Cheng-ying Wu, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN Tsung-Jen Shih, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN Explaining Stakeholders’ Representations of Scientific Uncertainties of Biotechnological Research in Public Senja Post, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Michaela Maier, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Extending The Cognitive Mediation Model: Factors Associated With Perceived Familiarity and Factual Knowledge Of Nanotechnology Xiaodong Yang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Soo Fei Chuah, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Edmund W. J. Lee, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE More Credible but Less Effective: The Effects of News Cues on Perceptions of Self-Driving Technologies Tianduo Zhang, U of Florida, USA Jung Won Chun, U of Florida, USA Baobao Song, U of Florida, USA Ah Ram Lee, U of Florida, USA Jungyun Won, U of Florida, USA Sriram Kalyanaraman, U of Florida, USA 6542 Monday 14:00-15:15 Kiku Environmental Themes and Popular Narratives: Communicating Change From Asia to Europe Environmental Communication Chair Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Participants Climate Fiction and Narratives of Hope and Despair Alison Anderson, Plymouth U, UNITED KINGDOM Eco-activism Stories: the Case of Lego Toby Miller, U del Norte, COLOMBIA Fast Media and Slow Media on Climate Change Miyase Christensen, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Exploring Cultural Symbolism in Chinese Environmental Narratives Jingfang Liu, Fudan U, CHINA Linchuan Jack Qiu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF The aim of this panel is to explore and analyze a variety of popular communication forms, and the power embedded therein, in narrativizing environmental change and mobilizing human action. Popular communication here is defined to include the entire grammar, syntax, and vocabulary of everyday life expressed in literature, media, film, through social movements and other performances and speech acts. Popular communication narratives, on the whole, do not only provide frames within which audiences regard everyday “lived” dimensions of environmental change and environmental politics, but they can also impact upon formulations of future scenarios and policies. Environmental narratives are also continuously reconfigured as they travel through diverse mediums/media and geographic scales. 6543 Monday 14:00-15:15 Ran Advances in the Study of Entertainment Media Mass Communication Chair Charisse L'Pree Corsbie-Massay, Syracuse U, USA Participants Friends in Books: Figure Attributes, Reading Experience, and Their Influence on Parasocial Relationships and Romances Nicole Liebers, U Wuerzburg, GERMANY Holger Schramm, U of Wuerzburg, GERMANY Generation Me in the Spotlight: Linking Reality TV to Narcissism, Materialism, and Entitlement Suzanna Johanna Opree, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rinaldo Kuehne, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Quality TV and Social Distinction: An Experiment on How Quality TV Series Distinguish Their Users Daniela M. Schluetz, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Helmut Scherer, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Katharina Emde, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY Jonas Wedemeyer, Hanover U of Music, Drama, and Media, GERMANY “Glued to the Tube”: The Interplay Between Self-Control, Evening Television Viewing, and Bedtime Procrastination Liese Exelmans, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Jan Van den Bulck, U of Leuven, BELGIUM 6545 Monday 14:00-15:15 Sumire Political Information and News Exposure in Election Time Political Communication Chair Sophie Lecheler, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Detachment From Surveillance Needs: Effects of ‘News Finds Me’ Perception on Political knowledge, Interest, and Voting Homero Gil de Zuniga, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Trevor H Diehl, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Does Political Advertising Still Matter?: Linkage of Message Frames With Personal Traits for Political Ads Effectiveness Eun-Kyung Han, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Chanho Park, Sungkyunkwan U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hyoungkoo Khang, U of Alabama, USA Opportunity Structures for Selective Exposure: Investigating Selective Exposure and Learning in Swedish Election Campaigns Morten Skovsgaard, U of Southern Denmark, Centre for Journalism, DENMARK Adam Shehata, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Jesper Stromback, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Political Information for Closed Minds: Effects of the Need for Cognitive Closure on Political Interest and News Consumption Eike Mark Rinke, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Patricia Moy, U of Washington, USA When the Interests of Parties, Media, and Electorate Diverge Marloes Jansen, Northumbria U, UNITED KINGDOM Sikke Jansma, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Susanne Barth, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS Menno de Jong, U of Twente, THE NETHERLANDS 6546 Monday 14:00-15:15 Koh Use Of Mobile Services In Different Contexts (High Density) Mobile Communication Chair Veronika Karnowski, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Participants Contextualized Motivations Predicting the Continuous Use of Smart Devices Among People With Physical Disabilities H. Erin Lee, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Jaehee Cho, Chung-Ang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Experiencing Smartglasses in Everyday Life: An Empirical Study Based on Grounded Theory Joachim Robert Hoeflich, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Tim Kessler, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Castulus Kolo, Macromedia U of Applied Sciences, GERMANY Mobile Phones for Coordination in Violent Conflict abdul rohman, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Natalie Pang, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE 'Igorotak, mensilsilponak' Inayan and Other Expressions of Indigeneity Through the Mobile Phone Dazzelyn Baltazar Zapata, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Mobile Phone Use in Northern Tanzania Benson Perry Fraser, Regent U, USA William J. Brown, Regent U, USA Terrence R Lindvall, Virginia Wesleyan College, USA Steven Kiruswa, Regent U, USA Migrant Parenting and Mobile Phone Use: Rebuilding Relationships Between Chinese Migrant Workers and Their “Left-Behind” Children Piper Liu, Hong Kong Baptist U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Louis W. Leung, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Our World is Under Our Control?!: Mobile Phone as a Dialectical Transformative Tool for Rural-Urban Female Migrant Workers in China Xin PEI, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Arul Chib, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Rich Ling, Nanyang Technological U/Telenor, SINGAPORE 6547 Monday 14:00-15:15 Yoh Four Square Pegs: Understanding Popular Communication Popular Communication Chair Bethany Klein, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Participants Classifying Social Media Audience Management Strategies Through Writers’ Room Twitter Accounts Annemarie Navar-Gill, U of Michigan, USA Living Healthy Versus Looking Attractive: The Multimodal Portrayal of Skin Cancer in Women’s Magazines in the United States Yiyi Yang, U of Alabama, USA Mitt Romney, Mormonism, and the Media: How Culture Matters in the Public Sphere Hannah Dick, U of California San Diego, USA Questioning the Ethno-Cultural Mediated Attraction of (Dis)likable Characters: What do Audiences Find Charming? Adolfo Rafael Mora, U of Texas, USA Gejun Huang, U of Texas, USA 6548 Monday 14:00-15:15 Kei Powerful Connections: Public Relations and Crisis Communication Public Relations Chair Sabine A. Einwiller, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Participants Crisis Initiation and Management of E-commerce: An SCCT Perspective of Customer-Seller Interactions at Taobao.com Yan Yan, Wuhan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Shaoshen Xu, Wuhan U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Information Detail and Expressions of Concern in Crisis Messages: Effects on Compliance and Crisis Coping Guan Lian Lim, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Tracy Loh, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Examining the Effectiveness of Using CSR Communications in Apology Statements After Negative Publicity Eun Ji (Angie) Chung, Auburn U, USA How a Paracrisis Situation is Instigated by an Online Firestorm and Visual Mockery Joon Soo Lim, Syracuse U, USA Respondent Finn Frandsen, U of Aarhus, DENMARK 6549 Monday 14:00-15:15 Board Room Models, Tools, and Methods for Visual Communication Research Visual Communication Studies Chair Laurie Gries, U of Colorado, Boulder, USA Participants A Decision Support Tool for Producing and Assessing Visual Representations for Scientific Discovery and Communication Luc Pauwels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Catalyzing Hope: What We Can Learn From a Single Image About Communicating Power and Generating Community Activism Laurie Gries, U of Colorado, Boulder, USA Taking Another Look at Meaning Structures Along the Horizontal and Vertical Axes in Multimodal Compositions Marilyn B Mitchell, Bond U, AUSTRALIA The Joker as Satire? A Transmedia Analysis of Joker(ized) Images Johan Nilsson, Örebro U, SWEDEN Transmedia Narrative Elements in the Universe of Batman, From Comics to Movies to Videogames; or How Intelligible and Interactive Narratives Create Convergence and Linear Narratives Jorge Mora Fernandez, U of Cuenca, ECUADOR 6553 Monday 14:00-15:15 Fuji Intervention and Privacy in Online Behaviour Communication Law & Policy Chair Christopher Ali, U of Virginia, USA Participants From Confrontation to Collaboration: NGOs, Information Intermediaries, and Stakeholder Dialogue on Privacy Tatevik Sargsyan, American U, USA Online Privacy in the Post-Snowden Era: A Comparison of Online Services With Privacy-Enhancing Features (PEF) to Non-PEF Services in Terms of Their Privacy Policies Minjeong Kim, Hankuk U of Foreign Studies, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Hogeun Seo, U of Texas, USA Young Social Media Users’ Legal Consciousness About Privacy Katharine Sarikakis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Lisa Winter, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Internet Radicalization: Fear in Small Numbers, Internet Governance, and Politics in Data Piotr MMM Szpunar, U of Pennsylvania, USA 6554 Monday 14:00-15:15 Sakura Social Network Approach to Engaged Scholarship: Creating Actionable Knowledge Through Collaboration With Organizations Organizational Communication Chair Heewon Kim, Rutgers U, USA Participants Hyperlink Network Analysis in Academia and Industry: Insights from 10 years of VOSON Robert Ackland, Australian National U, AUSTRALIA Engaging in Corporate Research: Practical Contributions and Theoretical Implications Matthew Scott Weber, Rutgers U, USA The Power of Cohesion during Organizational Change: Implications for Knowledge Sharing and Strategic Communication Heewon Kim, Rutgers U, USA Network Rules for Radicals Andrew Nicholas Pilny, U of Kentukcy, USA Reimagining Social Interaction: Data Visualization and Critical Social Analysis Leo Kim, Treum, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Respondent George A. Barnett, U of California - Davis, USA 6560 Monday 14:00-15:15 Olive Negative Campaigns and Campaign Negativity Political Communication Chair Christian Schemer, U of Mainz, GERMANY Participants A Network Model of Negative Campaigning: Structures and Determinants of Negative Campaigning in Multiparty Systems Hyunjin Song, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Dominic Nyhuis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Hajo G. Boomgaarden, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Attacking to Gain? Effects of Negative Campaigning on British Voters’ Electoral Participation and Party Preferences in the 2015 General Election Annemarie S. Walter, U of Nottingham, UNITED KINGDOM Cees Van der Eijk, U of Nottingham, UNITED KINGDOM Disproportionality in Media Representations of Campaign Negativity Dominic Nyhuis, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Hyunjin Song, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Hajo G. Boomgaarden, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA The Impact of Advocacy, Contrast, and Attacks in Political Advertising and News Coverage on Political Efficacy: Evidence From a Panel Study in a Direct-Democratic Campaign Christian Schemer, U of Mainz, GERMANY Stefan Geiss, Johannes Gutenberg U Mainz, GERMANY Werner Wirth, U of Zurich, SWITZERLAND Anna Baumert, U of Koblenz-Landau, GERMANY Tweeting the Attack: Predicting Gubernatorial Candidate Attack Messaging and its Spread Jennifer Stromer-Galley, Syracuse U, USA Feifei Zhang, Syracuse U, USA Sikana Tanupabrungsun, Syracuse U, USA Jeff Hemsley, Syracuse U, USA Bryan Semaan, Syracuse U, USA 6561 Monday 14:00-15:15 Sage Online Harassment and Bullying Children Adolescents and the Media Participants Adolescents’ Online Peer Support on Cyberbullying: A Thematic Analysis of Online Support Group Fora Sara Bastiaensens, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Katrien Van Cleemput, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Karolien Poels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Ann DeSmet, Ghent U, BELGIUM Ilse De Bourdeaudhuij, Ghent U, BELGIUM Can Emotion Regulation Serve as a Tool in Combatting Cyberbullying? Anouk H. den Hamer, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Elly A. Konijn, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Cyberbullying Policies of Social Media Companies Tijana Milosevic, U of Oslo, NORWAY Differences in Friendship Networks and Experiences of Cyberbullying Among Korean and Australian Adolescents Jee Young Lee, U of Canberra, AUSTRALIA Yeji Kwon, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Soeun Yang, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Sora Park, U of Canberra, AUSTRALIA Eun-Mee Kim, Seoul National U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Eun-Yeong Na, Sogang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Exposure to Cyberbullying as a Bystander: An Investigation of Desensitization Effects Among Early Adolescents Sara Pabian, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp - Department of Communication Studies, BELGIUM Katrien Van Cleemput, U of Antwerp - Department of Communication Studies, BELGIUM Sara Bastiaensens, U of Antwerp, Department of Communication Studies, BELGIUM Longitudinal Patterns of Involvement in Cyberbullying: Results From a Latent Transition Analysis Among Adolescents Ruth Festl, German Youth Institute, GERMANY Jens Vogelgesang, U Hohenheim, GERMANY Michael Scharkow, U of Hohenheim, GERMANY Thorsten Quandt, U of Muenster, GERMANY Nice or Naughty? Adolescents' Online Prosocial and Antisocial Behavior Sara Erreygers, U Antwerpen, BELGIUM Heidi Vandebosch, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Ivana Vranjes, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Elfi Baillien, U of Leuven, BELGIUM De Witte Hans, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Prevalence and Characteristics of Online Slut-Shaming in Belgian Adolescent Girls Kathleen Van Royen, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Karolien Poels, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM 6620 Monday 15:30-16:45 Argos C Beyond Lora: Female Gender in Games Game Studies Chair Andre Melzer, U of Luxembourg, LUXEMBOURG Participants Femme Fatales: The Developing Identity of the Feminine in Digital Games Mildred Frances Perreault, U of Missouri, USA Gregory Pearson Perreault, Appalachian State U, USA Joy Michelle Jenkins, U of Missouri, USA Ariel Schroder Morrison, U of Missouri, USA Game Character Appeal in the Eye of the Beholder: The Role of Gendered Perceptions Andre Melzer, U of Luxembourg, LUXEMBOURG Elisabeth Engelberg, U of Luxembourg, LUXEMBOURG Kawaii Killers and Femme Fatales: How Japanese and U.S. Video Game Firms Communicate the Power of Female Characters Jessica Ethel Tompkins, Indiana U, USA Teresa Lynch, Indiana U, USA Irene Ingeborg van Driel, Indiana U, USA Niki Fritz, Indiana U, USA Play Mechanics of Sexy Female Characters in Video Games Dennis Frohlich, Bloomsburg U of Pennsylvania, USA "I Am Not a Gamer": An Empirical Study on Women as Self-Identified Digital Gamers Lotte Vermeulen, iMinds-MICT-Ghent U, BELGIUM Jan Van Looy, Ghent U, BELGIUM Sofie Van Bauwel, Ghent U, BELGIUM 6621 Monday 15:30-16:45 Argos D Narrative Processing Information Systems Chair Elizabeth L. Cohen, West Virginia U, USA Participants Examining Moral Differences in News Coverage Across Sources and Topics Using the News Narrative Analyzer James Michael Mangus, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Richard Wayne Huskey, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Rene Weber, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Don’t Spoil It! Examining Spoilers as Impediments to the Intrinsic Rewards of Narrative Engagement Elizabeth L. Cohen, West Virginia U, USA Jennifer Knight, West Virginia U, USA Molly Eickholt, West Virginia U, USA Chelsea Betts, West Virginia U, USA Alan K. Goodboy, West Virginia U, USA Elizabeth Hudson, West Virginia U, USA Rebekah Ford, West Virginia U, USA Don’t Tell Me How It Ends: Testing Effects of Narrative Spoilers for Film and Television Benjamin K. Johnson, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Judith E. Rosenbaum, Albany State U, USA Explicating the Influence of Character-Audience Similarity on Narrative Processing Angeline Sangalang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Improving the Effectiveness of Prosocial Messages: The Impact of Narrative on Intention to Donate Ruobing Li, Pennsylvania State U, USA Jiangxue (Ashley) Han, Pennsylvania State U, USA Mirror and Mentalizing Systems: Fluctuating Activation During Narrative Engagement as a Function of Trait Empathy and Production Techniques James G. Collier, Ohio State U, USA The Importance of Imagery for Effects of Narratives in Health Education Materials on Knowledge Simon Zebregs, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Bas van den Putte, U of Amsterdam, ASCoR, THE NETHERLANDS Peter Neijens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS The Influence of Shot Scale on Theory of Mind Responding in Visual Narratives Katalin Balint, Augsburg U, GERMANY Brendan Rooney, U College Dublin, IRELAND Tibor Polya, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, HUNGARY 6622 Monday 15:30-16:45 Argos E The Paradoxes of Photographic Power Visual Communication Studies Chair Paul Frosh, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Participants Image Activism and the Production of Rebellious Subjectivity in Syria Kari Anden-Papadopoulos, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Reframing the Personal Image: Challenges for Digital Methods Jean Burgess, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Powerful Stock: The Contradictory Visual Regime of Contemporary Commercial Photography Giorgia Aiello, U of Leeds, UNITED KINGDOM Giants With Feet of Clay: The Circumscribed Power of Iconic Photographs Sandrine Boudana, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Paul Frosh, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Akiba A. Cohen, Tel Aviv U, ISRAEL Respondent Barbie Zelizer, U of Pennsylvania, USA This panel explores the thesis that photography is retaining or gaining power as a medium, even as it relinquishes distinctiveness and loses traditional strengths. Our panelists and respondent will explore these paradoxes between continued power and diminished distinctiveness across several inter-related areas: in personal photography and public communication, in activist images, in commercial photography, and in the recollection and interpretation of iconic news photographs. In the process they will interrogate the empirical veracity, historical novelty and explanatory usefulness of claims for radically transformative shifts in the power of photography. 6624 Monday 15:30-16:45 Navis A Journalism in Authoritarian and Postconflict Societies Journalism Studies Global Communication and Social Change Chair Henrik Ornebring, Karlstad U, SWEDEN Participants The Losing Media? An Empirical Study of Defamation Litigation in China Fen Jennifer Lin, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Xin He, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Fighting Putin and the Kremlin’s Grip: The Battles of Russia’s “Independent” Media Vera Slavtcheva-Petkova, U of Chester, UNITED KINGDOM Understanding News Media Censorship in China Xianwen Kuang, Xi'an Jiaotong - Liverpool U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Media, Populism, and Hegemony: The Rearticulation of Equivalential Chains in a Dislocated Cuba Sara Garcia Garcia Santamaria, U de La Habana, CUBA Citizen Journalism and Democratization of Mainstream Media in Rwanda Dominique Nduhura, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Michael Prieler, Hallym U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 6625 Monday 15:30-16:45 Navis B Mobile Health Communication: Health Apps, Activity Tracking, Texting, Online Health Communication Mobile Communication Chair Qinghua Yang, U of Pennsylvania, USA Participants Applying an Extended Theory of Planned Behavior in Developing Communication Strategies Against Texting and Driving Nien-Tsu Nancy Chen, California State U - Channel Islands, USA Chloe Carr, California State U - Channel Islands, USA Recovery Speaks: Language Use Within a Peer-to-Peer Online Discussion Forum Predicts Relapse in Alcohol Use Disorder Rachel Kornfield, U of Wisconsin, USA Catalina Laura Toma, U of Wisconsin, USA Tae Joon Moon, U of Wisconsin, USA Dhavan Shah, U of Wisconsin, USA David H Gustafson, U of Wisconsin, USA The Impact of Postadoption Beliefs on the Continued Use of Health Apps Jaehee Cho, Chung-Ang U, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF The Multifaceted Usage Patterns of Nutrition Apps: A Survey on the Appropriation of Nutrition Apps Among German Users Paula Stehr, U of Erfurt, GERMANY Veronika Karnowski, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Constanze Rossmann, U of Erfurt, GERMANY “Social Networkout”: Boosting Physical Exercise Through Social Features of Wearable Fitness Trackers Yaguang Zhu, U of Texas, USA Stephanie Layne Dailey, Texas State U, USA Daniel Kreitzberg, U of Texas, USA 6626 Monday 15:30-16:45 Navis C Facebook Studies: Effects, Meanings, and Prominence Communication and Technology Chair Erin Spottswood, Portland State U, USA Participants Facebook Use and its Role in Access to Social Benefits Among Older Adults Rebecca Ping Yu, National Chengchi U, TAIWAN Nicole Ellison, U of Michigan, USA Cliff Lampe, U of Michigan, USA The Algorithmic Imaginary: Exploring the Ordinary Affects of the Facebook Algorithm Taina Bucher, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK The Multifunctionality of the Facebook Like Button: An Exploration of Meaning, Functionality, and Potential Alternative Facebook Buttons Erin Michelle Sumner, Trinity U, USA Luisa Ruge-Jones, Trinity U, USA Davis Alcorn, Trinity U, USA What Can We Learn From Social Media by Studying Facebook? A Response to Rains and Brunner Elizabeth Stoycheff, Wayne State U, USA Juan Liu, Wayne State U, USA Kunto Adi Wibowo, Wayne State U, USA Dominic Nanni, Wayne State U, USA 6630 Monday 15:30-16:45 Nire Cultural and Community Variables in Health Communication Studies Health Communication Chair Lalatendu Acharya, Purdue U, USA Participants Exploring the Cross-Cultural Differences in the Relationship Between Condom Knowledge, Attitudes, and Use Among Young Women From China, India, and the United States Minhao Dai, U of Kentucky, USA Ana de la Serna, U of Kentucky, USA Mengle Yao, Jilin U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Nancy Grant Harrington, U of Kentucky, USA Implementing Communication Infrastructure Theory-Based Strategies in Community Health Access Interventions: Lessons Learned From Two Projects Holley A. Wilkin, Georgia State U, USA Matthew D. Matsaganis, U of Albany - SUNY, USA Involved, United, and Efficacious: Could Self-Affirmation be the Answer to the California Drought? Nathan Walter, U of Southern California, USA Stefanie Demetriades, U of Southern California, USA Sheila Teresa Murphy, U of Southern California, USA Situated Influences on Perceived Barriers to Health Behavior Change: Cultural Identity and Context in Kazakhstan Brett Craig, St Louis College of Pharmacy, USA Aizhan Kapysheva, Nazarbayev U, KAZAKHSTAN Social Support, Social Control, and Dietary Acculturation Among Asian Immigrants Living in the United States Zheng An, U of Hawaii - Hilo, USA 6631 Monday 15:30-16:45 Kusu Social Media and Persuasion Communication and Technology Chair Sonja Utz, Leibniz-Institut fuer Wissensmedien, GERMANY Participants Tapping Into The Diversity of Information Seeking on Social Media for Personnel Selection Evelien de Ferrerre, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Cedric Courtois, Ghent U, BELGIUM Cuing Perceptions of Employability From Self- and Other-Generated Information in Fiverr Caleb T. Carr, Illinois State U, USA Robert Hall, Illinois State U, USA Adam Mason, Illinois State U, USA Eric Varney, Illinois State U, USA The Interplay of Central and Peripheral Information in Online Reviews Brandon Van Der Heide, Michigan State U, USA Soo Yun Shin, Michigan State U, USA David Beyea, Michigan State U, USA Yue Dai, Michigan State U, USA Benjamin Prchal, Michigan State U, USA Care or Not Care Others’ Reaction: Moderators of Social Endorsement Effects Myojung Chung, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Compliance or Not: The Impact of Facebook Communication Channels Jian Rui, Lamar U, USA Jun Xiang, U of Arizona, USA Xi Cui, Dixie State U, USA 6632 Monday 15:30-16:45 Kashi Journalism Education and Journalism Students Journalism Studies Chair Daniel C. Hallin, U of California - San Diego, USA Participants A Teaching Philosophy for Journalism Education in the Global South Ylva Rodny-Gumede, U of Johannesburg, SOUTH AFRICA The Noble Path: Using Habitus To Explore The Motivations of Journalism Students David Bockino, Elon U, USA Indian Field Notes: New Institutionalism and Journalism Education David Bockino, Elon U, USA How Future Journalists Differ: A Longitudinal Comparison Between Hong Kong and Mainland China Li Deng, China U of Political Science and Law, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Respondent Tim P. Vos, U of Missouri, USA 6633 Monday 15:30-16:45 Kaede Russia: The Need for the Holistic Media Policy Sponsored Sessions Chair Elena Vartanova, National Association of Mass Media Researchers, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Participants Theoretical Approaches to Media Policy in Russian Media Studies Denis Dunas, National Association of Mass Media Researchers, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Media Regulation and Commercial Media in Russia in 2000s Katja Lehtisaari, National Association of Mass Media Researchers, FINLAND Russian Broadcasting to Foreign Audiences and Globalization of Media Markets: The Three Competing Models of ‘Russianness’ Anatoly S. Puyu, National Association of Mass Media Researchers, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Svetlana S. Bodrunova, National Association of Mass Media Researchers, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Citizen Media Activism as a Resource of Media Policy Alexander Mansurov, Altai State U, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Strategies of Public Media Regulation of Political Communications on Facebook: Russian Case Maria Pilgun, Higher School of Economics, RUSSIAN FEDERATION Russian media landscape has been characterized by universal trends, as well as by its own national specifics. This may be the reason that the process of setting legal and self-regulatory frames, implementing regulation tools, and reaching social consensus on the mission of journalism and mass media in modern society as well as on ways to accomplish this mission is still ongoing. This panel aims to discuss such topics as theoretical approaches to the study of media policy in Russia; the nature, processes, and outcomes of recent changes in Russian media regulation; models of communicating messages to international audiences; citizen media activism as a media policy resource; and trends in development of media regulation applied to communication online. 6640 Monday 15:30-16:45 Rigel Global Journalistic Cultures and Practices Global Communication and Social Change Journalism Studies Chair Omar Al-Ghazzi, U of Sheffield, UNITED KINGDOM Participants A Tale of Two Journalistic Cultures: The “Je Suis Charlie” Mohammed Cartoon and Journalistic Paradigms in Canada Lyombe S. Eko, Texas Tech U, USA Media Development and International Journalism Training Thomas R. Schmidt, U of Oregon, USA Professional Struggles in Conflict Reporting in China Li Zhi, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Limin Liang, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Attribution of Global Ethical Norms: Perceptions of Journalistic Independence and Integrity in Serbia, Macedonia, and Croatia Ivanka Pjesivac, U of Georgia, USA Katerina Spasovska, Western Carolina U, USA Iveta Imre, Western Carolina U, USA Is Journalism a Transnational Field? Asymmetric Interactions and Symbolic Domination in Online News Angele Christin, The New School for Social Research, GERMANY 6641 Monday 15:30-16:45 Vega Advances in the Study of Advertising and Branding Mass Communication Chair Carmen Stitt, California State U - Sacramento, USA Participants Making Brands Symbolic: How Self-Construal Affects Brand Endorsements on Social Media Stefan F. Bernritter, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Annemijn C. Loermans, Vrije U Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Peeter Verlegh, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Edith Gloria Smit, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Narrative Persuasion: The What, Why, and How of Narrative Advertising Eunjin Kim, Southern Methodist U, USA Esther Thorson, U of Missouri, USA Resisting Persuasion: The Effects of Message Framing and Brand Attachment Hongmin Ahn, West Virginia U, USA Sang Yeal Lee, West Virginia U, USA The Effectiveness of Celebrity Endorsements: A Meta-Analysis Johannes Knoll, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA 6642 Monday 15:30-16:45 Kiku Quantitative Inquiries: Stereotypes, Attitudes, Parasocial Relationships Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies Chair Alberto M. Albuquerque, Yamanashi Gakuin U, JAPAN Participants Effects of Positive Stereotypes of Sexual Minorities on News Consumers’ Attitudes and Recognition of Stereotypes Rhonda Gibson Hester, U of North Carolina, USA Karen Elizabeth McIntyre, Virginia Commonwealth U, USA Too Much Too Soon? The Relationship Between Online Self-Disclosure and Attitudes Toward Gay Men Sharon Tan, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Sarah Malik, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Amelia Chong, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Hugo-Morgan Bart, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Predicting Attitudes and Acceptance of Gay Men and Lesbians: Interpersonal Contact Matters Most Benjamin H. Detenber, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Mark A. Cenite, Nanyang Technological U, SINGAPORE Kevin Lam, National U of Singapore, SINGAPORE Adolescents’ Parasocial Relationships: How They Differ for Sexual Minority Youth and Why They Matter Bradley J. Bond, U of San Diego, USA Ijime, Gender, and Sexual Orientation (work in progress) Alberto M. Albuquerque, Yamanashi Gakuin U, JAPAN 6643 Monday 15:30-16:45 Ran Visual Aspects In Mobile Media Mobile Communication Chair Jordan H. Frith, U of North Texas, USA Participants Augmented Criminality: Examining How Mobile Augmented Reality Crime Overlays Affect Fear, Emotion, and Perceptions of Crime Tony Liao, Temple U, USA Hocheol Yang, Temple U, USA Songyi Lee, Temple U, USA Kun Xu, Temple U, USA Ping Feng, Temple U, USA Spencer Bennett, Temple U, USA Visualising the Mundane: A Snapshot of Camera Phone Use and Mundane Intimacy in Tokyo and Melbourne Larissa Hjorth, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA Heather A Horst, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA Sarah Pink, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA Kana Ohashi, Keio U, JAPAN Jolynna Sinanan, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, AUSTRALIA The Effects of Screen Size and Physical Proximity on Perceptions of Risk and Hazard Jonathan Borden, Syracuse U, USA Sreyoshi Dey, Syracuse U, USA “Time Travel With One Click:” Effects of Digital Filters on Perceptions of Mobile Photographs Yilang Peng, U of Pennsylvania, USA 6645 Monday 15:30-16:45 Sumire Political Conversations Online: Disagreement and Incivility Political Communication Chair David Nicolas Hopmann, U of Southern Denmark, DENMARK Participants Cross-Cutting Exposure on Facebook and Political Participation: Unraveling the Effects of Emotions and Online Incivility Yanqin Lu, Indiana U, USA Jessica Gall Myrick, Indiana U, USA Identifying Factors Influencing User Incivility in Polarized Online Debates Rainer Freudenthaler, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Hartmut Wessler, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Incivility in User Comments on Online News Articles Julia Lueck, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Carlotta Nardi, U of Mannheim, GERMANY Political Disagreement and Ambivalence in New Information Environment: Exploring Conditional Indirect Effects of Partisan News Site Use and Discussion Network Heterogeneity on Social Network Sites on Political Participation Jinhee Kim, Pohang U of Science and Tech, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Kideuk Hyun, U of Texas, USA The Politics of “Unfriending”: User Filtration in Response to Political Disagreement on Social Media JungHwan Yang, U of Wisconsin, USA Matt Barnidge, U of Vienna, AUSTRIA Hernando Rojas, U of Wisconsin, USA 6646 Monday 15:30-16:45 Koh Theories and Practices in Media Industry Research Media Industry Studies Chair Paolo Sigismondi, U of Southern California, USA Participants Critical Theory and Media Industry Structure in the Digital Era W. Russell Neuman, New York U, USA Fail Fast: The Value of Studying Unsuccessful Technology Companies Nora A. Draper, U of New Hampshire, USA Rethinking Chinese Internet: Social History, Cultural Forms, and the Industrial Formation Nina Li, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA A Critical Media Industry Analysis of John Oliver and the Regulation of Net Neutrality Melinda Sebastian, Drexel U, USA Alison N. Novak, Rowan U, USA The Monetization of the Social Value and Cultural Impact of Basque Media: A Study of Two Cases: Goiena and Berria Eneko Bidegain, Mondragon U, SPAIN Txema Egaña, Mondragon U, SPAIN Aitor Zuberogoitia, Mondragon U, SPAIN 6647 Monday 15:30-16:45 Yoh Difficult Conversations Between Groups in Conflict: Cultural, Ideological Linguistic, National, and Religious Aspects Intergroup Communication Chair Stephen Michael Croucher, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Participants Lessons From Past Research on Conflict, Culture, and Communication: Looking 50 Years Back Deborah A. Cai, Temple U, USA Intergroup Language Wars: Judeo Arabic and Hebrew in Israel Esther Schely-Newman, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Language, Power, and Ideology in Conflict: Perceptions, Feelings, and Narratives of Palestinians in East Jerusalem Learning the Language of the Jewish Israeli Dominant Group Clila Gerassi-Tishby, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Ifat Maoz, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Common Impediments in Difficult Interethnic Conversations: A Case Analysis of Public Discourse in the United States Young Yun Kim, U of Oklahoma, USA Historical, Cultural, and Religious Aspects of the Difficult Conversations Between Muslims and Jews: The Case of Temple Mount/ Al-Haram Al-Sharif as a Contested Site Moshe Ma'oz, Hebrew U, ISRAEL Political Correctness and Intergroup Conflict Becky Robinson, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Scott A. Reid, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Respondent Cindy Gallois, U of Queensland, AUSTRALIA Conflicts within and between societies often bring with them difficult conversations, that involve disagreement, power struggles, mutual delegitimization and clashes of ideologies, identities and narratives. This panel will discuss these difficult processes of intergroup communication, dialogue and contestation in conflict focusing on cultural, ideological, linguistic and religious aspects of these difficult conversations. The papers addressing these issues cover diverse dynamics, processes, settings and localities including: interethnic and interracial relations in the USA, Muslim Jewish interreligious dialogue over Temple Mount as a contested religious and national site and the complex encounter between Palestinians and the Arabic language, on the one hand, and Israelis and Hebrew language, on the other hand, in the context of the asymmetrical conflict between Israeli-Jews and Palestinians. 6648 Monday 15:30-16:45 Kei Individual and Interpersonal Dynamics in Organizational Communication Organizational Communication Chair Sun Kyong Lee, U of Oklahoma, USA Participants Confidence in Dyadic Decision Making: The Role of Individual Differences and Interpersonal Behavioral Interaction Style Jonathon P. Schuldt, Cornell U, USA Christopher Chabris, Union College, USA Anita Williams Woolley, Carnegie Mellon U, USA Polyphony in Employee Narratives: An Insightful View of Organizational Change Pascale Caidor, U of Montreal, CANADA Support me in a Stressful Workplace: Understanding Social Support Processes Under Different Stresses Xueying Zhang, U of Alabama, USA Joshua Ray Pederson, U of Iowa, USA Warm but Incompetent? The Processing and Consequences of Mixed Media Stereotypes of Older Workers Anne Cornelia Kroon, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Martine van Selm, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Claartje L. ter Hoeven, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Rens Vliegenthart, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Respondent Catrin E. Johansson, Mid Sweden U, SWEDEN 6649 Monday 15:30-16:45 Board Room Work and Life in Neoliberal Societies: Questions of Trust, Time, and Affect Philosophy, Theory and Critique Chair Lana F. Rakow, U of North Dakota, USA Participants Trust and the Financial Market in Light of Habermas and Luhmann: A Research Agenda for Communication Science Nadine Strauss, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Think Rich, Feel Hurt: Affective Making of Financial Subjects Through Wealth-Tech Education in South Korea Bohyeong Kim, U of Massachusetts, USA From Happiness to Passion: Work and the Good Life Imaginary Renyi Hong, U of Southern California, USA Time and Temporality in the Call Center Carina Guyard, Södertörn U, SWEDEN 6653 Monday 15:30-16:45 Fuji Boundaries: Questioning the Local, Global, and Transnational Media Industry Studies Global Communication and Social Change Chair Terry Flew, Queensland U of Technology, AUSTRALIA Participants Flows in Reflux: The BRIC “Mockbuster” as a Glitch in Mediatic Hegemony Camilo Cesar Diaz Pino, U of Wisconsin, USA The Secret of the Magic Gourd: The Transformation of Disney's Localization Strategies in China Wan-Jun Lu, U of Wisconsin, USA The "Responsible Adult": On Media Responsibility, Off-Screen Activities, and Commercial Preschool Television Ranit Grossaug, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Rethinking the Korean Wave: The Political Dimensions of Transnational Media Culutre Ju Oak Kim, Temple U, USA Border Crossing: A Case Study of Industrial Logics and Discourses in International Television Adaptation Nicole Hentrich, U of Michigan, USA 6654 Monday 15:30-16:45 Sakura Public Relations in Public Sector Organizations: A Response to Conflicting Demands? Public Relations Chair Magnus Fredriksson, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Participants Bringing Bureaucracy Into Political Public Relation Theory Heidi Salomonsen, Aalborg U, DENMARK Finn Frandsen, U of Aarhus, DENMARK Winni Johansen, Aarhus U, DENMARK Negotiating Legitimacy and Reputation in the Swedish Armed Forces’ Public Relation Activities Eva-Karin Olsson, Swedish National Defense College, SWEDEN Maria Hellman, Stockholm U, SWEDEN Not Expecting to Engage? Citizen Engagement With Local Government Jana Bowden, Macquarie U, AUSTRALIA Vilma L. Luoma-aho, U of Jyväskylä, FINLAND Kay Naumann, Macquarie U, AUSTRALIA Public Sector Public Relations in the Intersection of Institutional Conditions Magnus Fredriksson, U of Gothenburg, SWEDEN Josef Pallas, Uppsala U, SWEDEN Respondent Maria Jose Canel, U Complutense de Madrid, SPAIN As other types of organizations, public sector organizations (government agencies, country councils, municipals, hospitals, schools and others) are using public relations. Earlier research have provided valuable insights when it comes to the processes, consequences and challenges related to public relations in and by public sector organizations (Houlberg-Salomonsen 2013; Wæraas, Byrkjeflot & Angell 2011). In this panel, we seek to further these advancements by exploring different aspects of public relations performed by public sector organizations and how these relate to institutional, organizational and professional conditions. 6660 Monday 15:30-16:45 Olive Digital Media and Political Protest Political Communication Chair Jacob Groshek, Boston U, USA Participants Conceptualizing Political Protest Communication: Theories, Models, and Methodology for Researching Social Activism in a Digital Dimension Oliver Hahn, Uof Passau, GERMANY Isabelle Brodesser, U of Passau, GERMANY Digital Media, Cycle of Contention, and Sustainability of Environmental Activism: The Case of Anti-PX Protests in China Jun Liu, U of Copenhagen, DENMARK From Twitter to the Streets: A Mixed-Methods Study of Contemporary Activist Practices Rogelio Lopez, U of Southern California, USA Perry B. Johnson, U of Southern California, USA Kate Miltner, U of Southern California, USA Courtney Cox, U of Southern California, USA I Shield Myself From Thee: Selective Avoidance on Social Media During the 2014 “Umbrella Movement” in Hong Kong Qinfeng Zhu, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Marko M. Skoric, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Fei Chris Shen, City U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF 6661 Monday 15:30-16:45 Sage Increasing Young People’s Resilience to Unwanted Media Effects Children Adolescents and the Media Chair Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Participants Study 1: Research Synthesis on Media Literacy Suzanna Johanna Opree, Erasmus U Rotterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Study 2: The Influence of Online Pornography on the Sexual Objectification of Women: The Attenuating Role of Health Education Laura P. Vandenbosch, U of Leuven / U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Study 3: A Short-Term Longitudinal Investigation of the Role of Perceived Parental and Teacher Norms in Predicting Adolescents’ Cyberbullying Bystander Behavior Sara Pabian, U of Antwerp, BELGIUM Study 4: Enhancing Positive and Mitigating Negative Media Effects Among Adolescents: Parental Mediation Matters – But Not Always Kathleen Beullens, U of Leuven, BELGIUM An Katrien Sodermans, U of Leuven, BELGIUM Ine Beyens, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Study 5: The Effectiveness of Media Literacy Videos on Social Media: Disentangling the Role of Video Character and Online Sharing Johanna M.F. van Oosten, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Sonya Dal Cin, U of Michigan, USA Respondent Jessica Taylor Piotrowski, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS This panel presents five papers that explore different ways of building resilience (i.e., media literacy, education and parental mediation) among adolescents and emerging adults to the effects of media exposure. 7109 Tuesday 08:30-12:00 NHK Japanese Broadcasting Corporation Conference Room 7154 Tuesday 08:30-16:00 Sakura Postconference: Key Communication Institutions in Tokyo: Culture and the Profession Meet at NHK Sponsored Sessions Chair Bonita Dostal Neff, Indiana U Northwest, USA Postconference: Communicating With Machines: The Rising Power of Digital Interlocutors in Our Lives Sponsored Sessions Chair Andrea L. Guzman, Northern Illinois U, USA Participants What is Human-Machine Communication Anyway? Andrea L. Guzman, Northern Illinois U, USA Communication Near the End of its Exceptionalism Steven Jones, U of Illinois - Chicago, USA Ars Ex Machina: Rethinking Art and Artistry in the Age of Creative Machines David J. Gunkel, Northern Illinois U, USA Risky Robots: Using Robotic Delivery Platforms to Deliver Information Concerning Environmental Hazards Kenneth Alan Lachlan, U of Connecticut, USA Adam Michael Rainear, U of Connecticut, USA Zhan Xu, U of Connecticut, USA Ronald E. Rice, U of California - Santa Barbara, USA Xialing Lin, U of Kentucky, USA Patric R. Spence, U of Kentucky, USA Animals, Humans, and Machines: Interactive Implications of Ontological Classification Autumn Payge Edwards, Western Michigan U, USA My Algorithm: User Perceptions of Algorithmic Recommendations in Cultural Contexts Terje Colbjornsen, U of Oslo, NORWAY Theorizing About Human-Machine Communication Through Reciprocity Seungcheol Austin Lee, Northern Kentucky U, USA Agency in the Age of Intelligent Machines Gina Neff, U of Washington, USA Communicating With Machines and Other Non-Human, Medical Things Laura Forlano, Illinois Institute of Technology, USA Negotiating Power, Aliveness and the Off-Switch in Human-Robot Relations Eleanor Sandry, Curtin U, AUSTRALIA Administrative Support Bots in Wikipedia: How Automation Can Transform the Affordances of Platforms and the Governance of Communities R.Stuart Geiger, U of California - Berkeley, USA Personification and Polysemy in the Robotic Narrative: Ontology, Innocence and Consumerism Leslie Mabry, U of Washington, USA Semi-Autonomous Fan Fiction: Examining Japanese Character Bots as Socialbots Keiko Nishimura, U of North Carolina, USA Communicating With Robots: ANTalyzing the Interaction Between Digital Interlocutors and Humans Christoph Lutz, BI Norwegian Business School, NORWAY The Poetic Quantitative Self: Perceiving Cyborg as a Cultural Technique Ido Ramati, Hebrew U of Jerusalem, ISRAEL Artificial Intelligence, Social Media, and Newsgathering Neil James Thurman, Ludwig Maximilians U Munich, GERMANY Stephen Schifferes, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Stephen Hunt, City U London, UNITED KINGDOM Intrusion of Robot Into Journalism: Comparing the Quality of News Written by a Robot and a Human Journalist Jaemin Jung, KAIST, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF Youngju Kim, Korea Press Foundation, KOREA, REPUBLIC OF A Cross-Nationally Comparative Look at the Determinants of Attitudes Toward Robots Rinaldo Kühne, U of Amsterdam, THE NETHERLANDS Racially Identified Twitterbots: Perceptions of Communication Competence and Credibility Chad Edwards, Western Michigan U, USA Henry Goble, Western Michigan U, USA Austin Beattie, Western Michigan U, USA Receiver Apprehension, Learning, and Telepresence-Mediated Messages: Submersive Viewing vs. 2-D Viewing Kathleen Martini, Western Michigan U, USA Noelle Massey, Western Michigan U, USA Eric Mishne, Western Michigan U, USA Using Anthropomorphic Agents for Persuasion Sookyung Cho, Northern Kentucky U, USA Seungcheol Austin Lee, Northern Kentucky U, USA Yuhua (Jake) Liang, Chapman U, USA Mysterious Machines and Their Technical Cultures Alex Lambert, Monash U, AUSTRALIA Revealing the True Self to AI? Comparing the Human-Human and Hman-AI First Social Interactions Yi Mou, Shanghai Jiao Tong U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Audience Identification and Species Solipsism in the Representation of Artificial Intelligence in Film and Television Science Fiction Edward Brennan, Dublin Institute of Technology, IRELAND Persuasive Computing: Bridging SIDE and the CASA Paradigm Kun Xu, Temple U, USA Moving to the Extremes? Interactions between Computer Algorithms and Online Communicative Behaviours of Lacuna Publics Lisa Tam, La Trobe U, AUSTRALIA Hugh Davies, La Trobe U, AUSTRALIA In concert with the conference theme of "Communicating with Power," our post-conference focuses on the growing power of artificial entities in our lives fostered in and through Human-Machine Communication (HMC) and the power that we have as communication researchers to bring new insight into life and communication in a robotic culture. We invite scholars from across ICA’s divisions and a variety of epistemological and methodological backgrounds to discuss their work related to HMC, which encompasses Human-Computer Interaction, Human-Robot Interaction, and Human-Agent Interaction, in this full-day postconference. We will focus on the individual, cultural, and philosophical implications of the various ways in which we interact with machines. 7112 Tuesday 09:00-17:00 School of Chinese Classics Building 7113 Tuesday 09:00-17:00 Kyoto Sangyo U Room 3-A Postconference: Theory as Power vs. Power as Theory in Communication Studies Sponsored Sessions The theme of this post-conference echoes the 2016 ICA Fukuoka Convention theme of Communicating with Power. In the Western world of communication studies, while traditional theories of communication such as cognitive approaches and interpretive approaches focus on discovering, explaining and interpreting reality, post-modern theories of communication such as the British Cultural Studies, the Continental Philosophy, and post-colonial theories and so on aim to uncover, critique and change (unjust) reality. Given such a complex and evolving intellectual terrain on a global scale, it is high time that concerned scholars of communication studies pause along and reflect upon such intellectual development paths. Postconference: Power of Strategic Communication: Public Relations and Advertising in the 21st Century Sponsored Sessions Chair Katerina Tsetsura, U of Oklahoma, USA The postconference will examine the concept of strategic communication in relation to advertising and public relations, from communication and business perspectives. The professional agencies around the world increasingly engage in so-called integrated strategic communication and advocate the close collaboration between advertising and public relations specialists. However, both disciplines have insisted on separating the academic knowledge and practices. This post-conference will investigate the ways strategic communication is understood in the United States, Europe, and Asia, and will offer research- and practice-based solutions to understanding the realm of strategic communication and the power of public relations and advertising in the 21st Century from the communication and business perspectives. 7503 Tuesday 14:00-18:00 Fudan U Conference Room Postconference: Mediatization: Digital Revolution and Chinese Setting Sponsored Sessions Chairs Randy Kluver, Texas A&M U, USA Peter K Yu, Drake U, USA Linchuan Jack Qiu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yong Hu, Peking U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Min Jiang, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA The convergence of digital technologies, including the Internet and mobile media, has reconfigured communication and social relationships, resulting in the dramatic transformation of Chinese society. In China, the latest development of digital technologies affords a unique real-life setting, where we see some of the world's most rapid and drastic social changes brought by new media, where new critical facets of mediatization theory still wait to be explored. We intend to enrich and expand the theoretical meaning of mediatization theory, accentuate communication as mediating practices that connect humans to the world, and thereby promote a new “communication turn” that enables communication rather than the exclusive category of media organizations to become the founding stone of Chinese society and of humanity. 8103 Wednesday 09:00-18:00 Fudan U Conference Room Postconference: Mediatization: Digital Revolution and Chinese Setting Sponsored Sessions Chairs Randy Kluver, Texas A&M U, USA Peter K. Yu, Drake U, USA Linchuan Jack Qiu, Chinese U of Hong Kong, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Yong Hu, Peking U, CHINA, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF Min Jiang, U of North Carolina - Charlotte, USA The convergence of digital technologies, including the Internet and mobile media, has reconfigured communication and social relationships, resulting in the dramatic transformation of Chinese society. In China, the latest development of digital technologies affords a unique real-life setting, where we see some of the world's most rapid and drastic social changes brought by new media, where new critical facets of mediatization theory still wait to be explored. We intend to enrich and expand the theoretical meaning of mediatization theory, accentuate communication as mediating practices that connect humans to the world, and thereby promote a new “communication turn” that enables communication rather than the exclusive category of media organizations to become the founding stone of Chinese society and of humanity.