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Communication Technology 2006 Abstracts

January 17, 2012 by Kyshia

Communication Technology Division (CTEC)

Municipal Broadband Services: Government Supply as Panacea to Market Failure in the Provision of High Speed Internet service to Underserved and Unserved Communities • Abubakar Alhassan, Florida • Broadband’s higher speed and greater bandwidth distinguishes it from the hitherto slow, limited bandwidth dial-up service. Although the US is the cradle of the Internet, but OECD reports show that it now lacks behind other nations in broadband deployment, a development blamed on market failure characterized by the commercial ISPs’ refusal to deploy broadband to certain communities. This paper examines the provision of broadband by municipalities as the policy panacea for the market failure.

Utility vs. Commodity: Framing the Provision of Broadband • John Anderson, Illinois at Urbana-Champaign • The importance of broadband connectivity is growing, and while universal service is a national priority incumbent telecommunications service providers are not moving in this direction. This leads to public and non-profit entities working to correct this market failure. Incumbents have responded with a political offensive swiped largely from the playbook of the electric power industry some 100 years ago. Ultimately, the question of broadband provision may be settled at the national level.

Revisiting the Issue of Blog Credibility: A National Survey • Stephen Banning, Bradley and Kaye Trammell, Louisiana State • This study investigated the relationship between credibility, third-person effect, and blog use. Through a national phone survey (N = 575), researchers found support for all hypotheses. While credibility was neutral overall, blog authors assessed blogs as being more credible than non-bloggers, and credibility correlated with likelihood to act (behavior). Third-person effect was found in reference to blogs and it correlated with blog credibility and likelihood to act. Findings and future research are discussed.

Value and Digital Rights Management: A Social Economics Approach • Benjamin Bates, Tennessee-Knoxville • Current copyright overemphasizes financial return compared to alternative sources of value (both social and private) deriving from information use. I use an approach designed to emphasize those other aspects of value and consider the implications of current and proposed Digital Rights Management (DRM) approaches for the creation of social value. I conclude that while most DRM approaches actually exacerbate conditions, DRM also offers the potential for an irights system that more fully incorporates social value.

Generation iPod: An Exploratory Study of Podcasting’s ‘Innovators’ • David Brown, Texas at Austin • Podcasting has become one of the most heavily hyped media concepts in recent years, billed as the latest digital-age threat to “old-media”. Yet almost nothing is known about listeners, their habits, or podcast demand. This exploratory study offers one of the first snapshots of real-world podcast use among its earliest adopters. The results suggest surprising gender and other distinctions between listeners and non-listeners, barriers to experimentation, and fading interest after initial podcast use.

Pioneers in the Blogosphere: Profiling the Early Adopters of Weblogs • Byeng-Hee Chang and Trent Seltzer, Florida • Weblogs, or “blogs,” are increasing in their use, visibility, and impact. Using the Innovation Diffusion Theory literature as a theoretical framework, a secondary analysis of data gathered by the Pew Internet and American Life Project indicated that there are significant differences between adopters and non-adopters of weblogs in terms of demographic profile, innovativeness, use of other new communication technologies, and Internet use.

A Multinational Study on Online Privacy: Global Concerns and Local Responses • Hichang Cho, Rivera Milagros and Sun Sun Lim, National University of Singapore • Using a survey on 1261 Internet users from five international cities—Bangalore, Seoul, Singapore, Sydney, and New York, we examined international Internet users’ perception and behavioral responses concerning online privacy. We found that online privacy was a “global human rights issue” affecting almost all Internet users worldwide, but the way individuals perceived and coped with it varied across a host of micro-macro level factors such as demographics, Internet expertise, nationality, and cultural values.

Extending Technology Acceptance Model With Social And Organizational Variables • Siyoung Chung, National University of Singapore • The purpose of this study is to empirically examine the differential influences of a comprehensive set of technology acceptance attributes on both adoption and usage behavior. A mail survey was conducted with the employees (n = 108) who were the active sales of a large corporation in the U.S, which recently introduced a web-based sales system. The findings demonstrated that attitudinal, social, and organizational variables selectively influenced technology adoption and usage behavior.

News as a Process: A New Approach to the Political Economy of Communication • Lori Cooke-Scott, Ryerson • This paper proposes a unified theory of the political economy of news communication, encompassing changing realities in technology, market capitalism and everyday life. A central feature is its treatment of news as a process of exchange rather than a product to be exchanged. A processive approach is needed to understand the structural transformation of the news industry, the shift in power relations among producers and consumers, and the revolution in audience agency and community formation.

Is Seeing–or Hearing–Believing?: Reactions to Listening to the 2004 Presidential Debates With and Without Video • Mike Dorsher, Wisconsin-Eau Claire • In a quasi-experimental study inspired by the Kennedy-Nixon “Great Debate,” 175 participants from a mid-size Midwestern university either watched the 2004 presidential debates on TV or listened to them without the video. The data yielded few significant differences between debate viewers and listeners. Candidate debate performances rated high on “presidential” qualities and eloquence best predicted the debate winner.

Can Billie-Jo sell wine? The Effects of Social Category Cues and Rich Media in E-commerce Websites • Edward Downs, Sampada Marathe, Bimal Balakrishnan and Suellen Hopfer, Penn State • Do social category cues and richness of media affect website perceptions and memory in E-commerce? If so, how do these variables relate to product price sensitivity? An eight-condition mixed-model experiment was designed to test these questions. A significant three-way interaction effect was detected, driven by a rich media by product interaction effect when holding source constant. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed as well as limitations and directions for future research.

Sociology of News and New Media: How the Blogosphere Transforms Journalism and Changes News • Ivan Dylko and Gerald Kosicki, Ohio State • Political blogs have recently demonstrated an ability to affect public discourse, especially during the 2004 presidential election. In this paper we examined implications of the blogosphere for the sociology of news. A case study of the CBS’ 60 Minutes segment about George W. Bush was used to demonstrate that journalists used information from blogosphere and that blogs could break stories faster than traditional media and successfully push them onto media’s agenda.

Is the Internet an Agent of Empowerment in News Making? A Case Study of Chinese Journalists • Li Fu, Chinese University of Hong Kong • This study adopts the mediationist perspective to explore the impact of the Internet on Chinese journalists. It finds that, the Internet has made an impact on news making, however, its power is limited, affected by constraining and facilitating factors at the individual, organization, and institutional levels; the Internet therefore empowers journalists in a situational way, characterized as time-specific, genre-specific, media status-specific, and location-specific. Such situational empowerment is mainly driven by commercialization and propaganda reforms.

A Ten-Year Profile of the Democratic Agency of the Internet in 152 Countries • Jacob Groshek, Indiana • Since its inception, the internet has been lauded as a potent democratizing agent. Using macro-level data from 1994 to 2003, this study examined the extent to which the internet has fulfilled this promise. In the 152 countries included in this study, increased internet diffusion was not shown to be a meaningful predictor of more democratic regimes or diminished government control of the press. It did, however, show strong, positive relationships with economic growth.

Unraveling Uses And Effects Of An Interactive Cancer Communication System • Jeong-Yeob Han, Robert Hawkins, Bret Shaw, Suzanne Pingree, Fiona McTavish and David Gustafson, Wisconsin • As part of an effort to understand uses and effects of an Interactive Cancer Communication System (ICCS), the purpose of current study is to explore the relationships between different use patterns and subsequent changes in patients’ health outcomes. By examining different use patterns, this study revealed effective styles of use that are associated with benefits. Both theoretical and practical implications for eHealth research and evaluation are discussed.

Blogs in the Media Conversation: The Knowledge Factor in the Diffusion Process • Nanette Hogg, Carol Lomicky, Ruth Brown and Syed Hossain, Nebraska-Kearney • A content analysis of 1,168 stories in seven media outlets found blogs first mentioned in 2000. The number of stories mentioning blogs tripled every year until 2004 when the rate of increase slowed. Researchers concluded media provided knowledge about blogs as an innovation, consistent with the first step identified by Rogers in the innovation-decision process. Qualitative analysis revealed media generally discussed blogging in positive terms.

Exploring E-gov Online Structures for Citizen Participation • Min Jiang, Purdue • Acknowledging that Internet architecture, far from being value free, are results of deliberate choices, the paper utilizes website content analysis to examine the online structures for citizen participation on 30 Chinese provincial government websites. Their potentials and limits for democratic practices in the neo-authoritarian state are evaluated through a revised UN e-participation framework. Although not implemented to promote democracy, some features of the websites online structures grant cautious optimism for more open and responsible governance.

Creating a Web of Trust and Change: Testing the Gamson Hypothesis on Politically Interested Internet Users • Tom Johnson, Southern Illinois and Barbara Kaye, Tennessee-Knoxville and Daekyung Kim, Southern Illinois • Creating a Web of Trust and Change This study used an online survey of politically interested Internet users to examine the Gamson hypothesis that those who are low in political trust and high in political self-efficacy can be most easily mobilized into political action. Internet users in general were almost equally divided between being an Assured (high in trust and efficacy) and a Dissident (low in trust and efficacy).

Posting and Reading Personal Messages: The Motivation of Personal Blog Use and The Effects of Personal Blog Use on Users’ Loneliness, Belonging and Well-Being in Real Life • Younbo Jung, Hayeon Song and Peter Vorderer, Southern California • The purpose of the current paper is to develop a theoretical model that explains the motivation of personal Blog use (Impression Management, Voyeuristic Surveillance, and Social Comparison) and the effects of personal Blog use on offline life (loneliness, belonging, and psychological well-being). The proposed model for Study 1 (N=73) and Study 2 (N=531) were tested via an online survey of Blog users in Cyworld. Implications based on the findings are discussed.

Influences of Online Chat Use on Social Support and Psychosocial Well-Being • Seok Kang, Arkansas Tech • This study explores the role of disembodiment—telepresence in cyberspace—in online chat use and its effects on social psychosocial well-being. Results suggest that disembodiment in online interaction is a compelling contributor to increased loneliness and depression and decreased social support.

Abandoning Traditional News Media?: Factors Influencing the Time Displacement Effects of Online News • Daekyung Kim and Tom Johnson, Southern Illinois • This study surveys 266 college students to examine which factors, such as reliance, interactive use, motivations, and credibility of online news, predict perceived displacement effects of mainstream, portal news sites, and blogs on traditional news media. The study shows mixed findings and suggests that displacement effects vary by reliance, motivations, and credibility of each online news sites. Discussions about the relationship between online news sites and traditional media are followed.

When the Public Has the Press: An Analysis of Bloggers and Their Blogging Activities in the 2004 U.S • Eunseong Kim, Indiana • This study examines bloggers and their blogging activities during the 2004 U.S. presidential campaign. The analysis of an online survey of 270 bloggers provides valuable information about bloggers’ weblog activities, their motivations for blogging, political orientation, and the pattern of media use. The findings indicate that bloggers played active roles as information providers (or communicators in the participatory media) and as contributors of civic discourse.

Effects of Cognitive Busyness and Computer Modality on Gender Stereotyping of Computers • Eun-Ju Lee, California-Davis • Two experiments tested the mindlessness explanation for the Computers Are Social Actors paradigm. In Experiment 1, participants played a trivia game with a computer, which they thought generated random answers. They attributed greater competence and conformed more to the male than the female computers, but only when cognitively busy with a secondary task. However, when the computer produced its output in synthesized speech, as opposed to written text, such advantages of the male computer dissipated.

Philosophy and Network Structure: A Case Study of Japan’s i-Mode and Wi-Fi in the U.S. • Hoon Lee and Yong Jin Park, Michigan • This study examines how philosophical outlooks of societies influence the development of network systems. A comparison between i-Mode and Wi-Fi demonstrates that culture, which conspired to either hamper or accelerate the Internet diffusion, influences the configuration of wireless networks in each country. Hierarchical Japanese culture transformed the architecture of the Internet. In the US, the legacy of hacker reanimated grassroots movements toward free Wi-Fi network. Policy implications of technological designs are discussed.

Blog agenda: What did they blog about in the 2004 U.S. Presidential Election? • Jae Kook Lee, Texas at Austin • This study investigates the way that political blogs prioritize a variety of public issues in comparison with mainstream media. With an analysis of news coverage of blogs and mainstream media in the 2004 U.S. Presidential Election, the study found that the priority, or the agenda, of blogs are similar to that of mainstream media. Furthermore, the study found that political blogs cover the election with virtually the same agenda, regardless of their political leaning.

Viewer Privacy over Cable, Satellite, the Internet, and other MVPDs: The Need for Uniform Regulator • Laurie Lee, Nebraska-Lincoln • Television viewers can now watch shows over a variety of distribution formats, including telephone, broadband Internet, and cellular phone, from many multichannel video program distributors (MVPDs). Unfortunately, subscribers also risk their privacy to MVPDs capable of collecting vast amounts of viewing data. Federal laws protect cable and satellite subscribers, but do not necessarily extend to all MVPDs. This paper examines these laws and proposes uniform federal legislation protecting all video consumers regardless of transmission medium.

The Effects of 3G License Fees on the Mobile Markets in OECD Countries • Sangwon Lee, Florida • Over the last several years, a large number of licenses for 3G services have been awarded through various approaches. This article presents an empirical analysis of the potential effects of 3G license fees on mobile markets in OECD countries. The findings herein reveal that 3G license fees have affected mobile prices in OECD countries, which may imply that large initial down-payments have an adverse effect on the growth of 3G services.

The Development of Mobile Television: Examining the Convergence of Mobile and Broadcasting Services • Sangwon Lee and Sylvia Chan-Olmsted, Florida • The convergence of mobile and broadcasting services may deliver a driver for dramatic growth in the telecommunications sector. It is said that Korean DMB system is the most commercially successful mobile television services worldwide today. We explore the factors that influence the development of the Korean DMB market and their implications. It was found that the combination of broadcasting and mobile telephone in the context of mobile television presents a classic case of “complementary convergence.”

Mobile Phone Diffusion in Developed and Developing Countries: Digital Divide, Factor, and Difference • Yang-Hwan Lee, South Carolina • This study identified the exist of digital divide between 23 developed and 54 developing countries in mobile phone diffusion during 1996-2002. In addition, factors that known to the influential affecting ICT diffusion were tested. According to the empirical test, the digital divide in mobile phone diffusion still existed and had been widen. Based on the panel regression, it was found that economy, technology, and regulation factors affected mobile diffusion. Time effect existed, but was minimal.

Predictors of Cell Phone Use as a News Device • Xigen Li, Southern Illinois • Building on the theoretical framework drawn from diffusion of innovation, technology acceptance model and expectancy-value model, this study proposed and tested a model of cell phone use as a news device. Technology functionality, information accessibility and user technology initiative were found to be significant predictors of cell phone use as a news device. Perceived value of information, news reliance and news consumption were not significant predictors of cell phone use as a news device.

College Students’ Use of iPods: Connecting iConsumption to iPiracy • Lisa Marshall, Bowling Green State • The purpose of this paper is to analyze the iPod as a tool of communication for college students and explore connections it has to the Diffusion of Innovations Theory. This paper provides an iPod overview, shows connections to piracy and the theory, and presents findings to a survey completed by 100 college students. Seventy-three percent of students reported they never pay music used on the iPod, seeking ways other than purchase to obtain iPod media.

The Source Cycle: Intermedia Agenda-Setting Between the Traditional Media and Weblogs • Marcus Messner and Marcia Watson, Miami • This study examined the intermedia agenda-setting effects between the traditional media and weblogs based on the use of one as a source by the other. A content analysis of 2,059 newspaper articles was combined with a separate content analysis of 120 weblogs. It was found that the newspapers increasingly use weblogs as sources and that weblogs heavily rely on the traditional media as sources. Thereby, traditional media and weblogs engage in a source cycle.

Online Journalism and the War in Cyberspace: A Comparison between U.S. and International Newspapers • Matt Neznanski and Daniela Dimitrova, Iowa State • The 2003 Iraq War was the first military conflict in which online media played a significant role. This study explores how the Internet was used to disseminate war news and information by comparing a number of international newspaper Web sites (N=791). Through a content analysis, the study shows some differences in the use of Web-specific features such as hyperlinks, animations, multimedia content, and interactive elements. Differences between U.S. and international Web sites are also discussed.

Uses of the Internet by College Students: Implications for Political Involvement • Kristine Nowak, David Atkin, Christian Rauh and Mark Hamilton, Cleveland State • In this emerging online environment, an intriguing avenue for research involves the relationship between Internet use and political involvement. In an effort to fill that void, the present study explores the extent to which college students rely on the Internet as a channel for political information and the influence that such uses have on their levels of political involvement.

Ruling the Cyber-Cities: When the West and the East Walk Together • Yong Jin Park, Michigan • This study examines the moderating role of culture in promoting or curtailing the convergence of online marketplaces. Drawing upon international regime theory, this study challenges the viability of ‘industry self-regulation’ regime that neglects cultural differences in privacy. A survey compared regulatory perceptions of the US and Korean participants. The aim is to explore the nature of a consensus among policymakers and to measure the effectiveness of the policy in its operation.

The Political Shaping of Municipal Wi-Fi Networks: A Case Study of Hermosa Beach • Namkee Park, Southern California • This study examines the role of local government and its impacts on the municipal Wi-Fi networks’ deployment and operation from the perspectives of social/political shaping of technology and path dependency. By employing a case study method, the study investigates the ways in which the network in Hermosa Beach, CA, has been implemented. It uncovers that the role played by local government still matters even in the era of deregulation and privatization in communication technologies.

Information Technology and Information Literacy in Journalism-Mass Communication Libraries: • Patrick Reakes, Barbara Semonche and Fred Thomsen, Florida • The last decade has been a time of sweeping change in journalism education as well as in the research facilities that support it. The management and use of information technology are critical factors in the promotion and development of information literacy within the journalism-mass communication curriculum. This research was undertaken in an effort to investigate information technology use and information literacy programs in Journalism/Mass Communications libraries and to establish a “baseline” for future research.

The Internet Immersion Divide: A Barrier to Inclusive Online Communities • Louis Rutigliano, Texas at Austin • The concept of Internet immersion looks at the relationship between online access and online activities. It considers Internet immersion as a continuum from passivity to interactivity. This paper finds that people who go online more frequently are more likely to use the Internet for interaction and after comparing offline factors such as income to this continuum, this paper presents a new form of digital divide.

Is it More Fun to Kill Other People? Exploring Video Game Enjoyment in a Variety of Game Modes • Mike Schmierbach and Thomas Butler, College of Charleston • Video games exist to provide players with enjoyment, yet little research has explored what makes a game enjoyable. In this study, we consider how college students (N = 102) respond to one of three play modes in a first-person shooter. Enjoyment is fostered by greater excitement and attachment to avatar and lower frustration, all of which points to the importance of engagement or flow. Gaming experience shapes some responses, but game mode has minimal effects.

Online Citizens and Consequences of Internet Use for Political Participation • Daniel Schneider, Stanford • The Internet offers new opportunities for political dialogue and communication with possible implications for political participation. Using data from General Social Survey of 2000, 2002 and 2004 characteristics of Internet users with and without interest in political online content are investigated and the consequences of Internet use for political participation are examined. Results suggest a selection process for use of the Internet and political online content and that Internet use can increase political participation.

Frame-up: An Analysis of Arguments Both For and Against Municipal Wi-Fi Initiatives • Gwen Shaffer, Temple • Dozens of cities plan to build wireless broadband networks. This textual analysis compares documents used to bolster and break down the case for municipal Wi-Fi. It examines how Wireless Philadelphia uses “public good” principles to frame its argument for a potentially massive taxpayer investment, while the telecommunications industry frames city-run wireless networks as “risky” and unnecessary. Contradictions and inconsistencies in these documents highlight how information is manipulated to influence the debate over Wi-Fi policy.

Dear Radio Broadcaster: Fan Mail as a Form of Perceived Interactivity • Charlene Simmons, Tennessee-Chattanooga • In an attempt to learn more about perceived interactivity this study explores the perceptions of broadcast radio listeners. Early broadcast radio provides an interesting example for exploring interactivity because although the medium lacked interactive features millions of listeners perceived that the opportunity to ‘interact’ with radio personalities existed through fan mail. This study examines listener fan mail as well as radio programs to determine whether radio encouraged a level of perceived interactivity.

Political Web sites: An Equalizer for Candidate Gender and Race Disparities? • Melissa Smith, Mississippi State and Barry Smith, Alabama • This study examines the roles candidate race and gender may play in the evaluation of candidates presented via campaign Web sites. Apparent race and gender of a candidate were manipulated while issue information was held constant on a campaign Web site. The candidate’s gender was shown to affect evaluations of the candidate (positively for female candidates). The candidate’s race did not affect evaluations of the candidate.

Blogging for Better Health: Putting the “Public” Back in Public Health • S. Shyam Sundar, Heidi Hatfield Edwards, Yifeng Hu and Carmen Stavrositu, Penn State • Weblogs are a relatively new and unique online communication tool. This paper examines blogs that focus on mental health issues to better understand the function and content of these particular types of blogs. The researchers discuss theoretical issues surrounding technological and psychological aspects of health blogs and employ quantitative content analysis as well as qualitative textual analysis to determine who mental health bloggers are, why they blog, and the nature of mental health blogs.

Framing of Tsunami Bloggers: A Study of Print Newspapers from Four Countries • Renuka Suryanarayan, Ohio • The purpose was to see if blogs had become important journalistic sources in newspaper reporting of the tsunami, 2004. The coverage by the New York Times, the Daily Mail, London, the Times of India, and the Daily News, Sri Lanka, was content analyzed. Two findings were 1) that technology does not change journalists’ routine in Eastern and in Western countries; and 2) that the number of tsunami deaths in a country had no correlation to media salience.

An Experiment Testing the Agenda-Setting Effect of Blogs • Kaye Trammell, Louisiana State • This study explored the agenda-setting effect of communication style and interactivity on blogs among young people. As a multi-cell experiment on undergraduate students, this study exposed participants to blog posts that discuss an issue in 1). an anecdotal manner told from a first-person perspective or 2). report-like manner discussing facts and statistics about an issue. Results confirm the agenda-setting power of blogs, but find mixed results regarding the hypothesized impact of communication style and interactivity.

Credibility and the Uses of Blogs Among Professionals in the Communication Industry • Kaye Trammell, Lance Porter, Deborah Chung and Eunseong Kim, Louisiana State • Communication professionals are beginning to take note of blogs as more turn to them for information and deem blogs “credible.” Using an online survey of professionals in journalism and public relations, this study investigated the use of blogs within the communication industry. Factor analysis revealed simplistic blog use categorizations as being either passive or active. Results also indicate that those who are labeled “high users” in both factors assign more credibility to the medium.

From Yahoo! to AAARGH: Developments in the French Approach Towards Blocking Hate Speech • Bastiaan Vanacker, Minnesota • This paper discusses a recent case in which a French court ordered local ISPs to block certain American Web sites because they violate French hate speech law. It discusses how French courts have dealt with similar issues in the past and compares these approaches with the recent one. It also discusses the technological issues relating to destination ISP blocking brought up by such blocking orders.

Ethical and Strategic Messages: Frames and Learning in a Mixed Media Context • Aaron Veenstra, Ben Sayre, Dhavan Shah and Doug McLeod, Wisconsin • Many people consider strategic framing harmful to democracy because it erodes citizen interest in the democratic process. Our results demonstrate that this is not always the case. Testing the effects of textual strategic frames and video processing in a digital environment, we show that strategic frames may also provide a context that is more conducive to learning in mixed media news environments than that provided by ethical or value frames.

The Diffusion of GIS in Journalism • Ben Wasike, Texas at Brownsville • This study looked at the likelihood of journalists to adopt GIS and the future of the technology’s diffusion in journalism. In-depth interviews and a Web survey were used. Sixty-three percent of reporters were aware of GIS but only 11% use GIS. OLS regression showed that gender, age, and the use of other technologies affect the likelihood to adopt GIS. The availability of map data, competition, and use of secondary GIS products will affect diffusion.

Internet Gratifications, Media Use and Technology Cluster as Predictors of Wi-Fi Adoption • Ran Wei, South Carolina • The Internet becomes portable thanks to Wi-Fi and Wi-Max. However, existing research shows use of wireless Internet was low. This study explores factors predicting adoption of Wi-Fi powered WLAN. Findings show that low level of Wi-Fi awareness is a hurdle to adoption. Results of multivariate analyses indicate that newspaper reading is a predictor of Wi-Fi awareness. The motivations of information learning and social escapism are the strongest predictors of Wi-Fi interest and adoption likelihood.

The Adoption and Use of Mobile Phone in Rural China: Behavioral and Psychological Factors • Lu Wei, Washington State and Mingxin Zhang, Hubei University • Based on a theoretical model adapted from perceived need theory and original diffusion theory, this study demonstrated that both behavioral and psychological factors may significantly predict Chinese rural resident’s adoption and use of mobile phone. The effect of psychological factors, however, is very limited in the prediction of adoption and use of new media technologies, especially in the context of rural society. The relationships among demographic, behavioral, and psychological factors were discussed.

The Big Three’s Prime Time Decline: The Technological and Social Context • Kenneth Wiegand and Douglas Hindman, Washington State • This paper is an analysis of factors associated with the 25 year decline in the prime time shares of the top three television networks. Time series analysis revealed that share decline was associated with multiple video programming distribution (MVPD) penetration. MVPD penetration and network profits were associated with social differentiation, indicating organizational adjustment to the social environment. Findings were discussed in terms of the principle of relative constancy and open systems models of organizational change.

Perception Gaps of Cyber Public Sphere • Xu Wu, Arizona State • The focus of this research is to explore and compare people’s perception of online sphere as opposed to print media sphere and broadcasting media sphere. Nine attributes were summarized from Jürgen Habermas’s original discussions. A comparative survey study was conducted among some 150 undergraduate journalism students in China and in the United States, respectively. Findings exposed significant perception gaps on cyber sphere’s capacity and performance as a genuine public sphere.

Weblogs as Agents of Political Participation: Mobilizing Information in Weblogs and Print Newspapers • Masahiro Yamamoto, Washington State • Considering the growing popularity of Weblogs for journalistic use, the present study investigated the possibility that Weblogs could become a catalyst for political participation. Examining Weblogs and print newspapers, this content analysis study found more tactical mobilizing information in Weblogs than in print newspapers. This result suggests that Weblogs can potentially function as an alternative information source that encourages citizens to engage in political activities.

Perceived Anonymity and Online Public Disclosure • Haejin Yun and Robert LaRose, Michigan State • This study redefined anonymity as perceived anonymity based on a critique of previous, pertinent empirical studies. The redefined construct of perceived anonymity adopted the Social Information Processing (SIP) model’s approach to computer-mediated communication (CMC). Two competing models of perceived anonymity affecting online public disclosure – a deindividuation model and a SIP-based model – were built and tested with real online social support community data. The SIP-based model was supported with perceived anonymity negatively affecting public disclosure.

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Advertising 2006 Abstracts

January 17, 2012 by Kyshia

Advertising Division

Research
Effects of “Gender Role Orientation” on Perceived Role Offensiveness in Advertising: A Cross-cultural Study of Korea and U.S. • Daechun An, University of North Texas and Sang Hoon Kim, Inha University and Gul-Jin Jung, Kyung Buk National University • Employing Hofstede’s gender role items as a new scale for female role orientation, this study examined cross-cultural differences in the female role orientation, the perception of female role offensiveness in advertising, and its consequences with Korean and American student samples.

Humor in Advertising and Audience Offense: An Exploratory Study • Fred K. Beard, University of Oklahoma • The use of humor in advertising has often been considered risky, partly due to its potential for causing offense. The findings of this study of consumer complaint adjudication reports, published by the Advertising Standards Authority of New Zealand, reveal that audience members are (1) more offended by inherently offensive themes than anything else, and (2) when an intentionally humorous advertisement offends, it is likely because it was a certain type of humor that frequently includes inherently offensive themes.

Real Women on Real Beauty: Perceptions of Attractiveness and Thinness in Dove’s Campaign for Real Beauty • Kimberly L. Bissell and Amy Rask, University of Alabama and Ron Leone, Stonehill College • Using an experiment with college women at a university in the south, we used an image of a model from Dove’s Campaign for Real Beauty with other lingerie and swimsuit models of varying shapes and sizes to test how or if the campaign’s objective of teaching women that beauty comes in all shapes and sizes was at all successful in changing college women’s beliefs about beauty and attractiveness in themselves and in other women.

Blue Ads, Red Ads: Are Connections Being Made in the Political Blogosphere? • Laura F. Bright and Gracieli Scremin, University of Texas at Austin • Blogs are a new force in the online media market used to reach niche markets. This study examines advertising on the most popular type of blog: political blogs. A content analysis of 74 political blogs was undertaken which analyzed advertisements with respect to their interactivity, product context and political affiliation. Advertisements were found to be mostly static, politically congruent within their blogs and to feature products as opposed to political issues or organizations.

Publication Productivity and Topic Trends in Advertising Research: 1996 through 2005 • Jongsuk Choi, Hyejin Yoon, Hana Kim and Jooyoung Kim, University of Georgia • Retrospective studies are meaningful in the way that they guide us in designing our future courses by shedding light on pas progress and limitations. The purpose of this study is to reveal and document the contributions of institutional and departmental affiliations to theory and model development, advertising topic trends, and research method via a retrospective study in the field of advertising research.

Generating Congruence: How Repeated Sponsorship Messages Enhance Evaluations of Incongruent Sponsors • Frank E. Dardis, Pennsylvania State University • Much research on sponsorship indicates that congruent sponsors – brands or companies with a perceived fit with the sponsored event or cause – enjoy much more favorable reactions from consumers than do incongruent sponsors. However, by conceptualizing congruence as a static property and by exposing individuals to only one sponsorship message, extant research in this regard remains limited.

Senior Citizens on Interpersonal, Advertising, and Other Mediated Sources of Rx Drug Information • Denise E. DeLorme, University of Central Florida and Jisu Huh, University of Minnesota and Leonard N. Reid, University of Georgia • A series of in-depth interviews was conducted with senior citizens (1) to determine how they evaluate, compare, and use different interpersonal, advertising, and other mediated sources of prescription drug information; (2) to provide additional insight on their perceptions of the credibility, trustworthiness, and value of these sources, including DTC advertising; and (3) to capture verbatim comments for translation into scalar statements in future survey research.

Do They See What We See? A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Advertising Visuals • Katherine T. Frith and Kavita Karan, Nanyang Technological University • In this globalized world, advertising is becoming more visual, yet to date, there has been little research on how culture shapes audience’s perceptions of visual messages. In this qualitative study the authors asked respondents in the USA, India, and Singapore what they saw in the visuals used in global ads.

Advertising Students’ Attitudes about Advertising: A Nationwide Survey of Generation Y • Jami Fullerton, Oklahoma State University and Alice Kendrick, Southern Methodist University and Connie Frazier, American Advertising Federation • The first large-scale nationwide survey of advertising student attitudes toward advertising in-general revealed more positive beliefs about advertising than did previous studies of both advertising and non-advertising students. The 1,226 students from 187 colleges and universities expressed most favorable attitudes toward the economic effects of advertising and the level of regulation for the industry. Students were largely neutral in their attitudes toward advertising ethics and social effects.

Krugman Revisited: Brain Wave Measures of Media Involvement for Print and Television • Joel Geske and Saraswathi Bellur, Iowa State University • In 1971, Krugman used brain waves to examine differences in media involvement. From a sample of one subject, he posited his finding that television evokes passive involvement as opposed to active involvement by magazines. The current study re-evaluated this proposition with a larger sample of thirty participants. Findings run counter to those found by Krugman, suggesting greater attention to television than to magazines. Methodological concerns and implications for EEG and media effects studies are discussed.

Is Beauty a Joy Forever? Young Women’s Emotional Responses to Varying Types of Beautiful Advertising Models • J. Robyn Goodman, Jon Morris, and John Sutherland, University of Florida • This paper investigated college women’s emotional responses to Solomon et al.’s (1992) six beauty types. Factor analysis revealed that the original six beauty types did not hold up. Instead, the six types combined into two mutually exclusive, independent dimensions: Sexual-Sensual and Wholesome Beauty. After testing emotional reactions to these two beauty types, it was found that models with higher degrees of Wholesome Beauty produced significantly greater pleasure, arousal, and dominance. Implications for the industry are discussed.

Implicit Memory as a Complementary Measure of Brand Placement Effectiveness in Video Games • Federico de Gregorio, University of Alabama • Explicit memory measures (free recall, recognition) assume that items which cannot be accessed explicitly have been forgotten and are, thereby, ineffective. Implicit memory is proposed as a means of tapping into such “forgotten” items. An experiment to explore the utility of implicit memory as a complementary measure of brand placement effectiveness in video games shows that participants demonstrated explicit recall for approximately three placed brands while demonstrating implicit memory for an additional two (different) brands.

Reconceptualization of Advertising Clutter in the Online Environment • Louisa Ha and Kim McCann, Bowling Green State University • The paper proposes an analytical framework that reconceptualizes advertising clutter by separating the physical presence from the perception of advertising clutter with individual differences taken into account. We compare the characteristics of online and traditional media to show how various online ad formats constitute the dual self-pace and the captivity characteristic of online media. Task orientations and time orientations should be additionally taken into consideration in determining consumers’ perceived advertising clutter level.

Blog Ads Revisited: A Follow-Up Analysis of Advertising on Weblogs • Daniel M. Haygood and Amanda L. Miller, University of Tennessee and Cassandra Imfeld, SunTrust Bank • Weblogs, a form of personal expression placed on the Internet, are now often the front lines of political debate and candidate races; just one of the many changes occurring on weblogs. Among those changes is the growing presence of advertising. This research, a follow-up study from six months ago, gauges the advertising presence on weblogs to determine just how advertising has changed since that time, a substantial amount of time in technological terms.

The Development of a Popular Culture Identification Scale: A New Way to Investigate Consumers’ Attitudes • William Hoon, Western Illinois University, Jyotika Ramaprasad, Southern Illinois University Carbondale • Over the years, as advertisers broadened their scope of potential customers and diversified the models used in advertising, the salient factors of consumer attitudes became a significant interest to marketers. A new variable, popular culture identification, was introduced as an explanatory variable with respect to white consumer behavior. The paper addresses the need to examine the salience of popular culture and the development of a scale to measure the variable.

What’s Eating CARU About Kids’ Food Advertising? An Exploratory Analysis of Recent CARU Food Advertiser Cases • Mariea Grubbs Hoy and Margaret Morrison, University of Tennessee • Obesity among children is a major concern in the U.S. with advertising often being cited as a contributing factor. Self-regulation is viewed as the most favorable approach to combat the influence of advertising on childhood obesity. This paper examines some recent CARU cases involving foods, beverages and fast foods to determine the focus of advertising self-regulation aimed at food advertisers who target children.

Hispanic TV Advertising, Where did All the Mariachis Go? • Maria-Gracia Inglessis, Felipe Korzenny and Holly McGavock, Florida State University • Based on the assumption that marketers have begun to represent the Hispanic market in a less stereotypical fashion, this content analysis examines the frequency and nature of the value orientations represented in U.S Hispanic television commercials. The most commonly occurring value orientations dealt with enjoying life, collectivism, and wisdom/education. Notably less frequent were value orientations referring to luxury/social status, respect for the elderly, and nurturance, among others. Implications and recommendations for the industry are discussed.

Advertising and Promotions in Children’s Programs in the New Millennium • Nancy A. Jennings, University of Cincinnati • Historically, scholars have examined children’s advertising, but this line of research has not been updated in the new millennium. This study updates and expands the investigation with a content analysis of 563 non-program segments appearing during Saturday morning programming on 2 network (ABC and WB) and 2 cable channels (Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon). Results show that media products are becoming an increasingly larger portion of the advertising environment and that program promotions have risen dramatically.

Brought to You by…: The Impact of Television Billboards on Advertising Effectiveness in Sports Broadcasts • Yongick Jeong and Joe Bob Hester, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • This study explored the impact of television billboards (the 5-10 second identification of a sponsor during a broadcast) on advertising performance in sports broadcasts and addressed the question, “Do television billboards increase the effectiveness of a sponsor’s advertisement?” The results showed that the brands whose advertising was paired with television billboards were better recognized than ones without television billboards.

Advertising Appeals in the Global Men’s Magazine: A Cross-Cultural Comparison • Hong Ji, The Richard Stockton College of New Jersey • This study content-analyzed the use of advertising appeals in Shishang• Esquire, the Chinese mainland edition of Esquire, compared to its U.S. counterpart by focusing the changes since the copyright cooperation between Trends Magazines and Hearst began. In 2004, the use of group, soft/hard sell, modernity/traditional, and nature appeals differed in Shishang• Esquire and U.S. Esquire. The mixed use of Western and Eastern appeals was found. Glocalization thesis was supported in a complex way.

Why Not “the Best?”: Women Scarce When Adweek Ranks the Best Creative • Karen L. Mallia, University of South Carolina • This study analyzed eleven years of Adweek annual issues in which the magazine’s editors identify the “best” commercials of the prior year, to evaluate the presence of women creative staffers in this industry accolade. The study looked at issues from February 1996 through February 2006, which culled advertising from 1995 through 2005. This study finds further evidence suggesting that women are severely under-represented in advertising agency creative roles.

More Than Meets the Eye: Investigating the Hidden Impact of Brand Placements in Television Magazines • Joerg Matthes, Christian Schemer and Werner Wirth, University of Zurich • A growing research literature suggests that visual brand placements need not to be recalled in order to have an impact on brand attitudes. In an experimental study, we investigated the influence of brand frequency, viewer’s involvement and viewer’s persuasion knowledge on the attitudes towards the brand. Results clearly indicate a mere exposure effect (Zajonc, 1968): A frequently presented brand placement can have a positive effect on brand evaluations although viewers do not recall the brand.

A Cross-cultural Study of Young American and Taiwanese Consumers’ Intentions to Opt-in to SMS Advertising • Alexander Muk, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater • This study aims at examining whether cultural differences between countries have significant impact on consumers’ adoption of SMS advertising. To understand whether culture is an important determinant of people’s intentions to accept SMS advertising, Taiwan and the U.S. representing two different cultures are selected in this study. Propositions presented in this study provide preliminary evidence that young consumers’ cultural orientations embedded in their belief systems may play an influential role in their decision-making processes.

The Pursuit of Self-Regulatory Goals: How Counterfactual Thinking Influences Advertising Persuasiveness • Xiaoli Nan, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Individuals have a self-regulatory system that regulates behaviors toward either promotional goals (those that relate to attaining positive outcomes) or preventional goals (those that pertain to avoiding negative consequences). This research tests the idea that matching versus mismatching the focus of an ad appeal (highlighting the positive outcome achieved or the negative outcome avoided by using the product) with an individual’s self-regulatory goal can enhance advertising persuasiveness.

One Goal, Three Voices: Content Analysis and Audience Evaluation of Antismoking Advertisements in Youth Magazines • Hye-Jin Paek, University of Georgia • Through both content analysis and an audience evaluation of antismoking advertisements, this study examines what kinds of antismoking advertisements are currently available in youth magazines and how audiences evaluate the different types of advertisements. It finds that antismoking advertisements in youth magazines are simply invisible. It also suggests that, to achieve intended results, campaigners should practice more sophisticated media planning and creativity techniques, and that they should pre-test their advertisements before execution.

“If Her Name Is on It, She Must Be Famous:” The Impact of Naming the Spokesperson on Attitude Toward the Ad • Kartik Pashupati, Southern Methodist University and Pushkala Raman, Texas Woman’s University • In spite of the large amounts of money being spent on celebrity endorsements, many ads do not explicitly identify the celebrity spokesperson. This study investigates whether the explicit identification of a celebrity spokesperson by name results in more favorable attitude toward the ad. The impact of identifying a non-celebrity (or fake celebrity) spokesperson is also investigated.

Direct to Consumer Advertising: Enhancing Patient-Provider Communication and Health Literacy • Paula Rausch and Debbie Treise, University of Florida • Direct-to-consumer advertising (DTC) of prescription medications through mass media has burgeoned, accompanied by significant interest in how this advertising affects patients and their health-care providers. This study’s purpose is to add to existing literature by investigating through in-depth qualitative interviews the perceptions of nurse practitioners, who have largely been neglected in prior studies. Five themes emerged: communication effects, DTC learning, quick fix, de-stigmatization, and paradoxes. These themes and their implications are discussed in detail.

Does “Passing the Courvoisier” Always Pay Off? Positive and Negative Evaluative Conditioning Effects of Brand Placements in Rap Videos • Christian Schemer, Joerg Matthes, Werner Wirth and Samuel Textor, University of Zurich • The proliferation of brands in rap videos continues to loom. One mechanism by which brand placements affect consumer attitudes is evaluative conditioning. Given that rap videos contain positive and negative scenes, there is a high potential for positive and negative attitudinal effects. The results of our experimental study indicate the expected effects: The pairing of a brand (conditioned stimulus) with positively evaluated rappers (unconditioned stimulus) produces positive attitudes toward the brand.

Western Women in the Chinese Edition of Cosmopolitan Magazine: A Preliminary Comparison of Western and Asian Models in Advertising to a Middle-Class Chinese Audience • John C. Schweitzer, Bradley University • This exploratory research was undertaken to investigate the use of Western models in Chinese advertising; specifically to look at how Western and Asian models are depicted in a Chinese edition of an international magazine, Cosmopolitan. The results of the investigation showed that Western models were associated with Western fashion and accessory ads for Western-based companies. On the other hand, both Chinese and Western cosmetic companies featured Asian women in their advertising.

Building Trust and Loyalty through Corporate Social Responsibility Advertising: The Effects of Transparency and Intent • Janas Sinclair and Karen Mishra, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • The strength of advertiser (1) intent and (2) transparency communicated in a corporate social responsibility ad were experimentally manipulated, and trust was examined as a key mediator of advertising effectiveness. In the proposed model, strong intent builds trust by increasing perceptions of shared values, and strong transparency builds trust by increasing perceptions of reliability. Further, perceptions of shared values and reliability were expected to build loyalty by increasing trust.

Effects of Third-Party Endorsements on Information Strength and Purchase Intent: Information Relevancy vs. Product Communication Form • Alex Wang, University of Connecticut-Stamford, Carolyn A. Lin, University of Connecticut-Storrs • This experimental study examines whether the insertion of a TPO endorsement—or the lack of it—in conjunction with product information relevancy, influences consumers’ perceived information strength and purchase intent. Study findings indicate that, while TPO endorsements had no influence on consumer perceptions of product information strength, product information relevancy did. Product information relevancy to consumers’ choice goals also has a significant influence on both product information strength and purchase intent.

Gender, Humor and Sexual Appeals in Advertising • Fei Xue, University of Southern Mississippi and Tom Reichert, University of Georgia and Ignatius Fosu, University of Arkansas • Many advertisements that contain sexual information also contain humorous information. However, it is not clear what pattern of responses the two message appeals elicit when they are combined in the same ad. The current experiment examined the relationship between the use of humor and participants’ reactions to sexually oriented commercials, as well as individual difference variables such as gender and sexual self-schema.

Cross-Cultural Comparisons of U.S. and Chinese Corporate Websites • Jie Zhang, Wan-Hsiu Sunny Tsai and Wei-Na Lee, University of Texas at Austin • This study investigates information content and advertising appeals reflected in top U.S. and Chinese companies’ corporate websites to understand the role of corporate website in marketing communication mix, in different stages of e-commerce development, and in relation to specific sociocultural environments. The results suggest that most U.S. corporate websites were based on the e-commerce model and featured significantly more detailed product information.

Penetration of Brand Pre-evaluation on Hierarchy of Advertising Effect: A Structural Equation Modeling Analysis • Yanjun Zhao, Southern Illinois University Carbondale • Employing structural equation modeling analyses, this study checked the role of brand pre-evaluation within the framework of hierarchy of effects in advertising. By comparing two SEM models, the study examined the extent to which brand pre-evaluation exerts an impact on advertising effectiveness. Results from an experiment with 60 undergraduates showed that brand pre-evaluation influence attitudes toward brand and product, but not purchase intention in the hierarchy of effects.

Effects of Culture-Congruent Visuals on Affect Perception and Purchase Intention • Shuhua Zhou, Yinjiao Ye and Jie Xu, University of Alabama • This paper examines visual elements of TV commercials that influence viewers’ affect, perception and purchase intention. Based on theories differentiating cultures along the dimensions of contextuality as well as individualism and collectivism, we designed a study to test the effects of culture-congruent visuals on viewers’ affect, perception and behavioral intentions, in contrast to culture-incongruent visuals.

Cultural Values in Internet Advertising: A Longitudinal Study of the Banner Ads of the Top 100 U.S. Web Sites • Lin Zhuang, Louisiana State University and Xigen Li, Southern Illinois University Carbondale • This longitudinal study explores dominant cultural values in Internet advertising of the top 100 U.S. Web sites in 2000 and 2003. The findings reveal that Internet advertising reflects more utilitarian values than symbolic values. The study also found that the type of advertising appeal is associated with product categories. The results indicate that Internet advertising reflects a convergence of the typical cultural norms of the American society and the particular features of Internet advertising medium.

PF&R
Calls for a temporary ban on direct-to-consumer advertising of news prescription drugs: Would such regulation violate freedom of speech? • Terri Ann Bailey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • This paper focuses on recent calls for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to impose a temporary ban on Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) advertising of newly approved prescription drugs. By analyzing recent Supreme Court commercial speech cases and by applying the Central Hudson test established for ascertaining whether regulations of commercial speech violate the First Amendment, this study addresses whether a temporary ban on DTC advertising of prescription drugs would likely pass constitutional scrutiny.

Whose advertising is this? Examining the social communication in television advertising for the general and African American audiences • Karie Hollerbach, Southeast Missouri State University • Market segmentation made communication with the advertising audience predicated on the audience segment. African Americans were the first minority group identified as having economic viability as a target market that could be reached through advertising content and placement. A content analysis of 358 television advertisements for General and African American audiences revealed that African Americans are still playing a subordinate role, even in advertising targeted to them.

Truly Toffee and Raisin Hell: A textual analysis of lipstick names • Debra Merskin, University of Oregon • This study examines the monikers of 1,722 lipstick names from 52 national brands. Using Goffman’s (1959) concept of presentation of self and impression management and Barthe’s (1982) semiotic model, the findings show, in addition to simple color names, most of the lipsticks are named after food, beverages, sex, and romance. Understanding how naming, as a creative strategy, constructs meaning is an important part of apprehending the role of cosmetics in women’s lives.

Asian American females: The influences of life-stage on ethnic media use and other important advertising variables • Mariko Morimoto, University of Georgia and Carrie La Ferle, Michigan State University • Asian Americans are becoming one of the fastest growing ethnic groups in the U.S. With estimates of significant buying power, the group is becoming an attractive market for advertisers. However, little is known about this group regarding advertising responses. Previous studies on this group suggest we must start to examine differences within the group rather than ignoring potential variations in demographic factors.

Special Topics
Popular Music Placement in Prime-time Television Commercials • David Allan, Saint Joseph’s • Have you noticed a lot of popular music in commercials lately? This research analyzed 3,456 prime-time television advertisements to quantify and qualify the placement of popular music in advertising. The results showed that of the 715 unique ads, 14% contained popular music. Popular music (primarily pop and rock) was observed more often in automotive, audio/video, and food commercials than any other product category.

Direct-to-Consumer Advertising: Agency Perspectives • Jim Avery, Oklahoma • This paper discusses the issues surrounding direct-to-consumer (DTC) pharmaceutical advertising. The intent of this advertising is to convince or inform consumers about a drug or condition. These consumers can then discuss ailments with their doctors. A great deal has been written on this subject, but the author found no published information on how advertising agencies work with these pharmaceutical clients and the high level of scrutiny within the category.

7-Up: The Strategic Story of the Uncola Campaign • William Barre and Karl Idsvoog, Kent State • A brand’s position is crucial to its success in the category. This is particularly true in categories that are dominated by one or two brands. These dominant brands can reduce other brands in the category to niche positions. Such was the case for 7-Up in the soft- drink category. In 7-UP’s case, however, there were two dominant brands – Coke and Pepsi. In addition, there was a dominant type of product within the category, namely colas.

Consumer Responses to Visual Hyperboles in Print Advertising • Mark A. Callister, Brigham Young and Lesa A. Stern, Southern Illinois-Edwardsville • Advertising research on visual tropes is limited and has focused primarily on metaphors and puns. One type of visual trope that has been virtually ignored is the hyperbole. Depicting people, products, and objects in ways that far exceed their capability and nature is a popular strategy in advertising today.

Creative Strategies in Viral Advertising: An application of Taylor’s six-segment message strategy wheel • Guy J. Golan, Florida International and Lior Zaidner, Jetix • Based on a computer mediated word of mouth approach, viral advertising represents the latest online advertising phenomenon. The current study provides one of the first empirical investigations of viral advertising. It uses Taylor’s six segment message strategy wheel as a theoretical framework. A content analysis of 360 viral ads revealed that advertisers predominantly based their message strategies on an individual ego oriented appeals that were based on such themes as humor and sexuality.

Mobile Narratives and Mobile Citizens: What Cell Phone Ads Say about the Mobile World • Jonathan J.M. Lillie, Hawaii-Manoa • This article offers a critical reading of the active citizen of the mobile world as a dominant narrative presented in many marketing representations, such as those on Nokia.com. Within these “mobile narratives,” the individual is often articulated as a powerful construct to which technology-enabled agency is tied.

Student Papers
The Right Stuff: Brand Names and Logos on Clothing, Equipment and in Venues at the 2006 Olympics • Lois Bauman, Brigham Young University • Brand names and logos on clothing, equipment and in venues during the broadcast of the 2006 Olympics were analyzed for measures of visibility through content analysis. These results were compared to viewers’ perceptions collected through survey responses. Content analysis showed fewer actual brand names and logos than were reported by survey respondents. Perceptions of Olympic ad clutter were prevalent despite Olympic Brand Protection and Clean Venue policies.

The Joint Production of Advertising and Film: Brand Placement in Korean Films • Jongsuk Choi and Yongjun Sung, University of Georgia • As part of a larger research program examining the effectiveness of film as a brand placement vehicle in Korea, an exploratory content analysis was conducted of brand placements in popular films between 1995 and 2003. The present study attempts to examine to what extent and in what context brands have been placed in popular Korean films over a nine-year period.

Learning About Logos: Jamaican Children and Brand Advertising • Anthea Edalere-Henderson, University of the West Indies • This study investigates the recognition rates exhibited by Jamaican children for various televised brands and advances the argument that some perspectives on the effects of foreign media content require revisiting, given the dynamism of local industry and changes in advertising practices. In respect of this particular study, the real challenge facing Caribbean people seem to center on ideological shifts related to consumerism generally, which are reflective of processes occurring at the global level.

Direct Mail Advertising to Hispanics: The Influence of Acculturation on Attitude Toward the Ad • Kenneth Wilson Graham, Oklahoma State University • This study examines the influence of acculturation, language used and model ethnicity on the effectiveness of direct mail advertising to Hispanic consumers, as measured by respondents’ emotional response to the ad. An advertising experiment was conducted with a convenience sample of 205 respondents in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The Bidimensional Acculturation Scale for Hispanics (BAS) was used to group respondents into one of three acculturation groups: low acculturated, bicultural, and high acculturated.

Mobile Media Use and Its Impact on Consumer Attitudes Toward Mobile Advertising • JongWoo Jun and SangMi Lee, University of Florida • This empirical study researched cell phones, the representative mobile media, based on the approach of uses and gratifications. Using U.S. college students as a sample we explored the relationship uses and gratifications, attitudes toward mobile advertising, and behavioral intentions and we tried to construct a model with them. The results of this study indicated that mobility/convenience and multimedia service were positively related to attitudes toward mobile advertising and lead to favorable behavioral intentions.

The Different Effects of Involvement Types and Advertising Message Strategies on Product and Corporate Advertisements • Sora Kim and Yoon-Joo Lee, University of Tennessee, Knoxville • The purpose of this study is to gain a better understanding of the effects of different involvement types and ad message strategies on attitude and behavioral intentions toward the product and the company advertised. By comparing the advertisement of a computer brand with the advertisement of a corporation that produces the computer brand, the study intends to examine the different effects of involvement types and advertising message strategy. The results provided some useful insights.

Celebrity Endorsement in Cross-Cultural Advertising • Jenny Kriens and Weiqin Zhao, University of Nebraska-Lincoln • This study employs a qualitative research approach using focus groups to investigate American and Chinese consumers’ perceptions surrounding celebrity endorsers’ usage and effectiveness in American and Chinese advertisements. The findings of this study suggest that American and Chinese consumers’ perceptions of endorser usage differ and while celebrities attract attention to advertisements from both consumers group, this does not constitute effectiveness.

Attitude Certainty and Resistance to Persuasion: Investigating the Impact of Source Trustworthiness in Advertising • Jennifer Lemanski and Hyung-Seok Lee, University of Florida • This experimental study replicated previous research (Tormala and Petty, 2004b) concerning cognitive load and source expertise on attitude certainty. The present study replaces source expertise with another component of source credibility, trustworthiness. Under either high or low cognitive load conditions, participants generated counterarguments to a message either high or low in trustworthiness. Participants became more certain of their attitudes when counter-arguing a source low in trustworthiness, but only under low cognitive load.

Are You Ready for Some… Sex, Violence and Gender Stereotypes? A Content Analysis of Monday Night Football Commercials and Programming Promotions • Joel Massey, Louisiana State University • This study examined 2004 Monday Night Football commercials and promotions documenting sexual content, violence, and gender role stereotypes. Men appeared twice as often as women, but women were more likely to be stereotyped. Programming commercials were significantly more sexual and violent than other commercials. Despite apparent declines in objectionable content, this study alerts us to lingering concerns about advertising content, and raises the possibility that the networks themselves may be the worst offenders.

Attention, Attitude and Experience as Predictors of Advertising Avoidance Behaviors Among Five Different Media • Jensen Moore, University of Missouri-Columbia • This investigation extends on the 1997 Speck & Elliot study of advertising avoidance behaviors by examining attitudes, attention and experience in both traditional and new media. Drawing upon information processing theory, the hierarchy of effects model, and selective exposure and avoidance research, this study uses survey methodology to examine “coping” behaviors associated with exposure to today’s abundant advertising messages.

DTC Advertising and the Perceived Social Reality of Depression: The Potential Effects of DTC Advertising for Antidepressant Brands on College Students’ Perceptions of the Prevalence and Lifetime Risk of Depression • Jin Seong Park, University of Florida • This study is theoretically rooted in the research traditions of cultivation theory, construct accessibility and availability heuristic. Based on a survey with 206 student participants, this study finds that familiarity with DTC print advertisements for antidepressant brands are associated with college students’ inflated perceptions of the prevalence and lifetime risk of depression. Interpersonal experiences with depression also significantly predicts their perceived lifetime risk, but not perceived prevalence.

A Chain-Reaction View of Word-of-Mouth Communication: Effects of Perceived Group Norms on College Students’ Word-of-Mouth Communication Regarding the Issue of Choosing a Spring Break Destination • Jin Seong Park and Kenneth Kim, University of Florida • Based on the literature on the influences of perceived group norms on human behavior, the current study reveals a mechanism through which individuals’ exposure to WOMC could influence their own communication patterns in a later WOMC situation.

Appeals and Cultural Symbols in Chinese TV Commercials • Feng Shen, University of Florida • This content analysis examines the use of rational/emotional appeals and cultural symbols in Chinese TV commercials. The purpose is to explore their usage for indigenous brands and possible differences between product categories. Based on convenience sampling, the results indicate that there is no difference in the overall use of appeals and more use of Eastern cultural symbols, but there are significant differences in the use of appeals and cultural symbols between product categories.

Videostyle in Presidential Campaigns 2000 & 2004: An Informational Versus Transformational Approach • Feng Shen and Kenneth Kim, University of Florida • This content analysis examines the videostyle and advertising strategies in the 2000 and 2004 presidential campaigns. The purpose is to test the concepts informational/ transformational advertising and product life cycle (PLC) in the context of political advertising and the relationship between videostyle and informational/transformational advertising. The results suggest that the PLC concept is applicable to political advertising and there are certain significant relationships between videostyle and informational/ transformational advertising.

Effectiveness of Product Placements in Video Games: Game Players’ Perception and Virtual Reality Experience • Wonshun Shin, Yejin Hong and Yuening Jiang, University of Minnesota • This study examined the effectiveness of product placements embedded in a video game. The research findings showed that players who perceived their skill to be higher than the challenge from the game tended to remember more brand names and logos in the game than those who perceived their skill to be lower than the challenge. The positive relationship between virtual products experience and overall attitude toward the product was also found.

Untangling Knots: An Alternative Approach to Hybrid Corporate Speech • Youngju Sohn, University of Georgia • This paper proposes more refined and useful guidelines for determining the constitutionality of regulations on hybrid corporate speech, where commercial speech is blended with noncommercial elements. This paper compares the existing legal standards for the analysis of commercial speech with Robert O’Neil’s proposition, which urges to reexamine the current criteria and look at the nexus between the speaker’s economic motive, context and audience. An alternative framework, which modifies O’Neil’s scheme, is proposed.

Promoting Television: Synergy Effects on Cross Media Promotion • Tang Tang, Ohio University • A content analysis of 2099 mentions for 209 new network programs in 84 issues of TV Guide from 1997 to 2002 was conducted to test the synergy effects in the field of program promotion. The study found a significant positive correlation between a new network program’s total exposure in TV Guide and a program’s ratings; and an overall significant positive association between a new program’s advertising mentions in TV Guide and its ratings.

Political Advertising, Political Cynicism and Affect: A Mediation Model Account • Changmin Yan and Carrie Sipes, Pennsylvania State University • Through an experiment, this study explored the relationship between negative political advertising and political cynicism. While negative ads per se did not lead to dramatic increase of political cynicism among voters, but when it combined with positive political ads, voters’ political cynicism soared due to exposure to contrasting information of a candidate. Further analyses suggested a mediation model for contrasting information and political cynicism by ad-induced negative emotion. Practical and policy implications were discussed.

Political Advertising Valence and Candidate Response Strategy • Changmin Yan, Carrie Sipes and Pat Farabaugh, Pennsylvania State University • This study examined multiple factors’ influence on viewers’ perceptions of political advertising’s issue salience and the importance of image or issue as a voting criterion. In general, negative ads are effective for challengers and positive ads are effective for incumbents. Moreover, going alone with the opponent’s advertising valence is an effective response strategy to raise image whereas going against the opponent’s advertising valence works better to emphasize the importance of stance on the issue.

Mediated by TV Campaign News: Indirect Effects of Political Commercials on Voters’ Political Knowledge • Jason Jusheng Yu, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • The purpose of this study is to examine the mechanism of how TV political advertising and TV campaign news work together influencing voters’ political knowledge by proposing that TV campaign news mediates the effect of TV political advertising on voters’ political knowledge. Empirical evidence supports the mediating role of TV campaign news in the relationship between TV political advertising and voters’ political knowledge. More experimental research is needed for integrated political communication.

Teaching
An Analysis of Career Aspirations of 1,200 U.S. Advertising Students • Jami Fullerton, Oklahoma State University and Alice Kendrick, Southern Methodist University and Connie Frazier, EVP Mosaic Center & Education Services, American Advertising Federation • A pool of 1,226 students studying advertising at 187 U.S. colleges and universities provided the largest data set to date about aspects of employment preferences as well as attitudes toward working in advertising. Three-fourths of students said they planned to enter the advertising work force upon graduating, and four out of five expressed interest in working in an agency setting.

How To Improve Critical Thinking Skills In The Media Strategy Course Using Online Peer Collaborative Learning: A Mixed Methods Study • Frauke Hachtmann, University of Nebraska-Lincoln • This study addresses how a specific teaching standard set forth by the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC) can be measured in the media strategy course. The purpose of this exploratory sequential mixed methods design was to show how online peer learning can improve critical thinking and to examine the effect of this teaching approach. The author found that using the approach resulted in higher quality media plans.

<< 2006 Abstracts

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Status of Women 2007 Abstracts

January 17, 2012 by Kyshia

Commission on the Status of Women

Gender during the presidential honeymoon: An analysis of news coverage and its effects • Ingrid Bachmann, University of Texas at Austin • Women are not only running for president in many countries — they are winning. Yet, little is know about how the news media portray the first months in office when the president is a woman. That is the focus of this study, a content analysis of newspaper coverage of the honeymoon period of the new female president of Chile. The results suggest gender-biased news coverage of the president and her suitability to do the job.

Malingering Images of Women: Feminine Stereotypes in Television Advertising • Stephen Banning and Vaishali Shrikande, Bradley University • This study examined the portrayal of women in television commercials and documented the stereotypes associated with women in today’s television commercials. Advertisements were recorded from the networks ABC, CBS and NBC. Each advertisement was initially coded as to whether the central figure was a male or a female. In addition, each central figure in the advertisement was coded according to age, product use, occupation, voiceover, product representative, stance, and product types.

Good sports? A feminist framing analysis of public relations strategies in the Duke University lacrosse crisis • Barbara Barnett, Kansas University • In Spring 2006, three white Duke University lacrosse players were charged with raping a black female student from nearby North Carolina Central University, prompting a massive public relations campaign by Duke to repair and restore its image. In responding to the crisis, the university framed itself as a voice of reason, suffering because of attacks on its reputation. Although the crisis dealt with rape charges, Duke officials spent little time actually discussing rape.

Women’s Lib, Women Reporters, and Presidents’ Wives • Lisa Burns, Quinnipiac University • This essay examines how feminist ideals influenced the framing of first lady press coverage from 1964 – 1980, arguing that this coverage served as a site where questions about women’s changing roles could be raised and the tenets of the women’s liberation movement could be presented and promoted by women reporters. The result was the positioning of Johnson, Ford, and Carter as “liberated women,” while Nixon embodied the “feminine mystique” that the movement was rallying against.

Women’s Participation in Media Leadership in the Changing Media Environment in China • Chunying Cai, University of Maryland • Starting from a 1994 UNESCO survey of women journalists in China, which reported that women had difficulties in entering high-level decision-making positions in the media, the paper investigates whether the transformation of the Chinese media industry over the decade has changed the situation of women’s participation in leadership in the media.

Gender and the Attributes for Career Success in the Media Professions • Roger Cooper, Ohio University • This study, developed through established theoretical foundations in psychology and vocational choice, explores the role of gender in assessments of which attributes are most important for career success in the media industries. Forty-two attributes were assessed by current media professionals (N=1,122). t tests revealed significant differences between women and men on 17 of the 42 attributes measured.

Pioneer for Women Journalists: Katherine Conway and the Boston Pilot, 1883-1908 • Lucinda Davenport, Michigan State University; Denyse Smith • In 1870, there was a recorded 35 women journalists; Katherine Conway was one of them. By 1900, there were almost 2,000 women in journalism; and by then, Katherine Conway had almost single-handedly been publishing the Boston Pilot for a decade. Conway used her journalistic talents to advocate women’s vocations as wife and mother, while she was a single, career-woman. Her life was a paradox.

The Radical Act of Mommy Blogging: Redefining Motherhood Through the Blogosphere • Lori DesRochers, Indiana University • This paper provides an alternative to the masculine construction of the blogosphere by analyzing “mommy bloggers” through the lenses of feminism, autobiography, and political-economy. In qualitatively examining the blogs themselves and the media discourse surrounding them, the paper ultimately argues for their potential to build community and to challenge dominant representations of motherhood in the blogosphere and the mainstream media.

Gender’s role in perceptions of persuasiveness and quality of sports columns: An experimental study • Ada Diaconu-Muresan, Christopher Murray and Joshua Padilla; University of Nevada-Reno; Jennifer Greer; University of Alabama and Marie Hardin; Penn State • To examine whether female sports journalists still suffer from a lack of credibility among readers, an experimental study tested quality and persuasiveness of a column, manipulating author’s gender. Although the male and female columnists were rated equally when writing about women’s sports, gender stereotypes emerged for ratings of the columns about men’s sports. Women rated the work of the male columnist as significantly higher in quality and persuasiveness than the work of the female writer.

“Tale of Two Voices”: Women Communicators From Mississippi Freedom Summer & A New Black Feminist Concept • Brenda Edgerton-Webster, Mississippi State University • This study developed and employed a new concept of Black Feminism to examine women’s communication efforts in Mississippi Freedom Summer 1964. The oral histories of these women participants contribute omitted “voices” to journalism, civil rights, and women’s history. This study discovered generational differences of how the Movement shaped their worldviews and subsequent vocations. The rationale for this phenomena explain, in part, the omission of women from the historical “image” of the black civil rights leader.

Measuring a Woman’s Worth: Femininity and the Disciplined Body in FitTV’s “Buff Brides” • Erika Engstrom, University of Nevada, Las Vegas • The author examines the meanings of femininity contained in the fitness reality program “Buff Brides,” which ties physical fitness with the world of weddings. Women’s bodies, already subjected to hegemonic ideals, become even more scrutinized when taking on the role of bride. A textual analysis revealed recurrent themes such as bodily disapproval, food as enemy, and additional stress of wedding planning. Implications of this program in terms of mass media portrayals of femininity are discussed.

Under the Knife: How Women Perceive Cosmetic Surgery Reality Television • J. Robyn Goodman, University of Florida • This paper explores college women’s perceptions of cosmetic surgery reality television (CSRT) by conducting focus groups with low, moderate, and high CSRT viewers. Results found that the women largely saw CSRT as unrealistic because of the number of surgeries, the final outcome, and presenting surgery as a quick fix. However, the women found pleasure in the emotional aspects to the stories and the fantasy of transformation.

Maybe it’s not a “generational thing”: The values and beliefs of aspiring sports journalists in relationship to race and gender • Marie Hardin and Erin Whiteside, Penn State University • The assumption held by journalists and women’s sports advocates that the post -Title IX generation will produce journalists who will usher in more egalitarian coverage of female athletes is explored through focus groups with high school sports journalists. Participants articulated a narrow definition of sport that preserves white, male hegemony.

Sexual objectification, sports programming and music television: Frequency of viewing and support for sexually objectifying others • Stacey J.T. Hust and Ming Lei, Washington State University • A survey of 934 college students found that individuals who regularly watched sports programs and music television supported the sexual objectification of women. Males who regularly watched sports programming did not support sexually objectifying men, yet females who watched sports regularly did endorse the sexual objectification of men. Thus, both young women and men who watch sports and music television may be learning that sexual objectification is an acceptable way to view others.

First Lady Political Candidates in Semi and a Full Democracy: A Comparative Media Framing Rhetorical Analysis • Yusuf Kalyango, Jr. and Betty Winfield, University of Missouri – Columbia • This study examined how the news print media rhetorically frame two different political electoral campaigns of the First Ladies: Janet Museveni running for Parliament of Uganda in 2006 and Hillary Clinton running for the U.S. Senate in 2000. The purpose was to assess whether there are patriarchal journalistic norms across cultures in media framing by comparing the political campaign coverage of these two first ladies.

Teenage Beauty & Fashion Magazines: Selling Sexuality and Consumerism to Our Kids? • Camille Kraeplin, Southern Methodist University • This study reaffirmed the idea that teen magazines appear to place a great deal of emphasis on beauty and beauty products. Some 62 percent of the stories appearing in the women’s books and 46 percent in the teen books promoted beauty or beauty services. At least a third of the advertising items did as well.

When a Newswoman Becomes the News: A Case Study of Media Representations of Ann Curry • Hillary Lake, University of Oregon • Recent media attention on the gender of network evening news anchors emphasizes that equality is still an issue for women (and other minorities). Yet, media representations of newswomen have rarely been examined in light of their marginalized status, and increased cultural emphasis on public image.

Feminist Historiography in the Field: Writing New Histories • Lana Rakow, University of North Dakota • What is feminist history in the field of communication? This work addresses the challenges of countering standard histories in which both women and the work of feminist scholars are absent because of an emphasis in media history on “great men,” “great ideas,” and “great places.” Feminist scholars in six communication-related organizations were asked for their recollections of key works, key scholars, and key trends in feminist communication scholarship.

Katie Couric: Liberal and radical feminist perspectives of press coverage themes • Amanda Scheiner, Temple University • This study finds two themes throughout press coverage from The New York Times and The Washington Post of Katie Couric becoming the first female solo anchor. The initial foregrounds Couric as female, while the second theme is a discourse of praise concealing a subtext of doubt. A liberal feminist perspective notes the historic importance of Couric’s new position, while a radical feminist perspective complicates this analysis, noting Couric affirms the dominant cultural paradigmatic ideals.

Seeking the Online Stranger: The Double-Edge of Contemporary Motherhood • Felicia Song, Louisiana State University • The state of contemporary motherhood has been the focus of much scholarly attention as informal systems of kin care have increasingly become fragmented and uncertain. This paper is a preliminary exploration of how contemporary mothers use the Internet to communicate and gather information about childrearing. Drawing on Georg Simmel’s work on social distance, I argue that rationalization has become embedded in the relationships contemporary mothers have with their online networks of care and support.

How Women Make Meaning of Shared Involvement in News about Bioterrorism • Jennifer Vardeman and Linda Aldoory, University of Maryland • We conducted 23 in-depth interviews with women to explore how they made meaning of bioterrorism in news and perceived shared involvement with a news spokesperson. In general, the participants made meaning of bioterrorism in the news by negotiating their perceived susceptibility to risk; and they contextualized bioterrorism within their everyday lived experiences as caregivers and as potential victims of risk. However, some of the participants distrusted the media environment and organizational alliances of spokespeople.

Associated Press Reporter Bess Furman and Four Years of Access to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt • Liz Watts, Texas Tech University • Eleanor Roosevelt influenced AP Washington bureau reporter Bess Furman’s work and personal life. Mrs. Roosevelt granted access through her press conferences and friendship. Furman enjoyed and appreciated both. Under Mrs. Roosevelt’s tutelage, Furman learned a great deal about social conditions and reform policies, and gradually, this would raise her prominence and success as a reporter. As she began reporting on Mrs. Roosevelt, she dropped society stories, and she reported about Mrs. Roosevelt’s interests.

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Small Programs 2007 Abstracts

January 17, 2012 by Kyshia

Small Programs Interest Group

Theory vs. Skills Courses in Small Programs • Robert Bergland, Ken Rosenauer and Ann Thorne, Missouri Western State • The long-running debate between skills and theory courses in small journalism programs has a large influence on course and curriculum content. This survey of over 500 media advisers at small and large programs revealed the impact of size on internship and journalism workshop course offerings, along with adviser and student perceptions on the merits of theory vs. skills courses.

Relevance and critical thinking in the journalism curriculum: Harnessing the power of popular culture to discuss media approaches to diversity • Susan Brockus, California State University, Chico • Diversity is an issue that can be avoided without notice in many higher education classrooms, but one that is critical for journalism students to discuss and understand. Rather than fighting the power of American popular culture, journalism educators should embrace it as a tool to engage students to get them talking – and thinking.

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Science Communication 2007 Abstracts

January 17, 2012 by Kyshia

Science Communication Interest Group

Print Media Coverage of Passive Smoking: A Content Analysis Study of Mainstream Newspapers • Asya A. Besova, Louisiana State University • The primary objective of this research study was to assess the extent and content of newspaper coverage of passive smoking. The researcher found that passive smoking was portrayed as a controversial issue. Twenty nine percent of articles concluded that passive smoking is not harmful. Although the majority of people quoted in articles were scientists, physicians, and academicians; reporters devoted a considerable amount of quotes to tobacco company representatives.

Perspectives of African Americans and Dentists on Oral Cancer and Dentist-Patient Communication • Youjin Choi, Virginia Dodd, Jennifer Watson, Scott Tomar, Henrietta Logan and Heather Edwards, University of Florida • Oral cancer is one of the most pressing diseases that disproportionately affect African American men and White American men. Dentists’ role in delivering oral cancer information and explaining the importance of early detection exams is vital in reducing the disparities. Using focus groups with African Americans and dentists, this study compared African American’s knowledge about oral cancer and its exams, and perceptions of dentist-patient communication with dentists’ perspectives on the same topics.

To booze or not to booze? Newspaper coverage of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders • Colleen Connolly-Ahern, Penn State University and S. Camille Broadway, University of Texas at Arlington • This paper reports the results of a qualitative framing of the coverage of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD). Findings indicate that media discourse about FASD is characterized by differing story types and competing frames. The study also documents the recent emergence of a news frame in opposition to the prevailing abstinence frame in health coverage. This frame has shown physicians to be conflicted in their advice about drinking during pregnancy.

Precision of Information, Sensationalism, and Self-Efficacy as Message-Level Variables Affecting Risk Perceptions • Michael Dahlstrom and Anthony Dudo, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Risk studies often investigate how risks are processed psychologically, but few have investigated the effects of message-level variables on risk perception. This study examined the effects of three message-level constructs, risk precision, sensationalism and self-efficacy, on general and individual fear toward the risk of sick building syndrome. Results show that risk precision significantly affects general fear, but is moderated by sensationalism. Individual fear was not affected by any of the constructs.

News Frames of Hormone Replacement Therapy Before and After the Women’s Healthy Initiative Report in 2002 • Kenneth Kim, University of Florida • Until July 2002, Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is widely recommended by physicians for reducing the symptoms of menopause. However, in July 2002, there were alarming reports on the long-term HRT use from the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), a national health study for postmenopausal women. The WHI reported that any potential benefit of HRT might be offset by potential harms, including an increase in the risk of breast cancer, stroke, and heart disease.

Misunderstanding Public Understanding of Nanotechnology: Nanotechnology Researchers’ Views of Ordinary People, Media and Public Discourse • Victoria Kramer, University of South Carolina • Nanotechnology is an emerging technology predicted to have major impacts on society. There are those within the nanotechnology community calling for public involvement, yet there appear to be no studies examining nanotechnology researchers’ views of the public and science communication. This exploratory study examines how nanoresearchers perceive ordinary people, media coverage of nanotechnology and science’s role in society. The findings’ implications for how nanoresearchers are likely to approach science communication are discussed.

Public Concern, Risk Delineation and Source Use in Newspapers’ Coverage of Genetically Modified Food • Xigen LI, Southern Illinois University Carbondale • This study examined ten U.S. newspapers’ coverage of genetically modified food during 1994 and 2004,and attempted to answer several important questions on how U.S. newspapers covered issues of public interest, how media dealt with risk information, and to what degree source used was associated with the key aspects of the coverage.

Understanding Public Support for Stem Cell Research: Media Communication, Interpersonal Communication and Trust in Key Actors • Hui Liu and Susanna Priest, University of South Carolina • This paper analyzes data from a 2005 telephone survey of 1200 people in the U.S. that included questions about attitudes toward stem cell research and a broad range of communication variables. After all controls, trust in university scientists and religious leaders, exposure to national television news, familiarity, and religious service attendance produced statistically significant main effects on perception of research benefits, together explaining about 31% of the variance. Interpersonal communication may have contingent effects.

The Perceived Justice of Local Scientists and Community Support for their Research • Katherine McComas, Cornell University, John Beesley, University of South Carolina and Zheng Yang, Cornell University • This study investigates the relationship among measures of justice and attitudes toward local scientific research. It uses results of a mail survey of residents in two upstate New York counties (N=1306) that host substantial biotechnology and nanotechnology research facilities. Predictor variables are distributional, procedural, interpersonal, and informational justice. Controls include demographics, media use, basic science knowledge, and technology awareness.

Intersections of Health Literacy and Media Literacy: An Explication of Concepts • Paula Rausch, University of Florida • Mass media are the primary means through which most Americans obtain health information, yet research examining their role in health literacy is rare. This explication provides overviews of both health literacy and media literacy and identifies the overlap between them. It then proposes a conceptual definition and an operational model of health literacy that links the two concepts and takes into account mass media as significant providers of public health information.

How Attention to Local Newspaper and Television Environmental News Relates to Risk and Knowledge • Daniel Riffe and Thomas J. Hrach, Ohio University • Survey data compared influence of local television and newspaper environmental coverage, exploring how environmental risk and value of environmental knowledge are related to exposure to news and attention to environmental news and beliefs about its quality. Respondents perceiving greater risk paid more attention and were more critical. Value of environmental knowledge was negatively related to perceived quality of television coverage and positively correlated with attention to newspaper environmental coverage.

Newspaper coverage of genetic modification events in China, Thailand and the United States: Across-cultural analysis • Lu Lu Rodriguez and Zheng Xiang, Iowa State University • This study compares how the English-language newspapers of three countries covered two genetic modification cases, the genetic engineering of rice in China and the US, and the genetic alteration of papaya in Thailand and the US. The intensity of newspaper coverage of each genetic modification event, the pattern and the tone of the coverage, the sources cited, and the frames employed were determined through a content analysis.

Environment Reporters and U.S. Journalists: A Comparative Analysis • David Sachsman, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, James Simon, Fairfield University and JoAnn Valenti • Reporters assigned to covering a beat like the environment might be expected to be more experienced and better educated in their subject area. However, a comparison between 652 environmental journalists working at daily newspapers and television stations and more than 1,000 U.S. journalists in general found that these reporters share many individual and work-related characteristics, perhaps due in part to their similar backgrounds and to the basic professional training received by most journalists.

At the Frontiers of Faith and Science: News Media Framing of Stem Cell Research • Nicole Smith, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • Framing research has shown that media framing of issues has real implications for both policy makers and audiences. As the ethical debate surrounding stem cell research presents a problem of choice to the American people, how that choice is framed is a fundamental determinant of what the American people think, and ultimately decide, about the future of stem cell research. This study presents a framing analysis of newspaper coverage of the issue.

Sourcing Patterns in the Crisis Phases of a Bioterror Attack • Kristen Swain, University of Kansas • This study examined attribution in U.S. news coverage of the anthrax attacks across disaster phases, uncertainty factors, and types of media, attribution, advice, and explanations. Overall, 833 stories from AP, NPR, 272 newspapers, and four television networks were analyzed. Nearly half of attributions were unnamed sources. Prominent sourcing shifted from federal politicians to federal health officials shortly after journalists began receiving tainted letters. Fire-rescue/health care workers emerged as the top source after the attacks ended.

Health on the Web: A content analysis of mobilizing information on local TV Web sites • Andrea Tanner, Daniela Friedman and Kim Smith, University of South Carolina • This study explored the volume and scope of health coverage on local television news Web sites as well as the mobilizing information contained within the online health content. Data revealed that health stories were present on 64% of the sites examined. Little mobilizing information was presented. Health stories were significantly more likely to contain locational MI than identificational or tactical MI. There were also significant differences between large and small markets regarding specific health content.

Power, Knowledge, and Hope: The Framing of Breast Cancer in Women’s and Consumer Health Magazines • Kim Walsh-Childers and Heather Edwards, University of Florida • This framing analysis examined breast cancer articles from five popular consumer magazines read by women. The analysis revealed three primary frames – power, knowledge and hope – and two themes, fear and risks to young women, that were pervasive regardless of the dominant frame. The three frames, power, knowledge, and hope, suggest that while breast cancer is a real threat to women, they have good reason to feel that useful, risk-reducing actions are within their ability.

Media effect, political interests, and other social cultural factors: The making of China’s environmentalists and their view on their societal cultural environment • Qingjiang Yao, University of South Carolina • Using data from China part (2001, N=1000) of the World Value Survey, this research found a positive impact of news media use on environmental concern. However, political interest, income and postmaterialist value are found to have stronger and more consistent predicting power of being a Chinese environmentalist. The research also found that Chinese environmentalists who like to voluntarily work for environment protection with no pay tend to be more skeptical on government and media.

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