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Mass Communication and Society 2013 Abstracts

June 12, 2013 by Kyshia

Measuring News Media Literacy • Adam Maksl, Indiana University Southeast; Seth Ashley, Boise State University; Stephanie Craft • News media literacy refers to the knowledge and motivations needed to identify, appreciate, and engage with journalism. This study measured levels of news media literacy among 500 Chicago-area teenagers using a new scale based on Potter’s model of media literacy and adapted to news media specifically. News literate teens were found to be more intrinsically motivated to consume news, more skeptical and more knowledgeable about current events than their less news literate counterparts.

Why Change the Story? Portrayals of the Arab Spring in the Western and Eastern News Media • Mian Asim, University of Florida; Hyojin Kim, University of Florida • This study examines the content and framing of new stories emerged from the Western and the Arab media, right before and
after the peak period of the Arab Spring while suggesting that the level of deviance employed by protest groups in terms of tactics and goals are equally substantial in affecting their news coverage. This study also hints that media may adjust its stance as time proceeds depending upon the potential outcome of protests.

Facebook “Friends”: Effects of Social Networking Site Intensity, Social Capital Affinity, and Flow on Knowledge-Gain • Valerie Barker, Journalism & Media Studies SDSU; David Dozier; Amy Schmitz Weiss; Diane Borden • Using a subset of data from a survey of a representative sample of U.S. Internet users, 236 participants responded regarding social networking site (SNS) intensity, experience of flow (concentrated engagement in/enjoyment of an activity), social capital affinity (value of interaction/identification with online peers) and focused and incidental-knowledge gains. SNS intensity strongly predicted flow and social capital affinity, but the latter appeared to be a stronger predictor of focused and incidental-knowledge gains from social networking sites.

The creepiness factor: Explaining conflicting audience attitudes toward tailored media content • Lisa Barnard • In an online survey (N=2,002), attitudes toward tailoring were more favorable when tailoring was less invasive – i.e. when it involved impersonal media functions rather than personal ones, and when it used public rather than private information. Four individual difference models (narcissism; open-mindedness; audience selectivity; online media dependency) were tested. Those who were more narcissistic and more dependent on online media had more positive attitudes toward tailoring and thought more types of tailoring should be allowed.

Workplace Characteristics and Limitations on U.S. Journalists’ Professional Autonomy • Randal Beam • Autonomy is a hallmark of professional labor, but for individuals working in complex organizations, such as journalists, it is never unfettered. This study examines constraints on journalists’ professional autonomy. It uses analyses of open-ended and fixed-response questions from a national panel survey of U.S. journalists to explore what news workers characterize as the most significant limitations on their freedom as journalists.

Picturing Collective Memory: What Google’s Doodles Want Us to Think About • Bob Britten, West Virginia University; Mark Poepsel, Loyola University New Orleans • A Doodle is a variation of the logo on the starting page of search engine Google, used to commemorate dates, individuals, events and things. Their novelty, and Google’s widespread use, make them potent elements of collective memory. This research identifies the types of Doodles used over time, comparing which subjects are emphasized and which are omitted. Google encourages memory of artists and explorers, and covertly places itself squarely within that group.

The Influence of Participation and Online Norms in the Development of a Sense of Virtual Community • Michael Clay Carey, Ohio University; Hans Meyer, Ohio University • The emergence of Web 2.0 has facilitated the proliferation of virtual groups and communities. Virtual communities are distinct from online groups in part because their members experience a sense of virtual community (Blanchard, 2008). Participants in a nationwide survey (N=1,014) were asked about their experienced sense of virtual community, and solicits their opinions on other facets of online groups. The study suggests generalizable conditions that may facilitate sense of virtual community.

Transparency in Newsrooms: What’s visible, What’s not and Why • Kalyani Chadha, University of Maryland College Park; Michael Koliska • Facing a decline in public credibility, news organizations have been encouraged to embrace transparency to combat public distrust. In this paper, we examine how journalists at six leading news outlet grapple with the concept of transparency and its implementation in their newsrooms. Our data indicate that news outlets engage in a limited and strategic form of transparency, that enable them to appear transparent without offering substantive insights into the journalistic process.

Visiting Theories That Predict College Students’ Self-disclosure On Facebook • Chen-wei Chang, The University of Southern Mississippi; Jun Heo, University of Southern Mississippi • The present study explored theories that may explain information disclosure behavior on Facebook and provided understanding of each theoretical framework’s contribution in explaining such behavior. Findings suggested the potential of all the constructs tested in this study (the uses and gratifications theory, the social contract theory, trust/self-disclosure relationships, time spent on Facebook, the number of Facebook friends, and gender difference) as frameworks to explain self-disclosure behavior on Facebook. This social media-specific study observed rather interesting evidences that theories may have different implications from previous literature theoretically as well as practically.

Click “like” and share if you’re not affected: Adolescents, third-person perception, and Facebook. • John Chapin, Pennsylvania State University • A survey of adolescents (N = 1,488) documented third-person perception (TPP) regarding Facebook use and cyber bullying. As Facebook establishes itself as the dominant social network, users expose themselves to a level of bullying not possible in the analog world. The study found that 84% of adolescents (middle school through college undergraduates) use Facebook, and that most users log on daily. While 30% of the sample reported being cyber bullied, only 12.5% quit using the site and only 18% told a parent or school official. Despite heavy use and exposure, adolescents exhibit TPP, believing others are more likely to be negatively affected by Facebook use. The current study contributes to the TPP literature by linking the perceptual bias to self-protective behaviors. A range of self-protective behaviors from precautionary (deleting or blocking abusive users) to reactionary (quitting Facebook) were related to decreased degrees of TPP. TPP was also related to optimistic bias, experience, liking of and use of Facebook, perceived subjective norms and age. Implications for prevention education are discussed.

Hong Kong-er Or Chinese? Impact of Mainland Tourist News on Hong Kong Students’ Social Identity • Hexin CHEN, City University of Hong Kong; Wanqi Gong, City University of Hong Kong; Sixian Lin, City University of Hong Kong; Miriam Hernandez, City University of Hong Kong; Jie Ying Wang, Hong Kong Baptist University • Based on the social identity theory, this study examines the impact of news exposure on the perception of the social identities of university students in Hong Kong. We found that exposure to negative news about mainland tourists has a positive impact on respondents’ Hong Kong identity and their superiority sense over mainland Chinese. The theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed.

Crisis frames across media and distances: An analysis of local, regional, and national news coverage of the Tucson shooting • Bethany Anne Conway • This study examined the evolution of frames in news coverage of the Tucson shooting to determine how traditional theories of crisis coverage map-on to a smaller-scale, domestic terrorism event. Along with adding to the literature on national coverage of tragedy, it provides insight into how crisis coverage differs among local, regional, and national newspapers. Findings reveal that human-interest frames made marked appearances across news outlets. While political frames were prevalent in later stages of coverage, cable and network news outlets emphasized politics to a different extent. Differences were found among the national, regional, and local newspapers, demonstrating how news coverage is adapted to the needs and interests of different audience segments in crisis.

Testing the Utility of Graphic Program Advisory Labels: An Eye-Tracking Study • Glenn Cummins, Texas Tech University; Cam Stone; Boni Cui, Texas Tech University; Hannah Gibby, Texas Tech University • Despite the use of television program advisories for more than 15 years, viewer understanding of these advisories remains problematic. Thus, this study examined the effectiveness of alternate graphic program advisories as a means of attracting viewer attention and more effectively communicating their intended meaning. Results indicated that viewers better understood the meaning of the advisories. Moreover, eye-tracking data revealed that they also allocated greater attention graphic advisories during initial exposure.

“Oh Man! Am I a Woman!?”: Analysis of ESPN.com user comments on the presence of Danica Patrick in NASCAR • Denae D’Arcy, University of Tennessee; Kyle Heuett, University of Tennessee; Katie Reno, University of Tennessee • In the wild world of men’s sports, women are making a showing. This is evident in competitions such as NASCAR where Danica Patrick raced in the 2012 Daytona 500. Some contributors to the comments section on ESPN web stories suggested that she did not belong on the track or in the sport. Three coders analyzed more than 1,300 comments on ESPN online stories before and after Patrick’s Daytona 500 race to find the meaning of her presence in NASCAR.

The Good, the Bad, and the Ambivalent? Analyzing the moral nature of fiction characters over time • Serena Daalmans, Radboud University Nijmegen; Ellen Hijmans, Radboud University Nijmegen; Fred Wester, Radboud University Nijmegen • Recently, the public eye and the academic community have started to focus on the presence and effects of morally ambivalent characters in television fiction. Both assume a prevalence of these characters, but neither is based on more than anecdotal evidence. This study explores the longitudinal changes (1985-2010) in the moral nature as well as the socio-demographic characteristics of the cast of television fiction aired during prime time in the Netherlands, through content analysis (N = 352).

The Chronicle of Current Events: uncensored information from the Soviet Union • Nino Danelia, University of South Carolina; Maia Mikashavidze, University of South Carolina • This study analyzed The Chronicle of Current Events, an underground Soviet publication issued from 1967 through 1982. Using scholarship on political framing, the study found Soviet dissidents using conflict and responsibility frames to write about the dominant themes of human rights abuses and persecutions of ethnic and religious minority groups. The publication was framing the dissidents’ cause as the protection of human rights, and aiming to get the word out to the international public.

The Miami Zombie Attack: How Broadcast News Media Constructed a “Bath Salts Epidemic” • Ruth DeFoster, University of Minnesota; Natashia Swalve, University of Nebraska • Using framing theory and textual analysis, this paper examines broadcast media coverage of a May 2012 crime in Miami that became rhetorically tied to a bath salts “epidemic” in mass media. It finds that coverage focused on bath salts use to the exclusion of other interpretive schema for the event, and finds a marked disparity between the portrait of bath salts use/effects presented in these texts and clinical literature and data on actual usage/effects.

Adolescent Perceptions of Digital Play: A Study in Third-Person Effects • Wendy Blanchard; Bryan Denham • Research on third-person effects has found that, relative to themselves, individuals perceive others as being more affected by media content. In this study, we examined perceived effects of video games and digital play among students enrolled at a charter high school in the Southeastern United States. As determinants of third-person perceptions, the study included measures of gender, race and age, time spent on video games during a typical school day, household rules governing time spent on video games and exposure to violent media content, and communication from parents about spending too much time in digital play. Results showed a consistent pattern of third-person perceptions, with those who reported lower levels of digital play estimating higher levels of adverse effects on others. Females and those who indicated the presence of household rules governing digital play and exposure to violent content estimated especially negative effects on others.

Surfing Alone: Search Engines, Flow, and Positive Outcomes • David Dozier; Valerie Barker, Journalism & Media Studies SDSU; Amy Schmitz Weiss; Diane Borden • This study integrates Stephenson’s (1967) play theory and Csikszentmihalyi’s (1990) flow theory to examine the use of search engines. The challenge of an Internet search is balanced against the Internet surfer’s skills, permitting optimum experiences or flow. A national telephone survey, using probability sampling, provides evidence that search-engine flow mediates the relationship between search-engine usage and four positive outcomes: (1) focused knowledge gain, (2) incidental knowledge gain, (3) satisfaction, and (4) reputation.

Three Patterns of News Use in College Students • Eunjin Kim; Esther Thorson, University of Missouri; Margaret Duffy, U of Missouri; Heather Schoenberger • Through latent profile analysis, the study identifies three groups of college students based on self-reports of news consumption from various news sources. Most fell into Low News group, which also showed high levels of Entertainment Media use. Membership in the groups was strongly predicted by Parent and Friend News Use, needing the news every day, and confidence in knowing what others were trying to express.

A New Model for the Hierarchy of Influences?: Interviewing ‘Front Lines’ National Security Journalists • Heather Epkins, University of Maryland • This paper examines a critical tier in the global flow of terrorism information gathered through in-depth interviews with 35 national security journalists in the Washington, DC, ‘prestige press.’ Rarely studied but extremely influential, these ‘front-line’ reporters offer insider knowledge regarding how the post-9/11 era has altered journalist routines. Findings include evidence to reconsider the Hierarchy of Influences Model (Shoemaker & Reese, 1996) using the lens of an important modern frame: the “War on Terror.”

Do college students benefit from their social media experience? Social media involvement and its impact on college students’ self-efficacy perception • Ling Fang, Bowling Green State University • The indulgence in social networking sites (SNS) among college students has drawn scholars’ attention and research interest. Considering the importance of self-efficacy as a behavior indicator in every aspect of life, it is worth examining whether college students’ Facebook usage could influence college students’ self-efficacy perception in learning, socializing, and public participation. Based on a theoretical framework combining social cognitive theory and uses and gratifications theory, this study examined college students’ time spent on SNS as well as other users’ behaviors as indicators of perceived self-efficacy change after using SNS. This pilot study is based on a web survey of 395 students in public university in the Midwest on September 2012. Findings indicate a negative association between socializing use of SNS and perceived self-efficacy after using SNS. Specifically, students’ perception of SNS experience is an important indicator of their perceived self-efficacy after using SNS. However, students’ self-reported social learning behavior on SNS turned out to be a negative indicator. Moreover, positive associations found between perceived general self-efficacy change after using SNS and reported civic and politic participation suggest potential indirect effects of SNS involvement on students’ political and public participation. Interesting findings are discussed in this paper.

Thinking about issues: What drives opinion formation? • Stefan Geiss, Department of Communication, U of Mainz • Outcomes of collective opinion formation processes are often criticized. Obviously, some engage in sustained in-depth opinion formation while others process the information superficially and transiently. To account for this, a cognitive miser model is proposed: Individuals form cognitive appraisals of current issues which influence their motivation for engaging in opinion formation. A three-wave panel study tracks the progress of opinion formation. Findings support the notion that appraisals steer depth and duration of opinion formation processes.

Learning From “Fake News”: Is “Daily Show” Viewing Linked to Greater Political Knowledge? • Jennifer D. Greer, University of Alabama; Brooke Carbo, University of Alabama; Yeojin Kim • Using nationwide survey data from U.S. voters, this study examines whether exposure to “fake news” is linked to higher political knowledge, even when age, education, political participation, and political ideology are entered as control variables. “Daily Show” viewers overall had significantly higher levels of liberal knowledge than non-viewers. By gender, “Daily Show” viewing was linked to higher levels of all three types of political knowledge for women and higher levels of liberal knowledge in men.

Media repertoire and multi-platform media use: Media consumption diversity in a digital age • Louisa Ha, Bowling Green State University; Yen-I Lee, Bowling Green State University • In this digital age, many media options are available to consumers. People can resist or embrace the diversity based on their own habit and preference. This study of general population’s media consumption patterns including mobile media in a local market shows that media content preference diversity, total news consumption time and household income predict the news media repertoire diversity. But within each medium, the repertoire is narrow with most consumers using only one outlet in newspapers and social media. It advances the media repertoire theory and utilizes brand loyalty and media accessibility to explain why the proliferation of media outlets and platforms may not translate to consumption diversity. To maximize time use and efficiency and for different content, consumers choose a variety of media platforms to satisfy their needs. But in each specific medium, one platform dominates as their primary format to consume.

Victimhood and restoration: Retooling memory in newspapers • Choonghee Han, Hope College • Claiming victimhood provides victims with a sense of restoration, and helps them recover their self-esteem. This seemingly psychological process is, in fact, political. In a nation-state context, remembering victimhood enables a country to avoid division in the society by reminding the public that they shared the memory of national suffering. This paper explores the discursive construction of victimhood and restoration in Asian flagship newspapers. A critical discourse analysis was conducted on news articles.

Can Enduring Values Endure? Examining Professional Self-Image of Local News Workers in a News Community of Constant Change • Shawn Harmsen, University of Iowa; Brian Ekdale, University of Iowa; Jane B. Singer, University of Iowa; Melissa Tully, University of Iowa • “They didn’t know it at the time, but when Tuchman (1978), Gans (1979), and Schudson (1981) wrote some of the seminal works in the area of the sociology of news, they were writing about what some later called the “golden age” of journalism. Part of what they found and described in various ways was a group of journalists who saw themselves as professionals, as part of a special group with its own special history, training, skill, rights, and responsibilities. Forty years later the news industry looks very different than it did in the 1970s. But despite all of the changes, including but not limited to technology, ownership, and job stability, have journalists changed as well? This research uses a case study approach (interviews, observations, and surveys) at a small-market converged newspaper/television/online news operation to explore how journalists define themselves in an ever-changing environment. This paper first discusses the amount of change in general this particular news staff has experienced in the last five years, asks how they feel about those changes, and then focuses in on their feelings about management driven exploration of what is sometimes called “community” or “public” journalism. This paper describes a staff facing its own conflicting attitudes about change and the future of their jobs, while also determined to hold onto what they find to be special about their profession. It concludes with a discussion about the normative implications of these findings for journalism and for the society which the journalists are supposed to serve.”

“Am I Pretty?” YouTube Answers. • Azeta Hatef • The purpose of this study is to uncover the motivations and effects of creating an “Am I Pretty or Ugly?” YouTube video. We are able to infer the young women’s motivations for creating and uploading videos through content analysis of words and actions as well as viewer’s comments. Analysis of data illustrates the strongest relationships correlate with the amount of activity on a YouTube video page rather than the level of attractiveness of the video creator.

Twitter’s Role in the Modern Newsroom: Circumventing the Gatekeepers and Pounding the Digital Pavement • Keren Henderson, Louisiana State University; Andrea Miller, LSU • Is social media so convenient that journalists are replacing traditional news routines with Twitter? Analyzing a survey of 166 local television news workers, this study offers insights into use of Twitter in the newsroom, rates of adoption, who journalists are following, and their attitudes toward the value of Twitter as a story idea source.

Perceived Realism, Enjoyment, and News Perception in the Context of Stereotypes: The Influence of Stereotypic Portrayals of Gender Roles on Attitudes toward News Stories • Jennifer Hoewe, The Pennsylvania State University; Alyssa Appelman, The Pennsylvania State University; Elise Stevens, The Pennsylvania State University • This study explores the relationship between stereotypic beliefs and subsequent attitudes, specifically how beliefs about women relate to attitudes toward news stories about a stay-at-home parent. A between-subjects experiment revealed that participants with more stereotypic beliefs about women thought a news story about a stay-at-home mother was more realistic than one about a stay-at-home father. Regardless of story condition, stereotypic beliefs about women were associated with negative attitudes regarding perceived realism, enjoyment, and news perception.

It’s All About Me: Narcissism and User-Generated Content on Facebook • Todd Holmes, University of Florida • It is thought that the content-generating capabilities of Facebook are leading to higher levels of narcissism within our society. A survey (N=344) was conducted that assessed a number of Facebook behaviors: self-promotion, ensuring a large network of friends, retaliation/anger over critical remarks, and entitlement/exploitativeness. Results were mixed concerning self-promotional behaviors and entitlement/exploitativeness, but were consistent with ensuring a large friend network and retaliating and becoming angry over negative comments.

Morally Engaged and Cognitively Mixed: The Prosocial Effects of Exposure to Unpleasant Media Violence on Charitable Giving • T. Franklin Waddell, Penn State; Edward Downs, University of Minnesota Duluth; James Ivory, Virginia Tech; Kwaku Akom, Virginia Tech; Marcela Weber, The University of the South; Desmond Hayspell, Southside Virginia Community College • Although media violence is generally assumed to desensitize psychological and physiological responses to real world violence, it should not be assumed that all violent content produces uniform, negative effects. An experiment found that individuals who viewed a media clip that portrayed the consequences of domestic abuse were more likely to donate money to a charitable organization for international victims of violence. These results provide evidence that exposure to some media violence can promote prosocial behaviors.

Occupying the Civil Rights Movement: Cable News Framing of Contemporary Protest through Historical Memory • Sarah Jackson, Northeastern University • This paper examines if and how public memory of the civil rights movement was put into action by newsmakers seeking to frame understandings of Occupy Wall Street on two of America’s most polarized news networks. A descriptive and discursive analysis reveals the differential journalistic values, and presumptions of core American values, that influence coverage of social movements on Fox News and MSNBC. Implications for debates about social change in the public sphere are discussed.

Promoting broadband and ICT access for persons with disabilities: International comparison of case studies • Krishna Jayakar, Penn State University; Chun Liu, Southwest Jiaotong University; Gary Madden, Curtin University; Eun-A Park, University of New Haven • Despite the promise of information and communication technologies (ICTs) and broadband to improve the lives of persons with disabilities, there are wide disparities in access and usage of ICTs between disabled and non-disabled populations. This paper researches ten case studies of policies and programs promoting ICT and broadband access for persons with disabilities in the leading economies of the Asia-Pacific region, in order to identify successful programs on the basis of effectiveness and cost efficiency.

The Features of Hegemonic Masculinity in Korea • Jaehyeon Jeong, Temple University • This study, focusing on the Korean variety-talk show, investigates how popular media form people’s consent to hegemonic masculinity, and what features of hegemonic masculinity are (re) produced through media discourses. The features of hegemonic masculinity are discussed in terms of the exclusion of the feminine, the exclusion of female masculinity, homophobia, and the division of labor.

The Priming of Arab – Israeli Stereotypes: How News Stories May Enhance or Inhibit Audience Stereotypes • Erika Johnson, University of Missouri • Present research shows that there is no study examining media representation of Arab women and Israeli women as a prime causing stereotype activation in Americans. The goal of this study was to understand how news stories about Arab and Israeli women prime stereotypes in Americans, extending research on priming and ethnic media representation. A 2 (female target ethnicity: Arab and Israeli) x 3 (depiction type: prototypical, non-prototypical, and control) x 3 (multiple messages) mixed factorial design was conducted to examine how depiction and ethnicity in news story stimuli would interact with stereotype activation and accuracy (N = 107). Results showed that participants exhibited higher stereotyping after reading prototypical stories about Arab women and after they were not primed by stories. Also, participants who read non-prototypical news stories about Arab women showed reduced stereotyping. The results give meaningful implications for scholars and journalists, including possibilities for expanding research and improving coverage.

Promoting the Tan Ideal? Does Exposure to Tanned versus Untanned Images Affect College Women’s Attractiveness Motivations for Tanning • Hannah Kang, University of Florida; Kim Walsh-Childers, University of Florida; Sarah Lashley, University of Florida • This study investigated how exposure to mass media images promoting a tanned appearance influence attractiveness motivations for tanning and how exposure affects tanning intentions. The study was based in social cognitive and social comparison theories. The participants were 106 undergraduate women who were randomly assigned to one of the four conditions (light, moderate or dark tan or control). The results indicated that attractiveness motivation for tanning was a predictor of sunbathing expectations and tanning salon use expectations at pre-test and post-test. However, exposure to models displaying different tan levels had no significant impact on women’s attractiveness motivations, body satisfaction, intentions to sunbathe in the future or intentions to engage in indoor tanning. Implications and limitations of the findings are addressed in the study.

Placing Blame and Seeking Solutions: Media Framing of School Shootings • Ana Keshelashvili; Kenneth Cardell, University of South Carolina • Analyzing newspaper articles and television transcripts, this study explores how American news media have framed the issue of school shootings in the United States. More specifically, through an examination at both the individual and societal levels, this research seeks to understand attributions of responsibility represented within the news coverage. Using a representative sample of newspaper and television news transcripts covering school shootings between 1999 and 2012, this study employs content analysis method to explore how the media has addressed the questions of who is responsible for school shootings and what can be done about them. Implications of findings, as well as suggestions for future research are also considered.

News Use and Cognitive Elaboration The Mediating Role of People’s Perception of Media Complex Issues Comprehension • Ji won Kim; Monica Chadha; Homero Gil de Zuniga • Using a two-wave panel data, the study attempted to find the relationship between news consumption and news cognitive elaboration while accommodating for the role of media perception. The results showed the mediating role of media perception in this relationship. The study contributes to the existing literature by introducing a new perception variable and examining its relationships with elaboration to make theoretical advancement and social implications in the democratic society.

Facebook, “Frenemy?”: Examining the Relationship between Exposure to Facebook Profiles and Body Image • Ji Won Kim, Syracuse University • This study examined the relationship between exposure to Facebook profiles and body image. From the online survey of 175 respondents, results showed that the Facebook usage was correlated with higher levels of self-objectification and appearance comparison, and the hierarchical regression analyses revealed that self-objectification and appearance comparison mediated the relation between Facebook usage (Facebook Intensity, Facebook usage for social grooming) and body shame.

Investigating the Role of Motivated Reasoning on Third-Person Perceptions of PSAs • Nam Young Kim, Sam Houston State University • Since Public Service Announcements (PSAs) are perceived as socially valuable and promote positive behavioral changes, scholars have found that people tend to estimate larger impacts on themselves (i.e., a first-person effect) than on others (Cho & Han, 2004; Duck & Mullin, 1995; Gunther & Hwa, 1996). However, empirical studies have shown that individuals’ behavioral differences or a message’s features can evoke different estimates of media impacts on the self and on others (Duck & Mullin, 1995; Duck, Terry, & Hogg, 1995). In particular, when people are exposed to information that is inconsistent with their prior beliefs, it can be perceived as personally irrelevant as a defensive tactic toward the dissonance in their cognition (i.e., motivated reasoning) according to Keller and Block (1999). Using a 2 (Fear Appeal: High vs. Low) X 2 (Prior Attitudes: Negative vs. Positive) factorial experiment, this study therefore investigates how the dissonance between level of fears and individuals’ prior beliefs boosts their defensive information processing and influences the PSAs effects on both themselves and others in the context of an anti-binge drinking health campaign. The results show that there were no significant interaction effects between level of fears and participants’ prior attitudes toward drinking alcohol, which might differentiate third-person perceptions across conditions. However, a negative scores of other-self difference implies that participants generally evaluated the PSA effects on others is greater than the effects on themselves. The findings have practical and theoretical implications for future studies on the use of emotional appeals in PSAs.

Forewarning of Persuasive Intent: The Role of Regulatory Focus and Brand Attachment • Sang Lee; Hongmin Ahn • Forewarning people of incoming persuasive information often results in decrease in persuasion by conferring resistance to persuasion. The present research explored the forewarning effects and the moderating roles of regulatory focus and brand attachment in a public relations context. The results of a 2x2x2 factorial design experiment (N = 217) showed that forewarning of persuasive intent interacts with regulatory focus and brand attachment to influence participants’ attitudes and persuasiveness of the information. Specifically, the study showed that the impact of forewarning is more pronounced in prevention-focused than in promotion-focused conditions. It also showed that the impact of forewarning is less pronounced when participants’ brand attachment is high.

To Boldly Go: A Comparison of Early and Modern Gender Roles in Science Fiction Television • Alicia Linn, Oakland University • Through viewing the long-running United Kingdom shows “Doctor Who” (1963) and “Doctor Who” (2005), along with the United States shows “Star Trek” (1966) and “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” one can see shifts in gender expectations for both men and women in science fiction. These shifts can be linked to cultural expectations of gender roles. Using a list of stereotypical qualities typically associated with each gender, I have determined a few of these shifts. Contentious discourse and dynamic frames: The interplay among online public opinion, media report, and government discourse in public event • Shiwen Wu; Na Liu • How do online public opinion, mainstream media, and government construct interpretative frames towards contentious social events? Employing a content analysis of 765 online posts, 87 commercial media reports, 77 party media reports, and 14 government releases regarding a sociopolitical event in China, we test the frame building and frame interacting impacts originated from the four actors. We find that each actor constructs divergent but interrelated frames by employing different functions of the frames.

Second-Level Agenda Setting in 140 Characters: How Journalists Used Twitter to Report the Newtown Shooting • Megan Mallicoat, University of Florida • This study explores second-level agenda setting and social media through a content analysis of journalists’ tweets during a 10-day period following the Newtown, Conn., shooting. The results show gun control was by far the cognitive attribute most frequently identified, followed by timeline and story details, news content, and emotional reactions. They also show that, in terms of affective attributes, the tweets were neutral in about half the cases, but negativity increased as time progressed.

Educational TV Consumption and Children’s Interest in Leisure Reading and Writing: A Test of the Validated Curriculum Hypothesis • Nicole Martins, Department of Telecommunications; Jakob Jensen, University of Utah • The relationship between children’s TV consumption and literacy outcomes is currently unclear as past research has identified both linear (positive and negative) and curvilinear trends. It has been suggested that one source of variance in this relationship is the content children consume; specifically, researchers have argued that research-based educational TV programming (e.g., Between the Lions) should be positively related to literacy outcomes whereas non research-based programming (e.g., Boohbah) should be negatively related to literacy outcomes (what we refer to as the validated curriculum hypothesis). To test this hypothesis directly, fourth and fifth graders (N = 120) completed a survey assessing educational TV consumption and leisure reading/writing behaviors. The results upheld the validated curriculum hypothesis and revealed several key moderators including composite TV consumption and parent’s reading behavior. The results help to rectify conflicting results in the literature, support the validated curriculum hypothesis, and underscore the value of research-based educational TV programming.

Handheld Media Use at School: Increased Use Negatively Impacts Reading Outcomes • Nicholas Matthews, Indiana University; Jakob Jensen, University of Utah; Nicole Martins, Department of Telecommunications; Rebecca Ivic, The University of Akron • Two studies were conducted to investigate the possibility that portable video game (PVG) devices and cell phones displaced children’s leisure reading. In study one, 120 fourth and fifth grade children completed a survey about their media habits and found that bringing PVG devices to school and talking on cell phones negatively related to leisure reading. In study two, 136 fourth, fifth, and sixth graders completed a similar survey and found that cell phones but not PVGs negatively related to children’s leisure reading. These data extend the displacement literature by illuminating the impact these newer technologies have on reading outcomes.

Vicarious Experience: Experimentally Testing the Effects of Empathy for Media Characters with Severe Depression and the Intervening Role of Perceived Similarity • Robert McKeever, University of South Carolina • This study reports results from a 3-condition experiment (N = 80), wherein participants either read an article about a person (high vs. low social similarity) struggling with severe depression or no article (control), before viewing a stimulus website for a faux peer support organization. The results indicated that the level of empathic responses, positive attitudes, and the likelihood of engaging in helping behaviors, might be enhanced after reading about a socially similar person with depression.

A comparative study of the propaganda devices used by FOX and MSNBC • Aimee Meader, University of Texas at Austin • This study investigates the use of propaganda devices on two cable networks: FOX and MSNBC. These devices work to sway audiences toward a conservative or liberal ideology, respectively, and may increase the political divide through rhetorical manipulation. A contextual content analysis found that MSNBC used more testimonials and name-calling than FOX, but FOX used more fear appeals. The results of this study may partially explain why partisan often fail to see eye-to-eye.

Citizens as Opinion Leaders: Exploring the Effects of Citizen Journalism on Opinion Leadership • Seungahn Nah, University of Kentucky; Kang Namkoong, University of Kentucky; Stephanie Van Stee, University of Kentucky; Rachael Record, University of Kentucky • This study explores the effects of citizen journalism on opinion leadership concerning community issues and nonprofit and voluntary organizations. Results from a quasi-experiment showed that there were no differences in opinion leadership between the treatment and control groups. However, the results also revealed that the diversity of news sources produced (i.e., use of both web and human sources in news articles produced by citizen journalists) yielded a positive relationship with opinion leadership changes.

Public Risk Perception of Food Hazards: Understanding The Relationships Between Communication Channels, Risk Perceptions and Preventive Behavioral Intentions • SANG HWA OH, University of South Carolina; Sei-Hill Kim; Jea Chul Shim, Korea University; Jeong-Heon JC Chang, Korea University; Hwalbin Kim, University of South Carolina • Using food-safety issues in South Korea, this study examines whether two levels of risk perception – personal and societal – are related with people’s precautionary behaviors. Our findings point to the important role of personal risk perception in shaping South Korean’s precautionary behaviors for food-safety. We also look into the role of communication channels in shaping the public’s risk perceptions. Findings indicate that interpersonal communication and reading of online news are positively related with personal risk perception.

“Lord, forgive them; they know not what they do”: The Divine and the Damned in News Coverage of Executed Texas Death Row Inmates • Gregory Perreault; Berkley Hudson; Delia Cai • This historical analysis examines selected newspaper coverage of the last words of executed death row inmates in Texas, U.S.A. from 1982-2000. This study seeks to place the words of those silenced within the context of history and media coverage. It focuses on themes of religion, spirituality, and forgiveness. The findings argue that the prominence of spiritual themes in the newspaper coverage serves as a humanizing story element in contrast with the brutality of the crimes. This research builds on Campbell’s theory of myth (1988), examining the degree to which the newspapers themselves serve as a reifying, perpetuating ritual role in their coverage of executions.

Rediscovering Media-Value Associations in the Internet Age • Chris Roberts, University of Alabama • An update and improvement to a 1981 study shows that, more than ever, participants associate specific media channels with specific values. In 2011, digital natives and immigrants replicated 1981 research by associating Rokeach’s 36 values statements with mass media channels. Data were analyzed using Rokeach’s approach and by Schwartz’s and Bilsky’s motivational domains. Adding the Internet introduced many value shifts from 1981, as well as revealing significant differences between contemporary younger and older participants. The Internet was perceived high for “freedom” as well as many instrumental, achievement and self-direction values. Newspapers remained associated with a preponderance of values, but with many changes in intensity. Television remained affiliated with many terminal and self-focused values, while radio and magazine associations remained flat.

Explaining third-person perceptions: Comparing self-enhancement, social distance, exposure, normative fit, and exemplar accessibility explanations • Mike Schmierbach, Pennsylvania State University; Michael Boyle • Although many explanations are offered for third-person effects, few studies directly measure and compare multiple theories. We present participants with three distinct types of media meant to evoke varied third- and first-person perceptions, and measure how well each theory predicts the perceptual gaps. Results show that the acceptability of influence and ability to think of examples of influence best predict both expected influences and perceptual gaps.

Television Viewing and the Cultivation of Attitudes toward American Exceptionalism • Laras Sekarasih, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Gregory Blackburn, University of Massachusetts Amherst • This study examined the cultivation of attitudes toward American Exceptionalism. Controlling for demographic attributes, television viewing predicted pride in being American, but not attitudes toward U.S. unilateralism. Significant two-way interactions between television viewing and gender and political orientations in predicting attitudes towards U.S. unilateralism were found. Among male and liberal participants, more television viewing was associated with more positive attitudes toward unilateralism. An indirect relationship between television viewing and unilateralism was found through American pride.

Effectiveness of Entertainment-Education in Communicating Health Information: A Systematic Review • Fuyuan Shen; Ashley Han • This paper conducted a meta-analysis of published research on entertainment-education and health communication. A search of databases identified 22 studies (N = 19517) that met our inclusion criteria and contained relevant statistics. Analysis of the results suggested that overall, entertainment-education’s effects on health outcomes—as measured by knowledge, attitudes, intention and behaviors—was small but significant, with an average effect size (r) of .11 (p < .001). This effect size did not vary significantly across channels, health issues, study locations, and participants’ gender. However, research designs (surveys vs. experiments) and exposure time were significant moderators of entertainment education’s impact on health outcomes.

Being a Truth-Teller Who Serves Only the Citizens: A Case Study of Newstapa • Wooyeol Shin, University of Minnesota, Twin-Cities • This study explores the boundary work of the Korean independent newsroom Newstapa. The journalistic value of truth-telling is emphasized in Newstapa’s practices. Newstapa journalists, who previously worked in mainstream media, open the boundaries of professional work by embracing the nascent practices of digital culture. Although this process causes the journalists to relinquish their autonomy to the citizens, it leads to their being exclusively accountable journalists who serve only the citizens through truth-telling.

Trust, Happiness and the Watch-Dog: Social Trust in the Context of a Free Press • Heather Shoenberger, University of Missouri; Freya Sukalla, University of Augsburg, Germany • We conducted a hierarchical analysis using data from 45 countries from the World Values Survey wave with data from 2004 to 2008 and matching these with country information on the level of press freedom collected by Freedom House to simultaneously test for differences in levels of social trust among individuals and, more importantly, for variations in social trust between countries with different levels of press freedom. We also extend the theory of trust by examining the influence of press freedom as an important contextual factor. We find that countries with higher levels of freedom of the press (i.e., more free) are more likely to have a citizenry who report higher trust in their fellow citizens.

Media Credibility and Disaster: The Moderating Role of Information Satisfaction in Post-Earthquake Haiti • Erich Sommerfeldt, University of Maryland; Jennifer Mandel • The 2010 earthquake in Haiti left survivors in desperate need of information. This study examined if satisfaction with the availability of information moderated the relationship between frequency of radio use and perceptions of radio credibility. From data acquired in Haiti (N = 1,808), analyses revealed an interaction effect between radio usage and information satisfaction on the perceived credibility of radio. Lower satisfaction levels were found to enhance the relationship between frequency of use and credibility.

Once Upon a [Mediated] Time: How Retrospective Television Programs Shape Cultural Memory • Vivian Sponholtz, University of Florida • This paper examines how television shapes Cultural Memory through episodic retrospective dramas concerning gender equity in the workplace. It argues that television, as a ritually-viewed, performance-based, storytelling medium, which bridges the gap between orality and textuality, influences the cultural understanding of history and sense of identity for women through historic portrayals. Based on Cultural Memory theory, Social Cognition theory, and Transportation theory, and the Bechdel-Wallace Test, a typology of television programs as fables is proposed.

Constructing Digital Childhoods in Taiwan newspaper • Ping Shaw; Yue Tan • With a content analysis of news reports in the most popular children’s newspaper in Taiwan, this study examined the media framing of child computer users in Taiwan by showing how Taiwan media represent and construct childhoods and frame the impact of digital technology on children in order to explain how cultural assumptions of children’s nature, status, and needs influence the media representation, and as being mediated by children’s age and living domains (home vs. school).

FYI on FOI: Exploring the effects of freedom of information (FOI) laws around the world • Edson Tandoc, University of Missouri-Columbia • Many democracies, young and old, have instituted Freedom of Information (FOI) laws. FOI scholars and advocates argued that having an FOI law contributes to curbing corruption and improving standards of living. But having an FOI law can be different from effectively implementing it. Pooling together indices summarizing data from 168 countries, this study revisits the assumption that having an FOI law and implementing it can curb corruption and improve quality of life.

CNN’s Coverage of the 2012 Presidential Debates: Balanced or Liberally Biased? • Steven Voorhees, Rutgers University • Following the 2012 presidential election season, conservatives charged cable news networks CNN and MSNBC as being liberally biased in their news coverage. While MSNBC openly acknowledges its progressive leanings, CNN has maintained a commitment to balanced journalism. This study conducts a comparative rhetorical and semiotic analysis of both networks’ coverage following the three highly watched presidential debates to see if CNN holds to its balanced commitments. Results indicate a wide separation between the two networks.

Conflict avoidance, context collapse: Young citizens and politics on Facebook • Emily Vraga, George Mason University; Kjerstin Thorson, University of Southern California; Neta Kligler-Vilenchik, University of Southern California; Emily Gee, University of Southern California • Social networking sites like Facebook increasingly shape youth engagement with politics, but little is known about how individuals manage election-related content in this social space. This study combines twenty in-depth interviews with a survey of young adults to examine how individual predispositions and Facebook network characteristics shape attitudes and behaviors towards sharing political content. Our results suggest young adults perceive delicate norms governing political expression on Facebook, where mostly a motivated minority posts political content.

“Unbelievable job numbers”: Bias claims, economic reporting, and the 2012 presidential election • Fred Vultee, Wayne State University • This content analysis addresses a specific claim of quantifiable media bias arising from coverage of unemployment statistics in the 2012 presidential campaign. Partisan assertions about what the media “always” do for Republicans or Democrats are often easy to dismantle, but the framing of economic issues provides a chance to examine real, rather than imagined, press performance. Results suggest that partisanship is hard to find among the ideologies that appear to influence how economic news is presented during elections. More influential is professionalism – despite the apparently contradictory forms it takes in different media sectors.

Meaningfully Moved, but Emotionally Mixed: The Dual Effects of Inspiring, Meaningful Films on Viewers’ Enjoyment of Media Violence • T. Franklin Waddell, Penn State; Stefanie Davis; Erica Bailey • Recent research suggests that media violence interventions can reduce the negative effects of media violence by affecting viewers’ preferences for violent media content. An experiment tested whether exposing participants to an inspiring, meaningful film could be used to reduce viewers’ subsequent enjoyment of media violence. Results suggest that inspiring films elicit co-occurring emotional responses that both enhance and inhibit the enjoyment of media violence. The moderating role of viewers’ hedonic orientation is also discussed.

She should have/She shouldn’t have: Examining the effect of combined news frames in sexual health on people’s emotions, perceptions of societal responsibility, and social policy intentions • Kimberly Walker, Indiana University School of Journalism, Indianapolis • This study manipulated two variables in an experimental design–cognitive framing (thematic/episodic) and affective framing (gain/loss)–to determine whether changing the way newspaper stories report HPV and teen pregnancy alters readers’ emotions, attribution of societal responsibility, and intentions to support health policy changes. Results revealed the affective gain frame led to more positive audience emotions, support for societal responsibility and intentions to support health policy changes. No interaction effects between frames were found.

Murder She Searched: The Effect of Violent Crime and News Coverage on Residents’ Search for Crime-Related Information • Brendan Watson, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities • This paper examines the agenda-setting effect of local news coverage of crime and local violent crime rates on local residents’ Google searches for crime-related information. These web searches can be viewed as manifestations of the latent cognitive salience of an issue. The time-series analysis found that while news coverage, which does not reflect changes in “real-world” conditions (i.e., changes in the violent crime rate), does affect searches in the short-term, in the longer-term violent crime, not coverage, has an agenda-setting effect on local residents’ searches for crime-related information.

‘Child of Mine:’ Impacts of Prolonged Media Exposure on Women’s Fertility Desires • Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, The Ohio State University; Laura Willis, The Ohio State University; Ashley Kennard • A prolonged exposure experiment examined whether media portrayals of women’s social roles affect fertility desires with childless adult women. Participants viewed magazines pages five days in a row. Stimuli presented women either in mother/homemaker roles, professional roles, or beauty ideal roles. Exposure to mother/homemaker and beauty ideal portrayals increased the number of desired children across time. Exposure to the professional portrayal increased the time planned until first birth compared to the beauty ideal portrayal.

Not on my watch: A textual analysis of local and national newspaper coverage of the Martin-Zimmerman case • Erin Willis, University of Memphis; Chad Painter, Eastern New Mexico University • The shooting of Trayvon Martin by George Zimmerman made national newspaper headlines. Textual analysis was used to examine news framing of race and crime in news coverage. Five themes are discussed: (1) the Sanford Herald compared to national newspapers, (2) Zimmerman’s mysterious race, (3) uneven descriptors of Martin and Zimmerman, (4) the case being used as a platform for discussion of larger issues such as race and gun control, and (5) the infamous “hoodie.”

Use of SNSs, Political Efficacy, and Civic Engagement Among Chinese College Students: Effects of Gratifications and Network Size • Qian Xu, Elon University; Lingling Qi, Nanjing University • A survey (N=471) was conducted to explore the impact of social networking site (SNS) use on political efficacy and civic engagement among Chinese college students. SNS network size positively predicted civic engagement, but not political efficacy. Social connection gratification positively predicted both internal efficacy and engagement in political voice, whereas entertainment gratification negatively predicted external efficacy and engagement in political voice. Information seeking gratification did not significantly correlate with either political efficacy or civic engagement.

A Multilevel Analysis of Individual- and Prefecture-Level Sources of Media Trust in Japan • Masahiro Yamamoto, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse; Tien-Tsung Lee, University of Kansas; Weina Ran • Previous research has examined various sources of media trust including media consumers’ political stands and media use, objectivity in news reports, and perceived biases stemming from journalists’ political leanings. The goal of this study is to examine community contextual sources of media trust. Data from the Japanese General Social Surveys reveal that community structural pluralism and political heterogeneity have independent negative effects on audiences’ trust in the media.

Antecedents to Media Use: Effects of Parent Socialization and Childhood Behavior on Consumption Patterns During Adulthood • Chance York, Louisiana State University; Rosanne Scholl, LSU • Whether the media choices of adults are influenced by the socializing role of family during childhood is a largely unexplored question. Using parent-child panel data, this study shows that parent media behaviors and childhood media use influence news and entertainment consumption patterns later in life. Media consumption patterns, which have been shown to influence political knowledge and voter turnout, appear to be learned and habituated during childhood.

Insight for Policy-Making:Mothers’ Opinions of TV Snack/Fast-Food Advertising Aimed at Children Regarding Its Overall Amount, Content, and Influence on Their Children’s Health • Jay (Hyunjae) Yu • This exploratory study investigated the opinions of mothers who had at least one child between the ages of 7 and 12 on TV snack/fast-food advertising targeted at children. Mothers’ opinions were assessed concerning the amount of this advertising, its content, its influence on children’s health, and the need for stricter regulation of such content. The present research also examined whether there was a social distance or third person effect active in the mothers’ opinions about the influence of TV snack/fast-food advertising on children by identifying their opinions about the effects on their own children, their friends’ children, and the children of people they didn’t know. The results showed that most mothers in this study believed that there were too many TV snack/fast-food advertisements for their children to avoid, and the content of these advertisements should be improved, even if this required stricter regulation. However, it was also found that the mothers believed the children of people they didn’t know were more negatively influenced by exposure to TV snack/fast-food advertising compared to their own children. Thus, the third person effect was observed. There was evident complexity in mothers’ opinions about TV snack/fast-food advertising. Mothers hesitated to say that TV snack/fast-food advertising was the most important influence on their children’s eating habits, and even though they were generally negative about the impact of TV snack/fast-food advertising on their children and wanted to see greater regulation of content, they did not think that adverting was the most important factor influencing their children’s eating habits and health. Rather, they thought that they were, and should be, the most important mediator of how many TV advertisements their children watched and what kinds of food their children ate.

Framing depression: Cultural and organizational influence on coverage of a public health threat and attribution of responsibilities in U.S. news media • Yuan Zhang; Yan Jin; Jeannette Porter; Sean Stewart • We conducted the first study of how U.S. news media covered depression over the past three decades. We analyzed how media framed depression thematically vs. episodically and attributed causal and problem-solving responsibilities at personal vs. societal levels. We also explored how cultural and organizational factors influenced the frame building process. U.S. news media relied on thematic framing to cover the issue but placed more causal and problem-solving responsibilities on the individual than on the society.

A self-created spiral of silence?: Modeling the effects of media reliance and perceived media diversity on opinion expression • Xinyan Zhao, University of Maryland • This study investigated the effects of media reliance and perceived media diversity on individuals’ opinion expression intention and the psychological mechanism underlying such effects. Both direct and indirect effects of media reliance and perceived media diversity on people’s opinion expression were tested and compared. Using data from a survey of 317 undergraduates in China, it was found that: (1) Perceived media diversity does not directly predict one’s willingness to speak out; instead, it moderates the relationship between opinion congruency and individual opinion expression; (2) newspaper reliance has both a positive direct and indirect influence (through self-efficacy) on individual opinion expression; (3) perceived diversity of Internet rather than the perceived diversity of traditional mass media is positively related to self-efficacy and individual opinion expression.

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Magazine 2013 Abstracts

June 12, 2013 by Kyshia

“Trail of Corpses”: Newsweek, Time, and U.S. News & World Report’s Coverage of Genocide in Southern Sudan, 1989-2005 • Sally Ann Cruikshank • This study examines how three U.S. national magazines, Newsweek, Time, and U.S. News & World Report, framed the conflict in southern Sudan. Based on a textual analysis of the reports, the most salient frame associated with the conflict throughout all the coverage was that it was a “religious” civil war. In all three magazines, two dominant themes emerged: famine and the way children were being affected by the war. The implications of these findings are discussed at length.

Magazines in the new millennium: A concept explication • Joy Jenkins, University of Missouri • The format, content, and appearance of magazines have changed considerably during their history. As a result, the already fluid definition of “magazine” is changing. Following the steps described by McLeod and Pan (2005), this paper explicates “magazine.” After describing the history of magazines in America, the paper analyzes the definitions that have been assigned to magazines and examines their empirical properties. Lastly, the author proposes a new conceptual definition of “magazine” and suggests operational procedures.

Development of Men’s Magazines Industry in Taiwan • Chingshan Jiang, University of Nebraska at Kearney • The emergence of men’s magazines in Taiwan forms an interesting case study when looking at the growth of global media. Not only are men’s magazines popular in Taiwan, but they also shape readers’ attitudes about masculinity. International men’s magazines in Taiwan have had a significant influence on the format and content of local men’s magazines. Furthermore, the globalization of men’s magazines which includes foreign fashion, lifestyle, Western masculinity and editorials suitable for advertising has had an impact on the design and content of local men’s magazines in Taiwan. The purpose of this study is to examine how men’s magazines in Taiwan are constructed as hybrids incorporating both local and international cultures.

Exploring How College Magazines Portray Science and Scientists: A Comparative Analysis of Harvard Magazine and KU (Korea University) Today • Hwalbin Kim, University of South Carolina; Jeong-Heon JC Chang, Korea University • This study explores how two college magazines – Harvard Magazine and KU Today – portray science and scientists. Based on a framing theory as a theoretical framework, we conducted a content analysis of science stories. Findings of this analysis show that Harvard Magazine framed science as the progress issue while KU Today portrayed science as the convergence and communication theme. As elite media, the university magazine can serve as a guide for news dealing with scientific research.

Between academia and journalism: Formation of the intellectual field in postwar South Korea (1953-59) • Ah-Reum Kim, The University of Tokyo • This study investigates the close ties between the media and knowledge production by analyzing rise of the intellectual field. An intellectual group formed around the magazine, Sasanggye, is considered as a middle range of analytical tool and material conditions of 1950s’ South Korean intellectual society are examined. These conditions situate the intellectual field between journalistic and academic field and suggest the way in which intellectual paradigm of American knowledge was appropriated.

Examining the lens on the world: Reader negotiation of identity through National Geographic coverage of Puerto Rico • Andrew Mendelson, Temple University Journalism; Nancy Morris, Temple University • This study examines how a 2003 National Geographic Magazine article on Puerto Rico was interpreted by Puerto Ricans. Their reactions to their representation by a U.S. magazine that positions itself as an arbiter of cultural knowledge is supplemented by examination of NGM content and interviews with NGM staff. NGM faces new challenges in representing culture in the Internet era in which media representations of the “other” are increasingly available to the “other.”

“50 Ways to Seduce a Man” vs. “The Better Sex Diet”: A Content Analysis • Chelsea Reynolds, University of Minnesota • This study analyzed magazine framing of sex, sexuality, and sexual health. The researcher conducted a content analysis of 134 sex articles in 53 issues of Cosmopolitan, Glamour, Redbook, Esquire, GQ, Maxim, Women’s Health, Self, Men’s Fitness, and Men’s Health. Consistent with previous examinations of magazine sex content, women’s and men’s health and lifestyle titles gave more attention sex as entertainment than they did to sexual health or human sexuality. Differences between genres’ frames are discussed.

Portrayal of a Man and his Magic: The Image of Walt Disney in Magazines from 1934-1969 • Andi Stein, Cal State Fullerton • This study focuses on the image of Walt Disney that was portrayed by the magazine media during his time as the head of the Walt Disney Studios and in the years following his death in 1966. The study evaluates the recurring themes that emerged in magazine articles written about Disney to show how these articles portrayed him as an individual as well as within the context of his leadership role in his company.

Men’s images in women’s eyes • Yan Yan • Although women and girls have long been reported under great pressures from the image of “ideal beauty” communicated by mass media, little research focuses on the mediated “ideal male” image and its potential influences on the women’s expectations of the men. The current research examined how the “ideal male” and its related constructs were communicated by four top female beauty and fashion magazines— Vogue, Elle, Glamour and Cosmopolitan in 12 countries. Results showed that the ideal male and its related constructs varied significantly across magazines, indicating that the representation of male subjects was greatly influenced by each magazine’s self-positioning strategies and editorial intentions. Culture played a unique role in the representation of ideal male image. In particular, the U.S. and European magazines kept a relevant cultural independency in male model selection, but other countries confronted with a danger of being assimilated into the Westernized standard.

<<2013 Abstracts

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Law & Policy 2013 Abstracts

June 12, 2013 by Kyshia

Open Competition

Documenting Fair Use • Jesse Abdenour, UNC-Chapel Hill • The United States Copyright Act of 1976 allows for fair use of copyrighted material under certain circumstances, but federal courts have been inconsistent in rulings on copyright infringement cases in which a documentary filmmaker claims fair use. This can be problematic for documentarians, since they often use copyrighted materials such as historical footage and songs. The “Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use,” released in 2005, aimed to clear up the confusion surrounding fair use in documentaries by providing guidelines for documentary filmmakers to follow. This paper analyzes relevant federal court cases in which a documentary maker was sued under the Federal Copyright Act for infringement and in which the court addressed the issue of whether the use was or was not covered by the fair use provisions in the Act. This case analysis is conducted in an effort to determine if the federal rulings in such cases have changed since the Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement was released, as some have indicated. Federal cases in which a news organization or production company was sued under the Act for infringement due to the use of copyrighted reality footage are also examined, as well as the Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement itself.

The FTC Enters The Blogosphere: The Marketplace of Ideas and The FTC’S Regulation of Blogger Speech • Cassandra Batchelder • In 2009, the Federal Trade Commission made a step into the 21st century by amending its Guides Concerning Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising. The new Guides target endorsements of products or services by bloggers who have a connection to the advertiser who sells the good or service and do not disclose this connection. While the Guides may provide clarity to consumers, they also raise concerns about the First Amendment rights of bloggers. This paper employs a marketplace of ideas approach and examines the three instances since the Guides’ enactment in 2009 when the FTC relied on the Guides in its work. The paper finds that the Guides improperly treat all blogger speech as commercial speech and do not further the goals underlying the marketplace of ideas in the online context. The paper concludes that the FTC’s action to date have targeted advertisers, which faces far few First Amendment concerns, and that the Guides should be modified to reflect the FTC’s goal of encouraging advertisers to be honest about their dealings with bloggers.

Forcing the Web to Forget: The “right to be forgotten,” free expression, and access to information • Cheryl Ann Bishop, Non • New technologies provide instantaneous communication and access to information escalating tensions between the right to information privacy and rights to free expression and information in a digitized world. Recently the European Commission proposed a draft of new Data Protection Regulation, which includes the controversial “right to be forgotten,” a right to have one’s personal data erased from webpages. At the same time, the European Court of Justice is hearing a case on whether Google can be forced, under the Spanish “right to be forgotten” and the current EU data protection directive to removes links from its search indexes to webpages containing suspect personal information. This paper assessed implications for rights to free expression and information regarding the draft Data Protection Regulation and its proposed “right to be forgotten” by analyzing the pertinent sections of the draft and case law of the ECJ interpreting the current data protection directive. Drawing on this analysis, this paper assessed implications of a “right to be forgotten” in terms of the Google case currently being heard by the ECJ, and finds that there are possible negative implications for free expression and information regardless of outcome.

An “Actual Problem” in First Amendment Jurisprudence? Examining the Immediate Impact of Brown’s Proof-of-Causation Doctrine • Clay Calvert, University of Florida; Matthew Bunker, University of Alabama • This paper analyzes the immediate impact on First Amendment jurisprudence of the U.S. Supreme Court’s “direct causal link” requirement adopted in 2011 in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association. Brown, in embracing an empirically focused proof-of-causation doctrine, marked the first time in the Court’s history it had used the phrase “direct causal link” in any free-speech case. But just one year later, the Court again deployed it a very different factual context in United States v. Alvarez to strike down a federal law making it a crime to lie about earning military medals. Then, in December 2012, a federal judge used Brown’s “direct causal link” test to enjoin a California law that prohibits healthcare providers from engaging in sexual orientation change efforts with gay minors. The paper explores problems with adopting Brown’s quantitative and empirical causation standard in cases like Alvarez where an intangible injury (reputational harm) to an inanimate object (a medal) is the alleged compelling interest. Bridging doctrine with theory, the paper also examines how the direct causal link requirement comports with the marketplace of ideas theory upon which much of First Amendment jurisprudence is premised.

Fights From the First Amendment Fringes: Debating the Meaning of “Speech” Amid Shifting Cultural Mores & Changing Technologies • Clay Calvert, University of Florida • This paper examines the meaning of the word “speech” in the First Amendment, using three cases from 2012 as analytical springboards for both legal and cultural analysis. The cases center on whether tattooing and tattoos, “Liking” on Facebook, and begging for money constitute speech. The subjects were chosen, in part, because they force judges to confront shifting cultural stereotypes or technological advances. The paper draws on scholarly literature beyond the law to contextualize these skirmishes within broader cultural, social and/or technological frameworks. The paper concludes by identifying principles at the macro and micro levels distilled from the cases.

Lost in Translation: Reviewing the Stored Communications Act in Practice • Robyn Caplan, School of Communication and Information, Rutgers University • Though the Stored Communications Act has faced criticism for being outdated, little has been done to revise the Act to reflect technological changes in remote storage and computing practices. And yet, can the judiciary system be tasked with the responsibility of interpreting the SCA to reflect current technological reality? This paper examines two subpoenas issued under the SCA to investigate the impact of the use of outdated technical distinctions on decisions governing the privacy and surveillance of data.

Sexual Conversion Therapy and Freedom of Speech • Kara Carnley, University of Florida; Brittany Link, University of Florida; Linda Riedemann, University of Florida • This paper analyzes, from both a doctrinal and theoretical perspective, the First Amendment speech interests now at stake before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Welch v. Brown and Pickup v. Brown. Those cases pivot on a new California law banning mental health providers from performing sexual orientation change efforts (conversion therapy) on minors. Two district court judges reached radically different conclusions about the First Amendment questions in December 2012. The paper explores how three recent Supreme Court decisions involving seemingly disparate factual scenarios – Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, United States v. Alvarez and Gonzales v. Carhart – and three venerable theories of free speech – the marketplace of ideas, democratic self-governance and individual self-realization – might affect the outcome of the cases on appeal.

The Arrival of Real Malicia: Actual Malice in Inter-American Court of Human Rights • Edward Carter, Brigham Young University • The Inter-American Court of Human Rights decided two cases in recent years that represent a significant step for freedom of expression in nations that belong to the Organization of American States. In 2004, the Court had stopped short of adopting a standard that would require proof of “actual malice” in criminal defamation cases brought by public officials. In 2008 and 2009, however, the Court did adopt actual malice in two similar cases. The Court’s progress toward actual malice is chronicled and the ramifications of that jurisprudential development for Central and South America are discussed.

The State of Indecency Law: A Positive and Normative Evaluation of the Fox Cases • Kevin Delaney, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • This past summer, after nearly a decade of litigation, the Supreme Court released its long-awaited ruling in FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc. In Fox, many experts thought the Court would deem unconstitutional the government’s regulation of broadcast indecency. The Court did not, however. Rather, the Court offered a narrow holding that upheld the government’s regulations. This paper evaluates, both positively and normatively, the state of indecency regulation subsequent to the Court’s ruling in Fox.

Arab Media Regulations: Identifying restraints on freedom of the press in laws of six Arabian Peninsula countries • Matt Duffy, Georgia State University • This article analyzes media regulations of the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries on the Arabian Peninsula—Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The laws are analyzed and compared to international approaches that aim to balance freedom of expression against other societal obligations. The analysis shows that GCC laws go far beyond international norms in several areas including defamation, insults and criticisms, public order, and the banning of “false news.”

Transfer of Collective Journalistic Works from Real Space to Cyberspace under French and American Intellectual Property Law. • Lyombe Eko, University of Iowa • This article is a comparative analysis of how the exceptional intellectual property law regimes of the United States and France managed the legal conflicts that were spawned by the transfer of collective journalistic works published in newspapers and magazines in real space to cyberspace (digital electronic databases, servers, the Internet and the “cloud”). Both countries approached the issue within the framework of their respective, exceptional intellectual property law regimes. In the United States, courts refused to transfer wholesale, the law of collective works that is applicable to the print media in real space, to the dematerialized realities of searchable databases in cyberspace. In France, courts held that the unauthorized transfer of the journalistic work of both freelance and full-time journalists from real space to cyberspace violated the French Intellectual Property Code. While these controversies show that legal provisions governing the privileges of authors and the rights of individual contributors to collective works under intellectual property law are functionally equivalent in the United States and France, the contexts, and the philosophical rationales for the decisions are different.

The Impact of Next Generation Television on Consumers and the First Amendment • Rob Frieden, Penn State University • Consumers have access to an ever increasing inventory of video content choices as a result of technological innovations, more readily available broadband, new business plans, inexpensive high capacity storage and the Internet’s ability to serve as a single medium for a variety of previously standalone services delivered via different channels. They increasingly have little tolerance for “appointment television” that limits access to a particular time, channel and device. Access to video content is becoming a matter of using one of several software-configured interfaces capable of delivering live and recorded content anytime, anywhere, to any device and via many different transmission and presentation formats. Technological and marketplace convergence eliminate the viability of judicial and regulatory models that apply varying degrees of First Amendment protection as a function of the medium delivering the content. With the Internet serving as a single conduit for a variety of information, communications and entertainment (“ICE”), ventures can offer a bundle of services that span two or more regulatory classifications, e.g., the ability of wireless handsets to make telephone calls, to receive video programming and to access the Internet. This paper will examine the ongoing migration from channels to software-configured platforms for accessing video content with an eye toward assessing the impact on consumers and the First Amendment. The paper identifies the need for significant amendment of the Communications Act of 1934 to provide a light-handed and limited, but explicit statutory basis for the FCC to resolve predictable disputes between stakeholders and to remedy anticompetitive practices.

“Ag-Recording” Laws Disassembled • Emily Garnett, University of Missouri School of Journalism • Four “Ag-Recording laws” in place in Kansas, Montana, North Dakota, and Utah violate three major First Amendment rights. The laws are overly broad because they restrict a constitutionally protected form of speech, whistleblowing. They are content-based restrictions of speech that are not content-neutral, do not serve a compelling government interest, and are not minimally restrictive. Finally, two of the state laws in place in Kansas and Montana are examples of prior restraint.

Physicians, Firearms and Free Expression • Justin Hayes, University of Florida; Daniel Axelrod, University of Florida; Minch Minchin, University of Florida • This paper analyzes, from both a doctrinal and theoretical perspective, the First Amendment speech interests now at stake before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in Wollschlaeger v. Farmer. The case pivots on Florida’s Firearm Owners’ Privacy Act, a statute supported by the National Rifle Association that limits physicians’ ability to question patients about gun ownership. The paper also addresses an issue unresolved by the Supreme Court in its abortion opinion in Planned Parenthood v. Casey: What standard of scrutiny should apply to measure the validity of statutes affecting doctors’ speech within the doctor-patient relationship?

American Hemispheric Exceptionalisms: A comparative analysis of U.S. and Brazilian laws of defamation and racist speech • Brett Johnson, University of Minnesota • Two exceptionalisms exist in the American hemisphere: U.S. (i.e. “American”) exceptionalism, and Brazilian exceptionalism. These exceptionalisms are most evident within each country’s laws regarding racist speech and defamation. The United States permits racist, discriminatory, blasphemous and borderline defamatory speech like no other country. In Brazil, racism and other forms of hate speech are banned under constitutional and statutory law, and the law acts to protect the honor of citizens, especially public figures. This paper will compare these two areas of law within each country. The paper will address foundational cases and constitutional precepts in both the U.S. and Brazilian context and incorporate both U.S. and Brazilian legal theory in order to show how each exceptionalism plays a central role in its respective country’s civilization vision as both a hemispheric and global power.

New Media, New Guideline? • Hyosun Kim, University of North Carolina • This study examines the possible advertising regulatory issues surrounding DTC advertising of prescription drugs by analyzing NOVs and warning letters sent to pharmaceutical companies in the past five years, with particular attention to online media promotion. The study found that the fair balance issue is a concern for online pharmaceutical promotions of prescription drugs. In addition, the research shows that new alleged violation categories were added due to the advent of new media.

Cameras in the Courtroom 2.0: How Technology is Changing the Way Journalists Cover the Courts • Christina Locke Faubel, University of Florida • The “cameras in the courtroom” issue has expanded to include handheld image dissemination and real-time reporting using cell phones, laptops, and third-party platforms such as Twitter. This study examined the legal status of live-reporting with mobile devices in state and federal courtrooms across the country and developed both a model policy for courts on the use of electronic devices and a list of best practices for journalists.

The right to bear cannons: Reevaluating DDoS actions as civic protest • Vyshali Manivannan, Rutgers University School of Communication & Information • This article will reconstitute Distributed-Denial-of-Service actions as symbolic speech within a civil disobedience framework. It will consider technical, historical, and sociocultural inflections of law and policy concerning the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, DDoS case law, symbolic speech considerations, and semiotic disobedience of expressive altlaws. Finally, it will suggest a revision of legal frameworks and current DDoS strategies to redress the overreach and exorbitant punishments of the CFAA without exceeding First Amendment protections.

Drone Journalism: Using Unmanned Aircraft to Gather News and When Such Use Might Invade Privacy • Karen McIntyre, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • Journalists in the United States have started gathering news by collecting photos, video, and other data using small drones – aircraft with no onboard pilot. The new use of this technology could benefit the future of journalism. However, it currently is illegal for private people or entities to operate drones for commercial purposes. The Federal Aviation Administration, which regulates drone use, is developing new rules that are expected to allow commercial drone use, but not until the end of 2015. Once journalists can legally operate drones, how will they be able to use them without invading people’s privacy? This paper examines the possible uses of drones for journalism and how drones are regulated. Further, it analyses court decisions in existing surreptitious newsgathering and aerial surveillance cases, which courts might rely upon to decide future cases in which journalists intrusively use drones. Based on these cases, this paper suggests the ways drone journalism may invade a person’s privacy and offers guidelines to journalists considering the use of unmanned aircraft to gather news.

Check your rights at the schoolhouse door: Thomas and the narrowest view of student speech • William Nevin, University of Alabama • In Morse v. Frederick, the Supreme Court was confronted with a difficult issue: Should students be allowed speech rights where that speech is on illegal drug use? Justice Clarence Thomas, in siding with the majority against the student, went so far as to claim students should have no First Amendment rights. This paper is an examination of how Thomas came to that conclusion and ultimately a refutation of his methods.

Participatory Democratic Governance and Judicial Balancing of Privacy and Expression in the United Kingdom • Bryce Newell, University of Washington, Information School • The rights of privacy and expression often conflict. Case law from the United Kingdom suggests that the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights into domestic law has changed domestic participatory governance in the UK and, in line with prior theory, has increased transparency and given greater political authority to courts. It has also spurred the growth of domestic privacy law at the expense of the rights of the press to free expression.

The Supreme Court’s “Indecision” on the FCC’s Indecency Regulations Leaves Broadcasters Still Searching for Answers • Robert Richards, Pennsylvania State University; David J Weinert • In June 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court left broadcasters in a “holding pattern” by sidestepping the longstanding question of whether the F.C.C.’s broadcast indecency policy can survive constitutional scrutiny today given the vastly changed media landscape. The Court’s narrow ruling in FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc. let broadcasters off the hook for the specific on-air transgressions that brought the case to its docket, but did little to resolve the larger issue of whether such content regulations have become obsolete. This paper provides an in-depth analysis of the legal hurdles the F.C.C. will face in attempting to construct any modified policy governing broadcast indecency. It discusses the insurmountable First Amendment considerations that will plague the Commission in its efforts, including the current exceptions that swallow the rationale for the regulations and the dramatically changed media landscape that render them futile.

Newspapers, Cross-Ownership, and Antitrust in the Digital Era • Frank Russell, University of Missouri-Columbia • This paper examines the Federal Communications Commission’s newspaper-broadcast cross-ownership rule in the context of reduced print publication days for Newhouse Newspapers’ publications in New Orleans and Alabama and the rise of online sources for local news. A standard of audience concentration is proposed based on the Herfindahl-Hirschmann Index, or HHI, used by the U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission to measure economic concentration in a market.

The “First Amendment” in Nepal: How Madison’s America Informs Press Freedom Efforts Globally • Joseph Russomanno, Arizona State University • As the reality of McLuhan’s global village grows by the day, previously under-the-radar nations assume new positions of relevance. Analyzing Nepal’s efforts to transform itself from monarchy to democracy, complete with a constitution that includes press and speech freedom provisions, is useful. It serves to highlight the uniqueness of America’s post-revolutionary experience that resulted in, among other documents, the First Amendment. This paper focuses on those unique circumstances, in part by utilizing a Madisonian perspective.

A Reputation Held Hostage? Commercial Mugshot Websites and the Trade in Digital Shame • Kearston Wesner, University of Minnesota Duluth • Recently, a spate of websites trafficking in arrestees’ booking photographs has emerged. Booking photographs, commonly known as mugshots, are ordinarily legitimate public records that enable people to engage in a “community watchdog” function and ferret out government abuses of power. However, these new websites also serve a nefarious commercial purpose. They post mugshots for public review and only offer to remove them upon suitable payment, even when the subject of the mugshot has been exonerated of any crime. Publication of mugshots raises significant privacy interests and concerns about prejudicial trials. Further, easy access to government documents and a high possible payoff will likely fuel the creation of more similar sites. The paper analyzes the status of mugshot websites and considers two recent proposals for dealing with them: the right-of-publicity lawsuit and statutory measures.

When (News)Gathering Isn’t Enough: The Right to Gather Information in Public Places • Elizabeth Woolery, UNC-Chapel Hill • In dozens of highly publicized cases in 2011, reporters were arrested covering Occupy Wall Street and spin-off protests. In other cases citizens have been arrested for using their cell phones to videotape law enforcement officials. Though these cases are factually different, they raise this same important legal issue: Is there a First Amendment right to gather information in public places?

The Press, the Public, and Capital Punishment: California First Amendment Coalition and the Development of a First Amendment Right to Witness Executions • Elizabeth Woolery, UNC-Chapel Hill • The United States Supreme Court has never addressed the issue of access to government-conducted executions. This paper examines the approaches courts have used to determine whether a First Amendment right of access to witness all phases of executions exists, in light of and following the the Ninth Circuit’s 2002 holding in California First Amendment Coalition v. Calderon (CFAC). Two recent cases have again put the issue of constitutional access to executions in the national spotlight.

(Virtual) Crime & (Real) Punishment: The PROTECT Act’s Punishment of Erotic Cartoons as Child Pornography • Jason Zenor, SUNY-Oswego • In 2008, Christopher Handley was convicted and sentenced to six months in jail for receiving Japanese anime cartoons that portrayed fictional children engaged in bestiality. Pursuant to the PROTECT Act, possession of virtual child pornography was punished as it was found to be obscene. This current law replaced the Child Pornography Protection Act, which had an outright ban on virtual child pornography, but was deemed unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition.  However, under the PROTECT Act, if the work is deemed to be obscene, the defendant will be sentenced under the more severe crime of child pornography- and is forever branded a sex offender- even if it is only possession of the work. This paper argues that such an overbroad law-based in the good intention of protecting children from actual harms- is instead, at best, a tenuous connection between the unwanted harm and the speech prohibited. First, this paper will examine the development of sexually explicit Japanese animation and the sociological and historical roots of the genre, illustrating the social value that it has for its fandom. Second, the paper will outline recent cases where collectors of such anime have been convicted of obscenity possession and sentenced as child pornographers. Next, the paper will outline the law of obscenity and child pornography in the United States. Finally, the article will argue that the PROTECT Act is overbroad and misguided and is antithetical to free expression values.

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Internship and Careers 2013 Abstracts

June 12, 2013 by Kyshia

Reasons Underlying The Choice Behind Seeking a Major in Journalism: The Journalism Degree Motivations Scale (JDMS) • Serena Carpenter, Michigan State University; Anne Hoag, Penn State University; August Grant, University of South Carolina • Journalists are socialized into the profession through education. The purpose of the research was to develop and validate a measure determining the motivational variables underlying both intrinsic and extrinsic reasons why undergraduate students seek a degree in journalism, the Journalism Degree Motivations Scale (JDMS). It is important to examine motivations in order to understand why they pick the stories they do. Through a multi-method approach and exploratory factor analysis, it established a set of motivations that reflect existing theory and measures. The results show that the JDMS is composed of seven factors: social justice and responsibility, social prestige, sports media, public interaction, photography, writing, and a varied career.

Promotion and Tenure: Exploring the Guidelines of Journalism, Mass Communication and PR Departments in a Digital Era • Mia Moody; Yueqin Yang, Baylor; Poplar Yuan • This study examined tenure-review policies of 40 journalism, mass communication, and PR departments to identify trends and the impact—if any—that new media has had on tenure guidelines. The call for changes among departments can be traced back to more than 20 years ago, yet most of the documents in our sample are unreflective of a digital era. This analysis provides guidelines to help journalism, PR and communications departments transform their tenure and promotion guidelines for today’s technology-driven environment.

Hegemonic Masculinity in Sports Journalism: On the Field, but in the Classroom? • Sada Reed, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • Though the first American journalism school began in 1908, it wasn’t until the mid-1990s that sports journalism majors were created. By 2012, at least 10 American universities offered sports journalism tracks, and at least a quarter of mass communication-accredited institutions offered sports journalism courses. With the creation of these sports journalism-specific tracks comes new opportunity for educators to inform students about the role hegemonic masculinity, a critical theory that explains how ingroups maintain power, plays in sports journalism. Scholars regard sports journalism as a cultural maintenance site for hegemonic masculinity, as this theory has been used to explain the “common sense” ways in which outgroups are represented. This paper contains a brief overview of hegemonic masculinity, followed by a more in-depth section on hegemonic masculinity in sports and hegemonic masculinity in the classroom. The paper concludes with recommendations for educators regarding how to address hegemonic masculinity in the classroom and to ultimately create more critical, diverse student sports journalists.

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International Communication 2013 Abstracts

June 12, 2013 by Kyshia

Bob Stevenson Open Paper Competition

Inside and Outside of the Great Firewall: The Knowledge Gap Hypothesis Revisited in a Censored Online Environment • Yi Mou; Kevin Wu, University of Connecticut; David Atkin, University of Connecticut • Although China has surpassed the United States to command the world’s largest Internet user base, government-led information regulations prevent common users from enjoying free access to information. Owing to a special software apparatus that helps define China’s Great Firewall, savvy users can bypass online censorship. Based on Knowledge gap hypothesis and reactance effects, this paper reveals a knowledge gap existing as a side effect of state censorship, one that is emerging between the savvy users and common users.

Communicating External Voting Rights to Diaspora Communities. Challenges and Opportunities for El Salvador and Costa Rica
• Vanessa Bravo, Elon University • “This paper fills a gap in the literature of international communication by exploring the challenges that home governments face when trying to convey information about newly established political rights to diaspora communities located in host countries. It does so by analyzing the cases of El Salvador and Costa Rica, two Central American countries that will offer external voting rights (absentee vote) to their citizens, for the first time, in the national elections of 2014.

The ability of video-mediated training approaches to reduce agricultural knowledge gaps between men and women in rural Uganda • Tian Cai; Eric Abbott • This study explored the effectiveness of video training delivered by portable battery-operated projectors to narrow the gap in agricultural knowledge between men and women in rural Uganda. Through a pre-post quasi-experiment, this study found that the method that combined video and lecture-demonstration was significantly more effective in narrowing the gender knowledge gap. Use of video alone improved women’s knowledge scores as much as men, but did not close the knowledge gap.

(Re)categorizing Intergroup Relations: Applying Social-Psychological Perspectives to News Reporting on International Conflict • Michael Chan • This study examines how intergroup relations between nations are categorized and recategorized through news discourse. Theories from social psychology, including the common in-group identity model, mutual intergroup differentiation model, and optimal distinctiveness theory, form an integrated framework to analyze news coverage of the territorially-disputed Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands by the China Daily from 2002 to 2011. Findings from content analyses showed that despite the local nature of the dispute that invokes clear in-group/out-group distinctions between China and Japan, the majority of the articles in the newspaper discursively recategorize intergroup relations. This includes the assimilation of Japan under a superordinate ‘Asian’ identity, and the categorization of the United States as the ‘outsider’ purposefully interfering in Sino-Japanese relations. The findings provide important ideological insights of the ruling party state and its attempts to influence intergroup comparisons by reconfiguring the basis of intergroup evaluation and differentiation.

A Theoretical Model of Transnational Communication by Dominican Diaspora Organizations • Maria De Moya, North Carolina State University • This study presents a theoretical model of strategic communication by diaspora community organizations (DCOs) serving the Dominican-American community. Using constructivist grounded theory, this study explored the reasons why DCOs engage in these efforts, the means through which they communicate to national and international in-group and external publics, and their desired community outcomes. The model highlights a combination of mediated and interpersonal efforts conducted to engage publics in both the home and the host country.

The Facilitative and Monitorial Roles of Bulgarian Media in the Coverage of the 2011 Presidential Election • Daniela Dimitrova, Iowa State University • Using a systematic content analysis, the present study investigates the coverage of the 2011 presidential election campaign in Bulgaria in order to evaluate the quality of news reporting 23 years after the end of Communism. The study examines several characteristics of the coverage, including the use of news sources, the framing of politics, references to scandal and journalistic speculations. The findings show that while the media have moved beyond direct political controls of the past, there are a number of areas that need improvement. Implications for normative democracy are briefly discussed.

Legitimating Journalistic Authority under the State’s Shadow: A Case Study of the Environmental Press Awards in China • Dong Dong • This study attempts to investigate the legitimation of journalistic authority in the form of journalism awards. The Environmental Press Awards (EPA), an unofficial but highly regarded news competition among Chinese environmental reporters, has been chosen as a case study. The case is examined from three interconnected dimensions: the creation and maintenance of moral and pragmatic legitimacies, the strategic processes of cognitive and social legitimation, and a dual process of symbolic legitimation of the market media ideology. Research data is formed based on statistical analysis of 181 award submissions and 10 in-depth interviews with key personnel in the host organizations, the journalism community, and environmental NGOs. By looking into the establishment, dynamics and results of the awarding process, it is found that the alliance between the market media and the green civil society has created and buttressed the legitimacy of the award. However, without blessing from the Party/state, such legitimacy is vulnerable and can easily be dismantled.

Governmental Corruption through the Egyptian Bloggers’ Lens: A Qualitative Study of Four Egyptian Political Blogs • Mohammed el-Nawawy; Sahar Khamis • Corruption was among the serious problems of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s regime. Egyptian political bloggers played a critical role in exposing this regime’s corrupt policies. This study analyzed a number of threads from four prominent Egyptian political blogs that tackled corruption, which performed three functions, namely: mobilization, documentation, or deliberation. This analysis highlighted the strengths and weaknesses and the potentials and limitations of political blogs in promoting civic engagement, democratization, and political change.

Russia versus the World: Are Public Relations Leadership Priorities More Similar than Different? • Elina Erzikova, Central Michigan University • As a part of a world-wide study, 215 Russian public relations practitioners completed an online survey of their perceptions related to professional leadership and communication management. The Russian sample’s demographics differed significantly from the overall sample’s make-up (N=4,484; 22 countries). Despite the differences, there was a significant overlap between Russian participants’ and their global peers’ beliefs. This result might signal, among others, universality of some specific leadership aspects and/or a globalization effect in Russian public relations.

Framing the Egyptian Revolution: An online frame building case study
• Hogar Mohammed; Peter Gade, University of Oklahoma • This agenda setting study explored the influence of citizen media on legacy media during the Egyptian Revolution. It examined the extent to which the frames in the posts on two popular citizen Facebook pages, We Are All Khaled Said (Arabic) and We Are All Khaled Said (English), were also found in frames of three online legacy media, Al Jazeera, the BBC, and The New York Times, during the revolution from January 25, 2011 to February 11, 2011. Results showed the two Facebook pages’ frames had an indirect influence on the frames of the three online legacy media.

Mediated Public Diplomacy in Times of War: An investigation of media relations in Pakistan
• Rauf Arif; Guy Golan, Syracuse University; Brian Moritz, Syracuse University • The current study provides a unique perspective into US-Pakistan and Taliban-Pakistan media relations in the context of the regional war on terror. Based on mediated public diplomacy and news construction literature, the study explores some of the key challenges and opportunities that both sides face as they aim to influence Pakistani media coverage and win the political support of the Pakistani people. Eighteen online in-depth interviews of Pakistani media practitioners explore their perceptions of wartime media relations involving four main categories: US-Pakistani media relations, Taliban-Pakistani media relations, Taliban/extremist groups’ understanding of Pakistani news routines, and US officials’ understanding of Pakistani news routines. The study’s key findings are discussed in the context of wartime media relations and mediated public diplomacy.

Journalism in times of violence: Uses and practices of social media along the U.S.-Mexico border • Celeste Gonzalez de Bustamante, University of Arizona; Jeannine Relly, University of Arizona School of Journalism • Mexico ranks as one of the most violent countries in the world for journalists, especially those who work on the country’s periphery such as its northern border. Our research examines the way that violence has influenced social media use by U.S. and Mexican journalists who cover northern Mexico, and advances the hierarchy of influences model (Shoemaker and Reese, 1996; Reese, 2001) through qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews conducted in 18 cities along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Online Coverage of the 2010 Brazilian Presidential Elections: framing power and professional ideology
• Heloiza Herscovitz, California State University Long Beach • A framing analysis of news and commentaries published by mainstream online media organizations and their bloggers and columnists on the 2010 Brazilian Presidential Elections revealed that framing do have the potential to uncover journalism’s ideological elements. Political preferences marked the Brazilian online coverage blurring the lines between the private and the public. Journalism status quo emerged as a main topic in the coverage as a free press under attack quickly reacted with rage causing a rift between news organizations that criticized the outgoing president and those that supported him. A popular president, apparently unaffected by corruption scandals, and the country’s most powerful media groups confronted each other in an exhaustive and unfinished battle.

Journalism on the Fly: Youth Reporters in Benin as a New Model of Development Journalism • Robert Huesca, Trinity University • “The concept of “”development journalism”” was introduced in the late 1960s and proposed as a new press theory more amenable to developing nations. The concept has been criticized as conceptually vague and professionally problematic due to a lack of independence vis a vis the state. Despite this criticism, the concept has continued to draw adherents and advocates who claim that this practice continues to hold promise as an alternative to other models of journalism. This paper reports on a development journalism project conducted in Africa among young women in terms of its potential contributions to development journalism. The journalism camp for girls was designed out of a framework drawn from the scholarship of development journalism and participatory development communication. The findings indicate that projects such as the journalism camp for girls addresses many of the criticism leveled against development journalism, while suggesting a sustainable, viable, and compatible model of development journalism in the developing world.”

Testing Cyber Nationalism in China: A Case Study of Anti-Japanese Collective Actions • Ki Deuk Hyun, Grand Valley State University; Jinhee Kim, Pohang University of Science and Technology; Shaojing Sun • Although the rise of nationalist activism in Chinese online sphere has drawn much scholarly attention, few studies examined how nationalism, usages and motivations of the Internet affect nationalist collective actions. Using Sino-Japanese diplomatic disputes as a testing ground, this study investigates the effects of news use of both traditional and social media, nationalist attitudes, motivations in using the Internet specific to the disputes on anti-Japanese political behaviors such as boycotting and protest. Analyses of online survey data of Chinese netizens demonstrate that nationalism positively correlate to news use and Internet use motivations of information seeking and social interaction. The results also show that respondents who are motivated to use the Internet for expression and discussion related to the Sino-Japanese disputes are more likely to engage in anti-Japanese behaviors.  This study demonstrates that motivations involved in the use of new media technologies related to specific political issues and events play significant roles in mobilizing supporters for collective actions.

Determinants of Satisfaction and Behavioral Intentions: Role of Perceived Authenticity, Identity, and Reputation in Tourism Promotion
• Rajul Jain, DePaul University • This study examined a model with causal linkages among identity, reputation, perceived authenticity, tourists’ satisfaction, and intended behavior. Survey data from 545 tourists and in-depth interviews with 16 visitors of a cultural and eco-archaeological theme park in Mexico showed significant linkages among constructs. Variations in perceived authenticity with demographics, visit characteristics, and information sources were also examined. Findings imply the value of strategic communication, which could lead to supporting behavioral intentions towards a destination.

Tweeting as a Journalistic Social Engagement Routine in Africa and Beyond
• Yusuf Kalyango, Ohio University, Ohio, Athens, USA; Pamela Walck, Ohio University • This study explores how international journalists based in East Africa and the United States communicate with their audiences about current affairs on Twitter and whether the reporting beats and their news-gathering routines reflects their tweets they share with their followers. This qualitative study also explores whether the issues that the four prominent journalists from East Africa and the United States tweet are driven by the need to brand themselves or to crowd-source through other social engagement approaches. The findings indicate that the two prominent East African journalists were more prone to use Twitter for a more conversational, less formal tone to convey information but the journalists from the United States eschewed using Twitter for personal conversations or editorial opinions. They were more likely to include informal, sarcastic or critical commentary on Twitter than the African international journalists.

U.S. vs. the rest of the world: Perceptions of war correspondents in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars • Hun Shik Kim, University of Colorado Boulder • The first decade in the 21st century saw two major wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in which journalists from different countries covered either as embedded and unilateral journalists. This study, based on a survey of 309 war correspondents, examines and compares the U.S. and non-U.S. journalists’ perceptions of various aspects of the two international conflicts. There are stark contrasts between U.S. and non-U.S. war correspondents in their perceptions of overall quality of news coverage, embedded reporting practices, censorship pressures from the military, and news themes involving high human casualties. It was evident that differences in nationality based on U.S. vs. non-U.S. distinction shaped the war correspondents’ overall assessment of news coverage from the two wars. Reasons for the divergent news coverage were discussed, including war reporting from the perspectives of our own wars vs. other people’s wars.

Journalists of Botswana: Roles and Influences
• Katie Lang, University of Miami, School of Communication; Jyotika Ramaprasad • This study is likely the first systematic study of journalists in Botswana. It examines their perceptions of their roles as well as the influences on their work within the framework of professional milieus and content theory respectively. The data was collected in person from 115 randomly selected journalists representing various ranks, media types, media ownership, and media orientation. The study’s contribution lies in the quantitative benchmarks it establishes for Batswana journalism practices.

Socio-cultural value difference of the media and news framing on business conflict issue • Min-Kyu Lee, Chung-Ang University; Wan Soo Lee, Dongseo University • This study conducted a comparative analysis on how media framing varied across two countries as well as the ideologies of newspapers when it comes to the market competitive reports such as the Samsung-Apple patent lawsuit. In addition, this study attempted to provide an integrated explanation of news frames quantitatively, analyzing both the generic frame and the issue-specific frame. This study shows that there were differences according to the ideological characteristics of the newspapers as well as to socio-cultural values, economic and social factors. While the news frame in favor of Samsung was absolutely abundant in South Korea, neutral frames were dominant in the U.S. This implies that the ethnocentrism or patriotism can have little significance in some issues that place emphasis on moral evaluations and market principles.

Web Credibility in China: Comparing Internet and Traditional News Sources on Credibility Measures • Yunjuan Luo; Hongzhong Zhang • China has the largest Internet population in the world. The rapid increase of Internet use has raised the question of whether the Internet is judged to be a more credible news source compared to the traditional media. Based on probability sample telephone surveys in two major Chinese cities, this study found that the Internet was judged as less credible than television and newspapers, but it was perceived to be more credible than other traditional news sources such as radio and magazines. Internet use was the strongest predictor of Web credibility. Newspaper use and television use were found to be negatively correlated with Web credibility. Some demographic variables such as age and education also turned out to be significant predictors.

Developing a survey instrument of journalistic peace/war performance: Toward a reliable assessment of crisis-reporters
’ attitudes • Rico Neumann, UN-mandated University for Peace; Shahira Fahmy, U of Arizona • Based on Galtung’s concept of peace/war journalism, this exploratory work attempts to advance an empirical method to develop a survey instrument for a reliable and valid assessment of journalists’ attitudes toward peace/war performance. The authors propose a measurement index of conflict reporting which combines practices linked to peace/war journalism. The approach’s usefulness is demonstrated by quantitative and qualitative evidence from a pilot study–a survey of worldwide members of The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

State of Research on Media Representation of China: A Thematic Meta-Analysis
• Zengjun Peng, St Cloud State University; Xi’an International Studies University; Yuan Zeng, Xi’an International Studies University; Pei Zheng, Xi’an International Studies University; Tianding Wang, Xi’an International Studies University • State of Research on Media Representation of China: A Thematic Meta-Analysis. This study, by way of thematic meta-analysis, analyzed 91 research articles in the area of media representation of China published in Chinese academic journals between 1994 and 2013. Targeting at an overall picture on the state and health of the scholarship in this field, the study used a comprehensive list of categories including publication and authorship profile, theory use, citation patterns and methodological details. Results identified several weaknesses and deficiencies, particularly in theory use and methodological execution. Implications for future research were discussed.

Tensions, Conflicts and Challenges: A Case Study of Foreign Correspondents in China • Wei Zhou, Beijing Foreign Studies University; Jiang Zhan, Beijing Foreign Studies University; Zengjun Peng, St Cloud State University; Xi’an International Studies University • This study, based on results from semi-structured interviews with nine foreign correspondents stationed in Beijing, China, offered a qualitative examination into the daily practices of foreign correspondents in a country undergoing dramatic political and social transitions. Focusing on themes emerged from the narratives of the foreign correspondents themselves, including profile feature, news agenda, sourcing pattern and special challenges in reporting, the paper explored the tensions, conflicts and special challenges foreign correspondents face in doing professional reporting in an authoritarian state. Related issues and implications were also raised and discussed against the theoretical premises in international communication and journalism scholarship.

The Digital Divide In Brazil, 2004 – 2009: Evolution and Effects on Political Engagement • Rachel Reis Mourao, University of Texas at Austin; Charles Wood, University of Florida • Results of a 2010 survey of twenty-two Latin American countries show that Brazil ranks first with respect to Internet connectivity. Analyses of national household surveys further show an increase in microcomputers and Internet access between 2004 and 2009, and a decline in the digital divide by rural-urban residence and socioeconomic status. The study also finds that the intensity of Internet use has a positive effect on the knowledge and attitudes deemed relevant to democratic governance.

Journalists’ perceptions of professional ethics norms in post-Ba’athist Iraq • Jeannine Relly, University of Arizona School of Journalism; Margaret Zanger, University of Arizona School of Journalism; Shahira Fahmy, U of Arizona • In the post-Saddam Hussein period in Iraq, thousands of Iraqi journalists were trained in journalistic professional norms as U.S. government officials paid for propaganda placement in news reports and local politicians handed out envelopes of cash at press conferences. This survey (N = 588) of Iraqi journalists examined influences on ethics perceptions. The study found when controlling for demographics that occupation, watchdog attitude, journalistic role perception, and training had the greatest impact on professional ethics.

The Journalist
’s Role in a Digital and Social Media Era: A Comparative Analysis of Journalists in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico and Peru • Amy Schmitz Weiss • Based on a survey conducted of over 1,100 journalists, this study examines how journalism is transforming in today’s global media climate. It specifically investigates the professional roles as well as the digital and social media routines of journalists in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico and Peru. Findings show the professional roles of the journalists surveyed show significant differences between countries in the area of the populist mobilizer and the interpretative role. In addition, the journalists also identified multiple uses of the digital platform for newsgathering tasks and social media channels for tasks ranging from using it to post news to using it to encourage dialog and conversation with the public. Implications of the findings are also discussed.

Cultural Values in Viral Video Advertisements in China and the U.S.
• Fei Xue, University of Southern Mississippi • The current research analyzed 194 popular online video advertisements in China (YouKu) and the U.S. (Advertising Age) from November 2012 to March 2013, to explore differences between two countries in cultural values and advertiser characteristics. It was found that ads from YouKu used more group/consensus appeals, more tradition/elderly appeals, and less individual/independence appeals, compared to those from Advertising Age. Significant differences were also found in terms of country-of-origin and product categories.

Communicating AIDS in Africa: A Case Study of Ugandan Newspapers • Angella Napakol; Nan Yu, North Dakota State University; Charles Okigbo, North Dakota State University • This empirical content-analytic study of AIDS coverage in two Ugandan newspapers — one government owned and the other private – showed that the media can be useful tools in framing AIDS narratives and directing attention to people at risk. Although there were slight differences between the two newspapers, on the whole they were similar in their AIDS reportage and portend great benefits in the fight against the epidemic. We conclude that the mass media can contribute in important ways to the various efforts toward HIV/AIDS prevention.

Framing Strategies At Different Stages of Crisis: Coverage of the “July 5th” Urumqi Event by Xinhua, Reuters, and AP • Lily Zeng, Arkansas State University; Lijie Zhou, Arkansas State University; Xigen Li • This study examined how Xinhua, Reuters, and AP adjusted their framing strategies when covering the 2009 “July 5th” Urumqi event, a series of violent activities between two ethnic groups in far west China. The findings revealed that during the initial stage, the three news agencies displayed considerable similarities, relying on official sources, addressing damages, and focusing on updates. They also tended to portray the crisis from the regional perspective, reflecting the nature and scope of the incident. However, reporting of the same crisis varied dramatically after the first stage. When it was time to define the situation by selecting background or contextual information, media organizations began to reveal the different interest they represent.

Bridges in the Global News Arena:  A Network Study of Bridge Blogs About China • Nan Zheng, James Madison University • The concept of bridge blogs as a form of global journalism was examined by content analysis and network analysis of 426 blog posts and 1026 links in 11 bridge blogs about China from 2009 to 2010. This study proposes a theoretical framework to examine how bridge blogs’ network characteristics (i.e. attentive cluster, betweenness, centrality) are related to their communicative practices as reflected in their linking preferences.

 

Markham Student Paper Competition

Euros over Citizens: The Dutch Press’s Narrow Conception of Democracy • Tabe Bergman, University of Illinois • The disruption of European politics as usual resulting from the Greek prime-minister’s proposal in late 2011 to hold a referendum on the euro-crisis provides an opportunity to examine the commitment to democratic deliberations among Dutch journalists. This paper first documents the current crisis in Dutch democracy and then argues that Dutch journalists have incorporated a narrow conception of democracy, similar to Walter Lippmann’s, that discourages citizen participation in the democratic process. The assumption that this almost antidemocratic conception of ‘democracy’ influenced the commentary on the referendum proposal is tested with a content analysis of four newspapers. The results show that, indeed, the proposal was widely and often vehemently dismissed.

“Blind dating” with culture, market, and governmental regulations: A case study of Meeting with Mother-in-Law, a blind date reality show in China • Li Chen • This study attempted to reveal and discuss how Meeting with Mother-in-Law, a Chinese blind date reality show, reflects glocalized cultural elements in urban areas in China. The study also analyzed how Chinese media practitioners balance market needs and governmental regulations through examining the role of judges in the show. By conducting textual analysis on eight episodes of Meeting with Mother-in-Law, the study revealed that the show reconstructed gender roles and reinterpreted Western values within a local context, which is a result of cultural hybridization. In addition, the study discussed how judges cautiously monitor the conversations to make the show appealing to the public without violating state regulations.

Online Social Support Messages for Intercultural Adaptation of Mainland Chinese international Students in Singapore • Liang Chen, Nanyang Technological University • China has become the biggest source nations of overseas students worldwide. Recently, there has been an increase in the number of Chinese students flocking to universities or colleges in Singapore. While the culture of Singapore, to some extent, is similar to China’s culture, mainland Chinese students might present the difficulty of adapting to an English medium education system, local culture and academic pressures in Singapore. Thus, many of them in Singapore feel homesick, isolated and frustrated at the beginning of their overseas study. Fortunately, a computer mediated social support group (the LSg Group), a sub-forum of most popular Chinese overseas study forum founded in April 2000, provides various types of social support messages for mainland Chinese students in Singapore. The present study does leading examinations to inquire the nature of social support that took place in the LSg Group for intercultural adaptation of mainland Chinese overseas students. A directed qualitative content analysis was applied to analyze all 736 posted messages collected from 6th July to 6th October .The results suggests that the social support messages can be categorize into many subcategories under three existing main categories, informational, instrumental and emotional support and a new created category: network support. In sum, this online social support group provides a convenient and effective platform for mainland Chinese students in Singapore to seek and share information, emotional encouragement, tangible services and opportunities to expand their social networks in order to orient themselves to a new cultural environment.

The Freelancer-NGO Alliance: What a Story of Kenyan Waste Reveals about Contemporary Foreign News Production • David Conrad, University of Pennsylvania – Annenberg School for Communication • This paper explores the impact that foundation/NGO partnerships are having on the practices of contemporary foreign news reporting in American journalism. Through an exploration of a widely published project on a health crisis in East Africa – funded by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and reported by the study’s author – this paper ultimately argues that issues of framing, representation, and ideology are not dominating foreign news production; they are being hotly contested within it.

Does the medium make a difference? A comparative analysis of international news in Chinese online and print newspapers • Ming Dai • The study examined the influence of new media technologies on agenda diversity of international news coverage and how the influence varied by media’s audience orientation. A content analysis of major Chinese newspapers and their websites showed that the online media reproduced some of the traditional media’s practices of covering international news unevenly. The influence of the internet was more pronounced on the government-oriented media than on the market-oriented media.

The role of social media in helping voters to resist mainstream media propaganda in Argentina • Mariana De Maio, University of Florida • In the last decade popular democracies have survived mainstream media opposition in many countries in Latin America.  This demarks a departure from history.  Voters support governments aligned with their needs in spite of media propaganda.  Within the propaganda theory framework, this paper will propose a model to study the case of Argentina focusing on how social media messages have helped media news consumers to resist the propaganda.

The South African Press’ Framing of Human Rights in the 2011 Libyan Conflict • Anthony Frampton • This qualitative study examines the South African Press’ coverage of the 2011 Libyan conflict and their framing of human rights abuses and discourses advocating Western intervention. I performed a content analysis of news stories from South African newspaper available on LexisNexis that referenced the Libyan Civil War during the period February 14 to March 17, 2011. To analyze the data, I used a customized thematic framework based on framing theory. I found that overwhelming, the coverage by the South African press appeared more closely aligned with war journalism than peace journalism. Their newspaper reports largely explored human rights issues by highlighting the negative actions of the Libyan Government and demonizing its leader, Colonel Gaddafi, while ignoring human rights violations by the rebel fighters. The research also revealed that while South African journalists adopted a nationalistic perspective, they ignored racial violence, depended heavily on elite political sources, and privileged Western proposed resolutions over local or regional mediation. That the African press’ framing of the conflict was little different from Western reports highlights the relative consistency of mainstream journalism around the globe on war and conflict, although it also points to significant insights into the uniqueness of war reporting on the continent by African-based newspapers.

Cyber Security in Developing Countries, a Digital Divide Issue: The Case of Georgia • Ellada Gamreklidze • Based on the case study of the cyber war between Russia and Georgia in August 2008, this paper is a theoretical deliberation in an attempt to illustrate connection between Digital Divide and cyber security. Through a qualitative case study of cyber warfare between the two countries, it shows that states on the disadvantaged side of the Digital Divide are subject to cyber insecurity. As a result, even though relatively low dependence of their vital systems on online networks supposedly makes them less vulnerable to cyber offensives, disruptions to communication infrastructures causes these states turn dysfunctional. The conclusion is that the level of country’s cyber security serves as a litmus test for the level of its cyber power that, in turn, is indicative of the country’s strategic political standing among other states.

Losing Focus: Goal Displacement at an Alternative Newspaper in El Salvador • Summer Harlow, University of Texas at Austin • This study examines whether a Salvadoran alternative newspaper maintained its critical, independent, and alternative position after the country’s first leftist president was elected and the newspaper no longer was in opposition to the government. Via a content analysis and in-depth interviews, this study improves our understanding of “alternativeness” in a non-U.S.-context. Findings indicate that the newspaper’s goals became less radical, with more pro-government coverage, and less coverage of social movements and civil society.

Framing Mediated Activism: Lokpal Bill Campaign in India • Sumanth Inukonda, BGSU • Anti-corruption agitations in India coincided with the Arab Spring inspiring many to draw parallels. This paper argues that the ease with which the frames crossed the boundaries of social and traditional media confirms the relevance of media framing. The cascade model helps explain circumstances under which the discord between media and political elite arises. This paper argues that initial media frames need not subscribe to the views of political elite; rather discord draws from historical struggles to maintain press freedom.

The Limits of Revolution in the Digital Age: The cases of China and Cuba • Haiyan Jia, Penn State University; Cristina Mislan, The Pennsylvania State University • The Internet, with its ease of obtaining information, is supposedly constructive to democracy while corrosive to non-democratic rule. The assumptions that technological advances foment democratization have roots in historical events, such as the fall of the Soviet Union and the libertarian ideology of early proponents of the Internet. While we have witnessed social movements such as “Arab Spring,” the prediction remains largely as an ideal. China and Cuba have shown that technology is moderated by external and internal factors, from macro to micro, instead of a single technological determinant. In this paper, we look at modernization theory to understand the rationale of technology as a liberalizing tool, and further analyze the effectiveness and limitation of this approach using two cases studies that investigate the utilization of Internet in China and Cuba. Based on a review of the literature and theories, and two case studies on Cuba and China, we propose different factors that influence the actual use of Internet and discuss the implications.

The Political Economy of Burma’s Media System: Democratization, Marketization and the Media • Brett Labbe, Bowling Green State University • Using political economy as a theoretical framework, this study employs Hallin and Mancini’s five-dimensional media systems model to the case of Burma (a.k.a. Myanmar) in an attempt address the relationship between media systems and political change. It finds that political structures cannot be adequately understood apart from national media systems and the global economic context in which they are embedded. Furthermore, the findings challenge theoretical assumptions asserting an organic, inherently linear relationship between democratization and marketization.

Can Regimes Really Discourage Social Networking? Urbanization, Cellphone Use and the Dictator’s Plight • Shin Haeng Lee • Are authoritarian regimes ever really successful at stopping at the use of social networking services? This study conducts a panel data analysis on 182 countries observed from 2009 to 2012, to reveal under what conditions and to what extent political institutions shape a cross-country difference in the adoption of Facebook. Including fixed effects, the findings support that authoritarian regimes are detrimental to the diffusion of the digital technology. However, the government’s suppression is moderated by the increased use of cell-phones and the growth of urban population. In other words, urbanization and mobile phone diffusion undermines a regime’s ability to censor the use of Facebook. The authoritarian control is also eroded when people perceive high levels of political efficacy.

Media Modality Effects on Perceptions of China: A Study of Text and Video Frames • Ruobing Li, The Pennsylvania State University; Steve Bien-Aime; Lian Ma, The Pennsylvania State University • The present paper describes an experiment that compared the strength of negative framing effects in text and video on people’s perceptions of China. Controlling for avidity for following international political news, results suggest that audience’s nationality moderate the effects of modalities on audience’s perceptions of China. For Chinese audience, video news increases their negative perceptions of China, while for non-Chinese audience, textual news elicits more negative perceptions of China.

Framing H1N1 Influenza in U.S. and Chinese TV News • Jingfei Liu; Gang (Kevin) Han, Greenlee School/Iowa State University • This study examines the news frames of H1N1 influenza in NBC Nightly News (NBC) in the U.S. and CCTV Evening News (CCTV) in China from April 2009 to October 2010. The content analysis reveals significant differences in news frames and news sources between the two programs. Attribution of responsibility and human interest are the most visible frames in NBC, and the former is also the dominant frame in CCTV. The visibilities of human interest, conflict, and economic consequence frames in NBC are higher than those in CCTV. Domestic government officials and citizens are the most cited sources in NBC, followed by scientists and non-government organizations. The most cited source in CCTV is the domestic government, followed by foreign governments and international organizations. Positive correlations are found between the attribution of responsibility frame and the domestic government source, and between the human interest frame and non-government organizations, citizens and victims in NBC. In CCTV, positive correlations are found between the attribution of responsibility frame and the domestic government, between the human interest frame and both the domestic government and citizens, and between the conflict frame and scientists.

Netizens Overlook “Official Frames” in China? A Framing Analysis of Online news and Micro-blogging Posts • Yanqin Lu • This framing analysis study examined China’s online news and micro-blogging posts on the disputes on Dioayu/Senkaku Islands. Compare to online news, micro-blogging users were more likely to put a human face and make moral judgments on the issue. Within the micro-blogging network, public figures tended to employ thematic frame while news media users preferred episodic frame. Pearson correlation test determined that public figures have a significant impact on the general users in the micro-blogging network.

Weibo, a Better Civic Medium?  A Comparative Framing Analysis of Weibo and Xinhuanet in Covering the 7.23 China Train Crash • Luyue Ma, Bowling Green State University • This study employs a comparative framing analysis approach to examine how the popular Chinese social media Weibo and the government-run news website Xinhuanet cover the 7.23 Wenzhou train crash event (2011). The findings indicate that compared with Xinhua coverage, Weibo users are more likely to employ societal or political frames to cover the event. The discourse on Weibo diverges independently from the mainstream media and is more civic oriented.

Framing Poll News in a Unbalanced Media System Society: A Study of Poll Coverage in South Korean Newspapers and Broadcasters during the 2012 Presidential Election • Chang Sup Park, Southern Illinois University Carbondale • This study examined the coverage on public polls by mass media during the 2012 presidential election in South Korea. Through the coding of news stories on public polls published in four newspapers and three broadcasters, this study finds South Korean mass media depended excessively on the strategy frame rather than the issue frame. This means that South Korean mass media presented readers the presidential election as an image of battle between candidates or political parties, rather than making voters engage in constructive dialogue about important issues regarding candidates and parties. Second, South Korean newspapers were very unkind in providing basic information about public polls that is necessary for voters to judge the results and implications of the polls. Third, topics that need to be delivered to voters were missing in the coverage of public polls in both newspapers and broadcasters. Important topics that the electorate should know in judging the candidates were rarely seen (e.g., main difference in policies between parties, human rights issues, and social welfare problems). Most importantly, South Korean media showed a very partisan attitude in the polling coverage. While the two conservative newspapers were positive toward the ruling party candidate, the two liberal newspapers were positive toward the opposition party candidate. Also, the two government-controlled broadcasters were seriously biased toward the ruling party and its candidate. The outcomes suggest that how the media system of a society is closely associated with the news coverage on important political issues.

Foreign Correspondence in the Digital Age:  An analysis of India Ink The New York Times’ India-specific blog • Newly Paul, Louisiana State University • This paper is a case study of India Ink, the New York Times’ first country-specific blog, launched in September 2011. This paper examines the blog’s content in order to analyze the ways in which participatory Web 2.0 tools have changed foreign coverage. Findings indicate that through interactive multimedia, crowd-sourced content, and collaboration between Indian and American reporters, India Ink is helping foreign correspondence thrive amidst drastic newsroom budget cuts.

Anonymous Sources Hurt Credibility of News Stories across Cultures: A Comparative Study of America and China • Ivanka Pjesivac, University of Tennessee; Rachel Rui, University of Tennessee • This experiment (N=620) tested the impact of the use of anonymous sources on perceived news story credibility in America and China, two countries with assumed different journalistic standards. Both Americans and Chinese rated news stories with only anonymous sources as less credible than stories with identified sources. Attitude of Americans towards news stories was found to be more positive. The study represents the first comparative research on the topic with rigorously established cross-cultural equivalences.

Still in the dark about Africa: 21st century perceptions of development in Sub-Saharan Africa among American college students • April Raphiou, Student • For decades, African countries have been portrayed inaccurately in mainstream media, often as a land filled with wild people, exotic wildlife and widespread poverty. On the contrary, the Africa of today is slowly moving beyond these stereotypical images with burgeoning economies and improved quality-of-life in many areas. However, this study illustrates that perceptions of Africa among young news consumers do not reflect the changing landscape of the continent. Even though information and communication technologies make it possible for younger generations to access more information, they are still misinformed or uniformed about developments in Africa. Employing media use, cosmopolitanism level, and socioeconomic status as guiding frameworks, the current study measures young news consumers’ knowledge of African development. An online survey was administered to 202 college students at a public university in the southeastern region of the United States to gauge their perceptions of the current state of development in Sub-Saharan Africa. Results indicate that students continue to associate Africa with negative aspects of development, such as poverty and disease. Additionally, respondents with high cosmopolitan or socioeconomic levels were more knowledgeable about African development. Interestingly, media use did not correlate with knowledge This study also highlights differences in perceptions based upon respondents’ ethnicities; Asian respondents were more knowledgeable that individuals of other races.

Right and Satisfied:  How the Influence of Political Leaning on Job Satisfaction of Journalists is Mediated by Their Perceived Role Fulfillment • Philip Baugut, U of Munich; Sebastian Scherr, U of Munich • This paper challenges the relevance of journalists’ political leanings. A secondary analysis of a representative survey of journalists (n = 1536) (see Weischenberg et al., 2006) shows that liberal journalists have a more active role conception, perceive stronger discrepancies between their role and their role fulfillment, and are less satisfied with their job. The indirect only effect of journalists’ political leanings on their job satisfaction underlines the significance of intrinsic factors for job satisfaction.

“A Hero With A Thousand Faces”: A Narrative Analysis of US and Taiwanese News Coverage of Linsanity • Chiaoning Su, Temple University • This paper examines the interconnectedness of the construction of ethnicity, nationalism and identity in contemporary media sports. This paper first describes the development and progression of the Linsanity phenomenon, a global sports story that defined 2012. Next, it reviews scholarship on the intersection of news media, sports, and national identity in the context of globalization, and further discusses research methods and data collection procedures. Finally, it compares US and Taiwanese news coverage of Jeremy Lin and argues that media in both countries reflect traditional racialized and nationalist ideologies in their representation of Linsanity, supporting the dominant nationalistic rhetoric in the US and increasing social solidarity in Taiwan. Consequently, this paper aims to demonstrate how national ideology sanctions specific constructions of ethnicity and identity, and how Jeremy Lin was framed differently by nationally-preferred archetypal narratives in the US and Taiwan that enable a hero to have “a thousand faces” on the stage of global media sports. Furthermore, the similarities and differences between US and Taiwanese media coverage of Jeremy Lin can be interpreted as clear evidence that global media sports are a contested terrain characterized by constant conflicting global cultural flows and local resistance to cultural domination.

Media in the Middle East: A Credibility Crisis or a Case of Rising of Confidence? Jordan as a Model • Khalaf Tahat, University of Oklahoma; Azzam Elananza, Yarmouk University • The main purpose of this study was to investigate journalism students’ perceptions of the credibility of the media in Jordan. Specifically, this paper sought to test the difference in media credibility between public media and private media. A questionnaire translated into Arabic was used and handed to a systematic random sample that consisted of 200 students at The Mass Communication College in Jordan. The study found that Jordanian journalism students perceive private media as more trusted than public media. Participants did not rate public media which is run by government as the most credible sources. Today, with the ongoing the “Arab Spring,” private media play a major role in expanding the freedom margins in different countries in the Middle East compared with those media operated by governments that serve only their agendas. Also, the study revealed that people who spend more time in using media tend to trust private media than public media. The high competition between different types of media, the advent of new technologies, and adoption of a market approach in creating media content could explain how private media could employ different effective tools to enhance its communication with potential audiences and keep them following their content for a long time. Future studies and limitations are reported.

Does Censorship or Culture Explain the Isoated Chinese Internet: Analyzing Global Online Audience Flows • Harsh Taneja; Angela Xiao Wu, Northwestern University • Censorship seemingly isolates Chinese internet users. We argue that blocking foreign websites has a limited role in shaping user behavior, as audiences anyway prefer local content. Analyzing traffic among the 1000 most visited websites globally we find that websites cluster according to language and geography. Chinese websites constitute one such cluster, which resembles other such geo-linguistic clusters. This cluster however excludes many uncensored foreign websites that offer content in Chinese language.

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