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Commission on the Status of Women 2013 Abstracts

June 11, 2013 by Kyshia

Checking the pulse of health and medical news: Women as reporters, sources, and subjects • Julie Andsager, University of Iowa • Health news is a salient arena for examination of gender because women comprise a growing proportion of health communicators. This content analysis of news releases, national news, and network TV news included source gender and roles in general and women’s health news. Reporter gender did not make a difference in gender of sources. Men outnumbered women as sources overall and in positions of authority. Women’s health comprised a small segment of health coverage.

A Female in a Man’s World”: New Media Discourses around the First Female NFL Referee • Dunja Antunovic, Pennsylvania State University • In August, 2012 the National Football League (NFL) announced: a female referee would be officiating for the first time in the league’s history. Shannon Eastin took the field as a replacement referee, as she gained this opportunity amidst a labor dispute between the NFL and the referees union. This paper examines new media discourse surrounding Eastin’s debut in the NFL as a pioneer woman. Conducting the analysis from a feminist perspective, I found that the media, bloggers and fans celebrated Eastin’s accomplishment and hailed the moment as an important milestone for women in sports. Sexist and paternalistic comments remained concealed on the message boards. Present in the discourse, but barely visible were critical analyses on the institutional issues that prevent women from breaking the barrier of male hegemony. I recommend that feminist scholars continue to engage with the ways in which gendered power relations manifest in the online environment, particularly in the sphere of sports, which despite the growing participation of women remains a male domain in the U.S. society.

News Sourcing and Gender on Twitter • Claudette Artwick, Washington and Lee University • Traditional news sourcing practices that favor official, male voices have been widely documented over time and across media. But do these patterns persist in today’s social media environment, where women outnumber and spend more time than men? This study explores news sourcing and gender on Twitter by analyzing more than 2,700 tweets from reporters at 51 U.S. newspapers. Guided by hegemony and set within the framework of social networking technology, the research examines quoting practices and interaction with sources by gender, beat, newspaper size, and live coverage.

The double bind of political women: Coverage of Hillary Clinton’s performance during the Benghazi Hearings • Dustin Harp, University of Texas – Arlington; Jaime Loke, University of Oklahoma; Ingrid Bachmann, Catholic University of Chile • Research has shown that news coverage of female politicians typically follow gendered lines that often disregard women’s competence for political affairs. Grounded in feminist theoretical framework, this textual analysis examines news websites coverage of Hillary Clinton’s congressional testimony on the Benghazi attack. The findings suggest that though there has been progress in how a notable female politician was covered in the media, there still remained discourse that perpetrated the stereotypical feminine frames.

Where the Gender Differences Really Reside: The “Big Five” Sports Featured in NBC’s 2012 London Primetime Olympic Broadcast • Andrew Billings, University of Alabama; James Angelini, University of Delaware; Paul MacArthur, Utica College; Kimberly Bissell, University of Alabama; Lauren Smith, Auburn University; Natalie Brown, University of Alabama • This study analyzed all 69 hours of NBC’s primetime coverage of the 2012 London Summer Olympics to determine which sports were most likely to contain divergences in dialogue by gender of athlete. Coding over 14,000 descriptors, 23 significant differences were detected: 11 attributions of athletic success and failure and 12 depictions of personality and physicality. Swimming was found to have the most dialogue differences (seven) while beach volleyball only contained one. Ramifications and implications for the study of gender in sports media are offered.

The Non-Communicative Female Consumer: A Look at Conflict & Confidence • Chizoma Cluff, Howard University • Although globally, women control about $20 trillion in annual consumer spending (Silverstein and Sayre, 2009. p.2), and make over 85% of the consumer purchases in the US, the female consumer has yet to be a driving force to the structure of customer relations in corporate consumership. In a world infused by the male influenced language and structure, the perspective and notion of corporate dominance and customer relations for the female consumer is obscured. Since conflict is unavoidable during a complaint, the obstacles the female consumer faces mounts as she battles this variable as she approaches corporate personnel face-to-face (F2F). The intent of this study was to determine if F2F complaint was affected by the female consumer’s self-confidence. The study also determines the difference in her confidence and behavior during a complaint using the corporate computer-mediated-communication (CMC) tools. The strength of this study rests on the official statistics and research that indicated the relationship and influence of self-confidence on the female consumer population during complaint interaction with corporations. To achieve the results, a quantitative questionnaire research was conducted to determine the impact of self-confidence of the female consumer population during their complaints. The study proposed hypothesis and results indicated that the female consumer is impacted by her self-confidence during F2F complaints and would prefer to use corporate CMC tools for complaints. However, the majority of female consumers do not find corporate CMC tools as effective. With the inefficiency of corporate CMC tools, the female consumer remains restricted in expression.

Scene of the crime: News discourse of rape in India and the geopolitics of sexual assault • Meenakshi Durham, University of Iowa • This paper applies critical discourse analysis to the first week of news coverage of a gang rape in New Delhi, India. Using theories of place, transnational feminism, and critical media studies, the paper interrogates the construction of space in US news coverage of a Third World sexual assault. The findings are that the news texts operate hegemonically to construe India as a space of sexual danger, vitiating the possibilities of transnational feminist activism.

Here Comes The Bride: A Content Analysis Examining Representations of Women in Brides Magazine Advertisements • Bene Eaton, University of Houston; Temple Northup, University of Houston • This study examines advertisements in Brides magazines published in 2011. A content analysis was employed to assess if Goffman’s (1979) gender role categories were applicable to the advertisements, to measure the advertisements’ socioeconomic depictions, and to examine models’ beauty ideals. Advertisements were found to reflect traditional gender roles and upper socioeconomic classes. Additionally, models were found to be predominately thin, Caucasian, and flawless. This research raises awareness about the representation of women in bridal media.

“Knope We Can!” Primetime Feminist Strategies in NBC’s “Parks and Recreation” • Erika Engstrom • The current inquiry addresses how popular television in the form of the NBC comedy series “Parks and Recreation” (2009- ), actively incorporates feminist ideology. Using textual analysis, the author describes four strategies by which the series’ text forwards feminism: the show’s presentation of Pawnee, Indiana as obsolete patriarchy, the central motif of feminism in individual episodes which illustrate how the personal is political, the appearance of noticeable and notable mentions of feminists, and feminism visualized. Through the strategic placement and presentation of visual text, in the form of feminist icons and symbols, and verbal text, in the form of dialogue, this 30-minute sitcom promotes an “everyday” feminism that normalizes the idea that feminists are everyday people.

The Status of Feminist Public Relations Theory • Kim Golombisky, University of South Florida • This essay scans the varieties of feminisms in academic public relations in terms of issues studied, theoretical developments, and feminist commitments. The author argues that feminist public relations theory would benefit by defining gender as performative, defining women through intersectionality, moving beyond liberal and radical formulations of feminism, and focusing on goals of gender justice rather than gender equality or equity.

Advising brides: How bridal magazines frame ceremonial and emotional crisis advice for women • Kristen Grimmer, University of Kansas; Kylee McCullough; Elaine Harber, University of Kansas • Crisis has been defined as a situation that disrupts business as usual (Coombs, 2007). Research has examined organizations in crises, however this study explored crises on an individual, personal level through the lens of bridal magazines. This study used framing theory, traditionally applied to news and politics, to investigate advice designed for brides in crisis. This extension of framing theory suggests future applications to other milestones in women’s lives, such as puberty, motherhood, and menopause.

Framing Cultural Warfare: Press Coverage of the Guerrilla Girls 1985-2011 • Katherine LaPrad, University of South Carolina • In order to evaluate the role the media play in the production of knowledge that may or may not increase awareness concerning social issues in society, this study analyzes how the news media have framed the Guerrilla Girls’ activities from 1985 to 2011. Findings reveal that the news media retain long existing biases toward women, feminists, and especially feminist activists that fight to dismantle larger institutions of power.

Binaries and the big screen in China: A longitudinal analysis of character gender in feature films • Carol Liebler, Syracuse U; Wei Jiang, University of Macau • This study examines gender constructions of the main characters in Chinese top-grossing feature films, 2002-2011, and the sex of content creators in relation to film content. Content analysis of 332 characters reveals that women are more likely than men to be young, sexualized and conform to an ideal image. Male characters are older and reflect traditional Chinese norms of masculinity. Women are rarely present among content creators, and most likely to be writers or producers.

Breastfeeding in Uniform: Contesting Discourses of Masculinity, Nationalism, and the Military • Jennifer Midberry, Temple University • This qualitative narrative analysis examines comments on the “Breastfeeding in Combat Boots” blog to investigate discourses about controversial photos of two airmen breastfeeding in uniform in public. This feminist critique is a case study that sheds light on the ideology that fuels criticism about breastfeeding in public generally and about public breastfeeding in the military specifically. It also aims to explicate what the criticism reveals about masculine and nationalist discourses about women in the military.

Gender Representation in Television Advertising: The Case of the Philippines • Michael Prieler, Hallym University; Dave Centeno • This study analyzed 254 unduplicated primetime Philippine television advertisements from 2010 for differences in gender representation. Two coders independently coded the entire sample and achieved an intercoder reliability of greater than .700 for each reported variable. The findings are based on chi-square analyses and indicate a high prevalence of gender differences and stereotypes in Philippine television advertisements. For example, more males were shown in the workplace (17.9% vs. 7.4%), whereas more females were shown at home (45.9% vs. 24.5%); males were generally fully clothed (88.7% vs. 44.6%), whereas females were often suggestively dressed (52.7% vs. 6.6%); more males than females delivered voiceovers (46.1% vs. 35.0%); and product categories were stereotypically associated with gender. The only exception to these traditional, stereotypical gender portrayals was the predominance of primary female characters in television advertisements (58.3% vs. 41.7%). Overall, such stereotypical portrayals do not accurately reflect Philippine society, which is considered to be one of the most egalitarian Asian societies with regard to gender. By analyzing Philippine television advertisements, this study intends to close a gap in the still under-researched area of gender representation in developing countries, which could provide a more complete picture of this topic from an international perspective. The similarities and differences between this research and previous studies on this topic in developing and developed countries are examined. The possible effects of such representation on audiences are discussed based on social cognitive theory and cultivation theory.

“Binders Full of Tweets”: Twitter Coverage of “Women’s Issues” During the 2012 Elections • Rachel Reis Mourao, University of Texas at Austin • In 2012, policies labeled “women’s issues” became central to the electoral process. This paper sought to analyze the coverage of those issues by journalists on Twitter. Through a content analysis of selected tweets, results revealed that coverage focused on abortion, equal rights, rape, and the economy in the context of political strategy and candidates’ characteristics. Male politicians were cited the most, although female journalists were more likely than male colleagues to mention women and nonpoliticians.

Scripted Eros: Framing analysis of sexuality-related articles in women’s and men’s magazines • Miglena Sternadori, University of South Dakota; Mandy Hagseth, University of South Dakota • This analysis of sexual scripts in two men’s and two women’s magazines suggests that, regardless of the gender of the target audience, sexuality is framed mostly in ways that prioritize the narrow construction of heterosexual men’s sexual schemas according to the Centerfold Syndrome theory (Brooks, 1995). Although an illusory power is awarded to women in their role as seductresses, this construction serves mostly purposes of men’s pleasure, aligning with Gadsden’s (2000) point that male dominance over female sexuality is reinforced through media. Both women’s and men’s magazines normalize and mainstream sexual scripts that fit the elements of a constructed, hypemasculine sexuality based around men’s voyeurism and objectification of women’s bodies, emotional aloofness, trophyism, and need for sexual validation. Three additional tropes that emerged in women’s magazines – sex as dirty, women’s interest in submissive sex, and women’s potential for sexual victimization – do not feat neatly into the elements of the Centerfold Syndrome, but continue to emphasize the general cultural narrative of male dominance and female submission.

“Greatest” Grace Coolidge: Why A First Lady Who Once Captured America Is Now Forgotten • Teri Finneman, University of Missouri-Columbia; Ryan Thomas, University of Missouri-Columbia • In 1931, Good Housekeeping named Grace Coolidge one of America’s 12 greatest living women. This study explores why a woman admired during her time has largely faded from history. Examining how media construct “acceptable” gender roles offers insight into the factors that prevented Grace from leaving a lasting legacy at a critical time in feminism. This gender repression undoubtedly delayed advancements in the women’s movement and perpetuated an expectation of first ladies that remains today.

“No Girls Allowed: A Textual Analysis of Newspaper Coverage of the National Council of Women’s Organization’s Protest of the 2003 Masters Tournament” • Mary Tucker-McLaughlin, East Carolina University; Cindy Elmore, East Carolina University • Using a textual analysis this paper compares the frames presented in the local, regional and national newspaper coverage of the National Council of Womens’ Organizations’ protest at The Augusta National’s 2003 Masters Tournament. The coverage was analyzed according to four categories: location of the newspaper, Op/Ed pieces, the gender of the reporter covering the story, and the general positive or negative framing of the articles. The analysis found that the gender of the reporter/contributor and the proximity of the newspaper to Augusta affected the framing of the event in the articles. Ninety-four articles were analyzed in the study. Drawing on other scholarship that has explored media coverage of feminist topics, the paper discusses the implications of the negative, and patriarchal, news coverage.

Issues of representation, reflexivity, and research-participant relationships: Doing feminist cultural studies to improve health campaigns • Jennifer Vardeman-Winter, University of Houston • I reflect upon findings from a feminist cultural study uncovering teen girls’ and parents’ perceptions of the Gardasil HPV/cervical cancer vaccine media campaign. I consider issues important to feminist researchers like representation, reflexivity, and researcher-participant relationships as they relate to public relations research. Topics discussed are seeing the dark side of meeting our publics, renegotiating feminist ideals, and balancing strategic and feminist goals. I propose considerations for doing feminist cultural studies to inform campaign production.

Her Cup of Tea: Tea Party Women in the News Media • Khadijah White, Annenberg School for Communication • The news frames that aimed to expose, legitimize, and explore the Tea Party relied heavily upon race, gender, and class. Because the topic of taxes invokes discussions of citizenship, belonging, and nationhood, equally implicated are the legacies of slavery, women’s suffrage, and working-class labor struggles and others who have led historic fights to be recognized and treated as equal in American society. Through reports about the Tea Party, journalists were able to invert twentieth-century notions of politics, portraying political activists as credible government candidates, feminists as anti-choice, white people as oppressed, and old people as the fiery radicals. This paper closely examines the ways in which the key (and often competing) themes of womanhood and feminism, through the bodies of Tea Party female politicians, drove the Tea Party narrative and gave it salience as a national news story.

Commemorating Forty Years: Title IX, Anniversary Journalism, and the Politics of Memory • Erin Whiteside, University of Tennessee; Lori Roessner, UTK • In June 2012 Title IX celebrated its fortieth anniversary to much fanfare nationwide, particularly in sporting circles. The event generated widespread news coverage, and journalists thus played a key role in situating the story of not only the law’s beginnings, but its place in contemporary gender politics. This study examines the public memory of Title IX, as told in mainstream media outlets in the weeks surrounding the law’s anniversary. Drawing from a post-structuralist perspective on gender, we argue that the ensuing narratives invited a disconnection to the socio-historical underpinnings behind Title IX, and put in motion a set of discourses that essentializes the female subject, in turn leaving powerful forms of invisible privilege intact.

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Civic and Citizen Journalism 2013 Abstracts

June 10, 2013 by Kyshia

Comparing the values of citizen photojournalists and professional photojournalists: A coorientation study • Tara Buehner, University of South Carolina • The joining of professional and citizen photojournalists raises several questions: What are citizens’ journalism values? Do professional photojournalists perceive a sense of threat from citizens? And, do citizen photojournalists and professional photojournalists effectively understand each others’ values? Coorientation theory (1973) is used to compare citizen and professional photojournalists understanding of photojournalism values, how accurate they are in perceiving each others’ values, and the extent to which they perceive each others’ values as similar.

Nuance and Source: An examination of Citizen Journalist Evaluations across Age Cohorts • D. Jasun Carr, Susquehanna University; Matthew Barnidge, University of Wisconsin-Madison; ByungGu Lee, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Stephanie Jean Tsang, University of Wisconsin-Madison • As citizen-generated news grows, the need to understand how individual predispositions interact with news sources to influence perceptions of credibility becomes increasingly important. This study uses a nationally representative sample to replicate a previous experiment that examined perceived credibility of mainstream and citizen journalism, allowing for examination across age cohorts. While both media skepticism and political cynicism interact with the news source, the age of the recipient remains the driving factor in determining news credibility.

Who are Citizen Journalists in Social Media Environment?: Focusing on personal and social determinants of citizen journalistic activities • Yeojin Kim; Wilson Lowrey • The study examined what social contexts and determinants encourage or help maintain individuals engaging in citizen journalism tasks. Drawing on the perspective of social capital, this study examines whether social media use, social network, social capital, and civic skills help to predict degree of engagement in producing citizen journalism, especially on Twitter and Faceook. By examining the social contexts of citizen journalism activity, it is hoped that this study can help clarify the nature of citizen journalism.

Contributors to Sustainability of Emergent, Civic News Sites: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis • Nakho Kim, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Magda Konieczna; Ho Young Yoon; Lewis A. Friedland • Local sectors of vibrant civic community news sites are important for journalism to improve and the community to thrive. In this study, we examine the news ecologies of four metropolitan regions, Chicago, Seattle, Minneapolis and New York City to explain which structural features contribute to the sustainability of the civic news sites. Based on the findings of the Qualitative Comparative Analysis on 137 cases, we suggest how future efforts should be directed for increasing sustainability.

Communicative Action and Citizen Journalism: A Case Study of OhmyNews in South Korea • Seungahn Nah, University of Kentucky; Deborah Chung, University of Kentucky • Drawing on Habermas’ theory of communicative action, this case study of OhmyNews in South Korea examines how citizen journalism operates in a broad organizational and social context. Through in-depth interviews of professional and citizen journalists, the study reveals that citizen journalism can be well understood at the intersection between the lifeworld and systems. Specifically, the study finds a co-existence mechanism by which citizen journalism competes, collaborates, coordinates, and compromises with professional journalism through communicative action.

Making Journalism Work by Citizens: Unveiling the Effects of Citizen Journalism on Social Capital • Seungahn Nah, University of Kentucky; Kang Namkoong, University of Kentucky; Stephanie Van Stee, University of Kentucky; Rachael Record, University of Kentucky • This study uncovers the effects of citizen journalism practice on social capital. Through a quasi-experimental design, the analyses reveal that students in the treatment group with citizen journalism practice had higher levels of satisfaction, trust, and engagement than students in the control group. This study offers unique contributions to the existing body of social capital scholarship and practical implications for a community-based participatory campaign utilizing citizen journalism as civic education in school and community settings.

Psychological Sense of Community Online: An Examination of News Blogs • Natalie Olsen • The current study extends community and journalism research in two ways. First, it builds upon the original psychological sense of community framework developed by McMillan and Chavis (1986) by supporting a PSOC measure that is both empirically and theoretically sound. Second, it examines community in the context of news blogs, which are becoming increasingly important to the journalism industry as technological advances allow people to easily communicate across vast distances, and audiences have the ability to choose from a seemingly infinite number of information sources, no longer constrained by traditional media filters. Therefore, the current study examines the extent to which PSOC may form among members of news blogs, the individual characteristics that are associated with PSOC formation in a mediated environment, and the valuable implications of understanding PSOC in this mediated environment. An analysis of ninety-three members of three major news blogs revealed that PSOC does form online, although at moderate levels. A regression analysis revealed that individuals’ level of identification with the blog, their history reading the blog, and trust in members of the blog were all significantly and positively related to PSOC. In addition, the motivations for using the blog of personal fulfillment, information seeking/media checking, and expression/affiliation were significantly and positively related to PSOC. This research suggests that understanding the variability in PSOC, as explained by these individual-level characteristics, has significant implications for the journalism industry and society as a whole.

Citizen Journalism in Rural Tribal Communities: A Content Analysis of CGNet Swara and The Times of India • Patti Piburn; Lyle Olson, South Dakota State University • CGNet Swara is a citizen journalism endeavor in rural India that allows residents to call in and listen to news of interest that mainstream media often does not cover. The authors conducted a content analysis of vetted and published news items, established categories, and then compared the results with Times of India stories during the same period. The preliminary data reveals that stories citizen journalists report differ widely from those covered in the newspaper.

Community characteristics correlate with social media involvement on online community news sites • Jack Rosenberry, St. John Fisher College • An examination of whether social media activity affiliated with online community news sites was predicted by or related to community structural characteristics such as population, education and employment found connections between some of those characteristics and audience social media engagement with the site, but not with social media activities of the site operators. Regression analysis was used to determine the relationship of the community structural variables (IVs) with both aggregate indices and individual social media activity variables (DVs).

Engagement without Deliberation? Civic Journalism in Mission, Perception, and Practice • Melissa Tully, University of Iowa; Shawn Harmsen, University of Iowa; Brian Ekdale, University of Iowa; Jane B. Singer, University of Iowa • This study considers the organizational vision of a converged newsroom in a medium-sized Midwestern city, news workers understanding of this vision and how it pertains to their community relationships, and the ways in which the vision are expressed through online journalistic products. The vision is closely related to the goals of civic journalism; however, journalists’ perceptions of the vision tend to not align with these larger goals despite embracing notions of community building and engagement.

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Advertising 2013 Abstracts

June 10, 2013 by Kyshia

Research Papers

Alcohol, Sex, ‘n’ Text Messaging: Effects of Pro-Alcohol and Anti-Alcohol Display Ads on Evaluations of Texts From Last Night Facebook Updates and Drinking Intentions • Saleem Alhabash, Michigan State University; Hyun Jung Oh, Michigan State University; Jing Yang, Michigan State University; Richard T. Cole, Michigan State University • An experiment (N = 413) investigated the effects of Facebook status updates paired with display ads on evaluations, viral behavioral intentions, and intentions to consume alcohol. Participants saw status updates, both alcohol- and sex-related, posted on the Facebook page of Texts From Last Night (TFLN) paired with display ads that either featured an alcohol brand, an anti-binge drinking PSA, or a local bank. Findings showed that participants rated status updates and display ads variably as a function of the display ad type. Additionally, intentions to consume alcohol were significantly predicted by viral behavioral intentions toward status updates and display ads, and varied as a function of the combination of status update type and display ad type. Findings are discussed in relation to the effect of alcohol marketing via social media.

Consumer Response to Ads in Social Network Sites: An Exploration into the Role of Ad Location and Path • Hyejin Bang; Wei-Na Lee, The University of Texas at Austin •
Past research repeatedly suggests consumer’s defensive response to persuasive attempts is a key challenge for advertisers. Given the explosive growth of social media, this study aims to understand if consumer response to ads placed in a social network site could be influenced by ad location and the path through which the ad is delivered. Findings from an experiment suggest that consumers’ attention to ads in SNSs is remarkably low. Furthermore, the interaction between ad location and the path significantly influences consumers’ attitudes toward the ad, attitudes toward the brand, and purchase intention. Specifically, it appears that an ad placed inside users’ timeline and sent through via known others, the indirect path, yielded favorable consumer response. On the other hand, consumers responded more favorably to an ad sent by the advertiser, the direct path, than that sent by known others if the ad is placed outside users’ timeline. Implications and suggestions for future research are provided.

The Impact of Athlete Transgressions and Image Repair Strategy on Endorsement Effectiveness • Kenon Brown, University of Alabama; Mia Anderson, The University of Tampa; Josh Dickhaus, Bradley University •
This study seeks to build upon the body of knowledge surrounding athlete endorsement by examining the impact of Benoit’s image repair strategies on source credibility, attitudes toward a brand and purchase intention. An experiment was designed to test participants’ reactions to negative information about an athlete endorser and reactions to a statement made by the athlete to respond to negative information using one of five selected image repair strategies. Results showed that negative information did have an effect on an endorser’s trustworthiness, attitudes towards the endorsed product, and intention to buy the endorsed product. Results also showed that while mortification and defeasibility strategies were effective in improving trustworthiness, none of the strategies improved brand attitude or purchase intention.

Advergaming and Health Involvement: How healthy eating inclinations impact processing of advergame content. • Vincent Cicchirillo, University of Texas at Austin; Amanda Mabry, The University of Texas at Austin • Advergames combine advertising messages within and around video games. Many food and beverage brands use advergames to promote their products; however, little research has been conducted examining the impact personal traits such as health involvement and situational factors (brand integration) have on attitudes. Our findings indicate congruency between brand integration and health involvement impact positive affect toward the brand and advergame after game play. Additionally, arousal impacts the relationship between advergame and brand attitudes.

Product Placement Advertising & Consumer Socialization: How are Emerging Adults Influenced by Parents, Peers, and Media? • Clay Craig, Coastal Carolina University; Shannon Bichard, Texas Tech •
The use of product placement as a form of advertising has become increasingly popular; yet there is little research examining the process. This study uses the theory of consumer socialization to evaluate the processes that influence product placement attitudes and behaviors. An online survey of emerging adults (18-25 years old) was used to examine the influence of socialization agents (peers, parents, and media). The findings indicate a complex relationship between socialization agents and product placement.

The Impact of Videogame-Induced Affect and Ad Type on Memory of In-Game Advertisements • Frank Dardis, Penn State University; Mike Schmierbach, Pennsylvania State University; Brett Sherrick, Pennsylvania State University; Britani Luckman •
In-game advertising continues to increase in importance for both industry and academia. Accordingly, current studies in the field are increasingly examining specific game-related factors that might impact the effectiveness of in-game advertisements. However, game difficulty – an important, real-world factor – has received little attention. The current experiment investigates the impact of game difficulty on players’ affective response and subsequent memory of in-game ads. More difficult game play led to more negative affective response. A significant interaction revealed that brand recognition increased as players in a more positive mood were exposed to a gain-framed message. Results are explained to occur via the additive affective and cognitive effects generated by game difficulty. Practical implications are discussed.

Entertaining with Food: The Interplay of Source Effect and Flow in Response to Advergames • Chang Dae Ham; Gunwoo Yoon; Michelle Nelson •
Based on the concept of marketplace metacognition (Wright 2002) and the feelings of flow (Csikszentmihalyi 1990), this study examines how consumers respond to an advergame for food brands that vary according to the perceived effects of the source (prosocial vs. commercial; beneficial vs. harmful) and state of flow (high vs. low). Results show that attitudes toward the brand were higher for prosocial than commercial sources and also for beneficial effects (healthy food) overharmful effects (junk food). The results were explained by consumers’ persuasion knowledge and self-enhancement perception. The differences between the advergame’s source conditions, however, disappeared when participants were immersed in an optimal flow state while playing the advergames.

Consumer-Generated Ads on YouTube: Impacts of Source Credibility and Need for Cognition on Attitudes, Interactive Behaviors, and eWOM • Sara Hansen, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh; Jin Kyun Lee, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh; Shu-Yueh Lee, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh •
This study examines consumer-generated advertising (CGA) impacts on consumer attitudes and behaviors for interacting with YouTube features and passing along CGA video as electronic word-of-mouth. An online experiment with 175 subjects was conducted with a 2x2x2 factorial design, manipulating ad source credibility and product involvement levels. Analysis revealed consumers as source significantly enhanced ad attitudes and interactivity behaviors. Higher need for cognition levels significantly increased interactivity and CGA pass-along. Theoretical and practical implications are suggested.

Red and Blue, not Black and White: Political Cue and Character Race Dynamics in Advertising • Gregory Hoplamazian, Loyola University Maryland; Jacquelyn D’Avella, Loyola University Maryland •
A growing body of research indicates white viewers are much more responsive to similarity cues in advertising other than character race. This paper reports findings from a quasi-experiment investigating the effects of political context cues in advertising. The influence of political cues was found to be more impactful than model race on character perceptions and advertising outcomes, suggesting advertisers should be highly mindful of background cues which might signify the political ideology of the character.

Novelty Effects in Augmented Reality Advertising Environments • Tobias Hopp, University of Oregon; Harsha Gangadharbatla •
This study examined the relationship between novelty effects, gender, and augmented reality advertising (ARA). We predicted that exposure time to ARA and attitudinal outcomes would be negatively related and that this relationship would be especially pronounced for women. The results only tentatively supported the hypotheses. In comparatively brief exposure to the ARA, women were more likely to have favorable opinions of the brand and higher purchase intentions. In longer exposure periods, men’s attitudes actually increased.

Attractive Model, Persuasion, and Social Comparison: An Inclusion/Exclusion Perspective • Fan Hu, BNU-HKBU United International College •
Previous studies have shown that advertisements featuring attractive female models may effectively enhance persuasion. Yet, advertisers have been increasingly criticized for using such models, because research has indicated that the idealized images may make female consumers feel negatively about the self. Extant research has not offered clear theorizing of the coexistence of the two types of effects associated with attractive models in advertising. Thus, this research proposes a theoretical model to examine the underlying mechanism that accounts for both the intended (i.e., persuasion) and the unintended (i.e., social comparison) effects. Specifically, when an attractive model is included (excluded) in the representations of the product and the self, persuasion and self-evaluation will be more (less) consistent with the attractive model. An important condition for inclusion versus exclusion processing is individuals’ attention focused on internal or covert aspects of the self, known as “self-focused attention”. In the current experiment, 114 female students were exposed to advertisements for beauty-related products, featuring attractive female models or products only. Participants were either induced to a high level of self-focused attention or not. Results showed that when exposed to attractive-model advertisements, females under low self-focused attention evaluated the ad and the brand more positively, rated the self in terms of attractiveness more positively, and generated less negative thoughts than those females who were highly self-focused. When exposed to product-only advertisements, females under high versus low self-focused attention did not differ in terms of ad/brand evaluations, self-evaluation, and negative thoughts. Implications for advertising are discussed.

Scarcity Effects on Luxury, Limited Edition Products • wonseok jang, University of Florida; Yong Jae Ko, University of Florida; Jon D. Morris, University of Florida; Yonghwan Chang, University of Florida •
Recently, many brands had begun to launch limited edition products. Typically, advertisers are implementing two types of scarcity messages for Limited Edition (LE) products: (a) limited-time scarcity vs. limited quantity scarcity messages (Cialdini 2008). Several studies found that these scarcity messages lead consumer to perceive LE products as more attractive and valuable (Aggarwal, Jun, and Huh 2011). The current study examined the effects of scarcity messages on different types of LE products.

Picture-perfect personality: Examining the influence of advertising images on brand personality • Adriane Jewett, University of Florida; John Sutherland, University of Florida •
Surrounded by advertisements, today’s consumers are bombarded with covert cultural meanings wrapped in catchy slogans. According to meaning transfer theory, advertising is a dominant vehicle for the provision and movement of cultural meanings (McCracken, 1986; 1990). Combined, advertising’s profusion and ability to propagate meaning leaves advertisers with considerable power in shaping modern culture. Within advertisements, visuals are largely responsible for connecting products with particular cultural meanings. According to McCracken, these visuals are imbued with cultural meanings, such as gender, status, age, lifestyle, time and place. Specifically, this study extends McCracken’s meaning transfer theory to examine visuals’ ability to transfer brand personality from an advertisement to a brand. A survey (n=304) was conducted using a scale based on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI). Respondents were asked to evaluate the brand personality of Fresh Cola, a fictitious soft drink, based on researcher-created advertisements. Each of the four ads used an image aligned with one of the four tested personality traits – Extroversion (E), Introversion (I), Thinking (T) or Feeling (F). According to this study’s results, images have the ability to manipulate personality, molding a consumer’s perception of and relationship with a brand, perhaps giving advertisers more control over brand personality than some scholars previously assumed. This finding places additional importance on advertising images, necessitating careful, calculated choices to create or manipulate the desired brand personality. Additionally, this study’s findings made cautious connections between brand attitude, Extroversion and Feeling, and support a re-examination of brand personality measures and their influences on purchase intent.

Food Advergames Targeting Children: Brand Exposure Context, Nutritional Content, and Ad Breaks • Hannah Kang, University of Florida; Soontae An, Ewha Womans University,Seoul, Korea • This study investigated the content of food advergames presented on food company websites targeting children, in terms of brand exposure context, nutritional content of the food products, and ad breaks. Among 53 websites that have advergames, a total of 387 food advergames were examined. Results of this study found that about 90 percent of foods advertised in advergames were low-nutrition and/or high-calorie foods. In particular, when product package was shown in the game or branded food contents or product packages were related to the game scoring, those foods were more likely to be foods high in sugar. Moreover, foods advertised in advergames that did not have ad breaks were foods that were higher calorie, higher in fat and higher in sugar, except for sodium. This study highlights the fact that more scholarly attention is needed for the content of advergames.

Attitudes about Advertising and Patterns of News Use and Evaluation • Esther Thorson, University of Missouri; Eunjin Kim •
The study examined whether positive and negative attitudes toward advertising were related to attitudes toward news sources including both television and print, local and national, and whether exposure to these sources was related to advertising attitudes. There were strong positive relationships between news source attitudes and positive attitudes toward advertising, and weaker negative relationships with negative attitudes toward advertising. Neither was related to news source consumption. The study is considered in terms of theory about how the ubiquitous association of news and advertising may be processed by consumers.

Brand Placements and Media Characters – The Influence of Parasocial Interactions on Brand Placements Effects • Johannes Knoll, Würzburg University; Christiana Schallhorn, Würzburg University; Sabrina Wynistorf; Holger Schramm •
Although brand placements are frequently associated with media characters, previous research has scarcely dealt with their influence on brand placements. Addressing this, the present study investigates the influence of parasocial interactions with media characters on attitudes towards brands related to characters. A 1 x 2 between-subject design is applied, assuming that positively represented characters elicit greater parasocial interaction and, subsequently, more favorable brand attitudes compared with negatively represented characters. The results confirm the indirect effect.

The tales of ad-context congruency, ad format, and the preference for multitasking: The case of YouTube • Anastasia Kononova •
The study explored the effects of YouTube ad-video thematic congruency and ad format on memory, attitudes, and online behavioral intentions. Polychronicity, or the preference for doing multiple things at a time, was predicted to moderate these effects. The study showed that ad-video congruency positively predicted memory for ads, while negatively predicted attitudes toward brands. Participants also remembered more information from in-stream ads than from display ads, while they were more in favor of display ads. The main effects of ad-video thematic congruency and ad format were moderated by polychronicity. The results are discussed with the use of information processing theories.

The Moderating Role of Cultural Orientation in Explaining Temporal Orientation of Self-Referencing • Seungae Lee, University of Texas at Austin; Jun Heo, University of Southern Mississippi •
A psychological process called self-referencing justifies the use of “you” statements in advertisements; the more an individual relates an ad to him/herself, the greater the likelihood of recall and favorable evaluation. Self-referencing is distinctive based on the temporal dimension of the self being activated while processing advertisements. The current study examined the moderating role of consumers’ cultural background (i.e., long-term orientation dimension) on the process of temporal orientation of self-referencing to better understand advertising persuasion.

Can’t Live Without it: A Qualitative Investigation into the Uses & Gratifications that Drive U.S. College Student Smartphone Use • Kelty Logan, University of Colorado at Boulder •
This study seeks to contribute to the uses and gratifications literature by focusing on US college students and their use of smartphones in the belief that a thorough understanding of the gratifications sought will provide guidance to advertisers regarding the relative levels of involvement associated with each function. Specifically, the study employs qualitative research to investigate how and why college student use their smartphone functions and provides a preliminary typology of those uses and gratifications for further, empirical validation. The study indicated that the most commonly used smartphone functions are text messaging, voice calling, email, clock, calendar, and apps for social media and other entertainment, information, and helpful uses. Use of the smartphone functions is driven by five areas of gratifications sought: Connectedness, Relationship Strengthening, Self-Esteem, Escape/Boredom Relief, and Mood Elevation.

Taking a Closer Look at Green Ads. Consumers’ Green Involvement and the Persuasive Effects of Emotional Versus Functional Advertising Appeals • Jorg Matthes, U of Vienna; Anke Wonneberger; Desirée Schmuck •
A sample of U.S. consumers was exposed to one of four green ads, a functional ad, an emotional ad, a mixed type ad, and a control ad. Green involvement was gauged by measures of environmental concern, green purchase behavior, and green product attitudes. Both the emotional and the mixed-type ads significantly affected brand attitude. These effects were independent from green involvement. Functional ads, in contrast, only impacted brand attitudes when green involvement was high.

Who should do the talking? Marketplace advocacy messages by corporations or industry trade groups • Barbara Miller, Elon University; Julie Lellis •
Marketplace advocacy campaigns often arise in response to burgeoning societal concerns, such as those faced by many industries. Using focus groups, this paper explores how lay audiences with little knowledge of the topic being advocated respond to marketplace advocacy messages when presented by a corporation versus those by industry trade groups, research which has potentially significant implications for how corporations allocate advertising resources as well as for environmental groups attempting to combat certain industry initiatives.

I’ll buy that: Electronic word of mouth and the persuasion knowledge model • Barbara Miller, Elon University; Qian Xu, Elon University; Brooke Barnett, Elon University •
This study applied the persuasion knowledge model (PKM) to assess the role of persuasion knowledge in consumer response to online product reviews, a form of electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM). Using an experimental research design, this paper examined a) what product review attributes are most likely to be seen by consumers as a persuasive attempt, and b) how being seen as a persuasive attempt impacts persuasive outcomes toward the product, namely product attitudes and purchase intention.

Are They Celebrity Followers? Examining Third-Person Perception in the Context of Celebrity Endorsed Advertising • Po-Lin Pan, Arkansas State University; Juan Meng, University of Georgia •
This study used source credibility and advertising skepticism as major predictors to third-person perception and examined whether celebrity endorsed advertising yielded third-person perception and other perceived variables led consumers’ purchase intention. Both source credibility (e.g., expertise, trustworthiness, and attractiveness) and advertising skepticism had negative relationships with third-person perception. Celebrity trustworthiness was most influential to third-person perception, while advertising skepticism was the weakest predictor. Yet, neither third-person perception nor trustworthiness was significant to direct purchase intention.

The Role of Risk Perceptions and Involvement in Regulatory Focus: Its Application to Anti-High-Risk Drinking Advertising • Park Sun-Young, Drury University •
Based upon regulatory fit theory the present study examines the moderating effects of risk perceptions and involvement on responses to regulatory focus frames in the context of anti-high-risk advertising messages. The result showed when individuals’ risk perceptions or involvement were high they were more likely to be persuaded by a promotion-focused frame in terms of ad attitudes, and behavioral attitudes and intentions, whereas there were no differential effects when risk perceptions or involvement were low.

 

Teaching Papers

Team teaching creative applications for advertising and public relations • Pamela Morris • Advertising and public relations are complex and creative industries and it is ever more challenging for educators to find instructors who can fulfill expertise across disciplines, particularly in creative applications where technology is involved. Team teaching is one approach to provide multiple experts in the classroom. This paper describes how two experimental undergraduate team taught courses, Design for Advertising and Public Relations and Multimedia Commercial Production for Advertising and Public Relations, were developed and delivered within the context of student-centered learning. Student surveys focusing on team teaching efforts are the method for evaluating the approach. Literature review of team teaching and hands-on instruction of creative production provides a framework for course designs. The study is important as advertising, public relations and communication disciplines are converging and specialties from multiple practices have become increasingly necessary for teaching and preparing students for jobs in these industries. It adds to the literature about team teaching and provides recommendations for creating an effective team teaching course.

 

Professional Freedom & Responsibility

Distorted Ethnic Targeting in Food Advertising: A Content Analysis of Ebony, Essence, and People • Jung-Sook Lee • A content analysis was conducted with 680 food advertisements from 2008 and 2011 issues of Ebony, Essence, and People. The results indicate overrepresentation of unhealthy foods and underrepresentation of less unhealthy or healthy foods in Ebony and Essence when compared with their counterparts in People. The difference is manifested not only in the food categories advertised but also in the product types (e.g., low-calorie, baked) and the brand varieties (number of brands) advertised within each food category. Results confirm the concern that African Americans will be increasingly targeted for the marketing of unhealthy foods and beverages as the general population becomes more health conscious and demands less of unhealthy food and beverages. Results also bear a remarkable resemblance to the history of distorted ethnic targeting in cigarette and alcohol advertising where healthier options were less likely to be offered to African American consumers than were they to the general population.

LinkedIn: An impediment to workplace diversity? • Troy Elias, University of Florida; Megan VanRysdam; Jung Won Chun •
Hiring practices in the U.S. in general and within the advertising industry, specifically, have ostensibly evolved with the emergence of social networking sites (SNS). This study examines the overall prominence of SNS usage in hiring decisions across a variety of industries. Secondly, the study explores the use of SNS by ad agencies, focusing primarily on the hiring of account executives. Account executives tend to embody the face of agency life as they liaise directly with clients. Finally, the study seeks to expose potential opportunities for bias, or racially disparate treatment toward minority populations who can no longer easily avoid displaying their race, age, gender, or disabilities to potential employers via SNS. A mixed methods approach was adopted for this study, such that 300 hiring professionals were surveyed and semi-structured interviews were conducted with 11 advertising agencies located across the U.S.

How Gender Situates Learning in Advertising Creative Departments • Kasey Windels, LSU; Karen Mallia, University of South Carolina •
Situated learning theory sees learning as produced through interaction with and increasing participation in a community of practice. Based on interviews with 23 female creatives, this study examines how women learn and form identities in a creative department that is dominated by masculine values. Findings reveal that women lack legitimacy and experience difficulties developing an identity as a master practitioner in the creative department. They instead emphasize parts of their identity unrelated to the profession.

Selling or selling out?: An analysis of children’s snack packages and implications for advertising practitioners and educators • John Wirtz, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Regina Ahn, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Gina Song, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Zongyuan Wang, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign •
The paper presents a review of literature related to food advertising that targets children and how food packaging is used to influence children and primary food purchasers (e.g., parents). We then present the results of a content analysis of a large sample (N = 114) of portable children’s snack packages. Our analysis demonstrated that sugar was one of the top three ingredients for 88.6% in portable children’s snacks and that verbal claims such as “artificial and natural flavoring” and “real fruit juice” were used frequently. Further, more than 25% of the sample featured licensed characters (e.g., Scooby Doo) on the front of the package. We conclude the paper by discussing ethical implications of food advertising and marketing for practitioners and advertising educators.

 

Special Topics

Branding Footwear in the Late Nineteenth Century • Stephen Banning • Sorosis Shoes was the first nationally marketed brand of shoes designed specifically for working women in 1897, and its meteoric rise made it an early international advertising success story. This study examines Sorosis Shoe’s capitalization on the women’s clothing reform movement and deliberate use of the name of the largest women’s club in America, Sorosis, to promote its product, against their wishes.

Mobile Applications and Advertising: Scan vs. Shazam • Brittney Block, University of Memphis •
Building from the Technology Acceptance Model, this exploratory study sought to determine smartphone users’ acceptance of advertising intermediaries Scan and Shazam. Three focus groups, consisting of 18 to 24 year-old daily smartphone application users, were conducted to assess the acceptance of Scan and Shazam based on perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use. Results indicated that Scan and Shazam were easy to use, but each application’s usefulness in regards to advertising was not as clear.

Advertising America: International Reactions to U.S. Tourism Advertising • Jami Fullerton; Alice Kendrick •
A pre/post quasi-experimental copy test of a newly produced US tourism commercial found that the ad was effective in increasing interest in travel to the United States among a nationally representative sample of Australian adults. Gender, age, income and previous US travel appeared to moderate the effect. The ad had a stronger effect on those who reported prior to viewing the commercial not to like America versus those who were self-reported “Americaphiles.” Qualitative reactions to the commercial were predominantly positive, although some viewers said that the spot was not an accurate depiction of the US. Findings are discussed in the context of place branding and best practice message strategy for destination marketing.

An Exploratory Study on Multinational Brand Twitter Strategies Between the U.S. and South Korea • Young Sun Lee, Florida State University; Jaejin Lee, Florida State University •
The current study aims to explore how the social network sites (SNS) is used as a marketing communication tool for the multinational brands. In order to examine the cultural differences, this study employs a cross-cultural comparisons of SNS use in the U.S. and South Korea. The findings from content analysis suggest that brands in the U.S. showed more transformational messages, while the brands in South Korea were more prevalent in informational messages than the U.S. Additionally, there are cultural differences on many other message types in brand messages. Theoretical and managerial implications, limitations, and future research are suggested.

Lost in Space: Advertising agency employees’ perceptions of work space • Karen Mallia, University of South Carolina; Kasey Windels, LSU; Jenny Mumah, University of North Texas; Sheri Broyles, University of North Texas •
Advertising is a creative industry, and the creativity of advertising professionals has been attributed to the space in which they work. This quasi-ethnography based on data from six advertising agencies explores the physical environment from the perspective of those who work in these agencies. Discussion includes the relation between openness in reference to space and creativity, the balance of openness and privacy as well as the workplace identity for advertising agency personnel.

A Different Approach to an Old Problem: A Qualitative Study on the Role of Analytical and Experiential Processing on Consumers’ Interpretation of Organic • S. Senyo Ofori-Parku, University of Oregon •
Studies on information processing have traditionally relied on laboratory experiments. Although of predictive value, experiments do not reveal the nuances of information processing. This exploratory study investigates how the analytical (systematic, rational, linear) information and experiential (intuitive, heuristic, holistic) processing in concert manifest in the meanings interviewees make of products labeled organic. Despite that the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits the use of the word in a misleading manner, it does not bar organizations from using the term “organic” in their company names and logos, yet more and more people relying in organic labels to make their purchasing decisions. So, how do patrons of organic products process the organic label? Results suggest that contrary to the dichotomization of analytical and experiential information processing modes, participants demonstrate ample knowledge of the meaning of organic, but the meaning they ascribe to the labels were also derived from past experiences, upbringing, family values, environmental values, among others. They rely on the label even when they think the label has become a buzzword, and may not actually be a good estimate of how healthy food is. Implications of the results for theory, advertising, targeted marketing, as well as public policy deliberations are discussed.

Connecting Advertising Students with High School Students: A Case Study in Community-Based Learning • Dana Saewitz, Temple University •
Advertising students at a large, urban, public, research university were given an opportunity to participate in a unique community-based learning course in which the university students travelled weekly to two local inner-city public high schools to teach advertising. For high school students, the goals of the program were to inspire them to graduate, apply to college, and to consider a career in advertising. For college students, the goals were to develop teaching skills and leadership skills, strengthen and develop advertising skills, and to learn about the challenges facing urban education. The program was funded by a grant from two professional associations: The local Ad Club and the State Association of Broadcasters. For these partners, the goal was to develop a pipeline of young, ethnically diverse local talent to help improve diversity in the advertising industry and to encourage bright young urban students to achieve their potential. Results of a study conducted at the conclusion of the semester-long program indicate that community-based learning is an extremely valuable and rewarding learning experience for both college students and high school students. If urban universities want to build positive connections with the neighborhoods that surround them, they must re-evaluate incentives and rewards to encourage more faculty to develop community-based learning courses.

Compare Global Brands’ Micro-Blogs between China and USA: Focusing on Communication Styles and Branding Strategies • Xiaochen Zhang, University of Florida; Weiting Tao, University of Florida; Sora Kim, University of Florida •
This quantitative content analysis compares global brands’ use of communication styles and brand anthropomorphism between Twitter and Weibo. Task-oriented communication is found to be more dominant on both sites than socio-emotional communication. Specifically, global brands ask for opinions and give suggestions (tasked-oriented indicators) and use first and second personal pronouns (anthropomorphism indicators) more on Twitter. However, they give opinion (task-oriented indicator), reduce tension (socioemotional indicator), and use nonverbal cues and consumer nicknames more on Weibo.

Effectiveness of Digital Video Advertising in Experimental Setting • Xiyao Yang, University of Oklahoma; Doyle Yoon, University of Oklahoma •
Digital video advertising is one of the fastest growing areas of interactive advertising in the industry; though there is limited understanding of this field due to little academic research. The present study is meant to explore the effectiveness of interactive advertising in order to predict the effectiveness of digital video advertising, while gaining an understanding of the influence of digital advertising formats, and user-mode’s impact on users’ brand awareness and attitudes toward to advertising.

 

Student

Who Is Wonder Woman? Gender Stereotypes and Heroism in TV Advertisements • Yunmi Choi, University of Florida; Walter Starr, University of Florida; Kayoung Kim, University of Florida; Nancy Parish, Univ of Florida • This study investigated the gender stereotypes of hero figures in Clio Award winning commercials between 1999 and 2010. By applying content analysis method, this study found support for the hypotheses that male characters in the ads are more likely to be depicted as warrior types. Also, male products are more likely to contain male characters that match with their product personality. However, there was no support for the hypotheses that female characters are likely to be caregiver types in the ads.

Cultural Differences in Cognitive Responding to Ads: A Comparison of Americans and Chinese • Yang Feng, Southern Illinois University Carbondale •
This study explored differences in cognitive responses to ads across two cultures. In an experiment, 120 college students from the U.S. and 120 college students from China were exposed to different types of ads, and subsequently participants were instructed to recall objects, and list product/brand thoughts. It was found that compared with Chinese participants, participants from the U.S. recalled more salient objects, and generated more product/brand thoughts elicited by salient objects from the ads. These findings suggest that American college students attended more to salient objects in the ads, and therefore are more analytic than Chinese students. Implications for international advertising were provided in the end.

The Effects of Types of Behavior, Positive Discrete Emotions, and Involvement on Loss-Framed Message Processing • Heewon Im •
This study investigated the effects of types of behavior, involvement, and positive discrete emotions on loss-framed persuasive message processing. The role of involvement as an individual difference in the effects of the information processing motivation level on loss-framed persuasive messages was examined. In addition, the interaction effect of positive discrete emotions and involvement was hypothesized, because both factors influence individuals’ motivation levels. A three (Positive emotion: control, nurturance, amusement) by two (Involvement: high, low) factorial design experiment study was conducted. The results showed the main effects of involvement on loss-framed persuasive messages, but did not support the main effects of positive emotions or the interaction effects of positive emotions and involvement.

Metaphor as Visual Thinking in Advertising and the Effects: Focused on Consumers’ Brand Familiarity and Involvement • Soojin Kim, University of Florida; Jihye Kim, University of Florida •
Visual metaphors are among the favorite communication techniques used by advertisers; metaphor usage perennially increases in ad images. The purpose of this experimental study is to investigate the impact of visual metaphors in advertising on consumers’ attitude changes though brand familiarity and their perceived involvement. One of the most interesting findings is the significant three-way interactions. The findings showed that brand familiarity will change the impact of a visual metaphor more under conditions of high involvement than low involvement. Therefore, practically, advertisers should consider the consumers’ perceived involvement and the level of the brand familiarity toward the target for the optimal effects of visual metaphors ad on consumers’ attitude changes. The theoretical implication of the current study is that visually metaphorical ads may be more effective than non-metaphor-based ads in changing consumers’ attitudes when the brand has low brand familiarity, regardless of perceived involvement. For a practical perspective, the current study has implications for the effective combination of visual metaphor and brand familiarity for consumers of different involvement levels. It may not be effective to use visual metaphors in ads for products with high brand familiarity and for targeted consumers with high involvement to affect consumers’ attitudes. Ads that use visual metaphor would be effective with unfamiliar brands, including new brands, because consumers may not have a good brand attitude toward the unknown brand in order to change their attitudes.

The Cognitive Effects of Online Advertisement on Online News Perception: Readers’ Causal Attribution of Responsibility for Sexual Assault • Jinyoung Kim, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee •
Despite a fast-growing number of online advertisements on every corner of news web pages, little research has been done to how cognitive interferences aroused by online advertisements may influence readers’ perception of news stories. This study explored the effects of sexually suggestive presentation in online advertisement on readers’ perception of sexual violence coverage. Results showed that participants who were exposed to sexual online advertisement attributed a higher degree of responsibility of rape to the victim than to the rapist and that participants who perceived the suggestive ad ‘highly sexual’ tended to assign disproportionate attribution assessment that is unfavorable to the victim. Findings from this study imply that typical suggestive online advertisements found easily on news web sites can influence news readers’ perceptions of the cause of important social issues and events.

A Consumer Dilemma: Consumer Privacy Concerns, Trust, and Personalized Advertising • Junga Kim •
The availability of vast amounts of powerful customer data has opened up new opportunities for the online advertisers to shift their focus from mass-market strategies to customer-centric personalized advertising. However, it is not clear whether highly targeted advertising is perceived as beneficial among online users. This study explores how online consumers cope with personalized advertising. Drawing upon the cost-benefit framework and literature on privacy concern, this study proposes a structural model of consumer response toward personalized advertising. The model indicates that three factors such as perceived controllability, vulnerability, and information sensitivity significantly determined consumers’ privacy concern. The findings of this study suggest that privacy concern did not influence the likelihood of clicking on personalized advertising, while perceived benefits of personalized advertising affect click-through intentions.

Effects of Interpersonal Tie Strength and Subjective Norms on Consumers’ Brand-Related eWOM Referral Intentions • Yan Shan, The University of Georgia •
Electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM) is an important communication tool in the integrated marketing communication (IMC). This study was designed to examine the antecedents for a brand-related referral behavior through investigating the interplay between consumers’ brand evaluation and personal influence on consumers’ referral attitudes and behavior intentions. Specifically, the results suggested that consumer-brand relationship and interpersonal tie strength, and their interaction were positively related with referral attitude. Referral attitude was found to be positively associated with referral intention, and this relationship was moderated by consumers’ perceived subjective norms.

When Tea Leaf Meets Coffee Bean: Consumer Identity, Global Brand and the Circuit of Culture • Xiaochen Zhang, University of Florida •
Under the circuit of culture framework, this qualitative study explored consumer culture and global brands through the case of Starbucks and Chinese consumers at the nexus of globalization. Results from four focus groups and 13 in-depth interviews show that the cultural nuances involving how consumers perceive their own identity as a Starbucks consumer as opposed to their “Chineseness” as a tea drinker have a great impact on how they would consume global brands.

<< 2013 Abstracts

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AEJMC & ASJMC Condemn the U.S. Government’s Actions Against the Press, Defends Public’s Right to Information

May 28, 2013 by Kyshia

May 23, 2013 | The Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC), which includes professors, deans and directors of journalism and mass communication programs, and the Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass Communication (ASJMC), which includes schools and colleges of journalism and mass communication, call for the U.S. government’s investigation of the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) egregious intrusion into privacy related to the April and May 2012 secret seizures of Associated Press telephone records. Only a year later has the DOJ informed the nation’s news media about subpoenas that had been served to gather phone records of major AP Bureaus, as well as records from the private phones of AP journalists.

Secret investigations of journalists’ news sources produce a chilling effect on news-gathering activities, jeopardizing the critical role of the press in a democracy and ultimately harming the American public. These seizures of phone records also demonstrate the urgency of a Shield Law that would provide journalists with more security in keeping their interactions and interviews with sources confidential.

This investigation must result in a full and clear explanation of the process from which these secret subpoenas had resulted, together with appropriate sanctions for those found to have exceeded their legal authority or to have been derelict in their judicial responsibilities.

AEJMC and ASJMC further call for assurances by the DOJ that other secret subpoenas related to news-gathering activities have not been served and will not be served in the future.

In our universities and programs, we seek to instill in our students an appreciation for the necessity of a free press that understands the need to balance the privacy and national security issues with the publics open access to information. In this case, we find it hard to understand how that balance was met.

<<PACS

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Page Legacy Scholar Grants Call

May 28, 2013 by Kyshia

Guidelines and Deadlines

Application materials must be electronically submitted on or before September 1, 2013.
Applicants will be notified of the selection committee’s decisions in October of 2013.

PROPOSAL COMPONENTS MUST BE COMBINED INTO ONE PDF FILE.
Please click below to let us know that you plan to submit a proposal>>

SPECIAL CALL ON
Ethical Stakeholder Engagement

Coversheet (1 page)
Please include the following:

  1. Title of the proposed project
  2. Name of applicant(s)
  3. Job title, position or affiliation, name of institution organization, or business
  4. Email address and phone number
  5. Contact information for the Office of Sponsored Research at your institution,including the name and email address of a point of contact
  6. Subject area that best describes the focus of the proposal

Abstract (1 page)
A one page abstract or summary of the proposed project that includes the applicant’s name, university/college affiliation, and project title. Please list the amount of funding requested, up to $5,000.

Narrative
(up to 5 pages)
A description, not more than five pages, typed and double-spaced, of the proposed research and how it furthers the mission of the Page Center to foster ethics and responsibility in public communication. Appropriate Appendices that support the proposed project may be included and should be no more than 10 pages long. Applicants may wish to attach an optional selected bibliography, up to two pages, of scholarly or other works, other than the applicant’s own, that place the project in its intellectual framework. Appendices and bibliographies should be included following the project narrative, and should bring the total page count for the section to no more than 17 pages.

Budget
(1 page)
Using a spreadsheet or table, please list the amount of the grant being requested – up to $5,000 – by line item. The grants may be used for legitimate scholarly purposes approved by the Center, such as field research, assistants, and the purchase of research materials. Awards may not be used to support any commercial purpose.

The Center does not allow the following costs:

Overhead, indirect or F&A costs
Release time or course buy-out
Any expenses to attend conferences
Publication costs
Equipment

Budgets should be realistic and commensurate with the project proposed. Applicants are strongly encouraged to list only real and necessary costs in the proposed budget.  The Page Center may offer funding at a different level than that requested. Applicants and awardees must disclose any other source of funding for the project.

Where applicable, proposals should be processed through the Office of Sponsored Research of the applicant’s institution to avoid lengthy delays in awarding funds.

Budget Notes
(1 page)
Include a separate document that lists the budget by line item, followed by a description of each line item explaining how the funding will be spent. For example, a description of requested wages may read:

Wages: One graduate student to be paid $15/hour for 20 hours/week X 12 weeks of the summer semester. The graduate student will analyze data collected during the Fall and Spring semesters.

Curriculum Vitae or Professional Resume
(10 page maximum)
Attach curriculum vitae or resume that describes scholarly work related to the proposed project and publication/presentation history of the applicant. This document will inform the review committee of the scholar or professional applicant’s potential for dissemination of findings.

ALL COMPONENTS OF THE CSR CALL MUST BE COMBINED INTO ONE
PDF FILE AND UPLOADED TO THE CORRECT FOLDER BELOW.

Ethical Stakeholder Engagement proposals click here.

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