Friday, August 6, 2010

(as of June 22, 2010)

7 am to 8 am / 214

Law and Policy Division

Business Session: Incoming Executive Committee Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Amy Gajda, Tulane Law

7 am to 8 am / 215

Mass Communication and Society Division

Business Session: Mass Communication and Society Editorial Board Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: John C.Pollock, The College of New Jersey

7 am to 8 am / 216

Media Management and Economics Division

Business Session: Executive Committee Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Gracie Lawson-Borders, Wyoming

7 am to 8 am / 217

Public Relations Division

Business Session: Incoming Board Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Colleen Connolly-Ahern, Pennsylvania State

All officers and members interested in appointed positions are urged to attend the meeting of the incoming board of the Public Relations Division.

7 am to 8 am / 218

Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

Business Session: Divisional Journal Editors Business Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Sandy Utt, Memphis

7 am to 8 am / 219

Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

Research Administrators Meeting: Encouraging Faculty Research

Moderating/Presiding: Don Stacks, Miami

An informal meeting of mass communication administrators who have as part of their job descriptions research administration. Discussion will focus on how we can help each other in doing our jobs, insight and problem-solving regarding human subjects boards, obtaining grants (to include cross-university collaborations), and whatever else might arise. Possibility of creating a more formal AEJMC interest group or committee.

7 am to 8 am / 220

Journalism & Communication Monographs

Business Session: Editorial Board Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Kathy Brittain Richardson, Editor, Berry

7 am to 8 am / 221

Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass Communication

Business Session: Secondary Education Committee Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Lillian Lodge Kopenhaver, Florida International

7 am to 8 am / 222

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Ph.D. Alumni Organization

Breakfast Session: Alumni Breakfast

Moderating/Presiding: Glenn Scott, Elon

By invitation only.

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 223

Communication Theory and Methodology Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: Public Opinion Expression, Deliberation and Political Action

Moderating/Presiding: Patricia Moy, Washington

Cultural Predispositions, Mass Media, and Opinion Expression: Examining

the Spiral of Silence in Singapore

Shirley Ho, Vivian Chen and Clarice Sim, Nanyang Technological

Do Hostile Opinion Environments Harm Political Participation?

The Moderating Role of Generalized Social Trust

Jörg Matthes, Zurich

Effects of Political Talk Show Discussion on Mobilizing Citizens: Applying

An Approach-Avoidance Motivation Framework

Melissa R. Gotlieb, Sojung Claire Kim, Itay Gabay, Xuan Liang, Chia-I Hou

and Douglas McLeod, Wisconsin-Madison

Another Condition for Successful Deliberation: A Mathematical Approach

Poong Oh, Southern California

Discussant Rosanne Scholl, Louisiana State

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 224

Law and Policy and International Communication Divisions

Research Panel Session: Freedom of Information: An International and Comparative Perspective

Moderating/Presiding: Kyu Ho Youm, Oregon

Panelists: Christopher P. Beall, Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz, L.L.P., Denver, CO

Martin Halstuk, Pennsylvania State

Doreen Weisenhaus, Hong Kong

Nikhil Moro, North Texas

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 225

Mass Communication and Society, History and Public Relations Divisions

Refereed Paper Research Scholar-to-Scholar Session: Title

History Division

1. Herodotus as An Ancient Journalist: Reimagining Antiquity’s Historians as Journalists

Joe Saltzman, South California

2. Legacy of the Covenant: Media, Riots, and Racialized Space in Chicago, April 1968

Meagan Manning, Minnesota-Twin Cities

3. Narratives of Progress in Times of Faith and Optimism in Industrial Development:

Press Coverage of Operation Bootstrap in Puerto Rico (1947-1963)

Ilia Rodriguez, New Mexico

Discussant: Joe Hayden, Memphis

4. Negotiating the Transition from “True Woman” to “New Woman” in the Lydia Pinkham

“Animated Ads” of 1890

Elizabeth Burt, Hartford

5. Piloting Entertainment News: “Entertainment Tonight” and its Lasting Impact

on Television News Programs

Sara Magee, West Virginia

6. Politics as Patriotism: Advertising, Activists and the Press During World War II

Inger Stole, Illinois at Urbana at Champaign

Discussant: Elliot King, Loyola-Maryland

7. The President’s Private Life: A New Explanation for the “Right to Privacy”

Patricia Ferrier, Austin Peay State

8. The Role of the Business Press in the Commercial Life of Cincinnati, 1831-1912

Brad Scharlott, Northern Kentucky

9. When the Computer Became Personal: Print Ads for Early Home Computers

Bartosz Wojdynski, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Discussant: Tim Vos, Missouri-Columbia

10. “Science” in Advertising: The Role of Research for Richardson-Vicks During

the Scientific Advertising Movement

Yeuseung Kim, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

11. “The Shibboleth of “‘Freedom of the Press’”: The 1940s Newspaper Crisis, Media

Criticism, and the Move Toward Regulating the Press

Victor Pickard, New York University

12. Friends of the Bureau: Personal Correspondence, and the Cultivation

of Journalist-adjuncts by Hoover’s FBI

Matthew Cecil, South Dakota State

Discussant: Sally Renaud, Eastern Illinois University

Mass Communication and Society Division

13. Are you a “WOMAN”? : Representation of Femininity in Two Women’s Magazines,

“Cleo” & “Her World”

IcchaBasnyat and LeanneChang, National University of Singapore

14. Is She Man Enough?: News Coverage of Male and Females Candidates

at Different Levels of Office

LindseyMeeks, Washington

15. “Undressing the Words:” Analysis of Genre and Gender in the use of Profanity,

Misogyny, Violence, and Gender Role Presentation in Today’s Popular Music

CynthiaFrisby, Missouri-Columbia

16. Bonding and Bridging Social Capital: The Impact of Homogeneous

and Heterogeneous News Content

GuangYang, Hong Kong Baptist University

Discussant: Huan Jiang, Towson

17. Viral Politics: A Look into the Credibility and Effects of Online

Viral Political Messages

MonicaAncu, South Florida-St. Petersburg

18. Political Socialization of 2008 First-time Eligible Presidential Voters: How

This Cohort Integrates Their Perceptions of Politics, Patriotism, Religion

and News Media

KennaGriffin and PeterGade, Oklahoma

19. Political Knowledge and Participation in Teens During Low and High

Political Interest Periods Surrounding the U.S. 2008 Presidential Election

EstherThorson, MiJahng and MitchellMcKinney, Missouri-Columbia

20. Talking About Poverty: News Framing of Who Is Responsible for Causing

and Fixing the Problem

Sei-HillKim, South Carolina; JohnCarvalho

and AndrewDavis, Auburn

Discussant: Holly Hall, Arkansas State

21. Beyond Exposure: Exploring the Role of Economic News Coverage in People’s

Sense of Economic Well-being

DavidRemund, NellHuang, DanielRiffe

and JenniferHarlow, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

22. Building Identity Through Facebook Images

LeeFarquhar, Samford

23. Social Media Activism as a Behavioral Consequence of the Third-Person Effect:

Assessing the Influence of Negative Political Parody Videos on YouTube

Joon SooLim, Middle Tennessee State

and GuyJ. Golan

24. “Curated Creativity”: Motivations and Agendas Influencing the Relationship

Between Twitter Use and Blog Productivity

JeremyLittau, Lehigh; CarrieBrown, Memphis;

ElizabethHendrickson, Tennessee and TayoOyedeji, Georgia

Discussant: Janet A. Bridges, Sam Houston State

25. Booms, Bailouts and Blame: News Framing of the 2008 Economic Collapse

AnthonyPalmer and AndreaTanner, South Carolina

26. Indexing in Economic News: Coverage of the 2009 Economic Stimulus Package

PortiaBridges, Louisiana State

27. Advertisers’ Use of Model Distinctiveness: Main Model Characteristics

in Cosmopolitan and Latina Magazines

MariaLen-Rios, JiYeonJeong, ElizabethGardner

and YoungAhLee, Missouri-Columbia

28. Inequality in Knowledge Acquisition, Political Discussion, and Internet Exposure:

Nonlinearity in the Acquisition of Knowledge in the Internet

SungsooBang, Texas at Austin

Discussant: Barry Smith, Mississippi University for Women

29. Damsel in Distress? Sensationalism in News Coverage of Amber Alert Victims

ShuhuaZhou, SkyeCooley, JonEzell

and JefreyNaidoo, Alabama

30. Entertainment versus Hard News: Does Entertainment News Have More

of an Influence on the Priming Effect than Hard News?

JenniferKowalewski, Texas Christian

31. Transnational Regional Community through Global Culture: The Case of East Asia

and the Korean Mass Mediated Culture

WoongjaeRyoo, Gyeonggi Research Institute

32. What Are Americans Seeing? Examining the Gain and Loss Frames of Local

Health News Stories

HyunminLee, YoungAhLee, Sun-APark

and ErinWillis, Missouri-Columbia

Discussant: Mina Tsay, Boston University

33. User-generated Content on the Internet: Implications for Democratization,

Nationalism, and Political Empowerment in China

LinZhang, JiangZhao

and HeNan, The Chinese university of Hong Kong

34. Family Harmony: How Campaign Information Environment Affected Evaluations

of Obama Among Parents and Kids

MingWang, ItayGabay, PorismitaBorah

and DhavanShah, Wisconsin-Madison

35. Does the Internet Lead to Fragmentation? Relationships of Relative Entertainment

Use and Incidental News Exposure with Political Knowledge and Participation

YonghwanKim, Hsuan-TingChen

and HomeroGil de Zuniga, Texas at Austin

36. Online Parenting Information Seeking: Attitude and Usage of Chinese

Parents with 0-to-6-year-old Children

YanCui and Wan ChiLeung, The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Discussant: Lisa M. Weidman, Linfield

37. Ideology-Motivated Selective Exposure on the Internet and Its Impact

on Political Judgment

ByungGuLee and JungHwanYang, Wisconsin-Madison

38. Examining Influence During a Public Health Crisis: An Analysis

of the H1N1 Outbreak

JinsooKim, MatthewRagas, Young EunPark, Kyung-GookPark,

Yoo JinChung and HyunsangSon, Florida

39. Intermedia Agenda Setting in Television, Online Newspapers, Portal Sites,

and Blogs in South Korea

Jin Sook Im, Florida

40. Bowling Online: “Web-network” Social Capital as a New Way of Understanding

Distance Engagement

Jeremy Littau, Lehigh

Discussant: Soo Yeon Hong, Virginia Commonwealth

41. Social Networking Sites from an Interpersonal Perspective: Facebook

and Expectancy Violation Theory

EricFife, C. LeighNelson

and KristinZhang, James Madison

42. Narrative Persuasion in Fantastical Films

LaraZwarun and AliceHall, Missouri-St. Louis

43. Framing Deng Yujiao: How Online Public Opinion Impacts Offline

Media Reports

HaiyanWang, The Chinese University of Hong Kong

44. Portrayals of the Insanity Defense in News/Interview Programs

MichaelMurrie and RachelFriedman, Pepperdine

Discussant: Paul D’Angelo, The College of New Jersey

45. The Effects of Government Censorship of Negative News Coverage

on Public Opinions

BoyaXu, West Virginia

46. Images of Injury, Desensitization, and Support for War: An Experiment

EricaScharrer, GamzeOnut

and LisaWortman, Massachusetts-Amherst

47. Keeping up with Current Affairs: New(s) Sources and Their Users

DamianTrilling, The Amsterdam School of Communication Research
and KlausSchoenbach, Amsterdam School of Communication Research/Vienna

48. Influence of Value Predispositions, Interpersonal Contact, and Mediated

Exposure on Public Attitudes toward Homosexuals in Singapore

BenjaminDetenber, ShirleyHo, RachelLijie Neo, ShellyMalik

and MarkCenite, Nanyang Technological University

Discussant: Jenn Mackay, Virginia Tech

49. Female Characters and Financial Performance in 100 Top-Grossing

Films in 2007

StacySmith, South California; ReneWeber, California-Santa Barbara
and MarcChoueiti, South California

50. Adolescent Development of Political Efficacy and Its Mediating Role

in Political Socialization

Mi Jahng, Missouri-Columbia; Hans Meyer, Ohio

and EstherThorson, Missouri-Columbia

51. Sources of Facts and Advice for Farmer Decision-Making Concerning

Soil Conservation Practices in Wisconsin

Tammy Enz, EricAbbott and SumanLee, Iowa State

52. Sex, Race, and Misrepresentation: The Political Implications of Interracial

Relationships in American Film

CaroleBell, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Discussant: Brad Scharlott, Northern Kentucky

Public Relations Division

Theme — Crisis/Emergency/Health Communications

53. Reputation Repair at the Expense of Providing Instructing and Adjusting

Information Following Crises: Examining 18 Years of Crisis Responses

Strategy Research

SoraKim, Florida; ElizabethJohnson Avery, Tennessee
and RuthannLariscy, Georgia

54. A Study of PR Practitioners’ Use of Social Media in Crisis Planning

ShelleyWigley, Texas – Arlington and WeiwuZhang, Texas Tech

55. How Emergencies Have Affected the Interaction of Journalists/Sources:

Message Development in the Terror Age

ChristopherSwindell, Marshall

56. Framing Breast Cancer: Building an Agenda through Online Advocacy

and Fundraising

BrookeWeberling, North Carolina

57. The Effects of Crisis Response Strategies on Attribution of Crisis Responsibility

and Relationship Quality Outcomes

Eyun-JungKi and KenonBrown, Alabama

Discussant: Karen Hilyard, Tennessee

Theme — New Media

58. When Tourists Are Your Friends: An Exploratory Examination of Brand

Personality in Discussions About Mexico and Brazil on Facebook

MariaDeMoya and RajulJain, Florida

59. Social Media And Strategic Communications: Attitudes And Perceptions

Among College Students

Bobbi KayLewis, Oklahoma State

60. Has the Use of Online Media Rooms to Create a Dialogue with Journalists

Changed in Global Corporations? Comparing 2004 to 2009

DustinSupa, Ball State and LynnZoch, Radford

61. Legitimacy 2.0: Possible Research Avenues for Corporate Reputation

in the Digital Age*

JoyRodgers, Florida

62. A Longitudinal Analysis of Changes in New Communications Media Use

By Public Relations Practitioners: A Two-Year Trend Study

DonWright, Boston
and MichelleHinson, director of development, Institute for Public Relations, Gainesville, FL

Discussant: Sheila McAllister-Spooner, Monmouth

* Top Student Paper, Fourth Place, Public Relations Division

Theme — Professional Practice Research

63. Delusions vs. Data: Longitudinal Analysis of Research on Gendered

Income Disparities in Public Relations

DavidDozier and Bey-LingSha, San Diego State

64. Factors Contributing to Anti-Americanism among People Abroad: The Frontlines

Perspective of U.S. Public Diplomats

KathyFitzpatrick, Quinnipiac; AliceKendrick, Southern Methodist

and JamiFullerton, Oklahoma State

65. Roles of Nonprofit Organizations as Social Oil: How Local Nonprofit Organizations

Help Multinational Corporations Build Social Capital in Host Countries

MoonheeCho, Florida

66. The Role of Social Capital in Public Relations’ Efficacy: How Internal

Networks Influence External Practice

ErichSommerfeldt, Oklahoma

67. Explicating Cynicism toward Corporate Social Responsibility: Causes

and Communication Approaches

HyejoonRim, Florida

Discussant: Colleen Connolly-Ahern, Pennsylvania State

Theme — Relationships/Publics

68. Organization-Employee Relationship Maintenance Strategies:

A New Measuring Instrument

HongmeiShen, San Diego State

69. Corporate Social Responsibility and Organization-Public Relationships:

Public Relations and Marketing Educators’ Perspectives

DaewookKim and Mary AnnFerguson, Florida

70. Exploring the Roles of Organization-Public Relationships in the Strategic

Management Process: Towards an Integrated Framework

Rita LinjuanMen, Miami and Chun-ju FloraHung, Hong Kong Baptist

71. Exploring Citizen-Government Relationships: A Study of Effective Relationship

Strategies with South Korean Citizens During a Crisis

HannaPark and LindaHon, Florida

72. The Situational Theory of Publics: Youth Civic Engagement*

JarimKim, Maryland

Discussant: Patricia Swann, Utica

* Top Student Paper, Fifth-Place, Public Relations Division

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 226

Media Management and Economics Division

Teaching Panel Session: Sherman’s Best: Teaching Tips from Past Barry Sherman

Teaching Award Winners

Moderating/Presiding: Amy Jo Coffey, Florida

Panelists: Walter McDowell, Miami

James Gentry, Kansas

Ann Hollifield, Georgia

Sylvia Chan-Olmsted, Florida

Richard Gershon, Western Michigan

Louisa Ha, Bowling Green State

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 227

Newspaper and Media Ethics Divisions

Teaching Panel Session: Pedagogical Approaches to Investigative Reporting

Moderating/Presiding: Marcy Burstiner, Humboldt State

Panelists: Robert Bergland, Missouri Western State

David Cuillier, Arizona

Victoria Goff, Wisconsin-Green Bay

Marcy Burstiner, Humboldt State

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 228

Radio-Television Journalism Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: New Technologies and Definitions in News

Moderating/Presiding: Tim Hudson, Point Park

Differing Uses of YouTube During the 2008 U.S. Presidential Primary Election

Gary Hanson, Paul Haridakis and Rekha Sharma, Kent State

Tweeting the News: Broadcast Stations’ Use of Twitter

Jessica Smith, Stephanie Miles and Jillian Lellis, Texas Tech

Operationalizing the Dimensions of “Current Events”: Two Pilot Studies