Wednesday, July 31, 2003 - AEJMC



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”

Iccha Basnyat and Leanne Chang, National University of Singapore

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

at Different Levels of Office

Lindsey Meeks, 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

Cynthia Frisby, Missouri-Columbia

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

and Heterogeneous News Content

Guang Yang, Hong Kong Baptist University

Discussant: Huan Jiang, Towson

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

Viral Political Messages

Monica Ancu, 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

Kenna Griffin and Peter Gade, Oklahoma

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

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

Esther Thorson, Mi Jahng and Mitchell McKinney, Missouri-Columbia

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

and Fixing the Problem

Sei-Hill Kim, South Carolina; John Carvalho

and Andrew Davis, Auburn

Discussant: Holly Hall, Arkansas State

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

Sense of Economic Well-being

David Remund, Nell Huang, Daniel Riffe

and Jennifer Harlow, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

22. Building Identity Through Facebook Images

Lee Farquhar, 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 Soo Lim, Middle Tennessee State

and Guy J. Golan

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

Between Twitter Use and Blog Productivity

Jeremy Littau, Lehigh; Carrie Brown, Memphis;

Elizabeth Hendrickson, Tennessee and Tayo Oyedeji, Georgia

Discussant: Janet A. Bridges, Sam Houston State

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

Anthony Palmer and Andrea Tanner, South Carolina

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

Portia Bridges, Louisiana State

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

in Cosmopolitan and Latina Magazines

Maria Len-Rios, JiYeon Jeong, Elizabeth Gardner

and YoungAh Lee, Missouri-Columbia

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

Nonlinearity in the Acquisition of Knowledge in the Internet

Sungsoo Bang, Texas at Austin

Discussant: Barry Smith, Mississippi University for Women

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

Shuhua Zhou, Skye Cooley, Jon Ezell

and Jefrey Naidoo, Alabama

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

of an Influence on the Priming Effect than Hard News?

Jennifer Kowalewski, Texas Christian

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

and the Korean Mass Mediated Culture

Woongjae Ryoo, Gyeonggi Research Institute

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

Health News Stories

Hyunmin Lee, YoungAh Lee, Sun-A Park

and Erin Willis, Missouri-Columbia

Discussant: Mina Tsay, Boston University

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

Nationalism, and Political Empowerment in China

Lin Zhang, Jiang Zhao

and He Nan, The Chinese university of Hong Kong

34. Family Harmony: How Campaign Information Environment Affected Evaluations

of Obama Among Parents and Kids

Ming Wang, Itay Gabay, Porismita Borah

and Dhavan Shah, Wisconsin-Madison

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

Use and Incidental News Exposure with Political Knowledge and Participation

Yonghwan Kim, Hsuan-Ting Chen

and Homero Gil de Zuniga, Texas at Austin

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

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

Yan Cui and Wan Chi Leung, 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

ByungGu Lee and JungHwan Yang, Wisconsin-Madison

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

of the H1N1 Outbreak

Jinsoo Kim, Matthew Ragas, Young Eun Park, Kyung-Gook Park,

Yoo Jin Chung and Hyunsang Son, 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

Eric Fife, C. Leigh Nelson

and Kristin Zhang, James Madison

42. Narrative Persuasion in Fantastical Films

Lara Zwarun and Alice Hall, Missouri-St. Louis

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

Media Reports

Haiyan Wang, The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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

Michael Murrie and Rachel Friedman, Pepperdine

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

45. The Effects of Government Censorship of Negative News Coverage

on Public Opinions

Boya Xu, West Virginia

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

Erica Scharrer, Gamze Onut

and Lisa Wortman, Massachusetts-Amherst

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

Damian Trilling, The Amsterdam School of Communication Research

and Klaus Schoenbach, Amsterdam School of Communication Research/Vienna

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

Exposure on Public Attitudes toward Homosexuals in Singapore

Benjamin Detenber, Shirley Ho, Rachel Lijie Neo, Shelly Malik

and Mark Cenite, Nanyang Technological University

Discussant: Jenn Mackay, Virginia Tech

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

Films in 2007

Stacy Smith, South California; Rene Weber, California-Santa Barbara

and Marc Choueiti, South California

50. Adolescent Development of Political Efficacy and Its Mediating Role

in Political Socialization

Mi Jahng, Missouri-Columbia; Hans Meyer, Ohio

and Esther Thorson, Missouri-Columbia

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

Soil Conservation Practices in Wisconsin

Tammy Enz, Eric Abbott and Suman Lee, Iowa State

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

Relationships in American Film

Carole Bell, 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

Sora Kim, Florida; Elizabeth Johnson Avery, Tennessee

and Ruthann Lariscy, Georgia

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

Shelley Wigley, Texas – Arlington and Weiwu Zhang, Texas Tech

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

Message Development in the Terror Age

Christopher Swindell, Marshall

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

and Fundraising

Brooke Weberling, North Carolina

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

and Relationship Quality Outcomes

Eyun-Jung Ki and Kenon Brown, 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

Maria DeMoya and Rajul Jain, Florida

59. Social Media And Strategic Communications: Attitudes And Perceptions

Among College Students

Bobbi Kay Lewis, Oklahoma State

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

Changed in Global Corporations? Comparing 2004 to 2009

Dustin Supa, Ball State and Lynn Zoch, Radford

61. Legitimacy 2.0: Possible Research Avenues for Corporate Reputation

in the Digital Age*

Joy Rodgers, Florida

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

By Public Relations Practitioners: A Two-Year Trend Study

Don Wright, Boston

and Michelle Hinson, 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

David Dozier and Bey-Ling Sha, San Diego State

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

Perspective of U.S. Public Diplomats

Kathy Fitzpatrick, Quinnipiac; Alice Kendrick, Southern Methodist

and Jami Fullerton, Oklahoma State

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

Help Multinational Corporations Build Social Capital in Host Countries

Moonhee Cho, Florida

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

Networks Influence External Practice

Erich Sommerfeldt, Oklahoma

67. Explicating Cynicism toward Corporate Social Responsibility: Causes

and Communication Approaches

Hyejoon Rim, Florida

Discussant: Colleen Connolly-Ahern, Pennsylvania State

Theme — Relationships/Publics

68. Organization-Employee Relationship Maintenance Strategies:

A New Measuring Instrument

Hongmei Shen, San Diego State

69. Corporate Social Responsibility and Organization-Public Relationships:

Public Relations and Marketing Educators’ Perspectives

Daewook Kim and Mary Ann Ferguson, Florida

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

Management Process: Towards an Integrated Framework

Rita Linjuan Men, Miami and Chun-ju Flora Hung, Hong Kong Baptist

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

Strategies with South Korean Citizens During a Crisis

Hanna Park and Linda Hon, Florida

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

Jarim Kim, 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

Jack Karlis and August E. Grant, South Carolina

Social Identity and Convergence: News Faculty and Student Perspectives

on Web, Print, and Broadcast Skills

Glenn Hubbard, Texas at Arlington; Elizabeth Crawford, North Dakota State

and Vincent Filak, Wisconsin-Oshkosh

Discussant: Anthony Moretti, Point Park

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 229

Scholastic Journalism Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: A Status Report on Student Expression:

What the Research Shows

Moderating/Presiding: John Bowen, Kent State

Tinkering with Student Expression: The Schoolhouse Gate Becomes

a Revolving Door

Thomas Eveslage, Temple

Toothless Tinker: The Continued Erosion of Student Speech Rights*

Dan Kozlowski, Saint Louis

Protecting the “Impressionable Minds” From The “Impressionable Minds”:

The Third-person Effect and Student Speech**

Adam Maksl and Brian Schraum, Missouri

Squelching Student Speech in Florida?: Cyberbullying

and the First Amendment

Kara Carnley Murrhee, Florida

Discussant: Genelle Belmas, California State-Fullerton

* Laurence Campbell Research Award, Top Faculty Paper

** Top Student Paper

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 230

Visual Communication and Communication Technology Divisions

Teaching Panel Session: Best of the Web

Moderating/Presiding: Phil Loubere, Middle Tennessee State

Winning Presentations:

Individual Innovation


First Place: Media Law Class

Ben Wasike, Texas, Brownsville


Second Place: Media, Power, & Culture

Gary Hanson, Kent State

Third Place: Automatic Action Script Production

Byung Lee, Elon

Team Innovation


First Place(tie): Streets of Dreams

Leslie-Jean Thornton, Arizona State

First Place(tie): Latinos & Hispanics in America

Jason Manning, Arizona State


Third Place: May Day Show

Alba Mora-Roca, California at Berkeley

Individual Journalism


First Place: Honduras and the Hidden Hunger

Tracy Boyer, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Team Journalism


First Place: Living Galapagos

Patrick Davison, North Carolina at Chapel Hill


Second Place: The Young and the Wireless

Steve Davis, Syracuse


Third Place(tie): Powering a Nation

Laura Ruel, North Carolina at Chapel Hill


Third Place(tie): The New Voters

Leslie Walker, Maryland


Honorable Mention: Five Teenagers

Kara Platoni, California at Berkeley


Honorable Mention: BARThood

Jeremy Rue, California at Berkeley

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 231

Community College Journalism Association

Teaching Panel Session: Using Technology Tools to Make Your Story Better

Moderating/Presiding: Robert Muilenberg, Del Mar

Panelists: Elena Jarvis, Daytona State

Toni Albertson, Mt. San Antonio

Robert Mercer, Cypress

This session will show you how to teach your students to incorporate the latest tools and applications into your online publications and how to be better digital storytellers.

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 232

Communicating Science, Health, Environment and Risk Interest Group and Magazine Division

Teaching Panel Session: Communicating Policy, Pandemics and Pink Ribbons

Moderating/Presiding: Brian Southwell, Minnesota

Panelists: Holly Stocking, Indiana

Lindsey Koehler, managing editor, 5280 Magazine

Leyla Kokmen, Health Reform communications coordinator,

Minnesota Department of Health

Tom Linden, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 233

Graduate Education Interest Group

Refereed Paper Research Session: It’s All Political: Graduate Education Interest Group

Moderating/Presiding: Erica Salkin, Wisconsin-Madison

The Writing on the Wall: A Content Analysis of College Students’

Facebook Groups for the 2008 Presidential Election

Kevin W. Bowers, Juliana Fernandes, Magda Giurcanu

and Jeffrey C. Neely, Florida

Wait, Who Said That? The Role of Source Cue Placement in Argument Evaluation

D. Jasun Carr and Emily Vraga, Wisconsin-Madison

“Star Wars” Revisited: An Analysis of Ronald Reagan’s Rhetoric On

The Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI)

Ji Hoon Lee, Florida

The Success of Opting Out? Political Information in the Changing

Media Environment

Leticia Bode, Wisconsin-Madison

Discussant: Robert Margesson, Regis

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 234

Religion and Media and Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Interest Groups

Teaching Panel Session: Sex, Media and Religion

Moderating/Presiding: Dane S. Claussen, Point Park

Panelists: Dane S. Claussen, Point Park

Tien-Tsung Lee, Kansas

Cecile Holmes, South Carolina

Jason M. Shepard, California State

Gary Hicks, Southern Illinois-Edwardsville

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 235

Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass Communication

Panel Session: Building Bridges to High School Journalism

Moderating/Presiding: Lillian Lodge Kopenhaver, Florida International

Panelists: Research to Support Scholastic Media

Candace Perkins Bowen, Kent State

Reaching Out Through Workshops and More

Linda Puntney, Journalism Education Association

Building Partnerships

Vanessa Shelton, Iowa

Forging Mentoring Relationships Through Events and Community-driven Projects Andrea Breemer Frantz, Robert Morris

8:15 am to 3 pm / 236

Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass Communication

Workshop Session: 2010-11 JMC Leadership Institute

Convener:  Jennifer McGill, AEJMC Executive Director

Welcome: Maria Marron, Central Michigan, ASJMC President

Speaker: Derek Lane, Kentucky

Session is only for the members of the 2010-11 class of the JMC Leadership Institute. The institute is for first-time deans and directors of journalism and mass communication programs.

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 237

Dow Jones News Fund

Workshop Session: Breakfast of Editing Champions

Moderating/Presiding: Andy Bechtel, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

and Deborah Gump, Middle Tennessee State

A working gathering for editing professors and others interested in the craft of editing. The focus is on training students for a multiplatform career, with special emphasis on handling professional pressures unique to the online world. Special guests include Teresa Schmedding, president of the American Copy Editors Society, and Denver-area journalists. In addition, the Teaching Idea Exchange returns with participants' most effective classroom tips and strategies.

8:15 am to 9:45 am / 238

University of Southern California Annenberg School for Communication

Invited Paper Session: USC Annenberg Research Presentation: Wikipedia and The Future of News

Moderating/Presiding: name, affiliation

Panelists: Reinventing Local News

Adam Clayton Powell III, Vice Provost at the University of Southern California

The Impact of Wikipedia: Crowds, Collaboration and Curation Remaking the News

Andrew Lih, associate professor, USC Annenberg School for Communication

and Journalism

Andrew Lih, USC Annenberg associate professor of journalism, and Adam Clayton Powell III, senior fellow at USC Annenberg’s Center on Communication Leadership & Policy, present new research findings on the future of news, how new technologies are connecting communities and the effects of peer-produced knowledge on news gathering. Lih, author of The Wikipedia Revolution, will discuss models for understanding the new collaborative network of information creation and real-time fact checking of news stories. Powell has updated his landmark book, Reinventing Local News, with new data examining how well local broadcasters and websites cover the fundamental local issues that are critical to an informed citizenry.

Breakfast will be served.

10 am to Noon / 239

Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

General Business Session: AEJMC Business Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Carol J. Pardun, South Carolina, AEJMC 2009-10 President

Award Presentations:

Paul J. Deutschmann Award

Recipient: Stephen Lacy, Michigan State

Hillier Krieghbaum Under-40 Award

Recipient: Dietram Scheufele, Wisconsin-Madison

Nafziger-White-Salwen Dissertation Award

Recipient: Jeremy Littau, Lehigh

Lionel C. Barrow, Jr. Award for Distinguished Achievement in Diversity

Research and Education

Recipient: Robert M. Ruggles, emeritus, Florida A&M

Award Announcement:

2010 Gene Burd Urban Journalism Award

Recipients: Joel Kotkin, Urban Historian and Social Demographer

and Inga Saffron, architecture critic, Philadelphia Inquirer

Remarks by: Gary Gumpert, Urban Communication Foundation

Presentation of Commission on the Status of Women Awards

Donna Allen Award for Feminist Advocacy

Recipient: Pamela Creedon, Iowa

Mary Gardner Award for Graduate Student Research

Recipient: Carolyn Martindale Edy, North Carolina

Mary Ann Yodelis Smith Award for Feminist Scholarship

Recipient: Sheila Webb, Western Washington

Outstanding Woman in Journalism and Mass Communication Education

Recipient: Diane Borden, San Diego State

Installation of 2010-11 AEJMC President: Jan Slater, Illinois at Urbana

12:15 pm to 1:30 pm / 240

Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

Refereed Paper Research Session: Scholar-to-Scholar

Cultural and Critical Studies Division

Theme — Music Culture and The Search for Meaning

1. Understanding the Local and the Global in Mexican Rock Music:

An Alternative Theoretical Framework

Magdelana Red, Colorado at Boulder

2. Hip Hop versus Dancehall: Caribbean Popular Culture, Is It Cultural

Hegemony or Contestation?

Juliette Storr, Pennsylvania State

3. The Folk Cacography of Woody Guthrie*

Matthew Blake, California State, Chico

Discussant: Kelley Crowley, West Virginia

* Third-Place Faculty Paper, Cultural and Critical Studies Division

Theme — American Politics and Media

4. Will an Electronic Medical Record Policy Maintain Privacy and Cut Costs?:

A Comparison of Frames

Hannah Kang and Dae-Hee Kim, Florida

5. Candidate Obama in the News: “True Blue Populism” and Social Production

of Empty Signifiers in Political Reporting

Anup Kumar, Cleveland State

6. Expanding the Public Sphere? An Examination of Print and Web Site

Commentary at The Washington Post**

Ed Simpson, Ohio

7. Throwing a Right Cross: U.S. Conservative Counterpublic Discourses

on Academic Freedom

Christopher Brown, Ohio State

Discussant: Katie Foss, Middle Tennessee State

** Second-Place Student Paper, Cultural and Critical Studies Division

History Division

8. Considering Contempt by Publication, 1800-1830

Butler Cain, West Texas A&M

9. A Celebrated Illustrator and the Man Behind the Man:

J. C. Leyendecker and Charles Beach

Rodger Streitmatter, American

10. A Half Crazy Fellow: Newspapers and the Insanity Plea

of the Assassin Charles Guiteau

Justin Murphy, Syracuse

Discussant: Jon Marshall, Northwestern

11. An Incitement to Riot: Television’s Role in the Civil Disorders

of the Summer of ’67

Thomas Hrach, Memphis

12. Courage and Composure: The Framing of the 1916 Easter Rising Rebels

as Heroes in the Irish Times

Carrie Teresa, Temple

13. Frontier Fears: The Clash of Indians and Whites in the Newspapers

of Mankato, Minnesota, 1863-1865

Charles Lewis, Minnesota State, Mankato

14. Managing China’s Image Abroad: Justification and Institutionalization

of Internal Propaganda in Republican China

Yong Volz, Missouri

Discussant: Ann Thorne, Missouri Western State

International Communication Division

15. How Two Irish Newspapers Framed the 2007 British Military

Withdrawal From Northern Ireland*

Dave Ferman, Oklahoma

16. Analyzing the Spell of War: A War/Peace Framing Analysis of the 2009

Visual Coverage of the Sri Lankan Civil Conflict in Newswires**

Rico Neumann and Shahira Fahmy, Arizona

17. From Heritage to Horror: Crisis Coverage of the Mumbai Terrorist Attacks

Bridgette Colaco, Troy

18. Reinforcing Functions of Attention to Affective Coverage

and Partisans for Attitudes

Jeongsub Lim, Sogang University

19. Procedural Justice Matters More than Distributive Justice: How the

Saddam Hussein Trial Became a Show Trial

Jin Yang, Memphis

20. More Troops, More War: A Framing Analysis of International News

Coverage of the Troop Surge in Afghanistan

James Ian Tennant, Texas at Austin

Discussants: Thimios Zaharopoulos, Park and Hun Shik Kim, Colorado at Boulder

* Top Student Paper, First Place

** Top Faculty Paper, Second Place

Mass Communication and Society Division

21. Issue Attention Cycles and the H1N1 Pandemic: A Cross-National Study

of U.S. and Korean Newspaper Coverage

Hyun Jung Oh, Thomas Hove and Hye-Jin Paek, Michigan;

Byoungkwan Lee, Hanyang University

and Sun Kyu Song, Incross Inc.

22. Common Acceptance Rate Calculation Practices in Communication

Journals: Developing Best Practices

Stephen Perry and Lindsey Michalski, Illinois State

23. The Skinny on Weight Stigmatization: Testing the Effectiveness of a Media

Literacy Program Designed to Decrease Anti-Fat Bias in Children

Scott Parrott and Kimberley Bissell, Alabama

24. The Effects of Video Game Controls on Hostility, Identification, Involvement,

and Presence

Kevin Williams, Mississippi State

Discussant: Mike Schmierbach, Pennsylvania State

25. Listening in: Profiling Podcast Users and Their Political Participation

Monica Chadha, Alex Avila and Homero Gil de Zuniga, Texas at Austin

26. Pundits or Pugilists? The Role of Guest Incivility in Televised Debate

D. Jasun Carr, Emily Vraga, Courtney Johnson, Mitchell Bard

and Young Mie Kim, Wisconsin-Madison

27. Man-child in the White House: The Discursive Construction of Barack Obama

in Reader Comments at

Fred Vultee, Wayne State

Discussant: Jennifer Henderson, Trinity

Media Management and Economics Division

28. Factors Determining the Popularity of Fortune 500 Corporate Blogs

Eun Hwa Jung, Dae-Hee Kim

and Angie B. Lindsey, Florida

29. New Business Pursuit at a Small Advertising Agency: An Emerging Model

for the Pursuit of New Accounts

Daniel Haygood, Elon and Jae Park, Tennessee

30. News Editors? Beliefs and Attitudes toward Online Advertising: A Happy Balance

Between Journalistic Ideals and Commercial Realities?

Jisu Huh, Minnesota-Twin Cities;

Tsan-Kuo Chang, City University of Hong Kong,

Brian Southwell, Hyung Min Lee and Yejin Hong, Minnesota-Twin Cities

31. Predicting Theatrical Movies’ Financial Success

Seung Hyun Park, Hallym and Namkee Park, Oklahoma

32. Refashioning Television: A Structural Analysis of Webisodes

L. Meghan Peirce, Ohio and Tang Tang, Wisconsin-Oshkosh

33. Text is Still Best: Online Editors’ Attitudes Toward News Story Platforms

Bartosz Wojdynski, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

34. The New Economics of Advertising

Andrew Gaerig, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Discussants: Glenda Alvarado, South Carolina and Brad Scharlott, Northern Kentucky

Radio-Television Journalism Division

35. Bridging the Gap Between Students and Veteran Journalists:

Promising Practices for Journalism Educators

Sarah Holtan, Concordia

36. What Was the Murrow Tradition? A Case for Supplementing

Historical Research with Content Analysis

Raluca Cozma, Iowa State

37. Marketing Sensationalism: A Comparison of Television News

in Mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan

Shuhua Zhou, Alabama; Trisha Lin, Nanyang Technological

and Cui Zhang, Alabama

Discussant: Anthony Moretti, Point Park

Visual Communication Division

38. College Student Preferences for Trendy Versus Classic Typefaces: A Q-Study

Tara Buehner, Oklahoma

39. Four Years Later: A Longitudinal Study of Emerging Visual Icons of Hurricane Katrina

Andrea Miller and Nicole S. Dahmen, Louisiana State

40. How a Multimedia Course Design Affects Differing Learning Styles in the

Visual Communication Classroom

Jennifer George-Palilonis, Ball State and Vincent Filak, Wisconsin-Oshkosh

41. Remembering 9/11 through Photos in Anniversary Editions of Impact Site Newspapers

Bob Britten, West Virginia

42. Show Me a Story: The Synergy of Photo Stories and Words

Carolyn Yaschur, Texas

43. The Visual Rhetoric of Consumer Journalism

Grant Hannis, Massey

Discussant: Michael O’Donnell, St. Thomas

Communicating Science, Health, Environment and Risk Interest Group

44. Effect of Ecological, Proximal, and Psychometric Risk Perception on Reported

Self-protective Behavior for West Nile Virus

Craig Trumbo and Raquel Harper, Colorado State;


Emily Zielinski-Gutiérrez, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
;

Cindy Kronauge, Weld County Department of Health and Environment


and Sara Evans, Weld County Department of Health and Environment

45. The Role of Perceived Risk and Self-efficacy in Health Information Seeking,

Preventive Behaviors and Choice of Media Channels

Eun Go, Florida

46. Unrealistic Optimism: A Systematic Review of Perceptions of Health Risks

Sherine El-Toukhy, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

47. Empowering the Patient to Maximize the HealthCare Exam

Andrea Ciletti and Penny Pence Smith, Hawaii Pacific

48. A Comparative Analysis of Chinese and American Newspapers’ Coverage

of the Milk Scandal in China

Lulu Rodriguez and 
Jiajun Yao, Iowa State

49. Employing Strategic Ambiguity in a Multimedia Message: The Case

of Hurricane Charley

Gina Eosco, Kentucky; 
Shari Veil, University of Oklahoma

and 
Kevin Kloesel, Oklahoma College of Atmospheric

and Geographic Sciences/National Weather Center

50. Talking Green: Green Quad, Communication Behavior

and Environmental Norms

Daphney Barr and Caroline Foster, South Carolina

 

Entertainment Studies Interest Group

51. Alcoholic Content: A Textual Analysis of Rock of Love

Tim Hogarth, Mike McComb, Kareema Pinckney

and Sandra Smith, Syracuse

52. The Lady Is (Still) a Tramp: Prime-Time Portrayals of Women

Who Love Sex

Jan Whitt, Colorado

53. Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why? Doctors, Diseases, and Mortality

in TV Medical Dramas

Julie Andsager, Rauf Arif, James Carviou, Kyle Moody

and Erin O’Gara, Iowa

Discussant: Daniel Shipka, Louisiana State

54. Critic-Adored, Award-Ignored: Roots and Consequences

of Emmy Gone Wire-less

Todd Sodano, St. John Fisher

55. Using Sense of Control and Sense of Others to Explicate User Experiences

and Impact of Online Games

Gunwoo Yoon, Graduate School of Culture Technology, KAIST

and Seoungho Ryu, Kangwon National University, Korea

56. Uses and Gratifications Structural Model of Videogame Play

Emil Bakke and L. Meghan Peirce, Ohio

Discussant: Maria Fontenot, Texas Tech

Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Interest Group

57. Breeding Masculinities: Bareback Pornography and the Fluid Phallus

Byron Lee, Temple

12:15 pm to 1:30 pm / 241

Public Relations Division

Off-site Luncheon Session: Bill Adams/Edelman Luncheon

Moderating/Presiding: Patricia Swann, Utica and Colleen Connolly-Ahern, Pennsylvania State

Luncheon Speaker: Jane Madden, senior vice president, Corporate Social Responsibility

& Sustainability, Edelman Chicago

Luncheon to take place at The Rialto Café, 934 16th St.,16th Street Mall. Pre-registration is required. Sponsor: Edelman Worldwide Public Relations. For more information, please contact Heidi Hatfield Edwards, Florida Tech, at heidihat@fit.edu.

12:15 pm to 1:30 pm / 242

Scholastic Journalism and Minorities and Communication Divisions

Off-site Award Luncheon

Moderating/Presiding: Vanessa Shelton, Iowa, SCHJ Head;

Jennifer Woodard, Middle Tennessee State, MAC Head

and Petra Guerra, Texas Pan American, MAC Second Vice-Head

Presentation of Scholastic Journalism Division’s Robert P. Knight Multicultural Award

Recipient: University of Arizona School of Journalism

Speaker: Nadia Gedeon, president, Colorado Association of Black Journalists;

night-side assignment editor, KUSA-TV9 News

Luncheon will be held at the Denver Press Club, 1330 Glenarm Place (a short distance from the hotel) and is partially funded by the Center for Scholastic Journalism at Kent State University. Pre-registration is required.

12:15 pm to 1:30 pm / 243

Commission on the Status of Women

Luncheon Session: CSW Anniversary Luncheon & Mentoring Network Launch

Moderating/Presiding: Carolyn Byerly, Howard and Dustin Harp, Texas at Austin

Luncheon Speaker: TBA

Pre-registration is required.

12:15 pm to 1:30 pm / 244

Civic & Citizen Journalism and Community Journalism Interest Groups and Communication Technology Division

Luncheon Session: Networked Journalism: How Old and New Media are Collaborating

Introduction: Mary Beth Callie, Regis

Moderating/Presiding: Jan Schaffer, J-Lab, American

Panelists: Bob Payne, director of communities,

Steve Gunn, editor, Innovations and New Products, Charlotte Observer

Rick Hirsch, senior editor/ Multimedia, The Miami Herald

Luncheon produced by J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism with funding from the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation. Pre-registration is required.

12:15 pm to 1:30 pm / 245

Small Programs Interest Group

Off-site Luncheon Session: Honoring the 2010 SPIG Teacher of the Year

Moderating/Presiding: Vivian Martin, Central Connecticut State

Luncheon Speaker: TBA

Luncheon to be held at Maggiano’s Little Italy in Denver Pavillions.

12:15 pm to 2 pm / 246

Hearst Journalism Awards Program

Off-site Business Session: Steering Committee Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Jan Watten, program director, Hearst Awards Program

and Douglas Anderson, Pennsylvania State

1 pm to 3 pm / 247

Law and Policy Division

Off-site Tour: Tenth Circuit Courthouse Tour

Moderating/Presiding: Derigan Silver, Denver

As part of the AEJMC Annual Conference, the Law and Policy Division will be hosting a guided tour of the Byron R. White U.S. Courthouse, home of the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, and a question and answer session with current Tenth Circuit judges.  Located a ten-minute walk from the conference hotel, the Neo-Classical Courthouse was completed between 1910 and 1916 and listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. In 1994, it was renamed in honor of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron R. White (1917-2002) a native of Fort Collins, Colorado.  After a 30-45 minute tour of the Courthouse, guided by the clerk of the court and her staff, there will be a 45-minute to one-hour question and answer session with some of the judges who sit on the Tenth Circuit.  Pre-registration is required.

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 248

Advertising Division and Entertainment Studies Interest Group

PF&R Panel Session: Movies and Marketing: Selling the Silver Screen

Moderating/Presiding: Jami Fullerton, Oklahoma State

Panelists: Julie Reiger, executive vice president of Media and Marketing Planning,

20th Century Fox

Helen Green, executive creative director, Greenhaus GFX

Paul Holtzhausen, co-owner/editor, Vibe Creative

Lance Porter, Louisiana State

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 249

Communication Technology Division and Graduate Education Interest Group

Refereed Paper Research Session: Understanding the Digital World: Trust, Relationships

and Social Media - Top Student Papers Session

Moderating/Presiding: Marcus Messner, Virginia Commonwealth

Screen Name Interpretation Strategy As a Corollary of Social Media Experience:

Toward a Hierarchy of Virtual Needs*

Jaime Banks, Colorado State

Discussant: Don Heider, Loyola, Chicago

Are You What You Tweet? Warranting Trustworthiness on Twitter**

Andrew Schrock, Southern California

Discussant: Richard Craig, San José State

How Should I Reach You? A Quantitative Analysis of Interpersonal Relationship

Dialectics in Computer Mediated Communication***

David Fry, Colorado State

Discussant: Augustus Grant, South Carolina

* First Place Student Paper

** Second Place Student Paper

*** Third Place Student Paper

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 250

Cultural and Critical Studies Division and Religion and Media Interest Group

Teaching Panel Session: Brainstorming: Teaching Students to Think Critically and Creatively

Moderating/Presiding: Erika Engstrom, Nevada Las Vegas

Panelists: Brainstorming Questions and the Bulletproof Story: Helping Students

Craft Questions Before, During, and After the Interview

Paola Banchero, Alaska-Anchorage

Extracting the Stone of Madness: Brainstorming, Critical Media Literacy

and Mindfulness

Ralph Beliveau, Oklahoma

Brainstorming the Big Picture: Thinking Concretely About the Relationships

between Mass Media and Society

Peggy Bowers, Clemson

Social Reporting: Harnessing The Power of Curiosity And Helping Students

Generate Culturally Relevant Research Ideas

Susan Brockus, California State Chico

1:45 pm to 4:45 pm / 251

History Division

Off-site Session: The Denver Post and the “Bucket of Blood”

This off-site session will feature a conversation with Gregory L. Moore, who has been editor of The Denver Post since 2002, a period that coincided with the culmination of a newspaper war with the now-defunct Rocky Mountain News. We’ll also take a look back to the late 19th century and the early days of the Post, when its lurid content gave rise to the moniker the “bucket of blood.” The Post’s owners then were Gilmer Bonfils and Harry Tammen, and Time magazine once said they “stirred up a brand of journalistic dust in Denver’s rarefied air which made Hearst look stuffy.” The Denver Post is a 5-minute walk from the conference site.

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 252

Minorities and Communication and International Communication Divisions

PF&R Panel Session: The Tenure Process from the Perspective of Minority, Women

and International Faculty: Strategies for Success

Moderating/Presiding: Claire Serant, St. John’s

Panelists: Challenges for International Faculty in the Tenure Process

Margaretha Geertsema, Butler

Process Management of Tenure and Promotion

Pam McAllister Johnson, Western Kentucky

Tenure is a Game. Play by the Rules.

Jerry Domatob, Alcorn State

Unspoken Rules: Lessons Learned on the Promotion Committee

Sharon B. Stringer, Lockhaven

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 253

Radio-Television Journalism Division

PF&R Panel Session: New Models of TV Convergence

Moderating/Presiding: Robert Papper, Hofstra

Panelists: Patti Dennis, vice-president of news, KUSA-TV, Denver

Augie Grant, South Carolina

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 254

Community College Journalism Association and Magazine Division

Teaching Panel Session: The Multiplatform Magazine

Moderating/Presiding: Jacqueline Marino, Kent State

Panelists: Doug Schnitzspahn, editor-in-chief, Elevation Outdoors magazine

John Capouya, Tampa

Toni Albertson, Mt. San Antonio

Lori Blachford, Drake

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 255

Commission on the Status of Women

Refereed Paper Research Session: Who Are You? Identity and Gender in the Mediated World

Moderating/Presiding: Stacey Hust, Washington State

Plugging Old-media Values Into “New Media”: Social Identity and the Attitudes

of Sports Bloggers Toward Issues of Gender in Sport*

Marie Hardin, Bu Zhong and Thomas Corrigan, Pennsylvania State

Mammy Revisited: How Media Portrayals Of Overweight Black Women

Affect How Black Women Feel About Themselves*

Gina Chen, Sherri Williams, Nicole Hendrickson,

and Li Chen, Syracuse

A Comparison of Gender Portrayals in News Content across Platforms

and Coverage Areas*

Cory Armstrong and Fangfang Gao, Florida

Discussant: Pamela Laucella, Indiana

* Top Paper

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 256

Civic & Citizen Journalism Interest Group and Media Management and Economics Division

PF&R Panel Session: Media Entrepreneurship and Innovation: New Business Models,

New Career Paths

Moderating/Presiding: Anne Hoag, Pennsylvania State

Panelists: Ben Compaine, Northeastern

Nikhil Moro, North Texas

Debashis “Deb” Aikat, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 257

Communicating Science, Health, Environment and Risk Interest Group

Refereed Paper Research Session: Risk Communication and Amplification

Moderating/Presiding: Linda Florence Callahan, North Carolina A&T State

Swine Flu Shift: Effects of Risk and Concern on Health Information Sources

During a Pandemic

Avery Holton, Texas at Austin

Communicating a Health Epidemic: A Risk Assessment of the Swine Flu

Coverage in U.S. Newspapers

Nan Yu, Dennis Frohlich, Jared Fougner

and Lezhao Ren, North Dakota State

News Media and the Social Amplification of Risk for Seasonal Influenza

Craig Trumbo, Colorado State

Amplifying Risk to Activate Protection Motivation: Merck’s Gardasil Campaign

Susan Grantham, Hartford; Lee Ahern

and Colleen Connolly-Ahern, Pennsylvania State

Emergency Risk Communication in the University Community: Exploring Factors

Affecting Use for SMS Emergency-Alert Service

Jee Young Chung and Doohwang Lee, Alabama

Discussant: Katherine Rowan, George Mason

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 258

Community Journalism Interest Group and Newspaper Division

PF&R Panel Session: Community Newspapers: Healthiest in the Trade, But for How Long?

Moderating/Presiding: Al Cross, Kentucky

Panelists: Benjy Hamm, executive editor, Landmark Community Newspapers,

Shelbyville, Kentucky

Jock Lauterer, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Dean Lehman, president/editor, Lehman Communications Corp., Longmont, CO

M.E. Sprengelmeyer, editor/publisher, Guadalupe County Communicator,

Santa Rosa, New Mexico

Faith Wylie, editor, Oologah Lake Leader, Oologah, OK

John Wylie, publisher, Oologah Lake Leader, Oologah, OK

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 259

Internship and Careers Interest Group and Community College Journalism Association

PF&R Panel Session: Preparing Students to Succeed on Camera, Online, and in Print

Moderating/Presiding: James Simon, Fairfield

Panelists: Tim Ryan, Channel 9 News, Denver

Jeanette Chavez, The Denver Post

Kathleen Ryan, Miami

Don Stacom, Connecticut

Terri Lynn Johnson, Eastern Illinois

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 260

Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

High Density Invited Research Session: AEJMC Scholars Program Showcase

Moderating/Presiding: Felix Gutierrez, Southern California

Call for 2011 Projects: Stephen Lacy, Michigan State

2010 Scholars Program Projects (listed alphabetically by PI):

The Internet Defends Itself: The Network Neutrality Debate on the Web

Bill Herman, Hunter and Minjeong Kim, Colorado State

Discussant: Jennifer Greer, Alabama

Citizen Journalism and Social Media in the 2010 Election: A Multi-method

Approach to Understanding Emerging Trends and Innovations in Mass

Communication Campaigns

Heather LaMarre, Minnesota

Discussant: Mary Arnold, South Dakota State

A Survey of Subpoenas against Anonymous Internet Speakers and Outcomes

Jasmine McNealy, Syracuse

Discussant: Brian Carroll, Berry

Gay Marriage in the News

Leigh Moscowitz, College of Charleston

Discussant: Julie Andsager, Iowa

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 261

Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly

Research Panel Session: Does Journalism and Mass Communication Research Matter?

Moderating/Presiding: Daniel Riffe, editor, J&MCQ, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Panelists: Kimberly L. Bissell, Alabama

W. Wat Hopkins, Virginia Tech

Susan Keith, Rutgers

Stephen R. Lacy, Michigan State

Patricia Moy, Washington

Karen B. Dunlap, Poynter Institute

1:45 pm to 3:15 pm / 262

Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass Communication

Business Session: General Business Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Maria Marron, Central Michigan

Installation of 2010-2011 ASJMC President: Paul Parsons, Elon

2 pm to 6 pm / 263

Visual Communication Division

Off-site Tour: Hiking Colorado: A Photo Excursion

Moderating/Presiding: Jeremy Gilbert, Northwestern and Jennifer George-Palilonis, Ball State

Join the VISC Division for an afternoon hike. Photographers, bring your cameras, this is a photo excursion! The scenic hike will provide visual journalists with great subject matter for their own photo portfolios and personal artwork. It will be an opportunity to commune with nature and your VISC colleagues. We’ll provide traditional hiking snacks, such as bottled water and trail mix, as well as transportation to and from the hike.

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 264

Communication Theory and Methodology Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: Exploring Otherness

Moderating/Presiding: Theodore L. Glasser, Stanford

Talking About Poverty: News Framing of Responsibility and the Public’s

Support for Government Aid to the Poor

Sei-Hill Kim, South Carolina; James Shanahan, Boston University

and Doo-Hun Choi, Wisconsin-Madison

Anti-Americanism as a Media Effect? Arab Media, Prior Cognitions,

and Public Opinion in the Middle East

Erik Nisbet and Teresa Myers, Ohio State

Reinforcing Spirals of Negative Affects and Selective Attention

to Advertising in a Political Campaign

Christian Schemer, Zurich

The Effect of Narrative News Format on Empathy for Stigmatized Groups

Mary Beth Oliver, James P. Dillard, Keunmin Bae

and Daniel J. Tamul, Pennsylvania State

Discussant: Jason Reineke, Middle Tennessee State

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 265

Law and Policy and Advertising Divisions

Research Panel Session: Regulating Tobacco Advertising in the Current Constitutional

Landscape: Thirty Years Post-Central Hudson

Moderating/Presiding: Anthony Fargo, Indiana

Panelists: Clay Calvert, Florida

Michael Hoefges, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Peggy Kreshel, Georgia

Jodi Radke, regional advocacy director, Rocky Mountain/Great Plains Region,

Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 266

Mass Communication and Society and Newspaper Divisions

Refereed Paper Research Scholar-to-Scholar Session

Mass Communication and Society Division

1. Multivariate Testing of the Dark Side of Social Capital

Weiwu Zhang and Jerod Foster, Texas Tech

2. Experiment Examining Poll Disclosure Effects on Issue Attitudes

and Perceived Credibility

Ashley Kirzinger, Louisiana State

3. Filling the Credibility Gap with News Use: College Students’ News Habits,

Preferences, and Credibility Perceptions

Matt Schafer, Louisiana State

4. Human Interest and Deceptiveness in the News: Faking a Human Face

Ingrid Bachmann, Texas at Austin

Discussant: Dennis T. Lowry, Southern Illinois at Carbondale

5. Creating Cultural Conflict: Biased Geographic Reporting of Crime

on the “Southeast Side”

Robert Gutsche, Jr., Iowa

6. Biofuels and Public Benefit and Risk Perceptions: The Interacting Effects

of Political Ideology and Media Attention

Michael Cacciatore, Andrew Binder, Dietram Scheufele,

and Bret Shaw, Wisconsin-Madison

7. The Digital Boneyard: An Exploration of Death, Simulacra, and Social

Networking Sites

Andi Prewitt, Portland State

8. The World According to Beck: An Economic Exchange of Abstract Symbolism

Between Subjects

Christina Lefevre-Gonzalez, Colorado at Boulder

Discussant: Cynthia M. Frisby, Missouri-Columbia

9. Every Little Thing’s Gonna Be All Right; Popular Music as a Way of Coping

After the Virginia Tech Shootings

Jennifer Billinson, Syracuse

10. Exploring Effectiveness of Credibility in Usage of Political Blogs

June-yung Kim and Hanna Park, Florida

11. Comparing Frames Analysis: The Influenza A (H1N1) Flu in U.S.

and South Korea Newspapers

Jin Sook Im, Florida

12. Selective Moderating and Selective Responding of User Comments on Online

Social Media: A Field Experiment

Sung-Yeon Park, Gi Woong Yun, Kisung Yoon, Kyle J. Holody;

Shuang Xie and Anca Birzescu, Bowling Green State

Discussant: Vincent Filak, Wisconsin-Oshkosh

13. “Death in the American Family”: Framing of Health Care Reform After

Senator Edward Kennedy’s Death

Ben Lapoe, Louisiana State

14. Sources Without a Name: An Analysis of the Source Interaction Between

Elite Traditional News Media and Filter Blogs

Marcus Messner, Virginia Commonwealth

and Bruce Garrison, Miami

15. Exaggeration of Self in Everyday Life: Symbolic Interaction and

Lee Farquhar, Samford

16. Political Cynicism and Political Involvement Reconsidered: A Test of Antecedents

Hanlong Fu, Yi Mou, Mike Miller and Gerard Jalette, Connecticut

Discussant: Kwadwo Anokwa, Butler

17. Framing Across the Pond: A Comparative Perspective on the Media Coverage

of the 2009 Health Care Reform Debate

Jackson Foote, Missouri - St. Louis

18. Learning How to Vote: Vote Determinants for Parent-child Dyads in the 2008 Election

Leticia Bode, Kjerstin Thorson, Emily Vraga

and Dhavan Shah, Wisconsin-Madison

19. Triggering Body Dissatisfaction: The Role of Familiarity on Subsequent

Evaluations of the Self

Temple Northup, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

20. Conceptualizing the Role of Gender in Journalistic Practice: A Pilot Study

Examining Leverage

Maria Len-Rios, Amanda Hinnant

and JiYeon Jeong, Missouri-Columbia

Discussant: Frank E. Dardis, Pennsylvania State

21. Media Exposure, Self, Collective and Proxy Efficacy: Predicting Preventative

Behaviors in a Public Health Emergency

Xigen Li, City University of Hong Kong

and Xudong Liu, Southern Illinois at Carbondale

22. Mass Media and Racial/Ethnic Minorities; Analysis of News Coverage

of the Kosians (Korean-Asians) in South Korea, 2001-2009

Eun-Jeong Han, Washington State

23. Need for Orientation and Journalists’ Use of Political Blogs in Covering

the 2008 Presidential Campaign

Kyle Heim, Seton Hall

24. Measuring the Dynamics of Perceptual Gaps: A Survey of Public Relations

Practitioners and Journalists in U.S. and South Korea

Jae-Hwa Shin, Southern Mississippi

Discussant: Sonya R. Miller, North Carolina-Asheville

25. The Rumoring of SARS and the SARS of Rumoring at Times of Uncertainty

and Information Scarcity: A Study of the 2003 Epidemic in China

Zixue Tai, Kentucky and Tao Sun, Vermont

26. Affluenza Effects in a Broad Context: Twelve Further Tests of the

TV-Materialism Link

Mark Harmon, Tennessee

27. The External Side of the Story: An Examination of the Effect of Hyperlink

Network Structure on the Impact Level of NGO Web Sites

Aimei Yang, Oklahoma

28. The Effects of Cosmetic Surgery Reality Shows on the Cognitions of Beauty

and Desire for Cosmetic Enhancements

Shu-Yueh Lee, Wisconsin-Oshkosh

Discussant: Rod Carveth, Fitchburg State College

29. The Fury of the Storm: A Framing Analysis of the Climate Change Discussion

and Hurricane Katrina

Melissa Thompson, Minnesota

30. Trusting Institutions, Citizen Journalism and the Hostile Media Phenomena

Jill Hopke, Eugenia Highland and Hernando Rojas

and Albert Gunther, Wisconsin-Madison

31. Predictors of Verbal Aggression: Demographics, Sociological Factors,

and Media Usage

Jack Glascock, Illinois State

32. Behavioral Consequences of Conflict-Oriented News Coverage: The 2009

Mammography Guideline Controversy and Online Search Trends

Brian Weeks, Laura Friedenberg

and Brian Southwell, Minnesota-Twin Cities

and Jonathan Slater, Minnesota Department of Health

Discussant: Kathleen M. Ryan, Colorado at Boulder

33. An Exploration of Trends in Food Attitudes and Behaviors Among Adults

with 6-11 Year Old Children: An Agenda Setting Theory Perspective

Mariea Hoy and Courtney Childers, Tennessee

34. Involvement with Celebrities in Media: The Role of Parasocial Interaction,

Identification, Affinity, and Capture

Nainan Wen, Nanyang Technological University;

Stella Chia, City University of Hong Kong

and Xiaoming Hao, Nanyang Technological University

35. Connecting to One Another, Communities, and Newspapers

Rachel Davis Mersey, Northwestern

36. Exiting with Dignified Rhapsody: A Lexical Study of U.S. Presidential

Concession Speeches

Uche Onyebadi, Southern Illinois at Carbondale

Discussant: Jensen Moore, West Virginia

37. Wise Latina: The Framing of Sonia Sotomayor in the New York Times

and El Diario La Prensa

Carolyn Nielsen, Western Washington

38. Message Boards, Public Discourse and Historical Meaning: An Online

Community Reacts to September 11

Bonnie Bressers, Kansas State and Janice Hume, Georgia

39. Why Are We Losing the War on Obesity? Contradictory Social Cognitive Effects

of Media on Individuals’ Health and Behavior Against Higher BMI, Lower Education

Level, and Poverty

Hojoon Choi and Minsun Shim, Georgia

40. Effects of Media Use on Athletes’ Self-Perceptions

Cynthia Frisby, Missouri-Columbia

and Wayne Wanta, Oklahoma State

Discussant: Camilla Gant, West Georgia

Newspaper Division

41. Latino Candidates: Community Features, Newspaper Treatment, and Election

Outcomes in 14 Southwestern Cities

Jennifer Schwartz, Oregon

42. Walking a Tightrope: Obama’s Duality as Framed by Selected African American Columnists

Kenneth Campbell and Ernest Wiggins, South Carolina

43. News and Community in a Tumultuous Border Region

Cathleen Carter and Kris Kodrich, Colorado State

44. Latinos in Mainstream and Latino Press: An Argument for Cultural Citizenship

Lisa Paulin, North Carolina Central

Discussant: Margaret Duffy, Missouri

45. Courting Iran: The New York Times and Washington Post News Coverage

of the March 2000 U.S. Foreign Policy Changes

Abhinav Aima, Pennsylvania State, New Kensington

46. The G-20 Summit: An Analysis of Newspaper Coverage of Nine Days That

the World Came to Pittsburgh

Steve Hallock, Point Park

47. Covering a Teenage Killer: Using Framing to Qualitatively Analyze Baltimore Newspapers’

Coverage of the Murder of the Browning Family

Kimberly Lauffer and William Toohey, Towson

48. Decoding Darfur Conflict: Media Framing of a Complex Humanitarian Crisis

Mustafa Taha, American University of Sharjah, UAE

Discussant: Andi Stein, California State-Fullerton

49. Collective Memory and Discursive Contestations: Reconstruction of a Maoist-Era

Icon in China’s Government-controlled Newspapers

Ji Pan, South Carolina

50. An Early History of Newspaper Agents

Tim Vos, and You Li, Missouri

51. Integration or Law and Order - Editorial Stances of the Arkansas Gazette During

the Central High Crisis

Donna Stephens and Nokon Heo, Central Arkansas

Discussant: Susan Keith, Rutgers

52. Do Comments Count?: The Effects of Type and Amount of User-Generated

Comments on News Stories

Erin Ash, Kirstie Hettinga and Andrew Peeling, Pennsylvania State

53. Effects of Quantitative Literacy and Information Interference on the Processing

of Numbers in the News

Coy Callison, Texas Tech; Rhonda Gibson, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

and Dolf Zillmann, Alabama

54. It is All the Same Newspaper to Me: Assessment of the Online Newspapers Through

Uses and Gratification Analysis and Relationships with their Print Parents

Jelena Petrovic, New Mexico

55. Conversational Journalism: An Experimental Test of Traditional and “Collaborative”

Online News

Doreen Marchionni, Pacific Lutheran

Discussant: Michael J. O’Donnell, St. Thomas

56. Polarization or Moderaterism? Activist Group Ideology in Newspapers

Michael McCluskey, Ohio State

and Young Mie Kim, Wisconsin-Madison

57. When Citizens Meet Both Professional and Citizen Journalists: Social Trust,

Media Credibility, and Perceived Journalistic Roles Among Online Community

News Readers

Seungahn Nah and Deborah Chung, Kentucky

58. College Newspaper Editors and Controversial Topics: Applying the Third-person

Effect and the Willingness to Self-censor*

Vincent Filak, Wisconsin-Oshkosh

Discussant: Rod Carveth, Fitchburg State

* Top Faculty Paper, Second Place, Newspaper Division

59. Understanding the News Habit: An Exploration of the Factors

Affecting Media Choice

Jonathan Groves, Drury

60. Young Voters Online News Use and Political Tolerance: The Influence

of Alternative News Use to Argument Repertoire of College Students

Mi Jahng and HyunJee Oh, Missouri

Discussant: Ron Rogers, Florida

61. The Influence of Educational Information on Newspaper Reader Attitudes

Toward People With Mental Illness

Scott Parrott, Alabama

62. Frame-changing and Stages of a Crisis: Coverage of the H1N1 Flu Pandemic

Lily Zeng, Arkansas State

63. The Elite Press Coverage of the 2009 Health Care Reform Debate

Steven Adams, Iowa State

64. Declarations of Independence: Experts, Popular Sources, and Press

Independence in the Health Care Debate*

Matthew Barnidge, Louisiana State

Discussant: Anju Chaudhary, Howard

* Top Student Paper, First Place, Newspaper Division

65. A Discourse Analysis of Supreme Court Case Coverage in News

Magazines and Newspapers

Kathryn Blevins, Pennsylvania State

and Courtney Barclay, Syracuse

66. Abortion and Same-Sex Marriage: “Wedging” Issues Together

Through Indexing

Cindy Elmore, East Carolina

67. The Good, Bad, and Unknown: Coverage of Biotechnology in Media

Ann Reisner and Gwen Soult, Illinois

Discussant: Tracy Everbach, North Texas

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 267

Commission on the Status of Women and Cultural and Critical Studies Division

Research Panel Session: Charting the Course: Experienced Feminist Scholars Reflect

on the Prospects for Feminist Scholarship in the Future

Moderating/Presiding: Brenda J. Wrigley, Syracuse

Panelists: Larissa Grunig, professor emerita, Maryland

Lana Rakow, North Dakota       

Linda Steiner, Maryland

Elizabeth Toth, Maryland

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 268

Communicating Science, Health, Environment and Risk Interest Group

Refereed Paper Research Session: eHealth and Health News

Moderating/Presiding: Andrea Tanner, South Carolina

“Willing but Unwilling”: Attitudinal Barriers to Adoption of Home-Based

Health-Information Technologies Among Older Adults

Rachel Young, and Erin Willis, Missouri; Mugur Geana, Kansas

and Glen Cameron, Missouri

Exploring the Role of Online Discussion in Improving Obesity-related

Health Literacy: A Content Analysis of Health Literacy Domains and

eWOM of The Biggest Loser League

Ye Wang, Erin Willis and Shelly Rodgers, Missouri

Tracking Explanations In Health News. More Attention Is Not Always

Needed For Understanding

Ronald Yaros, Maryland

Analyzing Health Organizations’ Use of Twitter for Promoting Health Literacy

Hyojung Park, Shelly Rodgers and Jon Stemmle, Missouri

Discussant: Robert Logan, U.S. National Library of Medicine

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 269

Community Journalism and Civic & Citizen Journalism Interest Groups

Teaching Panel Session: Into the Mean Streets: Lab Community Newspapers Take

on Tough Neighborhoods

Moderating/Presiding: Jock Lauterer, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Panelists: Huntly Collins, LaSalle

Bruce dePyssler, North Carolina Central

William Drummond, California, Berkeley

Bernard L. Stein, Hunter

Lisa Paulin, North Carolina Central

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 270

Entertainment Studies Interest Group

Refereed Paper Research Session: The Best of ESIG

Moderating/Presiding: Anthony Ferri, Nevada-Las Vegas

 “Personally, I Feel Sorry for Her” A Focus Group Analysis of Journalistic

Coverage of Celebrity Health*

Amanda Hinnant, Missouri and Elizabeth Hendrickson, Tennessee

Times Change, But Trailers Don’t: Violent and Sexual Content

in a Decade of Movie Trailers**

Adrienne Holz Ivory, Julie E. Leventhal

and James D. Ivory, Virginia Tech

People Watching: Genre Repertoires and Multichannel TV Environments***

Chad Harriss, Alfred and Maria Fontenot, Texas Tech

The Mediating Role of Identification and Perceived Persuasive Intent

in Overcoming the Resistance to Persuasive Narrative Messages****

Kitae Kim, Shin-Il Moon,

and Thomas Feeley, SUNY at Buffalo

Goffman in The Real World: Processes of Performance and Characterization

Across Three Reality Television Series*****

Mark Lashley, Georgia

Discussant: Anthony Ferri, Nevada-Las Vegas

* First Place Award

** Second Place Award

*** Third Place Award

**** Fourth Place Award

***** First Place Student Award

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 271

Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Interest Group and Public Relations Division

PF&R Panel Session: Coming Out of the (PR and Advertising) LGBT Closet

Moderating/Presiding: Jennifer Vardeman, Houston

Panelists: Debra Pollock, director of Development & Communications, The Center

Amy Falkner, Syracuse

Richard Waters, North Carolina State

Natalie Tindall, Georgia State

Philip Ryan Johnson, Syracuse

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 272

Graduate Student Interest Group

Refereed Paper Research Session: Physical and Mental Health and Wellness: Graduate Education Interest Group

Moderating/Presiding: Erica Salkin, Wisconsin-Madison

A New Area of Video Game Research? The Pro-Social Effects of Playing

Violent Video Games Cooperatively

J.J. De Simone, Wisconsin-Madison

Three Decades of Direct-to-Consumer Advertising of Prescription Drugs

Wan Jung, Jihye Kim and Eun Soo Rhee, Florida

A Theory of Planned Behavior Study of the HPV Vaccine: A Comparative

Analysis of College Students’ Intention to Get the Vaccine in the

United States and South Korea

Eun Go, Florida

News Framing of Swine Flu in Time of Global Economic Recession:

A Comparison of Newspaper Coverage in the United States and China

Miao Guo and Fangfang Gao, Florida

Discussant: Carson Wagner, Ohio

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 273

Internship and Careers Interest Group and Community College Journalism Association

PF&R Panel Session: Preparing Students to Succeed on Camera, Online, and in Print II

Moderating/Presiding: Ronnie Lovler, San Francisco State

Panelists: Marcie Hinton, Middle Tennessee State

John Kerezy, Cuyahoga Community

Kim McDonough, Iowa State

Robert Muilenberg, Del Mar Community

Cindi Yanow, Southeast Missouri State

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 274

Small Programs Interest Group and Scholastic Journalism Division

PF&R Panel Session: A Generational Ethics Gap, or A Recognition of New Realities?

Moderating/Presiding: Margo Wilson, California University of Pennsylvania

Panelists: Donna Bertazzoni, Hood

Lona Cobb, Winston-Salem State

Cecilia Friend, Utica

Jack Kennedy, Journalism Education Association

Chris Roberts, Alabama

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 275

Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication Elected Standing Committee

on Research

Award Panel Session: Recognizing 2010 Deutschmann Award Winner Stephen Lacy

Moderating/Presiding: Patricia Curtin, Oregon

Featured Speaker: Stephen Lacy, Michigan State, 2010 Deutschmann Award Recipient

Panelists: Lucinda Davenport, Michigan State

Jean Folkerts, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Ann Hollifield, Georgia

Hugh Martin, Ohio

Daniel Riffe, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Pamela Whitten, Michigan State

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 276

Scripps Howard Foundation and AEJMC Council of Affiliates

Teaching Panel Session: Teaching Business Journalism

Moderating/Presiding: Barbara Hines, Howard, AEJMC past president

Introduction of 2009 Recipient: Sue Porter, Scripps Howard Foundation

Featured Speaker: Chris Roush, North Carolina Chapel Hill, 2009 Scripps Howard Foundation Journalism and Mass Communication Teacher of the Year

Panelists Jimmy Gentry, Kansas

Marty Steffens, Missouri

Mary Jane Pardue, Missouri State

Mark Tatge, Ohio

3:30 pm to 5 pm / 277

Urban Communication Foundation and Association for Education in Journalism

and Mass Communication

2010 Gene Burd Urban Journalism Award Panel:

Journalism and the New Demography and Digital Geography of the Urban Landscape

Moderating/Presiding: Gary Gumpert, president, Urban Communication Foundation

Featured Speakers: The Design and Destiny of the Traditional Notion of City

Inga Saffron, architecture critic, Philadelphia Inquirer

Housing 100 Million More Americans

Joel Kotkin, Urban Historian and Social Demographer

Respondent: Paul Voakes, Colorado at Boulder

These two recognized and widely acknowledged urban journalists will share their contrasting perspectives on the nature of urban change as digital technologies usher in a new configuration of urban and social community.

This special panel will be followed by a reception in honor of the two winners of the award sponsored by the Urban Communication Foundation. The Foundation was created in 2004 with a $1 million endowment from longtime AEJMC member Gene Burd, Journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin.

4 pm to 6 pm / 278

International Communication Division

Off-site Session: EU Update: Conversations with Consuls General

Moderating/Presiding: Amy Schmitz Weiss San Diego State

Hosted by Colorado European Union Center for Excellence from University of Colorado-Boulder and the International Communication Division. RSVP required. Contact Vice-Head Amy Schmitz Weiss for details at aschmitz@mail.sdsu.edu

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 279

Communication Technology Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: Current Trends in Communication Technology:

Top Faculty Papers Session

Moderating/Presiding: Homero Gil de Zúñiga, Texas at Austin

Why Do College Students Use Twitter?*

Mijung Kim and Mira Lee, Michigan State

Perceived Substitutability and Actual Viewership Overlap Between

Traditional and New Video Platforms**

Jiyoung Cha, North Texas

The Influence of Prior Issue Attitudes on Perception Bias and Perceived

Message Credibility: Opposing Online Messages About Smoking Bans***

Jehoon Jeon, Wayne State, Hye-Jin Paek

and Thomas Hove, Michigan State

The Digital Divide Exists Among Cancer Patients****

Chul-joo Lee, Ohio State; Susana Ramirez

and Nehama Lewis, Pennsylvania

Discussant: Benjamin Detenber, Nanyang Technological

* First Place Faculty Paper

** Second Place Faculty Paper

*** Third Place Faculty Paper

**** Fourth Place Faculty Paper

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 280

Communication Theory and Methodology Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: Best of CT&M Research

Moderating/Presiding: Michel Haigh, Pennsylvania State

Identity Salience and Policy Support: Barack Obama, Group Identity

Cues, and Message Effects**

Penelope Sheets, Washington

Spiral of Speaking Out: Conflict Seeking of Democratic Youth

in Republican Counties***

Mike McDevitt, Colorado at Boulder

The Correspondent, the Combatant, and the Comic: How Moderator Style

and Guest Civility Shape News Credibility***

Emily Vraga, Mitchell Bard, Leticia Bode, D. Jasun Carr,

Stephanie Edgerly, Courtney Johnson, Young Mie Kim

and Dhavan Shah, Wisconsin-Madison

Ambivalence Reduction and Polarization in the Campaign Information

Environment: The Interaction between Individual-Level

and Contextual-Level Influences*

Young Mie Kim, Ming Wang, Melissa R. Gotlieb, Itay Gabay

and Stephanie Edgerly, Wisconsin-Madison

 Discussant: Xiaoli Nan, Maryland

* Top Faculty Paper

** Chaffee-McLeod Top Student Paper

*** Top Three Faculty Paper

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 281

Cultural and Critical Studies Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: C&CS Top Papers: New Media and Newspapers

Moderating/Presiding: Bob Trumpbour, Pennsylvania State-Altoona

New Media, Old Criticism: Bloggers’ Press Criticism and the Journalistic Field*

Tim Vos, Stephanie Craft and Seth Ashley, Missouri

We Will Be Missed: Self-Commemoration in 2009 Newspaper Failures**

Nicholas Gilewicz, Temple

Discussant: Rebecca Kern, Manhattan

* James J. Murphy Memorial Award for Top Faculty Paper

** James W. Carey Memorial Award for Top Student Paper

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 282

Magazine Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: The Face of Magazines: Business, Content, and Images

Moderating/Presiding: David Remund, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

The Magazine Industry, 2000 to 2010

David E. Sumner, Ball State

Photographic Images of Gender and Race Portrayed in Sports Illustrated Kids, 2000-2009

Ashley Furrow, Ohio

The Consumer-Citizen: Life Magazine’s Construction of the Ideal American

Sheila Webb, Western Washington

Visual Framing of Patriotism and National Identity on the Covers of Der Spiegel

Andrea Pyka and Scott Fosdick and William Tillinghast, San José State

Discussant: Beverly Merrick, United Arab Emirates

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 283

Mass Communication and Society Division and Graduate Education Interest Group

Teaching Panel Session: Promising Professors and Distinguished Educator Awards

Panel and Workshop

Moderating/Presiding: Frank Dardis, Pennsylvania State

Promising Professors: First Place

Sue Burzynski Bullard, Nebraska-Lincoln

Second Place

Mina Tsay, Boston University

Graduate Student Winner

Myiah Hutchens, Ohio State

Distinguished Educator: Dennis Davis, Pennsylvania State

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 284

Media Ethics Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: Grappling with Controversial Events: An Examination

Media Coverage Across Old and New Media

Moderating/Presiding: Theodore Glasser, Stanford

Public Opinion About News Coverage of Leaders’ Private Lives:

A Role for “New” vs. “Old” Media?*

Bartosz Wojdynski and Daniel Riffe, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Non-Western Ethics Analysis of Media Coverage of Death

During the 2010 Olympics**

Mitch Land, Koji Fuse, and Susan Zavoina, North Texas

The Power of Tank Man vs. Neda: How New Media Iconic Images

Create Ethical Connections

Maggie Patterson, Duquesne and Virginia Whitehouse, Whitworth

Discussant: Dong Hyun-Byun, Sogang University

* Top Paper, Open Call

** Runner-Up, Open Call

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 285

Media Management and Economics Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: MME Refereed Research Top Paper

Moderating/Presiding: Dorothy Bland, Florida A&M

User Flow in a Non-linear Environment: An Examination of Web Site Consumption*

Tang Tang, Wisconsin-Oshkosh, and Gregory Newton, Ohio

Non-English Language Audiences in the U.S.: Predictors of Advertiser

Investment Across Media Platforms**

Amy Jo Coffey, Florida

Diffusion of Innovation or Not?: Both Cases of Direct t-DTV Adoption

With and Without Payment***

Kyung Han You, Pennsylvania State and Hongjin Shim, Yonsei University

Not For Profit or Not For Long – Is Nonprofit Journalism Sustainable?****

Kelly Kaufhold, Texas at Austin

Discussant: Dane S. Claussen, Point Park

* Top Faculty Paper

** Second-Place Place Faculty Paper

*** Top Student Paper

****Second-Place Student Paper

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 286

Minorities and Communication and Public Relations Divisions

PF&R Panel Session: Health Promotion, Minority Populations and Health Reporting:

Challenges for 2010 and Beyond

Moderating/Presiding: Kurt Wise, Quinnipiac

Panelists: Carolyn Stroman, Howard

Anita Fleming-Rife, Northern Colorado

Crystal Lumpkins, Kansas

María Len-Ríos, Missouri

Elizabeth Johnson Avery, Tennessee

Marilee Long, Colorado State

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 287

Radio-Television Journalism Division

Refereed Paper Research Session: Current Issues in News Coverage

Moderating/Presiding: Hub Brown, Syracuse

Domestic Terrorism on the Nightly News

Ruth DeFoster, Minnesota

Motivations and Attitudes toward Crime News as Predictors

of Risk Perception

Eun Hwa Jung, Florida

The Evolving Frame: NBC’s Coverage of The U.S. Presidents’

Visits to China, 1989-2009

Boya Xu, West Virginia

Third-person Perception and Myths About Crime and Victims of Crime

John Chapin, Pennsylvania State

Discussant: Laura Smith, Huston-Tillotson

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 288

Scholastic Journalism and Law and Policy Divisions

PF&R Panel Session: State Laws Protecting Student Free Expression

Moderating/Presiding: James Tidwell, Eastern Illinois

Panelists: Mike Farrell, director, Scripps Howard First Amendment Center, KY

Mark Newton, Mountain Vista High School, Highlands Ranch, CO

Mark Goodman, Kent State

Frank LoMonte, executive director, Student Press Law Center

Brian Schraum, Missouri

Angela Thomas, formerly, J-Ideas

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 289

Commission on the Status of Women

PF&R Panel Session: Our Voices, Our History: Twenty Years and Counting

Moderating/Presiding: Therese Lueck, Akron; commission co-chair, 1999-2000; 2000-2001

Panelists: Marion Marzolf, Michigan, emerita, founding editor, CSW newsletter, 1977-1978

Lana Rakow, North Dakota, committee chair, 1987-1988; 1988-1989

H. Leslie Steeves, Oregon, committee chair, 1989-1990

Jane Rhodes, Macalester, first commission chair, 1990-1991 

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 290

Communicating Science, Health, Environment and Risk Interest Group

Refereed Paper Research Session: ComSHER Top Paper Session

Moderating/Presiding: LeeAnn Kahlor, Texas at Austin

Models: The Missing Piece in Climate Change Coverage

Karen Akerlof, George Mason

News Framing of Autism: Media Advocacy, Health Policy & the Combating Autism Act

Brooke Weberling, North Carolina at Chapel Hill

The Cognitive Mediation Model: Factors Influencing Public Knowledge

of the H1N1 Pandemic and Precautionary Behavior

Xianghong Peh, Veronica Soh and Shirley Ho, Nanyang Technological University

The Effect of Proximity to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita on Subsequent

Optimistic Bias and the Perception of Hurricane Risk

Craig Trumbo, Michelle Lueck, Holly Marlatt,

and Lori Peek, Colorado State

Framing Health Disparity News: Effects on Journalists’ Perceptions of Newsworthiness

Amanda Hinnant and HyunJee Oh, Missouri-Columbia;

Charlene Caburnay and Matthew Kreuter, Washington University in St. Louis

Discussant: Dietram Scheufele, Wisconsin-Madison

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 291

Political Communication Interest Group

Panel Session: The State of Political Discourse in America: Reevaluating the Role

of the Media in the Political Process

Moderating/Presiding: Guy J. Golan

Panelists: David D. Perlmutter, Iowa

Dhavan V. Shah, Wisconsin-Madison

Regina Lawrence, Louisiana State

Spiro Kiousis, Florida

Dietram A. Scheufele, Wisconsin-Madison

5:15 pm to 6:45 pm / 292

Urban Communication Foundation and Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

2010 Gene Burd Urban Journalism Award Reception

Hosting: Gary Gumpert, president, Urban Communication Foundation

2010 Award Recipients: Joel Kotkin, Urban Historian and Social Demographer

Inga Saffron, architecture critic, Philadelphia Inquirer

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 293

Advertising Division

Business Session: Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Jami Fullerton and Bobbi Kay Lewis, Oklahoma State

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 294

Communication Technology Division

Business Session: Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Jim Benjamin, Toledo

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 295

Communication Theory and Methodology Division

Business Session: Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Dominique Brossard, Wisconsin-Madison

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 296

Cultural and Critical Studies Division

Business Session: Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Bob Trumpbour, Pennsylvania State-Altoona

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 297

Public Relations Division

Off-site Social

Hosting: Patricia Swann, Utica and Colleen Connolly-Ahern, Pennsylvania State

Social to take place at The Brown Palace, 321 17th St. Pre-registration is required. Sponsors include: Routledge, The Arthur W. Page Center for Integrity in Public Communication at Pennsylvania State University and Florida International University. For more information, please contact Colleen Connolly-Ahern @cuc15@psu.edu.

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 298

Community College Journalism Association

Business Session: Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Robert Muilenberg, Del Mar Community

and Toni Albertson, Mt. San Antonio

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 299

Commission on the Status of Minorities

Business Session: Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Linda Florence Callahan, North Carolina A&T State

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 300

Commission on the Status of Women

Business Session: Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Jennifer Rauch, Long Island

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 301

Communicating Science, Health, Environment and Risk Interest Group

Business Session: Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: LeeAnn Kahlor, Texas at Austin

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 302

Political Communication Interest Group

Business Session: Inaugural Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Guy J. Golan

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 303

Religion and Media Interest Group

Business Session: Members’ Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Paola Banchero, Alaska-Anchorage

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 304

JHistory Internet Group

Panel Session: The History of Free: How Free (or Cheaper) Content Have Challenged Media

Moderating/Presiding: David T.Z. Mindich, Saint Michael’s

Panelists: Mitchell Stephens, New York

David Nord, Indiana

Elliot King, Loyola, Maryland

Jane Singer, Iowa/Central Lancashire

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 305

Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass Communication

Dinner Session: Gerald M. Sass Distinguished Service to Journalism

and Mass Communication Award Dinner

Moderating/Presiding: Maria Marron, Central Michigan, ASJMC President

Introduction of Recipient: Pam Johnson, Western Kentucky

Presentation of Award: Paul Parsons, Elon

2010 Recipient: Richard S. Holden, Dow Jones News Fund

ASJMC thanks the AEJMC Council of Affiliates for sponsoring the gathering reception.

7 pm to 8:30 pm / 306

Korean American Communication Association

Business Session: Committee Meeting

Moderating/Presiding: Sei-Hill Kim, South Carolina

8:45 pm / 307

Advertising Division

Off-site Social

Hosting: Jami Fullerton, Oklahoma State

Meet at Katie Mullen’s Irish Restaurant and Pub, located in the Sheraton Downtown Denver Hotel.

8:45 pm / 308

Communication Technology Division

Off-site Social

Hosting: Jim Benjamin, Toledo

8:45 pm / 309

Minorities and Communication Division

Off-site Social

Hosting: Jennifer Woodard, Middle Tennessee State, and Ilia Rodríguez, New Mexico

Social to be held at Jazz@Jack’s, 500 16th Street Mall #320 (at Denver Pavilions, 3rd level). MAC members will meet at hotel lobby and walk to the club.

8:45 pm / 310

Community College Journalism Association

Off-site Social

Hosting: Robert Muilenberg, Del Mar Community and Toni Albertson, Mt. San Antonio

8:45 pm / 311

Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Interest Group

Off-site Social

Hosting: Tim Edwards, Arkansas-Little Rock

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