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A longitudinal examination of collaboration diversity among communication scholars: 1990–2023 Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Shan Xu, Kulsawasd Jitkajornwanich, Prabu David, Hye-jung Park, Yani Zhao, Jeffery Du, Thanathip Chumthong
This study examines racial diversity in co-authorship in articles published in communication journals and its association with citations accrued over time. We analyzed 76,217 publications from 73 communication journals, spanning from 1990 to 2023, with a focus on racial diversity in authorship as an indicator of collaboration diversity. Our results reveal that diversity is positively associated with
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“What do you want to do?”: expertise tension and authority negotiation in emergency nurse–physician interactions Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-08 DaJung Woo, Laura E Miller, Leonard N Lamsen
Collaborative work represents a communicative context in which organizational actors navigate the blurring of knowledge and authority boundaries as they address complex problems. This article theorizes about expertise tension that arises when individuals with valuable insights lack corresponding authority to act, or vice versa. Using observations and interviews, we studied how physicians and nurses
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Deliberation in online political talk: exploring interactivity, diversity, rationality, and incivility in the public spheres surrounding news vs. satire Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-11-05 Mark Boukes
Political satire is often believed to enrich the public sphere in ways distinct from traditional journalism. This study examines whether deliberative qualities of online political talk in response to satire differ from those in response to regular news or partisan news. The analysis focuses on four normative standards: interactivity, diversity, rationality, and civility. A manual content analysis of
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An asymmetrical reinforcing spiral? Disentangling the longitudinal dynamics of media use and mainstream media trust Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-10-22 Yariv Tsfati, Rens Vliegenthart, Jesper Strömbäck, Elina Lindgren
While numerous studies have documented an association between mainstream media trust and mainstream media use, only little is known about potential causal mechanisms underlying the association. We theorize that selective exposure, social influence, and the reinforcing spirals model offer three possible mechanisms that may underlie the association. These possibilities were studied using random intercept
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Networked privacy and its broader implications Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-10-17 Lee Humphreys, Rosie Nguyen
In this article, we review Alice Marwick’s book, The Private is Political: Networked Privacy and Social Media, published by Yale University Press in 2023. In the book, Marwick argues that the digital nature of the social media landscape fundamentally changes contemporary notions of privacy. We trace three specific elements of her argument, namely: (1) the design of networked technologies to connect
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Literacy training vs. psychological inoculation? Explicating and comparing the effects of predominantly informational and predominantly motivational interventions on the processing of health statistics Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Ozan Kuru
Communicating statistics is challenging and fraught with mis-contextualization and causal misattributions. Can we train the public against statistical misrepresentations? Pre-emptive interventions against misinformation primarily include literacy tips/training and inoculation. In theory, inoculation has an additional motivational component (forewarning). However, forewarning has not been directly tested
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A longitudinal test of relational turbulence theory and serial arguments in romantic relationships Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Denise Haunani Solomon, Yuwei Li, Kellie StCyr Brisini, Rachel Reymann Vanderbilt
Relational turbulence theory (RTT) suggests that people perceive their romantic relationships as turbulent when they experience interactions that manifest the deleterious effects of relational uncertainty and altered patterns of interdependence. RTT also positions communication in these episodes as associated with subsequent relational uncertainty and qualities of interdependence. Using three-wave
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Inflation of crisis coverage? Tracking and explaining the changes in crisis labeling and crisis news wave salience 1785–2020 Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-19 Stefan Geiß, Christina Viehmann, Conor A Kelly
Has there been an inflation in crisis coverage in newspapers over the last centuries, and if so, what structural factors drive this change? We utilize computational text analyses along with our own signal detection algorithm to measure the presence of crisis keywords and the emergence of crisis news waves. An analysis of crisis coverage in The Times (U.K., 1785–2020, 183,239 news stories) shows that
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Organizational communication for social change on social media: NPOs’ social media strategies based on their perception of three stakeholder networks in collective and connective action Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-09-15 Jennifer Ihm
Social media transform and complicate nonprofit organizations’ (NPOs) traditional communication to engage and lead stakeholders for collective action. Stakeholders can self-organize for connective action on social media and form stakeholder networks of varied potential and structures that NPOs may leverage for collective goals. Facing such networks, NPOs may communicate in diverse ways to accommodate
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The persistence of toxic online messages influences perceptions of harm and attributions of blame Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Charles K Monge, Nicholas L Matthews, David C DeAndrea
Researchers often use attribution theory to understand how people make sense of messages. Unlike the ephemeral actions typically investigated using attribution frameworks, messages can persist. Our study observed how persistence influences the harmfulness of messages and how people levy blame upon harmful posters and those ostensibly obligated and capable of intervening. Grounded in the path model
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Too amused to stop? Self-control and the disengagement process on Netflix Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-06-28 Alicia Gilbert, Leonard Reinecke, Adrian Meier, Susanne E Baumgartner, Felix Dietrich
Consuming media entertainment often challenges recipients’ self-control. While past research related self-control almost exclusively to whether individuals engage in media use, it might be equally relevant for the disengagement from media use. Testing core assumptions of the Appraisal of Media Use, Self-Control, and Entertainment (AMUSE) model, the present study investigates the situational interplay
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Engaged interorganizational networks and resilience in the humanitarian sector Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-05-04 Minkyung Kim, Marya L Doerfel
This study extends the communication theory of resilience (CTR) by examining social networks that facilitate resilience for refugee-oriented humanitarian organizations (ROHOs). This study draws on a network survey and interviews from ROHOs in the United States and South Korea during the height of coronavirus disease 2019. Results illuminate how refugees, generally seen as the subject of concern, become
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The concept of normalization in the production of LGBTIQ+ media imaginaries: the scriptwriters’ conceptions Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-04-18 Isabel Villegas-Simón, Maria T Soto-Sanfiel
The representation of the LGBTIQ+ community in TV series has received major attention from academia, mostly from textual and reception perspectives. However, the creative and industrial processes behind the production of media content, including the writers’ views and experiences, remain under-explored, especially outside of the United States and Northern Europe. Drawing on Queer Production Studies
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Have courage and be kind: gender depictions, female empowerment, and modern audience ratings in film adaptations of Cinderella from 1914 to 2022 Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-22 Jane Shawcroft, McKell A Jorgensen-Wells, Sarah M Coyne, Adam A Rogers, Madeleine Meldrum
Fairytales may represent a unique genre of media well-suited to depict feminine traits as valuable to characters of all genders by positioning traditionally feminine-coded traits as sources of strength and power to characters in fairytale plots. To examine this theoretical supposition, this study examines the association between indices of female empowerment (United States), modern audience ratings
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Pornography, identification, alcohol, and condomless sex. Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-19 Paul J Wright,Robert S Tokunaga,Debby Herbenick
Using national probability data from the 2022 National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior, the present study evaluated whether moderators of the association between frequency of pornography exposure and condomless sex are consistent with the sexual script acquisition, activation, application model's (3AM) suppositions about the facilitating effects of wishful identification and decreased self-regulation
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The professional backstaging of diversity in journalism Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-15 Ashley W Carter, Patrick Ferrucci
This study examines how diverse US-based journalists—both Black, Indigenous, and people of color and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer [or sometimes questioning] and others—perform their diversity within newsrooms. Applying Goffman’s theory of dramaturgy, the study illustrates the nuanced differences in terms of how journalists perform their diverse identities differently on both the frontstage
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Empowering social media users: nudge toward self-engaged verification for improved truth and sharing discernment Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-10 Fangjing Tu
How can we empower social media users to better discern the veracity of news and share less false news? This survey experiment (N = 636) assessed the effectiveness of two interventions—signing a Pro-Truth Pledge and utilizing a Fact-Checking Guide. Results showed that utilizing the Fact-Checking Guide increased skepticism of news posts, likelihood to verify news posts, verification engagement, and
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Publish and perish: mental health among communication and media scholars Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-03-05 Thomas Hanitzsch, Antonia Markiewitz, Henrik Bødker
Studies point to a significantly higher prevalence of mental health issues among academics compared to most other working populations. However, we know relatively little about the situation within the field of media and communication studies. Based on an international survey of 1028 researchers within this field, we found mental health issues to be widespread. Early career researchers, women, and those
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How shared ties and journalistic cultures shape global news coverage of disruptive media events: the case of the 9/11 terror attacks Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-02-12 Marc Jungblut, Scott Althaus, Joseph Bajjalieh, Chung-hong Chan, Kasper Welbers, Wouter van Atteveldt, Hartmut Wessler
In recent decades, disruptive media events, such as major terrorist attacks, have gained increasing relevance in news coverage around the world. Despite the growing importance of such globally broadcast media events, little research to date has examined cross-national variation in event coverage or the predictors of this variation. This study examines news coverage about the 9/11 terror attacks in
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In-person, video conference, or audio conference? Examining individual and dyadic information processing as a function of communication system Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-02-11 Jingjing Han, Lucía Cores-Sarría, Han Zhou
The wide use of virtual communication has raised a need to understand its effect on communication effectiveness and the ways its different forms influence users’ information processing. To that end, this study proposes the Dynamical Interpersonal Communication Systems Model and posits that the amount of information directly perceived affects individual and dyadic information processing. This proposition
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How dual-message nature documentaries that portray nature as amazing and threatened affect entertainment experiences and pro-environmental intentions Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-01-25 Anna Freytag, Daniel Possler
Nature documentaries are an entertaining and informative genre that appears well-suited to environmental communication. However, producers of nature documentaries face a dilemma: Although they aim to inspire their audiences to act pro-environmentally, they fear ruining viewers’ entertainment experience if they address environmental destruction. Hence, conventional nature documentaries solely portray
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Theory of communicative (dis)enfranchisement: introduction, explication, and application Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-01-25 Elizabeth A Hintz, Kristina M Scharp
In this essay, we set forth the theory of communicative (dis)enfranchisement (TCD). The TCD is useful for exploring the ramifications of the hegemonic ideologies which constrain and afford our everyday lives, and which are constructed and reflected in disenfranchising talk (DT). The TCD also asks what communication mechanisms work to reify and resist these hegemonic ideologies. We first introduce the
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Meta-theorizing framing in communication research (1992–2022): toward academic silos or professionalized specialization? Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2024-01-05 Dror Walter, Yotam Ophir
Framing, a prominent communication theory, is often lamented as a fractured paradigm, leading some to offer radical changes to its conceptualization, operationalization, and application. Using a meta-theoretical and computational approach, we analyze three decades of framing research to examine academic silos, specializations, the canon’s formation, gender inequalities, authors’ origins, countries
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The journalistic preference for extreme exemplars: educational socialization, psychological biases, or editorial policy? Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-12-09 Lene Aarøe, Kim Andersen, Morten Skovsgaard, Flemming Svith, Rasmus Schmøkel
Exemplars are central in news reporting. However, extreme negative exemplars can bias citizens’ factual perceptions and attributions of political responsibility. Nonetheless, our knowledge of the factors shaping journalistic preferences for including exemplars in news stories is limited. We investigate the extent to which educational socialization, psychological biases, and editorial policy shape journalistic
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Is communication a dependent or involuted discipline? A citation analysis of communication publications from 2010 to 2020 Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-11-08 Jiaying Hu, Jeffry Oktavianus, Jonathan J H Zhu
Communication research has been one of the fastest-growing disciplines across the social sciences over the last two decades in terms of the numbers of Social Science Citation Indexed journals and articles. However, whether Communication is an independent discipline remains debated. Of various criticisms, one extreme considers Communication too dependent on other disciplines, whereas the other regards
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The effect of animated Sci-Fi characters' racial presentation on narrative engagement, wishful identification, and physical activity intention among children. Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-10-25 Amy Shirong Lu,Melanie C Green,Dar Alon
Characters play an integral role in animated narratives, but their visual racial presentation has received limited attention. A diverse group of U.S. children watched a 15-min physical activity-promoting animated Sci-Fi narrative. They were randomly assigned to one of three conditions, which varied the lead characters' racial presentation: realistic racially unambiguous (Original: White children, Black
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Contextualizing communication for digital innovation and the future of work Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-10-06 Jiawei Sophia Fu, Joshua B Barbour
Digital innovation is the future of work. The ongoing and interlinked transformation of digital technologies, work, communication, and organizing raises important theoretical questions. Integrating recombination-based innovation theory and institutional theory of communication, this article contributes a novel framework that specifies the theoretical linkages between macro-level institutions and digital
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Why we fight: investigating the moral appeals in terrorist propaganda, their predictors, and their association with attack severity Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-09-17 Lindsay Hahn, Katherine Schibler, Tahleen A Lattimer, Zena Toh, Alexandra Vuich, Raphaela Velho, Kevin Kryston, John O’Leary, Sihan Chen
How do terrorists persuade otherwise decent citizens to join their violent causes? Guided by early mass communication research investigating propaganda’s efficacy and the model of intuitive morality and exemplars, we investigated the persuasive moral appeals employed by terrorist organizations known to be successful at recruiting others to their causes. We compiled a database of N = 873 propaganda
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Phenomenology of the Turing test: a Levinasian perspective Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-08-15 Matthew S Lindia
This article considers the Turing test as a problem of communication, particularly by asking how the language of artificial intelligence (AI) appears to human experience in comparison to the language of the Other. This question is approached through Levinas’ philosophy, by considering the possibility of AI as an absolute alterity, rather than reducing its alterity to the Same. This perspective diverges
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Two faces of message repetition: audience favorability as a determinant of the explanatory capacities of processing fluency and message fatigue Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-08-15 Jiyeon So, Hyunjin Song
This study offers a critical test of two competing theoretical accounts of message repetition effects—processing fluency and message fatigue—which have yet to be examined together under a coherent framework. Furthermore, integrating research on metacognition and motivated processing, we propose audience favorability toward message advocacy as a crucial moderator in this dynamic. A repeated-exposure
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Race and gender intertwined: why intersecting identities matter for perceptions of incivility and content moderation on social media Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-08-12 Ian Hawkins, Jessica Roden, Miriam Attal, Haleemah Aqel
Social media users often push back against harmful rhetoric with satirical and aggressive counterspeech. How do the interconnected race and gender identities of the person posting counterspeech and the person viewing it impact evaluations of the comment? Across two online experiments, we manipulate the race (Black or White) and gender (man or woman) of an individual whose tweet opposes ignorance about
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Is artificial intelligence more persuasive than humans? A meta-analysis Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-08-10 Guanxiong Huang, Sai Wang
The rapid deployment of artificial intelligence (AI) technology has enabled AI agents to take on various roles as communicators, such as virtual assistants, robot journalists, and AI doctors. This study meta-analyzed 121 randomized experimental studies (N = 53,977) that compared the effects of AI and human agency on persuasion outcomes, including perceptions, attitudes, intentions, and behaviors. The
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Too close for comfort: leveraging identity-based relevance through targeted health information backfires for Black Americans Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-07-28 Veronica Derricks, Allison Earl
Communicators frequently make adjustments to accommodate receivers’ characteristics. One strategy for accommodation is to enhance the relevance of communication for receivers. The current work uses information targeting—a communication strategy where information is disseminated to audiences believed to experience heightened risk for a health condition—to test whether and why targeting health information
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Curbing the decline of local news by building relationships with the audience Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-07-19 Natalie Jomini Stroud, Emily Van Duyn
In the struggle to find sustainable business models, many local news sites have turned to engaged journalism, which draws from social exchange theory and aims to build relationships with audiences. The causal impact of these initiatives is unclear, but important given that local news sites are critical information sources and face dire economic situations. In this study, 20 news sites were randomly
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Modulating moderation: a history of objectionability in Twitter moderation practices Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-06-30 Emillie de Keulenaar, João C Magalhães, Bharath Ganesh
With their power to shape public discourse under unprecedented scrutiny, social media platforms have revamped their speech control practices in recent years by building complex systems of content moderation. The contours of this tectonic shift are relatively clear. Yet, little work has systematically documented, examined, and theorized this process. This article uses digital methods and web history
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Computationally modeling mood management theory: a drift-diffusion model of people’s preferential choice for valence and arousal in media Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-06-13 Xuanjun Gong, Richard Huskey, Allison Eden, Ezgi Ulusoy
Mood management theory (MMT) hypothesizes that people select entertainment content to maintain affective homeostasis. However, this hypothesis lacks a formal quantification of each affective attributes’ separate impact on an individual’s media content selection, as well as an integrated cognitive mechanism explaining media selection. Here we present a computational decision-making model that mathematically
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Introduction to the special issue of social media: the good, the bad, and the ugly Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-06-09 Jennifer Stromer-Galley, Magdalena Wojcieszak, Nicholas John, Adrienne L Massanari
As social media scholarship pervades the communication discipline, it is time to reflect on the good, bad, and ugly of social media. The theme for this special issue is inspired in part by the 1966 film, “The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly.” Like its portrayal of the American Civil War, we again face deep divisions. The question is what role is social media helping us to heal those divides versus fragmenting
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Media stereotypes, prejudice, and preference-based reinforcement: toward the dynamic of self-reinforcing effects by integrating audience selectivity Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-06-08 Florian Arendt
The media portray various social groups stereotypically, and studying the effects of these portrayals on prejudice is paramount. Yet, audience selectivity—inherent within today’s high-choice media environments—has largely been disregarded. Relatedly, the predominance of forced-exposure designs is a source of concern. This article proposes the integration of audience selectivity into media stereotype
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Motivations underlying Latino Americans’ group-based social media engagement Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-05-25 Muniba Saleem, Dana Mastro, Meagan Docherty
Guided by the Social Identity Model of Collective Action, the current research utilizes a three-wave longitudinal study collected pre and post the 2020 U.S. Presidential election to examine the motivations underlying Latino Americans’ group-based social media engagement (N = 1,050). Results revealed that Time 1 group (Latino) identity increased Time 2 perceptions of social media as efficacious in improving
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Metrics in action: how social media metrics shape news production on Facebook Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-04-23 Subhayan Mukerjee, Tian Yang, Yilang Peng
Social media metrics allow media outlets to get a granular, real-time understanding of audience preferences, and may therefore be used to decide what content to prioritize in the future. We test this mechanism in the context of Facebook, by using topic modeling and longitudinal data analysis on a large dataset comprising all posts published by major media outlets used by American citizens (N≈2.23M
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Misperceptions in sociopolitical context: belief sensitivity’s relationship with battleground state status and partisan segregation Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-04-19 Qin Li, Robert M Bond, R Kelly Garrett
Numerous studies have shown that individuals’ belief sensitivity—their ability to discriminate between true and false political statements—varies according to psychological and demographic characteristics. We argue that sensitivity also varies with the political and social communication contexts in which they live. Both battleground state status of the state in which individuals live and the level
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Tweeting the Holocaust: social media discourse between reverence, exploitation, and simulacra Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-04-17 Motti Neiger, Oren Meyers, Anat Ben-David
This article explores the uses and abuses of traumatic memory within the context of the multifaceted discursive representation of the Holocaust on social media. Combining computational, quantitative, and qualitative methodologies, the article offers a comprehensive mapping of the mnemonic spectrum extending beyond memory work conducted during official commemorative occasions. To do so, we examined
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Broadcast information diffusion processes on social media networks: exogenous events lead to more integrated public discourse Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-04-12 Xuanjun Gong, Richard Huskey, Haoning Xue, Cuihua Shen, Seth Frey
Understanding information diffusion is vital to explaining the good, bad, and ugly impacts of social media. Two types of processes govern information diffusion: broadcasting and viral spread. Viral spreading is when a message is diffused by peer-to-peer social connections, whereas broadcasting is characterized by influences that can come from outside of the peer-to-peer social network. How these processes
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Resilience as a predictor for why some marital relationships flourished and others struggled during the initial months of COVID-19 Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-04-03 Abdullah S Salehuddin, Jesse King, Tamara D Afifi, Walid A Afifi
Using the theory of resilience and relational load, this study examined how married individuals’ baseline communal orientation (CO) and relational load (RL) at the beginning of the pandemic predicted their stress, conflict, mental health, and flourishing during quarantine. Using a Qualtrics Panel, married individuals (N = 3,601) completed four online surveys from April to June 2020. Results revealed
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“I love this photo, I can feel their hearts!” How users across the world evaluate social media portraiture Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-03-15 Tommaso Trillò, Blake Hallinan, Avishai Green, Bumsoo Kim, Saki Mizoroki, Rebecca Scharlach, Pyung Hwa Park, Paul Frosh, Limor Shifman
Portraits on social media are value-laden constructs. Whether documenting graduation or flexing in the gym, users express what they care about and present it for others to evaluate. Since “global” portrait genres are produced and consumed in different locales, their interpretation and evaluation may vary. We thus ask: What values do people identify in different types of social media portraits? Which
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Why we stopped listening to the other side: how partisan cues in news coverage undermine the deliberative foundations of democracy Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-03-15 Florian Arendt, Temple Northup, Michaela Forrai, Dietram Scheufele
Recent theorizing on deliberative democracy has put political listening at the core of meaningful democratic deliberation. In the present experiment (N = 827), we investigated whether news media can improve diverse political listening in the United States via a reduction in party cue salience. Although Republican (Democratic) participants showed a strong preference for listening to speeches given by
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Visual misinformation on Facebook Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-03-01 Yunkang Yang, Trevor Davis, Matthew Hindman
We conduct the first large-scale study of image-based political misinformation on Facebook. We collect 13,723,654 posts from 14,532 pages and 11,454 public groups from August through October 2020, posts that together account for nearly all engagement of U.S. public political content on Facebook. We use perceptual hashing to identify duplicate images and computer vision to identify political figures
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A comprehensive experimental test of the affective disposition theory of drama Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Matthew Grizzard, C Joseph Francemone, Rebecca Frazer, Kaitlin Fitzgerald, Charles K Monge, Christina Henry
Using a three-act written narrative, a preregistered 2 (Act 1 Moral/Immoral Character Behavior) × 2 (Act 3 Moral/Immoral Character Behavior) × 2 (Positive/Negative Narrative Outcome) study provides a comprehensive test of affective disposition theory (ADT) that simultaneously manipulates disposition formation and outcome evaluation processes. We convert ADT’s conceptual hypotheses into testable path
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A longitudinal analysis of involuntary job loss and communication resilience processes during the COVID-19 pandemic Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-22 Kai Kuang, Steven R Wilson, Timothy Betts, Josephine K Boumis, Elizabeth A Hintz, Dennis DeBeck, Patrice M Buzzanell
This longitudinal study explored associations between communication resilience processes, job-search self-efficacy, and well-being for a sample of US adults who involuntarily lost their jobs during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Based on the communication theory of resilience (CTR), we tested four possible models regarding how the enactment of resilience processes would be associated with
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Inequities of race, place, and gender among the communication citation elite, 2000–2019 Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-17 Deen Freelon, Meredith L Pruden, Kirsten A Eddy, Rachel Kuo
A recent wave of studies has focused on the identities of communication scholars, quantifying the degree to which Whites, men, and Americans dominate the discipline.This study analyzes the communication citation elite (CCE)—a group of 1,675 highly cited scholars in communication research—in terms of race, gender, and country of employment over 20 years. Applying computational methods and content analysis
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Communication-based strategies to curb the overuse of low-value cancer screening Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-16 Soela Kim, Jennifer L Monahan, Young Kyung Do
Drawing upon the theory of reasoned action, the protection motivation theory, and theories of regret, this study proposes and examines three communication strategies to curb the overuse of low-value cancer screening: (a) highlighting negative affective consequences of screening; (b) providing information about diagnostic uncertainty, and (c) using a noncancer disease label. An online survey-based experiment
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Conversational dynamics of joint attention and shared emotion predict outcomes in interpersonal influence situations: an interaction ritual perspective Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-13 Wang Liao, Yoo Jung Oh, Jingwen Zhang, Bo Feng
This article addresses conversational dynamics in interpersonal influence situations. Drawing on interaction ritual theories and the research of interaction processes and patterns, we argue that sequential transition patterns of task and social–emotional acts can capture essences of conversational interaction ritual.A successful ritual then generates emergent solidarity and induces desired outcomes
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The communicative constitution of atomization: online prepper communities and the crisis of collective action Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-13 Emil Husted, Sine N Just, Erik Mygind du Plessis, Sara Dahlman
As environmental and societal crises increase in numbers, severity, and urgency, online forums for so-called “doomsday preppers” have seen a concomitant surge in membership. Beginning from the perspective of communicative constitution of organization, we explore the sociotechnical communities that emerge on such forums. Methodologically, we use netnographic observations to show that online prepper
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Watching Turkish television dramas in Argentina: entangled proximities and resigned agency in global media flows Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-02-06 María Celeste Wagner, Marwan M Kraidy
For decades, the theory of cultural proximity, which states that audiences prefer culturally proximal content (Straubhaar, 1991), has remained a major framework to explain audience preferences. We show how transnational media flows have challenged its contemporary applicability. To probe this, we focus on a recent, intriguing, and still understudied development: the success of Turkish television dramas
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Mutual socialization during shared media moments: U.S. LGBTQ teens and their parents negotiate identity support Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-01-20 Marie-Louise Mares, Yuchi Anthony Chen, Bradley J Bond
Social relational theory proposes that children and parents socialize each other, particularly when knowledge, beliefs, and identities diverge. For families with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer (LGBTQ) teens, identity-relevant media depictions may spark moments of mutual socialization, including attempts to mediate each other’s viewing and discussions of the teen’s identity. U.S. data from
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Exploring how cultural and structural elements relate to communal coping for separated Latina/o/x immigrant families Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-01-18 Roselia Mendez Murillo, Jennifer A Kam
Family immigration-related separation is incredibly stressful; however, Latina/o/x separated families might engage in communal coping to help mitigate those stressors. Utilizing the extended theoretical model of communal coping, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 20 family triads (i.e., separated parent, separated child, primary caregiver) who were experiencing or had recently experienced
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The development and validation of a measure of moral intuition salience for children and adolescents: The Moral Intuitions and Development Scale Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-01-14 Drew P Cingel, Marina Krcmar, Catherine Marple, Allyson L Snyder
In this article, we create and validate a measure of moral intuition salience developmentally appropriate for use among children and adolescents. This measure allows researchers to apply moral foundations theory and the model of intuitive morality and exemplars to child and adolescent moral development and media use, an important addition to the literature, as to date, this theory and its measurement
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Gendered times: how gendered contexts shape campaign messages of female candidates Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-01-10 Nichole M Bauer, Martina Santia
We develop and test a theory of gendered political times, which argues that the gendered political climate during an election shapes the extent to which female candidates emphasize feminine or masculine traits in campaign messages. We measure gendered electoral contexts through rigorous analyses of public opinion data and news media content of the top issues during an election, and we complement these
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Silenced on social media: the gatekeeping functions of shadowbans in the American Twitterverse Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2023-01-02 Kokil Jaidka, Subhayan Mukerjee, Yphtach Lelkes
Algorithms play a critical role in steering online attention on social media. Many have alleged that algorithms can perpetuate bias. This study audited shadowbanning, where a user or their content is temporarily hidden on Twitter. We repeatedly tested whether a stratified random sample of American Twitter accounts (n ≈ 25,000) had been subject to various forms of shadowbans. We then identified the
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Engagement with partisan Russian troll tweets during the 2016 U.S. presidential election: a social identity perspective Journal of Communication (IF 6.1) Pub Date : 2022-12-30 Stephen A Rains, Jake Harwood, Yotam Shmargad, Kate Kenski, Kevin Coe, Steven Bethard
Operatives working for the Russian Internet Research Agency (IRA) infiltrated social media with the goal of disrupting the 2016 U.S. presidential election. We investigate how these operatives or “trolls” leveraged partisan political identities in discussing presidential candidates and parties on Twitter. Adopting a social identity lens, we conceptualize retweeting troll content as a form of identity