20 Media School students, faculty to present at ICA conference
The Media School Report
June 18, 2024
Twenty Media School faculty and students will present research at the 74th annual International Communication Association conference.
The conference, “Communication and Global Human Rights,” will take place virtually and at the Gold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre in Gold Coast, Australia, June 20-24.
Faculty
Associate professor
“Race-Based Inequities Among US Citizens During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Influence of Media Use and Other Individual Differences on Vaccine Uptake”
Assistant professor
“#WheresTiffany: Redefining Racial Broadcast Norms With Tiffany Cross’ MSNBC Removal”
Associate professor
“Race-Based Inequities Among US Citizens During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Influence of Media Use and Other Individual Differences on Vaccine Uptake”
Professor and director of research and creative activity
“Children, Adolescents and the Media Research Escalator” panelist
Provost professor
“The Impact of Internal and External Motivational Variables on Behavior and Affect in Video Game Play”
“Imminence and Urgency as Drivers of Approach-Avoidance Motivation in a Dynamic Video Game Environment”
“From Clicks to Captivation: The Meaningfulness of Decision-Making on Arousal and Attention in Interactive Video”
Panelist during the ICA24 Fellows’ Session
Professor
“Effects of Mass Media on Partisan Opinion Dynamics in an Evolving Media Landscape”
Associate professor
“Trolling is in the Eye of the Beholder: Perceptions of Trolling Motivations in Others Predict Vigilantism in Video Games”
Students
PhD’24
“iParenting: A Latent Profile Analysis of Mothers’ Media Use Frequency and Home Environment Outcomes”
“Patterns of Parent Media Use: The Influence of Parent Media Use Profiles on Parental Media Monitoring, Technoference, and Problematic Media Use”
“Multilingual Parental Mediation and Ethnic Identity”
“The Impact of Internal and External Motivational Variables on Behavior and Affect in Video Game Play”
“Fictional Families: Portrayals of Family and Parent Gender Roles in Top Adolescent Novels”
Doctoral student
“Assessing Malaysia’s Fake News Laws Through the Lens of International Human Rights Standards”
Master’s student
“Third-Person Effects of COVID-19 Social Media Posts”
“Partisan Cues as a Key Determinant for Misinformation Processing: Measuring Psychophysiological Responses to Misinformation”
Doctoral student
“Trolling is in the Eye of the Beholder: Perceptions of Trolling Motivations in Others Predict Vigilantism in Video Games”
Undergraduate student
“The Impact of Internal and External Motivational Variables on Behavior and Affect in Video Game Play”
Doctoral student
“The Impact of Internal and External Motivational Variables on Behavior and Affect in Video Game Play”
“Imminence and Urgency as Drivers of Approach-Avoidance Motivation in a Dynamic Video Game Environment”
“From Clicks to Captivation: The Meaningfulness of Decision-Making on Arousal and Attention in Interactive Video”
“Trolling is in the Eye of the Beholder: Perceptions of Trolling Motivations in Others Predict Vigilantism in Video Games”
Doctoral candidate
“Third-Person Effects of COVID-19 Social Media Posts”
“Populist Hustlers Versus Establishment Dynasties: The Contentious Visual Framing Dual of the 2022 Kenyan Election”
Doctoral student
“The Impact of Internal and External Motivational Variables on Behavior and Affect in Video Game Play”
“Imminence and Urgency as Drivers of Approach-Avoidance Motivation in a Dynamic Video Game Environment”
Doctoral candidate
“Third-Person Effects of COVID-19 Social Media Posts”
“Populist Hustlers Versus Establishment Dynasties: The Contentious Visual Framing Dual of the 2022 Kenyan Election”
Master’s student
“Third-Person Effects of COVID-19 Social Media Posts”
Doctoral student
“Partisan Cues as a Key Determinant for Misinformation Processing: Measuring Psychophysiological Responses to Misinformation”
PhD’24
“Trolling is in the Eye of the Beholder: Perceptions of Trolling Motivations in Others Predict Vigilantism in Video Games”
Doctoral student
“The Impact of Internal and External Motivational Variables on Behavior and Affect in Video Game Play”
“Trolling is in the Eye of the Beholder: Perceptions of Trolling Motivations in Others Predict Vigilantism in Video Games”