23 faculty, students to present at NCA convention
Faculty members and students will virtually attend and present at the National Communication Association Convention this month.
The theme of the organization’s 2020 convention is “Communication at the Crossroads.” It will include both asynchronous segments, which will run through November, and synchronous elements, which are Thursday through Sunday.
The following attendees will participate in the conference by presenting their research, participating in and moderating panel sessions, and more.
Faculty
“Instructional Adaptation to COVID-19” in the Instructional Development Division’s panel.
- “Linking Leaders’ Corporate Social Advocacy (CSA) to Employee Advocacy Outcomes in Strategic Employee Relations” in the Public Relations Division’s session, “Corporate Social Responsibility, Corporate Social Advocacy, and CEO Activism.”
- “Understanding Employee Behavioral Impacts of Authentic Leadership and Employee-Organization Relationships in Problematic Working Conditions” in the Public Relations Division’s session, “At the Crossroads of Employee Communication and Public Relations.”
“Danger, sex and everything else: A comparison of camera angle and camera distance effects across pictures of varied emotional content” in the Communication and Social Cognition Division’s session, “Cognition in Entertainment Media.”
- “Exceptional Ethnic Celebrities: The Politics of Hybridity and Crossover Fantasies in Transnational American Media” in the Critical and Cultural Studies Division’s session.
- “Shit Talk in Shitty Terrain: YouTube at the Crossroads of Comedy and Feminism in India” in the Feminist and Gender Studies Division’s session, “Top Papers in Feminist and Gender Studies Division.”
“Co-activation in the motivational systems: Memory, valence, and arousal of sexually explicit materials with aggressive content” in the Mass Communication Division’s session, “Examining the Content and Effects of Sexually Explicit Media and Pornography.”
“‘Welcome to the Matrix’: Context and Anchoring Effects of Bot Recognition Tasks on Third-Person Perceptions of Social and Political Bots” in the Human Communication and Technology Division’s session, “Bots, Automation, and Algorithms.”
“A comparative study of trust (in) and information source during an epidemic” in the Health Communication Division’s poster session.
“Not Enough Cooks in the Kitchen: How Playing Games Together can Encourage Cooperative Task Completion” in the Game Studies Division’s session, “Communication During Gameplay.”
- “Linking Leaders’ Corporate Social Advocacy (CSA) to Employee Advocacy Outcomes in Strategic Employee Relations” in the Public Relations Division’s session, “Corporate Social Responsibility, Corporate Social Advocacy, and CEO Activism”
- “Understanding Employee Behavioral Impacts of Authentic Leadership and Employee-Organization Relationships in Problematic Working Conditions” in the Public Relations Division’s session, “At the Crossroads of Employee Communication and Public Relations.”
Students
- “Not Enough Cooks in the Kitchen: How Playing Games Together can Encourage Cooperative Task Completion” in the Game Studies Division’s session, “Communication During Gameplay.”
- “Who Are the Viewers of C-SPAN? Predicting Political Orientation of the Viewers of Politically Neutral Channels on YouTube” in the Political Communication Division session’s “Crossroads of Message and Audience: Political Communication Content Analyses.”
“Stories from Tech Company Founders: A Qualitative Analysis of The NPR Podcast How I Built This” in the Organizational Communication Division’s session, “Organizational Communication Division Research Engagement and Development Session.”
“EXCLUSIVE!: Representations of Celebrity Girlhood on Teen Magazine Covers” in the Critical and Cultural Studies Division’s session, “Representing Self, Representing Others.”
“Danger, sex and everything else: A comparison of camera angle and camera distance effects across pictures of varied emotional content” in the Communication and Social Cognition Division’s session, “Cognition in Entertainment Media.”
- “Porn and Consent: The relationship between college students’ pornography consumption, perception of realism, and consent intentions” in the Mass Communication Division’s session, “Examining the Content and Effects of Sexually Explicit Media and Pornography.”
- “Using the theory of planned behavior to help understand the relationship between campus sexual consent messaging and adherence to sexual consent intentions” in the Health Communication Division’s poster session.
“Shit Talk in Shitty Terrain: YouTube at the Crossroads of Comedy and Feminism in India” in the Feminist and Gender Studies Division’s session, “Top Papers in Feminist and Gender Studies Division.”
“‘Desiness’ in the Digital Age: Investigating Social Media as a Site for South Asian Diaspora Interpellation” in the Asian/Pacific American Caucus’ paper session, “Scholarship on South Asia and its Diaspora(s).”
- “Linking Leaders’ Corporate Social Advocacy (CSA) to Employee Advocacy Outcomes in Strategic Employee Relations” in the Public Relations Division’s session, “Corporate Social Responsibility, Corporate Social Advocacy, and CEO Activism.”
- “Understanding Employee Behavioral Impacts of Authentic Leadership and Employee-Organization Relationships in Problematic Working Conditions” in the Public Relations Division’s session, “At the Crossroads of Employee Communication and Public Relations.”
“Media effects of racial phenotype and nationality on US immigration attitudes: Syrian, Palestinian, and Norwegian refugees in the news” in the Mass Communication Division’s session, “Immigration, Stigma, and Politics in the Media.”
“Shit Talk in Shitty Terrain: YouTube at the Crossroads of Comedy and Feminism in India” in the Feminist and Gender Studies Division’s session, “Top Papers in Feminist and Gender Studies Division.”
- “Not Enough Cooks in the Kitchen: How Playing Games Together can Encourage Cooperative Task Completion” in the Game Studies Division’s session, “Communication During Gameplay.”
- “Danger, sex and everything else: A comparison of camera angle and camera distance effects across pictures of varied emotional content” in the Game Studies Division’s session, “Communication During Gameplay.”
“Ergonomics and the Multi-Scalar Design Politics of the Smartphone” in the Media Ecology Association’s session, “Top Student Papers in Media Ecology.”
- “Making Stability Dependable: Stable Cellphone Access Leads to Better Health Outcomes for Those Experiencing Poverty” in the Human Communication and Technology Division’s session, “Support, Health, and Technology.”
- “‘Welcome to the Matrix’: Context and Anchoring Effects of Bot Recognition Tasks on Third-Person Perceptions of Social and Political Bots” in the Human Communication and Technology Division’s session, “Bots, Automation, and Algorithms.”
- “Danger, sex and everything else: A comparison of camera angle and camera distance effects across pictures of varied emotional content” in the Communication and Social Cognition Division’s session, “Cognition in Entertainment Media.”
“Co-activation in the motivational systems: Memory, valence, and arousal of sexually explicit materials with aggressive content” in the Mass Communication Division’s session, “Examining the Content and Effects of Sexually Explicity Media and Pornography.”