Beiträge auf Jahrestagung der ICA 2017

Auf der Jahrestagung der International Communication Association ICA vom 25.-29. Mai 2017 in San Diego (USA) sind Forscherinnen und Forscher des Instituts für Publizistik mit insgesamt 34 Beiträgen vertreten:

  • Silke Adam, Marcus Maurer, Thomas Häussler, Jörg Hassler, Corinna Oschatz, Ueli Reber & Hannah Schmid-Petri: Climate change communication – A divide between the online and offline world? (Vortrag auf der Preconference "Political Communication in the Online World: Empirical Findings and Theoretical Perspectives”)
  • Johannes Beckert, Marc Ziegele & Oliver Quiring: Just the way I am. The effects of personality traits and situational factors on the deliberativeness and civility of user comments on news websites.
  • Nora Denner, Benno Viererbl, Johannes Beckert & Thomas Koch: A matter of timing? The interaction of argument position and disclosure of persuasive intent.
  • Katharina Emde-Lachmund, Corinna Oschatz & Christoph Klimmt: Does personalization improve audience memory for news? Exemplars, narrative involvement and information processing.
  • Stefan Geiß: Curbing Audience Prejudgments in Scandals: An experimental study of a public figure’s responses.
  • Stefan Geiß & Jörg Haßler: Frame contests in real-time: How panelists elaborate, shift, and challenge frames in political talk shows.
  • Stefan Geiß, Jörg Haßler & Christian Schemer: The dynamics of conflict in political talk shows: Reproduction, spillover, and escalation.
  • Dominique Heinbach & Marc Ziegele: Sleeper effect from below. Long-term effects of source credibility and user comments on the persuasiveness of news articles.
  • Christina Köhler & Pablo B. Jost: Being rational or being rude? On the influence of media content, discussion-related, and situational factors on incivility in online discussions.
  • Christina Köhler & Pablo B. Jost: Beyond good and evil – Styles of media conflict coverage about wage disputes as a product of a commercial and a normative logic.
  • Isabelle Krebs, Marcel Verhoeven, M. Bjørn von Rimscha & Gabriele Siegert: What are success factors for media brands? Identifying paths to audience success in media industries.
  • Richard Lemke, Simon Merz & Christina Köhler: Gay acting or straight acting? – The relationship between perceived gay-related public opinion and the public expression of male homosexuality.
  • Inga Louis & Mathias Weber: Convinced, or not convinced? – How complaints on social media and their presumed effects on others influence users’ attitudes toward companies.
  • Melanie Magin & Stefan Geiß: Beyond time and space: A multilevel approach to structural influences on mediatization in campaign coverage.
  • Adrian Meier: Neither pleasurable nor virtuous: Procrastination links smartphone habits and messenger checking behavior to decreased hedonic as well as eudaimonic well-being.
  • Christine E. Meltzer: Despite personal experience? The impact of personal and media experience on the evaluation on an event.
  • Philipp Müller, Christian Schemer, Martin Wettstein, Anne Schulz, Dominique S. Wirz & Werner Wirth: [Titel ausgeblendet, wegen laufendem Peer-Review-Verfahren gleichnamigen Artikels]
  • Teresa K. Naab & Anna Schnauber: Habitual media selection and attention to the content during exposure.
  • Corinna Oschatz, Katharina Emde-Lachmund & Christoph Klimmt: Journalistic storytelling and Narrative Persuasion: The impact of different exemplar types on message-consistent attitudes.
  • Sabine Reich, Leonard Reinecke, Dorotheé Hefner, Julia Winkler, Frederic R. Hopp, Katharina Knop-Huelß, Michael Chan, Bradford Owen, und Peter Vorderer: Self-construal, cultural values and everyday life with a smartphone – Intercultural differences in being permanently online and connected.
  • Leonard Reinecke, Christoph Klimmt, Adrian Meier, Sabine Reich, Katharina Knop-Hülß, Diana Rieger und Peter Vorderer: Permanently Online and Permanently Connected: Development and validation of the Online Vigilance Scale.
  • Markus Schäfer & Oliver Quiring: “A smart pill a day keeps the teacher at bay – and the doctor away?!” The role of the media in the public debate on Pharmacological Cognitive Enhancement.
  • Svenja Schäfer, Josephine Schmitt & Christian Schemer: The more the better?! An experiment on the influence of political Facebook news posts on subjective knowledge.
  • Christian Schemer, Stefan Geiß, Philipp Müller & Svenja Schäfer: The Impact of electronic media use on adolescents’ well-being.
  • Anna Schnauber & Frank Mangold: From temporal to social rhythms. Day-to-day media platform usage and its meaning for society.
  • Anna Schnauber, Adrian Meier & Leonard Reinecke: Procrastination out of habit? The role of impulsive vs. reflective media selection in procrastinatory media use.
  • Anne Schulz, Werner Wirth, Martin Wettstein, Dominique S. Wirz & Philipp Müller: The Populist’s worldview: How populist citizens perceive mainstream media and public opinion.
  • Michael Sülflow: The effects of sound and image bite displays on the perception of politicians and news stories.
  • Michael Sülflow, Svenja Schäfer & Stephan Winter: Selective Attention in the newsfeed: An eye tracking study on the perception and selection of political news posts on Facebook.
  • Benno Viererbl, Thomas Koch, Nora Denner & Katja Krämer: Too good to be true? Effects of two-sided messages and disclosure of sponsoring in product presentations on YouTube.
  • Mathias Weber & Oliver Quiring: Is it really that funny? Laughter, emotional contagion, and heuristic processing during shared media use.
  • Larissa Wessel & Gianna Ehrlich: The influence of native advertising on customer-based brand equity of media outlets and advertising companies.
  • Marc Ziegele & Oliver Quiring: The discussion value of online news: How news story characteristics affect the deliberative quality of user discussions in SNS comment sections.
  • Marc Ziegele, Christina Köhler & Mathias Weber: Socially destructive! Effects of hateful user comments on recipients’ prosocial behavior.

Außerdem sind Marc Ziegele und Pablo Jost Mitinitiatoren der der Preconference "Comments, Anyone? Multidisciplinary Approaches for Analyzing Online User Comments across News and Other Content Formats." (gemeinsam mit Nina Springer aus München und Scott Wright aus Melbourne).

Wir freuen uns darauf, unsere Arbeiten dem internationalen Fachpublikum vorzustellen.