Auf der 6. European Conference der European Communication Research and Education Association (ECREA), die vom 9.- 12. November 2016 in Prag stattfindet, sind Forscherinnen und Forscher des Instituts für Publizistik mit ihren Arbeiten vertreten:
- Nora Denner & Christina Peter: Self-referential reporting in German news coverage – How media refers to the term Lügenpresse.
- Jörg Haßler, Pablo B. Jost & Marcus Maurer: Sharing the news – Facebook shares as relevance indicators.
- Claudia Fortkord & Thomas Koch: Between journalism and public relations – A qualitative study on the professional role conception of custom publishing editors.
- Thomas Koch, Sascha Himmelreich, Benno Viererbl & Nora Denner: Corporate responses to journalistic interview requests on critical issues – an experimental study.
- Simon Kruschinski: Porting the successful campaign?! An empirical comparison of canvassing in the U.S. and Germany using the example of the 2014 Thuringian and 2016 Rhineland-Palatinate federal state elections.
- Richard Lemke, Simon Merz & Tobias P. Tornow: Expressing homosexuality in public – The influence of negative events and public opinion on showing homosexual orientation among gay and bisexual men in European Countries.
- Melanie Magin, Uta Rußmann, Jörg Haßler & Nicole Podschuweit: How to measure professionalization of campaigns in the fourth age of political communication—the Post-Professional Campaigning Index (PPCAMI).
- Philipp Müller: Perception of Media Change and Attitudes towards Media Education.
- Marie Legrand, Corinna Oschatz & Anja Dittrich: News values of climate change coverage.
- Franziska Pröll, Melanie Magin & Martin Krieg: Setting the collective memory on 20 July 1944? A long-term comparison of German newspaper coverage and opinion survey data on Stauffenberg’s Hitler assassination attempt (1954-2014).
- Markus Schäfer & Oliver Quiring: “Does it work?” vs. “Should we do that?” - Medical and ethical issues in media knowledge transfer on pharmacological cognitive enhancement.
- Svenja Schäfer, Michael Sülflow & Philipp Müller: Understanding the Appeal of Facebook as a Source for Political Information. An Application of the Niche Theory.
- Anna Schnauber: The importance of general habits in media selection processes.
- Birgit Stark, Pascal Jürgens & Melanie Magin: Intermediaries as shapers of our information environment.
- Miriam Steiner, Philipp Weichselbaum & Birgit Stark: Smart, up-to-date, and tired of news? Perceptions of political news overload among the elite.
- Benno Viererbl, Sascha Himmelreich & Thomas Koch: Organizational reactions to customer complaints in social media - an experimental study on the perception of uninvolved recipients.
- Jürgen Wilke: Periodization and transnational references in national press histories. A comparison of three nations.
- Marc Ziegele, Oliver Quiring, Nikolaus Jackob & Christian Schemer: Who broadcasts (shady) truths on news websites? A survey on the predictors of truth-demanding user commenting.
- Arne Freya Zillich, Claudia Riesmeyer, Melanie Magin, Kathrin Friederike Müller, Liane Rothenberger & Annika Sehl: Measuring values and norms in communication studies. An empirical challenge?
- Fabian Zimmermann & Lutz Hofer: Social Media Use and Political Cynicism. Mediating Effects of Negativity and Procedural Fairness Perceptions.
Wir freuen uns darauf, unsere Arbeiten dem internationalen Fachpublikum vorzustellen.