Beiträge auf der Jahrestagung der ICA 2018

Auf der Jahrestagung der International Communication Association ICA vom 24.-28. Mai 2018 in Prag sind Forscherinnen und Forscher des Instituts für Publizistik mit insgesamt 30 Beiträgen vertreten:

  • Nora Denner, Benno Viererbl, Thomas Koch: A Matter for The Boss? How Personalized Communication Affects Recipients’ Perceptions of a Company During Corporate Crises.
  • Nora Denner, Stephanie Senger, Thomas Koch: Faces of Companies: Personalization of Corporate Coverage in Crisis and Non-Crisis Situations.
  • Liese Exelmans, Adrian Meier, Leonard Reinecke & Jan Van den Bulck: Just one more episode: Predictors of procrastination with television and implications for sleep quality.
  • Viola Granow: At least three episodes or at least two hours? Proposal for a definition and measurement of binge watching as TV series viewing behavior.
  • Viola Granow & Marc Ziegele: Titel ausgeblendet, wegen laufendem Peer-Review-Verfahren
  • Michael Hameleers, Linda Bos, Nayla Fawzi, Carsten Reinemann, Ioannis Andreadis, Nicoleta Corbu, Christian Schemer, Tamir Shaefer, Toril Aalberg, Sofia Axelsson, Delia Cristina Balas, Rosa Berganza, Cristina Cremonesi, Stefan Dahlberg, Claes H. de Vreese, Agnieszka Hess, Evangelia Kartsounidou, Dominika Kasprowicz, Joerg Matthes, Elena Negrea-Busuioc, Signe Ringdal, Susana Salgado, Karen Sanders, Desiree Schmuck, Anne Schulz, Agnieszka Stepinska, Jesper Stromback, Jane Suiter, Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Naama Weiss-Yaniv: Start Spreading the News: A Comparative Experiment on the Effects of Populist Communication in 16 European Countries.
  • Jörg Haßler, Marcus Maurer & Corinna Oschatz: What You See Is What You Know: The Influence of Involvement and Eye Movement on Online Users’ Knowledge Acquisition.
  • Sven Jöckel & Leyla Dogruel: Privacy vs. Social Relatedness – Adolescents’ Tendency to Adhere to Defaults During App Selection.
  • Pablo Jost & Christina Köhler: Who shapes the news? Analyzing journalists’ and organizational interests as competing influences on biased coverage.
  • Pascal Jürgens, Birgit Stark & Melanie Magin: News diversity between push and pull, online and offline.
  • Christina Köhler & Mathias Weber: Severity of the incident and its perception by bystanders as predictors of victim blaming and willingness to help in cyberbullying.
  • Christina Köhler, Marc Ziegele, Viola Granow, Oliver Quiring, Nikolaus G. E. Jackob, Christian Schemer & Tanjev Schultz: Me and my online social network against the mainstream media. SNS use and perceived congruency between own opinion and online opinion climate as predictors of voicing alternative positions online.
  • Simon Kruschinski, Pascal Jürgens, Marcus Maurer, Christian Schemer & Birgit Stark: A multi-feature framework for detecting Social Bots on Facebook.
  • Julia Lück: Deliberative Quality of Narrative News. Evaluations Based on a Standardized Content Analysis of Brazilian, German and US Newspaper Coverage on Climate Change.
  • Senja Post & Hans Mathias Kepplinger: Self-censorship or provocation? Influences of audience hostility on journalists´ editorial decisions.
  • Adrian Meier, Emese Domahidi, Elisabeth Günther & Leonard Reinecke: Computer-mediated communication, psychological well-being, and psychopathological symptoms: a computational scoping review of an interdisciplinary field.
  • Adrian Meier & Leonard Reinecke: The relationship between computer-mediated communication and mental health—a meta-review of systematic reviews and meta-analyses.
  • Adrian Meier & Svenja Schäfer: The positive side of social comparison on SNS: Investigating inspiration on Instagram.
  • Johanna Möller, Pamela Nölleke, Denise Voci, Klaus-Dieter Altmeppen, Matthias Karmasin & Bjørn von Rimscha: From transnational companies abroad to cross-border activities. Towards a typology of media companies’ cross-border engagement.
  • Corinna Oschatz, Katharina Emde-Lachmund & Christoph Klimmt: Organisatoren der Preconference “Long-term Effects in Narrative Communication Research” am 24. Mai 2018.
  • Annika Schanne, Johannes Beckert & Thomas Koch: Invasive or persuasive? – How frequency of brand mentioning in Native Ads influences brand attitudes.
  • Anna Schnauber-Stockmann & Teresa K. Naab: The Process of Forming a Media Habit: Results From a Longitudinal Study.
  • Miriam Steiner, Melanie Magin & Birgit Stark: Seek and you shall find? A content analysis on the diversity of five search engines’ results on political queries.
  • Mathias Weber & Christina Köhler: Peer group talk and striving for autonomy as motivators for cyberbullying.
  • Mathias Weber & Christina Köhler: Peers or parents? Predicting teenagers’ preferred context for talking about online experiences.
  • Dominique S. Wirz, Anne Schulz, Christian Schemer, Philipp Müller, Nicole Ernst, Frank Esser, & Werner Wirth: How Right-Wing Populist Communication Influences Cognitions and Emotions towards Immigrants: Evidence from a Cross-National Panel-Survey.
  • Mariek Vanden Abeele, Adrian Meier, Joseph Bayer, Niklas Johannes, Edmund Wei Jian Lee: Voicing concerns: alternative perspectives on problematic mobile media use beyond the disease model. (Blue Sky Workshop auf der 15th Annual Mobile Pre-Conference der ICA)
  • Marcel Verhoeven, Bjørn von Rimscha, Isabelle Krebs & Gabriele Siegert: Paths to audience success in media industries.
  • Ramona Vonbun-Feldbauer & Leyla Dogruel: Regional Newspapers’ Sourcing Strategies: Changes in Media-Citation and Self-Citation from a Longitudinal Perspective.
  • Marc Ziegele, Johannes Daxenberger, Oliver Quiring & Iryna Gurevych: Developing Automated Measures to Predict Incivility in Public Online Discussions on the Facebook Sites of Established News Media.