학술논문

Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (86th, Kansas City, Missouri, July 30-August 2, 2003). Communication Theory & Methodology Division.
Document Type
Collected Works - Proceedings
Reports - Research
Author
Source
Subject
Adolescents
Advertising
Athletics
Community
Higher Education
Interaction
Internet
Interpersonal Communication
Journalism Education
Journalism Research
Memory
News Media
Research Methodology
Self Esteem
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Television Research
Values
World Wide Web
Language
English
Abstract
The Communication Theory & Methodology Division of the proceedings contains the following 14 papers: "Interaction As a Unit of Analysis for Interactive Media Research: A Conceptualization" (Joo-Hyun Lee and Hairong Li); "Towards a Network Approach of Human Action: Theoretical Concepts and Empirical Observations in Media Organizations" (Thorsten Quandt); "Community & Civic Values, Communication, and Social Capital: 'Bowling Alone' as a Product of Values and Communication" (Leo W. Jeffres, Jae-won Lee, Kimberly Neuendorf, and David Atkin); "None of the Above: Creating Mass Deliberation Without Discussion" (Ray Pingree); "An Amplification of Sensationalism: Comparing the Tonal Values of the 'New York Times' to the 'New York Post' Using Whissell's Dictionary of Affect in Language" (Paul Crandon and John J. Lombardi); "Do Mass Communication Studies Test Measures for Unidimensionality?" (John D. Richardson and Frederick Fico); "Is Herpes Entertaining?: An Application of Entertainment-Education to Text Information Processing Concerning STDs Among Adolescents" (Donna Rouner and Ralf Kracke-Berndorff); "Attributions of Advertising Influence and Negative Stereotypes Among First- and Third-Person Perceptions" (Don Umphrey and Tom Robinson); "Modeling Micro and Macro: A Multilevel Model to Predict Memory for Television Content" (Brian G. Southwell); "Assessing Co-Termination Between Coders in Unitizing Textual Data: A Multi-Response Randomized Blocks Permutation Approach" (Li Cai); "How General Principles of Organization Theory Explain Gatekeeping Decisions About News: A Revised View of the Field" (Hugh J. Martin); "Democratic Realism, Neoconservativism, and the Normative Underpinnings of Political Communication Research" (Erik P. Bucy and Paul D'Angelo); "The World Wide Web of Sports: A Path Model Examining How Online Gratifications and Reliance Predict Credibility of Online Sports Information" (Thomas J. Johnson and Barbara K. Kaye); and "Self-Esteem, Self-Affirmation and Threats to Self-Worth: Testing a Motivational Explanation for the Third-Person Effect" (Patrick C. Meirick). (RS)