See the list of graduate student and faculty co

advertisement
2013 AEJMC PAPERS & AWARDS
SoJ authors in bold, alumni in italics
*Top Paper award
32 papers, 6 award winners
Ardevol-Abreu, A., Saldana, M., & McCombs, M. (2013). Agenda-setting in the
beginning of the 1979 oil crisis: Compelling arguments and public concern.
Communication Theory and Methodology Division.
Choi, H. (2013, August). Journalists' social capital and moral development. Media Ethics
Division.
*Chyi, H. I., Lewis, S., & Zheng, N. (2013). Is Google “stealing” your content?
Examining how the news industry framed Google in an era of news aggregation. SecondPlace Award from the Online News and Newspaper Division.
Chyi, H. I. & Tennant, J. I. (2013). Less is better? The impact of reduced newspaper
publication schedule on advertising revenue. Media Management & Economics Division.
Dan, V., & Coleman, R. (2013). HIV/AIDS and recurrent frames as patterns of
information in meaning-making: A systematic review of empirical studies.
Communicating Science, Health, and Risk Division.
Diehl, T. (2013). Knowledge gaps on social media: Exploring inequality in contemporary
news environments. Communication Theory and Methods Division.
Gil de Zúñiga, H. (2013). Social network ties and discussion attributes as antecedents of
political discussion elaboration. Communication Theory & Methodology Division.
Harlow, S. (2013). Losing focus: Goal displacement at an alternative newspaper in El
Salvador. International Division.
Harlow, S. (2013). It was a Facebook revolution: Exploring the meme-like spread of
narratives during the Egyptian protests. Communication Technology Division.
Johnson, T. J. & Kaye, B. K. (2013, August) Some like it lots: The influence of
interactivity and reliance on credibility. Communication and Technology Division.
*Kim, J.W., Chadha, M., & Gil de Zúñiga, H. (2013). News use and cognitive
elaboration the mediating role of people's perceptions of media complex issues
comprehension. Top Three Faculty paper in the Mass Communication Division.
Lee, A. M., & Chyi, H. I. (2013, August). News consumption in the age of content
aggregation: The case of Yahoo, Google and Huffington Post. Newspaper and Online
News Division.
*Lee, A., Coleman, R., & Molyneux, L. (2013). From thinking to doing: Effects of
social norms on ethical conduct in journalism. Top Faculty Paper in the Media Ethics
Division.
Lee, A., Gil de Zuniga, H., Johnson, T., & Coleman, R. (2013). The dialogic potential
of social media: Assessing the ethical reasoning of companies’ public relations on
Facebook and Twitter. Media Ethics Division.
Lee, A. M., Sacco, V., & Giardina, M. (August, 2013). Technological and sociological
motivations: Predictors of online content curation platform acceptance among journalists.
Newspaper and Online News Division.
Lee, N.Y. (2013). Does motivation make a difference in agenda-setting effects?
Communication Theory and Methodology.
Lee, Seok Ho (2013). Stay tuned for more news from your friends: Closeness of
friendship and news consumption on Facebook, Online News Division.
Lee, Seok Ho (2013). When ideology meets bottom line: Analysis on market competition
and ideology bias in newspapers. Media Management and Economics Division.
*McElroy, Kathleen. (2013). Basket case: Framing 'Linsanity' and Blackness. Thirdplace student paper award, Minorities and Communication Division.
McElroy, K., & Lee, N.Y. (2013) Are online comments good for you? Health journalism
and its readers. Communicating Science, Health, and Risk Division.
Meader, A. (2013) A comparative study of the propaganda devices used by FOX and
MSNBC. Mass Communication and Society Division.
Molyneux, L. (2013) What journalists retweet: Opinion, humor and brand development
on Twitter. Newspaper and Online News division.
Mourao, R.R. (2013) Binders full of tweets: Twitter coverage of “women’s issues” in
the 2012 elections. Commission on the Status of Women.
Mourao, R.R. & Wood, C.H. (2013) The digital divide in Brazil, 2004 – 2009: Evolution
and effects on political engagement. International Communication Division.
Saldana, M. (2013). Reshaping the journalist-audience relationship: A national survey of
journalists and their use of Twitter. Newspaper and Online Division.
*Shahin, S. (2013) Unveiling the American-Muslim press: News agendas and frames in
Islamic Horizons and Muslim Journal. Second Place Student Paper, Minorities and
Communication Division.
Shahin, S., Saldaña, M., and Gil de Zúñiga, H. (2013). The peripheral elaboration
model: How incidental news exposure predicts political participation. Communication
Theory and Methodology Division.
Suran, M., Holton, A., & Coleman, R. (2013). Idiosyncratic responses: The relationship
between framing and health topic in how readers respond to online health articles.
Communicating Science, Health, and Risk Division.
Vargo, C., Guo, L., Shaw, D., & McCombs, M. (2013). Network issue agendas on
Twitter during the 2012 U.S. presidential election. Political Communication Division.
*Vu, H., Woo, J., Stephens, M., Mourao, R.R., Baresh, B. & Johnson, T.J.
(2013) Communication’s next top model: Comparing the differential gains and
communication mediation models as predictors of political participation and
knowledge. Top paper at the Political Communication Interest Group.
Wang, Q. (2013).Walking through the fine line: Comparing Ann Romney’s RNC speech
with Michelle Obama’s DNC speech in 2012.
Zheng, P., Ardèvol-Abreu, A., and Gil de Zúñiga, H. (2013). News use, infotainment
and political participation: Advancing the mediating role of news and infotainment
cognitive elaboration. Mass Communication & Society Division.
Download