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Jensen, Jakob D.; Bernat, Jennifer K.; Wilson, Kari M.; Goonewardene, Julie – Human Communication Research, 2011
A between-participants experiment (N = 147) tested for the presence of a delayed effect following exposure to an episode of a legal drama that contained false information. Participants were more likely to endorse false beliefs if they were queried two weeks after watching the program rather than immediately following exposure. The relationship…
Descriptors: Mass Media Effects, Television, Beliefs, Time
So, Jiyeon; Nabi, Robin – Human Communication Research, 2013
The risk convergence model proposes reduction of perceived social distance to a mediated personality as a mechanism through which the mass media can influence audiences' personal risk perceptions. As an initial test of the model, this study examined whether 5 audience variables known to facilitate media effects on personal risk…
Descriptors: Social Distance, Mass Media Effects, Attitudes, Risk
Cho, Jaeho – Human Communication Research, 2011
This study explores whether and how campaign-induced changes in local information environments influence citizens' everyday communication activities. The empirical analysis in this study centers on a comparison of two New Jersey media markets that showed idiosyncratic differences in the amount of political advertising during the 2000 presidential…
Descriptors: Political Campaigns, Geographic Regions, Advertising, Mass Media Effects
Wang, Zheng; Solloway, Tyler; Tchernev, John M.; Barker, Bethany – Human Communication Research, 2012
In the theoretical framework of dynamic motivational activation, this study reveals the dynamics of antimarijuana public service announcement (PSA) processing, especially the processing of co-occurring positive and negative content. It specifies the important role of endogenous feedback dynamics of the information processing system and teases them…
Descriptors: Publicity, Mass Media, Information Dissemination, Marijuana
Zhang, Jinguang; Reid, Scott A. – Human Communication Research, 2013
The public expression of opinions (and related communicative activities) hinges upon the perception of opinion consensus. Current explanations for opinion consensus perceptions typically focus on egocentric and other biases, rather than functional cognitions. Using self-categorization theory we showed that opinion consensus perceptions flow from…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Mass Media Effects, Models, Social Behavior
Oliver, Mary Beth; Bartsch, Anne – Human Communication Research, 2010
This article elaborates upon the notion of media enjoyment in the context of film viewing by proposing a complementary type of gratification that we conceptualize as appreciation. Three studies were conducted to tap into the multidimensionality of viewers' entertainment gratifications with a special focus on the domain of more serious, poignant,…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Mass Media Effects, Films, Role
Zhao, Xiaoquan; Nan, Xiaoli – Human Communication Research, 2010
Self-affirmation has been shown to reduce biased processing of threatening health messages. In this study, the impact of self-affirmation on college smokers' reactions to gain- versus loss-framed antismoking public service announcements (PSAs) was examined. A consistent pattern of interaction was observed wherein self-affirmation produced more…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, College Students, Smoking, Health Promotion
Walther, Joseph B.; DeAndrea, David; Kim, Jinsuk; Anthony, James C. – Human Communication Research, 2010
Web-based media often present multiple sources of influence, such as mass media and peers, within one interface. When individuals identify with peers who are visually anonymous and with whom they do not directly interact, they should be susceptible to social influence from that group. This study examined the interplay among antimarijuana public…
Descriptors: Social Influences, Mass Media, Marijuana, Drug Use
Weaver, Andrew J.; Wilson, Barbara J. – Human Communication Research, 2009
This experiment explores the relationship between television violence and viewer enjoyment. Over 400 participants were randomly assigned to one of 15 conditions that were created by editing five TV programs into three versions each: A graphically violent version, a sanitized violent version, and a nonviolent version. After viewing, participants…
Descriptors: Television Viewing, Violence, Television, Mass Media Effects
Nabi, Robin L. – Human Communication Research, 2009
The recent proliferation of reality-based television programs highlighting cosmetic surgery has raised concerns that such programming promotes unrealistic expectations of plastic surgery and increases the desire of viewers to undergo such procedures. In Study 1, a survey of 170 young adults indicated little relationship between cosmetic surgery…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Surgery, Young Adults, Models
Grabe, Maria Elizabeth; Yegiyan, Narine; Kamhawi, Rasha – Human Communication Research, 2008
This study experimentally tested the knowledge gap from an information processing perspective. Specifically, knowledge acquisition was investigated under conditions of medium and low news message arousal, with time delay. Results show the persistence of a knowledge gap, particularly for low arousing messages. In fact, at low levels of message…
Descriptors: Motivation, Mass Media Effects, News Media, Arousal Patterns
Peter, Jochen; Valkenburg, Patti M. – Human Communication Research, 2009
The aim of this study was to investigate, within a social comparison framework, the causal relationship between adolescents' use of sexually explicit Internet material (SEIM) and their sexual satisfaction. In addition, we tested which adolescents were most susceptible to a potential influence of SEIM on sexual satisfaction. Between May 2006 and…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Adolescents, Sexuality, Internet
Aubrey, Jennifer Stevens; Taylor, Laramie D. – Human Communication Research, 2009
We present a program of research investigating the effects of lad magazines on male body self-consciousness and appearance anxiety. Study 1, based on panel data from undergraduate men, showed that lad magazine exposure in Year 1 predicted body self-consciousness in Year 2. Study 2 was an experiment that showed that men assigned to view objectified…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Anxiety, Males, Undergraduate Students
Scharrer, Erica; Leone, Ron – Human Communication Research, 2008
A sample of 118 U.S. 6th and 7th graders was used to examine early adolescents' views of whether video games negatively influence themselves, others of the same age, and younger others. Six specific games ranging in rating from E for Everyone to M for Mature were listed for the early adolescents to respond to, with questions asked about both…
Descriptors: Video Games, Social Cognition, Adolescents, Grade 7
Mastro, Dana E.; Behm-Morawitz, Elizabeth; Kopacz, Maria A. – Human Communication Research, 2008
Although research suggests that manifestations of blatant racism are on the decline, findings additionally demonstrate that subtle racism remains prevalent when contexts provide sufficient ambiguity for the expressions to go unnoticed. Notably, studies examining these outcomes have typically been confined to intergroup contexts, despite the fact…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Racial Identification, Television, Hispanic Americans