I checked 55 communication journals on Tuesday, December 02, 2025 using the Crossref API. For the period November 25 to December 01, I found 108 new paper(s) in 32 journal(s).

Communication Studies

Children are (Still) Communicators Too: Assessing and Advocating for Child-Focused Communication Scholarship
Colleen Warner, Ellen Jordan, Sophia Richards, Michelle M Miller-Day
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Communication Theory

Communication skills as generic objects: a relational view
David Boromisza-Habashi
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Communication skills do not have an agreed upon definition despite the importance contemporary communication culture attributes to them. Instead of asking what communication skills are, this study adopts a relational approach and asks how skills materialize as elements of the situation in and with which speakers interact. I review the sociopsychological theoretical tradition’s conception of skills as typologies of skills and skill components, and the sociocultural tradition’s conception of skills as discursive resources, to analyze and interpret practical metadiscourse about skills in a U.S. undergraduate public speaking course. I find that theorists and practitioners alike constitute communication skills as generic objects, that is, discrete but non-specific objects that encompass specific features and serve as templates for action. Further, the generic nature of skills allows them to circulate broadly. The constitution of skills as generic objects resolves the contradiction between the importance ascribed to them and their lack of specificity.
Identifying fake experts: a conceptual framework and case study of illegitimate expertise in climate change and COVID-19 misinformation and its implications for communication theory
Christel W van Eck, Michael Hameleers, Emma van der Goot
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The concept of the “fake expert” has been used as a label to delegitimize established expertise but also refers to experts that are invoked to support misinformation claims. This study examines how “fake experts” and their expertise are constructed in misinformation. Analyzing fact-checked misinformation on climate change and COVID-19, we investigate how sources are framed as experts (RQ1), how their expertise is linked to misinformation (RQ2), and to what extent these references are misleading or inaccurate (RQ3). Our findings show that expertise in misinformation is shaped more by content and communicative context than by credentials alone. Misinformation employs rhetorical strategies such as selective quoting and epistemic trespassing to create credibility. We propose a framework for identifying “illegitimate” expertise in misinformation, integrating content- and actor-based indicators. This framework offers a structured approach for analyzing how misinformation manipulates expert credibility and provides a foundation for future empirical research.

Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies

Semantic variation and translation issues in positively evaluative Korean homographs
Qian Hu, Yan Xie
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In order to develop one for a morphologically difficult language like Korean, the paper investigates the problem of homograph disambiguation in NMT. Homographs – words with a common form but several meanings and context differences – cause significant issues for NMT systems because they often assign meanings at random, leading to translation errors. This work introduces UTagger, a tool that uses the Standard Korean Language Dictionary (SKLD) to provide homographs distinct sense-codes in order to resolve homograph ambiguity. These sense-codes are then integrated into the parallel corpus, where each indexed homograph is treated as an individual word by the NMT system, minimizing ambiguity-related translation errors. The addition of UTagger improves the quality performances of the translation systems with BLEU, TER, and DLRATIO measures, according to experiments conducted on Korean-English and Korean-Vietnamese translation pairings. The outcome shows that for languages with complex morphology, UTagger enhances translation accuracy and dependability. The study concludes with a discussion of extending the application of UTagger to a wider range of homographs, particularly favourable evaluations, and outlines future work to further enhance UTagger, including enhancing its capacity to adapt to various languages and dialects.
Do androids dream of adventure games? Blade Runner , Hollywood and video game adaptation
Kyle Barrett
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Although Blade Runner (1982) initially failed at the box office, Ridley Scott’s cyberpunk/neo-noir film has since become a seminal work, widely regarded for its enduring influence and inspiration. The release of Blade Runner: The Director’s Cut (1992) removed elements Scott considered to be producer-imposed weaknesses, a vision fully realised in Blade Runner: The Final Cut (2007). A belated sequel, Blade Runner 2049 (Denis Villeneuve, 2017), also underperformed commercially but reaffirmed the enduring relevance of Scott’s dystopian future, one drenched in perpetual rain, climate disaster, overpopulation, and moral decline. While Blade Runner has been extensively examined across philosophical, aesthetic, and cultural contexts, this article shifts focus to its lesser-studied 1997 videogame adaptation by Westwood Studios. By transposing Scott’s cinematic universe into a point-and-click adventure format, the game, in some respects, enhances the film by addressing the challenges of adapting cinematic narratives into interactive media.
Virtual production in news media: Transforming storytelling, audience engagement, and ethical practices in the digital age
Ioanna Georgia Eskiadi, Nikolaos Panagiotou
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This study examines the transformative potential of Virtual Production (VP) technologies within news media organizations. By leveraging tools such as real-time game engines, LED walls, and Extended Reality (XR), VP redefines storytelling, enhances audience engagement, and alters journalistic workflows. This research focuses on case studies of innovative media organizations that have integrated VP, analyzing its impact on immersive journalism practices, audience interaction, and ethical considerations. The qualitative thematic analysis reveals how VP fosters participatory news consumption, aligns with the expectations of digital-native audiences, and addresses the complexities of integrating AI and blockchain tools in production. Findings highlight VP’s capacity to democratize content creation and promote inclusivity while also discussing the challenges of infrastructure investment, energy consumption, and accessibility. This paper offers a roadmap for news organizations to adopt VP technologies, emphasizing their role in shaping the future of journalism in the digital age.

Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking

Resilience You Can Train: The Brain–Gut Connection in Stress Adaptation
Brenda K. Wiederhold
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Digital Journalism

Spatiotemporal Unfixing, Image-Flow & Palinode in Photography of the Ukraine War
Jennifer Good
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Dancing with AI: The Impact of AI-Generated Images and Videos on Chinese Visual Journalism
Jing Meng, Haiyan Wang
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European Journal of Communication

Does fact-checking influence media trust? Longitudinal evidence from Flanders
Ferre Wouters, Lucie Wittner Franckx, Brahim Zarouali, Michaël Opgenhaffen
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Fact-checking is vital in combating misinformation, yet concerns persist regarding potential unintended effects on media trust. This study investigates causal dynamics between exposure to fact-checks and media trust over time, using a random intercept cross-lagged panel model (RI-CLPM) with longitudinal panel data from Flanders (Belgium) across three waves in 6 months before the 2024 elections. Findings indicate that people who encounter more fact-checks are also more likely to have higher trust in media. However, we found no causal relationship, suggesting that fact-checking neither erodes nor enhances media trust over time. Amid growing scrutiny of fact-checking by political actors and technology platforms, these results challenge assumptions about negative spillover effects of fact-checking.

Games and Culture

The Invention of Leshy
Tomasz Z. Majkowski, Magdalena Kozyra, Aleksandra Prokopek
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The objective of this paper is to examine the role of a digital game series in elevating this relatively minor mythological figure to the status of a synecdoche for the broader concept of “Slavic mythology” and in its appropriation as part of Polish cultural heritage. To this end, this study analyzes Leshy's position in both Polish and global culture before and after the release of The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt , with particular attention to how game design has shaped its popular perception. Drawing on Foster and Tolbert's concept of the folkloresque and Hobsbawm and Ranger's theory of invented tradition, this study analyzes how CD Projekt Red's interpretation of the forest spirit has become the dominant global representation, superseding previous fragmented and obscure references to Leshy in popular culture while simultaneously influencing Polish cultural discourse.
Rip and Tear: Reimagining Power Fantasy Through the Posthuman Aesthetics of the Doom Games
Tibor Guzsvinecz, Judit SzƱcs
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This article explores the construction of power fantasy and posthuman masculinity in the Doom series, mainly Doom (2016), Doom Eternal (2020), and Doom: The Dark Ages (2025). The study argues that the games construct a uniquely embodied fantasy of resilience through fast-paced violence, rhythm-based gameplay, and minimal narrative framing. Drawing on theories of affect, masculinity, and posthuman embodiment, the article positions the Doom Slayer as a symbolic projection of digitally mediated agency and control. Unlike other hypermasculine avatars, the Slayer is characterized by narrative silence, affective opacity, and rhythmic precision: traits that support an affective loop of empowerment. The analysis reframes Doom not merely as gratuitous violence, but as a meaningful response to contemporary cultural anxieties about control, identity, and survival. Ultimately, the games create a playable allegory of posthuman agency, where the human body is rendered obsolete in favor of mechanized flow, tactical immediacy, and emotional resilience amid collapse.

Howard Journal of Communications

Introduction: Exploring the Past, Present, and Future of Hip Hop
Tia C. M. Tyree, Roger Caruth
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Collective Emotions on Social Media: An Examination of Collective Emotions in YouTube Comment Sections Below New Videos and Their Political Consequences
Chang Sup Park, Mohammad Al Masum Molla
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Human Communication Research

Can fictional stories beat the congeniality bias? Selective exposure to fiction and non-fiction
Markus Appel, Juliane Gabel, Lena Wimmer, Marieke Klöppel, Tobias Richter
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People prefer attitude-consistent information over attitude-inconsistent information (congeniality bias). Connecting theory on the processing of stories to selective exposure theory, we assumed that the congeniality bias is reduced or even nullified when it comes to fictional messages. Across two experiments examining two different, polarizing topics (refugees, N1 = 1,326; theistic faith, N2 = 1,316) a highly consistent pattern of results could be observed: Participants were more willing to read a narrative message (exposure preference) in which the story events were in line with their attitudes rather than a message contrasting attitudes. This congeniality bias was unaffected by the fictionality of the information (i.e., whether the events were introduced as a fictional short story or a non-fictional journalistic reportage). Interestingly, the congeniality bias emerged for positive characterizations of refugees or theistic faith but not for negative characterizations. Implications regarding the role of fictionality and congeniality in selective exposure are discussed.

Information Technology & People

Consequences of illegitimacy perceptions: understanding Internet users’ resistance to firms’ information requests
Ding Wu, Benjiang Lu
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Purpose In the digital economy, value creation hinges critically on users’ voluntary compliance with corporate data acquisition initiatives. Nevertheless, it is reported that a significant number of users tend to adopt a defensive stance and resist these requests. Efficient coping endeavors of firms must be established on the basis of a systematic understanding of such user resistance, which remains under-explored. Accordingly, in this paper, we establish a theoretical model to provide an in-depth understanding of the diverse resistant behaviors exhibited by Internet users, adopting an integrative perspective grounded in relational contract appraisals. Design/methodology/approach We self-develop two theoretical constructs, namely perceived request excessiveness and perceived option restrictiveness, to characterize Internet users’ perceptions of the illegitimacy of firms’ information requests. From the integrative perspective of relational contract appraisals, specifically privacy contract concerns and psychological contract violations, we investigate the impacts of these constructs on users’ representative resistant behaviors, such as refusal, switching and complaining. To test the model, we conducted a scenario-based online experiment (N = 633) and analyzed the data using structural equation modeling. Findings The empirical results yielded two major findings. First, users’ perceptions of request excessiveness and option restrictiveness collectively impact their appraisals of relational contracts. Meanwhile, the perception of option restrictiveness can also exert a negative moderating effect. Second, Internet users’ psychological contract violations and privacy contract concerns further shape their resistant behaviors, where the two dominate defending and complaining behaviors, respectively, and the latter can also play a mediating role. Originality/value The originality of this work is threefold. First, we self-develop two constructs to characterize online users’ typical illegitimacy perceptions of firms’ information requests and systematically examine their functional roles. Second, we propose and examine the novel lens of relational contract appraisals to better understand users’ resistant responses. Third, we discuss a wide range of privacy-related defending and complaining behaviors and reveal their differential predominant mechanisms. Overall, our research lays the foundation for future work that aims to promote the harmonious use of user information.
To free ride or contribute? The effects of enforced working from home on employees’ engagement in the corporate online forum
Yang Liu, Yuan Chen, Yuchen Xu
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Purpose The COVID-19 pandemic fundamentally transformed workplace dynamics, compelling organizations to transition employees to work from home abruptly. Since corporate online forums played an important role as an online communication channel during the shift, this paper aimed to investigate the effect of enforced working from home (WFH) on employee engagement behaviors in such forums during COVID-19. Design/methodology/approach Leveraging the Wuhan lockdown as a natural experiment, this study employed a year-to-year difference-in-differences approach to analyze a unique panel dataset from a large company. Findings We found that enforced WFH increased passive engagement but significantly reduced active contributions. We also found an interesting recovery effect: while the drop in contributions subsided within a month of adaptation, elevated login and free-riding behaviors persisted. Further heterogeneity analyses uncovered critical disparities: male employees contributed less, senior employees participated less in low-cost activities, while employees under a stricter containment policy exhibited a smaller decrease in contributions. Practical implications Our findings provide insights for organizations to design equitable engagement incentives, recalibrate forum management strategies, and prioritize mental health support in future WFH policies. Our results also inform policymakers on tailoring containment measures to mitigate unintended workforce online disengagement. Originality/value Our study advances WFH research by analyzing enforced remote work’s impact on corporate forum engagement during COVID-19. It also enriches pandemic-related literature by incorporating crisis-specific factors and highlighting recovery patterns and policy-driven heterogeneity.

Information, Communication & Society

Legitimating digital media in religious institutions: the case of Benedictine monasteries
Jan Simon Danko, Oren Golan, Katja Rost
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Artificial intelligence and the image war: does exposing AI-generated images as fake limit the images’ influence on perceptions about wars and conflicts?
Moran Yarchi, Ela Blatt
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Climate communication in the stormy transition of Twitter to X
Una Joh, Christy Khoury, Alexander O. Smith, Yiran Duan, Jeff Hemsley
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If i perceive the influence of health misinformation, will i correct it? The roles of information verification and health knowledge
Shuming Yang
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Pandemic activism in comparative perspective: exploring the roles of populist attitudes, direct online political sources, and misinformation
Shelley Boulianne, Christian P. Hoffmann
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Can affordable internet increase employment opportunities for low-income workers? Evidence from the Affordable Connectivity Program
Hernan Galperin, François Bar, Angel Chavez Penate
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International Journal of Advertising

Exploring the advertising effectiveness of generative artificial intelligence: an empirical study using the hierarchy-of-effects model
Weipeng Hou, Jinghong Xu, Jie Ren
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Distance between ‘them’ and ‘us’: identity stigmatization in the age of consumer inclusion
Nikhita Tuli, Harish Kumar, Saurabh Upadhyay, E. Ciszek
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How do consumers with different need for cognition appreciate visual metaphor advertisements? Multifaceted aspects of human-made and AI-generated images
Ryosuke Takeuchi, Jue Wang
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Explaining variations in the use of humor in advertising across countries: a meta-analysis
Malgorzata (Mags) Karpinska-Krakowiak, Martin Eisend, Artur Modlinski, Joseph Riley
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The secret sauce: factors influencing the effectiveness of virtual influencer endorsements
Jasper Aniket, Neeraj Kaushik, Brijesh Sivathanu
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Internet Research

Should influencer CEOs speak out? The interplay among influencer CEO activism, self-disclosure on social media, and political ideology
Taeyeon Kim, Jeonghyun Janice Lee, Jihoon Kim
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Purpose Given the need for social consciousness among public figures and the increasing social influence of influencer CEOs, we examined how influencer CEO activism, influencer CEO styles of social media use (e.g. self-disclosure) and political ideology of followers interact to affect perceived intimacy and attitudes. Design/methodology/approach We conducted an online experiment with 219 participants randomly assigned to one of six conditions manipulating influencer CEO activism and influencer CEO self-disclosure on social media posts. Participants' political ideologies were measured. From the perspective of social penetration theory, we assessed perceived intimacy and examined a moderated mediation model. Findings The three-way interaction effect among influencer CEO activism, CEO self-disclosure and political ideology on intimacy was significant, affecting attitudes toward the activism, the CEO and the brand. The two-way interaction of influencer CEO activism and political ideology was significant in the professional self-disclosure condition but not in the personal self-disclosure condition. Practical implications This research underscores the importance of aligning influencer CEO activism with audience characteristics, highlighting personal disclosure as a potential buffer against backlash. Originality/value The findings show that the personal self-disclosure of influencer CEOs in their social media posts can insulate CEOs when their expressed opinions diverge from the opinions of their audience. Delving into the intrinsic mechanism behind this phenomenon through the lens of social penetration theory sheds light on the role of perceived intimacy in the persuasive power of influencer CEOs.
Gamification in C2C secondary marketplace apps: from motivating sustainable behavior to unintended overconsumption
Calvin Wan, Peggy M. L. Ng
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Purpose This study integrates affordance theory and self-determination theory to examine how gamification affordances on consumer-to-consumer (C2C) secondary marketplace apps influence users' pro-environmental behaviors. Drawing on the concepts of warm glow and moral licensing, it investigates how pro-environmental actions via apps may unintentionally lead to overconsumption. Design/methodology/approach We recruited 613 respondents who had recently used Xianyu, a leading C2C secondary marketplace app in China, to sell their unwanted possessions. Data were analyzed using SmartPLS 4.0 to test the proposed path relationships. Findings The findings showed that instrumental and hedonic affordances, but not social affordances, are crucial for enhancing pro-environmental motivations. Users' engagement in pro-environmental actions is driven by autonomous (intrinsic) and controlled (extrinsic) motives. Engaging in pro-environmental actions via apps can increase the warm glow effect, which, in turn, may unintentionally contribute to overconsumption behaviors, including over-purchase, hedonic consumption and impulse purchase. Moral licensing strengthened the impact of warm glow on hedonic consumption and impulse purchase. Practical implications This study suggests C2C secondary marketplace apps can design gamified elements to sustain pro-environmental motivations while reducing overconsumption by leveraging instrumental and hedonic affordances, emphasizing long-term environmental impact and mitigating moral licensing through ongoing commitment. Originality/value This research offers a novel perspective by demonstrating how gamification affordances promote pro-environmental behaviors yet may indirectly drive overconsumption through the emotional benefits of these actions. By highlighting both positive motivations and potential unintended consequences, this study provides a comprehensive understanding of gamification's impact in C2C secondary marketplaces.

Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media

Barrier or Catalyst? How Gender Discrimination on Social Media Shapes Political Participation
Mengxuan Cai, Saifuddin Ahmed
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“We are the Last Generation”: Exploring Gender, Power, and Resistance in China’s Digital Childfree Movement
Tongtong Hou, Lu Tang
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Journal of Communication

Toward a group theory of political communication
Stewart M Coles, Daniel Kreiss, Daniel S Lane, Shannon C McGregor
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Recent political communication scholarship finds that groups and identities play a central role in the crises faced by political and media systems globally, particularly in democracies. Yet an individualist orientation in the literature has resulted in key theoretical and conceptual limitations, preventing a broader group-centric theoretical framework from emerging. We synthesize disparate bodies of theory on groups, politics, and communication to offer three basic propositions underlying a group theory of political communication. First, it is the group—not the individual—that is the fundamental organizing unit of social and political life. Second, groups are constituted through communication, which is central to how they define their politics. Third, groups and politics are reciprocally influencing forces through political communication, oriented around power. We offer a framework for studying the role of groups in political communication at the micro, meso, and macro levels, providing a concrete agenda for the study of groups in political communication.

Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication

From screens to sensors: a contextual integrity approach to understanding privacy norms across mobile health contexts
Leheng Lin, Laurent H Wang
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The increasing reliance on digital technologies in health care brings unique privacy risks to individual users. Guided by the framework of contextual integrity (CI), this study examined how privacy norms compare across four mobile health technological contexts: telehealth, online patient portals, mobile health applications, and wearable devices. Analysis of 34 semi-structured interviews revealed context-specific actors, information types, and transmission principles, and identified instances that represent points of departure from entrenched privacy norms. In addition, we found that people use privacy heuristics—evoked by CI parameters—to guide their privacy evaluations. Findings theoretically contribute to CI by identifying parameters in the novel context of mobile health and by proposing privacy heuristics as the explanatory mechanism underlying the evaluation of privacy norms. Practically, findings can inform more user-centered mobile health design and communication practices.

Journal of Information Technology & Politics

Using computational methods to examine the framing of China in Latin America
Itai Himelboim, Guy J. Golan, Sihao Zhou, Porismita Borah
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Journal of Public Relations Research

ESG Communication as a Strategic Public Relations Function: A Framework for Excellence
Nadine Strauß, Vesile Cinceoglu, Sandra Binder-Tietz, Ingrid Oliva Alvarado
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Journal of Social and Personal Relationships

Victims’ justification of violence, support need, and help-seeking: A longitudinal study
Cantyo A. Dannisworo, Esther S. Kluwer, Ximena B. Arriaga, Johan C. Karremans
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Previous research has revealed various negative outcomes when victims of intimate partner violence justify their partner’s behavior, including reductions in self-worth and the persistence of violence. The current research tested the temporal dynamics of the justification of violence and its negative effect on the need for support and help-seeking behavior. Additionally, we explored whether victims’ level of violence justification moderates the impact of frequency of violence on the perceived need for support. A longitudinal study was conducted among pre-screened participants who are currently victims of partner violence using self-report measures via online research platforms (T1 N = 335, T2 N = 286, T3 N = 261). The data were collected at three time points, each three weeks apart. The findings were mixed. Across the entire sample, we did not find that justification of violence was directly or indirectly associated with support need and help-seeking, either cross-sectionally or longitudinally, nor were changes in justification of violence associated with changes in support need. However, the results among men (but not women) showed a pattern consistent with our general prediction: male victims who justified violence to a greater extent were less likely to seek help. Moreover, exploratory analyses showed that victims’ justification of violence dampened the association between frequency of violence and their perceived need for support. The current findings provide novel insights into the processes underlying support need and help seeking among victims of intimate partner violence.
Longitudinal changes in interparental conflict and impacts on children’s socioemotional skills
Qiujie Gong, Karen Z. Kramer
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Interparental conflict is a common issue in families. Guided by the family systems theory, conflict between parents may not only impact their relationship but also influences child’s development. While previous research has established links between interparental conflict and children’s outcomes, fewer studies have examined how changes in conflict over time may affect children’s development. Using three waves of data from a national and longitudinal dataset, Early Childhood Longitudinal Study - Birth Cohort (ECLS-B), this study investigated changes in mothers’ and fathers’ reports of interparental conflict and how these changes relate to children’s socioemotional skills at the third wave, when they are 4-year-old. Results from multilevel growth curve models indicate a significant decrease in fathers’ reports of conflict frequency, while a significant increase in mothers’ reports of conflict. Furthermore, an increase in mother-reported conflict frequency was associated with lower socioemotional skills in children at age 4. Findings highlight the importance of examining couple relationships from a dynamic perspective.

Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly

Beyond Credibility: The Effects of Different Forms of Visual Disinformation
Teresa Weikmann, Jana Laura Egelhofer, Sophie Lecheler
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Deepfakes dominate discussions about manipulated videos, but other forms of visual disinformation are more prevalent and less understood. Moreover, deception is often assessed through measuring credibility, overlooking cognitive effects like misperceptions and attitude changes. To address these gaps, an online experiment ( N = 802) examined visual disinformation’s effects on credibility, misperceptions, and perceptions of a politician. The study compared a deepfake (machine learning manipulation), a cheapfake (rudimentary manipulation), and a decontextualized video (false context), all portraying the same politician and false message. Despite low in credibility, the deepfake and cheapfake caused a misperception, with the deepfake harming perceptions of the politician.
The Short-Term Impact of an On-Site Literacy Intervention on Discerning Deepfake Videos Based on Visual Features
Daniel Vogler, Adrian Rauchfleisch, Gabriele de Seta
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This study examines how well individuals in Switzerland can distinguish high-quality deepfakes from real videos and whether a brief literacy intervention improves detection. In an online experiment with 1,361 participants, we tested the deepfake detection skills and how prior exposure and experience with deepfakes and various forms of media literacy relate to performance. Participants struggled to identify deepfakes when attending to visual features of 10-s clips and the literacy intervention showed no direct effect. However, prior deepfake experience and media literacy moderated the intervention’s impact. Findings highlight the need for comprehensive digital literacy strategies to address deepfake-related challenges.
Immunizing the Public Against AI-Generated Disinformation: Testing the Effects of Inoculation Mode and Issue Attitude on Inoculation Likelihood of Political Deepfakes
Bingbing Zhang, Sang Jung Kim, Alex Scott
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Political deepfakes are considered detrimental to democracy by eroding public trust and distorting communication. Scholars have advocated for inoculation strategies to counter deepfakes, yet they have found that individuals’ partisan attitudes can undermine the effects of inoculation. Guided by inoculation theory and motivated reasoning theory, we conducted a 3 (Inoculation Mode: Passive vs. Active vs. No Inoculation) × 2 (Deepfake Attack: Pro-Attitudinal vs. Counter-Attitudinal) between-subjects experiment. Results show that inoculation increases deepfake awareness, intention to debunk deepfakes, and information-seeking behaviors, while reducing the perceived credibility of deepfake messages. However, exposure to counter-attitudinal deepfakes led to greater agreement with embedded disinformation.
“It’s All Fake News!”: How Perceptions of Misinformation and Disinformation Influence News Consumption Across Traditional Media, Social Media, and AI
Muhammad Ehab Rasul, Christopher Calabrese, Yoo Jung Oh, Hee Jung Cho, Moonsun Jeon, Mark Boukes
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Public trust in the news media has eroded in the United States. This study examines how perceptions of misinformation (PMI) and disinformation (PDI) affect the consumption of traditional media, social media, and artificial intelligence (AI) news, and whether this relationship is moderated by political ideology and media trust. Findings from a pre-registered experiment ( N = 637) revealed that PMI and PDI regarding traditional and social media news lowered intentions to consume news from traditional, social, and AI sources. We found no significant moderating effect of political ideology or media trust. The implications of the findings are discussed.
The Power of Visual Framing in the Age of AI
Daniela V. Dimitrova, Mary Angela Bock, Erik P. Bucy, Renita Coleman, Viorela Dan
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This invited forum explores the complexity and power of visual framing in the field of journalism and mass communication. The forum brings together leading visual communication scholars who offer insights into how images continue to shape meaning and audience interpretations in an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven social media landscape. Contributions discuss framing as a constructive act of power, the interpretive agency of audiences, the interplay between text and visuals, adaptive framing strategies, and image creation and accountability challenges introduced by AI technologies. The forum calls for renewed theoretical rigor, transparency, and interdisciplinary collaboration to advance visual framing research in the digital era.
Data Visualization or Visual Exemplars? Testing the Differential Effects of AI-Generated Visual Correction Enhancements
Yibing Sun, Liwei Shen, Ji Soo Choi, Porismita Borah, Michael W. Wagner, Dhavan V. Shah, Sijia Yang
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This study investigates the efficacy of AI-generated visuals and potential credibility cues in correcting health-related misinformation. Using a pre-registered, factorial experiment ( N = 1,751), we tested two AI-generated visual enhancements (visual exemplars, infographics) and two credibility boosters (source tagging, partisan neutrality in posting history). Findings revealed small but significant advantages of visual exemplars, but not infographics, over text-only corrections in reducing misbeliefs, primarily through mitigating psychological reactance. However, credibility cues did not significantly enhance correction effectiveness. Overall, the results suggest that AI-generated visual exemplars offer incremental persuasive benefits beyond textual correction alone.
What Roles Can Journalists (Still) Play for the Self-Curating News User? Exploring How Young Adults Tailor Their Social Media News Feeds
Sarah Vis, Daniël Jurg, Ike Picone
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As young adults increasingly turn to social media for news, they rely on an eclectic mix of journalistic and non-journalistic sources to shape their daily news intake. To navigate this complexity, social media news users develop personal curation practices such as (un)liking or (un)following content to construct their personal news feeds. The study examines how these practices inform the roles that news users attribute to journalists. Using a novel mixed-methods approach that integrates visualized Instagram and TikTok data donations (DDPs) as elicitation tools within interviews ( n = 21), we capture how and why social media users manage their exposure to news. The findings identify four key drivers underlying these personal news curation practices: the pursuit of positivity, opinion affirmation, clarity, and diversity. Within this context, journalists are positioned as both diversifiers of content and benchmarks for clarity.
Deepfakes’ Cognitive, Emotional, and Behavioral Impact: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Individual Responses
Seok Kang, Kayla Valadez
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This meta-analysis examines 24 experimental studies on deepfake effects on credibility, emotions, and sharing intention, comprising 20,685 participants from 10 countries. Moderator effects of media literacy, control type, video topic, literacy type, gender, age, and country on individual responses were also analyzed. Effect sizes indicated deepfakes’ impact on elevated emotions. Media literacy moderated the effects of deepfake exposure on diminished credibility and sharing intention. The moderator effect of no literacy on emotions was positive. The results suggest that critical media consumers with media literacy, depending on the topic and type, can mitigate the adverse effects of deepfakes.
Disinformation in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (AI): Implications for Journalism and Mass Communication
Christian von Sikorski, Michael Hameleers
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We explore the growing intersection of artificial intelligence (AI) and disinformation, examining its implications for journalism and mass communication. We propose a working definition of AI disinformation, highlighting its role in the production, dissemination, and perception of misleading content. While AI technologies enable hyper-realistic synthetic media and targeted influence campaigns, empirical evidence on their impact remains mixed. We critically assess both alarmist and dismissive narratives, calling for a nuanced, evidence-based approach. Finally, we explore how AI can also serve as a tool to detect and counter disinformation, emphasizing the dual-use nature of AI in today’s complex information environment.
Countering Post-Truth: A Comparative Study of Journalists Responses to Disinformation Challenges
Jacopo Custodi, Hans-Joerg Trenz, Martin Moland
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This study explores how journalists respond to post-truth challenges through qualitative interviews with professionals from seven European countries. It examines their perceptions of disinformation, key obstacles, and effective countermeasures. Findings reveal diverse practices and regulatory contexts, showing how digitalization, political polarization, and economic pressures undermine journalism and spread false information. Simultaneously, emerging strategies offer opportunities to restore trust and strengthen democratic public spheres. By analyzing journalists’ perspectives, this study contributes to discussions on media resilience and innovation in the digital age.

Journalism Studies

Lost in Translation? How Structural, Individual, and Professional Factors Hinder AI Adoption in Investigative Journalism
Jessy De Cooker, Danielle Arets, Marius Brugman, Bart Wernaart, Marieke Van Vliet, Tim Van Leeuwerden
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How Safe Is Journalism? Unpacking Risks and Implications for the Profession in Romania
Natalia Vasilendiuc, Alexandra Bardan, Antonia Matei, Rodica Melinda Șuțu, Andrada Fiscutean, Gheorghe Anghel, Bogdan Oprea, Carmen Ionescu
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Sandbox Journalism: The Role of Media Labs as Innovation Drivers in European News Organisations
Ana Cecília Bisso Nunes, Hannes Cools, Ana Marta Flores, Colin Porlezza, Sonja Kretzschmar, Julia Eyrich, Giulia Ferri, Jose A. García-Avilés, Jane B. Singer
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Learning from Indigenous Journalism: A Case for Standpoint Journalism
Gisele Souza Neuls, Ava Francesca Battocchio, Marcos Paulo da Silva
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Mass Communication and Society

From Intentional Avoidance to Estrangement? A Longitudinal Study of News Avoidance and News Media Repertoires in Sweden
Kiki de Bruin, Erik Espeland, Rens Vliegenthart, Jesper StrömbÀck
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Abandoned by Elites, United by Crisis: Anti-Discourses and the Reinforcement of a Dissatisfied Collective Identity Online
Martina NovotnĂĄ, Lenka VochocovĂĄ
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Media and Communication

Counter-Mapping: Visual Strategies for Alternative Imaginaries
Miranda McKee
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Throughout the pandemic, maps of visual data published in the digital mediascape were used to communicate the global impact of Covid-19. While public and private entities offered “big picture” perspectives, hegemonic visualizations often neglected to address the disproportionate toll of the pandemic on the members of marginalized communities. This article presents findings from a mixed-methods investigation of 12 case studies, comparing eight grassroots counter-mapping sources against four mainstream mapping sources, created by government and academic institutions, that will be referred to here as “hegemonic.” The purpose of this study was to investigate how visuals presented online by community-focused counter-mapping collectives differed from those presented by mainstream sources, examining what these differences might indicate about the social imaginaries at play. Case studies from Argentina, Brazil, Canada, and the US produced a corpus of 1,556 images manually collected from online sources. An initial content analysis using NVivo generated quantitative data forming the foundation for later semiotic analysis examining each individual image while also considering the collection holistically. Informed by social semiotics, the findings highlight how counter-mapping employs bespoke illustrations and community insights to portray a more nuanced perspective of the impacts of the pandemic. In contrast, hegemonic maps rely on vector-based graphics that reflect dominant worldviews. Altering the practices of mapping, counter-mapping empowers communities, challenges systemic inequities, and reimagines how visual data shapes public knowledge.
Government Communication on Social Media: Balancing Platforms, Propaganda, and Public Service
Maud Reveilhac, Nic DePaula
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Social media have become essential channels for government communication with the public, creating opportunities for engagement with citizens, greater complexities in messaging and interactions, and distinct challenges in addressing government-citizen relations. This thematic issue brings together several articles that explore how governments, officials, and citizens interact on social media platforms. Collectively, the contributions illuminate how social media reshape communicative roles, redefine the boundaries between journalism, propaganda, and public service, and challenge democratic accountability. The studies employ a wide range of theoretical frameworks (from mediatization and affordance theory to principal-agent models and boundary work theory), distinct contexts (such as crisis communication, health communication, and military intervention), and several methodological approaches including text mining, machine learning, and mixed-methods approaches, among others.
The Role of Harm, Misinformer Age, and Information Scrutiny on Adolescents’ Trust in Misinformation
Aqsa Farooq, Adam Rutland, Luke McGuire
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Adolescents’ online habits may contribute to the spread of misinformation due to their preference for trusted peers as sources of information over credible sources. This propensity can also make adolescents a population more vulnerable to misinformation, particularly during crises when misinformation levels surge. In situations of uncertainty and risk, such as during public health crises, trust plays an important and influential role. This study explored whether adolescents’ trust in an individual sharing misinformation, and trust in their misinformation about Covid-19, differed based on adolescents’ perceived risk of harm from Covid-19 (risk vs reduced risk) and the age of the misinformer (peer vs adult). When shown misinformation about a hypothetical Covid-19 variant, adolescents (<em>N</em> = 131; 14–17 years old) trusted a misinformer more when there was a perceived risk of harm to their age group. Adolescents were also asked to provide open-ended justifications for their trust evaluations which were analysed in accordance with the elaboration likelihood model. We found that adolescents who reported to more regularly scrutinising information were more likely to consider information and source credibility when there was a perceived risk of harm to their age group. Adolescents who reported engaging in less information-scrutinising behaviours were more likely to consider their relationship with the misinformer when the misinformer was a peer. These findings suggest how the elaboration likelihood model can play an important role in risk communication amongst adolescents and emphasise the need for educating adolescents about the importance of scrutinising information, particularly during crises.
Migrant Social Media Influencers as Vernacular CERC Agents: Mediating Government Communication During Covid-19
Anna Smoliarova
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Effective government communication is crucial for promoting inclusive governance, especially in increasingly diverse societies. However, a significant gap remains in engaging residents with migration backgrounds, often leaving these communities underinformed and underserved in public discourse. This shortfall becomes especially critical during crises like the Covid-19 pandemic. Among transnational migrants in various countries, social networks were the main sources of information about Covid-19. Social media influencers with migration backgrounds became crucial transmitters of governmental information to their audiences. For instance, in 2020, Russian-speaking female bloggers in almost 40 countries started a global discussion about the Covid-19 outbreak on Instagram. This article presents the results of a content analysis of 113 Instagram posts by 58 Russian-speaking female influencers in 37 countries during the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. It demonstrates that influencers acted as primary information sources. Instead of relying on news media, they spread information from governmental sources to audiences within their countries of residence and globally. In this article, I highlight how strategic use of social media can bridge the communication divide, ensuring that residents with migration backgrounds integrate better into the public information ecosystem while balancing public service with ethical governance

Media Psychology

Empathy in the Face of Death: Fear Transcendence Effects are Conditional on Empathizing with Movie Characters in Eudaimonic Entertainment
Anneke de Graaf, Enny Das
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Mobile Media & Communication

Mobile communication and later life: From theories to empirical frescoes
Mireia FernĂĄndez-ArdĂšvol, Sakari Taipale
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New Media & Society

Reconceptualising political influencers: An alternative means of definition and analysis
Elizabeth Dubois, Katharine Dommett
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Recent interest in online political influencers has resulted in an array of competing definitions of who counts as a political influencer. Contending the value of a more porous and resilient definition able to recognise a spectrum of online political influence, we interrogate scholarship on opinion leadership, influentials, micro-celebrities, and social media influencer studies to reveal a range of identifying traits that can characterise different types of political influencers. Introducing a new approach to categorising these varied manifestations, we discuss six key attributes: personalised communication, compensation, audience size, political topical focus, control, and formal political role. Showing how this approach can be deployed to capture different manifestations of political influencers, we aim to build understanding that is resilient to change over time and that can support comparative empirical work.
Utilizing information communication technologies (ICTs) during the process of disaffiliating from the ultra-Orthodox community
Yossi David, Baruch Shomron
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The ultra-Orthodox community is characterized by high levels of commitment to community and religion and insulation from the outside world. Leaving such a community resembles the process of migration, in which the individual encounters new cultures, norms, and behaviors. This presents challenges with integration and disaffiliated community members do indeed often lack the tools, skills, and knowledge to successfully integrate into their new societies. Through qualitative in-depth interviews, we examine the role of information communication technologies (ICTs) and media in the processes of disaffiliation from ultra-Orthodox communities. Findings reveal the enablers and constraints these individuals experience in their journey and shed light on the importance of media and ICTs in individuals’ attempts to build new lives outside the ultra-Orthodox community. This study contributes to a better understanding of the role of media and ICTs in the lives of people undergoing major life changes, such as disaffiliation from the ultra-Orthodox community.
‘Influence’ in the (post-)digital age: Girls’ experiences of online influencer culture
Emily Setty, Robyn Muir, Rosie Macpherson
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This paper examines how girls aged 9–15 engage with online influencer culture, focusing on interplays between digital and non-digital normative ecologies. Drawing on school-based workshops, we explore tensions between authenticity, normative ideals and self-presentation in girls’ interactions with influencers. Participants expressed agency in content consumption alongside pressures to conform, shaped by social interactions online and offline. We argue that influencer culture perpetuates dominant femininity norms through reciprocal dynamics between influencers and audiences. Girls navigated this terrain ambivalently, often endorsing authenticity and diversity while feeling constrained by normative expectations. We propose a post-digital literacy framework to conceptualise girls’ critically engagements with influence as part of everyday life, highlighting implications for education and digital practice.

Personal Relationships

Who Is “Doing It”? Casual Sex and WellBeing in Singlehood
Anuki Amarakoon, Nicholas Latimer, Geoff MacDonald, Samantha J. Dawson
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The casual sex literature has mostly ignored the fact that casual sexual encounters typically occur in the broader context of lives lived single. This study aimed to address this gap by examining the casual sex experiences of single people. Using a discovery (Study 1, N = 747) and replication/extension (Study 2, N = 483) design, we investigated the frequency and characteristics of casual sexual relationships during singlehood and explored factors distinguishing singles who do and do not engage in casual sex in the domains of attachment, singlehood satisfaction, and wellbeing. Within our samples, 15.1% and 26.1% of singles reported being sexually active. These sexual relationships were characterized by limited exclusivity, low emotional closeness, and little interest in transitioning to a committed romantic relationship. Across both studies, singles engaging in casual sex reported lower attachment avoidance, greater sexual satisfaction, and higher self‐perceived mate value compared to those not sexually active, challenging previous research linking casual sex participation with negative outcomes. Considering casual sex as one part of lives lived single may provide a clearer picture of both decisions around casual sex opportunities and thriving during singlehood.
Adapting the Dyadic Trust Scale for the Chinese Context: Psychometric Evidence From Two Independent Samples
Jie Cai, Ye Zhang, Minmin Cai, Huimin Hua, Guifang Sun
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Trust is fundamental to forming, maintaining, and repairing close relationships, yet no established instrument exists for assessing trust in Chinese close relationships, despite such measures being in place in Western contexts. We therefore adapted the widely used Dyadic Trust Scale (DTS) and examined its psychometric properties in two independent Chinese samples (Study 1: N = 204; Study 2: N = 377). Item analysis and EFA identified a two‐factor structure, contrasting with the DTS's usual unidimensional form in Western samples and suggesting cultural differences in trust conceptualization. Item 1 was removed for weak loading and model misfit in CFA, yielding a final seven‐item structure of Faith (five items) and Security (two items). CFA showed good fit (CFI = 0.98, TLI = 0.96, RMSEA = 0.09) alongside high internal consistency, good convergent and discriminant validity, and strong criterion validity with relationship satisfaction (total DTS: r = 0.69; Faith : r = 0.56; Security : r = 0.51; all p s < 0.001). This study provides the first adaptation and validation of the DTS in China; the adapted trust scale offers a brief, psychometrically robust assessment for use in research on Chinese close relationships and in therapeutic settings.
“Sexual Orientations, Like Relationships, Are Messy”: How LGBTQ +‐Related Stressors Contribute to College Students' Relationship Dissolution
Alyssa N. Clark, Tracy L. Walters, Veronica Hanna‐Walker, Madeline J. Hebert, Amanda Denes, Eva S. Lefkowitz
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Individuals who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or other minoritized sexual and gender identities (LGBTQ+) are at greater risk of experiencing stressors due to their diverse sexual and gender identities. These stressors extend to LGBTQ+ individuals' romantic relationships and can result in relationship dissolution. To inform strategies for relationship maintenance specific to LGBTQ+ identity‐related stressors, it is important to examine how individuals' LGBTQ+ identities impact their romantic relationships. In the current paper, we used a mixed methods design to examine open‐ended responses from 138 LGBTQ+ college students ( M age = 19.8) describing how their LGBTQ+ identities contributed to the dissolution of a prior romantic relationship. We also examined potential differences in theme prevalence of transgender and gender nonconforming (TGNC) compared to cisgender students. A coding reliability thematic analysis indicated five themes: sexual orientation/gender identity (SOGI) identity exploration, SOGI identity disclosure, negative biases/experiences, societal issues, and no contributions. TGNC students were more likely to provide responses aligning with the themes of SOGI identity exploration and SOGI identity disclosure as reasons for romantic relationship dissolution than cisgender students. Our results underscore the importance of understanding minority stressors and their role in relationship dissolution for LGBTQ+ college students.

Political Communication

Performative Propaganda Engagement: How Celebrity Fans Engage with State Propaganda on Weibo
Yingdan Lu
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The Limits of Computational Propaganda: Investigating Underexplored Platforms and Contexts
Hossein Kermani, Taberez Ahmed Neyazi, Sophie Lecheler
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Public Relations Review

Punish or forgive? Exploring the mediating role of perceived CEO attitude on the interaction of emotional crisis communication and crisis type
James Ndone, Qi Zheng, Rongting Niu, Yan Jin, Margaret Duffy
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Beyond blame: Extending crisis responsibility through multi-stakeholder responsibility, cause attribution, and solution attribution
Lisa Tam, Amisha Mehta
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Long live Darth Vapour! Examining how audiences engage with influencers in an anti-vaping campaign
David Micallef, Edward Hurcombe, Juan Feng
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How consumers’ positive moral emotions can drive their active communication: In the context of corporate responsibility to race campaign
Xiao Liang, Yeunjae Lee, Jo-Yun Li, Weiting Tao
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Better than thought? A comparison of the real and perceived performance of the 2030 Agenda in seven European countries
Paloma Piqueiras, Vilma Luoma-aho
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Public relations professionals' role in managing conflict: A cross-country contingency theory perspective
A.Banu Bıçakçı, Melike Aktaß Kuyucu, MĂłnica Arzuaga-Williams, CornĂ© Meintjes
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Embracing paradox and pragmatism: A metamodern exploration of the social value of public relations
Ana Adi, Melike Aktaß Kuyucu, Gabriela Baquerizo-Neira
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Bridging gaps in the gig economy: Strategic communication and employee-organization relationships
Zifei Wang, Linjuan Rita Men
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Limited corporate influence on social media news: Evidence from topic-level agenda building and newsworthiness
Xiaoyue Yan, Anne C. Kroon
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Enhancing employees’ social media advocacy through internal stewardship strategies
Xiao Ma, Yeunjae Lee, Rebecca Sewu
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Generative AI outperforms humans in social media engagement: Evidence from GPT-4 and the FIIT model
Jiacheng Huang, Alvin Zhou
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Public relations practitioners and AI implementation: The challenges presented by the dominant coalition’s diffusion of responsibility
Kyle Harris, Burton St. John
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Toward an Islamic Public Relations Theory (IPRT): A critical/cultural analysis of religious instagram posts of Islamic banks in Kuwait
Ali A. Al-Kandari, T. Kenn Gaither, Ali A. Dashti
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“Fake is not a strategy for you”: Unpacking expectations of authenticity for women political candidates
Stephanie Madden, Abbey Blake Levenshus
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Early codes of professionalism in 1950s government public relations
Mordecai Lee
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Unpacking perceptions of selective and inclusive listening in a government context
Lisa Tam, Soojin Kim
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Delicate interactions: Relational skills in public relations consulting
Deepti Bhargava, Petra Theunissen
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Exploring public relations' social impact: Insights from a Delphi study
Katja Miơič Udir, Urơa Golob, Klement Podnar
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Cultural insights for the READINESS framework: A qualitative study of practitioner and scholar perspectives
Brittany N. Shivers, Yan Jin, Grace Mains, Yijing Wang, River Gracey, W. Timothy Coombs, Toni G.L.A. van der Meer
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Believing in belonging: Rethinking organization–public relationships through the QAnon movement
Kalyca Lynn Becktel, Kaye D. Sweetser
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Bridging practice and academia: Global insights on the role and future of public relations education
Anca Anton, Silvia Ravazzani, Gabriela Baquerizo-Neira, Carolina Andrea Carbone, Darius Mukiza
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A global exploration of workplace well-being in public relations
Nicky Garsten, Anca Anton, Dalien Rene Benecke, Eugen Glăvan, Anthony Tibaingana
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Communicating for good in a globalized world: How MNO practitioners in Bangladesh, Botswana, Indonesia, and Kenya conceptualize and practice prosocial public relations
Drew T. Ashby-King, Jeannette I. Iannacone, Boitshepo Balozwi, Teresia Nzau, Irmawan Rahyadi, Habib Mohammad Ali, Luke Capizzo
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Public Understanding of Science

Ethics, generative AI and science communication
Hannah R. Feldman, Fabien Medvecky, Michelle Riedlinger
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In this essay, we argue that the applications of generative-AI technologies to science communication need careful consideration to ensure such uses are desirable, and socially and ethically acceptable. In early applications of GenAI in science communication, especially in public media, there has been swift and overwhelmingly negative response to news about its use. Drawing on existing literature about generative-AI in adjacent fields to science communication, and on the scholarship on the ethics of science communication, this article maps out the key ethical issues that the use of generative-AI technologies raise for science communication. Specifically, acknowledging that generative-AI is more than an output-producing technology but is a constellation of governance, infrastructure, data, human and computing operating systems, we argue that three dimensions of ethical concerns need to be explored: the communication outputs of generative AI; the social and environmental impacts of using generative AI technologies in science communication and the narratives we tell about AI technology.
Post-normal science communication? Evidence of third-order thinking among sustainability scientists
Marianne Achiam, Alan Irwin
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Mounting socio-environmental crises have prompted calls for post-normal sustainability science, emphasising complexity, uncertainty, and epistemic pluralism, and framing science communication as dialogical and reflexive. However, previous research has identified a gap between these ideals and actual practices, where conventional norms of objectivity and expert authority often prevail. Drawing on Irwin’s (2021) framework of socio-technical orders of thinking, we analyse interviews with 12 leading Danish sustainability scientists. Our thematic analysis shows that scientists pragmatically navigate between first-order (expert-led), second-order (inclusive), and third-order (reflexive and power-aware) modes of thinking. While third-order thinking emerges as integral to sustainability science, traditional assumptions about authority and neutrality continue to shape scientists’ communication practices. These findings invite science communication scholars to view sustainability science as a fertile ground for developing and testing pluralistic, reflexive, and power-aware communication models, while also learning from the situated practices of scientists who already navigate these complexities in context.

Social Media + Society

Finding Belonging in Competitive Play: How a Japanese Splatoon Discord Community Functions as a Third Place
Mattias van Ommen, Ginga Yahanashi
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This article explores how competitive gaming communities on Discord function as third places in Japan. Using ethnographic methods, including participant observation and interviews, we examine the social dynamics of “Medimura” (pseudonym), a Discord community centered around skilled Splatoon 3 players. We found that players negotiate competitive pressures and ambiguous communication styles through playful activities that foster meaningful social connections. Doing so, we show that while users initially join such Discord communities to enhance their gameplay, over time, these spaces evolve into third places, offering vital opportunities for social interaction and emotional support in contemporary Japan. This provides insights into how digital games and social media help transform third places in the digital age.
Communicating About and Through Platform Values: Legitimizing Public Expression Regulation on X and Weibo 2007–2024
Tianchan Mao, Chris Chao Su, Ngai Keung Chan, Lei Guo
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In this article, we argue that social media platforms communicate their governance strategies both about and through values across diverse sites of communication— about values in presenting normative ideals and through values to justify their content moderation practices. Moreover, we highlight the significance of analyzing platform values across temporal and regional contexts, especially beyond the Western sphere. Focusing on X and Weibo, we employed content and network analysis to examine how they articulated values in different venues to regulate public expression from 2007 to 2024. Our findings reveal an increasing convergence in how the two platforms communicate about values in their community guidelines, suggesting a trend of institutional isomorphism in response to shared challenges such as misinformation and online safety. However, they diverged in communicating through values in administrative posts. While X emphasized personal-level values such as self-expression, Weibo prioritized social-level values, particularly social and political security, often in the context of addressing concrete cases.
Cloud Parenting: Douyin Affordances, Emotional Authenticity, and Commodification of Wanghong Children
Tian Zhang, Crystal Abidin, Anthony Fung
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This article examines the phenomenon of cloud parenting in China, considering the affective mechanisms in sharenting and commodification of wanghong children facilitated by the platform affordances. We select five child wanghong accounts that are active on Douyin for case studies, along with corresponding audience interviews. We find that Douyin’s creation affordances enable child wanghong to create a family affection aesthetic. At the same time, audiences detect and decode emotional cues, especially children’s expressions and parent-child interactions, and use these signals to feel authenticity instead of rationally verifying it. Through this affective inference, audiences and child wanghong co-shape emotional authenticity. Cloud parenting emerges as a series of platformized affective practices normalized into data labor and consumption. We argue that in a platformized affective economy, guardians, cloud-parenting audiences, and the Douyin platform are complicit in producing and exacerbating the commodification of wanghong children. Douyin functions not merely as a content distribution platform but as an affective infrastructure that organizes, amplifies, and commodifies children’s emotions and family affection.
Reversing the Gaze: Gendered Parody, Affective Politics, and the “Greasy Man” on Douyin
Li Wenfei
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This article explores a series of parody videos on Douyin that satirize the “greasy man” (æČč腻男), a gendered figure embodying performative masculinity and everyday misogyny in Chinese digital culture. Primarily produced by young women, these videos employ audiovisual mimicry and exaggerated affect to stage a gendered counter-performance. Drawing on affect theory, gender performativity, and gaze theory, the study employs digital ethnography and critical visual analysis to examine how these parodies reproduce and disrupt dominant masculine norms. Analysis of audience engagement through comment sections reveals the emergence of affective publics that negotiate humor, critique, and resistance. The findings highlight how parody on Douyin functions as a memetic and oppositional practice, challenging hegemonic masculinity and contributing to broader discussions of digital activism, platform feminism, and the politics of the gaze. This study advances understanding of how affect and humor intersect in social media spaces to articulate gendered critiques and collective affective mobilization.
History and Contrarian Expression: Debating Genocide on Reddit
Aliaksandr Herasimenka, Ralph Schroeder
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Social media communities are increasingly considered as spaces where evidence-based information about history is undermined. We combine expert interviews and content analysis of debates about genocide in a popular online contrarian community to understand how to mitigate the spread of misleading information across such communities in the domain of history. We analyse 1725 entries on 10 Reddit forums dedicated to debating and promoting scepticism towards international consensus about prominent historical topics. The entries we analyse cover three topics referred to as genocide by forum members: the Holocaust, the Holodomor, and the COVID-19 vaccination. The prevailing view suggests that contrarian expression fosters smaller, ideologically homogeneous, and relatively radical online spaces where differing views are diminished or entirely absent. To the contrary, we analyse real-life behavioural data to demonstrate substantial scepticism towards contrarian narratives even in some of the most popular dedicated online communities, which may suggest that these spaces are more internally contested than prevailing theories imply.
Linking Social Media News Use, AI Interest, and Political Ideology With AI Subjective Knowledge: A Moderated Mediation Model Across Two Countries
Manuel Goyanes, Hui Min Lee, Rebecca Scheffauer, Homero Gil de ZĂșñiga
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Social media has emerged as a pivotal platform for accessing news content today. While there appears to be a connection between news consumption on social media platforms and perceived knowledge of public affairs, little is known about the potential effect on specific issues like artificial intelligence (AI). To extend findings on people’s perceived knowledge of AI, how it relates to social media news consumption, and what other factors can contribute, we offer results based on original survey data from two societies (Germany, N = 2213, and Spain, N = 2337). This study advances a moderated mediation model by which social media news positively predicts heightened AI interest, which in turn is associated with increased AI subjective knowledge. This effect is significant for both conservatives and liberals, albeit stronger for conservatives.
How Strangers Fall in Love in Games: Affective Infrastructures and Platformed Intimacy in China
Meng Wang
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In the platformized era, digital games have become key arenas for romantic connection, yet their role in shaping intimacy between strangers remains underexplored. This study examines how such relationships are initiated, developed, and evaluated in Honor of Kings, China’s most popular multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) game. Based on 25 in-depth interviews with young players, it addresses four questions: the stages of romantic intimacy formation, enabling digital affordances, reasons for choosing games over dating or social apps, and evaluations of game-based romantic relationships. Findings reveal a four-stage process—encounter, acquaintance, development, and establishment or termination. Conceptualizing games as affective infrastructures, the study shows how platform design structures and commodifies digital intimacy while enabling embodied, performative commitment. Comparative analysis with dating apps, social media, and Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Games (MMORPGs) highlights the distinctiveness of fast-paced, interaction-intensive play in fostering embedded emotional commitment. It also uncovers players’ tactical workarounds to reclaim autonomy from platforms. By theorizing intimacy as both enabled and contested within socio-technical systems, this research advances an infrastructural account of how love is imagined, enacted, and negotiated in contemporary digital culture.

Telematics and Informatics

Opting out of generative AI: A behavioral experiment on the role of education in Perplexity AI avoidance
Ulloa Roberto, Kulshrestha Juhi, Kacperski Celina
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A systematic review of research on digital mobile payment apps
Lin Yue
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Rethinking the ethical role in cyberloafing behavior: Organizational culture, interpersonal Justice, and compassion
Pablo Zoghbi-Manrique-de-Lara
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#BigTech @Minors: social media algorithms have actionable knowledge about child users and at-risk teens
Martin Hilbert, Drew P. Cingel, Jingwen Zhang, Samantha L. Vigil, Jane Shawcroft, Haoning Xue, Arti Thakur, Zubair Shafiq
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The authenticity Paradox of political AI Chatbots: Effects on candidate Credibility, social Presence, and voting intentions
Yu-Hao Lee, Chien Wen (Tina) Yuan
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Winning and losing with Artificial Intelligence: What public discourse about ChatGPT tells us about how societies make sense of technological change
Adrian Rauchfleisch, Joshua Philip Suarez, Nikka Marie Sales, Andreas Jungherr
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Collaborative content generation on social media platforms: Social capital, team dynamics, and viewer engagement
Mengxiao Zhu, Yating Xu, Lin Liu, Songbo Yang, Chunke Su
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How private is private enough? Evaluating facial de-identification across changing social contexts
Sunyoung Park, Dongjae Kim, Minhwa Cho, Doha Kim, S. Shyam Sundar, Jinyoung Han, Eunil Park
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