I checked 55 communication journals on Saturday, July 18, 2026 using the Crossref API. For the period July 11 to July 17, I found 78 new paper(s) in 31 journal(s).

Annals of the International Communication Association

Gender in/as communication: a constitutive framework and review
Matthew L Meier, Bengisu ƞimƟek, Marie-Louise Mares
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Adopting a framework of gender as communicatively constituted, this paper reviews the past decade of research from four flagship communication journals. Across all studies, gender was most often analyzed as an atheoretical class concept, typically a covariate. Where gender was of a priori interest, an inductive thematic analysis revealed seven gender-related topics, with half of studies falling under two topics focused on women’s marginalization. Our deductive coding of communication processes found most papers focused on media, typically as one-directional media effects or content analyses. Few papers considered how gender is negotiated through multi-directional interpersonal and group processes, or across cultural contexts. The paper argues for a shift toward researching gender as a dynamic phenomenon constituted through communication.

Communication Monographs

On the problems of construct proliferation and redundancy: A discussion of problems and various solutions
Brian Manata, Franklin J. Boster, Karen Boynton
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Communication Quarterly

Development and validation of the support marshaling scale
John P. Crowley, Amy Bleakley, Scott E. Caplan, Ariella Dodyk, Timothy Edwards, Emily J. Pfender, Susanna Weir
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Communication Research Reports

Media coverage of implicit bias affects attributions of blame and support for reform
Kristina Medero, David C. DeAndrea
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Communication Studies

Embodied Margins: Material Structures and the Communicative Organization of Reproductive Bodies
Bobbi J. Van Gilder, Jacqueline S. Bruscella
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Communication Theory

In defense of qualitative description: reclaiming “little t” theory as a site of knowledge advancement
Chelsea Reynolds, Jessica Maddox, Krysten Stein, Nahla Bendefaa
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This article problematizes post-positivism’s stronghold on the mass communication canon and defends the use of qualitative description as a legitimate methodology for media scholarship. We present evidence that our field’s gatekeepers have prioritized research that advances what we call Big-T social science theories—those recognizable, named theories with testable, generalizable explanatory power—rather than the context-specific little t theories associated with qualitative description. We link this trend with the systematic underrepresentation of emic research, especially from the Global South. Qualitative description allows scholars to explore emerging research contexts and build trust with research participants, setting ground for future theory advancement. We present a framework for doing qualitative description in mass communication, and we offer clarifications for how this approach differs from other theoretical work driven by qualitative communication research methods.
Theorizing media experience: a cartography of approaches
Ignacio Siles, Rodrigo Muñoz-Gonzålez, Mariana Rodríguez
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The notion of experience is foundational in communication and media studies. However, its use has been constrained by conceptual ambiguity and fragmentation. To advance its theorization and enhance its analytical precision, this article develops a cartographic exploration of different approaches to experience in communication and media studies. The article draws on an integrative review of articles published between 2000 and 2025. Based on this examination, we first introduce an interpretive “compass” to discuss four orientations through which scholars have engaged with experience: as process, lived occurrence, accumulated knowledge, and designed interaction with media. Having analyzed the intersections and divergences across these orientations, we propose advancing the study of experience by addressing four issues that have been relatively overlooked in the literature: adopting a temporal perspective; navigating the tension between fragmentation and coherence; complementing the focus on multidimensionality with multiperspectivalism; and critically examining both the promises and limitations of the concept.

Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies

Wellness creep into music streaming platforms: From pure chill to aural slop
Raquel Campos Valverde, Ludmila Lupinacci
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This article addresses and unpacks the phenomenon of wellness creep – the increasing pervasiveness of ‘wellness culture’ in digital media and society – examining its proliferation into music streaming platforms. This conception of well-being as an individual responsibility that can be managed through consumption now dominates different sectors, becoming particularly prominent in contemporary digital platforms and social media environments. Through platform walkthrough and critical interface analysis of Spotify, Apple Music and Amazon Music, this article considers how industry discourse, user interfaces, and playlist products increasingly push pseudoscientific and individualistic ideas of health and self-care as tools for the pursuit of an aspirational good life through music consumption. Our analysis demonstrates how wellness creep operates on three increasingly normative levels. First, we focus on how platforms push ‘chill’ as a dominant aesthetic category and affective disposition, which in turn paves the way for more profound layers of wellness creep . Second, we demonstrate how platforms stage wellness atmospheres as ways of acting and feeling that reproduce normative conceptions of physical, emotional, and spiritual well-being. In doing so, we show how the promise of wellness can be mobilized to promote conservative and even extremist regimes of subjectivity and governmentality. We conclude by arguing that the normalization of wellness creep sets the stage for the recommendation and consumption of ‘aural slop’, understood as the low-quality, commercially optimized musical products of generative artificial intelligence.
From the mind of J.K. Rowling: How Harry Potter fan destinations mediate a tainted authorship brand
Grace Elizabeth Wilsey
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This article provides a discourse analysis of Harry Potter fan pilgrimage destinations within the United Kingdom focusing on the ways these attractions mediate J.K. Rowling’s authorial brand in response to her transphobic online rhetoric. Covering tourism experiences centered on Rowling’s authorial inspiration and Harry Potter filming locations across England and Scotland, I seek to understand the complexities of disentangling beloved media objects from scorned authors in the age of media convergence. In conversation with industry and fan studies on the Harry Potter franchise, I draw upon theory from Roland Barthes, Michel Foucault, and Jonathan Gray, as I theorize the role of authorship as a system of power within this process of convergence that draws media tourism. How these sites mediate Rowling’s paratextual relationship to the series demonstrates the ways traditional notions of the author as an authentic center to the text clash against the media convergent environment where the author is both ever-present online and also recedes into the background of a complex media franchise that eclipses their original work.
Streaming sport: Platform power and the reconfiguration of the media-sport nexus
Jean K. Chalaby
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This article examines the growing involvement of global streaming platforms – Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV+, Netflix and YouTube – in the sports media landscape. While these actors have made significant inroads into live sport since 2022, the article argues that it is unlikely to become central to their business model in the way it was for pay-television providers. Drawing on platform theory, the study situates streaming services within the broader dynamics of the platform economy, emphasising the role of scale and transnational network effects in shaping content strategies. Through an analysis of recent rights acquisitions, the article demonstrates that global streamers adopt a selective approach to live sport, targeting packages that align with their brand identities and broader entertainment objectives rather than pursuing comprehensive rights portfolios. The territorial fragmentation of sports rights and the limited cross-border travelability of live sport further constrain its value for transnational platforms. These structural constraints are illustrated by the case of DAZN, whose territorially fragmented rights portfolio prevents the generation of transnational network effects, limiting its ability to scale globally and compete locally. At the same time, streaming platforms play an increasingly important role as strategic partners for sports leagues. Their global reach, technological capabilities and appeal to younger audiences make them central to leagues’ digital-first strategies. In particular, the article highlights the emergence of a new sports storytelling ecosystem, in which documentary series connect human-interest narratives with live competition. The article concludes that, while streaming platforms do not displace traditional broadcasters, they nonetheless reconfigure the balance of power in the media-sport nexus, shifting advantage away from rights owners.

Digital Journalism

Time Well Spent? Exploring Emotional Engagement with News Through Native Experience Sampling
Kenza Lamot, Tim Groot Kormelink, Tessel Bogaard
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“Living Amoeba of an Organization”: Organizational Bricolage as an Adaptive Strategy in Digital Journalism
Nisha Sridharan
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Through Different Lenses: Comparing AI-Generated Imagery and Press Photography in Visual War Representation
Stephanie Geise, Yi Xu
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Is Misinformation All Around Us? Citizens’ Perceptions of Misinformation Nearness Regarding Its Span, Availability, and Accessibility
Toni G. L. A. van der Meer, Michael Hameleers
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Environmental Communication

The Digital Representation of Greta Thunberg in Internet Memes: Gender, Ideology, and Digital Violence
Tiago Franklin Rodrigues Lucena, Roger Domenech Colacios
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Climate Change Advocacy in Libraries: Practices, Challenges and Future Research Directions
Bolaji David Oladokun, Ify Evangel Obim, Iyanu Emmanuel Olatunbosun, Rexwhite Tega Enakrire, Yusuf Ayodeji Ajani, Sylvester I. Ebhonu
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Environmental Communication
Jessica L. Thompson
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Climate Crisis or Climate Emergency? Tracing Differing Temporal, Spatial, and Felt Constellations in Youth Climate Rhetorics
Jessica Chaplain
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Dirtbags with Smartphones: The Paradox of Environmentally Conscious Consumerism on Social Media
Mark A. Flynn, Alexandru Stana, Anne Marie Deffe, Lauren Garcia, Madison Suitor
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European Journal of Communication

Book Review: Well-Being and Creative Careers: What Makes You Happy Can Also Make You Sick by Deuze, M. DeuzeM.  Well-Being and Creative Careers: What Makes You Happy Can Also Make You Sick. Intellect, 2025, 338 pp.£24.95. ISBN: 9781835951927.
Kerry Traynor
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Howard Journal of Communications

Visual Solidarity to Sustained Action: Mapping #BlackLivesMatter Hashtag Activism on Instagram in the Two Years Following George Floyd’s Murder
Yavuz Selim Balcıoğlu, Erkut Altındağ
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Ghosts Are Not Illiterate: Self-Invisibilization in a Mediated Dalit Community
Shashidhar Nanjundaiah
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Information Technology & People

Reconceptualizing IT-enabled organizational transformation
Faqir Taj, Karlheinz Kautz, Vince Bruno
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Purpose While organizations accomplish much of their work through executing organizational routines, the implementation of IT systems shapes and transforms organizations. The social constructivist perspectives – perception, interpretation, appropriation, enactment and alignment perspectives – provide a robust mechanism to study the social construction of IT implementation in IT-enabled organizational transformation (OT). Only a few studies have combined different social constructivist perspectives, while none have applied all five perspectives. This study applied the five social perspectives together to investigate the phenomenon of IT-enabled OT in a holistic and integrated manner. Design/methodology/approach Following the existing literature, we initially developed a framework to conceptualize IT-enabled OT as a cyclic process of the coevolution of organizational routines and an IT system. The framework integrates five social constructivist perspectives, suggesting that different perspectives focus on different implementation phases, and assumes an implicit sequence of applying the perspectives. We performed an interpretive case study and adopted a pluralist research approach to leverage the power of multiperspective inquiry by applying the proposed conceptual framework for a holistic investigation. Findings Extant literature on IT-enabled OT is based on a phase model of IT implementation, suggesting that the perception focuses on the adoption phase, the interpretation, appropriation and enactment perspectives focus on the use phase, and the alignment perspective focuses on the adaptation phase of a new IT system. This research challenges the distinction of five perspectives with focuses on certain phases, empirically demonstrating that all five perspectives are relevant during the entire implementation of an IT system, although with different weightings and emphases, which thus questions the understanding of IT implementation as a phased process. Originality/value The study proposes a theoretical framework to reconceptualize IT-enabled OT as a cyclic coevolution process of organizational routines and a new IT system, with the application of five social constructivist perspectives. The framework provides a holistic view of the coevolution process in a systematic manner by explaining how actors perceive, interpret, appropriate, enact and align a new IT system in their work routines, as well as how they align the new system and these routines with the social order and structures of the organization. Thus, this research challenges the existing phase model of the social construction of IT implementation and puts forward an alternative understanding of IT-enabled OT.
Antecedents and impact of distrust of generative AI in organizations: a socio-psychological perspective
Junjun Li, Xinyue Chen, Tangfa Chen
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Purpose As organizations increasingly adopt generative artificial intelligence (GAI) to enhance productivity, growing worker distrust may hinder this progress. While there is emerging literature from a technology acceptance perspective, the factors driving distrust from a socio-psychological perspective and the impact of distrust on adoption intentions require deeper exploration. We developed and validated a comprehensive framework to examine GAI distrust within organizations by integrating social cognitive theory and nudge theory. The framework identified pro-social nudges, outcome expectations, security concerns and privacy self-efficacy as key antecedents of distrust and assessed how distrust affects adoption intentions. Design/methodology/approach A survey of 1,005 active workers was conducted in China. The data were analyzed using partial least squares structural equation modeling and the PROCESS macro for SPSS (Model 4). Findings While pro-social nudges and security concerns increased distrust, they did not directly affect adoption intentions. In contrast, positive outcome expectations and privacy self-efficacy reduced distrust and enhanced adoption intentions. The mediating and suppression effects of distrust were also discussed. Originality/value This study offers a novel framework for understanding the antecedents and impact of GAI distrust, providing practical insights for organizations and GAI developers to mitigate distrust within a broader social-psychological context.
Implications of artificial intelligence for academics' work: a sociotechnical perspective based on podcast episodes
Maarten Renkema, Aizhan Tursunbayeva
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Purpose The increasing adoption and use of artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming how academics perform core activities, ranging from research to teaching and academic services. This paper empirically examines this phenomenon and its implications through a sociotechnical systems lens, analyzing changes in core activities and the multilevel factors that shape them. Design/methodology/approach This study adopts a qualitative design, employing a Podcast analysis. Based on 66 publicly available podcast episodes, we explore changes in academic knowledge work and examine the factors shaping them. Findings The findings show that the use of AI is changing academic work in ways that go beyond altering day-to-day activities. By interpreting the results with sociotechnical systems theory, this research identifies factors and emerging tensions at the individual, technology, organization and societal levels that together shape how AI changes academia. Originality/value Analyzing these sociotechnical factors, we introduce the academic AI-transformation framework (AAITF), offering a novel lens for understanding the consequences of AI for academics. Building on existing research, this study goes beyond the focus on single activities or levels of analysis, offering a more holistic understanding of how academic work is changing with AI.

Information, Communication & Society

Disability and AI in smart cities: centering access, agency, and awareness in hybrid spaces
Ria J. Gualano, Germaine R. Halegoua, Scott W. Campbell
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Media effects, selection effects, or no effects? A longitudinal analysis of the relationship between media use and misperceptions
Elena Broda
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Platforming pocket money: family finance apps and the datafication of child economies
BjĂžrn Nansen, Lauren Bliss, Helena Sandberg
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Socioeconomic and digital divides in public support for AI-driven welfare decisions: cross-national evidence from 21 countries
Yifei Wang
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Making it personal: Algorithmic personalization, identity, and everyday life
Junwen M. Hu
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Masculine optimization influencers and the sacrality of self-optimization
Sara Reinis
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International Journal of Advertising

Guilt and shame across cultures: feasibility appeals in environmental brand activism advertising
Tae Hyun Baek, Yung Kyun Choi, Inhye Kim, Sukki Yoon
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How Metaverse advertising can influence consumers making travel decisions: a bibliometric analysis
Paria Zamanfashami
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Can too many hashtags backfire? Understanding audiences’ perceptions of hashtags on Instagram
Hyun Seung Jin, Namin Kim
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The use of advertising to oppose your party’s candidate: a test of fifth column party advocacy effects during election campaigns
Oluseyi Adegbola, Maria De Moya
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Internet Research

From adoption to continued usage: unpacking configurations and motivational mechanisms in AI therapist utilization
Hongying Zhao, Xiaobo Ke, Qingfei Min, Leyan Yu
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Purpose Grounded in the decision factors classification framework, this paper examines how decision object factors, decision entity factors, and context factors combine as configurations that explain user adoption and continued usage of AI therapists. Furthermore, comparing the configurations for initial adoption and continued usage reveals three mechanisms—habit, belief updating, and belief revision—that facilitate the transition from adoption to continued use. Design/methodology/approach Employing a mixed-method approach, Study 1 conducts interviews to identify decision-related factors. Then, Study 2 employs fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) to elucidate how combinations of these factors lead to outcomes. Findings The results reveal six fsQCA configurations that suggest a strong intention to adopt the AI therapist, and five that indicate a strong intention to continue using it. Furthermore, comparing motivations for initial adoption and continued usage reveals three distinct mechanisms that encourage adopters to become continued users. Research limitations/implications On a theoretical level, this study pioneers the exploration of the motivations underlying both the initial adoption and sustained usage of AI therapists from a configurational perspective. Practical implications On a practical level, these findings help managers develop tailored strategies that encourage both initial adoption and continued use. Originality/value Although AI-powered virtual therapists offer a promising solution to the growing demand for mental health services, many individuals remain hesitant to adopt them, and sustaining user engagement over time remains a challenge. This study identifies the key factors underlying adoption and continued-use intentions and reveals three mechanisms that explain the transition from initial adoption to sustained usage.
Modality matters: comparing the persuasiveness of text- and voice-based conversational agents and non-interactive messages in health communication
Ziyang Gong, Junqi Shao, Nisa Rahman, Leona Yi-Fan Su, Yi-Cheng Wang
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Purpose Text- and voice-based conversational agents (CAs) provide interactivity beyond the messages public health agencies traditionally use to share information and correct misperceptions. Yet, little research has compared how interactivity and modality influence misperception correction and behavior change. This study examines how modality and information quantity shape cognitive load, misperception change, and behavioral intention. Design/methodology/approach A 3 (modality: non-interactive message vs. text-based CA vs. voice-based CA) × 2 (information quantity: short vs. long) between-subjects experiment was conducted with 1,157 U.S. adults. Findings Both CA modalities were associated with lower post-intervention misperceptions than non-interactive messages. Relative to text-based CAs, voice delivery was linked to higher cognitive load, which in turn was associated with greater post-intervention misperceptions and lower intention to adopt healthy behavior. Nevertheless, when information quantity, cognitive load, preexisting and post-intervention misperceptions, and preexisting behavioral intention were controlled for, voice-based CAs were directly associated with the intention to adopt recommended behaviors. Information quantity did not moderate the relationship between modality and cognitive load. Originality/value To our knowledge, this study is the first controlled experiment to compare text-based CAs, voice-based CAs, and social media messages used to correct health misinformation, while clarifying the mechanisms through which they shape behavior change. The results show that neither CA modality is consistently more effective than the other across all outcomes. As such, practitioners should adopt a “fit-for-purpose” strategy, i.e. use text-based CAs when demands for comprehension are high and voice-based CAs when the main goal is to motivate behavior change.
When eyes diverge: understanding inconsistency in patient–peer evaluations on online healthcare platforms
Min Zhang, Yifan He, Xitong Guo
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Purpose This study investigates patient–peer evaluation inconsistency on online healthcare platforms. We examine how the emotional and informational support in physicians' answers affects this inconsistency, whether the two support types act as substitutes or complements, and how professional titles moderate their effects. Design/methodology/approach Using a large dataset of 1,933,083 physician–patient interactions from a major Chinese healthcare platform (2017–2023), we analyzed how emotional support and informational support influence evaluation inconsistency. We employed logistic regression models, robustness checks, and heterogeneity analyses to test the hypothesized relationships. Findings Both emotional support and informational support are positively related to the likelihood of inconsistency in patient–peer evaluation. The two support types act as substitutes for one another. Professional titles buffer the inconsistency effects of both support types by providing a shared quality anchor that reduces both audiences' reliance on textual cues. Emotional support is associated mainly with peer-preferred inconsistency, whereas informational support affects both types of inconsistency. Originality/value This study repositions receiver heterogeneity not as a boundary condition on signaling effectiveness but as the generative mechanism of patient–peer evaluation inconsistency, extending signaling theory beyond single-audience contexts. It demonstrates that emotional and informational support operate as substitutes in driving patient–peer evaluation inconsistency. It further identifies an audience-alignment function of professional titles through which credentials narrow cross-audience evaluation divergence.
Sounds like AI? Consumer suspicion of AI authorship in mixed-source online reviews
Mingsong Mao, Tangxuan Guo, Fuguo Zhang, Si-hua Chen
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Purpose The proliferation of AI-generated content (AIGC) inevitably surrounds consumers with mixed-source content without clear authorship disclosure, prompting questions about how they perceive and respond to AI-like content. This study aims to examine how consumers infer AI involvement and how such subjective perceptions affect their content evaluation. Design/methodology/approach With a focus on online review settings, we propose that features in the sentiment (sentiment wave), syntactic (descriptive and formal writing styles) and pragmatic (redundant content) layers of reviews evoke consumer suspicion of AI involvement in review writing. We argue that perception of AI authorship diminishes evaluations of review helpfulness, primarily through eroding perceived authenticity. Three complementary studies validate our assertions. Findings Results revealed limited consumer ability to accurately detect AI authorship. The negative association between the perception of AI authorship and review helpfulness was stronger for experience (vs. search) products, and enhancing AI interpretability failed to mitigate consumers’ aversion to AI-like online reviews. Practical implications The findings guide content creators to avoid unwarranted AI-like signals when crafting authentic reviews, inform AI literacy programs aimed at improving consumers’ detection accuracy and content evaluation and help platforms design context-specific disclosure policies that safeguard authentic content. Originality/value These results provide novel insights into subtle consumer content adoption behaviors in the era of generative AI, advancing understanding of algorithm aversion in anonymous, suspicion-driven environments.
AI vs human designers: who creates more engaging social media ads for blood donation campaigns?
Josefa D. Martín-Santana, Lorena Robaina-Calderín, Andrés Fernåndez-Martín, Ángel Quintana-Gómez
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Purpose This study examines whether AI-generated posters are associated with higher reach-based engagement than human-created posters in organic Instagram blood donation campaigns, and which message, copy and image characteristics accompany these differences. Design/methodology/approach The analysis focuses on 196 posters (from 1,286 initial organic posts) from the Instituto de Hemodonación y Hemoterapia (IHH) Instagram profile (January 2023 to February 2024), of which 27% were AI-generated posters. Engagement rates were calculated using reach-based metrics (likes, comments and saves), a more accurate measure than the follower-based rate commonly used in prior research. Content analysis was conducted to code copy and image characteristics, while perceptual salience was assessed computationally using Python and OpenCV. Findings AI-generated posters achieved higher reach-based engagement and showed greater use of solidarity appeals, references to the need for blood, emotional copy, emotionally valenced images and donor-centred symbolic cues. These findings indicate that the higher engagement associated with AI-generated posters was accompanied by a distinctive content-design pattern, combining prosocial message framing with emotional and visual execution cues. Practical implications Non-profit-making organisations with limited resources may use generative AI tools to support the development of emotionally resonant, visually coherent and prosocially aligned content. Human oversight remains essential to preserve authenticity and trust. Originality/value To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is one of the first empirical studies examining a real-world transition to AI-generated poster design in non-profit Instagram campaigns, combining content analysis with computational salience measures to document the message and visual-design pattern associated with AI-generated posters in a public-health context.

Journal of Applied Communication Research

Wolf among the lambs: the case of Chi Alpha sexual abuse
R. Ryan Beaty
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Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media

Explaining AI-Generated News: How Explanation Strategies and Machine Heuristic Influence Perceived Credibility
Yongliang Liu, Kai Kuang, Qing’an Zhou
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Changing Perceptions Through Paralympic Media: Repeated Exposure Effects on Attitudes and Stigma Toward People with Physical Disabilities
Yifan Wu, Andrew C. Billings, Bumsoo Park
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Fact-Checking from Human to AI: Transformations in Accuracy, Trust, and Agenda-Setting Effects
Seung Woo Chae
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Journal of Communication

Media capture, academia capture? Rising authoritarianism and public knowledge capture
Ayala Panievsky
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Journal of Information Technology & Politics

“TikTok refugees”: motivations and political correlates of international platform migration
Yibin Fan, Tucker Wang-Hai
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Journal of Public Relations Research

Understanding the Ethic of Care’s Manifestation and Impact in the Public Sector: A Holistic Framework Highlighting Care from Individual, Leadership, and Organizational Perspectives
Chuqing Dong, Qi Zheng, Jordan Morehouse
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Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly

Antagonistic, Agonistic or Disinterested? How Peripheral Actors Across Beats Breach or Accept Social and Symbolic Boundaries of Journalism
Phoebe Maares, Kim Löhmann, Daniel Nölleke, Folker Hanusch
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In the digital age, peripheral journalistic actors increasingly contribute to information and views and increasingly impact the journalistic field depending on their transformative aims. To better understand their transformative intentions across all of journalism, we need to expand our focus to diverse journalistic beats. This study examines 192 Austrian peripheral websites and social media pages, spanning a broad spectrum of topics in politics, economics, lifestyle, and sports. Findings indicate that transformational intentions are not limited to antagonism or agonism but that the field’s periphery also includes actors who do not take an explicit stance in changing journalism.
Power Dimensions in Journalism: A Framework for Intersectional Journalism Studies
Stine Eckert, Karin Assmann
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We offer “Power Dimensions in Journalism” as a framework to systematically and holistically expose understudied intersections in journalism studies. This framework emphasizes two under-researched axes of identity in gender media studies: migration and intra-national identities. We adapt Patricia Hill Collins and Sirma Bilge’s four domains of power of intersectionality to examine how intersecting axes of identity are researched in journalism scholarship, in media production, content, and reception. Applying this framework as a heuristic tool in the German context demonstrates its utility in diverse national contexts to reveal connections between macro, meso, and micro levels.
Whispering and Yelling: Unfurling the Rhetorical Advocacy Continuum through Mental Health Social Change Communication
Sarah A. Aghazadeh
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Fostering mental health presents an exigency for societies across the globe. Advocates and activists employ societal rhetoric through public relations, yet we lack nuanced understandings of the relationship between different approaches. This study presents U.S. mental health social change communicators’ reflections (38). Through the lens of fully functioning society theory, I illustrate a rhetorical continuum of social change to show how the persuasive forces of advocacy, activism, community organizing, and lobbying coexist across sociocultural and institutional realms. I also explain how the study’s implications can apply beyond U.S. mental health and to a variety of mass communication endeavors.
Politics or Platform: How Social Identity and News Consumption Shaped Perceptions of U.S. University Pro-Palestine Encampment Protests
Morgan Butler, Ashley Larson, Dina Ibrahim
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This study examines how patterns of media consumption and demographic composition shape public perceptions of the pro-Palestine campus encampments that emerged across the United States in late 2023. Drawing on social identity theory and media framing theory, the research explores whether public support for protest goals and tactics, as well as perceptions of the protests’ effectiveness in generating awareness and political change, are better predicted by news source preference or by identity-based demographic characteristics such as age, education level, and political affiliation. Using survey data from 968 U.S. adults recruited via Prolific, the study finds that while social media and student-run news sources are associated with higher support for the encampments, traditional outlets like cable and network news are linked to lower support. Political identity consistently emerged as the strongest predictor of both support and perceived effectiveness. Overall, the findings suggest that while media environments shape the narratives audiences encounter, identity-based interpretation plays a dominant role in shaping evaluations of protest movements. These findings highlight the interplay between identity-driven interpretation and media framing, providing a clearer understanding of the challenges protest movements face when attempting to shape public opinion in fragmented media environments.
The Weather Wars and Well-Being: Factors That Influence the Job Satisfaction of Weathercasters
Christoph Mergerson
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Weathercasting is an understudied topic in journalism studies, even though weathercasters are trusted news personalities who can play an important role in developing their viewers’ political knowledge of issues related to weather and climate. This study addresses this gap by investigating the factors that influence the job satisfaction of U.S. weathercasters. Through 42 interviews, I find that increasing workloads without proportional increases in compensation; sexism in the workplace; negative interactions with viewers; and conflicts with management are frequent sources of dissatisfaction that contribute to weathercasters leaving their jobs, and their absence may lead viewers to seek information from less-credible sources.

Journalism Studies

Gender-Inclusive Language Shapes News Evaluations: An Experimental Study of the Effects on Perceived Credibility, Reactance, and Media Skepticism among News Users
Annabell Halfmann, Jonathan Schwenzer, Teresa K. Naab
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Avoiding the News But Still Feeling Connected? The Role of News Use and Avoidance Practices in Different Public Connection Repertoires
Julia Behre, Lisa Merten, Uwe Hasebrink
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Fewer but More Elaborate: How Information Accessibility Filters Participation and Shapes Online News Comments
Avner Kantor, Sheizaf Rafaeli
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Selling War at Home and Abroad: The Dual Objective of State Media Propaganda in the Russo-Ukrainian War
Matvei Makeev, Joshua Alley, Marco Bastos
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Constructive or Constrained? Solutions Journalism in an Authoritarian State
Karen McIntyre, Meghan Sobel Cohen
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Enthusiastic or Averse, Yet Nonchalant: Mapping Early-Career Journalists’ Engagement with Gen AI in Indian Newsrooms
Kabir Upmanyu, Sneha Gore Mehendale
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Talking to China About Climate Change: How Non-profit Journalism Diversifies Climate News in China
Zhong Zhang
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Mass Communication and Society

Understanding the Moderating Effects of Relevant Channel Beliefs and Information Gathering Capacity in the Risk Information Seeking and Processing Model
Timothy K. F. Fung, Ho Man Leung, Po Yan Lai, Robert J. Griffin
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Media and Communication

A Community Data Trustee for Sensitive Data Sharing in Far-Right Online Research
Jan Rau, Nils Jungmann, Moritz FĂŒrneisen, Gregor Wiedemann, Heidi Schulze, Pascal Siegers
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Data sharing poses a major challenge for digital media and communication research, particularly in sensitive areas such as far-right online studies. This article introduces the innovative concept of a “community data trustee” (CDT), a research infrastructure aimed at fostering collaboration and the sharing of research data, such as digital account lists. Compiling these lists is a critical yet labor-intensive step in many research projects; sharing them could significantly reduce effort and improve data quality. However, especially in sensitive research areas, sharing remains rare due to legal uncertainties and limited incentives. This hinders the traceability and comparability of research findings and threatens overall research quality. To address these challenges, we introduce the CDT as a collective research infrastructure that promotes the shared use of extensive account lists. The CDT views actor directories as a communal asset, developed and utilized based on mutually agreed-upon guidelines. A principle of reciprocity underpins this model: Those who access the lists also contribute to their updates and expansions, returning them to the data pool. An online portal facilitates the exchange and collaborative maintenance of the data. The setup of the CDT includes appropriate technical measures to ensure compliance with data protection and security standards, along with a robust regulatory framework that creates a legally secure environment for sharing personal data. This approach aims to (a) incentivize data sharing, (b) foster trust and legal certainty among research projects, (c) enhance data quality through ongoing maintenance, and (d) enhance researcher safety.
“Do Not Fight the Swans”: Gender Politics and Moral Norms Across Media
Tonny Krijnen, Zhen Ye, Qian Huang
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In recent years, we have witnessed a growing body of research focusing on identity politics, public shaming, and social outrage in the contemporary media landscape. Morality is often at the core of these debates. Recent studies show how all media types are rich sources of moral statements, producing an endless stream of moral discourse on all imaginable topics and themes. Yet, how these discourses are shaped in media production and what audiences and societies do with these discourses is not easy to predict. Simultaneously, gender politics are closely involved in these articulations of moral norms. This thematic issue aims to explore the historical trajectory and continuity of the vital role of media in shaping social dynamics and moral norms, particularly through the lens of gender, from a global perspective.

New Media & Society

A cross-country examination of normative expectations of social media platforms
Natalie Jomini Stroud, Tamar Wilner, Moo Sun Kim, Ashwin Rajadesingan
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Normative expectations of social media platforms, or what people believe is important for social media platforms to do, include actions such as “show reliable information” and “ensure that people feel safe.” This study examines whether normative expectations vary by country and platform. A survey of over 20,000 people across 20 countries allowed us to investigate beliefs about 14 normative expectations. Although there is a relationship between the country in which one resides and what one believes is important for social media to do, the effects are small, adding nuance to theories of both globalization and localization. Differences in people’s normative expectations based on the platform they use most are also small. Aggregating people’s normative expectations reveals by-country clusters that are most closely related to Hofstede’s concept of individualism. Platform clusters emerge based on the platform parent company and unique affordances.
Negotiating algorithmic time: Confucian folk theory of older Chinese adults on Douyin
Jiawen Zhou, Naiwen Zhang, Yuanfei Zeng
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While research has focused on algorithmic content selection, older adults’ temporal negotiations remain understudied. Through abductive analysis—a recursive, theory-building method that moves between data and interpretation—we examine interviews, think-aloud observations, and diaries with 45 Chinese Douyin users (aged 55–90). We show how participants treat platform time as morally rather than neutrally framed. They enacted fixed quarantine (a disciplined pattern of keeping platform time outside sacred or care-bound hours) and hierarchical pedagogy (treating non-response as a lesson in subordination). They used three Confucian principles— li (ritual propriety), shi zhong (timely equilibrium), and quan (situational weighing)—to manage temporal boundaries. The Confucian triad explained these temporal negotiations better than Western sociotechnical baselines. Two longitudinal trajectories — pragmatic drift (moral discipline giving way to convenience) and ritual ossification (reflexive adjustment hardening into fixed habit)—delimit the framework’s scope conditions. We propose a culture-centric lens for algorithmic literacy and gerontechnology design.
Making the future present: Corporate imaginaries of intelligent automobility
Fan Liang
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The study examines corporate imaginaries of intelligent vehicles in China, focusing on how automakers articulate and stabilize a desired vision of the mobility future. Drawing on sociotechnical imaginaries, the study demonstrates that intelligent vehicles are promoted as future-oriented technologies that enable technological aspirations, social interactions, and political ambitions, thereby shaping how the imagined future is experienced and perceived in the present. The analysis of 12 leading automakers reveals three discursive strategies for making the future present: rendering the future simultaneously mythic and attainable; embedding the future into everyday life through affective, automating, and infrastructural practices; and advancing a techno-nationalist vision of the future. These strategies collapse the boundary between future and present, positioning intelligent automobility as both already realized and the only possible trajectory forward. The findings demonstrate how companies construct imaginaries in which technological progress, user experience, and political considerations converge to produce actionable visions of the future.

Political Communication

Vengeance or Hope? A Role-Based Analysis of Hashtag Activism for the War in Gaza
Tay Jeong
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Public Relations Review

Agency, artificial intelligence, and the non-anthropocentric turn in public relations
Jenny Zhengye Hou, Ian Somerville
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Living the messiness: Advancing relationship management theory through embodied ethnography
Dongjing Kang, Ran Ju
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The “rankings” turn in higher education institutions and the return to relations in critical public relations scholarship
Angela Labador, Jan Michael Alexandre C. Bernadas
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Public Understanding of Science

“It’s very not ‘yes, and’”: How scientists and science communicators deploy improvised comedy as a form of science communication
James A. Dolan, Hauke Riesch, Oana-Catalina Mihai
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Over the past few decades, explicitly humorous or comedic science communication initiatives have become increasingly prominent. Within this context, a number of scientists and science communicators have chosen to deploy improvised comedy (“improv”) which incorporates and foregrounds science as a form of science communication. This study of a small selection of international science improv groups aims to better understand the emergence of science improv as a form of science communication, including who is creating science improv, for what purposes, and with what consequences. The research highlights the tension perceived by many scientists who perform science improv between an inherently spontaneous theatrical approach and the “risks” associated with uttering scientific mistruths, as well as the ways in which scientists have attempted to mitigate this tension by either avoiding scientific content or diluting the artistic commitments usually inherent to the improv medium (i.e. the principle of “yes, and”).
Measures of public attitudes towards science: A scoping review
Jessica E. Hughes, Kimberley Norris, James D. Sauer, Aaron Drummond, Holly Emery, Emilia Hawkey, Victoria J. Heinrich, Paul Schokman, Matthew A. Palmer
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The role that attitudes towards science plays in science acceptance has received attention in recent years, yet little is known about the ways that public attitudes towards science are conceptualised and measured. To address this, our review sought to identify instruments developed to measure attitudes towards general science or the scientific method for use with adult populations that had been subjected to psychometric analyses. The review protocol was pre-registered and methodology adhered to the Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines and PRISMA extension for scoping reviews. Title and abstract screening of 16,658 articles by two independent reviewers identified 783 articles for full-text screening, resulting in 31 articles (29 separate instruments) for inclusion. Psychometric properties were summarised; variations in conceptualisations of attitudes towards science and adherence to best-practice recommendations for scale development were identified. Overall, this research contributes to our ongoing understanding of attitudes towards science and the measurement of this important construct.

Social Media + Society

Navigating, Selecting, and Engaging: A Multi-Method Study of Social Media Information Use Practices Among Older Adults
Luise Anter, Martin Fischer, Anna Sophie KĂŒmpel
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Older adults—individuals aged 60 and above—are increasingly integrating social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram into their everyday information repertoires. Yet, little is known about how they actually interact with information encountered on these platforms. To address this gap, the present study examines which navigation, selection, and engagement practices are prevalent among older adults when using social media for information. We employed a within-method triangulated qualitative design that combined stimulus-based observations with self-confrontation and semi-structured interviews. Specifically, we recruited n = 41 German social media users aged 60 and above, who were observed interacting with a personalized social media feed and subsequently reflected on their behavior. Our findings reveal a diverse range of information practices: while some mirror those observed among younger adults—such as information snacking—others differ notably, including a general tendency toward passivity. We discuss how these practices are shaped by older adults’ media socialization, thus offering broader implications for research at the intersection of digital technology and aging. Our study enriches the conceptual vocabulary for describing (older) adults’ social media practices and highlights a methodological approach well suited to studying usage behavior in personalized media environments.
We Should All Be Talking About Religion*: Religion, Black Studies, and the Epistemic Grounds of Media Study
LaRisa Anderson-Horne
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This essay interrogates the nature of critical religious study in the field of media and communication. Religion is understudied as a critical quality of the human experience in our field, from journals to academic positions in communication departments to specialized grant funding to conferences and more. Recently, White Christian nationalism has swept the academy and blown a small tailwind of interest in “religion” as a demographical marker or political identity. While these are helpful in some instances, these depictions are often reductive, unjustly universalized, and Western-centric. Instead, I detail the epistemological contributions of Black studies of religion and Black media studies to argue that we need to be studying religion more rigorously. After briefly reviewing the contributions of J. Kameron Carter’s Anarchy of Black Religion and Armond Towns’ On Black Media Philosophy , I explain how religious study is vital to any analysis of power and human flourishing. What we need now more than ever are studies of religion that seriously engage what we mean by “religion” and “media” in ways that demand liberatory action.
Making Sense of AI-Generated Disinformation: How Audience Interpretations Influence the Impact of Deepfakes in Kenya
Morgan Wack, Stephen Prochaska
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Does social commentary influence the effects of political deepfakes? To answer this question, we rely on a survey experiment based in Kenya ( N = 7,000). The experiment saw respondents view a generated clip of presidential candidates discussing their role in a fabricated corruption scheme coupled with embedded comments expressing varied levels of skepticism. In line with prior work, we first show that social commentary shapes how audiences interpret media. Next, we go beyond this initial finding to examine how commentary in social environments can shape the perceived authenticity of entire videos by integrating a novel survey instrument aimed at improving the ecological validity of our experimental design. Using this instrument, we find that comments which failed to remark on the synthetic origins of the video reduced support for the politician, while skeptical comments partially restored it. Partisanship also mattered, as respondents more readily dismissed deepfakes targeting candidates they supported compared to opposing candidates. Our findings highlight how the social context in which users view AI-generated disinformation can reshape audience perceptions, particularly in contexts that lack sufficient resources to maintain effective moderation systems. We conclude that audience-driven “collective sensemaking” can critically alter the influence of deepfakes, introducing both challenges and opportunities for the development of countermeasures for mitigating the influence of audio-visual disinformation. Our discussion emphasizes the need for research on deepfakes and related forms of multi-modal AI-generated content to take socio-political contexts into account when considering the direction of influence and potential for harm.

Telematics and Informatics

Mapping workforce reskilling urgency in the age of AI: Occupational and geographic patterns across the united states
Waris Ahmed Faizi, Dayoung Kim, Can Dogan, Sohyun Park, Junghwan Kim
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Can open government data promote urban–rural public service equalization? Evidence from China
Yichen Zhang
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Media’s embrace of technology: How media portrays the use of autonomous taxis and its impact on individuals’ adoption intentions
Ruoheng Liu, Yi-Hui Christine Huang, Shuang Gao, Bo Chang
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The International Journal of Press/Politics

Exploring Possible Explanations for the Modest Relationship Between News Media Trust and Use
Yariv Tsfati, Rens Vliegenthart, Elina Lindgren, Jesper StrömbÀck
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Despite the widespread assumption that trust in news media drives news use, empirical research consistently finds only a modest correlation between the two. This study investigates possible explanations for the modest relationship between news media trust and use, drawing on recent qualitative insights and testing five hypotheses using a four-wave panel survey of Swedish respondents ( N = 3,542). We examine whether outlet-specific trust better predicts news use than generalized media trust, and whether the tendency for selective exposure, news avoidance, news finds me (NFM) perceptions, and conspiracy mindset moderate the trust–exposure relationship. Contrary to expectations, outlet-specific trust did not outperform generalized trust in predicting news use. Selective exposure showed no significant moderating effects. In contrast, news avoidance significantly moderated the relationship, such that the association between news media trust and mainstream news media use was stronger for those reporting low intentions to avoid the news. Stronger associations were also observed for those ranking themselves high on the NFM and conspirancy mindset scales, though these latter interactions became insignificant when entering all interactions to the model simulteneously.