Congratulations to faculty and students members of CHASSIS for papers accepted to the 2009 conference in May! Here's a partial list of titles:
Comello, M. L. G., & Slater, M. D. (2009). The effects of drug-prevention messages on the accessibility of identity-related constructs.
Comello, M. L. G. (2009). William James on “possible selves”: Implications for studying identity in communication contexts.
Dossett, A., & Hayes, A. F. Hypocrites and excuse makers: The promises or perils of a mass mediated hypocrisy induction paradigm for behavior modification.
Eno, C. A., & Roskos-Ewoldsen, D. R. The influence of explicitly and implicitly measured prejudice on interpretations of and reactions to Black film.
Hayes, A. F., & Matthes, J. A primer for communication researchers on probing single-degree-of-freedom interactions in regression models, with SPSS and SAS implementations. (Top 4 paper in the Information Systems division)
Kline, S.L., Zhang, S., Horton, B., Pariyadath, R., & Ryu, S. Theorizing the role of relational communication and cultural concepts in marriage conceptions: Comparisons between Asian and US young adults.
Kline, S. L.Sense-making and making sense: Creating selves and intersubjectivity in communication. Dervin workshop.
Kurita, S., Lang, A., Potter, R., Wang, Z., Weaver, A., Bae, S., Lee, S., & Koruth, J. (2009). Gender Differences in Motivational Activation.
Matthes, J., Hayes, A. F., & Shen, F. Dispositional fear of social isolation and willingness to self-censor: A cross-cultural test of spiral of silence theory.
Matthes, J., Morrison, K. R., & Schemer, C. A spiral of silence for some: Attitude certainty and the expression of political minority opinions.
Morrison, K. R.,& Matthes, J. So you think you are popular? Fear of isolation triggers motivated perceptions of consensus.
Nevin, K., Rhodes, N., & Roskos-Ewoldsen, D. R. Cultivation theory and cultural models of romantic relationships.
Oaks, D., Kline, S.L., & David, P.The effect of familiarity and coordination on designing online discussion environments: A comparison of chat and threaded discussion communication modes.
Roberto, A. J., Krieger, J. L., Katz, M., Goei, R., & Jain, P. Predicting pediatricians’ communication with parents about the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine: An application of the Theory of Reasoned Action. (Top-Four Paper--Health Communication Division.)
Roskos-Ewoldsen, D. R. Implicit Associations Test: Just what is the IAT measuring?
Roskos-Ewoldsen, D. R. Methodological perspectives on emotions and mass media.
Roskos-Ewoldsen, D. R. Effects is dead: Long live dynamics.
Slater, M. D., & Hayes, A. F. The influence of youth MTV/VH-1 viewership on increasing rates of cigarette use and association with smoking peers: A parallel process model.
Sohn, D. The effects of social norms on electronic word-of-mouth intention: A comparison of three models.
Wang, Z. (2009). Coactivation: An Examination on Subjective Feelings, Physiological Responses, and Adaptive Functions.
Wang, Z., Morey, A., Srivastava, J., Kruczkowski, A. (2009). Dynamics of Processing Emotional Political Ads.
Friday, February 20, 2009
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Latest installment of HINTS data now available
Bradford W. Hesse, Ph.D.
Chief, Health Comm & Informatics Research Branch
Behavioral Research Program
Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences
National Cancer Institute
To Our Current and Potential Grantees:
On behalf of the National Cancer Institute, it is with great pleasure that I announce the arrival of the latest installment of public release data from the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS). Since 2003, the HINTS survey has served as a cornerstone for statistically reliable information on how Americans aged 18 years and older get health information in a time of extraordinary change. This installment marks the release of the third biennial data point in the HINTS series. The installment brings with it a set of important improvements at the HINTS Web site for our partners.
For Communication Practitioners:
We have made it easier to look at questions across years of administration. You will begin with a simplified catalogue of questions, which will make it easy to track the years in which questions were asked. Once you have selected a question to review, a tabbed viewing screen will let you move quickly between presentations of data for individual years as well as an "All Years" overview of trends and comparisons. As before, you will be able to download charts and graphs for your own use in reports and presentations. An embellished Notes field will give you all the information you need to track the details of each year's administration including wording changes and subtle differences in types of respondents asked. While at the site, don't forget to check the latest collection of "HINTS Briefs," summarizing the results of empirical analyses being published on the data.
For Communication Researchers:
A fully documented data package is available for download in SAS, SPSS, and STATA formats. Please note that the latest administration of the HINTS instrument uses a split telephone + postal sampling frame to evaluate penetration of cell phone only households in the U.S. population. Weights are provided for each frame and composite weights are provided for analysis of the two frames combined. Be sure to read the accompanying documentation for instructions on how to analyze data with these newly embedded sampling features. You will also note that we have made it easy for you browse through an expanded set of resources on the site, and to add them to your own toolkit for easy download.
Also, stay tuned for further announcements on the third biennial HINTS Users Conference to be hosted by NCI in Silver Spring, Maryland on September 24-25 2009. We expect a "call for abstracts" to be issued at the beginning of March, with travel awards offered to students and general researchers for outstanding papers. Plans are to include best papers in a journal supplement to be published in 2010.
To all of our colleagues who have shown endless dedication in applying health communication science to the task of improving the health of Americans, we sincerely thank you and welcome you to the HINTS community. Come visit us at: http://hints.cancer.gov/
Sincerely,
Brad Hesse
Bradford W. Hesse, Ph.D.
Chief, Health Comm & Informatics Research Branch
Behavioral Research Program
Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences
National Cancer Institute
Executive Plaza North, Room 4068
6130 Executive Blvd., MSC 7365
Bethesda, MD 20892-7365
Call for papers - Third Annual National Conference on Health Communication, Marketing and Media
Third Annual National Conference on Health Communication, Marketing and Media
August 11-13, 2009
Omni HotelAtlanta, GA
Sponsored by:
National Center for Health Marketing, the Office of Enterprise Communication, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, the National Cancer Institute and the National Public Health Information Coalition
Deadline for submission is March 16, 2009
The conference planning committee invites abstracts for both oral and poster presentations in the following submission types - Research and Evaluation, Theoretical and Practice/Program-Based in one of four program tracks:
- Health Marketing: Nuts, Bolts and Beyond
- Social Determinants of Health
- New Frontiers - Trends and Technology
- Partnerships/Collaborations - Synergistic Relationships
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
CHASSIS welcomes new faculty members!
Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Winter quarter schedule
Jan 16: Dr. Joyce Wang on "Method is Message: Dynamic Signal Detection Theory and Its Application to Media Research"
Jan 23 - Angela Dosset, Myiah Hively, & Teresa Myers on measuring identity> based on their work on environmental identity (aka "the search for a scale that doesn't make you laugh out loud or roll your eyes")
Jan 30 - Dr. Mike Slater and Nori Comello to lead discussion on making> connections among frameworks/measures of identity discussed so far and research interests of the group
Feb 6 - Open
Feb 13 - Jen Moreland on "Conceptualizing Adolescent Risk Behavior in the Rural Appalachian Context"
Feb 20 - Open
Feb 27 - Dr. Dongyoung Sohn: "Social Structural Influence on Information Sharing Motivation"
Mar 6 - Parul Jain on "How Do McDreamy, McSteamy, and the Likes Talk on Television? A Content Analysis of Physician-Patient Communication and Disease Portrayals in Medical Dramas"
Thursday, October 09, 2008
Dr. Michael Slater wins int'l award for best article advancing comm theory

The McQuail Award is an annual award given by the Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR), the largest research institute of its kind in Europe and among the largest worldwide. Mike will be traveling to Amsterdam in November to accept the award.
Mike won the award for his "Reinforcing Spirals" article, which
appears destined to become a classic in the field. Here's the full cite:
Slater, M. D. (2007). Reinforcing spirals: The mutual influence of media selectivity and media effects and their impact on individual behavior and social identity. Communication Theory, 17(3), 281-303.
Congratulations, Mike!
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
Congratulations to Nori Comello for single-authored Comm Theory publication
Communication Contexts" in Communication Theory, one of the top journals in the Communication discipline.
The article was based on papers done during her 1st year core courses in communication theory.
Nori will be presenting her more recent work in communication and identity, addressing how anti-drug messages may operate through their impact on social identity, later this quarter in
CHASSIS.
Monday, September 22, 2008
CHASSIS kick-off / dessert social Oct 3
WHEN: Friday, Oct 3, 3:30-4:30pm (regular meetings @ same time every Friday thereafter)
WHERE: Derby 3150
Welcome to new and returning faculty and students!
As we set our schedules for the upcoming quarter, I want to encourage everyone to save some time (and some room for dessert) on Friday, Oct 3, 3:30-4:30, for our first meeting of CHASSIS - Communication, Health, Attitude Structure, and Social Influence Strategies.
We anticipate continuing discussion after this and future meetings at a local waterhole, to keep the conversation lubricated (we'll keep the car puns to a minimum, we promise!).
We believe issues of attitude structure and social influence are the foundation and underpinning of many key issues in communication, whether they be in domains of health, politics, media effects, etc. (in much the same way a chassis is the underpinning of a car, and the same chassis supports a Camry and a Lexus).
We're here to explore those shared underpinnings. In that spirit, we have broadened our original health comm focus to include people from political, social influence, mass and other topical orientations so that we can work together on topics of shared concerns. You can feel free to attend specific sessions even if you aren't a regular attendee.
This quarter and next, we'll focus on communication, self-concept and social identity. Here is our fall quarter schedule of topics/discussion leaders, subject to change/confirmation.
Oct 10 - Dr. Janice Raup-Krieger
Communication processes and rural identity
Oct 17 - Nori Comello, 3rd year PhD student
Drug-prevention messages from the perspective of social identity/Optimal Distinctiveness Theory
Oct 24 - Dr. Kim Rios-Morrison
Self-uncertainty and priming effects
Oct 31 - Dr. Erik Nisbet
Social identity cues and strategic framing
Nov 7 - Myiah Hively, 3rd year PhD student
Self-efficacy and identity's influence on behavior: Reciprocal, mediated, or casual relationship?
Nov 14 - NCA practice presentations
Sound intriguing? If so, please take a moment to add your name to our e-mail list by sending a message to Nori (comello.1@osu.edu). If you were on the Health Communication Research Group list and DON'T plan to attend CHASSIS, please send a message to Nori so she can remove you from the list.
If you have any questions, please let Mike Slater know (slater.59@osu.edu). Thanks, and hope to see you at our first meeting!
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Welcome to Dr. Erik Nisbet

Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Welcome to Dr. Kimberly Rios-Morrison

We look forward to her contributions to CHASSIS!
Monday, May 12, 2008
Next meeting May 13
Second-year PhD student Cat Goodall will do a quick walk-through of a study she'll be presenting at ICA on alcohol ads and implicit attitudes. In the second half of the meeting, Dr. Joyce Wang will discuss a study that examines the dynamic effects of motivational variables on four psychophysiological measures of emotion and cognition, as well as a behavioral measure of channel choice. The study tests the central role of motivational activation in mediated information processing.
Both of these talks are a great segue as we transition to CHASSIS, which has a broader focus that includes attitude structures involved in health and other communication effects. Please join us!
Welcome to Dr. David Roskos-Ewoldsen

Dr. Mira Katz Wins Telly Award!

Dr. Mira Katz (School of Public Health) has won a Telly Award (Bronze) for the educational video she developed entitled, "Ask your doctors about colon cancer screening?" The video was developed as part of the educational program component of Dr. Katz's K award (NCI K07CA107079). Congratulations Mira!
Sunday, May 11, 2008
HCRG transitions to CHASSIS...
Beginning next academic year, HCRG will officially transition to a new name with a broader focus: CHASSIS, which stands for Communication, Health, Attitude Structure, and Social Influence Strategies.
Per Mike Slater's recent e-mail to group members, the idea behind CHASSIS is that the intellectual challenges in health communication are the same kinds of challenges facing the broader fields of communication and persuasion: developing a better understanding of the role of mediated and interpersonal communication in social influence and social behavior, and a better understanding how it is that messages have the effects they do on attitudes and behaviors. Likewise, progress in those areas (attitude structure, social influence process and strategies) will better inform those of us involved with health communication issues.
Stay tuned for further plans as we roll out the new CHASSIS in the fall. As always, input and ideas are most welcome!
Student members win Comm Day awards!

Third-year PhD student Catherine Goodall received the Morgan Award, which is given to a senior PhD student who has demonstrated excellence in research. She has multiple publications, as well as in-press and under-review manuscripts. In addition, she has top conference papers and a book chapter to her credit.

Second-year master's student Gregory Hoplamazian won the graduate student teaching award based on his consistently excellent reviews and for the breadth of his teaching experience while at OSU.
Congratulations, Cat and Greg!
Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Janice Krieger wins ICA/NCA Health Communication Dissertation Award
Please join me in congratulating Dr. Krieger for winning this award!
Friday, May 02, 2008
The CDC National Center for Health Marketing (NCHM) is seeking three senior health communication scientists to serve as Associate Director of Communication Science (ADCS) for each of the following National Centers:
o National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, and Enteric Diseases (NCZVED) www.cdc.gov/nczved
o National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC) www.cdc.gov/ncipc
o National Center for Health Marketing (NCHM) www.cdc.gov/healthmarketing
ADCSs serve a pivotal role at CDC as the principal advisors to National Center Directors on health communication and social marketing science, research, and practice. The ADCSs provide senior health marketing and communication leadership to direct development and advance research, surveillance, and prevention activities through implementation of comprehensive communication science and health marketing programs. Each ADCS reports to the Director of NCHM, but works day-to-day with the Director of the National Center in which the position is embedded.
The GS-1001-15 Health Communications Officer positions are open to both internal (i.e., US government employees) and external candidates and close on May 15, 2008. Salary range: 111,892.00 - 145,464.00 USD per year.
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Next meeting Apr 29: Diabetes health narratives
Saturday, April 12, 2008
Planning meeting April 15
Monday, March 31, 2008
Call for abstracts - CDC Health Comm Conference
http://www.cdc.gov/HealthMarketing/conference2008-abstracts.htm
Friday, March 28, 2008
Next mtg April 1: Attention to news & alcohol-control policy support
Friday, February 29, 2008
Next mtg 4/4 - Tailored Web sites to enhance substance abuse treatment
Presentation at College of Public Health: "Health and International Humanitarian Assistance: 30 Years of Evolution"
The OSU College of Public Health and the OSU Center for African Studies are pleased to sponsor a presentation on
"Health and International Humanitarian Assistance: 30 Years of Evolution"
Dr. Ron Waldman, MD, MPH
Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health
USAID, Team Leader, Pandemic Planning/Humanitarian Response
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
3:30 - 5:00
Younkin Success Center, Room 150
1640 Neil Avenue (across from the OSU Medical Center)
Dr.Waldman will discuss the evolution of humanitarian assistance over the past 30 years, with a strong emphasis on the health and nutrition sectors. He will cover aspects of the complex emergencies in Somalia, Sudan and Mozambique. Lessons learned from events surrounding the genocide in Rwanda will be highlighted. The role of the United Nations, bilateral donors, and non-governmental organizations and their ability to work in the face of extensive human rights abuses will form the basis for discussion.
After receiving his medical degree from the University of Geneva, Dr. Waldman began his career as a volunteer in the World Health Organization's Global Smallpox Eradication Program in Bangladesh. He joined the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 1977 and, during his 25 years there, helped develop the epidemiology of refugee health by working in crises in Somalia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Eastern Europe. He also served as a regional epidemiologist, based in West Africa, for the Combatting Communicable Diseases of Childhood Program, as Secretary of WHO's Task Force on Cholera Control, and as Technical Director of the global child survival project, BASICS.
He is the founder of the Program on Forced Migration and Health at the Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University where he is Professor of Clinical Population and Public Health. Dr. Waldman serves on the Board of Overseers of the International Rescue Committee, the Board of Directors of Physicians for Human Rights, and has published extensively on complex emergencies and on child health in developing countries.
Free and open to the public. For more information contact cas@osu.edu or 292-8169.
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Matthew Kreuter talk 2/27
Wednesday, February 27
12:00 noon
Rm 518 of the James Cancer Hospital
Speaker:
Matthew W. Kreuter, PhD, MPH
Professor, Department of Community Health
Director, Health Communication Research Laboratory
St. Louis University School of Public Health
Presentation:
Communication-Based Strategies to Eliminate Cancer Disparities
Lunch available at 11:45 a.m. RSVP: katie.trego@osumc.edu
Friday, February 15, 2008
Next meeting Feb 19 - video to promote cancer screening
Thursday, January 31, 2008
Next meeting Feb 5 - Hayes talk on moderation/mediation
Also, we are still in need of presenters on Mar 4, Apr 15, and Apr 29. Please let me or Mike Slater know if you're interested!
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
New Goodall & Roberto publication on teaching health communication
Thursday, January 24, 2008
$3 million NIDA grant to Dr. Raup-Krieger and colleagues!

Friday, January 18, 2008
Next meeting Jan 22 - physician-patient communication
* If you have not presented yet this quarter, please sign up for a date! The available dates are Mar 4, Apr 15, Apr 29, and May 13. Completed research, research-in-progress, proposals, etc., are all welcome. Please e-mail Nori Comello or Mike Slater if you have questions.