Search
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Mini-Conference
Browse By Division
Browse By Session or Event Type
Browse Sessions by Fields of Interest
Browse Papers by Fields of Interest
Search Tips
Virtual Exhibit Hall
Change Preferences / Time Zone
Sign In
X (Twitter)
Session Submission Type: In-Person Created Panel
This panel investigates a variety of crisis points for journalism in a digital age, including problems with polarization and local news, when "fake" news sites are interpreted as real, filter bubbles and inflammatory rhetoric and hate crimes. The panel focuses on the effects of journalism, and how people interact with and interpret it.
Does Local News Mitigate the Polarized National Rhetoric on COVID-19? - Catie Snow Bailard, George Washington University
Group Salience, Inflammatory Rhetoric, and Hate Crimes (Pre-Recorded) - William Hobbs, Cornell University; Nazita Lajevardi, Michigan State University; Xinyi Li, Cornell University; Caleb Lucas, Michigan State University
Reinflating the Filter Bubble: Domain versus URL Level Analyses of News Sharing - Jon Green, Northeastern University; David Lazer, Northeastern University; Sarah Shugars, New York University; Stefan McCabe, Northeastern University