April 7-9, 2022 • Hyatt Regency • Lexington, KY
Communication Strategies to Promote Comprehensive Well-being
Communication Strategies to Promote Comprehensive Well-being
9:00am 10:00am 2022-04-07T08:00:00-04:00 2022-04-07T09:00:00-04:00 |
Registration and Breakfast (Patterson Ballroom Foyer, Lower Level B) |
10:00am 10:15am 2022-04-07T09:00:00-04:00 2022-04-07T09:15:00-04:00 |
Welcome and Introductions (Patterson Ballroom B-C, Lower Level B) ◆ Moderators: Nancy Grant Harrington and Anne M. Nicotera Overview of our Plans and Goals for the Day |
10:15am 11:00am 2022-04-07T09:15:00-04:00 2022-04-07T10:00:00-04:00 |
Session 1: Academic-Clinical Research Teams Moderators: Nancy Grant Harrington and Anne M. Nicotera ◆ Allison Scott Gordon and Lauren J. (LJ) Van Scoy ◆ Kami Silk and Mildred (Millie) Horodynski |
11:00am 11:30am 2022-04-07T10:00:00-04:00 2022-04-07T10:30:00-04:00 |
Session 1b: Small Discussion/Working Groups Bringing Communication Science and Clinical Research Together: Research Team Perspectives |
11:30am 12:00pm 2022-04-07T10:30:00-04:00 2022-04-07T11:00:00-04:00 |
Session 1c: Large Group Discussion: Sharing and Debriefing |
12:00pm 12:45pm 2022-04-07T11:00:00-04:00 2022-04-07T11:45:00-04:00 |
Session 2: Administrative Challenges of Engaging in Clinic-based Research: Obtaining Funding and Navigating Human Subjects Requirements Advice from University of Kentucky’s Proposal Development Office, Office of Sponsored Projects Administration, and Office of Research Integrity ◆ Identifying funding sources for such interdisciplinary (and ultimately translational) research ◆ Submitting grant applications with possible subcontracts and complex budgets ◆ Navigating challenges that may arise in terms of human subjects research in clinical settings and across institutions Shana Herron, Senior Proposal Development Officer Mike Gabbard, Senior College Grant Officer Lead Belinda Smith, Education Specialist Deane Quillen, Reliance and Education |
12:45pm 1:00pm 2022-04-07T11:45:00-04:00 2022-04-07T12:00:00-04:00 |
Break |
1:00pm 2:00pm 2022-04-07T12:00:00-04:00 2022-04-07T13:00:00-04:00 |
Lunch (Regency Ballroom) |
2:00pm 2:45pm 2022-04-07T13:00:00-04:00 2022-04-07T13:45:00-04:00 |
Session 3: Forging and Managing Academic-Clinical Research Teams in the Clinical Environment Moderator: Christopher J. Koenig ◆ Academy of Communication in Healthcare: Ankit Mehta, MD, Elizabeth Unni, PhD, and Carli Zegers, PhD ◆ Memorial Hospital at Gulfport: Gretchen Norling Holmes, PhD and Jimmy Dimitriades, MD |
2:45pm 3:15pm 2022-04-07T13:45:00-04:00 2022-04-07T14:15:00-04:00 |
Session 3b: Small Discussion/Working Groups Bringing Communication Science and Clinical Research Together: Clinical Perspectives |
3:15pm 3:45pm 2022-04-07T14:15:00-04:00 2022-04-07T14:45:00-04:00 |
Session 3c: Large Group Discussion: Sharing and Debriefing |
3:45pm 4:00pm 2022-04-07T14:45:00-04:00 2022-04-07T15:00:00-04:00 |
Break |
4:00pm 4:45pm 2022-04-07T15:00:00-04:00 2022-04-07T15:45:00-04:00 |
Session 4: Small Discussion/Working Groups Exploring Funding Opportunities for Academic-Clinical Research Teams |
4:45pm 5:45pm 2022-04-07T15:45:00-04:00 2022-04-07T16:45:00-04:00 |
Session 5: Panel Discussion and Q&A Bringing Everything Together ◆ All invited speakers will share their thoughts on the day and answer audience questions |
5:45pm 6:00pm 2022-04-07T16:45:00-04:00 2022-04-07T17:00:00-04:00 |
Wrap-up Where Do We Go from Here? |
8:30am 9:30am 2022-04-08T07:30:00-04:00 2022-04-08T08:30:00-04:00 |
Registration and Breakfast (Patterson Ballroom Foyer) |
9:30am 10:45am 2022-04-08T08:30:00-04:00 2022-04-08T09:45:00-04:00 |
Conference Keynote Address (Patterson Ballroom B-C-D) ◆ Call to Order: Nancy Grant Harrington, Professor, Associate Dean for Research, and KCHC Director ◆ Jennifer Greer, Dean and Professor, College of Communication and Information, University of Kentucky ◆ Keynote Speaker Introduction: Nancy Grant Harrington Keynote Address: Beyond the Absence of Disease: Communication, Health and Well-being ◆ Dr. Kasisomayajula "Vish" Viswanath, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health |
10:45am 11:00am 2022-04-08T09:45:00-04:00 2022-04-08T10:00:00-04:00 |
Break |
11:00am 11:45am 2022-04-08T10:00:00-04:00 2022-04-08T10:45:00-04:00 |
Poster Session 1 (Regency Ballroom) Directory Cancer and Chronic Disease 3. Testing the Influence of Family Cancer History on Cancer Related Beliefs and Vegetable/Fruit Intake among Low Income Populations5. Non-Pharmacologic Pain Management Options for Cancer In-Patients: A Qualitative Study of Stakeholder Perspectives7. Examining Salient Social Media Content about Cannabis Products and Cancer among Cancer Survivors and Caregivers9. Effects of Lexical and Discourse-based Hedging in News Stories about Cancer on Behavioral Beliefs and Trust Towards ScientistsClinical Communication 11. What Influences Trust in and Understanding of Clinical Trials? An Analysis of HINTSInfluences of COVID-19 15. Global News Coverage of Government Responsibility for COVID-19 Healthcare: Community Structure Theory & Health/Resource Privilege17. Addressing COVID-19 Misinformation and Resiliency among Latinos Living with HIV: Formative Research Findings21. Why Do People Oppose COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates? A Computational Discourse Analysis Study23. A Virtual Shift: Patient Perceptions and Relational Reconstructing with Telemedicine during COVID-1925. College Students’ Experiences Using and Seeking Digital Mental Health Services during COVID-1927. Integrating Norm Activation Model with Ethics Position Theory: Individuals’ Moral Decision Making on Wearing Masks in Pandemic29. COVID-19 Second Wave Information Behavior and Mental Health Outcomes among the Nepali Diaspora in the United StatesHealth Behavior Change 33. Sense-making and building resilience during the 2013-2016 Ebola outbreak in Liberia35. Factors Affecting Health Communication Outcomes for Increased Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Louisville’s West End37. Predictors of COVID-19 Risk Behaviors: A Longitudinal Study of Veterans and non-Veterans39. Leveraging Sense of Community Responsibility (SOC-R) to Connect Individual Actions to Collective and Civic Well-beingHealth Campaigns 41. Using Injunctive Norms to Support College Students Who Choose Not to Drink Alcohol either Occasionally or At All43. Process Evaluation of a Communication Campaign to Promote Access to a Treatment for High Risk Outpatients with COVID-19 |
11:45am 12:30pm 2022-04-08T10:45:00-04:00 2022-04-08T11:30:00-04:00 |
Poster Session 2 (Regency Ballroom) Directory Cancer and Chronic Disease 2. Improving Communication to Increase Uptake of High Risk Breast Cancer Prevention Appointments4. Exploring Black Breast Cancer Patients’ Questions About Biomarker Testing to Predict Chemotherapy Neuropathy: A Qualitative Study6. Visual / Virtual / Viral: Communicating Disease and Disability Experience through Art in the Digital Age8. Social Media Use and Demographics Predicted Knowledge about Alcohol as a Cancer Risk FactorClinical Communication 10. A Qualitative Application of Structurational Divergence Theory to Evaluate Socio-Cultural Structures in the Nursing Sector12. Understanding Key Stakeholders’ Perceptions of Using Artificial Intelligence to Discover Patients’ Social Determinants of HealthInfluences of COVID-19 14. Federal Government of Nigeria's Media Strategies during COVID-19 Lockdown: Content Analysis of The Guardian and Nation16. Cross-national News Coverage of Government COVID-19 Mental Health Responses: Community Structure Theory & Privileged Health Access18. Exploring the Power of Interactivity: Effects of Interactive COVID-19 Maps on Users’ Perceptions, Knowledge, and Behaviors20. The Impact of Emotional Appeals and University Branding on Students’ Response to COVID-19 Messages22. Social and Behaviour Change Communication Pathways to COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance and Uptake in Nigeria24. An EPPM-guided Examination of College Students' Perceptions of their Counseling Center in the Context of the COVID-19 Pandemic26. Maternal Care Experiences of US-based African Women in COVID-19: Proposing Best Practices through Intersectionality Approaches28. Evaluating Media Frames and Responsible Reporting of Suicide in Nepal before and during the COVID-19 Pandemic30. Examining the Context of Mental Health During COVID-19 through a Framing Analysis of Popular Health MagazinesHealth Behavior Change 32. The Mediating Role of Perceived Conflict in Processing Conflicting Health Information34. Chop & Season: In-Person and On-Line Communication to Improve Cooking Self-Efficacy and Fruit & Vegetable Intake in Young Adults36. A Descriptive Analysis of Online Information Seeking for Environmental Health Risk Information38. Community Vitality: A Healthy Life for Everyone—A Four-Part Interdisciplinary Research Study40. Defining the Concept of Help-seeking to Support Efforts in Predicting Health Related BehaviorsHealth Campaigns 42. Who Deserves Stigma? A Critical Analysis of a Health Campaign to Address Stigma toward People Who Use Drugs44. Using Design Thinking to Raise Infant Mortality Awareness among Black Communities: A Case Study |
12:30pm 2:00pm 2022-04-08T11:30:00-04:00 2022-04-08T13:00:00-04:00 |
Lunch on your own |
2:00pm 3:30pm 2022-04-08T13:00:00-04:00 2022-04-08T14:30:00-04:00 |
PANEL SESSION: Communicating about Mental Health, Well-Being, and Difference During and Beyond the COVID-19 Pandemic (Patterson Ballroom B) ◆ Diane Francis, University of Kentucky (Chair) ◆ Nori Comello, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ◆ Parul Jain, Ohio University ◆ Jeannette Porter, University of Missouri COMPETITIVE PAPER SESSION
“Make It Make Sense”: Acknowledging the Elaborate Nature of Sense-making and Uncertainty (Patterson Ballroom C) Chair: Deena Kemp, University of Texas at Austin 1. Conceptualizing Moral Boundary Work: Women’s Communicative Labor to be Seen as Credible Witnesses to Their Health2. The Role of Electronic Support Groups on Contested Health Conditions: Informing Health Communication to Promote Well-being3. Understanding Appraisal and Decisional Factors’ Influence on Treatment Decisions amongst Individuals with Fibroadenoma Diagnoses4. Women’s Uncertainty Management Strategies in Communication about Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs)5. Narrative Sense-making during COVID-19: Using Stories to Understand Birth in a Global PandemicCOMPETITIVE PAPER SESSION: He Says Vaping, She Says E-cigarettes, We Say Stop It: Approaches to Prevention in the Post-Cigarette Era (Patterson Ballroom D) Chair: Karen L. Roper, University of Kentucky 2. Communicating Science Through Comics: A Novel Approach to Understanding E-cigarette Use Among Young People3. Design of and Receptivity to a Peer-developed Public Service Announcement to Support E-cigarette Prevention among Youth in KY4. Impact of Vaping Prevention Messages among Adolescents and Young Adults: A Meta-Analysis of Experimental Studies |
3:30pm 3:45pm 2022-04-08T14:30:00-04:00 2022-04-08T14:45:00-04:00 |
Break |
3:45pm 4:30pm 2022-04-08T14:45:00-04:00 2022-04-08T15:30:00-04:00 |
Poster Session 3 (Regency Ballroom) Directory Communication at the End of Life 45. Problematic Integration: Racial Discordance in Provider End-of-Life Advice to African-American Cancer Patients and Their Families47. Tales of Love’s Perseverance: Family Bereavement Stories as Means to Investigating Impacts of End-of-Life Care on Sense-MakingHealth Communication and Social Media 49. “World Mental Health Day”: Awareness, Destigmatization, and Promoting Social Support on Twitter51. “Diets Don’t Work”: Intuitive Eating Voices on Social Media as Promoters of Comprehensive Well-beingHealth Information in the Media 53. “This is Healthy”: Body-positivity Images as Mediated Biopolitical Tools of Slow Death55. Promising Prescriptions? A Framing Analysis of News Coverage Surrounding the Alzheimer’s Prescription Drug AduhelmMessage and Intervention Design 57. Reducing Psychological Reactance to Bystander Intervention Messages: Comparing Preemptive and Postscript Mitigation Strategies59. Talking about Opioid Misuse: The Effect of Family Communication Patterns and Messages Advocating Direct and Indirect Conversation61. Communication to Cultivate a Culture of Health: Lessons from 5-Star AchieveWELL OrganizationsPatient-Provider Communication 63. A Content Analysis of Cultural Competence and Cultural Humility in Nursing Fundamentals Textbooks65. Comprehensive Patient-centered Care: An Assessment of Family Medicine Residents’ Shared Decision-Making Skills67. From the Doctor’s Point-of-View: Motivations for Reducing Uncertainty and Sharing Bad News69. What is Optometry Communication Competence? Being Prosocial and Providing Informative Explanations71. Caring for Children with Rare Illnesses: Parents’ Advice to Other Parents and Clinicians73. Type II Diabetic Patient Communicative Experiences in Rural Communities: Understanding the Complexity of AdherenceSexual Health Communication 75. An Examination of the Relationship between the Belief in Rape Myths and Disclosure of Sexual Assault in the MeToo Era among College Students77. In Search of Entertainment-Education’s Effects: Storylines and Calls to a Sexual and Reproductive Health Hotline in Mexico79. Examining Foreign-Born Mothers' (FBMs) Perceptions, Attitudes, Information Needs, and Information Seeking Behaviors Related to HPV Vaccines and VaccinationsSocial Support and Mental Health 83. It Shows that Someone Actually Cares: The Importance of Instructor Social Support for College Students’ Mental HealthStigma and Health Communication Technology and mHealth 87. Effects of Interactivity and Artificial Intelligence on Judgments of Expertise and Trustworthiness in Mobile Health Technology |
4:30pm 5:15pm 2022-04-08T15:30:00-04:00 2022-04-08T16:15:00-04:00 |
Poster Session 4 (Regency Ballroom) Directory Communication at the End of Life 46. Perceptions of a Good Death and Communication Apprehension about Death: Predictors of End-of-Life PreferencesHealth Communication and Social Media 48. A Healthy Influence? Exploring Relationships between Friends’ Social Media Posts, Loneliness, Isolation and Behavioral Intentions50. When We Talk about Opioids Overtly: Information Types of Opioid Discussion on Reddit52. Birds and Bees: Social Media Message Framing for Parent and Adolescent ConversationsHealth Information in the Media 56. Effects of Direct-To-Consumer Genetic Testing Narratives on Attitudes and Behavioral IntentionsMessage and Intervention Design 58. Understanding Young Adults’ Intentions to Intervene in Intimate Partner Violence Using Various Communication Strategies60. “I got training on the brain”: Designing Messages to Improve Seniors’ Adherence to Cognitive Assessment and Training Programs62. Civic Engagement as a Health Behavior: Mobilizing Individuals through Civic-oriented AppealsPatient-Provider Communication 64. Medical Students’ Orientation to Preceptor Feedback during Clinical Rotations: Self and Group Identity Influences66. Improving the Communication Practices of Clinical Research Coordinators with African American and Black Caribbean Patients68. Breaking Tradition is Risky: Physician Communication Strategies in Reducing Alternative Cancer Treatment Risk Perceptions70. The Influence of the Physical Environment on Perceptions of Patient-Provider Communication72. Child Care Providers’ Efficacy Towards Testing Water for Lead: Important Implications for Environmental Health LiteracySexual Health Communication 76. The Influence of University Sub-Group Identification and Social Norms About Sexual Assault on Disclosure Response Efficacy78. Perceived HPV Vaccine Effectiveness Predicts Rural West Virginia Parents’ Intention to Vaccinate Children, not Provider RecommendationsSocial Support and Mental Health 82. Supporting Representative Shared Decision Making in Dementia: Relatives’ Health Information Seeking BehaviorStigma and Health Communication Technology and mHealth 86. Mobile Technology Adoption and Use in Africa: Assessing How Kenyans Accept and Use Mobile Technology in Healthcare Delivery |
5:15pm 5:30pm 2022-04-08T16:15:00-04:00 2022-04-08T16:30:00-04:00 |
Break |
5:30pm 7:00pm 2022-04-08T16:30:00-04:00 2022-04-08T18:00:00-04:00 |
COMPETITIVE PAPER SESSION: The Social Diffusion of COVID-19 Information and Misinformation (Patterson Ballroom B) Chair: Sijia Yang, University of Wisconsin-Madison 2. Unraveling the Mechanisms of Social Media Opinion Leadership in COVID-19 Vaccine Promotion3. Cross-national News Coverage of Vaccine Hesitancy: Community Structure Theory, Political Instability, and Privilege4. A Critical Discourse Analysis of Health Communication for Latinx Communities in Oregon during the COVID-19 Pandemic5. COVID Misinformation Endorsement in the Criminal Justice Involved Population: Prevalence and Relationship with Information SourcesCOMPETITIVE PAPER SESSION: Reducing Mistrust and Promoting Inclusivity: Improving Patient-Provider Interaction (Patterson Ballroom C) Chair: Minhao Dai, Kennesaw State University 1. LGBT Medical Mistrust and Perceptions of Patient-Provider Communication in the Southern United States4. Individual Differences in the Mediating Role of Patient-centered Communication in Cancer Patient Health Outcomes5. Patient Experiences of Discrimination as a Predictor of Colorectal Cancer Screening: What Does It Mean?PANEL SESSION: Using Health Communication Strategies to Inform Research Report-Back and Build Environmental Health Literacy in Rural Communities (Patterson Ballroom D) Chair: Anna Goodman Hoover, University of Kentucky Using Research Report-Back to Build Environmental Health Literacy in Kentucky ◆ Anna Goodman Hoover, University of Kentucky Sharing Research Findings to Increase Community Water Quality Knowledge in Appalachia ◆ Jason Unrine, University of Kentucky ◆ Nina McCoy, Martin County Concerned Citizens Engaging Citizen Scientists in Environmental Health Research and Report-Back: Radon on the RADAR ◆ Ellen Hahn, University of Kentucky Tailoring COVID-19 Surveillance Information for Rural Water Utilities: The WACKIEST Project ◆ Matthew Liversedge, University of Kentucky |
9:00pm 11:00pm 2022-04-08T20:00:00-04:00 2022-04-08T22:00:00-04:00 |
Conference Reception (Hyttops Bar and the Kentucky Room, Lower Level A) |
8:30am 9:30am 2022-04-09T07:30:00-04:00 2022-04-09T08:30:00-04:00 |
Registration and Breakfast (Patterson Ballroom Foyer) |
9:30am 11:00am 2022-04-09T08:30:00-04:00 2022-04-09T10:00:00-04:00 |
PANEL SESSION: Academic-Clinical Research Partnerships to Enhance Clinical Trial Participation: The Potential for High-impact Scholarship (Patterson Ballroom B) Chair: Susan E. Morgan, University of Miami The Broad Landscape of Clinical Trial Communication: How Health Communication Scholars Can Help Advance Medical Discovery ◆ Susan E. Morgan, University of Miami What We Know about the Impact of Communication between Clinicians and Patients on the Willingness to enroll in Cancer Clinical Trials ◆ Susan Eggly, Karmanos Cancer Center Addressing Health Disparities in Marginalized Populations through More Effective Clinical Trial Communication ◆ Soroya MacFarlane, University of Georgia How Clinical Research Coordinators Manage the Influence of Family Members on Decisions to Participate in Clinical Research ◆ Kallia Wright, University of Miami The Application of Emerging Technologies in Clinical Trial Communication: The Opportunities and Challenges ◆ Wei Peng, Washington State University The Efficacy of Virtual Technology to Develop Tailored Research Recruitment Messages for African Americans and Latinos ◆ Janice Krieger, University of Florida ◆ Steve Anton, University of Florida Bridging the Gap between Science and People: Message Strategies for Educating Patients about Clinical Research ◆ Aurora Occa, University of Kentucky How Organizational Communication Approaches Can Support Clinical Trial Accrual ◆ Tyler R. Harrison, University of Miami COMPETITIVE PAPER SESSION: Achieving Health Equity through Community Engagement and Policymaking (Patterson Ballroom C) Chair: Stefanie Z. Demetriades, Northwestern University 1. Intersectionality Policymaking Toolkit: Principles for Intersectionality Informed Policymaking to Serve Diverse Women and Children2. Promoting Vaccine Equity in BIPOC Communities: Comprehensive Communication Strategies to Promote Comprehensive Well-Being4. Community Engagement to Reduce Health Disparities: Examining the Tactics Used by Practitioners to Engage Underserved Communities5. Using Community Engagement Studios to Design a COVID-19 Treatment Communication CampaignCOMPETITIVE PAPER SESSION: Justifying the Jab: Influences on COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake (Patterson Ballroom D) Chair: Haijing Ma, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 1. Demographic and Psychosocial Correlates of COVID-19 Vaccine Uptake Among US Adults: Application of the Theory of Planned Behavior2. Predicting COVID Vaccine Uptake in Racial Minorities: The Role of Information Sources, Attitude, and Norms3. “Getting a vaccine that came in a hurry”: A Mixed Methods Examination of COVID-19 Vaccine Beliefs and Hesitancy4. What Would Make You “Take Your Shot”: Identifying Motivations to Target among COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitant College Students5. Applying the Hornik & Woolf Approach to Identify Top Messaging Themes to Improve Healthcare Workers’ COVID-19 Vaccine Confidence |
11:00am 11:15am 2022-04-09T10:00:00-04:00 2022-04-09T10:15:00-04:00 |
Break |
11:15am 12:45pm 2022-04-09T10:15:00-04:00 2022-04-09T11:45:00-04:00 |
COMPETITIVE PAPER SESSION: Exploring Complex Patient-Provider Communication (Patterson Ballroom B) Chair: Brittnie Peck, Wake Forest University 1. Disclosure and Privacy During COVID-19: Health Care Provider Communication with Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence3. Do Women Desire More from Postnatal Communication? Voice, Partnership, and Opportunities for Accountability in Patient-Provider Communication4. An Examination of Patient-Provider Communication through Recollections of Black Breast Cancer Clinical Trial Participants5. A Systematic Review of Complementary and Integrative Health (CIH) Communication Using Observational Data in Biomedical SettingsCOMPETITIVE PAPER SESSION: Perspectives on Social Support: Navigating the Needs of Patients and Support Providers (Patterson Ballroom C) Chair: Jennifer Ptacek, University of Dayton 1. Everyday Support Provision to Individuals with Chronic Illnesses: A Needs Assessment2. Aiding in the Sacred Space: An Examination of Social Support, Advocacy, and Barriers among Birthing Doulas3. Talk about It: Examining the Relationship between Disclosing about Infertility and Social Support4. Black Women’s Maternal Health and Social Support across All Three Stages of Pregnancy: A Qualitative Evaluation5. Patients’ Self-Perceived Cancer Burden: Disclosure Decision-Making with Support PersonsCOMPETITIVE PAPER SESSION: Getting the Message Across: Message Design Strategies to Inform and Persuade in Multiple Contexts (Patterson Ballroom D) Chair: Rachael A. Record, San Diego State University 1. Comparing the Effects of Narratives and Non-narratives on Skin Cancer Risk Perceptions and Behavioral Intentions2. Celebrity Credibility and Endorsement on Decision-Making about Weight-Loss Supplements: Predictors of Intent to Use4. Adding Hope to Enhance Persuasion: The Effect of “Guilt-to-Hope” Appeals on Discouraging Texting while Driving |
12:45pm 1:00pm 2022-04-09T11:45:00-04:00 2022-04-09T12:00:00-04:00 |
Break |
1:00pm 2:30pm 2022-04-09T12:00:00-04:00 2022-04-09T13:30:00-04:00 |
Awards Luncheon and Research Presentation (Regency Ballroom) Awards Luncheon and research presentation by the Donohew Outstanding Health Communication Scholar award winner, Jessica Gall Myrick, Professor, Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications, Penn State University. |