Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Amelia C. Couture Bue"'
Publikováno v:
Media Psychology. 26:336-361
Advertisements that ostensibly serve to empower women have become popular in recent years, but recent research calls into question the psychological effectiveness of these advertisements. While seemingly progressive, empowerment-themed advertisements
Autor:
Amelia C. Couture Bue
Publikováno v:
The International Encyclopedia of Media Psychology. :1-5
Publikováno v:
Body Image. 33:152-163
Recent studies have demonstrated that exposure to thin-ideal social media content is associated with decreased body satisfaction, and disclaimer comments have been a proposed intervention. This experiment uses eye-tracking methods to explore the effe
Autor:
Benjamin O. Turner, Shelby Wilcox, Ralf Schmälzle, Richard Huskey, Christin Scholz, Clare Grall, Kelsey Prena, Allison Eden, Amelia C. Couture Bue, Dar Meshi
Publikováno v:
Journal of Communication, vol 70, iss 3
Journal of Communication, 70(3), 356-378. Wiley-Blackwell
Journal of Communication, 70(3), 356-378. Wiley-Blackwell
Author(s): Huskey, R; Bue, AC; Eden, A; Grall, C; Meshi, D; Prena, K; Schmalzle, R; Scholz, C; Turner, BO; Wilcox, S | Abstract: In this special issue devoted to speaking across communication subfields, we introduce a domain general explanatory frame
Publikováno v:
Media Psychology. 24:538-561
Media sensory curation theory conceptualizes sensory regulation within the built environment as a gratification of electronic media use and predictor of parent-child conflict over children’s media ...
Publikováno v:
Sex Roles. 81:627-642
Empowerment-themed advertisements are becoming an attractive marketing strategy for companies due to their popularity among female consumers, but there is no known empirical work examining their effectiveness at increasing women’s felt empowerment.
Autor:
Amelia C. Couture Bue
Publikováno v:
Computers in Human Behavior. 108:106329
Existing research links social media use with body dissatisfaction and increased appearance comparison, demonstrating that photo-based behaviors such as taking and posting ‘selfies’ may lead to increased risk of body image disturbance (Cohen, New