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Influential media conference becoming a CMCI showcase

Influential media conference becoming a CMCI showcase

By Iris Serrano

Empowered by social media and generative artificial intelligence, fake news is spreading faster than ever online鈥攁nd it鈥檚 becoming harder to avoid, let alone identify.

Muhammad Ali hopes his research helps users battle back against malicious misinformation.

Ali, a PhD student studying journalism in the College of Media, Communication and Information at the 麻豆影院, analyzed how extremist organizations use  stories and messaging on social media platforms to enforce their ideologies to individuals and networks.

鈥淧latforms like Facebook and X are increasingly recognized as hotbeds for extremist narratives,鈥 Ali said. 鈥淭here is still a big gap in understanding the personal and psychological aspects of online radicalization, but the findings of this research show us how we can protect ourselves from propaganda.鈥

  鈥淭he college does a great job promoting a diversity of viewpoints, research interests and intercollegiate venues.鈥
Kyle Harris

Ali was among the CMCI students and faculty recognized with best paper awards at the annual conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, which took place Aug. 8 to 11 in Philadelphia. All told, CMCI won five awards and presented 47 peer-reviewed papers at AEJMC.

鈥淥ur college was created to catalyze and nurture research like Muhammad鈥檚, which doesn鈥檛 fall into any single category,鈥 said Patrick Ferrucci, chair of the journalism department at CMCI. 鈥淭he cross-disciplinary approach to our doctoral programs means our students are challenged to bring an unconventional approach to research and problem-solving. It was incredible to see that recognized over and over at this year鈥檚 conference.鈥

Another CMCI best paper publication also turned on social media trends. Kyle Harris, a PhD student in the advertising, public relations and media design department, co-wrote a paper on disability influencers and self-representation on Instagram with his mentor, Erin Willis, an associate professor. Their research, which conducted a visual and textual analysis of the narrative discourse of 14 influencers to see how they represent invisible and visible illness鈥攚on second-place honors.

鈥淚 owe a lot to the APRD department and CMCI for believing in me and my research and valuing my contributions, and providing the resources and support to shepherd the work of Dr. Willis and myself to the conference,鈥 Harris said. 鈥淭he college does a great job promoting a diversity of viewpoints, research interests and intercollegiate venues.鈥

A full list of CMCI presentations at AEJMC follows. Names in bold are CMCI faculty and students. In addition, many CMCI faculty and students in journalism, APRD and media studies moderated or served on panels, or led workshops, in addition to serving as heads of different divisions.

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