This virtual poster session will provide an informal space for participants to share and discuss their work. The session will take place Wonder (link in participant email), an online platform allowing participants to move about freely.
Poster quick links:
Do Enfranchised Immigrants Affect Political Behaviour?
Apurav Yash Bhatiya, University of Warwick
An Analysis of the Partnership between Retailers and Low-credibility News Publishers
Lia Bozarth (she/her/hers), University of Michigan
Road to the White House: Analyzing the Relations Between Mainstream and Social Media During the U.S. Presidential Primaries
Aaron Brookhouse (he/him/his), Michigan State University
Modeling US State Legislators on Twitter
Ishita Gopal (she/her/hers), Pennsylvania State University
Computational Communication Science through Keywords
Heesoo Jang (she/her/hers), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Attention to the COVID-19 pandemic on Twitter: Partisan differences among U.S. state legislators
Taegyoon Kim (he/him/his), Pennsylvania State University
Global depolarization: Correcting overly negative group meta-perceptions across 26 countries
Jeffrey Lees (he/him/his), Clemson University
Watching the Birdwatchers: Examining the helpfulness of crowdsourced fact-checking on Twitter
Cameron Martel (he/him/his), MIT
Right-wing populism and the rise of internationalism in Europe
Nina Obermeier (she/her/hers), Cornell University
Political Campaigning in Immigrant Minority Communities in the United States during the 2020 Presidential Elections
Anmol Panda (he/him/his), University of Michigan
Users’ behavior and crowdsourced elites in the Spanish Twittersphere during the first wave of Covid-19
Luce Prignano (she/her/hers), University of Barcelona
Understanding the Spread of Misinformation on Social Media –The Effects of Topics and a Political Leader’s Nudge
Xiangyu Wang, University of Iowa, Min Zhang, Weiguo Fan, Kang Zhao, University of Iowa
Reply and Reaction: How Interactive Features Regulate Communication Dynamics on Social Media
Alvin Zhou (he/him/his), University of Pennsylvania
All Posters
Do Enfranchised Immigrants Affect Political Behaviour?
Apurav Yash Bhatiya, University of Warwick
An Analysis of the Partnership between Retailers and Low-credibility News Publishers
Lia Bozarth (she/her/hers), University of Michigan
Road to the White House: Analyzing the Relations Between Mainstream and Social Media During the U.S. Presidential Primaries
Aaron Brookhouse (he/him/his), Michigan State University
Modeling US State Legislators on Twitter
Ishita Gopal (she/her/hers), Pennsylvania State University
Computational Communication Science through Keywords
Heesoo Jang (she/her/hers), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Attention to the COVID-19 pandemic on Twitter: Partisan differences among U.S. state legislators
Taegyoon Kim (he/him/his), Pennsylvania State University
Global depolarization: Correcting overly negative group meta-perceptions across 26 countries
Jeffrey Lees (he/him/his), Clemson University
Watching the Birdwatchers: Examining the helpfulness of crowdsourced fact-checking on Twitter
Cameron Martel (he/him/his), MIT
Right-wing populism and the rise of internationalism in Europe
Nina Obermeier (she/her/hers), Cornell University
Political Campaigning in Immigrant Minority Communities in the United States during the 2020 Presidential Elections
Anmol Panda (he/him/his), University of Michigan
Users’ behavior and crowdsourced elites in the Spanish Twittersphere during the first wave of Covid-19
Luce Prignano (she/her/hers), University of Barcelona
Understanding the Spread of Misinformation on Social Media –The Effects of Topics and a Political Leader’s Nudge
Xiangyu Wang, University of Iowa, Min Zhang, Weiguo Fan, Kang Zhao, University of Iowa
Reply and Reaction: How Interactive Features Regulate Communication Dynamics on Social Media
Alvin Zhou (he/him/his), University of Pennsylvania