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Protect the naive or punish the evil? An in-depth examination on the connection between third-person perception and support for media censorship |
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Abstract:
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This study investigates the third-person perception and both preventive and punitive explanations for support for media censorship in a variety of communication context. The preventive explanation views support for censorship as a preventive action to protect others from threatening media effects; the punitive explanation argues that individuals' favorable attitudes toward media censorship reflect their intention to penalize the media for the harm they have done to the subject of the communication. The emphasis placed on which explanation shifts by context, which reflects the complexity of censorship attitudes. This paper also tests the role of self-esteem in third-person perception, although no support was found. |
Most Common Document Word Stems:
media (166), effect (161), perceiv (136), self (133), communic (115), support (92), person (84), censorship (79), third (77), other (74), third-person (69), individu (67), harm (64), percept (56), protect (56), esteem (50), negat (48), punish (47), self-esteem (46), studi (41), pornographi (41), |
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Association:
Name: International Communication Association URL: http://www.icahdq.org
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Citation:
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MLA Citation:
| Chia, Stella. and Lu, Kerr-Hsin. "Protect the naive or punish the evil? An in-depth examination on the connection between third-person perception and support for media censorship" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Marriott Hotel, San Diego, CA, May 27, 2003 <Not Available>. 2009-05-26 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p112187_index.html> |
APA Citation:
| Chia, S. C. and Lu, K. , 2003-05-27 "Protect the naive or punish the evil? An in-depth examination on the connection between third-person perception and support for media censorship" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Marriott Hotel, San Diego, CA Online <.PDF>. 2009-05-26 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p112187_index.html |
Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Review Method: Peer Reviewed Abstract: This study investigates the third-person perception and both preventive and punitive explanations for support for media censorship in a variety of communication context. The preventive explanation views support for censorship as a preventive action to protect others from threatening media effects; the punitive explanation argues that individuals' favorable attitudes toward media censorship reflect their intention to penalize the media for the harm they have done to the subject of the communication. The emphasis placed on which explanation shifts by context, which reflects the complexity of censorship attitudes. This paper also tests the role of self-esteem in third-person perception, although no support was found. |
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| Document Type: |
.PDF |
| Page count: |
38 |
| Word count: |
8896 |
| Text sample: |
| Running head: Protect the naive or punish the evil? Protect the naive or punish the evil? An in-depth examination on the connection between third-person perception and support for media censorship Submitted by Stella C. Chia Dept. of Life Sciences Communication University of Wisconsin-Madison 440 Henry Mall Madison WI 53706 phone: (608) 262-6722 email: cchia@wisc.edu and Kerr-hsin Lu Dept. of Journalism and Mass Communication University of Wisconsin-Madison 5115 Vilas Hall 821 University Avenue Madison WI 53706 Stella C. Chia is |
| -.10# -.05 -.08 .02 .00 .05 -.02 Perceived harm to the subject of communication .02 .06 Support for Support for censorship at censorship at attitudinal level .27*** behavioral level ***p<.001; **p<.01; *p<.05; #p<.10 |
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