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Architects of Communication Scholarship

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Architects of Communication Scholarship
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  • Architects of Communication Scholarship - Cynthia Stohl on Embedded Research and Global Perspectives
    This episode features Professor Cynthia Stohl in conversation with Professor Shiv Ganesh. Professor Stohl shares her perspective on the rapid expansion of the field of communication during the 1980s, where researchers shifted to a more  embedded and global approach. She discusses how  the International Communication Association continues to globalize through affiliate journals and hubs. Professor Stohl also shares some stories about her challenges doing organizational communication research among factory workers in New Zealand. Click here for the episode transcript  FeaturingEllen WartellaShiv GaneshCynthia Stohl SponsorsWee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University, SingaporeMore from the host & speakers: Ellen Wartella Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor of Communication | Professor of Psychology, Human Development and Social Policy, and Medical Social SciencesNorthwestern University Director, Center on Media and Human DevelopmentTwitter: @CMHD_NU Shiv GaneshProfessor of CommunicationMoody College of CommunicationThe University of Texas at AustinLinkedIn: shivganeshnzusFacebook: shivtalkCynthia StohlDistinguished Professor Department of Communication  University of California, Santa BarbaraWorks referenced in episodeBimber, B., Flanagin, A., & Stohl, C. (2012). Collective action in organizations: Interaction and engagement in an era of technological change. Cambridge University Press.Harness, D. Ganesh, S. & Stohl, C. (in press) Visibility Agents: Organizing Transparency in the Digital Era. New Media and Society.Knapp, M. L., Stohl, C., & Reardon, K. K. (1981). “Memorable” messages. The Journal of Communication. Putnam, L. L., & Stohl, C. (1990). Bona fide groups: A reconceptualization of groups in context. Communication Studies.Stohl, C. (1993). European managers' interpretations of participation:  A semantic network analysis. Human Communication Research, 20, 1, 97-117.  Stohl, C. (1995). Organizational communication: Connectedness in action. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.  Copy and Audio Editor:Dominic BonelliExecutive Producer:DeVante Brown
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  • Architects of Communication Scholarship - Byron Reeves on Media Psychology
    This episode features Professors James Cummings and Byron Reeves as they discuss Professor Reeves’s background and research in media psychology. Professor Reeves explores the topic of media effects and explains how data science within this area of the communications field has changed throughout his career.Click here for the episode transcript FeaturingEllen WartellaByron ReevesJames CummingsSponsor:The Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information at Nanyang Technological University in SingaporeMore from the host & speakers: Ellen Wartella Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor of Communication; Professor of Psychology, Human Development and Social Policy, and Medical Social SciencesNorthwestern University Director, Center on Media and Human DevelopmentTwitter: @CMHD_NU Byron ReevesPolicy Emeritus Professor of CommunicationProfessor, School of EducationStanford UniversityTwitter: @byronreevesJames CummingsAssistant Professor, Emerging Media Studies Boston UniversityTwitter: @_jjcii Works referenced in episode: Reeves, B., Robinson, T., & Ram, N. (2020). Time for the human screenome project. Nature, 577(7790), 314-317.Script and Audio Editors:Bennett PackJacqueline ColarussoExecutive Producer:DeVante Brown
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  • Architects of Communication Scholarship - Scott Poole on the Interactions of Groups
    In this episode, Professor Scott Poole, in conversation with Professor Andy Pilny, discusses the discourse and interactions within groups trying to accomplish a common goal. Dr. Poole also shines light on different theories, processes, and observations he’s made in group settings throughout his illustrious career. Click here for the episode transcript FeaturingEllen Wartella Andrew PilnyScott PooleSponsor:Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information at Nanyang Technological University in SingaporeMore from the host & speakers:  Ellen Wartella Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor of Communication | Professor of Psychology, Human Development and Social Policy, and Medical Social SciencesNorthwestern University Director, Center on Media and Human DevelopmentTwitter: @CMHD_NU Scott Poole David L. Swanson Professor Emeritus of Communication | Director of The Institute for Computing in the Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences | Senior Research Scientist at the National Center for Supercomputing ApplicationsUniversity of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Fellow in Organization Science Program | Vrije University, NetherlandsAndrew Pilny Associate Professor of Communication | University of Kentucky Works referenced in episode: Pilny, A. & Poole, M. S., (2017) Group Processes: Data-Driven Computational Approaches (Editors)., Springer. 206 p.Poole, M. S. & DeSanctis, G., ( 2009), Applied research on group decision support systems: The minnesota GDSS project. Routledge Handbook of Applied Communication Research. Taylor and Francis, p. 558-583 26 p.Arrow, H., Henry, K. B., Poole, M. S., Wheelan, S., & Moreland, R. (2005). Traces, Trajectories, and Timing: The Temporal Perspective on Groups.Copy and Audio Editors:Bennett PackExecutive Producer:DeVante Brown
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  • Architects of Communication Scholarship - Judee Burgoon on developing theories of nonverbal communication
    This episode features Professor Judee Burgoon in conversation with Professor Norah Dunbar. They discuss how Judee became interested in the field of communication, especially interpersonal communication. Judee shared how she developed EVT, Expectancy Violations Theory, one of the most influential theories in the field, and her other contributions like interpersonal deception theory. Also, she talked about her thinking of the big intellectual questions of communication in the next decade.Click here for the episode transcript  FeaturingEllen WartellaNorah DunbarJudee Burgoon Sponsor:Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University, SingaporeMore from the host & speakers: Ellen Wartella Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor of Communication | Professor of Psychology, Human Development and Social Policy, and Medical Social SciencesNorthwestern University Director, Center on Media and Human DevelopmentTwitter: @CMHD_NU Norah DunbarProfessor, Department of CommunicationUniversity of California Santa BarbaraTwitter: @nedPhDJudee BurgoonDirector of Research, Center for the Management of InformationProfessor of CommunicationProfessor of Family Studies and Human DevelopmentUniversity of ArizonaFacebook: [email protected]: Judee BurgoonWorks referenced in episode:Burgoon, J. K., Buller, D. B., & Woodall, W. G. (1989). Nonverbal communication: The unspoken dialogue. Harpercollins College Division.Burgoon, J. K., Bonito, J. A., Ramirez Jr, A., Dunbar, N. E., Kam, K., & Fischer, J. (2002). Testing the interactivity principle: Effects of mediation, propinquity, and verbal and nonverbal modalities in interpersonal interaction. Journal of communication, 52(3), 657-677.Copy and Audio Editor:Kate InExecutive Producer:DeVante Brown
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  • Architects of Communication Scholarship - Peter Monge on Systems Theory, Virtual Organizations, and a Globalizing ICA
    This episode features past ICA president, Professor Emeritus Peter Monge in conversation with Professor Noshir Contractor. They discuss Professor Monge’s transition from theological studies and education to a pioneer in the field of communication and his subsequent contributions to the areas of systems theory, communication networks, and organizational communication. Professor Monge further provides insight on how ICA, and the field of communication as a whole, has evolved since the 1970s and how he envisions the field further evolving, via globalization efforts and his introduction of evolutionary and ecological theory into organizational communication research.Click here for the episode transcript FeaturingEllen WartellaNoshir Contractor Peter Monge Sponsor:The Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information at Nanyang Technological University in SingaporeMore from our guests:  Ellen Wartella Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor of Communication | Professor of Psychology, Human Development and Social Policy, and Medical Social SciencesNorthwestern University Director, Center on Media and Human DevelopmentTwitter: @CMHD_NUNoshir Contractor Jane S. & William J. White Professor of Behavioral Sciences | McCormick School of Engineering & Applied Science Professor of Management & Organization | School of Communication & the Kellogg School of ManagementNorthwestern University Director | Science of Networks in Communities (SONIC) Research GroupPeter MongeProfessor Emeritus of Management and Organization | Marshall School of Business Professor Emeritus of Communication | Annenberg School for Communication and JournalismUniversity of Southern California Works Referenced in Episode:Farace, R. M., & Monge, P. R. P. and Russell, H. 1977. Communicating and Organizing. Reading, MA: Addison-Wedsey Publishing Co.Hilbert, M., Oh, P., & Monge, P. (2016). Evolution of what? A network approach for the detection of evolutionary forces. Social Networks, 47, 38-46.Monge, P. R., Contractor, N. S., & Contractor, P. S. (2003). Theories of communication networks. Oxford University Press, USACopy and Audio Editors:  Lucia Barnum Dominic Bonelli Sharlene Burgos Executive Producer:DeVante Brown
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About Architects of Communication Scholarship

With this podcast, host Ellen Wartella brings you interviews of several outstanding communication researchers who have been architects of communication scholarship. She will ask them questions about what motivated them to study communication, what they see as current status of their area of research, what they see as the important research questions in their respective areas moving forward, and how communication research contributes to societal challenges and opportunities. In each episode, Ellen will introduce one of the Architects of Communication Scholarship and a handpicked scholar who will be engaging in dialogue with that architect.
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