can 3d movies screen for binocular vision problems in children - indiana

61
Time Warner Medialab Proposal in Support of Media Research by University Faculty and Students Overview Institution: Indiana University, Bloomington Contact name: Sean Connolly Contact email: [email protected] Summary of proposed inquiry: This proposal asks if Hollywood’s new 3D movies can passively screen for binocular vision problems in children. Key deliverables: Internal Time Warner report, American Optometric Association (AOA) report for public health, Conference Papers (multiple), Journal Publication (vision sciences) Total cost: $45,260 Proposed Research This proposal tests the hypothesis that 3D movies can screen for binocular vision issues in children as well as the eyechart currently screens for acuity vision issues. Research indicates that 3D media can effectively screen for vision issues in children in near‐distance interactions (AOA 2011). While comparisons between near‐ distance and far‐distance 3D are popular (summary: Shibita 2011), no study has been conducted to see if far‐distance 3D can similarly serve as a screening tool. This proposal hypothesizes that the far‐distance interactions of a 3D movie will screen for binocular vision issues as effectively as near‐distance 3D. One difficulty in using feature‐length movies as 3D stimuli is that participants may feel symptoms during the presentation that go unreported by movie’s end. Post‐ tests may fail to capture the over‐time interplay between narrative, on‐screen depth, and a child’s ocular system. For example, eye pain that arises from more aggressive 3D techniques might dissipate by the time post‐exposure tests are administered. Negative parallax techniques appear to bring objects into the theater by forcing eyes to converge in front of the movie screen – and this taxes our binocular vision. More contemporary dynamic depth techniques force eyes to continuously converge and diverge as the entire volume of the overall frame changes in time with respect to an in‐frame object. The eye strain elicited by aggressive mid‐movie techniques may be forgotten by movie’s end. More deeply, the inherent narrative structure of modern movies may complicate post‐stimulus reporting as well. The Hero’s Journey myth‐paradigm underlying most modern American movies has built in moments of narrative rest (Vogler 1992). To get a moment‐by‐moment understanding of the binocular interaction then, in‐stimulus measures become necessary.

Upload: sean-connolly

Post on 18-Jan-2017

128 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

Time Warner Medialab Proposal in Support of Media Research by University Faculty and Students Overview     Institution:  Indiana University, Bloomington Contact name:  Sean Connolly Contact email:  [email protected] Summary of proposed inquiry: 

This proposal asks if Hollywood’s new 3D movies can passively screen for binocular vision problems in children.  

Key deliverables:  Internal Time Warner report, American Optometric Association (AOA) report for public health, Conference Papers (multiple), Journal Publication (vision sciences) 

Total cost:  $45,260  Proposed Research    This proposal tests the hypothesis that 3D movies can screen for binocular vision issues in children as well as the eyechart currently screens for acuity vision issues.  Research indicates that 3D media can effectively screen for vision issues in children in near‐distance interactions (AOA 2011).  While comparisons between near‐distance and far‐distance 3D are popular (summary: Shibita 2011), no study has been conducted to see if far‐distance 3D can similarly serve as a screening tool. This proposal hypothesizes that the far‐distance interactions of a 3D movie will screen for binocular vision issues as effectively as near‐distance 3D.   One difficulty in using feature‐length movies as 3D stimuli is that participants may feel symptoms during the presentation that go unreported by movie’s end.  Post‐tests may fail to capture the over‐time interplay between narrative, on‐screen depth, and a child’s ocular system.  For example, eye pain that arises from more aggressive 3D techniques might dissipate by the time post‐exposure tests are administered. Negative parallax techniques appear to bring objects into the theater by forcing eyes to converge in front of the movie screen – and this taxes our binocular vision.  More contemporary dynamic depth techniques force eyes to continuously converge and diverge as the entire volume of the overall frame changes in time with respect to an in‐frame object. The eye strain elicited by aggressive mid‐movie techniques may be forgotten by movie’s end. More deeply, the inherent narrative structure of modern movies may complicate post‐stimulus reporting as well. The Hero’s Journey myth‐paradigm underlying most modern American movies has built in moments of narrative rest (Vogler 1992). To get a moment‐by‐moment understanding of the binocular interaction then, in‐stimulus measures become necessary.  

Page 2: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

TimeWarner’s unique in‐theater biometric tools, direct dials, and infrared cameras, offer an otherwise unattainable understanding of the moment‐by‐moment behavioral, psychophysiological, and self‐reported binocular 3D movie experience.    Context/Rationale   This study brought together a team of interdisciplinary researchers because we believe this study is more about education and public health than it is about movies. Public health research promotes community health  “through the organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations, and individuals” (Winslow 1920).  Vision acuity is already a component of public health but BV‐deficiencies go largely unaddressed (Duenas 2011). This seems a particular problem since current research links BV‐problems to dyslexia (Atzmon 1985) and ADHD (Rouse 2009).    Up to 25% of school children have undiagnosed vision issues and vision deficiencies have been correlated with lower reading scores and lack of educational readiness (AOA 2011). Vision deficiencies even led “ultimately to special education classification” erroneously in some classrooms (New Jersey Commission Public Schools 2006).  The lack of BV awareness can underlie 8%‐15% of these vision problems.   The eyechart was made in 1862 and it quickly increased the awareness of acuity vision issues. What made the eyechart a particularly effective screener is its miniscule cost, and, ease of application. 3D movies have similar benefits that make them preferable to purchasing near‐distance 3D tools for schools. Movies reach a massive audience and the cost of participation is only five more dollars per ticket.  Positive results would not only mean 3D movies can screen for BV issues, it can turn the massive wave of 3D technologies into a massive platform for BV awareness.  This study can impact vision health, reading skills, and educational readiness.   We further note that the experimental set‐up used to capture the in‐theater experience of binocularly deficient viewers simultaneously captures a deep look at the movie‐going experience of non‐BV‐deficient viewers (via control group). Since we must already code the stimulus for Hero’s Journey moments, we will make hypotheses about physiological changes we expect to see at narrative moments.  Process / Methodology  The core experimental set‐up is a standard Vision Type 2 between subjects design. Approximately 130 children, 8‐16 years old, with unknown binocular vision status receive a comprehensive vision exam in New York (through already obtained optometric partners). One group (n=82) will watch the movie without dynamic measures. Four groups will rate their experience using direct response dials (n=24) to continuously rate (1) dizziness, (2) eye pain (3) blurriness and/or (4) strain over the entire message. These ratings are time‐locked to movie exposure allowing a 

Page 3: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

dynamic analysis of when these symptoms develop. To more deeply understand the over‐time data, the movie will be coded and time‐locked for moments of dynamic depth, high convergence, high divergence, narrative rest, and high visual activity. Psychophysiological responses will be gathered from the fifth group (n=24), also time‐locked to stimulus exposure. Biometric data will be collected in accordance with guidelines from the Society for Psychophysiological Research (Jennings 1981, Fowles 1981). After the movie is over, the standard questionnaire that currently screens for BV problems is administered.   Our primary outcome will be a comparative analysis of the vision exams, the current BV‐screening questionnaire, and, the in‐situ collection of self‐reported data, biometric data, and camera captured behaviors.   Since we already code for how narrative moments impact the BV‐experience, we will also see if psychophysiological ‘signatures’ predicted by the Hero’s Journey story‐structure arise in the data.  This is what is meant when we say the Hero’s Journey underlies modern movies (Moyers 1991). It’s a pre‐cultural psychological abstraction (Campbell 1949). We hypothesize seeing specific changes in multiple psychophysiological factors at each of the seventeen steps the HJ myth‐paradigm. Therefore this otherwise “yes or no” study on far‐distance vision screening efficiently serves “double duty” as a pilot test for extended feature film research as well.   Deliverables   Deliverable  Anticipated Length  Distribution 1. Executive summary and internal report 

Approximately 30 pages (15 pages for each) 

Internal to Time Warner 

2. Report for American Optometric Association 

Similar as above but with any proprietary information to Time Warner removed 

The American Optometric Association 

3. Conference paper and presentation 

Approximately 20‐25 pages  

International conference in communication and/or psychology  Potentially:  1. Society for Psychophysiological Research (membership: 800 members worldwide) 2. International Communication Association (membership: 3500 worldwide) 

Page 4: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

 4. Publication  Approximately 20‐25 

pages Top tier communication or optometry journals Potentially: 

1. Journal of Vision Sciences 

2. Health Communication 

3. Media Psychology  

   Timing   Milestones Time Allocated

Experiment Preparation

Recruitment for Pilot test in Indiana Week 1

Recruitment for Experiment in NY Week 1 Stimuli Coding for 3D-experience Week 1

Stimuli Coding for narrative experience

Week 3

Invitations to Participate NY Week 3 Stimuli Coding for Hero’s Journey Week 4

Pilot Testing in Indiana Week 5 Experimental Protocol Iterations Week 5

Data Collection and Analysis

Scheduling Ongoing since Invitations in Week 3

Vision Exams in New York Week 7 Collection Sessions in New York Week 7

Data Cleaning and Preparation Week 8-10

Data Analysis Week 11-13

Executive summary, internal report, and AOA report delivery

Week 14

Conference and Publication Submission

Week 16, ongoing depending on external deadlines

   

Page 5: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

Cost  

  Vendor:  TW Media Lab Equipment 

 

      Theater w 3D capabilities 

$7000/day x 2 days     $14,000

Biometric Testing, 12+ participants/day 

$2250/day x 2 days    $4,500

Direct Dial Pads 21 participants 

$475 /day  x 2 days    $950

 Supplemental Devices 

 

Dial pads  $150 for additional 11 participants x 2 days 

  $300

General Technical Support 

$75/ hour x 6 hours x 2 days 

$900

   Subtotal     $20,650      External to TW Media Lab Expenses 

 

Eye exams  (Vendor: AOA partners and New York School of Optometry)  

$70/ participant   x 130  $9,100

Compensation for psychophys participants 

$100 / participants  x 24  $2,400

Compensation for non‐psychophys participants 

$60 / participants   x 106 $6,360

Paper Questionnaires / Surveys 

  $200

Lodging 3 days NYC  $900/each  x 4 $3,600Per diem 3 days NYC  $450 / each  x 4 $1,350Airfare/Travel   $400/ each  x 4 $1,600   

Budget Summary 

Page 6: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

Subtotal      $24,610    TOTAL          $45,260    Applicant Backgrounds  We believe we have built a top‐tier team with the unique but required expertise to come together and deeply study the ability of 3D movies to potentially screen for binocular vision issues.   Distinguished Professor Annie Lang led the development of the widely used limited capacity model of motivated mediated message processing (LC4MP) in psychophysiological research. Her research seeks to understand the interplay among parts of the dynamic system comprised of the embodied mind and the mediated message. http://www.indiana.edu/~telecom/people/faculty/lang.shtml  Dr. Don Lyon is the Chief of Pediatrics and Binocular Vision Services at the School of Optometry. His research focuses on the apparent link between binocular vision issues, ADHD and dyslexia.  He also focuses on the most severe binocular vision issue, amblyopia (“lazy eye”), in infants and children.  http://www.opt.indiana.edu/Research/Lyon.aspx  Rachel Bailey is a PhD candidate with expertise in the dynamic interactions between humans and media. She focuses on the impact of branded and symbolic language as well as the psychophysiological patterns of experiential states elicited by media, like presence, transportation, and flow, and is a former biometric researcher for Disney. http://www.indiana.edu/~telecom/people/grads/rachbail.shtml  Sean Connolly is an MA/MS student with expertise in both 3D technologies and the Hero’s Journey story structure of modern feature films. Also a specialist at the User Experience Group, he views media from a user experience approach with narrative expertise developed during his time as a Story Editor at Universal Studios. http://www.indiana.edu/~telecom/people/grads/seaconno.shtml          

Page 7: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

Applicant References  

Annie Lang Distinguished Professor Telecommunications  Indiana University 

Bloomington, IN, 47405 [email protected] 812.855.1621 

Susan Kelly Associate Professor Telecommunications  Indiana University 

Bloomington, IN, 47405 [email protected] 

812.856.2546 

   

Page 8: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

References  American Optometric Association, 3D In the Classroom, 2011.   Atzmon D. Positive Effect of Improving Relative Fusional Vergence on Reading and Learning Disabilities. Binocul Vis Eye Muscle Surg Q 1985; 1:39‐43.  Campbell, Joseph, (1949) The Hero with a Thousand Faces. New York, NY: New World Library.  Duenas, Michael (September 2011), Public Health Policy and 3D, presentation given at the 3D Technical User Experience Conference.   Fowles D., Christie M., Edelberg R., Grings W., Lykken D., Venables P. Publication recommendations for electrodermal measurements. Psychophysiology 1981; 18. 232‐239.  Jennings J., Berg W., Hutcheson J., Obrist P., Porges, & G. Turpin. Publication guidelines for heart rate studies in man Psychophysiology, 1981; 18. 226‐231.  Moyers, Bill (1991) The Power of Myth. New York, NY: Anchor.  New Jersey Commission on the Business Efficiency of Public Schools, report 2006.  Rouse M., Borsting E., Mitchell G., et al. Academic Behaviors in Children with Convergence Insufficiency with and without ParentReported ADHD. Optom & Vis Sci 86:10, 1169‐1177.  Shibata, T., Kim, J., Hoffman, D., Banks, M. The zone of comfort: Predicting visual discomfort with stereo displays,    Vogler, Chris, (1992) The Hero’s Journey, New York, NY: Michael Wiese Productions.  Winslow, Charles‐Edward Amory (1920 Jan 9). "The Untiltled Fields of Public Health". Science 51 (1306): 23–33 

Page 9: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  1    

Department of Telecommunications [email protected] Indiana University (812) 855-5824 Radio-TV Center Bloomington, In 47405  

Bachelor of Science University of Wisconsin-Madison Journalism and Mass Communication May 1980 Master of Arts University of Florida-Gainesville Mass Communication August 1983 Doctor of Philosophy University of Wisconsin-Madison Mass Communication December 1987  

Jan 2012 – present Distinguished Professor, Department of

Telecommunications, Indiana University July 2000 – Jan 2012 Professor, Department of Telecommunications Fall 1995 - present Core Faculty Member, Cognitive Science Program

Full Member of the Graduate Faculty Indiana University

Sept. 2008 – Aug. 2011 Editor, Media Psychology July 2005 – June 2008 Associate Dean for Research, College of Arts and Sciences, Indiana University 1995 - 2004 Director, Institute for Communication Research,

Department of Telecommunications, Indiana University July 97 - July 2000 & July 2001-July 2005 Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Telecommunications, Indiana

University

PERSONAL

EDUCATION

PROFESSIONAL & ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE

Curriculum Vitae Annie Lang

(Derryberry)

January 4, 2012

Page 10: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  2    

Fall 1995 - July 2000 Associate Professor Department of Telecommunications, Indiana University Spring 93 - August 95 Associate Professor of Communication,

(Member of the Graduate Faculty, with tenure) Washington State University, Pullman,

Washington Fall 88 - August 95 Director, Laboratory for Psychophysiological

Responses to Media, Washington State University

Fall 87-Spring 93 Assistant Professor of Communication, Washington State University

Fall 86-Spring 87 Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation Fellow, University of Wisconsin - Graduate School

Summer 84-Spring 86 Research Assistant, Mass Communication Research Center, University of Wisconsin Fall 83-Spring 84 Harry S. Grant Fellow, University of Wisconsin 1981-82 Copywriter and sales representative, classified advertising, The Gainesville Sun, Gainesville, Florida

   Graduate courses taught Undergraduate courses taught Audience Analysis Principles of Advertising Processes & Effects: Advertising Media Planning Theory and Research at the Individual Level Audience Analysis Measuring Psychological Responses to Media Politics and Media The Information Processing of Mediated Messages Children and Media Quantitative Research Methods Quantitative Research Methods Graduate Seminar: Theories of Emotion Intro. to Mass Comm. Theory Graduate Seminar: Information Processing Information Processing of News Introduction to Communication Theory Advanced Mass Comm. Theory Applied Cognitive and Emotional Psychology Mind, Body, and Media Introduction to Inquiry in Telecommunications Intro. to Processes & Effects Cognitive Approaches to Media Motivated Cognitive States Psychophysiological Methods Graduate Seminar: Attention Theories and Measures Graduate Seminar: Motivated Message Processing      

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

Page 11: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  3    

 Wang, Zheng & Lang, A. (in press). Reconceptualizing excitation transfer as motivational activation changes and a test of the television program context effect. Media Psychology, accepted December, 2011. Bae, S., Eller, C. & Lang, A. (in press). Presence, physiological arousal, and visual recognition in 3D TV. Journal of Communication and Computer. Lang, A. & Yegiyan, N. (2011). Individual differences in motivational activation influence responses to pictures of taboo products. Journal of Health Communication, 16, 1072-1087. Lang, A., Kurita, S., Rubenking, B. & Potter, R. F. (2011). MiniMAM:Developing a short version of the Motivation Activation Measure. Communication Methods and Measures, 5, 146-117. Wang, Z., Lang, A., & Busemeyer, J. (2011). Motivational Processing and Choice Behavior during Television Viewing: An Integrative dynamic Approach. Journal of Communication, 61, 72-94. Yegiyan, N. & Lang, A. (2010). Processing central and peripheral detail: How content arousal and emotional tone influence encoding. Media Psychology, pp. 77-99. Sparks, J. V. & Lang, A. (2010). An initial examination of the post-auricular reflex as a physiological indicator of appetitive activation during television viewing. Communication Methods and Measures, 4, 311-330. Lee, S., & Lang, A. (2009). Discrete Emotion and Motivation: Relative activation in Appetitive and Aversive Motivational System as a Function of Anger, Sadness, Fear, and Joy during Televised Information Campaigns. Media Psychology, 12, 148-170. Lee, S., & Lang, A. (2008). The impact of slow motion on motivated cognition and liking. Korean Journal of Broadcasting & Telecommunication studies. 22(4), 237-276. Potter, R. F., Lang, A., & Bolls, P.D. (2008). Identifying Structural Features of Audio: Orienting Responses during Radio Messages and Their Impact on Recognition. Journal of Media Psychology, 20(4), 168-177. Pescosolido, Bernice A., Martin, Jack K., Lang, Annie, & Olafsdottir, Sigrun. (2008). Rethinking theoretical approaches to stigma: A framework integrating normative influences on stigma (FINIS). Social Science and Medicine, Stigma, Discrimination, Prejudice and Health, 67, pp. 431-440.

Lang, Annie & Yegiyan, Narine. (2008). Understanding the interactive effects of emotional appeal and claim effectiveness in health messages. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 52(3), 432-447. Wise, Kevin, Lee, Seungjo, Lang, Annie, Fox, Julia R., & Grabe, Elizabeth. (2008). Responding to change on TV: How viewer controlled changes in content differ from programmed changes in content. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media. 52, 2, 182-199.

REFEREED PUBLICATIONS

Page 12: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  4    

Chock, T. Makana, Fox, Julia R., Angelini, James R., Lee, Seungjo, & Lang, Annie (2007). Telling Me Quickly: How Arousing Fast-Paced PSAs Decrease Self-Other Differences Communication Research, Spring, 34(6), 618-636. Lang, Annie, Park, Byungho, Sanders-Jackson, Ashley, & Wilson, Brian D. (2007). Separating emotional and cognitive load: How valence, arousing content, structural complexity and information density affect the availability of cognitive resources. Media Psychology, 10, 317-338. Fox, Julia R., Park, Byungho, & Lang, Annie. (2007). When available resources become negative resources: The effects of cognitive overload on memory sensitivity and criterion bias. Communication Research, 34(3), 277-296. Lang, A., Bradley, S. D., Sparks, J.V., & Lee, S. (2007). Measuring individual differences in Motivation Activation: Predicting physiological and behavioral indicators of appetitive and aversive activation. Communication Methods and Measures, 1(2), 113-136.

Lang, Annie, Schwartz, Nancy, Lee, Seungjo, & Angelini, James (2007). Processing radio PSAs: Production pacing, arousing content, and age. Journal of Health Communication, 12, 581-599.

Lang, A. (2006). Using the Limited Capacity Model of Motivated Mediated Message Processing (LC4MP) to Design Effective Cancer Communication Messages. Journal of Communication, 56, 1-24. Lang, A., Bradley, S. D., Park, B., Shin, M. & Chung, Y. (2006). Parsing the resource pie: Using STRTs to measure attention to mediated messages. Media Psychology, 8, 369-394. Lang, Annie, Shin, Mija, Bradley, Samuel D., Wang, Zheng, Lee, Seungjo, & Potter, Deborah. (2005). Wait! Don’t turn that dial! More excitement to come! The effects of story length and production pacing in local television news on channel changing behavior and information processing in a free-choice environment. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 49, 3-22. Lang, Annie, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, Shin, Mija, & Schwartz, Nancy. (2005). It’s an arousing, fast-paced kind of the world: The effects of age and sensation seeking on the information processing of substance abuse PSAs. Media Psychology, 7, 421-454. Lang, Annie, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, & Zhao, Xiaoquan. (2005). Its the product: Do risky products compel attention and elicit arousal in media users? Health Communication, 17(3), 283-300. Lang, Annie, Shin, Mija, & Lee, Seungwhan. (2005). Sensation seeking, motivation, and substance use: A dual system approach. Media Psychology, 7, 1-29. Schneider, Edward F., Lang, Annie, Shin, Mija, & Bradley, Samuel D. (2004). Death with a story: How story impacts emotional, motivational, and physiological responses to first person shooter video games. Human Communication Research, 30, 361-375.

Page 13: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  5    

Fox, Julia R., Lang, Annie, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, & Potter, Deborah (2004). Picture this: Effects of graphics on the processing of television news. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 48(4), pp. 646-674.

Lang, A., Schwartz, Chung, Y., & Lee, S. (2004). Processing substance abuse messages: Production pacing, arousing content, and age. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 48, 61-88.

Lang, Annie, Bradley, Samuel D., Chung, Yongkuk, & Lee, Seungwhan (2003). Where the mind meets the message: Reflections on ten years of measuring psychological responses to media. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 47,4, pp.650-655. Grabe, M. E., Lang, A., & Zhao, X. (2003). News content and form: Implications for memory. Communication Research, 30(4), 387-413. Lang, A., Potter, D., & Grabe, E. (2003). Making news memorable: Applying theory to the production of local television news. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 47(1), pp. 1 13-1 23. Bolls, Paul D. & Lang, Annie. (2003). I saw it on the radio: The allocation of attention to high imagery radio advertisements. Media Psychology, 5 (1), pp. 33-56.

Lang, A., Borse, J., Wise, K., & David, P. (2002). Captured by the World Wide Web: Orienting to structural and content features of computer presented information. Communication Research, 29(3), 215-245. Bolls, P., Lang, A., & Potter, R. (2001). The use of facial EMG to measure emotional responses to radio. Communication Research, 28(5), 627-651. Potter, D. & Lang, A. (2001). Bridging the gap: Applying the lessons of research in TV newsrooms. Electronic News: A Journal of Applied Research & Ideas, 1 (1), 1-5. Shapiro, M. D., Lang, A., Hamilton, M. & Contractor, N. (2000). Information systems division: Intrapersonal meaning, attitude, and social systems. Researching Communication Processes. Communication Yearbook, 24, 17-49. Grabe, M. E., Zhou, S., Lang, A., & Bolls, P. D. (2000). Packaging television news: The effects of tabloid and standard television news on viewer evaluations, memory, and arousal. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 44, 581-598 Grabe, M. E., Lang, A., Zhou, S. & Bolls, P. (2000). Cognitive access to negatively arousing news: An experimental investigation of the knowledge gap. Communication Research, 27, 3-26. Lang, A. (2000). The information processing of mediated messages: A framework for communication research. Journal of Communication, 50, 46-70.

Page 14: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  6    

Lang, A., Zhou, S., Schwartz, N., Bolls, P. D., & Potter, R. F. (2000). The effects of edits on arousal, attention, and memory for television messages: When an edit is an edit can an edit be too much? Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 44, 94-109. Bucy, E., Lang, A., Potter, R. & Grabe, M. (1999). Structural features of cyberspace: A content analysis of the World Wide Web. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 50(13), 1246-1256. Lang, A., Bolls, P., Potter, R., & Kawahara, K. (1999). The effects of production pacing and arousing content on the information processing of television messages. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 43(4), 451-476. Lang, A., Potter, R. F., & Bolls, P.D. (1999). Something for nothing: Is visual encoding automatic? Media Psychology, 1(2), 145-164. Reeves, B., Lang, A., Kim, E., & Tartar, D. (1999). The effects of screen size and message content on attention and arousal. Media Psychology, 1, 49-68. Yoon, K., Bolls, B., & Lang, A. (1998). The effects of arousal on liking and believability of commercials. Journal of Marketing Communications, 4, 101-114. Lang, A. and Basil, M. (1998). Attention, resource allocation, and communication research: What do secondary task reaction times measure anyway? In M. Roloff (ed.), Mass Communication Yearbook, 21, 443-474. Sage: Beverly Hills, CA. Yoon, K., Bolls, P., Lang, A., & Potter, R. (1997). The effects of advertising pacing and arousal on ad and brand attitudes and behavioral intention. In M. C. Backlin, Ed., The Proceedings of the Conference of the American Academy of Advertising, 169-171. Lang, A. & Newhagen, J., & Reeves, B. (1996). Negative video as structure: Emotion, attention, capacity, and memory. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 40, 460-477. Lang, A. (1996). The logic of using inferential statistics with experimental data from nonprobability samples: Inspired by Cooper, Dupagne, Potter, and Sparks. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 40 (3), 422-430. Lang, A., Dhillon, P., & Dong, Q. (1995). Arousal, emotion, and memory for television messages. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 38,1-15.

Lang, A., Sias, P., Chantrill, P., & Burek, J.A. (1995). Tell me a story: Narrative structure and memory for television messages. Communication Reports, 8(2), 1-9. Lang, A. (1995). Defining audio/video redundancy from a limited capacity information processing perspective. Communication Research, 22, 86-115. Lang, A., & Friestad, M. (1993). Emotion hemispheric specialization and visual and verbal memory for television messages. Communication Research 20(5), 647-670.

Page 15: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  7    

Lang, A., & Krueger, E. (1993). Perception of truth and regulation in broadcast political advertising. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 37(2), 209-218. Lang, A., Geiger, S., Strickwerda, M., & Sumner, J., (1993). The effects of related and unrelated cuts on viewers’ memory for television: A limited capacity theory of television viewing. Communication Research, 20(1), 4-29.

Thorson, E., & Lang, A. (1992). Effects of television videographics and lecture familiarity on adult cardiac orienting responses and memory. Communication Research, 9(3), 346-369. Shapiro, M., & Lang, A. (1991). Making television reality: unconscious processes in the construction of social reality. Communication Research, 18(5), 685-705. Lang, A., & Lanfear, P. (1990). The information processing of televised political advertising: Using theory to maximize recall. In J. Muncy and M. Goldberg (Eds.) Advances in Consumer Research, 17, 149-158. Lang, A. (1990). Involuntary attention and physiological arousal evoked by structural features and motion in TV commercials. Communication Research, 17 (3), 275-299. Lang, A. (1989). The effects of chronological presentation of information on processing and memory for broadcast news. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 33(4), 441-452. Reeves, B., Lang, A., Thorson, E. & Rothschild, M. (1988). Emotional television scenes and hemispheric specialization. Human Communication Research, 15(4), 493-508. Thorson, E., Reeves, B., Schleuder, J., Lang, A., & Rothschild, M. (1985). Effects of program context on the processing of television commercials. In N. Stephens (Ed.) Proceedings of the 1985 Conference of the American Academy of Advertising. Tempe, Arizona: Arizona State University.  

   Lang, A. (Ed.) (1994). Measuring Psychological Responses to Media Messages. Lawrence Erlbaum: New Jersey.  

   Lang, A. (in press). Audio-Video Redundancy in Learning. Norbert Seel (ed.), Encyclopedia of the Sciences of Learning, Springer Science+Business Media.

BOOKS

BOOK CHAPTERS

Page 16: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  8    

Lang, A. (in press). Media message processing and the embodied mind: Measuring bodily responses to open the black box.” In Erica Scharrer (ed.) Media Effects/Media Psychology. International Companions to Media Studies, Angharad Valdivia (series ed.). Blackwell Publishing. Detenber, B.H., & Lang, A. (2010). The influence of media form and presentation attributes on emotion. In K. Doveling, C. von Scheve, & E. Konijin (eds.), Handbook of Emotions and Mass Media., pp. 275-293. Routledge, New York. Ewoldsen, D. and Lang, A. (2010). The measurement of positive and negative affect in media research. In K. Doveling, C. von Scheve, and E. Konijin (eds.), Handbook of Emotions and Mass Media, pp. 79-98. Routledge, New York. Lang, A., & Ewoldsen, D. (2010). Beyond effects: Conceptualizing communication as dynamic, complex, nonlinear, and fundamental. In Stuart Allen (ed.) Rethinking Communication: Keywords in communication research. Hampton Press. Lang, A., Potter, R.F., & Bolls, P. (2009). Where psychophysiology meets the media: Taking the effects out of mass communication research. In J. Bryant and M.B. Oliver (eds.), Media Effects: Advances in Theory and Research, 3rd edition. Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 185-206.   Lang, A. (2009). The limited capacity model of motivated mediated message processing. In R. Nabi & M. B. Oliver (eds.), The Sage Handbook of Mass Media Effects. Sage Publications, pp. 193-204. Lang, A. (2008). The limited capacity model of mediated message processing. Wolfgang Donsbach (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Communication, Volume VI. Blackwell Publishing, pp. 2697-2702. Lang, A. & Yegiyan (2009) Motivated Message Processing: How media elicit motivation which influences how media are processed. In James McCroskey, Kory Floyd, & Michael Beatty (eds.), Biological Dimensions of Communication, Hampton Press, pp. 135-159. Lang, A. (2006) Motivated cognition (LC4MP): The influence of appetitive and aversive activation on the processing of video games. In Paul Messarsis and Lee Humphries (eds.), Digital Media: Transformation in Human Communication, 237-256. Peter Lang Publishing, New York. Lang, A., Wise, K., Lee, Seungwhan, and Cai, X. (2002). The effects of sexual appeals on physiological, cognitive, emotional, and attitudinal responses for product and alcohol billboard advertising. Tom Reichert (ed.), Sex and Advertising. Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc. Lang, A. (1994). Comments on setting up a laboratory. In A. Lang (ed.), Measuring Psychological Responses to Media Messages. Lawrence Erlbaum: New Jersey. Lang, A. (1994). What can the heart tell us about thinking? In A. Lang (ed.), Measuring Psychological Responses to Media Messages. Lawrence Erlbaum: New Jersey.

Page 17: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  9    

Lang, A. (1991). The motion, formal features, and memory for televised political advertisement. In F. Biocca (ed.), Television and Political Advertising, Volume 1: Psychological Processes. Lawrence Erlbaum: New Jersey.    

   Potter, D., & Lang, A. (1999). The seven habits of highly effective storytellers. RTNDA Communicator: The magazine for electronic journalists. October, pp.54-48.    

   Rubenking, B.E., Bailey, R.L., Lang, A. (2011). Individual differences in motivational reactivity influences orienting. Psychophysiology, 48, Supplement 1, p. S71. Bailey, R. L., Rubenking, B.E., & Lang, A. (2011). An overtime comparison of motivated cognitive states: Flow, presence, and transportation. Psychophysiology, 48, Supplement 1, p. S103. Bailey, R. L., Rubenking, B.E., & Lang, A. (2011). The influence of trait motivational reactivity on the formation of motivated cognitive states: Flow, presence, and transportation. Psychophysiology, 48, Supplement 1, p. S103. Kurita, S. & Lang, A. (2010). The process of desensitization? Examining habituation and attention during violent and non-violent video games. Psychophysiology, Volume 47, Supplement 1, p. S83. Bailey, R. L., Lang, A., Nadorff, G., Lee, Sungkyoung, Pescosolido, B., & Martin, J. (2010). The effects of trait motivational activation and personal experiences on processing negative motivationally relevant television content. Psychophysiology, Volume 47, Supplement 1, p. S32. Bailey, R. L., Rubenking, B., Lang, A., Nadorff, G., Lee, Sungkyoung, Pescosolido, B., & Martin, J. (2010). The effects of trait appetitive system reactivity and personal experiences on processing TV messages about mental illness. Psychophysiology, Volume 47, Supplement 1, p. S33. Koruth, K. J. & Lang, A. (2010). Using HRV to measure variations in PNS and SS activation during television viewing. Psychophysiology, Volume 47, Supplement 1, p. S34. Nadorff, P.G., Lee, S., Lang, A., Pescosolido, B. & Martin, J. (2008). Physiological Responses to positive and negative portrayals of characters with and without mental illness. Psychophysiology, Volume 45, Supplement 1, p. S56.

NON-REFEREED PUBLICATIONS

PUBLISHED REFEREED ABSTRACTS

Page 18: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  10    

Lang, A., Nadorff, P.G., Lee, Sungkyoung, Pescosolido, B. & Martin, J. (2008). The influence of personal experience with people with mental illness on responses to television portrayals with characters who do or do not have a mental illness. Psychophysiology, Volume 45, Supplement 1, p. S98. Lee, Sungkyoung, Nadorff, Gayle, & Lang, Annie. (2007). The effects of age and motivational activation on the processing of risky products. Psychophysiology, 44, supplement 1, S46.

Koruth, J., Potter, R. F., Bolls, P.D., & Lang, Annie. (2007). An examination of heart rate variability during positive and negative radio messages. Psychophysiology, 44, supplement 1, S60. Nadorff, Gayle, Lee, Sungkyoung, Banerjee, M. & Lang, Annie. (2007). Children’s physiological responses to animal and human emotional faces as a function of age. Psychophysiology, 44, supplement 1, S88. Wang, Z. & Lang, A. (2006). Ad Placement Matters: A Psychophysiological Examination of Program Context Effects on Advertising Processing. Psychophysiology, 43, supplement 1, S Shin, M. & Lang, A. (2006). The role of motivation activation in processing emotional media messages. Psychophysiology, 43, supplement 1, S Shin, M. & Lang, A. (2006). The impact of positivity offset and negativity bias on emotional message. Psychophysiology, 43, supplement 1, S Lang, A., Yegiyan, N., & Bradley, S. (2006). Reactivity to risky products: Is motivational activation appetitive or aversive. Psychophysiology, 43, supplement 1,

Lang, A., Yegiyan, N., & Bradley, S. (2006). Effects of motivational activation on processing of health messages. Psychophysiology, 43, supplement 1, Lang, A., Sparks, J., Bradley, S. D., Lee, S. & Wang, Z. (2004). Processing arousing information: Psychophysiological predictors of motivated attention. Psychophysiology, 41 supplement 1, S61.

Chock, T. M., Lee, S., Lang, A., Angelini, J., Lee, S., & Schwartz, N. (2004). The impact of physiological arousal on self-other distinctions. Psychophysiology, 41 supplement 1, S61.

Bradley, S. D., Angelini, J. R., Lee, S. K., & Lang, A.. (2004). Dynamic prepulse: Proximity to scene change alters startle magnitude in emotional TV content. Psychophysiology, 41 supplement 1, S61. Angelini, James R., Lee, Seungjo, Schwartz, Nancy, Sparks, Johnny V. Jr., & Lang, Annie. (2003). Processing radio public service announcements: Arousing content, production pacing, and children. Psychophysiology, 40, supplement 1, S23.

Bradley, Samuel D., Shin, Mija, Wang, Zheng, Lee, Seungjo, & Lang, Annie. (2003).Processing the nightly news: How shot and story length affect effort, Arousal, and encoding Psychophysiology, 40, supplement 1, S27.

Page 19: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  11    

Fox, Julia R., Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, Schwartz, Nancy, Haverhals, Leah, Wang, Zheng, Lang, Annie, & Potter, Deborah. (2003). I effects of graphics on processing television news. Psychophysiology, 40, supplement 1, S41. Lee, Seungjo, Angelini, James R., Schwartz, Nancy, & Lang, Annie. (2003). Processing radio public service announcements: Arousing content, production pacing, and college students. Psychophysiology, 40, supplement 1, S54.

Shin, Mija, Bradley, Samuel D., Lee, Seungjo, Wang, Zheng, & Lang, Annie. (2003).By people change: Does physiology predict channel changing behavior? Psychophysiology, 40, supplement 1, S78.

Lang, Annie, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, Shin, Mija, & Schwartz, Nancy. (2002). Processing Anti-Drug Public Service Announcements: Production Pacing, Arousing Content, and Adolescence. Psychophysiology, 39, supplement 1. Lang, Annie, Chock, Makana, Shin, Mija, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, & Bradley, Samuel. (2002). The role of self-relevance in arousal elicited by anti-drug PSAs in adolescents and college students. Psychophysiology, 39, supplement 1. Fox, Julia R., Lang, Annie, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, Schwartz, Nancy, Haverhals,Leah, Wang, Zheng, Bradley, Samuel & Potter, Deborah. (2002). Effects of text and animated graphics in television news stories on viewer attention, arousal and memory. Psychophysiology, 39, supplement 1. Lang, A., Chung, Y., Lee, S., & Borse, J. (2001). Orienting to text on screen: Medium or Task? Psychophysiology, 38, supplement 1. Lang, A., Lee, S., Chung, Y., & Zhao, X. (2001). It's the product! Risky words and picturesincrease attention, arousal, and memory. Psychophysiology, 38, supplement 1. Lang, A. and Schneider, E. (2001). Physiological and emotional responses to first person shooter video games. Psychophysiology, 38, supplement 1. Potter, R. F., Bolls, P. D., & Lang, A. (2000). Effects of valence and message arousal of radio messages on facial EMG, attention, skin conductance, and memory. Psychophysiology, 37, supplement 1, S-80. Antecol, M., Thorson, E., Lang, A., Potter, R.F. & Bolls, P.D. (1999). Differential autonomic effects of individual blame and industry blame antismoking TV commercials on smokers and non-smokers. Psychophysiology, 36, supplement 1, S-27. Bolls, P. D., Potter, R. F., and Lang, A. (1998). I saw it on the radio: Listener’s physiological and cognitive responses to imagery-eliciting radio commercials. Psychophysiology, 35, supplement 2, S21. Lang, A., Grabe, M. E., Zhou, S., Bolls, P. D., and Potter, R. F. (1998). Tabloid television: Arousal, attention, and memory. Psychophysiology, 35, supplement 2, S51.

Page 20: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  12    

Potter, R. F., Lang, A., and Bolls, P. D. (1998). Orienting to structural features in radio messages. Psychophysiology, 35, supplement 2, S66. Lang, A., Bolls, P., & Potter, R. (1997). Attention, arousal, and television viewing. Psychophysiology,34, supplement 1, S56. Potter, R., Lang, A., & Bolls, P. (1997). Orienting responses to structural features of media. Psychophysiology,34, supplement 1, S72. Bolls, P., Potter, R., & Lang, A. (1997). Television and arousal: SCR responses to pacing and content arousal. Psychophysiology, 34, supplement 1, S21. Lang, A., Lee, S., Chung, Y. and Zhao, X. (2001). It’s the product! Risky words and pictures increase attention, arousal, and memory. Psychophysiology,35, supplement 1. Lang, A. and Schneider, E. (2001). Physiological and emotional responses to first person shooter video games. Psychophysiology,35, supplement 1. Lang, A., Chung, Y., Lee, S. and Borse, J. (2001). Orienting to text on screen: Task or medium. Psychophysiology,35, supplement 1.    

   Bolls, P., Potter, R.F., & Lang, A. (1996). The effects of production pacing and arousing content on encoding, storage, and retrieval of television messages. In M. Gasser (ed.), Online Proceedings of the 1996 Midwest Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science Conference. http://www.cs.indiana.edu/event/maics96/proceedings/bolls/bolls.html. Potter, R., Lang, A., & Bolls, P. (1998). Identifying structural features of radio: Orienting and memory for radio messages. Paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Theory and Methodology Division. Baltimore, MD. Lang, A., Bolls, P., & Kawahara, K. (1996). The effects of arousing message content and structural complexity on television viewers’ level of arousal and allocation of processing resources. In M. Gasser (ed.), Online Proceedings of the 1996 Midwest Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science Conference. http://www.cs.indiana.edu/event/maics96/proceedings/bolls/Lang.html.            

REFEREED ELECTRONIC PUBLICATIONS

Page 21: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  13    

   Rubenking, B., Bailey, R., & Lang, A. (2012). To accelerate or decelerate: Orienting response-elicitors, emotion, and individual differences in cardiac orienting to television. Paper presented to the Information Systems of the International Communication Association, May. Phoenix, AZ. Keene, J. & Lang, A. (2012). Differentiating coactive messages and coactive reactions: The processing of poignant messages. Paper presented to the Information Systems of the International Communication Association, May. Phoenix, AZ. Rubenking, B., Bailey, R., & Lang, A. (2011). Individual differences in motivational reactivity influence orienting responses. Poster to be presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological research. Bailey, R., Rubenking, B. & Lang, A. (2011). The influence of trait motivational reactivity on the formation of motivated cognitive states: flow, presence and transportation. Poster to be presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological research. Bailey, R., Rubenking, B. & Lang, A. (2011). An overtime comparison of motivated cognitive states: flow, presence and transportation. Poster to be presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological research. Kurita, S., & Lang, A. (2010). The effects of individual’s motivational activation during violent and non-violent video games. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Japanese Psychology Association, Osaka, Japan. Bae, S., Eller, C. & Lang, A. (2011). The Effect of 3D Film Shorts on Presence, Arousal, and Visual Recognition. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division. May, Boston, MA. Rubenking, B. & Lang, A. (2011). Exploring the Influences of Biologically Based Traits and Attitudes on Decisions to View Arousing Content. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division. May, Boston, MA. Rubenking, B. & Lang, A. (2011). Motivational Reactivity, Implicit and Explicitly Measured Attitudes Influences on Substance Use and Quitting Behaviors. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division. May, Boston, MA. Lee, S. & Lang, A. (2011). Testing resource allocation to encoding information during TV news viewing. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division. May, Boston, MA.

REFEREED CONVENTION PAPERS AND POSTERS

Page 22: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  14    

Lee, S. & Lang, A. (2011). Resources available to message processing: Redundancy, Structural complexity, and Emotional content. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division. May, Boston, MA. Kurita, S. & Lang, A. (2011). Are there desensitizers and sensitizers? Examining physiological responses during violent and non-violent games as a function of players’ motivational activation and prior violent exposure. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division. May, Boston, MA. Keene, J. & Lang, A. (2011). When does coactivity actually mean coactive? Applying the LC4MP to the processing of “poignant” messages. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division. May, Boston, MA. Bailey, R. & Lang, A. (2011). The Effects of Trait Motivational Reactivity and Personal Experiences on Processing Messages about Mental Illness. Top Paper. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division. May, Boston, MA. Bailey, R., Rubenking, B. & Lang, A. (2011). An Overtime Comparison of Flow, Presence and Transportation States. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division. May, Boston, MA. Bae, S. & Lang, A. (2011). Gender Difference in Emotional Rating of Naked News. Paper presented to the International Communication Association. Boston, MA. Kurita, S., & Lang, A. (2010). The process of desensitization? Examining habituation and attention during violent and non-violent video games. Presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Portland, Oregon. Bailey, R. L., Lang, A., Nadorff, G., Lee, Sungkyoung, Pescosolido, B., & Martin, J. (2010). The effects of trait motivational activation and personal experiences on processing negative motivationally relevant television content. Presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Portland, Oregon. Bailey, R. L., Rubenking, B., Lang, A., Nadorff, G., Lee, Sungkyoung, Pescosolido, B., & Martin, J. (2010). The effects of trait appetitive system reactivity and personal experiences on processing TV messages about mental illness. Presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Portland, Oregon. Koruth, K. J., & Lang, A. (2010). Using HRV to measure variations in PNS and SS activation during television viewing. Presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Portland, Oregon. Gao, Y., Lang, A., & Potter, R.F. (2010). The Impact of dimensions of audio complexity on cognitive load. Presented to the International Communication Association. Singapore, June.

Page 23: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  15    

Kurita, S., & Lang, A. (2010). The Process of Desensitization? Examining Habituation and Attention during Violent and Non-Violent Games. Presented to the International Communication Association. Singapore, June.. Kurita, S., Gao, Y., Lang, A., Lee, S. & Wang, Z. (2009). Dimensions of attention: media structure, content, cognitive load & overload. Presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Applied Research in Memory and Cognition. Kyoto, Japan. July. Lee, S. & Lang, A. (2009). The influence of structural complexity, audio video redundancy and emotion on the processing of broadcast news. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Chicago, Illinois. May.

Sparks, J.V., & Lang, A. (2009). Examining the influence of emotional, sexy, and humorous content on motivated cognitive processing of television advertisements. Paper presented to the information systems division of the International Communication Association. Chicago,.Illinois. May. Top Paper.

Yegiyan, N. & Lang, A. (2009). How “good” is that beer in the window? Motivational activationand use influence reactivity to pictures of risky products. Paper presented to the information systems division of the International Communication Association. Chicago, Illinois. May. Whitehead, M.B., & Lang, A. (2009). The effect of framing and motivational activation on the processing of health messages. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Chicago, Illinois. May. Lee, S., Lang, A., Kim, S., Stevenson, R. & James, T. (2009). Neural effects of exposure to emotional faces in media content: Type (human vs. animal), form (cartoon vs. real) and emotion (positive, negative, and neutral). Paper presented to to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication association. Chicago, Illinois. May. Gao, Y., & Lang, A. Dimensions of information density and cognitive load. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication association. Chicago, Illinois. May. Angelini, J.R., Nadorff, P.G., Lang, A., Martin, J., & Pescosolido, B. (2009). The portrayal of characters with mental illness on television: Prevalent, consistent, and negative. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Chicago, Illinois. May.

Kurita, S., Lang, A., Potter, R.F., Wang, Z., Lee, S. Weaver, A. Bae, S., & Koruth, J. (2009). The influences of gender on MAM. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Chicago, Illinois. May. Wang, Z., Lang, A, & Busemeyer, J. R. (2008). Motivational processing and choice behavior during television viewing: An integrative dynamic approach. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Montreal, Canada. Top Paper Award.

Page 24: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  16    

Nadorff, P. G., Lee, S., Wilson, B., Lang, A., Pescosolido, B., & Martin, J. (2008). Mass Media and Stigma: How portrayals of mental illness impact social stigma. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Montreal, Canada.

Kurita, S., Lee, S., Wang, Z. & Lang, A. (2008). How much is too much? Media structure, content, cognitive load, and overload. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Montreal, Canada.

Yegiyan, N., Wilson, B., Gao, Y., Mayell, S., Wang, Z. & Lang, A. (2007). Approach? Avoid? Both? Processing coactive motivational media messages. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Montreal, Canada. Sparks, J. V. and Lang, A. (2007). A validation of the post auricular response as a physiological indicator of appetitive activation during television viewing. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the National Communication Association. Chicago, IL.

Lee, Sungkyoung, Nadorff, Gayle, & Lang, Annie. (2007). The effects of age and motivational activation on the processing of risky products. Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Savannah, GA.

Koruth, J., Potter, R. F., Bolls, P.D., & Lang, Annie. (2007). An examination of heart rate variability during positive and negative radio messages. Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Savannah, GA. Nadorff, Gayle, Lee, Sungkyoung, Banerjee, M. & Lang, Annie. (2007). Children’s physiological responses to animal and human emotional faces as a function of age. Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Savannah, GA.

Kurita, S., Lee, S., Nadorff, G. & Lang, A. (2007). YO-MAM! Validating a measure for assessing individual differences in motivational activation. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association. San Francisco, CA. Kurita, S., Potter, R.F., & Lang, A. (2007). Is shorter better, or at least as good? MiniMAM: developing a short version of the Motivation Activation Measure. . Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association. San Francisco, CA. Lee, Sungkyoung, Nadorff, Gayle, & Lang, Annie. (2007). Risky products – are they Good or Bad? The effects of age and motivational activation on the processing of risky products. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association. San Francisco, CA.

Nadorff, G., Lee, S., Banerjee, M., Lang, A. (2007). Age related differences in emotional Responding to happy, sad, and neutral cartoon faces. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association. San Francisco, CA.

Page 25: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  17    

Wang, Z. & Lang, A. (2006). Ad Placement Matters: A Psychophysiological Examination of Program Context Effects on Advertising Processing. To be presented at Society for Psychophysiological Research annual conference, Vancouver, BC, Canada, October 25-29, 2006. Shin, M. & Lang, A. (2006). The role of motivation activation in processing emotional media messages. To be presented at Society for Psychophysiological Research annual conference, Vancouver, BC, Canada, October 25-29, 2006. Shin, M. & Lang, A. (2006). The impact of positivity offset and negativity bias on emotional message. To be presented at Society for Psychophysiological Research annual conference, Vancouver, BC, Canada, October 25-29, 2006. Lang, A., Yegiyan, N., & Bradley, S. (2006). Reactivity to risky products: Is motivational activation appetitive or aversive. To be presented at the 46th Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Vancouver, British Columbia. Lang, A., Yegiyan, N., & Bradley, S. (2006). Effects of motivational activation on processing of health messages. Presented at the 46th Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Vancouver, British Columbia. Yegiyan, Narine and Lang, Annie. (2006). What you see may be what you get: Understanding the interactive effects of message production features and claim effectiveness in health messages. Paper presented to the Health Communication Division of the International Communication Association. Dresden, Germany. Sanders-Jackson, A. & Lang, A. (2006). Processing coactive PS A's: Are to emotions better than one? Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Dresden, Germany. Kurita, Satoko, Potter, Robert F., Lang, Annie (2006). Is shorter better? Mini-MAM: Developing a short version of the Motivation Activation Measure. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Dresden, Germany. Yegiyan, Narine, Lang, Annie, and Bradley, Samuel D. (2006). Frighteningly Attractive: How risky products activate the appetitive and aversive motivational systems and how individual differences in motivational activation modify the effect. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Dresden, Germany. Lang, Annie, Derryberry, Dakota, Sparks, Johnny, Park, Byungho, Kurita, Satoko, Shyu, Stephen, Potter, Robert, F. (2006). The effects of audio and video information density on available resources and encoding. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Dresden, Germany. Fox, J., Park, B., and Lang, A. Complicated Emotional Messages Produce Liberal Bias: Effects of Valence and Complexity on Sensitivity and Criterion. (2006). Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Dresden, Germany. Top Three Paper.

Page 26: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  18    

Fox, J., Park, B., and Lang, A. When Available Resources Become Negative Resources: Effects of Cognitive Overload on Memory Sensitivity and Criterion. (2006). Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Dresden, Germany. Angelini, James R., Nadorff, Pamela Gayle, Shin, Mija, Gantz, Walter, and Lang, Annie. (2006). Stigma! How American Television Portrays People with Mental Illness and Those who Care for Them. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Dresden, Germany. Wang, Z., Busemeyer, J., & Lang, A. (2006). Grazing or Staying Tuned: A Stochastic Model of Channel Changing Behavior. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Dresden, Germany. Chock, T. M., Lee, S., & Lang, A. (2005). The impact of youth-oriented PSA message features on adolescents’ and college students’ similarity judgments. Paper presented to the Communication and Social Cognition Division at the annual conference of the National Communication Association, Boston. Lang, Annie. (2005). Motivated Cognition (LC4MP): The influence of appetitive and aversive activation on the processing of video games. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. May. New York, NY. Lang, Annie and Sparks, Johnny. (2005). Separating production pacing from cognitive load: Does information trump structure? Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. May. NY, NY. Park, B., Sanders-Jackson, A., Wilson, B. D., & Lang, A. (2005). Separating speed from load: Understanding how pacing and information contribute to variation in STRTs. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. May. New York, NY. Lee, S., Bradley, S. D., Nadorff, G. P., Yegiyan, N. S., & Lang, A. (2005). Psychophysiological predictors of motivated attention, sensation seeking, and substance use in an at-risk youth population. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. May. New York, NY. Potter, R.F., Wang, Z., Kurita, S., Sanders-Jackson, A., Koruth, J., Tao, C., Lang, A. (2005). I2 Audio: Does examining information introduced by auditory structural features help clarify perplexing research findings? Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. May. NY, NY. Yegiyan, N.S., Banerjee M., Bradley, S. D., & Lang, A. (2005). Approach or Avoid? How motivation type affects processing of risky information. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. May. New York, NY.

Haverhals, L., Bradley, S. D., Angelini, J. R., Sparks, J. V., & Lang, A. (November 2004). Friendly announcers and disturbing warnings: A longitudinal analysis and comparison of prescription drug

Page 27: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  19    

advertising. Paper presented to the Health Communication division of the National Communication Association at its annual conference, Chicago, IL. Lang, A., Bradley, S. D., Park, B., Shin, M. & Chung, Y. (2004). Parsing the Resource Pie: Using STRTs to measure attention to mediated messages. Paper presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Toronto, Canada Haverhals, Leah & Lang, Annie. (2004). The effects of frequency of direct to consumer psychotropic drug advertising on attitudes towards people with mental illness. Paper presented to the Health Communication Division of the International Communication Association. Top 3 Paper. New Orleans, LA.

Chock, T. Makana, Fox, Julia R., Angelini, James R., Lee, Seungjo, & Lang, Annie. (2004). First-person and social distance effects of anti-smoking radio PSAs: Message characteristics affecting non-smoking college students’ and tweens’ perceptions of effects on self, best friends, and peers. Paper presented to the Health Communication Division of the International Communication Association. New Orleans, LA. Lang, Annie, Bradley, Samuel, & Sparks, Johnny. (2004). Processing arousing information: Psychophysiological predictors of motivated attention, sensation seeking, and substance use. Paper presented to the Information Systems division of the International Communication Association. New Orleans, LA. Wang, Zheng, Bradley, Samuel, & Lang, Annie. (2004). Measuring individual variation and motivational activation: Man, mini-MAM, YO-MAM. Paper presented to the Information Systems division of the International Communication Association. New Orleans, LA. Lee, Seungjo, Schwartz, Nancy, Angelini, James, & Lang, Annie. (2004). The effects of Sensation Seeking on tween and young adult's processing of radio anti-drug abuse public service announcements. Paper presented to the Information Systems division of the International Communication Association. New Orleans, LA. Angelini, James, Wang, Zheng, Bradley, Samuel, & Lang, Annie. (2004). Measuring Motivation Activation in Children: A Look at Sensation Seeking, Motivation, and Substance Use. Paper presented to the Information Systems division of the International Communication Association. Angelini, James R., Lee, Seungjo, Schwartz, Nancy, Sparks, Johnny V. Jr., & Lang, A. (2003). Processing radio public service announcements: Arousing content, production pacing, and children. Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Society for pychophysiological Research, Chicago, Illinois. October.

Bradley, Samuel D., Shin, Mija, Wang, Zheng, Lee, Seungjo, & Lang, Annie. (2003). Processing the nightly news: How shot and story length affect effort, Arousal, and Encoding. Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Chicago, Illinois. October.

Fox, Julia R., Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, Schwartz, Nancy, Haverhals, Leah, Wang, Zheng, Lang, Annie, & Potter, Deborah. (2003). I effects of graphics on processing television news. Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Chicago, Illinois. October.

Page 28: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  20    

Lee, Seungjo, Angelini, James R., Schwartz, Nancy, & Lang, Annie. (2003). Processing radio public service announcements: Arousing content, production pacing, and college students. Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Chicago, Illinois. October.

Shin, Mija, Bradley, Samuel D., Lee, Seungjo, Wang, Zheng, & Lang, Annie. (2003). By people change: Does physiology predict channel changing behavior? Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Chicago, Illinois. October. Shin, Mija, Lee, Seungjo, & Lang, Annie. (2003). Don’t label me: The stigmatizing portrayal of mental illness on U.S. television. Paper presented to the Disabilities Interest Group of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Kansas City, Missouri. Chock, Makana, Fox, Julia R., Angelini, James R., Lee, Seungjo, & Lang, Annie (2003). Pacing and arousing content effects on personal impact, third person effect, and reverse third person effects of anti-smoking PSAs for smokers and non-smokers. Paper presented to the Communication Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Kansas City, Missouri. Bradley, Samuel D., Angelini, James R., Wang, Zhang, & Lang, Annie. (2003). Processing AIDS/HIV prevention messages: Arousing content, Production Pacing, and sexual experience. Paper presented to the Communication Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Kansas City, Missouri. Haverhals, Leah, Bradley, Samuel, Lang, Annie, & Chung, Yongkuk. (2003). An empirical examination of secondary task reaction times: Testing what they really measure. Presented to the Information Systems Division of the. International Communication Association. San Diego, CA. Lang, Annie, Schwartz, Nancy, Lee, Seungwhan, Shin, Mija. (2003). Processing Radio PSAs: Production Pacing, arousing content, and age. Presented to the Information Systems Division of the. International Communication Association. San Diego, CA. Fox, Julie, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan., Schwartz, Nancy, Haverhals, Leah, Wang, Zheng, Lang, Annie, & Potter, Deborah (2003). Picture this: Effects of graphics on the processing of television news. Presented to the Information Systems Division of the. International Communication Association. San Diego, CA.

Lang, Annie, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, Shin, Mija, & Schwartz, Nancy. (2002). Processing Anti-Drug Public Service Announcements: Production Pacing, Arousing Content, and Adolescence. Presented to the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Washington, DC. October. Lang, Annie, Chock, Makana, Shin, Mija, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, & Bradley, Samuel. (2002). The role of self-relevance in arousal elicited by anti-drug PSAs in adolescents and college students. Presented to the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Washington, DC. October.

Page 29: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  21    

Fox, Julia R., Lang, Annie, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, Schwartz, Nancy, Haverhals, Leah, Wang, Zheng, Bradley, Samuel & Potter, Deborah. (2002). Effects of text and animated graphics in television news stories on viewer attention, arousal and memory. Paper presented to the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Washington, DC. Oct. Bradley, Samuel D., Chung, Yongkuk, Haverhals, Leah M., & Lang, Annie (2002). Saying AMay cause internal bleeding@ with a smile: A multi-year analysis and comparison of prescription drug advertising. Presented to the Communication Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. August. Lee, Seungwhan, Chung, Yongkuk, Shin, Mija, & Lang, Annie (2002). It’s an arousing, fast paced kind of world: The effects of age and sensation seeking in the information processing of substance abuse PSAs. Presented to the Communication Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. August. Chock, T. Makana, Shin, Mija, Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, & Lang, Annie (2002). Processing anti-drug public service announcements: The role of perceived self relevance. Presented to the Communication Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. August. Fox, Julia R., Chung, Yongkuk, Lee, Seungwhan, Schwartz, Nancy, Haverhals, Leah, Wang, Zheng, Lang, Annie, and Potter, Deborah (2002). Effects of text and animated graphics in television news stories on viewer evaluations, arousal, attention, and memory. Presented to the Communication Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. August. Lang A., Chung, Y., Lee, S., & Schwartz, N. (2002). Processing anti-drug public service announcements: Production pacing, arousing content, and adolescents. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. July. Seoul, South Korea. Chung, Y., Lee, S., Lang, A., Borse, J., & Buchman, J. (2002). Orienting to text on screen: Task or medium? Paper presented to the Mass Communication Division of the International Communication Association. July. Seoul, South Korea.

Lang, A. & Lee, S. (2002). Approach and avoidance, a dual system approach: Sensation seeking, motivation, and substance use. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. July. Seoul, South Korea. Lee, S., Zhao, X., Chung, Y., and Lang, A. (2001). It’s the product stupid. Do risky products compel attention and elicit arousal in media viewers? Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association. Washington, DC. Wise, K. and Lang, A. (2001). Cardiac orienting and recognition for text appearing on a computer screen. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association. Washington, DC.

Page 30: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  22    

Wise, K., Lang, A., & Cai, X. (2000). Show me your Beer. Physiological responses to alcohol messages. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Phoenix, AZ. Cai, X., Lang, A., Wise, K., & Lee, S. (2000). Sex, Alcohol, and Billboards: Memory, attitude change, and purchase intentions. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Phoenix, AZ. Wise, K., Lang, A., Cai, X., & Lee, S. (2000). Help! I’m all shook up! Physiological responses to sex and speed in alcohol and beer commercials. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. June. Borse, J. & Lang, A. (2000). The effects of web banner advertisements: a study of the impact of animation and interactivity on memory, click-through, attention, arousal, and affect. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. June. Grabe, M. E. & Lang, A. (2000). Packaging arousing and boring television news content:The effects of tabloid packaging on information processing. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. June. Bolls, P. D. & Lang, A. (2000). I saw it on the radio: The allocation of attention to high imagery radio advertisements. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. June. Lee, S., Lang, A., Cai, X., & Wise, K. (2000). This Bud’s for you! The interactive effects ofsexual appeals and production pacing on memory for alcohol and product commercials. Paper presented to the Mass Communication Division of the International Communication Association. Acapulco, Mexico. June. Antecol, M., Thorson, E., Lang, A., Potter, R. F., & Bolls, P. D. (1999). Differential autonomic effects of individual blame and industry blame anti-smoking TV commercials on smokers and non-smokers. Presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. October, Granada, Spain.

Kirkley, S., Lang, A., Bauer, J. M., Siegel, M. (1999). WorldBoard: Supporting Collaboration with Just-in-Place Information. Paper presented to the Workshop on handheld CSCS, at the annual meetings of CSCW, <ahref’"http://www.acm.org/sigchi/cscw98">CSCW '98. Antecol, M., Thorson, E., Lang, A., Potter, R. F., Flora, J., & Henrikson, L. (1999). Complexity and blame focus in anti-smoking television commercials: The rule of complexity and individual vs. industry blame on smokers and non-smokers. Presented to the Advertising Division of AEJMC. August, New Orleans, LA. Lang, A., Schneider, E. & Deitz, R. (1999). Emotional experience and physiological arousal during violent video game playing: Gender, experience, and presence matter. Presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. August, New Orleans, LA.

Page 31: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  23    

Lang, A., Schwartz, N. &, Snyder, J. F. (1999). Slowdown, you’re moving to fast: Pacing, arousing content, and those aging boomers. Presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. August, New Orleans, LA. Dietz, R. B., Lang, A. (1999). Aeffective agents: Effects of Agent Affect on Arousal, Attention, Liking & Learning. Presented to the Cognitive Technology Conference. San Francisco, CA. August. Bucy, E. Lang, A., Potter, R. F., & Grabe, M. E. (1999). Formal features of cyberspace: A content analysis of the world wide web. Presented to the Visual Communication Division of the International Communication Association. San Francisco, CA. May. Antecol, M., Thorson, E., Lang, A., & Potter, R. F. (1999). Individual and corporate blame anti-smoking television commercials: differential autonomic and self-report responses of smokers and non-smokers. Presented to the Health Communication Division of the International Communication Association. San Francisco, CA. May. Grabe, M., Lang, A., Zhou, S., & Bolls, P. (1999). The impact of education on information processing: An experimental investigation of the knowledge gap. Presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. San Francisco, CA. May. Bolls, P., Lang, A., Potter, R. F., & Snyder, J. F. (1999). How can I tell if you love me? The effects of message valence on emotional and cognitive responses to radio. Presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. San Francisco, CA. May. Bolls, P.D., Potter, R.F., & Lang, A. (1998). I saw it on the radio: listeners' physiological and cognitive responses to imagery eliciting radio commercials. Presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Denver, CO. October. Potter, R. F., Lang, A., & Bolls, P. D. (1998). Orienting to structural features in auditory media messages. Presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Denver, CO. October. Lang, A., Grabe, M. E., Zhou, S., Bolls, P. D., & Potter, R.F. (1998). Tabloid television: arousal, attention, and memory. Presented to the annual meetings of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Denver, CO. October. Grabe, M., Zhou, S., Lang, A., & Bolls, P. (1998). The effects of tabloid and standard Television news on viewer evaluations, memory, and arousal. Presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Theory and Methodology Division. Baltimore, MD. Top three paper. August. Potter, R.F., Lang, A., Bolls, P.D. (1998). Identifying structural features of radio: Orienting and memory for radio messages. Paper presented to the annual meetings of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Theory and Methodology Division. Baltimore, MD. August. Lang, A., Bolls, P., & Potter, R. (1997). Attention, arousal, and television viewing. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Cape Cod, MA. October.

Page 32: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  24    

Potter, R., Lang, A., & Bolls, P. (1997). Orienting responses to structural features of media. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Cape Cod, MA. October. Bolls, P., Potter, R., & Lang, A. (1997). Television and arousal: SCR responses to pacing and content arousal. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. Cape Cod, MA. October. Borse, J., David, P., Dent, D., Lang, A., Potter, R., Bolls, P., Zhou, S., Schwartz, N., & Trout, G. (1997). Extra! Extra! Read all about it: Attention and memory for deviant and imagistic headlines. Paper presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Chicago, IL. August. Potter, R. F., Bolls, P., Lang, A., Zhou, S. Schwartz, N., Borse, J., Trout, G. & Dent, D. (1997). What is it? Orienting to structural features of radio messages. Paper presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Chicago, IL. August. Zhou, S., Schwartz, N., Bolls, P., Potter, R. F., Lang, A., Trout, G., Funabiki, R., Borse, J., & Dent, D. (1997, August). When an edit is an edit can an edit be too much? The effects of edits on arousal, attention, and memory for television messages. Paper presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Chicago, IL. Bolls, P., Yoon, K., Dent, D., Potter, R. And Lang, A. (1997). The Hard Sell: the effects of pace and content arousal of television commercials on viewers’ attention, arousal, and storage of commercial information. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Montreal, Canada. May. Reeves, B., Lang, A., Kim, E., and Tatar, D. (1997). The effects of screen size and message content on attention and arousal. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Montreal, Canada. May. Potter, R., Lang, A., Bolls, P., and Dent, D. (1997). Something for nothing: Is visual encoding automatic? Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Montreal, Canada. May. Yoon, K., Bolls, P. D., Lang, A., & Potter, R. F. (1997). The effects of advertising pace and arousal on ad and brand attitudes and behavioral intentions. Paper presented to the American Academy of Advertising. St. Louis, MO. April. Potter, R. & Lang, A. (1996). Arousing messages: Reaction time, capacity, encoding. Paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication Theory and Methodology Division. Anaheim, CA. August. Kawahara, K., Bolls, P., Hansell, R., & Lang, A. (1996). The effects of production pacing and content arousal on viewers allocation of capacity to encoding and storage of television messages. Paper presented to the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division, Chicago, IL. May.

Page 33: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  25    

Lang, A. & Basil, M. D. (1996). What do secondary task reaction times measure anyway? Paper presented to the International Communication Association, Information Systems Division, Chicago, IL. May. Bolls, P., Potter, R.F., Lang, A. (1996). The effects of production pacing and arousing content on encoding, storage, and retrieval of television messages. Paper presented to the Midwest Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science Conference. Bloomington, IN. April. Lang, A., Bolls, P., & Kawahara, K. (1996). The effects of arousing message content and structural complexity on television viewers’ level of arousal and allocation of processing resources. Paper presented to the Midwest Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science Conference. Bloomington, IN. April. Kawahara, K., Wadleigh, P.M., Hansell, R., Hazel, M.T., Nagami, K., and Lang, A. (1995). Everybody loves a fast message! Pacing, arousal and memory for television messages. Paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Theory and Methodology Division. Washington, DC, August. Hibbs, H., Bolls, P., & Lang, A. (1995). The medium is the memory: Using structural features to predict memory for random television messages. Presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Albuquerque, NM, May. Lang, A. (1995). The third person effect and political advertising: Truth, effectiveness, regulation, and usefulness. Presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Albuquerque, NM, May. Lang, A. & Bolls, P. (1995). Memory for emotional television messages: Arousal, valence, and capacity. Presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Albuquerque, NM, May.

Bolls, P., Hibbs, H. & Lang, A. (1995). A message is a message is a message ..., Structure predicts memory for random television messages. Presented to the Mass Communication Interest Group of the Western Speech Communication Association, Portland, OR. Feb. Lang, A., Pinkleton, B.E., and Newhagen, J. (1994). Categorical and dimensional theories of Emotion: How they predict memory for television messages. Presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Atlanta, GA. August. Top Three Paper. Lang, A. (1994). Defining audio/video redundancy from a limited capacity information processing perspective. Paper presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Atlanta, GA. August. Burek, J.A., Zawadzki, T.J., Flores, R.B., Opong, P.A., and Lang, A. (1994). Breaking through the glass ceiling: The growing proportion of women performing invited activities. Paper presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Atlanta, GA. August.

Page 34: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  26    

Lang, A., Dhillon, P. and Dong, Q. (1994). Arousal, emotion, and memory for television messages. Presented to the Broadcast Education Association. Las Vegas, NV. March. First place debut paper. Hill, S. and Lang, A. (1993). The effects of in-stadium advertisements on television viewers. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Washington, DC. May. Nelson, C. L. and Lang, A. (1993). Attention, exposure, and frequency of viewing: Do they all matter? Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication association. Washington, DC. May. Lang, A. (1992). A limited capacity theory of television viewing. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Miami, Fla. May. Lang, A., Chaffeur, C., Davidson, T., Funabiki, R. & Reynvaan, J. (1992). Political advertising: Structure, attention, and memory. Paper presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Miami, Fla. May. Top Four Paper. Lang, A., Strickwerda, M., Sumner, J., Winters, M., and Reeves, B. (1991) Aug. The effects of related and unrelated cuts on viewers memory for television: A limited capacity theory of television viewing. Paper presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Boston, MA. Austin, E., Lang, A. with Powers, B. and Sumner, J. (1991). Three dimensions of children's attention to messages: Mediation, Content, and Structure. Paper presented to the Theory and Methodology Division of Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Boston, MA. August. Lang, A. and Krueger, E. (1991). Public Perception of Truth and Regulation of Political Advertising. Paper presented to the Political Communication Division of the International Communication Association, Chicago, IL. May. Lang, A. and Sumner, J. (1990). Emotion, arousal, and memory for public service announcments: Murky but interesting? Presented to the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. Dublin, Ireland. June. Lang, A., Austin, E. W., and Shapiro, M. (1990). The geometry of communication. Presented to the Mass Communication Division of the International Communication Association. Dublin, Ireland. June. Lang, A. and Thorson, E. (1989). The effects of television video-graphics and lecture Familiarity on adult cardiac orienting responses and memory. Paper presented to the International Communication Association, San Francisco, CA. May. Top Three Paper. Lang, Annie (1989). The effects of over-time emotion on visual and verbal memory for television messages. Paper presented to the International Communication Association. San Francisco, CA May.

Page 35: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  27    

Lang, A. (1988). Involuntary attention and physiological arousal evoked by formal features and mild emotion in television commercials. Paper presented to the International Communication Association, New Orleans, LA. May. Thorson, E. and Lang, A. (1988). The effects of video-graphic complexity on memory for televised information. Paper presented to the International Communication Association, New Orleans, LA. May. Lang, A., Baldi, J., Seick, G., Peterson, K., Douglas, J. (1988). Effects of chronological presentation of facts on memory for broadcast news. Paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Portland, OR. Lang, A. & Friestad, M. (1987). Differences in memory for emotional television messages and hemispheric specialization. Paper presented to the International Communications Association, Montreal, Canada. May. Reeves, B. and Lang, A. (1986). Emotional television scenes and hemispheric specialization. Presented to the International Communication Association. Chicago, IL. May. Top Three Paper. Thorson, E., Reeves, B., Lang, A. and Rothschild, M. (1986). Prediction of memory for commercials from over-time patterns in occipital and frontal alpha. Paper accepted at the International Research Seminar on Marketing. Aix-En-Provence, France. May.  

  Lang, A. (2011). The shifting paradigm of mass communication research. Invited paper and competitive panel discussion presented to the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Mass Communication Divison, May, Boston, MA. Lang, A. (2011). Psychophysiology as a paradigm for investigated dynamic mental processes engaged by mediated messages. International Communication Association. Boston, MA. Lang, A. (2011). Evolution, Revolution, and Passion: Scholarship in a dynamic world. Invited master class. International Communication Association. Boston, MA. Lang, A. (2010). Where Psychophysiology Meets the Media. Keynote address to the Workshop on media psychology research: Psychophysiological measures. Hsinchu, Taiwan. Lang, A. (2010). The dynamics of motivated message processing. Rikkyo University, ECOTEC Project. Tokyo, Japan. Lang, A. (2010). Media Psychology and Message Processing. Ritsumeikan University, Center for Law and Psychology. Kyoto, Japan. Lang, A. (2010). Media psychology and the motivated cognitive processing of violent media. Hokkaido University, Department of Psychology, Sapporo, Japan.

INVITED TALKS

Page 36: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  28    

Lang, A. (2010). Motivated cognition and media: Using emotional and cognitive psychology to design better media. Busan Design Center, Busan, South Korea. Lang, A. (2010). Media message processing and individual differences in motivational activation. Korean Advanced Institute for Science and Technology, Seoul, South Korea. Lang, A. (2010). LC4MP: Using media psychology to understand media and media message processing. Dongkuk University, Seoul, South Korea. Lang, A. (2009). The message. Invited presentation to the International Communication Association. Chicago, Illinois. Lang, A. (2009). Effects. Invited presentation to the International Communication Association. Chicago, Illinois. Lang, A. (2009). Processing digital narratives. Paper presented to the Digital Narratives Workshop. National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan. Lang, A. (2009). LC4MP: A data driven model of mediated message processing. Invited talk presented to National Chiao Tung University. Hsinchu, Taiwan. Lang, A. (2009). Measuring Media Responses to a Dynamic World. Invited talk presented to National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan. Lang, A. (2009). Processing mediated messages. Motivated cognition and individual differences in motivational activation. Invited talk presented to National Chung Cheng University. Minsyong, Taiwan. Lang, A. (2007). Motivation, Motivational Activation, and Communication. University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill, School of Journalism. October. Lang, A. (2007). Motivational Activation and Communication. Indiana University, Psychological and Brain Sciences, Social Psychology Colloquium. September. Lang, A. (2007). Motivation, Motivational Activation, and Communication. University of Missouri, School of Journalism. October. Lang, A. (2006). Motivatation, motivated cognition and health communication. Panel presented to the Kentucky Conference on Health Communication. Lexington, Kentucky. Lang, A. (2004). Technology and Health Communication. A joint panel presented to the Health Communication and Communication Technology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Toronto, Canada. August. Lang, A. (2003). News programming pacing, arousal, memory, and channel changing. Presented to the Broadcast Education Association, Las Vegas, Nevada. April.

Page 37: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  29    

Lang, A. (2003). Processing health communication messages. Invited talk. School of Communication, University of Kentucky, Lexington. May. Lang, A. (2003). Processing mediated messages: implications for designing prevention messages. Invited talk, Workshop on Prevention sponsored by the National Cancer Institute and the Annenberg School of Communication, Philadelphia Pennsylvania. November. Lang, A. (2003). Processing Risky Messages, a limited capacity approach. Colloquium speaker, Annenberg School of Communication, Philadelphia Pennsylvania. January. Lang, A. (2002). The impact of IRBs on research in journalism and mass communication. Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Miami, Florida. August. Lang, A. (2002). Presence and arousal. International Communication Association. Seoul, South Korea. May. Lang, A. (2001). Psychological Processing of Media, talk given to the “Turn off the TV-Week” forum sponsored by the Monroe County Green Party. Lang, A. (2001). The information processing of media: Theory and Application. Invited colloquium for the Department of Communication at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. Lang, A., & Potter, D., (2000). Improving local television news: An experimental test. Paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Phoenix, Arizona. August.

Lang, A. (2000). Playing the tenure game: Be focused, fearless, & have fun. Panel presentation to the Graduate Education Division of the Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication. Phoenix, Arizona. August. Lang, A. (2000). Physiological responses to alcohol advertising. Panel presentation presented to the Health Communication Division of the International Communication Association. Acapulco, Mexico. June. Lang, A. (2000). Arousing Content, Production Pacing, and Drug PSAs. Paper presented to the National Institute of Drug Abuse, Communications Researchers Meeting. Washington, DC. May. Lang, A. (1999). Using theory to design better media. Instructional Systems Technology, School of Education, Graduate Colloquium Speaker, Indiana University, March, 1999. Lang, A. (1996). Research on the right side of the brain: Implications for visual communication. Panel presented to the Visual Communication and Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Anaheim, California. Lang, A. (1996). The information processing of mediated (and unmediated) messages: Towards a general theory of communication, or, The information processing of television messages: a not yet ready for prime time theory. Paper presented to the Mass Communication Division of the International Communication Association. Chicago, Illinois. May.

Page 38: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  30    

Lang, A. (1995). When one method is not enough: Exploring communication qualitatively and quantitatively. Panel presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Theory and Methodology Division. Washington, D.C. August. Lang, A., Sias, P., & Chantrill, P. (1995). Exploring narrative structure with quantitative and qualitative methods. Presentation to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication Theory and Methodology Division. Washington, D.C. August. Lang, A. (1992). Political advertising regulation and the third person effect. Refereed panel presented to the American Academy of Advertising. March. Lang, A. and Lanfear, P. (1989). The information processing of televised political advertising: Using theory to maximize recall. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the Association for Consumer Research. New Orleans, Louisiana. October. Lang, A. (1989). Effects of structural features and emotional impact on learning from televised political commercials. Presented to the American Academy of Advertising. San Diego, California. April. Lang, A., & Shapiro, M. (1989). Involuntary processes and voluntary reality. Presented to the International Communication Association. San Francisco, California. May. Lang, A. (1988). Heart rate as a measure of attention and arousal in advertising research. Presented to the American Academy of Advertising. Chicago, Illinois. April.  

   Lang, A. (1991). Arousal, emotion, attention, and production: How do they fit together? Technical Summary. Report to the membership of the National Association of Broadcasters. Solicited by the Research and Planning Division. Reeves, B., Thorson, E., Schleuder, J., Rothschild, M., Friestad, M., & Lang, A. (1984). Evaluation of the Tell-Back response system: Report 2. A technical report presented to the American Broadcasting Company.  

  Under first review Lang, A. & Lee, S. (2012). Individual differences in trait motivational reactivity influence children and adolescents’ responses to pictures of taboo products. Submitted to the Journal of Health Communication. April 23.

TECHNICAL REPORTS

UNDER REVIEW

Page 39: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  31    

Kurita, S. & Lang, A. (2012). The process of desensitization? Examining Habituation and attention during violent and non-violent games. Submitted to Media Psychology. April 3. Bailey, R. L., Lang, A., Marks, G., Lee, S., Pescosolido, B. & Martin, J. (2011). The effects of trait appetitive and defensive system reactivity and personal experiences on processing TV messages about mental illness. Submitted to Health Communication. November. Lang, A., Sanders-Jackson, A., Wang, Z., & Rubenking, B. (2011). The dynamic interaction of mediated emotion and motivated cognition. Paper submitted to Motivation and Emotion. April, 2012. Revise and Resubmit received April, 2012. Lang, A., Yegiyan, N., & Bradley, S. D. (2011). Motivated mediated message processing and individual differences in motivational activation. Submitted to Media Psychology, September. Under second or third review Lee, S. and Lang, A. (2011). Redefining media content and structure in terms of available resources: Toward a dynamic human-centric theory of communication. Resubmitted December. Lang, Annie, Bradley, Samuel D., Schneider, Edd, Kim, S. C., Mayell, S. Beyond total exposure: Violent video game character actions alter emotional and physiological responses to playing. Paper submitted to the Journal of Media Psychology. February. R & R received May, 2009, resubmitted December 2011. Revise and Resubmit requested - revision in progess Lang, Annie, & Schwartz, Nancy. (2009). Slow down you’re moving too fast: Age, production pacing, arousing content, and memory for television messages. Paper submitted to the American Journal of Media Psychology. March. R & R received June, 2009. Fox, Julia R., Lang, Annie, & Park, Byungho. (2006). Using signal detection measures to track motivated cognition: The interaction of valence, arousing content, information load, and structural complexity on recognition sensitivity and criterion bias. Paper submitted to Human Communication Research. July, 2006. Revise and resubmit received in October, 2006. Rubenking, B. & Lang, A. (2011). Predicting substance use and quitting with appetitive system activation and attitudes, submitted to Motivation and Emotion, November.    

   Title: The effects of visual complexity and emotional valence on physiological arousal and attention to television.  

DISSERTATION

Page 40: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  32    

Title: The measurement of the diversity of community issue and opinion agendas and of media plurality or entropy.

   Elected and appointed Indiana University Distinguished Professor, January, 2012. Top Paper Award (with Rachel Bailey). Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. May, 2011. Steven H. Chaffee Career Productivity Award, from the International Communication Association, May, 2009. Distinguished Alumna, University of Florida, College of Journalism and Communication, 2007. Fellow of the International Communication Association, June, 2006. Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication Kreighbaum Under 40 Award, 1997. Top three faculty paper (with Johnny Sparks ). Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. 2009, Chicago Illinois. Top three paper (with Zheng Wang and Jerry Busemeyer). Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association. 2008, Montreal, Canada. Top Paper (with Byungho Park & Julia Fox), Information Systems of the International

Communication Association, Division. June, 2006. Dresden Germany. Top Three Paper (with Leah Haverhals). Health Communication Division of the

International Communication Association. May, 2004. Top Paper (with Mija Shin) in the Special Competition for Research Papers on the Effects of

Media Coverage of Disability on Society, sponsored by the Media and Society Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. 2003, Kansas City, Missouri.

Top Three Paper, Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication,Theory & Methodology Division, 1998. Top Four paper, International Communication Association. Information Systems Division. May, 1995. Top Three Paper, Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.

August, 1994. First Place Paper, Broadcast Education Association. Research Division, Debut Category. March, 1994. Top Four Paper, International Communication Association, Information Systems Division.

May, 1992. Top Three Paper, Information Systems Division, International Communication Association.

May, 1989. Top Three Paper, Mass Communication Division, International Communication Association. May, 1986. Teaching Excellence Award, College of Arts and Sciences. Indiana University, 2000. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation Fellowship, September, 1986 - June, 1987. Harry S. Grant Fellowship, September, 1983 - June, 1984. Master's Degree with Distinction, University of Florida - Gainesville, December, 1983.

MASTERS THESIS

AWARDS AND HONORS

Page 41: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  33    

   Under Review  R01 DA030429-01. Measuring trait motivation & behavior in natural settings across the lifecycle. Submitted to NIH-NIDA. Resubmitted February, 2012. Total costs requested: $1,142,143.  Under Revision  Awarded Supplement to Social Network & Media Effects on Mental Illness Stigma (R01 MH065950) (with Bernice Pescosolido and Jack Martin), NIMH, 1/01/05 - 10/31/06, $129,982. Social Network & Media Effects on Mental Illness Stigma. 2004. National Institute for Mental Health. $1,708,835.00. Bernice Pescosolido, Principal Investigator; Annie Lang and Jack Martin, Co-Principal Investigators.

Motivation, Sensation Seeking & Designing Effective PSAs . 2002. National Institute on Drug Abuse: 1 R21 DA 16140-01, $575,089 (direct costs). News Program Pacing, Arousal, Memory, and Channel Changing. 2002. National Association of Broadcasters. January, 2002. $4500. Processing PSAs: Production pacing, emotion, and arousal. 1999. National Institute on Drug Abuse: 1 R01 DA12359-01A1, $376,378 (direct costs). June, 1999 - Sub-contract with Michigan State University and the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation - Processing Alcohol Advertsing - $17,500.

June, 1996 - With Walter Gantz, Indiana Public Broadcast System. $9,900. October, 1994 - CPSEA - consultant for Center Grant from NIMH, various. January, 1994. Dean's completion/initiation grant. $321.00. January, 1994. Release Time Grant. Washington State Alcohol Council. $12,000. October, 1993. $500 Dean’s grant. November, 1992. Grant (with Erica Austin) for studying the effects of alcohol commercials and PSAs on children. $4000. November, 1991. Dean's Completion Grant. $250.

GRANTS

Page 42: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  34    

November, 1990. Dean's completion grant. $200. June, 1990. Research Fellowship, American Academy of Advertising, $2500. November, 1989. Dean’s Initiation Grant (with Erica Austin), Washington State University, $500. February, 1989. Grant-in-Aid, OGRD, Washington State University, $8,945. May, 1988. Summer Research Stipend. OGRD, Washington State University, $3000. January, 1988. National Political Advertising Project, funded by the Gannett Foundation, $1000. November, 1987. Initiation Grant, through the Dean's Office, Washington State University, $250.      

   Member Cognitive Science Society. 2002-2006. Society for Psychophysiological Research. October 1984 - present. International Communication Association. May 1986 - present. American Academy of Advertising. January 1987 - 2006. Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. 1987 - 2006. Broadcast Education Association. September, 1993 - present. Association of Consumer Psychology. 1999 - 2004. Summary of Selected Service Activities Service to the University - Indiana University 2006-2009 Member of the Steering Committee for the Program in Cognitive Science 2003-2005 Member of the Dean of Faculties Summer Teaching Fellowship selection committee. 2001- 2003 Member of the College of Arts and Sciences Promotion Committee. 1997- 2001 Member of the Graduate Council, Indiana University Graduate School. 1997- 2001 Member of the Graduate Faculty Membership Committee, Indiana University. Service to the University - Washington State University 1992- 1995 Member of the Washington State University Human Subjects Institutional Review Board. 1994-1995 Member of the Dean’s Research Advisory Committee (College of Liberal Arts)

Service to the Department of Telecommunications - Indiana University 2009-2010 Chair of the Search Committee 2009-2010 Member of the graduate committee 2007-2008 Chair of the Advisory Committee 2005-2009 Member (sometimes chair), Merit Committee 2004-2005 Member of the Advisory Committee

PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS AND SERVICE

Page 43: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  35    

1997-2000 & 2001-2005 Director of Graduate Studies 1995- 2005 Member of the Graduate Committee 1995- 2005 Member of the Personnel Committee 1996- 1997 Chair of the Personnel Committee 1995-2004 Director of the Institute for Communication Research 1996 Agenda Committee 1996, 1998 Faculty Search Committee 1996 RTS/Telecommunications search committee for computer support personnel Service to the School of Communication - Washington State University 1992-93 Chair Advertising Search Committee 1992-93 Curriculum Committee 1993-94 Appeals Committee, Chair 1991-1995 Departmental Human Subjects Review Committee 1993-94 Organized three colloquia with internationally recognized speakers Service to the Field Positions Held 2009-present Editor, Media Psychology. 2008 Member of the program committee, Society for Psychophysiological Research. 2003-2006 Member of the Education and Training Committee of the Society for

Psychophysiological Research. 2005 Member of the NIDA Review Committee for RFA. 1999-2000 Member of the Research Committee on Stigma - National Institute of Mental Health.

Washington, DC. 1996, 1997 Paper competition chair for the Information Systems Division of International Communications Association. 1996-1999: Board Member, International Communication Association. 1996-1999: Chair of the Information systems Division, International Communication Association. 1994 - 1996: Vice Chair of the Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association 1994 - 1996: Member of the Executive Committee of the Theory and Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication Editorial Board Memberships 2007-present: Founding editorial board member, Communication Methods and Measures 2001-present: Member of the editorial board of Communication Monographs 1999-present: Member of the editorial board of Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 1999-2006: Member of the editorial board of Communication Research 1998-present: Founding editorial board member of Media Psychology 1997-2005: Member of the editorial board of Communication Studies 1993-present: Member of the editorial board of the Journal of Broadcasting &

Page 44: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  36    

Electronic Media 1995-present: Member of the editorial board of Human Communication Research 1995-present: Member of the editorial board of the Journal of Communication Ad-Hoc Reviewer for: Topic in Cognitive Science; Journal of Health Communication; Health Communication; Sex Roles; Center for Advanced Media Research, Amsterdam; McMillan Publishers; Human Factors; Discourse Processing; Journal of Computer Mediated Communication; Wadsworth Publications, Inc.; Sage Publications, Inc.; Mass Communication Review Yearbook; Political Communication; Communication Research; Journalism Quarterly; Critical Studies in Mass Communication; Communication Monographs; Psychophysiology; Psychological Reports; Perceptual and Motor Skills; Mass Communication and Society; Research Division of the Broadcast Education Association; Information Systems Division of the International Communication Association; Mass Communication Division of the International Communication Association; Theory & Methodology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. Students Directed at Indiana University MAs Bolling, Janis, MS, 2000 Borse, Jennifer, MA, 1995 Haverhals, Leah, MA, 2001 Johnson, George, MS/JD 1998 Kurita, Satoko, 1999 Lee, Seungjo, 2001 Lee, Sungkyoung, MA, 2004 Nzegwu, Azuka, MS, 2001 Sanders-Jackson, Ashley, 2003 Wang, Zheng, 2001 Wise, Kevin, 1998 PhDs Bolls, Paul, 1996 Bradley, Samuel (Cog Sci/Mass Comm), 2002 Chung, Yongkuk, 200 Kurita, Satoko, 2003 Kythaparampil, Jacob, 2010 Lee, Seungjo, 2003 Lee, Sungkyoung (Cog Sci/Mass Comm), 2008 Park, Byungho, 2001 Potter, Robert F., 1994 Shin, Mija, 1999 Sparks, Johnny, 2003 Wang, Zheng (Cog Sci/Mass Comm), 2003 Yegiyan, Narine, 2003 Ph.D. Director of Research Tao, Chen Chao (Mass Comm), 2006 Schneider, Edd (IST), 2003 Schwartz, Nancy, (IST) 2005

Page 45: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  37    

Ph.D. – current advisees Bae, Soyoung, admitted 2005, (ABD) Bailey, Rachel, admitted 2009 Gao, Ya, admitted 2005 (ABD) Keene, Justin, admitted 2009 Marks, P. Gayle, admitted 2004 (ABD, defense date 10/20/2011) Rubenking, Bridget, admitted 2008 (ABD) Whitehead, Madhuja (ABD)  

Page 46: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

Don W Lyon | ResearchGate

http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Don_Lyon/[11/5/2012 4:40:29 PM]

Don W LyonIndiana University Bloomington · School of Optometry

TOPICS (12) See all

PUBLICATIONS (5) See all

Journal Article: The accommodative lag of theyoung hyperopic patient.T Rowan Candy, Kathryn H Gray, Christy C Hohenbary, Don W Lyon

ABSTRACT: To determine the accommodative accuracy of infants and youngchildren before they had had any form of clinical intervention or treatment, in anattempt to determine the difference between 'normal' and 'abnormal' visualexperience for these individuals. Nott retinoscopy was performed ... [more]

Investigative ophthalmology & visual science. 11/2011; 53(1):143-9. · 3.43Impact Factor

Journal Article: Amblyopia in Children Aged 7 to 17Years-Reply.Mitchell M Scheiman, Richard W Hertle, Roy W Beck, Allison R Edwards, EileenBirch, Susan A Cotter, Earl R Crouch, Oscar A Cruz, Bradley V Davitt, SeanDonahue, Jonathan M Holmes, Don W Lyon, Michael X Repka, Nicholas ASala, David I Silbert, Donny W Suh, Susanna M Tamkins

Archives of ophthalmology. 11/2006; 124(11):1668-1669. · 3.86 ImpactFactor

Journal Article: Normative data for modifiedThorington phorias and prism bar vergences fromthe Benton-IU study.Don W Lyon, David A Goss, Douglas Horner, John P Downey, Bill Rainey

ABSTRACT: The use of a phoropter for measuring phorias and vergences inchildren is common in the optometric profession. For young children, the use ofthe phoropter can be confusing, making it difficult to obtain accuratemeasurements. Free space testing allows for direct observation of the eyes in anatural... [more]

Optometry (St. Louis, Mo.). 11/2005; 76(10):593-9. · 0.74 Impact Factor

Follow

Vision Screening Public Health Clinical Psychology Strabismus Refractive Errors

Diplopia Oculomotor Muscles Amblyopia

FOLLOWING See all

FOLLOWERS See all

Browse more researchers

Already a member? Log in

ResearchGate is the professional network for scientists and researchers. Join today, it's free! Sign Up »

Page 47: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

Don W Lyon | ResearchGate

http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Don_Lyon/[11/5/2012 4:40:29 PM]

© 2012 researchgate.net. All rights reserved. About Us · News · Privacy · Terms

Journal Article: A randomized pilot study of nearactivities versus non-near activities duringpatching therapy for amblyopia.Jonathan M Holmes, Allison R Edwards, Roy W Beck, Robert W Arnold, DavidA Johnson, Deborah L Klimek, Raymond T Kraker, Katherine A Lee, Don WLyon, Erin R Nosel, Michael X Repka, Nicholas A Sala, David I Silbert, SusannaTamkins

ABSTRACT: To plan a future randomized clinical trial, we conducted a pilotstudy to determine whether children randomized to near or non-near activitieswould perform prescribed activities. A secondary aim was to obtain a preliminaryestimate of the effect of near versus non-near activities on amblyopic eye v...[more]

Journal of AAPOS : the official publication of the American Association forPediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus / American Association for PediatricOphthalmology and Strabismus. 04/2005; 9(2):129-36. · 1.03 Impact Factor

Journal Article: Randomized trial of treatment ofamblyopia in children aged 7 to 17 years.Mitchell M Scheiman, Richard W Hertle, Roy W Beck, Allison R Edwards, EileenBirch, Susan A Cotter, Earl R Crouch, Oscar A Cruz, Bradley V Davitt, SeanDonahue, Jonathan M Holmes, Don W Lyon, Michael X Repka, Nicholas ASala, David I Silbert, Donny W Suh, Susanna M Tamkins

ABSTRACT: To evaluate the effectiveness of treatment of amblyopia inchildren aged 7 to 17 years. At 49 clinical sites, 507 patients with amblyopic eyevisual acuity ranging from 20/40 to 20/400 were provided with optimal opticalcorrection and then randomized to a treatment group (2-6 hours per day ofprescr... [more]

Archives of ophthalmology. 04/2005; 123(4):437-47. · 3.71 Impact Factor

Page 48: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  1    

Department  of  Telecommunications           [email protected]  Indiana  University               (573)  774-‐7362  1229  E.  7th  Street                rachellbailey.webs.com  Bloomington,  In  47405     Doctor  of  Philosophy                 Indiana  University     Mass  Communication               Projected  May  2013       Dissertation  Topic:  Engagement  as  a  Motivated  Cognitive  State:  Understanding  the     Complexity  of  Optimal  Mediated  Learning  in  a  Health  Communication  Context     Committee:  Drs.  Annie  Lang,  Rob  Potter,  and  David  Pisoni  Master  of  Arts                 Missouri  School  of  Journalism     Strategic  Communication             August  2008     Thesis  Topic:  Trained  to  Eat:  Children’s  Cognitive  and  Emotional  Processing  of  Snack  Food     Advergames     Committee:  Drs.  Kevin  Wise,  Paul  Bolls,  Glenn  Leshner  and  Steve  Hackley  Bachelor  of  Journalism               Missouri  School  of  Journalism     Strategic  Communication             May  2007     Honors:  summa  cum  laude,  phi  beta  kappa,  kappa  tau  alpha  Bachelor  of  Arts               University  of  Missouri-‐Columbia     Psychology                 May  2007     Honors:  summa  cum  laude,  phi  beta  kappa    Graduate  Research  Assistant             Indiana  University     Rob  Potter                 Fall  2012  Graduate  Research  Assistant             Indiana  University     Annie  Lang                 Spring  2012  Interim  Lab  Manager               Indiana  University     Institute  for  Communication  Research         Spring  2011    Research  Associate,  Biometrics           Media  Research  Labs,  LLC     Exclusively  contracted  to  Disney  Media         Spring  2009  

 Curriculum  Vitae  

Rachel  L.  Bailey    

October  31,  2012  

PERSONAL

EDUCATION

PROFESSIONAL & ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE

Page 49: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  2    

Lab  Manager                 Missouri  School  of  Journalism     PRIME  Lab                 Academic  Year  07-‐08    Project  Manager,  PRIME  Lab              Missouri  School  of  Journalism     Integris:  The  Effective  Use  of  Emotion  in  Health  Care  Messages   Summer  2008  Research  Assistant               Missouri  School  of  Journalism     PRIME  Lab                 Academic  Year  06-‐07  Research  Assistant                 University  of  Missouri-‐Columbia     Personality  Lab                 Academic  Year  05-‐06  

     Experience    Graduate  Psychophysiological  Methods,  Teaching  Assistant   Fall  Semester  2012  Programming  Strategies,  Teaching  Assistant         Fall  Semester  2011  Race  &  The  Media,  Teaching  Assistant         Fall  Semester  2010  Freshman  Seminar  in  Media  Processing,  Teaching  Assistant     Summer  Semester  2010  Media  &  Society,  Teaching  Assistant           Spring  Semester  2010  Media  &  Society,  Teaching  Assistant           Fall  Semester  2009  Strategic  Communication  Research  Methods,  Teaching  Assistant   Academic  Year  2007  Undergraduate  Research  Ambassador         Spring  Semester  2007    Invited  Lectures  Applying  Theory  to  Media  Development         Spring  Semester  2012     Topic:  Using  Research  on  Human  Emotion  to  Guide  Production  Motivated  Cognitive  States  Honors  Seminar         Fall  Semester  2010     Topic:  Dynamic  Systems  and  Attractor  States  Media  &  Society               Fall  Semester  2009     Topic:  Strategic  Health  Campaigns    Training  The  Compleat  Academic             Spring  Semester  2012     Professor:  Annie  Lang    Designing  Effective  Learner-‐Centered  Courses       Summer  Semester  2010     Course  Development  Institute            Bailey,  R.  L.,  Fox,  J.  R.,  &  Grabe,  M.  E.    (In  Press).  The  Influence  of  Message  and  Audience  Characteristics  on  TV  News  Grazing  Behavior.  Journal  of  Broadcasting  &  Electronic  Media.  *Alphabetical  authorship    

TEACHING EXPERIENCE & TRAINING

REFEREED PUBLISHED ARTICLES

Page 50: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  3    

 Norris,  R.  L.,  Bailey,  R.L.,  Bolls,  P.D.,  &  Wise,  K.R.  (2012).  Effects  of  emotional  tone  and  visual  complexity  on  processing  health  Information  in  prescription  drug  advertising.  Health  Communication,  27(1),  42-‐48.      Bailey,  R.  L.,  Wise,  K.,  R.  &  Bolls,  P.  D.  (2009).  How  avatar  customizability  affects  children’s  arousal  and  subjective  presence  during  junk  food-‐sponsored  online  video  games.  CyberPsychology  &  Behavior,  12(3),  277-‐283.    

 Bailey,  R.  L.  &  Yegiyan,  N.  (2012).  Separating  Motivational  Activation  from  Attitudes  Toward    Primary  Motivational  Objects.  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research.  Psychophysiology,  49,  S1.    Bailey,  R.  L.  &  Potter,  R.  F.,  Pisoni,  D.  B.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2012).  Resting  HRV,  Motivational  Reactivity  and  Executive  Functioning.  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research.  Psychophysiology,  49,  S1.    Yegiyan,  N.  &  Bailey,  R.  L.  (2012)  Affective  Reactivity  to  Junk  vs.  Healthy  Food  Images:  Less  Appetitive  But  More  Arousing.  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research.  Psychophysiology,  49,  S1.    Bailey,  R.L.  Rubenking,  B.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2011).  The  Influence  of  Trait  Motivational  Reactivity  on  the  Formation  of  Motivated  Cognitive  States:  Flow,  Presence  and  Transportation.  Psychophysiology,  48,  S1.          Bailey,  R.L.  Rubenking,  B.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2011).  An  Overtime  Comparison  of  Motivated  Cognitive  States:  Flow,  Presence  and  Transportation,  Psychophysiology,  48,  S1.      Rubenking,  B.,  Bailey,  R.L.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2011).  Individual  Differences  in  Motivational  Reactivity  Influences  Cardiac  Orienting,  Psychophysiology,  48,  S1.    Bailey,  R.L.  Rubenking,  B.,  Lang,  A.,  Nadorff,  G.,  Lee,  S.,  Pescosolido,  B.  &  Martin,  J.  (2010).  The  Effects  of  Trait  Appetitive  System  Reactivity  and  Personal  Experiences  on  Processing  TV  Messages  about  Mental  Illness,  Psychophysiology,  47,  S1.            Bailey,  R.L.  Lang,  A.,  Nadorff,  G.,  Lee,  S.,  Pescosolido,  B.  &  Martin,  J.  (2010).  The  Effects  of  Trait  Motivational  Activation  and  Personal  Experiences  on  Processing  Negative,  Motivationally  Relevant  Television  Content,  Psychophysiology,  47,  S1.    Bailey,  R.L.,  Wise,  K.,  Bolls,  P.D.,  &  Leshner,  G.  (2008).  The  effect  of  avatar  customization  on  children’s  cognitive  and  emotional  responses  to  branded  online  games,  Psychophysiology,  45,  S1.    Leshner,  G.,  Bolls,  P.,  Sternadori,  M.,  Bailey,  R.  L.,  &  Norris,  R.  (2008).  The  impact  of  Machiavellian  and  disgusting  images  in  anti-‐tobacco  ads  on  viewer’s  message  processing,  Psychophysiology,  45,  S1.  

REFEREED PUBLISHED ABSTRACTS

Page 51: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  4    

   Kononova,  A.,  Bailey,  R.L.,  Bolls,  P.D.,  Yegiyan,  N.,  &  Jeong,  J.Y.  (2008).  Here  and  far  away:  Cognitive  and  emotional  processing  of  national  and  foreign  sensational  and  not  sensational  television  news,  Psychophysiology,  45,  S1.      Leshner,  G.,  Bolls,  P.D.,  Moore,  J.,  Gardner,  E.,  Peters,  S.,  Kononova,  A.,  Bailey,  R.  L.  &  Wise,  K.  (2008).  The  impact  of  narrative  and  emotion  of  breast  cancer  survivor  testimonies  on  message  processing  for  African  American  female  viewers,  45,  S1.    Bailey,  R.  L.,  Bolls,  P.,  Wise,  K.,  &  Leshner,  G.  (2007).  Individual  Differences  in  Motivated  Processing  of  Highly  Arousing  Positive  TV  Advertisements,  Psychophysiology,  44,  S1      

 Bailey,  R.  L.,  Lang,  A.,  &  Gao,  Y.  (2012)  Encoding  the  Fleeting:  Examining  What  Types  of  Information  Humans  Encode.  National  Communication  Association.  Orlando,  FL.    Yegiyan,  N.  &  Bailey,  R.  L.  (2012)  The  Battleground  Food:  Understanding  Emotional  and  Cognitive  Mechanisms  of  Healthy  vs.  Unhealthy  Food  Choices.  National  Communication  Association.  Orlando,  FL.    Bailey,  R.  L.  (2012).  Separating  Motivational  Activation  from  Implicit  Attitudes  in  a  Food  Advertising  Context.  Association  for  Education  in  Journalism  and  Mass  Communication.  Chicago,  IL.      Bailey,  R.  L.  &  Yegiyan,  N.  (2012).  Separating  Motivational  Activation  from  Attitudes  Toward    Primary  Motivational  Objects.  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research.  New  Orleans,  LA.    Bailey,  R.  L.  &  Potter,  R.  F.,  Pisoni,  D.  B.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2012).  Resting  HRV,  Motivational  Reactivity  and  Executive  Functioning.  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research.  New  Orleans,  LA.    Yegiyan,  N.  &  Bailey,  R.  L.  (2012)  Affective  Reactivity  to  Junk  vs.  Healthy  Food  Images:  Less  Appetitive  But  More  Arousing.  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research.  New  Orleans,  LA.    Bailey,  R.L.  (2012).  Presence  as  an  Emergent  Property  of  the  Motivated  Cognition  Dynamic  System.  (Proceedings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting)  Phoenix,  AZ.  *Top  Student  Paper    Rubenking,  B.,  Bailey,  R.L.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2012).  To  Accelerate  or  Decelerate:  Orienting  Response-‐elicitors,  Emotion,  and  Individual  Differences  in  Cardiac  Orienting  to  Television.  (Proceedings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting)  Phoenix,  AZ.    

REFEREED CONFERENCE POSTERS AND PAPERS

Page 52: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  5    

Bailey,  R.L.,  Fox,  J.  &  Grabe,  M.E.  (2012).  The  Influence  of  Message  and  Audience  Characteristics  on  TV  News  Grazing  Behavior.  (Proceedings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting)  Phoenix,  AZ.  Alphabetical  authorship.      Yegiyan,  N.,  &  Bailey,  R.  L.  (2012).  Physiological  Correlates  of  Risk:  The  Case  of  Healthy  versus  Unhealthy  Food  Processing.  (Proceedings  of  the  Kentucky  Conference  on  Health  Communication,  2012)  Lexington,  KY.      Bailey,  R.L.  Rubenking,  B.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2011).  The  Influence  of  Trait  Motivational  Reactivity  on  the  Formation  of  Motivated  Cognitive  States:  Flow,  Presence  and  Transportation  (Proceedings  of  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research)  Boston,  MA      Bailey,  R.L.  Rubenking,  B.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2011).  An  Overtime  Comparison  of  Motivated  Cognitive  States:  Flow,  Presence  and  Transportation.  (Proceedings  of  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research)  Boston,  MA      Rubenking,  B.,  Bailey,  R.L.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2011).  The  Effects  of  Trait  Motivational  Reactivity  on  Cardiac  Orienting  Responses.  (Proceedings  of  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research)  Boston,  MA      Bailey,  R.L.  Rubenking,  B.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2011)  An  Overtime  Comparison  of  Flow,  Presence  and  Transportation  States.  (Proceedings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting)  Boston,  MA.      Bailey,  R.L.  Lang,  A.,  Nadorff,  G.,  Lee,  S.,  Pescosolido,  B.  &  Martin,  J.  (2011).  The  Effects  of  Trait  Appetitive  and  Defensive  System  Reactivity  and  Personal  Experiences  on  Processing  TV  Messages  about  Mental  Illness  (Proceedings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting)  Boston,  MA.  *Top  paper    Bailey,  R.L.  Rubenking,  B.,  Lang,  A.,  Nadorff,  G.,  Lee,  S.,  Pescosolido,  B.  &  Martin,  J.  (2010).  The  Effects  of  Trait  Appetitive  System  Reactivity  and  Personal  Experiences  on  Processing  TV  Messages  about  Mental  Illness  (Proceedings  of  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research)  Portland,  OR      Bailey,  R.L.  Lang,  A.,  Nadorff,  G.,  Lee,  S.,  Pescosolido,  B.  &  Martin,  J.  (2010).  The  Effects  of  Trait  Motivational  Activation  and  Personal  Experiences  on  Processing  Negative,  Motivationally  Relevant  Television  Content  (Proceedings  of  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research)  Portland,  OR      Bailey,  R.  L.,  Lang,  A.,  Angelini,  J.,  Lee,  S.,  Nadorff,  G.,  Pescosolido,  B.,  &  Martin,  J.  (2010).  Processing  negative  messages  about  persons  with  mental  illness:  MAM,  Social  Network  Group  and  arousing  content.  (Proceedings  of  the  Kentucky  Conference  on  Health  Communication,  2010)  Lexington,  KY      Leshner  G.,  Bolls,  P.D.,  Bailey,  R.L.,  Ashley,  S.,  Lee,  H.,  &  Wise,  K.R.  (2009).  The  information  processing  of  political  advertisements:  Attitude  accessiblity,  psychological  processing  and  party  affiliation.  (Processdings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting,  May  2009)  Chicago,  IL      

Page 53: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  6    

Bailey,  R.L.,  Wise,  K.,  Bolls,  P.D.,  &  Leshner,  G.  (2008).  The  effect  of  avatar  customization  on  children’s  cognitive  and  emotional  responses  to  branded  online  games.  (Proceedings  of  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research  Annual  Meeting,  October  2008)  Austin,  TX      Leshner,  G.,  Bolls,  P.,  Sternadori,  M.,  Bailey,  R.  L.,  &  Norris,  R.  (2008).  The  impact  of  Machiavellian  and  disgusting  images  in  anti-‐tobacco  ads  on  viewer’s  message  processing.  (Proceedings  of  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research  Annual  Meeting,  October  2008)  Austin,  TX      Kononova,  A.,  Bailey,  R.L.,  Bolls,  P.D.,  Yegiyan,  N.,  &  Jeong,  J.Y.  (2008).  Here  and  far  away:  Cognitive  and  emotional  processing  of  national  and  foreign  sensational  and  not  sensational  television  news.  (Proceedings  of  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research  Annual  Meeting,  October  2008)  Austin,  TX      Bolls,  P.,  Leshner  G.,  Gardner,  E.,  Bailey,  R.,  Kononova,  A.,  Peters,  S.,  &  Wise,  K.  (2008).  Stories  of  Feelings  and  Courage:  The  Effect  of  Narrative  and  Emotional  Tone  on  Processing  Cancer  Survivor  Stories.  (Proceedings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting,  May  2008)  Montreal,  Canada      Norris,  R.,  Bailey,  R.,  Malle,  J.  &  Bolls  P.  (2008).  Effects  of  Emotional  Tone  and  Visual  Complexity  on  Processing  Health  Risk  Information  and  Benefits  in  Prescription  Drug  Advertising.  (Proceedings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting,  May  2008)  Montreal,  Canada      Potter,  R.,  Bolls,  P.,  Korouth,  J.,  Wise,  K.,  Bailey,  R.,  &  Lang,  A.  (2008).  Heart  Rate  Variability  Analysis  Suggests  a  Re-‐Interpretation  of  Cardiac  Response  During  Media  Messages.  (Proceedings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting,  May  2008)  Montreal,  Canada      Bailey,  R.  L.,  Bolls,  P.,  Wise,  K.,  &  Leshner,  G.  (2007).  Individual  Differences  in  Motivated  Processing  of  Highly  Arousing  Positive  TV  Advertisements.  (Proceedings  of  47th  Annual  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research  Meeting)  Savannah,  GA      Bailey,  R.  L.,  Wise,  K.,  &  Leshner,  G.  (2007).  Individual  Differences  in  Motivated  Processing  of  Highly  Arousing  Positive  TV  Advertisements.  (Proceedings  of  International  Communication  Association  Annual  Meeting)  San  Francisco,  CA    

 “I’ve  Lived  Life  from  Both  Sides  Now:  What  I  Learned  Moving  from  Theory-‐Driven  Research  to  Applied  Research…  And  Back”       As  part  of:  Biometric  Measures  in  Applied  Electronic  Media  Research     Presented  to:  Broadcasters  Education  Association  Conference,  April  2012,  Las  Vegas,  NV       With:  Dr.  Rob  Potter,  Dr.  Paul  Bolls,  Dr.  Glenn  Cummins,  Dr.  Wes  Wise  &  Bruce  Rosenblum       (Executive  VP  of  Warner  Brothers  Research)        

REFEREED PANELS

Page 54: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  7    

 Bailey,  R.  L.  (under  review).  Separating  Motivational  Activation  from  Implicit  Attitudes  in  a  Food  Advertising  Context.  Motivation  and  Emotion.      Bailey,  R.  L.  (under  review).  Presence  as  an  Emergent  Property  of  the  Motivated  Cognitive  Dynamic  System.  Media  Psychology.    Lang,  A.,  Gao,  Y.,  Potter,  R.,  Lee,  S.,  Park,  B.,  &  Bailey,  R.  L.  (under  review).  Conceptualizing  audio  message  complexity  as  available  processing  resources.  Communication  Research.        Lang,  A.,  Bailey,  R.L.,  Nadorff,  P.G.,  Lee,  S.,  Pescosolido,  B.,  &  Martin,  J.  (under  revision).  Processing  Televised  Characters  with  Mental  Illness:  Influenced  by  Personal  Experience  with  Persons  with  Mental  Illness  and  Trait  Differences  in  Motivational  Reactivity.      Bailey,  R.  L.,  Rubenking,  B.E.,  &  Lang,  A.,  (under  revision).  Motivated  Cognition  and  the  Formation  of  Flow,  Presence  and  Transportation.      

   

Bailey,  R.L.  (in  preparation).  Advertising,  Food.  In  SAGE  Encyclopedia  of  Health  Communication.  Ed.  Teresa  Thompson.      

Bailey,  R.  L.,  (2011).  The  Behavioral  Dynamics  of  Human  Communication  and  How  They  Change.  In  The  Human  Media  Interaction,  Ed.  Annie  Lang.  Currently  unpublished.          

UNDER REVISION FOR SECOND PUBLICATION REVIEW

UNDER FIRST PUBLICATION REVIEW

REVISE AND RESUBMIT REQUESTS

BOOK CHAPTERS

INVITED REFERENCE CONTRIBUTION REQUESTS

Page 55: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  8    

 Gao,  Y.,  Bailey,  R.  L.,  Lee,  S.,  Park,  B.,  Potter  R.  F.,  &  Lang,  A.,    (under  review).  Conceptualizing  audio  message  complexity  as  available  processing  resources.  International  Communication  Association.    Bailey,  R.  L.,  Lang,  A.  (under  review).  Affordances  in  Media:  The  Embodied,  Embedded  User  from  a  Gibsonian  Perspective.  International  Communication  Association.    Bailey,  R.  L.,  Connolly,  S.  R.  &  Lang,  A.  (under  review).  Encoding  Systems  and  Evolved  Message  Processing:  Pictures  Enable  Action,  Words  Enable  Thinking.  International  Communication  Association.  Bailey,  R.  L.,  Potter,  R.  F.,  &  Lang  A.  (under  review).  Resting  HRV  as  a  Predictor  of  Individual  Differences  in  Trait  Motivational  Reactivity.  International  Communication  Association.    Bailey,  R.  L.  (under  review).  The  Behavioral  Dynamics  of  Human  Communication:  How  They  Lead  to  Motivated  Cognitive  States.  International  Communication  Association.      

 Bailey,  R.  L.,  Rubenking,  B.  E.,  &  Lang,  A.  (in  progress).  A  Dynamic  Conceptualization  of  Flow,  Presence  and  Transportation  States.    Yegiyan,  N.  &  Bailey,  R.  L.  (in  progress).  Appetitive  and  Aversive  Reactions  to  Junk  and  Healthy  Foods    Bailey,  R.  L.  &  Yegiyan,  N.    (in  progress).  Separating  Motivational  Activation  from  Attitudes  Toward    Primary  Motivational  Objects    Bailey,  R.  L.,  Lang,  A.  (in  progress).  Encoding  the  Fleeting:  Examining  What  Types  of  Information  Humans  Automatically  Encode    Bailey,  R.  L.,  Lang,  A.  (in  progress).  Affordances  in  Media:  The  Embodied,  Embedded  User  from  a  Gibsonian  Perspective    Lang,  A.,  Bailey,  R.  L.,  &  Connolly,  S.  (in  progress).  Encoding  Systems  and  Evolved  Message  Processing:  Pictures  Enable  Action,  Words  Enable  Thinking    Bailey,  R.  L.,  Potter,  R.  F.,  &  Lang  A.  (in  progress).  Resting  HRV  as  a  Predictor  of  Individual  Differences  in  Trait  Motivational  Reactivity    

MANUSCRIPTS IN PROGRESS FOR PUBLICATION

UNDER CONFERENCE REVIEW

Page 56: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  9    

Bailey,  R.  L.,  Potter,  R.  F.,  Pisoni,  D.  B.,  &  Lang,  A.  (in  progress).  Individual  Differences  in  Executive  Functioning  and  Trait  Motivational  Reactivity    Kononova,  A.,  Bailey,  R.  L.,  Yegiyan,  N.,  &  Grabe,  M.  E.  (in  progress).  When  Disaster  Strikes  Abroad:  Cognitive  and  Emotional  Processing  of  Foreign  Sensational  Television  News  Stories            Top  Student  Paper,  Information  Systems  Division,  International  Communication  Association  2012  Travel  Grant,  International  Communication  Association,  Information  Systems  Division,  2012  Top  3  Faculty  Paper,  Information  Systems  Division,  International  Communication  Association  2011  Travel  Grant,  Graduate  &  Professional  Student  Organization,  Indiana  University  2010  Student  Academic  Appointee,  Department  of  Telecommunications,  Indiana  University,  2009-‐Present  Indiana  University  Graduate  Fellowship,  Indiana  University,  2009-‐Present    

2008  Paul  Synor  Fellowship  Grant,  $500  (Funded)                   Awarded  for  the  recruitment  of  children  as  a  special  population  for  my  thesis  project     My  role:  Prepared  the  application  and  budget  in  full.    2011  IU  Collaborative  Research  Grant,  $75,000  (Applied,  Not  Funded)       Co-‐PIs:  Annie  Lang  and  Don  Lyon     Project:  Can  3D  Movies  Screen  for  Binocular  Vision  Problems  in  Children?     My  role:  Played  a  heavy  role  in  idea  development  and  experimental  design.  Prepared  the     budget.  2011  Women’s  Philanthropy  Council,  $75,000  (Applied,  Not  Funded)       Co-‐PIs:  Annie  Lang  and  Don  Lyon     Project:  3D  Movies  As  a  Screening  Tool  for  Binocular  Vision  Problems  in  Children     My  role:  See  above  2012  National  Institute  of  Drug  Abuse  (Applied,  Not  Funded)     PI:  Annie  Lang     Project:  Standardization  of  Motivational  Activation  Measure  &  Lifecycle  Hypothesis       My  role:  Supported  the  research  design,  sampling  plan  and  budget  creation.  Prepared  and     edited  documents.  2012  Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research  Training  Grant,  $1200  (Applied,  Not  Funded)     Applied  to  receive  funds  for  Dr.  Julian  Thayer  to  visit  IU  and  provide  specialized  heart  rate     variability  training     My  role:  Prepared  the  application  and  budget  in  full.  2012  Time  Warner  MediaLab  (Application  Underway)     PI:  Rachel  L.  Bailey     Project:  Food  Branding  and  the  Embedded,  Embodied  Media  Consumer  

HONORS AND AWARDS

GRANT SEEKING

Page 57: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  10    

  My  role:  Prepared  the  application  and  budget  in  full.  2012  Time  Warner  MediaLab  (Application  Underway)     PI:  Sean  Connolly     Project:  3D  Movies  As  a  Screening  Tool  for  Binocular  Vision  Problems  in  Children     My  role:  Significant  contributions  to  preparation  of  application  and  budget.      

Reviewer,  Information  Systems  Division,  ICA           2010-‐2012    Graduate  Student  Representative  to  the  Faculty         2011-‐2012  Meaningful  Play  Conference,  Programming  Committee       2012  Graduate  Student  Procedural  Committee           2011-‐2012  Graduate  Student  Representative  to  the  Graduate  Committee     2012-‐2013  Reviewer,  Computers  &  Education             2012    

Society  for  Psychophysiological  Research  International  Communication  Association  National  Communication  Association  Broadcast  Education  Association  Association  for  Education  in  Journalism  and  Mass  Communication                                            

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS

SERVICE

Page 58: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

  P a g e  |  11    

     

Annie  Lang  Distinguished  Professor  Telecommunications    Indiana  University  

Bloomington,  IN,  47405  [email protected]  

812.855.5824  Dissertation  Chair  

Kevin  R.  Wise  Associate  Professor  

Missouri  School  of  Journalism  University  of  Missouri  Columbia,  MO  65211  [email protected]  

573.844.0146  Thesis  Co-‐Chair  

Robert  F.  Potter  Associate  Professor  Telecommunications    Indiana  University  

Bloomington,  IN,  47405  [email protected]  

812.856.2546  Dissertation  Committee  

David  Pisoni  Distinguished  Professor  

Psychology  &  Brain  Sciences  Indiana  University  

Bloomington,  in  47405  [email protected]  

812.855.1155  Dissertation  Committee  

Maria  Elizabeth  Grabe  Professor  

Telecommunications    Indiana  University  

Bloomington,  IN,  47405  [email protected]  

812.856.2460  Dissertation  Committee  

Paul  D.  Bolls  Associate  Professor  

Missouri  School  of  Journalism  University  of  Missouri  Columbia,  MO  65211  [email protected]  

573.844.2689  Thesis  Co-‐Chair  

Glenn  Leshner  Professor  

Missouri  School  of  Journalism  University  of  Missouri  Columbia,  MO  65211  

[email protected]  573.844.6676  

Thesis  Committee  

Julia  Fox  Associate  Professor  Telecommunications    Indiana  University  

Bloomington,  IN,  47405  [email protected]  

812.855.9935  Collaborator  

Laura  Bright  Assistant  Professor  

Schieffer  School  of  Journalism  Texas  Christian  University  Fort  Worth,  TX  76129  [email protected]  817.257.5251  

Colleague,  Media  Research  Labs    

PROFESSIONAL REFERENCES

Page 59: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

SeanConnollyCurriculumVitae

IndianaUniversity–BloomingtonDepartmentofTelecommunications,andSchoolofInformatics&ComputingEmail:[email protected]:310.801.7642EDUCATION

IndianaUniversity InProgressPursuingajointmastersinthedesignandanalysisofadvancedmediapresentationsinpopularculture.ThroughtheMasterofArtsinTelecommunications,Ianalyzeandconceptualizemediaproductionswiththemostadvancedtechnologies,concepts,andmindsets.ThroughtheMasterofScienceinInformatics,Ianalyzeandcreateobject‐levelinteractionsandsystem‐levelexperienceswiththemostmoderntechnologies,concepts,andmindsets.Forme,thesetwoapproachesconvergeon3Dmoviesandtheimpactashiftto3Dmayhaveonaudiencesandpractitioners.DukeUniversity 1996Pursuedacombinationofthreedegreestoconstructandanalyzefeaturefilmproduct.BachelorsofScienceinPsychology(CognitiveConcentration).BachelorofArtsinEnglish(RhetoricConcetration).CertificateinFilm&Video(criticism).

AREASOFRESEARCHSPECIALIZATION

IfocusontheparticularnarrativestructureofAmericanfeaturefilmsandhowthedeliveryofthatstorystructure’smomentsisimpactedbydevelopingadvancedmediatechnologiesinpopularfilm.Imovefromtheveryhumanlevel–understandinghownewmediaelicitsdifferentpsychophysiologicalreactionsfromuser–tothesystemiclevel–howcreativepractitionersultimatelycometocommunicate,cogitate,andworktogethertobuildelaborateculturalproduct.

CONFERENCEPRESENTATIONS

Synergiesbetweenindustryandacademiainentertainment,NationalAssociationofBroadcasters/BroadcastEducationAssociation,LasVegas,Panel April2012MythsaboutinnovationatUniversities,BESTEntrepreneurshipConference(BuildingEntrepreneursinSoftwareandTechnology),Bloomington,Panel January2012Bridgingthegapsbetweenacademicresearchandindustryinentertainment,3DUserExperienceTechnicalSummit,Panel September2011

Page 60: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

TEACHING&ACADEMICAPPIONTMENTS

AssociateInstructor,T206,TheDesignofProduction Fall2011/Spring2012VolunteerSemesterLecturer,StudioSystems&Development Spring2011GuestLecturer,StorytellinginFiction(IUHonorsCollege) Fall2011

AdjunctProfessor,T331,Screenwriting Fall2010StudentTeacher,T453,3DStorytelling Fall2011UserExperienceSpecialist,UserExperienceGroup Fall2009–Fall2011

INVITEDGUESTSPEAKERS

Tosupplementgoodteaching,I’veinvitedanarrayofindustryfriendstoteleconferenceinandspeakwithstudentsabouthigh‐endfeatureentertainment:MartyBowen,ProduceroftheTwighlightfilmseriesaboutvampires.LaurenIungerich,CreatorofMTV’sAWKWARDaboutteenagegirlsinhighschoolKevinIwashina,CAAliteraryagentforSundancefilmfestivalBuzzHayes,DirectorofSony’s3DResearchCenterandUniversityInitiatives

GRANTSUNDERREVIEW

Can3Dmoviesscreenforbinocularvisionproblemsinchildren?CollaborativeinterdisciplinaryproposalunifyingtheSchoolofOptometry,DepartmentofTelecommunications,AdvancedVisualizationLab,andnewIUCinema.

3DDEVELOPMENTANDPRODUCTION

PartneredwithTelecommunicationsandAdvancedVisualizationLabtocreate3DStorytellingclassand3DResearchInitiative.Infullhavescripted,produced,shot,orconsultedonovertwenty3Dpiecesinthistime.Networkedindustrycontactstoshowstudentworkon3DChinanetworks,ESPN3D,and(upcoming)3NET.Anhourlength3DdocumentaryonTonyAwardwinningtangoperformerssettocompleteinMaywillbethefirstIUproducedentertainmentwe’llattempttosell.

UNIVERISTYSERVICE

ViceProvost’sSearchCommitteeforDeanofAcademicAffairs

ViceProvost’sCommitteeforOnlineIdentityRedesignofIU.EDU

IU’s3DResearchInitiative

IU’sInnovationCommunityCouncil

Page 61: Can 3D Movies Screen for Binocular Vision Problems in Children - Indiana

IU’sAlumnaeInitiativeonSecondLife

MANUSCRIPTSINPROGRESS:BOOKCHAPTER

ChapterontheparadigmshiftinSymbolSystemsintheHumanMediaInteraction.

ENTREPRENEURIALVENTURES

InformationExploration,LLCInformationExploration,LLCcreatesdigitalsearchvisualizationsandinteractionsthatenableuserstorefinesearchquerieswithmorefine‐grainednuancethancurrentlyofferedbyengineslikeGoogleorBing(patentpending).ScriptShark,LLCScriptSharkenablesaspiringscreenwritersacrosstheglobetohavetheirscreenplaysreadbythesamereaderswhoprovideactualscriptcoveragedocumentsforstudioexecutives.Ourlow‐cost,high‐volumeapproachprovedenormouslysuccessfulwithunknownwritersandwewereboughtin2001.

ENTERTAINMENTINDUSTRYSUMMARY

UniversalPictures May1999–Jun2004AsaStoryEditor,Ihelpedproductioncompaniesdevelopfromstoryconceptstostorytreatments,treatmentstoscripts,andscriptstofeaturefilms.Focusoncreatingbrandedexperiencesthatmatchlong‐termgoalsandmaximizereturnoninvestment.Analyzedculturaltrendstodevelopnewintellectualproperties. UnitedTalentAgency Jan1996–May1999AsaLiteraryAgent’sassistant,Ihelpedfind,refine,andmarketscreenwritersanddirectorstothefeaturefilmindustry.Helpednegotiateandmediatecontractualdemandsofclientsandensurecompliance.Networkedcontactstokeepabreastandaheadofindustryandculturaltrends.High‐profile,high‐demandclientele.