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Dive into the research topics where Shawna R. White is active.

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Featured researches published by Shawna R. White.


Journal of Children and Media | 2016

Relation between active mediation, exposure to Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, and US preschoolers’ social and emotional development

Eric E. Rasmussen; Autumn Shafer; Malinda J. Colwell; Shawna R. White; Narissra Maria Punyanunt-Carter; Rebecca L. Densley; Holly Wright

Abstract This study explored the relationship between active mediation, exposure to Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, and key indicators of preschoolers’ social and emotional development. One hundred and twenty-seven children aged 2–6 either watched or did not watch 10 episodes of Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood over a two-week period. Results revealed that preschoolers who watched the program exhibited higher levels of empathy, self-efficacy, and emotion recognition when their regular TV-watching experiences are frequently accompanied by active mediation. This was especially true for younger preschoolers and preschoolers from low-income families. Implications for policy-makers, parents, producers of prosocial programming, and educators are discussed.


Journal of Children and Media | 2015

Restrictive Mediation and Unintended Effects: Serial Multiple Mediation Analysis Explaining the Role of Reactance in US Adolescents

Shawna R. White; Eric E. Rasmussen; Andy J. King

Extant research indicates that restrictive parental mediation, parents enforcing rules limiting children’s media use, produces unintended effects in adolescents. Speculation exists that these suboptimal effects are due to psychological reactance following a restrictive mediation interaction leading the adolescent toward defiant behavior. A survey of undergraduate students (N = 483) was conducted to investigate the process of psychological reactance as a mediating factor in the relationship between restrictive parental mediation and three unintended effects: negative attitude toward parents, positive attitude toward restricted content, and increased viewing of restricted content with friends. Results revealed a direct effect of restrictive mediation on attitude toward parent, but not attitude toward restricted content or viewing restricted content with friends. Moreover, the reactance process fully mediated restrictive mediation’s effect on attitude toward restricted content and viewing restricted content with friends, and partially mediated the effect on attitude toward parents.


Media Psychology | 2016

The Relation Between Norm Accessibility, Pornography Use, and Parental Mediation Among Emerging Adults

Eric E. Rasmussen; Nancy Rhodes; Rebecca R. Ortiz; Shawna R. White

Widespread access to and use of pornography has led to concern about the potentially negative effects of exposure to pornography on emerging adults—its largest user group. Past research shows that salient social norms can influence subsequent behavior. This study, therefore, explored the relationship between salient pornography-related norms and pornography use among emerging adults, as well as the relationship between parental mediation of pornography during adolescence and emerging adults’ salient pornography-related norms. Results revealed that emerging adults are more likely to view pornography when they hold a salient belief (norm) that their peers both approve of viewing and regularly view pornography. The study also found that parents’ provision of rules about viewing pornography during adolescence may reduce future pornography use by instilling the salient belief that the parent disapproves of viewing pornography. These findings suggest that the effect of rules in the home about adolescents’ use of pornography may persist into emerging adulthood.


Politics and the Life Sciences | 2015

Selective perceptions of hydraulic fracturing

Melanie A. Sarge; Matthew S. VanDyke; Andy J. King; Shawna R. White

Abstract. Hydraulic fracturing (HF) is a focal topic in discussions about domestic energy production, yet the American public is largely unfamiliar and undecided about the practice. This study sheds light on how individuals may come to understand hydraulic fracturing as this unconventional production technology becomes more prominent in the United States. For the study, a thorough search of HF photographs was performed, and a systematic evaluation of 40 images using an online experimental design involving N = 250 participants was conducted. Key indicators of hydraulic fracturing support and beliefs were identified. Participants showed diversity in their support for the practice, with 47 percent expressing low support, 22 percent high support, and 31 percent undecided. Support for HF was positively associated with beliefs that hydraulic fracturing is primarily an economic issue and negatively associated with beliefs that it is an environmental issue. Level of support was also investigated as a perceptual filter that facilitates biased issue perceptions and affective evaluations of economic benefit and environmental cost frames presented in visual content of hydraulic fracturing. Results suggested an interactive relationship between visual framing and level of support, pointing to a substantial barrier to common understanding about the issue that strategic communicators should consider.


Communication Research Reports | 2016

Do Individual Perceptions Matter in Pornography Effects? How Perceived General Acceptance and Influence of Pornography May Impact Agreement With Sex-Role Attitudes

Rebecca R. Ortiz; Shawna R. White; Eric E. Rasmussen

Pornography use is often associated with less-progressive sex-role attitudes, such as endorsement of a sexual double standard between heterosexual partners, but the process by which this relationship occurs is still largely unexamined. The present study was conducted to examine how perceptions about pornography may play a role in the relationship between pornography use and sex-role attitudes. Perceived general acceptance and perceived influence of pornography on most people partially mediated the relationship between pornography use and sex-role attitudes. The more participants reported using pornography, the more they believed pornography was generally accepted and had a positive influence; however, conversely to what was hypothesized, the more positive they perceived pornography’s influence, the less likely they were to report sex-role attitudes that endorse a sexual double standard.


Journal of Children and Media | 2015

Emerging adults’ responses to active mediation of pornography during adolescence

Eric E. Rasmussen; Rebecca R. Ortiz; Shawna R. White


PsycTESTS Dataset | 2018

Reactance Restoration Scale--Adapted

Shawna R. White; Eric E. Rasmussen; Andy J. King


PsycTESTS Dataset | 2016

State Reactance Measures

Shawna R. White; Eric E. Rasmussen; Andy J. King


Archive | 2015

Boomerang Effects in Restrictive Mediation: Investigating the Role of Reactance Using Serial Multiple Mediation Analysis

Shawna R. White; Eric E. Rasmussen; Andy J. King


Archive | 2015

Selective Perceptions of Hydraulic Fracturing: The Role of Policy Support, Message Evaluation, and Economic/Environmental Frames

Melanie A. Sarge; Matthew S. VanDyke; Andy J. King; Erik P. Bucy; Shawna R. White

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Matthew S. VanDyke

Appalachian State University

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