1st Edition

Immersed in Media Telepresence in Everyday Life

Edited By Cheryl Campanella Bracken, Paul Skalski Copyright 2010
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    "Over the next few decades, immersive media could fundamentally change the ways humans engage in entertainment, communication, and social interaction.  The current volume takes a step towards understanding this potential paradigm shift, combining insights from pioneers of the field of ‘presence’ with bright young scholars who bring a new perspective." Jeremy Bailenson, Stanford University, USA

    "This book provides an indispensable contribution to scholars in communication studies, computer science and psychology interested in the modes of being present in different media, and offers a careful historical and theoretical framework to the state-of-the-art research."Anna Spagnolli, University of Padova, Italy

    "Bracken and Skalski have assembled a collection of works from the world’s foremost authorities on telepresence, a topic that has gone understudied for years. Someone has finally assembled a comprehensive volume on the subject. This book is a must not only for those interested in telepresence, but for mass communication scholars of all kinds."Kenneth A. Lachan, University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA

    Immersed in Media highlights the increasing significance of telepresence in the media field. With contributions representing diverse disciplines, this volume delves into the topic through considerations of popular media types and their effects on users. Chapters in the work explain how the experience of presence can be affected by media technologies, including television, video games, film, and the Internet. They also discuss how presence experience mediates or moderates commonly studied media effects, such as enjoyment, persuasion, and aggression. These discussions are accompanied by overviews of the current state of presence research and its future. Ultimately, this work establishes the crucial role of telepresence in gaining a complete understanding of the uses and effects of popular media technologies.

    Table of Contents ? Immersed in Media: Telepresence in Everyday Life ? ? Part I: Telepresence and Entertainment Media Popular Media and Telepresence: An Introduction Cheryl Campanella Bracken & Paul D. Skalski Telepresence and Film Kimberly Neuendorf & Evan Lieberman Telepresence and Television Cheryl Campanella Bracken & Renée A. Botta Telepresence and Computers: A Ghost in the Machine? David Westerman & Paul D. Skalski Telepresence and Video Games Ron Tamborini & Nicholas D. Bowman ? Part II. Telepresence and Effects of Media 6. Telepresence and Persuasion Terry Daugherty, Harsha Gangadharbatla, & Laura Bright 7. Telepresence and Media Enjoyment Tilo Hartmann, Christoph Klimmt, & Peter Vorderer 8. Telepresence and Media Effects Research Paul D. Skalski, James Denny, & Ashleigh K. Shelton ? Part III. The Future of Telepresence 9. Mediated Presence in the Future John A. Waterworth & Eva L. Waterworth 10. The Promise and Peril of Telepresence Matthew Lombard 11. Popular Media and Telepresence: Summary and Conclusion Cheryl Campanella Bracken & Paul D. Skalski

    Biography

    Cheryl Campanella Bracken (Ph.D., Temple University) is an associate professor in the School of Communication at Cleveland State University. Her research interests include psychological processing of media content, and her work has been published in Media Psychology, Journal of Communication, and Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. She is on the Board of Directors of the International Society for Presence Research.

    Paul Skalski (Ph.D., Michigan State University) is an assistant professor in the School of Communication at Cleveland State University. His research interests include video games, new media technologies, and media effects. His work has been published in Media Psychology, Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, and the book Playing Video Games: Motives Responses and Consequences. He is a charter member of the International Society for Presence Research.