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Call for Papers: Special Issue on "Revisiting Agenda-Setting Theory in the Age of AI."

  • 1.  Call for Papers: Special Issue on "Revisiting Agenda-Setting Theory in the Age of AI."

    Posted 10 days ago
    Edited by Tianchan Mao 10 days ago

    Dear Colleagues,

    This is a call for papers for a special issue of Communication and Change on "Revisiting Agenda-Setting Theory in the Age of AI."

    This special issue is edited by Lei Guo, Professor of Communication at Fudan University and Associate Editor of Communication and Change, alongside Chris Vargo (guest editor), Associate Professor of Advertising, Public Relations, and Media Design at the University of Colorado Boulder and Editor-in-Chief of The Agenda Setting Journal. David Weaver, Distinguished and Roy W. Howard Professor Emeritus of Journalism at Indiana University Bloomington serves as an advisor of the special issue.

    Theme:

    Developed more than five decades ago (McCombs & Shaw, 1972), agenda-setting theory has long served as a cornerstone of journalism and communication research, illuminating the processes through which news media influence public opinion around the world. As we enter the age of artificial intelligence (AI), the dynamics of agenda setting are undergoing profound transformations. AI technologies-from algorithmic news curation to generative AI creating personalized content-are redefining how media agendas are constructed, disseminated, and ultimately influence the public. These new AI-driven influences urge us to reconsider the foundations of agenda-setting theory and its relevance in the evolving information environment. Simultaneously, AI offers researchers an innovative set of research tools to explore agenda-setting effects in new and impactful ways.

    We invite original research articles and conceptual papers that examine the role of AI in the context of agenda-setting theory. We seek contributions from diverse cultural backgrounds and welcome cross-disciplinary research in particular. Although the issue considers a wide range of perspectives, it is focused on research rooted in the theoretical framework of "agenda setting" (McCombs & Shaw, 1972), its extensions such as agenda building, intermedia agenda setting, and agendamelding, its re-conceptualizations, as well as its interactions with other theoretical frameworks.

    We encourage submissions addressing, but not limited to, the following topics:

    1.  Content Curation and Algorithmic Agenda Setting: Examining the role of algorithms within agenda setting in digital spaces, focused on how algorithms prioritize certain news items, shape user opinions and engagement, and potentially perpetuate biases.

    2.  Emerging Agenda Setters: Exploring the rise of AI-driven entities – such as AI anchors and conservational agents – as new agenda-setters, their interactions with legacy media, and their impact on public discourse.

    3.  Information Manipulation and Agenda Setting: Investigating how AI technologies, such as social bots and deepfakes, are used to manipulate information to steer the agenda-setting process.

    4.  Corporate Influence on Media Agendas: Exploring how corporate interests, including those of billionaires, major stakeholders, and multinational corporations, shape media narratives, with a focus on how AI technologies, driven by these corporate agendas, influence news prioritization and public perceptions.

    5.  Theoretical Advances of Agenda Setting:

    ● Further explication of key developments in agenda-setting theory, including agendamelding, network agenda setting, agenda building, psychology of agenda setting, and their implications for communication research in an AI-driven media landscape.

    ● Re-conceptualizations of agenda setting in the age of AI.

    ● The interplay between agenda setting and other foundational communication theories and concepts (e.g., framing, gatekeeping, priming, and selective exposure), their intersections, and collective implications in contemporary media environments.

    6.  Methodological Innovations: Exploring cutting-edge advancements in computational techniques, with a focus on leveraging AI – including large language models – to refine and enhance the study of agenda-setting dynamics.

    About the Journal:

    Communication and Change (C&C) is a peer-reviewed, open-access international journal dedicated to advancing the understanding of communication in the context of rapid technological and societal transformation. With emerging technologies such as AI and big data reshaping communication practices, social structures, and media landscapes, Communication and Change seeks to foster innovative research and theory-building that explores the dynamic interplay between communication and change.

    C&C is published by Springer and is institutionally based at the School of Journalism, Fudan University. Professor James E. Katz at Boston University and Professor Baohua Zhou at Fudan are the journal's co-Editors-in-Chief.

    Article Processing Charges

    Article Processing Charges (APC) is fully sponsored by Fudan University, Shanghai, China. No payment from the authors will be required.

    Submission Process:

    Authors are invited to submit extended abstracts (approximately 1,500 words, excluding references) outlining the manuscript's objectives and relevance to the special issue. The abstract should clearly demonstrate how the paper engages with the core theoretical framework of agenda setting. For empirical studies, please include a description of the research design.

    Please submit the abstract and author information to cac@fudan.edu.cn by June 30, 2025. Notifications regarding invitations for full papers or rejections will be promptly communicated. Full papers should be submitted through the journal's online submission system by October 1, 2025.

    For any inquiries about the special issue, please contact the editor, Lei Guo, at guo_lei@fudan.edu.cn.

    Note. Apologies for any potential cross-posting.



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    Tianchan Mao
    Fudan U, School of Journalism
    Shanghai
    China
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