Mia Carbone
@miacarbone.bsky.social
44 followers 65 following 8 posts
UCLA PhD candidate studying news avoidance, psychophysiology, and identity. Fan of pop music and the Philadelphia Eagles.
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Reposted by Mia Carbone
dhrice.bsky.social
Also Mia is on the job market and you should hire her, she’s an amazing scholar!
miacarbone.bsky.social
That was fun!! Such a cool panel on politics and pop culture. Thanks to everyone who attended and to the other presenters for sharing their awesome projects. And, thanks Dan for letting me be the one to share this super fun and interesting paper
dhrice.bsky.social
Starting in a few minutes, @miacarbone.bsky.social will be presenting our paper on how partisanship is associated with different music preferences and content! #ICA25
miacarbone.bsky.social
That was fun!! Such a cool panel on politics and pop culture. Thanks to everyone who attended and to the other presenters for sharing their awesome projects. And, thanks Dan for letting me be the one to share this super fun and interesting paper
dhrice.bsky.social
Starting in a few minutes, @miacarbone.bsky.social will be presenting our paper on how partisanship is associated with different music preferences and content! #ICA25
Reposted by Mia Carbone
polcomm.bsky.social
The afternoon begins with the PhD students presenting their papers. Three sessions are held simultaneously. There is a lot of good research to catch up on! #PolcommPreconference25 #ICA25 #ICA2025
miacarbone.bsky.social
this study was quite a challenge (learning JavaScript and recruiting participants off the street are no joke!), but I’m so excited it’s finally out for the world to read 🥹
miacarbone.bsky.social
I find that, amongst subjects who decided to leave a video before it ended, most of the time (~70%) they left with decreased activation. on average, then, these findings uphold the idea from the physio literature that there is a positive correlation between activation and attention.
miacarbone.bsky.social
subjects navigated a custom built YouTube-like website w/ 35 pretested videos, and were allowed to watch each video they chose for as long as they wanted. there were entertainment and news clips, positive and negative. when they wanted to choose a new clip, they were given a choice of a random pair.
miacarbone.bsky.social
my first solo-authored paper (and the second chapter of my dissertation!) is out now in PLS 🥳 in this paper, using a psychophysiological experiment in a free-choice environment, I investigate whether increased activation leads to attention or avoidance 🧵 doi.org/10.1017/pls....
Affective (in)attention: Using physiology to understand media selection | Politics and the Life Sciences | Cambridge Core
Affective (in)attention: Using physiology to understand media selection
doi.org