
The 21st century has seen the use of media technologies become thoroughly integrated with our daily lives: most of us feel lost without our mobile device in hand, check social media multiple times a day, and turn to digital entertainment in our free time. This shift has spurred the emergence of media psychology: a multidisciplinary approach to studying how people use, process, and are affected by the media and technology they engage every day.This second edition of The Oxford Handbook of Media Psychology brings together leading experts in the field to update what is a rapidly evolving area of study. Returning contributors expand chapters on the history and progress of media literacy, research methods, parasocial experiences, and race and the media, among others. New chapters tackle cutting-edge issues like artificial intelligence, research in media and social justice, the impact of deep-fakes and social media on conspiracy theories, the psychology of fandom, the self as reflected in avatars, the evolution of video games and virtual reality, and the psychological experience of the pandemic related to media use.Together, this volume retains and broadens our understanding of the foundational aspects of media psychology, from research methods and theory to fields like cognitive and developmental psychology. It presents novel approaches to how we conceptualize, operationalize, and analyze media psychological phenomena. Building on the field-defining research of the first edition, this update collects scholarship covering the most essential developments in media psychology in the last decade.
This volume investigates the multidisciplinary field of media psychology, examining how human cognition, behavior, and social interaction are shaped by constant engagement with digital technologies. Edited by Karen E. Shackleford and Nicholas D. Bowman, the handbook synthesizes contributions from leading scholars to provide a comprehensive framework for understanding the psychological mechanisms underlying media use. The text integrates foundational theories with contemporary research to address how rapid technological shifts influence individual and societal well-being.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this handbook as a foundational reference for students and researchers navigating the rapidly evolving intersection of psychology and digital media. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a comprehensive resource for both theoretical grounding and current empirical inquiry in the field.
Page Count:
536
Publication Date:
2025-07-30
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0197689876
ISBN-13:
9780197689875
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