Dr. Judith Meinert
Wissenschaftliche MitarbeiterinDr. Judith Meinert
Anschrift | Forsthausweg 2 47057 Duisburg |
Raum | LE 206 |
Telefon | +49 203 379 - 2345 |
Sprechstunde | nach Vereinbarung per E-Mail! |
judith.meinert@uni-due.de |
Forschungsinteressen
- Privacy in social media
- Privacy in education and schools, perceptions and necessary requirements for children, teenagers, teachers, and parents
- All processes concerning digitalisation and E-Society
- Credibility in social media communication
- Cognitive heuristics in decision making and judgments
- Credibility assessments of news and political information online
- Fakes news - distribution processes, perceptions and consequences for attitude formation and behavioural outcomes
- Political communication in social media (with a focus to personalized communication styles)
- Social movements in social media
Curriculum Vitae
Übersicht
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Akademische Qualifikationen
Oktober 2019
Promotion
April 2012 - Februar 2015
Master-Studium der Angewandten Kognitions- und Medienwissenschaften mit der Vertiefungsrichtung Psychologie, Universität Duisburg-Essen
Oktober 2008 - März 2012
Bachelor-Studium der Angewandten Kognitions- und Medienwissenschaften, Universität Duisburg-Essen
Beruflicher Werdegang
Seit Dezember 2016
Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin am Lehrstuhl Sozialpsychologie: Medien und Kommunikation (Abteilung: Informatik und angewandte Kognitionswissenschaft) an der Universität Duisburg-Essen (Leitung: Prof. Dr. Nicole C. Krämer)
April 2014 - November 2016
IT Project Management bei der Xella International GmbH
Forschungsprojekte
Ab Oktober 2019
Forum Privatheit (BMBF-Projekt)
Mai 2019 - September 2019
DORIAN -Fake News finden und bekämpfen- (BMBF-Projekt)
Dezember 2016 - Mai 2019
Research Associate in the Research Training Group “User-Centred Social Media (UCSM)”
Publikationen
2022
Meier, Y., Meinert, J., & Krämer, N. C. (2022). One-Time Decision or Continual Adjustment? A Longitudinal Study of the Within-Person Privacy Calculus among Users and Non-Users of a COVID-19 Contact Tracing App. Media Psychology, 1-18.
Meinert, J., Mertin, M., & Krämer, N.C. (2022). For What Do You Want to Share in the Service of Health? - Perceived Benefits and Privacy Concerns in the Context of Self-Tracked Data. Paper presented at the annual conference of the International Communication Association (May 2022). Paris, France.
Meinert, J., & Krämer, N. C. (2022). How the expertise heuristic accelerates decision-making and credibility judgments in social media by means of effort reduction. Plos one, 17(3), e0264428.
Meier, Y., Meinert, J., & Krämer, N. C. (2022). Von Schutzbedürfnissen und Schutzverhalten. In Die Zukunft von Privatheit und Selbstbestimmung (pp. 189-213). Springer Vieweg, Wiesbaden.
Meinert, J., & Krämer, N. C. (2022). Digitales Lernen–Welche Rolle spielt die Privatheit der Daten von Schüler: innen bei der Nutzung von Lernsoftware?. In Selbstbestimmung, Privatheit und Datenschutz (pp. 191-206). Springer Vieweg, Wiesbaden.
2021
Szczuka, J. M., Meinert, J., & Krämer, N. (2020). Listen to the Scientists: effects of exposure to scientists and general media consumption on cognitive, affective and behavioral mechanisms during the COVID-19 pandemic. PsyArXiv. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/6j8qd
Meinert, J., Meier, Y., & Krämer, N. C. (2021). Privatheit aus medienpsychologischer Perspektive: Folgen der zunehmenden Digitalisierung für Kinder und Jugendliche. In I. Stapf, R. Ammicht Quinn, M. Friedewald, J. Heesen, & N. C. Krämer (Hrsg.): Aufwachsen in überwachten Umgebungen – Interdisziplinäre Positionen zu Privatheit und Datenschutz in Kindheit und Jugend (S. 37 – 59). Nomos.
Stapf, I., Meinert, J., Heesen, J., Krämer, N., Ammicht, R., Quinn, F. B., ... & Ochs, C. (2021). Das Recht von Kindern und Jugendlichen auf Privatheit in digitalen Umgebungen: Handlungsempfehlungen des Forum Privatheit. Aufwachsen in überwachten Umgebungen.
Meier, Y., Meinert, J., & Krämer, N. C. (2021). Investigating factors that affect the adoption of Covid-19 contact-tracing apps. A privacy calculus perspective. Technology, Mind, and Behavior, 2(3). https://doi.org/10.1037/tmb0000040.
Meier, Y., Meinert, J., & Krämer, N. C. (2021, September). A multilevel approach to investigate the adoption of the German Covid-19 contact-tracing app: separating between- from within-person effects. Poster presented at the 12th conference of the Media Psychology Division of the German Psychological Society, Aachen, Germany.
Krämer, N. C., Meier, Y., Ngo, T., Princi, E., & Meinert, J. (2021). Confidential interaction with algorithms? A systematization of new privacy challenges and reflections on theoretical conceptualizations. Paper to be presented at the 71st virtual Conference of the International Communication Association.
Mirbabaie, M., Brünker, F., Wischnewski, M., & Meinert, J. (2021). The Development of Connective Action during Social Movements on Social Media. ACM Transactions on Social Computing, 4(1), 1-21.
2020
Meinert, J. (2020). All you need is a (heuristic) cue? An Empirical Investigation of the Use of Social Media Cues and Features and Underlying Mechanisms for Credibility Judgments of News and Political Communication [Doctoral dissertation, University of Duisburg-Essen, Duisburg, Germany]. https://doi.org/ 10.17185/duepublico/72856.
Meinert, J., & Krämer, N. C. (2020). Which cues are credible?–The relative importance and interaction of expertise, likes, shares, pictures and involvement while assessing the credibility of politicians’ Facebook postings. In International Conference on Social Media and Society (pp. 299-308).
Brünker, F., Wischnewski, M., Mirbabaie, M., & Meinert, J. (2020). The Role of Social Media during Social Movements – Observations from the #metoo Debate on Twitter. In Proceedings of the 52nd Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS). Maui, Hawaii.
2019
Meinert & Krämer (2019). #instapolitics – How to communicate politics on Instagram? Paper presented at the 11th conference of the media psychology division of the German Psychological Society DGPs (September 2019). Chemnitz, Germany
Lippold, M., Meinert, J., & Krämer, N.C. (2019). Are credibility judgments heuristics? Critical reflection based on effort reduction principles. Paper presented at the annual conference of the International Communication Association (May 2019). Washington, USA.
Meinert, J., Aker, A., & Krämer, N. (2019). The Impact of Twitter Features on Credibility Ratings - An Explorative Examination Combining Psychological Measurements and Feature Based Selection Methods. In Proceedings of the 52nd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Maui, Hawaii.
2018
Meinert, J., Mirbabaie, M., Dungs, S., & Aker, A. (2018). Is it really fake? –Towards an understanding of fake news in social media communication. In International Conference on Social Computing and Social Media (pp. 484-497). Springer, Cham.
2017
Meinert, J., Winter, S. & Krämer, N.C. (2016). The Personal is Political – The Influence of Facebook Status Updates on the Perception of Politicians. Paper presented at the 10th conference of the media psychology division of the German Psychological Society DGPs (September 2017). Landau, Germany
2016
Meinert, J., Winter, S. & Krämer, N.C. (2016). The Personal is Political – The Influence of Facebook Status Updates on the Perception of Politicians, Paper presented at the annual conference of the International Communication Association (June 2016). Fukuoka, Japan.
2014
Winter, S., Neubaum, G., Eimler, S. C., Gordon, V., Theil, J., Herrmann, J., Meinert, J., & Krämer, N. C. (2014). Another brick in the Facebook wall–How personality traits relate to the content of status updates. Computers in Human Behavior, 34, 194-202.