On being human: An investigation of virtual influencers and activism
On being human: An investigation of virtual influencers and activism
Haley R. Hatfield (PhD student) and Aarum Youn-Heil (PhD student). (2023). On being human: An investigation of virtual influencers and activism [Paper Presentation]. 2023 AEJMC Midwinter Conference, Norman, OK.
Abstract: Social media influencers leverage their online fame to influence consumers' decision-making. With the advancement of immersive and interactive media technologies, virtual influencers (VIs) are rapidly catching up. As technology advances, the lines between responsibility and accountability blur because companies create and control VIs to portray a persona. Anthropomorphism, or the perception of human-like traits in non-human agents, can help to explain the humanness of VIs. Although VIs can look and act human, they cannot have human experiences like traveling or be harmed by dangerous social issues like racism and sexism. However, those consuming the images of VIs can. The current paper critically examines a famous VI known for advocating various social issues to understand the consequences of VI activism and how that may impact everyday consumers.
Related Research
-
Visual matters: Connecting aesthetic appeal and production quality of photos, infographics and data visualization to credibility of social media postsSalman Khawar, Yingdan Lu, Yilang Peng, Jiyoung Yeon (Ph.D. student) & Cuihua Shen. (2026). “Visual matters: Connecting aesthetic appeal and production quality of photos, infographics and data visualzation to credibility of social […]
-
“Identifying Ingredients That Make Mental Health Focused Short Videos Engaging: A Content Analysis of Source Type, Content Strategy, and Production FeaturesYen-I Lee (PhD Alum), Louise Ying-Chia Hsu, Di Mu, and Yan Jin. (Forthcoming). “Identifying Ingredients That Make Mental Health Focused Short Videos Engaging: A Content Analysis of Source Type, Content […]