Shu (Scott) Li, Ph.D.
Title: Assistant Professor
Dept/Program: School of Communication
Office: Kolbe Hall 110B
Phone: 330-972-4375
Email: sli10@uakron.edu
Curriculum Vitae: Download in PDF format
Biography
Shu (Scott) Li is an Assistant Professor in the School of Communication at the University of Akron. His research focuses on interpersonal influence, health persuasion campaigns, and nutrition intervention for healthy eating. In his most recent project, Scott investigated how message effects passed through interpersonal communication and produced individual health outcomes by identifying recurring patterns in the content and structure of campaign-induced conversations. His work has been featured in Journal of Health Communication, Human Communication Research, and Health Communication.
Research
Interpersonal influence; health persuasion campaign; nutrition intervention for healthy eating & obesity prevention
Publications
Dillard, J. P., Li, S. S., & Cannava, K. (2020). Talking about sugar-sweetened beverages: Causes, processes, and consequences of campaign-induced interpersonal communication. Health Communication. 37(3), 316-326.
Dillard, J. P., & Li, S. S. (2020). How scary are threat appeals? Evaluating the intensity of fear in experimental research. Human Communication Research, 46(1), 509-532.
Dillard, J. P., Kim, J., & Li, S. S. (2018). Anti-sugar-sweetened beverage messages elicit reactance: Effects on attitudes and policy preferences. Journal of Health Communication, 23(8), 703-711.
Krcmar, M., McGloin, R., & Li, S. S. (2018). “What is my Call of Duty?”: Exploring the importance of player experience in a first-person shooter video game. Journal of Gaming & Virtual Worlds, 10(2), 167-187.
Education
- Ph.D., 2022, Pennsylvania State University
- M.A., 2016, Wake Forest University
- B.A., 2009, University of Shanghai for Science & Technology
Courses
Health Communication, Persuasion, Communication Research Methods, Public Speaking
Areas of Responsibility
Health Communication; Strategic & Organizational Communication