Associate Professor
Young Anna Argyris’s research centers on the design, development, and use of Information Technology to aid users’ decision-making.
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Young Anna Argyris is an Associate Professor in the Department of Media and Information at Michigan State University. She has received a Ph.D. in Management Information Systems from the Sauder School of Business, University of British Columbia, Canada.
Before joining MSU, she was an assistant professor at the Gabelli School of Business, Fordham University, and a visiting scholar at Carroll School of Management, Boston College.
Dr. Argyris’s research centers on the design, development, and use of
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Information Technology to aid users’ decision-making and create social influence. Her application areas center on health misinformation and social media influencers. With her collaborators in Computer Science, Dr. Argyris has developed deep learning models for classifying vaccine misinformation propagated on social media that hampers Human-papilloma virus vaccine uptakes among US teens. In addition, Dr. Argyris has applied deep learning models to identify how “visual congruence” (the similarity portrayed in visual elements of social media posts between message sources and recipients) can augment the sources’ influences on the receivers. From these studies, Dr. Argyris has proposed a new concept, visual congruence-induced social influence, which she uses to create influential social media campaigns to counteract health misinformation.
Her previous work has appeared in MIS Quarterly, Information Systems Research, Communication of the ACM, ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction, Journal of Information Technology, and International Journal of Electronic Commerce, among others.
She is an active contributor to the Information Systems community. She serves as an associate editor for many conferences, including International Conferences on Information Systems, and as an ad-hoc reviewer for renowned journals such as MIS Quarterly and Information Systems Research.
Dr. Argyris is the principal investigator of an R21 grant from the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, on the project entitled Development of a vaccine misinformation portal and its application to identifying the impact of social media vaccine posts on immunization rates during a global pandemic. Dr. Argyris is also a co-PI of the National Science Foundation, Future of Work program on team collaboration.
Sauder School of Business, University of British Columbia: Ph.D., Management Information Systems
KSHB | 2021-07-09
So, does the information people view on social media truly influence their real-world actions? Young Argyris, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the Media and Information Department at Michigan State University, is working to answer that question.
MSU Today | 2021-06-15
Though COVID-19 vaccines are widely available, many people in the United States have not received the vaccine and don’t plan on getting one. Assistant professor Young Anna Argyris, in the College of Communication Arts and Sciences, sheds light on the data and social media influences behind vaccine hesitancy.
MSU College of Communication Arts and Sciences | 2020-06-02
Assistant Professor Young Anna Argyris, 2019 Diversity Research Network Program Launch Awards Program Recipient, Investigates Anti-Vaxx Social Media Messaging Phenomenon.