M.A./Ph.D. Recent Publications

Current graduate students

Calderwood, K. J. (in press). Discourse in the balance: American presidential discourse about climate change. Communication Studies, 1-18.

Calderwood, K. J. (forthcoming). Going global: Climate change discourse in presidential communications. Environmental Communication.

Crowley, J. P., Denes, A., Makos, S., & Whitt, J. (in press). The longitudinal effects of expressive writing on victims of relational transgressions. Health Communication, 1-13.

Kubler, K. (in press). New economy narrative? A comparative analysis of technology and economic recovery in the business press. Journalism Practice, 1-17.

Neumann, R., & Geary, D. (forthcoming). Reaching Muslims from the bully pulpit: Analyzing presidential discourse on Islam and Muslims from FDR to Trump. International Journal of Communication. 2017 Top Four Student Paper Award by the Political Communication Division, National Communication Association. 

Thomas, V. E. (in press). Gazing at “It”: An intersectional analysis of transnormativity and black womanhood in Orange is the New Black. Communication, Culture and Critique, 1-17.

Bennett, W. L., Segerberg, A., & Yang, Y. (2018). The strength of peripheral networks: Negotiating attention and meaning in complex media ecologies. Journal of Communication, 68(4), 659-684.

Champion, K., & Gunnlaugson, O. (2018). Fostering generative conversation in higher education course discussion boards. Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 55(6), 704-712.

Crowley, J. P., Denes, A., Makos, S., & Whitt, J. (2018). Threats to courtship and the physiological response: Testosterone mediates the association between relational uncertainty and disclosure for dating partner recipients of relational transgressions. Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology, 4(3), 264-282.

Denes, A., Crowley, J. P., Makos, S., Whitt, J., & Graham, K. (2018). Navigating difficult times with pillow talk: post sex communication as a strategy for mitigating uncertainty following relational transgressions. Communication Reports, 31(2), 65-77.

Hsiao, Y., & Yang, Y. (2018). Commitment in the cloud? Social media participation in the sunflower movement. Information, Communication & Society, 21(7), 996-1013.

Manbeck, K. E., Kanter, J. W., Kuczynski, A. M., Fine, L., Corey, M. D., & Maitland, D. W. (2018). Improving relations among conservatives and liberals on a college campus: A preliminary trial of a contextual-behavioral intervention. Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science, 10, 120-125.

Neumann, R., & Moy, P. (2018). You’re (not) welcome: The impact of symbolic boundaries, intergroup contact, and experiences with discrimination on immigration attitudes. American Behavioral Scientist, 62(4), 458-477.

Parks, E. S., & Barta, K. (2018). Are you my mother? Perpetuating gender inequality through listening expectations and relational roles. Journal of Research in Gender Studies, 8(1), 28-48. 2018 Top Paper Award by the Feminist Scholarship Division of the International Communication Association (ICA)

Straub-Cook, P. (2018). Source, please? A content analysis of links posted in discussions of public affairs on Reddit. Digital Journalism, 6(10), 1314-1332.

Zhou, Y., & Yang, Y. (2018). Mapping contentious discourse in China: Activists’ discursive strategies and their coordination with media. Asian Journal of Communication, 28(4), 416-433.

Kubler, K. (2017). State of urgency: Surveillance, power, and algorithms in France’s state of emergency. Big Data & Society, 4(2), 1-10.

Merrell, B., Calderwood, K. J., & Graham, T. (2017). Debate across the disciplines: Structured classroom debates in interdisciplinary curricula. Contemporary Argumentation & Debate, 37, 57-74.

Zhou, Y., & Yang, Y. (2017). Media strategy of social contentions in China: Comparing environmental and land requisition protests. Communication & Society, 40, 169-202.

Keary, P. (2016). The least of these: How Eduardo Diaz’s image of drug users in Pakistan offers an alternate media representation of addiction. Communication, Culture & Critique, 10(1), 131-147

Neumann, R., & Fahmy, S. (2016). Measuring journalistic peace/war performance: An exploratory study of crisis reporters’ attitudes and perceptions. International Communication Gazette, 78(3), 223–246.

Yang, Y. (2016). How large-scale protests succeed in China: The story of issue opportunity structure, social media, and violence. International Journal of Communication, 10, 2895-2914.

Merrell, B., Calderwood, K. J., & Flores, R. (2015). The intersection of competitions and classrooms in forensics pedagogy. Communication Studies, 66(4), 433-447.

Bradshaw, S. C., Coe, K., & Neumann, R. (2014). Newspaper attention to major presidential addresses: A reexamination of conceptualizations, predictors, and effects. Communication Reports, 27(1), 53-64.

Fahmy, S., & Neumann, R. (2012). Shooting war or peace photographs? An examination of newswires’ coverage of the conflict in Gaza (2008-2009). American Behavioral Scientist, 56(2), 1-26.

Neumann, R., & Fahmy, S. (2012). Analyzing the spell of war: A war/peace framing analysis of the 2009 visual coverage of the Sri Lankan Civil War in Western newswires. Mass Communication and Society, 15(2), 169-200. Top Paper Award, Second Place, Robert L. Stevenson Open Paper Competition, International Communication Division, AEJMC.

Coe, K., & Neumann, R. (2011). Finding foreigners in American national identity: Presidential discourse, people, and the international community. International Journal of Communication, 5, 819-840.

Coe, K., & Neumann, R. (2011). International identity in theory and practice: The case of the modern American presidency. Communication Monographs, 78(2), 139-161. 2011 Outstanding Article of the Year by the International and Intercultural Communication Division, NCA.

Coe, K., & Neumann, R. (2011). The major addresses of modern presidents: Parameters of a data set. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 41(4), 727-751.

TeBlunthuis, N., Bayer, T., & Vasileva, O. (2019, August). Dwelling on Wikipedia: Investigating time spent by global encyclopedia readers. In Proceedings of the 15th International Symposium on Open Collaboration. ACM. Skövde, Sweden.

Kiene, C., Shaw, A., & Hill, B. M. (2018). Managing organizational culture in online group mergers. In Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 2(CSCW), Art. 89.

Pina, L. R., Gonzalez, C., Nieto, C., Roldan, W., Onofre, E., & Yip, J. C. (2018). How Latino children in the US engage in collaborative online information problem solving with their families. In Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 2(CSCW), Art. 140.

TeBlunthuis, N., Shaw, A., & Hill, B. M. (2018). Revisiting “the rise and decline” in a population of peer production projects. In Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI ’18). New York, NY: ACM.

Dasgupta, S., Hale, W., Monroy-Hernández, A., & Hill, B. M. (2016). Remixing as a pathway to computational thinking. In Proceedings of the 19th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing (pp. 1438-1449). New York, NY: Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).

Kiene, C., Monroy-Hernández, A., & Hill, B. M. (2016). Surviving an Eternal September: How an online community managed a surge of newcomers. In Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, CHI ’16 (pp. 1152-1156). New York, NY: ACM.

Moy, P., & Neumann, R. (in press). Methodologies: Quantitative. In T. P. Vos & F. Hanusch (Eds.), The International Encyclopedia of Journalism Studies. Boston, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.

Coyer, K., & Wanstreet, R. (2015). Terms of service agreements. In R. Mansell & P. H. Ang (Eds.), The International Encyclopedia of Digital Communication and Society (Vol. 3, pp. 1005-1013). Boston, MA: John Wiley & Sons.

Neumann, R., & Coe, K. (2014). Using a mixed approach to content analysis: The case of apologetic rhetoric in the modern presidency. In A. N. Valdivia & F. Darling-Wolf (Eds.), The International Encyclopedia of Media Studies: Research Methods in Media Studies (Vol. 7) (pp. 277-302). Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.

Neumann, R., & Coe, K. (2011). The rhetoric in the modern presidency: A quantitative assessment. In J. A. Edwards & D. Weiss (Eds.), The rhetoric of American exceptionalism: Critical essays (pp. 11-30). Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co.

TeBlunthuis, N. (2018). [Review of Helen Margetts, Peter John, Scott Hale and Taha Yasseri, Political Turbulence]. Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 15(1), 1-2.

Neumann, R. (2017). [Review of Finn Brunton and Helen Nissenbaum, Obfuscation: A user’s guide for privacy and protest]. New Media & Society, 19(1), 154-156.

Calderwood, K. J. (2016). [Review of Eszter Hargittai and Christian Sandvig, Digital research confidential: The secrets of studying behavior online]. New Media & Society, 18(11), 2802-2803.

Howard, P. N., Shorey, S., Woolley, S. C., & Guo, M. (2016). Creativity and critique: Gap analysis of support for critical research on big data. Comprop Research Note. Oxford, UK: Project on Computational Propaganda.

Kubler, K. (2016). [Review of Frank Pasquale, The Black Box Society: The secret algorithms that control money and information]. Information, Communication & Society, 19(12), 1727-1728.

Swan, A. L. (2016). [Review of Howard Rosenbaum and Madelyn R. Sanfilippo, Online trolling and its perpetrators: Under the cyberbridge]. Media, Culture & Society, 39(2), 298-300.

Swan, A. L. (2016). [Review of Joseph M. Reagle Jr., Reading the comments: Likers, haters, and manipulators at the bottom of the web]. International Journal of Communication, 10, 1677-1680.

Neumann, R. (2015). [Review of Zohar Kampf and Tamar Liebes, Transforming media coverage of violent conflicts: The new face of war]. Political Communication, 32(1), 177-179.

Wanstreet, R. (2018, March 8). America’s farmers are becoming prisoners to agriculture’s technological revolution. Motherboard. Available at https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/a34pp4/john-deere-tractor-hacking-big-data-surveillance

Pan, L. (2016, February 26). Tea leaf nation: Why China isn’t hosting Syrian refugees. Foreign Policy. Available at http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/02/26/china-host-syrian-islam-refugee-crisis-migrant/

Recent alumni

Mari, W. (2019). A short history of disruptive journalism technologies: 1960-1990. London, UK: Routledge.

Parks, E. S. (2019). The ethics of listening: Creating space for sustainable dialogue. Lanham, MD: Lexington.

Woolley, S. C., & Howard, P. N. (Eds.) (2019). Computational propaganda: Political parties, politicians, and political manipulation on social media. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Celeste, M. (2017). Race, gender, and citizenship in the African diaspora: Travelling blackness (Series: Routledge Transformations in Race and Media, Vol. 7). New York, NY: Routledge. 2017 Outstanding Book Award by the African American Communication & Culture Division and the Black Caucus, National Communication Association (NCA) & 2018 Diamond Anniversary Book Award by NCA.

Howard, P. N., & Hussain, M. M. (2013). Democracy’s fourth wave? Digital media and the Arab Spring (Series: Oxford Studies in Digital Politics). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Hussain, M. M., & Howard, P. N. (Eds.) (2013). State power and information infrastructure. (Series: Politics and International Relations). London, UK: Ashgate Publishing.

Thurlow, C., & Mroczek, K. (Eds.). (2011). Digital discourse: Language in the new media. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Dengah, H. F., Gilmore, J., Brasileiro, M., Cohen, A. S., Thomas, E. B., Blackburn, J. B., … & Thomas, R. (2019). Cultural models of raça: The calculus of Brazilian racial identity revisited. Journal of Anthropological Research, 75(2), 157-182.

Fischer, M., & McClearen, J. (in press). Transgender athletes and the queer art of athletic failure. Communication & Sport.

Gilmore, J., & Rowling, C. M. (in press). Partisan patriotism in the American presidency: American exceptionalism, issue ownership, and the age of Trump. Mass Communication and Society.

Manusov, V., Stofleth, D., Harvey, J. A., & Crowley, J. P. (in press). Conditions and consequences of listening well for interpersonal relationships: Modeling active-empathic listening, social-emotional skills, trait mindfulness, and relational quality. International Journal of Listening, 1-17.

Meeks, L. (in press). Defining the enemy: How Donald Trump frames the news media. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly.

Meeks, L. (2019). Owning your message: Congressional candidates’ interactivity and issue ownership in mixed-gender campaigns. Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 16(2), 187-202.

Moon, R. (2019). Beyond puppet journalism: The bridging work of transnational journalists in a local field. Journalism Studies, 20(12), 1714-1731.

Nielsen, S. L., & Sheets, P. (in press). Virtual hype meets reality: Users’ perception of immersive journalism. Journalism, 1-17.

Parks, E.S. (2019). Listening to hybrid identities in medical contexts. International Journal of Listening 33(3), 163-167.

Parks, E. S. (2019). Listen first: Dialogic research ethics with Caribbean signing communities. Ethics & Behavior, 29(2), 156-166.

Robles, J. S., & Parks, E. S. (2019). Complaints about technology as a resource for identity-work. Language in Society, 48(2), 209-231.

Stofleth, D., & Manusov, V. (2019). Talking about mindfulness: An ethnography of communication analysis of two speech communities. Language & Communication, 67, 45-54.

Beam, R. A., John, S. L., & Yaqub, M. M. (2018). ‘We don’t cover suicide … (except when we do cover suicide)’: A case study in the production of news. Journalism Studies, 19(10), 1447-1465.

Bos, L., Sheets, P., & Boomgaarden, H. G. (2018). The role of implicit attitudes in populist radical‐right support. Political Psychology, 39(1), 69-87.

Coleman, M. C. (2018). Bots, social capital, and the need for civility. Journal of Media Ethics, 33(3), 120-132.

Coleman, M. C. (2018). Machinic rhetorics and the influential movements of robots. Review of Communication, 18(4), 336-351.

Coleman, M. C. (2018). The role of patience in arguments about vaccine science. Western Journal of Communication, 82(4), 513-528.

Gilmore, J., & Rowling, C. M. (2018). Lighting the beacon: Presidential discourse, American exceptionalism, and public diplomacy in global contexts. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 48(2), 271-291.

Gilmore, J., & Rowling, C. (2018). A post-American world? Assessing the cognitive and attitudinal impacts of challenges to American exceptionalism. The Communication Review, 21(1), 46-65.

Guo, M. (2018). Playfulness, parody and carnival: Catchphrases and mood on the Chinese internet from 2003 to 2015. Communication and the Public, 3(2), 134-150.

Habel, P., Moon, R., & Fang, A. (2018). News and information leadership in the digital age. Information, Communication & Society, 21(11), 1604-1619.

Howard, P. N., Woolley, S., & Calo, R. (2018). Algorithms, bots, and political communication in the US 2016 election: The challenge of automated political communication for election law and administration. Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 15(2), 81-93.

Mari, W. (2018). Technology in the newsroom: Adoption of the telephone and the radio car from c. 1920 to 1960. Journalism Studies, 19(9), 1366-1389.

Mari, W. (2018). Unionization in the American newsroom, 1930 to 1960. Journal of Historical Sociology, 31(3), 265-281.

McClearen, J. (2018). Introduction | Women in sports media: New scholarly engagements. Feminist Media Studies, 18(5), 942-945.

Meeks, L. (2018). Appealing to the 52%: Exploring Clinton and Trump’s appeals to women voters during the 2016 US presidential election. International Journal of Communication, 12, 2527-2545.

Meeks, L. (2018). Questioning the president: Examining gender in the White House press corps. Journalism, 19(4), 519-535.

Meeks, L. (2018). Tweeted, deleted: theoretical, methodological, and ethical considerations for examining politicians’ deleted tweets. Information, Communication & Society, 21(1), 1-13.

Moon, R. (2018). Getting into living rooms: NGO media relations work as strategic practice. Journalism, 19(7), 1011-1026.

Parks, E. S., & Barta, K. (2018). Are you my mother? Perpetuating gender inequality through listening expectations and relational roles. Journal of Research in Gender Studies, 8(1), 28-48. 2018 Top Paper Award by the Feminist Scholarship Division of the International Communication Association (ICA)

Pearce, K. E., Vitak, J., & Barta, K. (2018). Socially mediated visibility: Friendship and dissent in authoritarian Azerbaijan. International Journal of Communication, 12, 1310–1331

Rowling, C. M., Sheets, P., Pettit, W., & Gilmore, J. (2018). Consensus at home, opposition abroad: Officials, foreign sources, and US news coverage of drone warfare. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 95(4), 886-908.

Bos, L., Lefevere, J. M., Thijssen, R., & Sheets, P. (2017). The impact of mediated party issue strategies on electoral support. Party Politics, 23(6), 760-771.

Coleman, M. C. (2017). Rhetorical logic bombs and fragmented online publics of vaccine science. Journal of Contemporary Rhetoric, 7(4), 203-216.

Gilmore, J., & Rowling, C. M. (2017). The United States in decline? Assessing the impact of international challenges to American exceptionalism. International Journal of Communication, 11, 137-157.

McClearen, J. (2017). “We Are All Fighters”: The transmedia marketing of difference in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). International Journal of Communication, 11, 3224–3241

Meeks, L. (2017). Getting personal: Effects of twitter personalization on candidate evaluations. Politics & Gender, 13(1), 1-25.

Meeks, L. (2017). Thank you, Mr. President: Journalist gender in presidential news conferences. International Journal of Communication, 11, 2411-2430.

Neff, G., Tanweer, A., Fiore-Gartland, B., & Osburn, L. (2017). Critique and contribute: A practice-based framework for improving critical data studies and Data Science. Big Data, 5(2), 85-97.

Yaqub, M. M., Beam, R. A., & John, S. L. (2017). ‘We report the world as it is, not as we want it to be’: Journalists’ negotiation of professional practices and responsibilities when reporting on suicide. Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism, 1-17.

Wojcieszak, M., Azrout, R., Boomgaarden, H., Alencar, A. P., & Sheets, P. (2017). Integrating Muslim immigrant minorities: The effects of narrative and statistical messages. Communication Research, 44(4), 582-607.

Barta, K., & Neff, G. (2016). Technologies for sharing: Lessons from quantified self about the political economy of platforms. Information, Communication & Society, 19(4), 518-531.

Bellinger, M. (2016). The rhetoric of error in digital media. Computational Culture: A Journal of Software Studies, 5.

Coleman, M. C. (2016). Paralogical hyperbole: A “missing link” between technical and public spheres. Poroi, 12(1), Art. 5, 1-24.

Geist-Martin, P., Bollinger, B. J., Wiechert, K. N., Plump, B., & Sharf, B. F. (2016). Challenging integration: clinicians’ perspectives of communicating collaboration in a center for integrative medicine. Health Communication, 31(5), 544-556.

Gilmore, J., Sheets, P., & Rowling, C. (2016). Make no exception, save one: American exceptionalism, the American presidency, and the age of Obama. Communication Monographs, 83(4), 505-520.

Lelkes, Y., Malka, A., & Sheets, P. (2016). Democratic like us? Political orientation and the effect of making democracy salient on anti-Israel attitude. Journal of Experimental Political Science, 3(1), 97-107.

Meeks, L. (2016). Aligning and trespassing: Candidates’ party-based issue and trait ownership on Twitter. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 93(4), 1050-1072.

Meeks, L. (2016). Gendered styles, gendered differences: Candidates’ use of personalization and interactivity on Twitter. Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 13(4), 295-310.

Meeks, L., & Domke, D. (2016). When politics is a woman’s game: Party and gender ownership in woman-versus-woman elections. Communication Research, 43(7), 895-921.

Moon, R. (2016). A corpus-linguistic analysis of news coverage in Kenya’s Daily Nation and The Times of London. International Journal of Communication, 10, 2381–2401.

Parks, E. S., & Nishime, L. (2016). Extinction, genealogy, and institutionalization: Challenging normative values in popular endangered language discourse. Journal of International and Intercultural Communication, 9(4), 312-333.

Shorey, S., & Howard, P. N. (2016). Automation, big data and politics: A research review. International Journal of Communication, 10, 5032–5055.

Tanweer, A., Fiore-Gartland, B., & Aragon, C. (2016). Impediment to insight to innovation: Understanding data assemblages through the breakdown–repair process. Information, Communication & Society, 19(6), 736-752.

Woolley, S. C. (2016). Automating power: Social bot interference in global politics. First Monday, 21(4).

Bellinger, M. (2015). Bae caught me tweetin’: On the representational stance of the selfie. International Journal of Communication, 9, 1806-1817.

Bollinger, B. J. & Moran, M. (2015). To reach adolescents with high trait resistance and sensation seeking, taking risks may be beneficial: A case study of the truth campaign. Cases in Public Health, 8, 115-135.

Coleman, M. C. (2015). Connecting integrity, respect, and ethical disagreement in Darwin and Dawkins. Philosophy & Rhetoric, 48(3), 292-312.

Coleman, M. C. (2015). Courage and respect in new media science communication. Journal of Media Ethics, 30(3), 186-202.

Gilmore, J. (2015). American exceptionalism in the American mind: Presidential discourse, national identity, and US public opinion. Communication Studies, 66(3), 301-320.

Mari, W. (2015). An enduring ethos: Journalism textbooks and public service. Journalism Practice, 9(5), 687-703.

McClearen, J. (2015). Unbelievable bodies: Audience readings of action heroines as a post-feminist visual metaphor. Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, 29(6), 833-846.

McClearen, J. (2015). The paradox of Fallon’s fight: Interlocking discourses of sexism and cissexism in mixed martial arts fighting. New Formations: A Journal of Culture/Theory/Politics, 86, 74-88.

Pearce, K. E., Barta, K., & Fesenmaier, M. A. (2015). The affordances of social networking sites for relational maintenance in a distrustful society: The case of Azerbaijan. Social Media + Society, 1(2), 1-11

Rowling, C. M., Gilmore, J., & Sheets, P. (2015). When threats come from within: National identity, cascading frames, and the US war in Afghanistan. The International Journal of Press/Politics, 20(4), 478-497.

Rowling, C. M., Sheets, P., & Jones, T. M. (2015). American atrocity revisited: National identity, cascading frames, and the My Lai massacre. Political Communication, 32(2), 310-330.

Sheets, P., & Rowling, C. M. (2015). When journalists say what a candidate doesn’t: Race, nation and the 2008 Obama presidential campaign. International Journal of Communication, 9, 3621-3643.

Sheets, P., Bos, L., & Boomgaarden, H. G. (2015). Media cues and citizen support for right-wing populist parties. International Journal of Public Opinion Research, 28(3), 307-330.

Sheets, P., Rowling, C. M., & Jones, T. M. (2015). The view from above (and below): A comparison of American, British, and Arab news coverage of US drones. Media, War & Conflict, 8(3), 289-311.

Fesenmaier, M. A., Kaloumeh, L., Zhuang, Y., & Ivory, J. D. (2014). Revolutionary medium? Portrayals of social media in American and Egyptian newspapers’ coverage of the 2011 Egyptian Revolution. Newspaper Research Journal, 34(4), 113-127.

Gilmore, J. (2014). Translating American exceptionalism: Comparing presidential discourse about the United States at home and abroad. International Journal of Communication, 8, 2416–2437.

Hans, V. P., Gastil, J., & Feller, T. (2014). Deliberative democracy and the American civil jury. Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, 11(4), 697-717.

Knobloch, K. R., Gastil, J., Feller, T., & Richards, R. C. (2014). Empowering citizen deliberation in direct democratic elections: A field study of the 2012 Oregon Citizens’ Initiative Review. Field Actions Science Reports: The Journal of Field Actions, 11, 1-10.

Kolodziejski, L. R. (2014). Harms of hedging in scientific discourse: Andrew Wakefield and the origins of the autism vaccine controversy. Technical Communication Quarterly, 23(3), 165-183. Winner of the  2015 Association for the Rhetoric of Science, Technology and Medicine article of the year award.

Nielsen, C. E. (2014). Coproduction or cohabitation: Are anonymous online comments on newspaper websites shaping news content? New Media & Society, 16(3), 470-487.

Silova, I., Yaqub, M. M., Mun, O., & Palandjian, G. (2014). Pedagogies of space: (Re)imagining nation and childhood in post-Soviet states. Global Studies of Childhood, 4(3), 195-209.

Abel, A. D., & Barthel, M. L. (2013). Appropriation of mainstream news: How Saturday Night Live changed the political discussion. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 30(1), 1-16.

Coleman, M. C. (2013). Mashing and remixing: Using the quadripartita ratio in the aesthetic public sphere. Journal of Aesthetics & Culture, 5(1), Art. 20350, 1-9.

Barthel, M. L. (2013). President for a day: Video games as youth civic education. Information, Communication & Society, 16(1), 28-42.

Gilmore, J., Meeks, L., & Domke, D. (2013). Why do (we think) they hate us: Anti-Americanism, patriotic messages, and attributions of blame. International Journal of Communication, 7, 701-721.

Hussain, M. M., & Howard, P. N. (2013). What best explains successful protest cascades? ICTs and the fuzzy causes of the Arab Spring. International Studies Review, 15(1), 48-66.

Mead, M. A., & Silova, I. (2013). Literacies of (post) socialist childhood: Alternative readings of socialist upbringings and neoliberal futures. Globalisation, Societies and Education, 11(2), 194-222.

Meeks, L. (2013). He wrote, she wrote: Journalist gender, political office, and campaign news. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 90(1), 58-74.

Meeks, L. (2013). All the gender that’s fit to print: How the New York Times covered Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin in 2008. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 90(3), 520-539.

Namkoong, K., McLaughlin, B., Yoo, W., Hull, S. J., Shah, D. V., Kim, S. C., Moon, T. J., Johnson, C. N., Hawkins, R. P., McTavish, F. M., & Gustafson, D. H. (2013). The effects of expression: How providing emotional support online improves cancer patients’ coping strategies. Journal of the National Cancer Institute Monographs, 2013(47), 169-174.

Nielsen, C. (2013). Wise Latina: Framing Sonia Sotomayor in the general-market and Latina/o-oriented prestige press. Howard Journal of Communications, 24(2), 117-133.

Vats, A., & Nishime, L. (2013). Containment as Neocolonial visual rhetoric: Fashion, yellowface, and Karl Lagerfeld’s “Idea of China”. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 99(4), 423-447.

Fiore-Silfvast, B. (2012). User-generated warfare: A case of converging wartime information networks and coproductive regulation on YouTube. International Journal of Communication, 6, 1965-1988.

Gilmore, J. (2012). Ditching the pack: Digital media in the 2010 Brazilian congressional campaigns. New Media & Society, 14(4), 617-633.

Hussain, M. M. (2012). Journalism’s digital disconnect: The growth of campaign content and entertainment gatekeepers in viral political information. Journalism, 13(8), 1024-1040.

Meeks, L. (2012). Is she “man enough”? Women candidates, executive political offices, and news coverage. Journal of Communication, 62(1), 175-193.

Nielsen, C. (2012). Newspaper journalists support online comments. Newspaper Research Journal, 33(1), 86-100.

Pietrucci, P. (2012). Strategic maneuvering through shifting ideographs in political discourse: A rhetorical analysis of Silvio Berlusconi’s first Liberation Day speech. Journal of Argumentation in Context, 1(3), 291-311.

Vraga, E. K., Edgerly, S., Bode, L., Carr, D. J., Bard, M., Johnson, C. N., Kim, Y. M. & Shah, D. V. (2012). The correspondent, the comic, and the combatant: The consequences of host style in political talk shows. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 89(1), 5-22.

Howard, P. N., Agarwal, S. D., & Hussain, M. M. (2011). When do states disconnect their digital networks? Regime responses to the political uses of social media. The Communication Review, 14(3), 216-232.

Howard, P. N., & Hussain, M. M. (2011). The upheavals in Egypt and Tunisia: The role of digital media. Journal of Democracy, 22(3), 35-48.

Nahon, K., Hemsley, J., Walker, S., & Hussain, M. M. (2011). Fifteen minutes of fame: The power of blogs in the lifecycle of viral political information. Policy & Internet, 3(1), 1-28.

Parks, M. R., Faw, M., & Goldsmith, D. (2011). Undergraduate instruction in empirical research methods in communication: Assessment and recommendations. Communication Education, 60(4), 406-421.

Pietrucci, P. (2011). “Poetic” publics: Agency and rhetorics of “netroots” activism in post-earthquake L’Aquila. The Journal of Community Informatics, 6(3).

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