By Region
By Topic
Asia
- China: Media use and satisfaction with government during a pandemic
- Fandom Nationalism in China: Effects of Idol Adoration and Online Fan Community Engagement
- Social media engagement against fear of restrictions and surveillance: The mediating role of privacy management
- Social media expression, political extremity, and reduced network interaction: An imagined audience approach
- Social media, messaging apps, and affective polarization in the United States and Japan
- Chatting in a mobile chamber: Effects of instant messenger use on tolerance toward political misinformation among South Koreans
Latin America
- WhatsApp, Polarization and Non-conventional political participation: Chile and Colombia before the Social Outbursts of 2019
- The Connection Between Perceptions of Media Bias and Influence and Affective Polarization - An Examination in Brazil and Mexico and the United States
- Political tolerance of demobilizing armed actors: The case of FARC in Colombia
- Entertainment, News, and Income Inequality. How Colombian media shape perceptions of income inequality and why it matters
- Silencing Political Opinions: An Assessment of the Influence of Geopolitical Contexts in Colombia
- Egocentric Publics and Corrective Action
- “Corrective” actions in the public sphere: How perceptions of media effects shape political behaviors
- Strategy versus understanding: How orientations towards political conversation influence political engagement
- Agreeing not to Disagree: Iterative vs. Episodic Forms of Political Participatory Behaviors
North America
- Perceiving Immigrants as a Threat: A Motivational Approach to False Consensus
- The more you know, the less you like: A comparative study of how news and political conversation shape political knowledge and affective polarization
- Communication mediation model predicting political participation among instant messaging app users: An OSROR approach
- The politics of unfriending: User filtration in response to political disagreement on social media
- Social Media and Perceived Political Polarization: Role of Perceived Platform Affordances, Participation in Uncivil Political Discussion, and Perceived Others’ Engagement
Global
- The Contexts of Political Participation: The Communication Mediation Model Under Varying Structural Conditions of the Public Sphere
- Perceived Media Bias and Political Action: A 17-country comparison
- A Call to Contextualize Public Opinion-Based Research in Political Communication
- Taming the digital information tide to promote equality
- Why Are “Others” So Polarized? Perceived Political Polarization and Media Use in 10 Countries
- The networked public sphere
Political Engagement
- China: Media use and satisfaction with government during a pandemic
- Fandom Nationalism in China: Effects of Idol Adoration and Online Fan Community Engagement
- Social media engagement against fear of restrictions and surveillance: The mediating role of privacy management
- Social media expression, political extremity, and reduced network interaction: An imagined audience approach
- Communication mediation model predicting political participation among instant messaging app users: An OSROR approach
- Agreeing not to Disagree: Iterative vs. Episodic Forms of Political Participatory Behaviors
Political Polarization
- WhatsApp, Polarization and Non-conventional political participation: Chile and Colombia before the Social Outbursts of 2019
- Social media expression, political extremity, and reduced network interaction: An imagined audience approach
- The more you know, the less you like: A comparative study of how news and political conversation shape political knowledge and affective polarization
- Social media, messaging apps, and affective polarization in the United States and Japan
- The Connection Between Perceptions of Media Bias and Influence and Affective Polarization - An Examination in Brazil and Mexico and the United States
- Political tolerance of demobilizing armed actors: The case of FARC in Colombia
- The politics of unfriending: User filtration in response to political disagreement on social media
- Why Are “Others” So Polarized? Perceived Political Polarization and Media Use in 10 Countries
- Social Media and Perceived Political Polarization: Role of Perceived Platform Affordances, Participation in Uncivil Political Discussion, and Perceived Others’ Engagement