All Stories

  1. Disconnection: How Measured Separations From Journalistic Norms and Labor Can Help Sustain Journalism
  2. Making Sources Visible: Representation of Evidence in News Texts, 2007–2019
  3. “Not Their Fault, but Their Problem”: Organizational Responses to the Online Harassment of Journalists
  4. Legitimating a platform: evidence of journalists’ role in transferring authority to Twitter
  5. Surveying journalists in the “New Normal”: Considerations and recommendations
  6. Tweeting Outside the Lines: Normalization and Fragmentation as Political Reporters Break from the Mainstream
  7. A Personalized Self-image: Gender and Branding Practices Among Journalists
  8. Aggregation, Clickbait and Their Effect on Perceptions of Journalistic Credibility and Quality
  9. Media work, identity, and the motivations that shape branding practices among journalists: An explanatory framework
  10. A Decade of Research on Social Media and Journalism: Assumptions, Blind Spots, and a Way Forward
  11. Twitter’s influence on news judgment: An experiment among journalists
  12. A Clearer Picture
  13. Political Journalists’ Normalization of Twitter
  14. Multiplatform news consumption and its connections to civic engagement
  15. Mobile News Consumption
  16. How journalists engage in branding on Twitter: individual, organizational, and institutional levels
  17. Twitter as a tool for and object of political and electoral activity: Considering electoral context and variance among actors
  18. Identity lost? The personal impact of brand journalism
  19. From Thinking to Doing: Effects of Different Social Norms on Ethical Behavior in Journalism
  20. Gaming Social Capital: Exploring Civic Value in Multiplayer Video Games
  21. What journalists retweet: Opinion, humor, and brand development on Twitter
  22. Reporters' Smartphone Use Improves Quality of Work
  23. Fact Checking the Campaign
  24. Social Media, Political Expression, and Political Participation: Panel Analysis of Lagged and Concurrent Relationships
  25. Branding (Health) Journalism
  26. How journalists used Twitter in the 2012 election campaign