All Stories

  1. Misperceptions in sociopolitical context: belief sensitivity’s relationship with battleground state status and partisan segregation
  2. Engagement with fact-checked posts on Reddit
  3. Comparing beliefs in falsehoods based on satiric and non-satiric news
  4. Correcting misperceptions of gun policy support can foster intergroup cooperation between gun owners and non-gun owners
  5. Changes in COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy Among Black and White Individuals in the US
  6. Conservatives’ susceptibility to political misperceptions
  7. Better Crowdcoding: Strategies for Promoting Accuracy in Crowdsourced Content Analysis
  8. Public Opinion Perceptions, Private Support, and Public Actions of US Adults Regarding Gun Safety Policy
  9. Processing Style and Responsiveness to Corrective Information
  10. New Evidence on Group Polarization From Partisan Media to Misperception: Affective Polarization as Mediator
  11. Toeing the Party Lie: Ostracism Promotes Endorsement of Partisan Election Falsehoods
  12. Flagging Facebook Falsehoods: Self-Identified Humor Warnings Outperform Fact Checker and Peer Warnings
  13. Promoting Persuasion With Ideologically Tailored Science Messages: A Novel Approach to Research on Emphasis Framing
  14. Social media’s contribution to political misperceptions in U.S. Presidential elections
  15. Rumor Acceptance during Public Health Crises: Testing the Emotional Congruence Hypothesis
  16. Social Identity, Selective Exposure, and Affective Polarization: How Priming National Identity Shapes Attitudes Toward Immigrants Via News Selection
  17. Threading is Sticky
  18. The “Echo Chamber” Distraction: Disinformation Campaigns are the Problem, Not Audience Fragmentation
  19. Epistemic beliefs’ role in promoting misperceptions and conspiracist ideation
  20. Strategies for Countering False Information and Beliefs about Climate Change
  21. On retiring concepts
  22. Biased news sites promote misperceptions without hiding evidence
  23. Candidate Vulnerability and Exposure to Counterattitudinal Information: Evidence From Two U.S. Presidential Elections
  24. The new information frontier: toward a more nuanced view of social movement communication
  25. New Technologies and Social Movements
  26. Why Do Partisan Audiences Participate? Perceived Public Opinion as the Mediating Mechanism
  27. The Partisan Brain
  28. Political Participation and Ideological News Online: “Differential Gains” and “Differential Losses” in a Presidential Election Cycle
  29. Communication Modalities and Political Knowledge
  30. Partisan Paths to Exposure Diversity: Differences in Pro- and Counterattitudinal News Consumption
  31. Implications of Pro- and Counterattitudinal Information Exposure for Affective Polarization
  32. Electoral Consequences of Political Rumors: Motivated Reasoning, Candidate Rumors, and Vote Choice during the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election
  33. Selective Exposure: New Methods and New Directions
  34. Undermining the Corrective Effects of Media-Based Political Fact Checking? The Role of Contextual Cues and Naïve Theory
  35. The promise and peril of real-time corrections to political misperceptions
  36. Bursting your (filter) bubble
  37. A Turn Toward Avoidance? Selective Exposure to Online Political Information, 2004–2008
  38. Resisting Political Fragmentation on the Internet
  39. Troubling Consequences of Online Political Rumoring
  40. The Internet electorate
  41. E-DEMOCRACY WRIT SMALL
  42. On-line and Memory-based: Revisiting the Relationship Between Candidate Evaluation Processing Models
  43. A New Era of Minimal Effects? A Response to Bennett and Iyengar
  44. Politically Motivated Reinforcement Seeking: Reframing the Selective Exposure Debate
  45. Echo chambers online?: Politically motivated selective exposure among Internet news users
  46. Disaffection or expected outcomes: Understanding personal Internet use during work
  47. On Cyberslacking: Workplace Status and Personal Internet Use at Work
  48. Selective Processes, Exposure, Perception, Memory
  49. IM = Interruption Management? Instant Messaging and Disruption in the Workplace
  50. Revolutionary Secrets: Technology’s Role in the South African Anti-Apartheid Movement
  51. Which Telework? Defining and Testing a Taxonomy of Technology-Mediated Work at a Distance
  52. It's All News to Me: The Effect of Instruments on Ratings Provision
  53. Protest in an Information Society: a review of literature on social movements and new ICTs
  54. Testing the Effectiveness of Interactive Multimedia for Library-User Education