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Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, Volume 25
Volume 25, Number 1, January 2020
- Editor's Note: Thank You to Reviewers. 1-3
- Mike Z. Yao, Rich Ling:
"What Is Computer-Mediated Communication?" - An Introduction to the Special Issue. 4-8 - Caleb T. Carr:
CMC Is Dead, Long Live CMC!: Situating Computer-Mediated Communication Scholarship Beyond the Digital Age. 9-22 - Andrew J. Flanagin:
The Conduct and Consequence of Research on Digital Communication. 23-31 - Kun Xu, Tony C. Liao:
Explicating Cues: A Typology for Understanding Emerging Media Technologies. 32-43 - Jeffrey William Treem, Paul M. Leonardi, Bart van den Hooff:
Computer-Mediated Communication in the Age of Communication Visibility. 44-59 - Eun-Ju Lee:
Authenticity Model of (Mass-Oriented) Computer-Mediated Communication: Conceptual Explorations and Testable Propositions. 60-73 - S. Shyam Sundar:
Rise of Machine Agency: A Framework for Studying the Psychology of Human-AI Interaction (HAII). 74-88 - Jeffrey T. Hancock, Mor Naaman, Karen Levy:
AI-Mediated Communication: Definition, Research Agenda, and Ethical Considerations. 89-100 - Scott W. Campbell:
Cutting the Cord: Social and Scholarly Revolutions as CMC Goes Mobile. 101-110 - Jiawei Sophia Fu, Chih-Hui Lai:
Are We Moving Towards Convergence or Divergence? Mapping the Intellectual Structure and Roots of Online Social Network Research 1997-2017. 111-128
Volume 25, Number 2, March 2020
- Tai-Quan Peng, Jonathan J. H. Zhu:
Mobile Phone Use as Sequential Processes: From Discrete Behaviors to Sessions of Behaviors and Trajectories of Sessions. 129-146 - Jingbo Meng, Soo Yun Shin, Arram Bae, Brandon Van Der Heide:
Time-Dependent Effects of Relational Composition on the Success of Online Wellness Challenge Groups. 147-162 - Laura Marciano, Peter J. Schulz, Anne-Linda Camerini:
Cyberbullying Perpetration and Victimization in Youth: A Meta-Analysis of Longitudinal Studies. 163-181 - Eveline Hage, Marjolein van Offenbeek, Albert Boonstra:
New Rules of Engagement: How Adaptation To Online Media Changes Older Adults' Social Connectedness. 182-197
Volume 25, Number 3, May 2020
- Yphtach Lelkes:
A Bigger Pie: The Effects of High-Speed Internet on Political Behavior. 199-216 - Artie Konrad, Susan C. Herring, David Choi:
Sticker and Emoji Use in Facebook Messenger: Implications for Graphicon Change. 217-235 - Renwen Zhang, Jiawei Sophia Fu:
Privacy Management and Self-Disclosure on Social Network Sites: The Moderating Effects of Stress and Gender. 236-251
Volume 25, Number 4, July 2020
- Nicholas A. Palomares, V. Skye Wingate:
Victims' Goal Understanding, Uncertainty Reduction, and Perceptions in Cyberbullying: Theoretical Evidence From Three Experiments. 253-273 - Kate Mannell:
Plural and Porous: Reconceptualizing the Boundaries of Mobile Messaging Group Chats. 274-290 - Valerie Belair-Gagnon, Seth C. Lewis, Colin Agur:
Failure to Launch: Competing Institutional Logics, Intrapreneurship, and the Case of Chatbots. 291-306
Volume 25, Number 5, September 2020
- Carmina Rodríguez-Hidalgo, Ed S. H. Tan, Peeter W. J. Verlegh, Ine Beyens, Rinaldo Kühne:
Don't Stress Me Now: Assessing the Regulatory Impact of Face-to-Face and Online Feedback Prosociality on Stress During an Important Life Event. 307-327 - Anneleen Meeus, Steven Eggermont, Kathleen Beullens:
Digital Distraction or Stimulated Self-Disclosure: Preadolescents' Mobile Device Use in the Family Context. 328-345 - S. Mo Jang, Yu-Jin Heo, Robert McKeever, Jung-Hyun Kim, Leigh Moscowitz, David Moscowitz:
Good News! Communication Findings May be Underestimated: Comparing Effect Sizes with Self-Reported and Logged Smartphone Use Data. 346-363
Volume 25, Number 6, December 2020
- Yang Wang, Sun Sun Lim:
Digital Asymmetries in Transnational Communication: Expectation, Autonomy and Gender Positioning in the Household. 365-381 - Carla Anne Roos, Namkje Koudenburg, Tom Postmes:
Online Social Regulation: When Everyday Diplomatic Skills for Harmonious Disagreement Break Down. 382-401 - Nicole B. Ellison, Penny Trieu, Sarita Schoenebeck, Robin Brewer, Aarti Israni:
Why We Don't Click: Interrogating the Relationship Between Viewing and Clicking in Social Media Contexts by Exploring the "Non-Click". 402-426
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