Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 43
pro vyhledávání: '"Daniel E. Bergan"'
Publikováno v:
Communication Monographs. :1-21
Publikováno v:
Mass Communication and Society. :1-23
Publikováno v:
Journal of Communication. 72:592-603
Research on misinformation and misperceptions often investigates claims that have already reached a critical mass, resulting in little understanding of why certain claims gain widespread belief while others fall into obscurity. Here we consider how v
Publikováno v:
Journalism Studies. 22:1911-1929
While generally understood as an individual-level effect, we argue that reinforcement effects—or the strengthening of existing party loyalties through media exposure—might also play a role in shapi...
Autor:
Siyuan Ma, Dustin Carnahan, Ezgi Ulusoy, Rachel C Barry, Daniel E. Bergan, Suhwoo Ahn, Johnny McGraw
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Public Opinion Research. 33:856-872
Much scholarly attention has been paid to the effects of misinformation on beliefs and attitudes, but rarely have studies investigated potential downstream effects of misinformation exposure on belief judgments involving subsequent factual statements
Autor:
Daniel E. Bergan, Dustin Carnahan
Publikováno v:
Political Communication. 39:166-183
While research consistently shows that fact-checking improves belief accuracy, debates persist about how to best measure and interpret expressions of factual beliefs. We argue that this has led to ...
Autor:
Daniel E. Bergan
Publikováno v:
Journal of Political Marketing. 20:251-254
It is a pleasure to introduce this special issue on the role of norms in the 2020 election. Social norms are unwritten rules that guide behavior (Chung and Rimal 2016). Democratic norms refer speci...
Publikováno v:
Journal of Political Marketing. 20:269-288
The rise of negative partisanship raises the possibility that perceptions of what the partisan out-group believes on a factual matter could serve as a cue for one’s own factual beliefs. In the curr...
Publikováno v:
Health communication.
Several extremely influential theories, including the multiple streams approach and punctuated equilibrium theory, predict that dramatic policy change occurs when problems are reframed. However, there is little direct evidence of how framing messages