內容註: |
v. 1. Trending Politics : Comparing Political Information Flows in Social Media and Traditional Media / Leticia Bode -- What Campaigns Become as Social Media Become the Infrastructure of Political Communication / G.R. Boynton , Huyen TT Le, Yelena Mejova, M. Zubair Shafiq, and Padmini Srinivasan -- Facebook in Presidential Elections : Status Effects / Caleb T. Carr, Rebecca A. Hayes, Andrew Smock, and Paul J. Zube -- From Home-Style to Twitter-Style : How Personal, District, and Campaign Characteristics Affect House Candidates' Twitter-Style / Heather K. Evans and Savannah Sipole -- Gender, U.S. House Campaigns, and the Twitterverse / Melinda Muller, Matthew Cain, Mariah Wallace, and Samantha Sarich -- Issue Coverage on Twitter : Evidence from Two 2014 Senate Races / Shamira Gelbman -- Social Media Use in U.S. Senate Campaigns : Initial Tactics with Twitter / Joan Conners -- Candidate Ethos through Social Media / Misty L. Knight -- Mexican Elections Travel to Social Media : How Citizens Participated Through YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter / Santiago Betancourt Gonzalez and Jose Luis Lopez -- Who Sees What? : Individual Exposure to Political Information via Social Media / Leticia Bode -- How Many People Saw Your Tweet? : Network Density among Twitter Followers / G.R. Boynton, Morgan Brittain, Kendal Corkle, Ryan Hall, Mitchell Khader, Thomas Panther, Brian Parks, Ryan Shellady, and Rachel Zuckerman -- You Have How Many Followers? / G.R. Boynton, Morgan Brittain, Kendal Corkle, Ryan Hall, William Hancock, Devon Jenses, Mitchell Khader, Thomas Panther, Brian Parks, Ryan Shellady, and Rachel Zuckerman -- The Influence of Political Intergroup Differences and Social Media Use on Political Discussion and Polarization / Paul Haridakis, Mei-Chen Lin, and Gary Hanson -- Comparing Social Media Use and Political Engagement : Toward a Valid Measurement Strategy / Ozan Kuru and Josh Pasek -- |