SEARCH

SEARCH BY CITATION

Cited in:

CrossRef

This article has been cited by:

  1. 1
    Yi-Cheng Ku, Tsai-Hsin Chu, Chen-Hsiang Tseng, Gratifications for using CMC technologies: A comparison among SNS, IM, and e-mail, Computers in Human Behavior, 2013, 29, 1, 226

    CrossRef

  2. 2
    Nirupama Dharmavaram Sreenivasan, Chei Sian Lee, Dion Hoe-Lian Goh, Tweeting the friendly skies: Investigating information exchange among Twitter users about airlines, Program: electronic library and information systems, 2012, 46, 1, 21

    CrossRef

  3. 3
    Chiara Valentini, Stefania Romenti, Blogging about crises: The role of online conversations in framing Alitalia's performance during its crisis, Journal of Communication Management, 2011, 15, 4, 298

    CrossRef

  4. 4
    Hania Janta, Adele Ladkin, Lorraine Brown, Peter Lugosi, Employment experiences of Polish migrant workers in the UK hospitality sector, Tourism Management, 2011, 32, 5, 1006

    CrossRef

  5. 5
    Fangfang Gao, Renee Martin-Kratzer, Gender differences in Chinese journalists' blogs, Chinese Journal of Communication, 2011, 4, 02, 167

    CrossRef

  6. 6
    Barbara K. Kaye, Thomas J. Johnson, Hot Diggity Blog: A Cluster Analysis Examining Motivations and Other Factors for Why People Judge Different Types of Blogs as Credible, Mass Communication and Society, 2011, 14, 2, 236

    CrossRef

  7. 7
    Thierry Giasson, Vincent Raynauld, Cyntia Darisse, Hypercitizens from a Distinct Society, International Journal of Interactive Communication Systems and Technologies, 2011, 1, 2, 29

    CrossRef

  8. 8
    Yonghwan Kim, Understanding j-blog adoption: factors influencing Korean journalists' blog adoption, Asian Journal of Communication, 2011, 21, 1, 25

    CrossRef

  9. 9
    Bradley M. Okdie, Rosanna E. Guadagno, Daniel M. Rempala, Cassie A. Eno, Who Blogs in 2010?, International Journal of Interactive Communication Systems and Technologies, 2011, 1, 2, 1

    CrossRef

  10. 10
    Jenny Bronstein, Blogging in the Global Society, 2011,

    CrossRef

  11. 11
    Cecilia Strand, E-Health Communities and Online Self-Help Groups, 2011,

    CrossRef

  12. 12
    Thomas J. Johnson, Barbara K. Kaye, Daekyung Kim, Creating a Web of Trust and Change: Testing the Gamson Hypothesis on Politically Interested Internet Users, Atlantic Journal of Communication, 2010, 18, 5, 259

    CrossRef

  13. 13
    Barbara K. Kaye, Going to the Blogs: Toward the Development of a Uses and Gratifications Measurement Scale for Blogs, Atlantic Journal of Communication, 2010, 18, 4, 194

    CrossRef

  14. 14
    Antti Oulasvirta, Esko Lehtonen, Esko Kurvinen, Mika Raento, Making the ordinary visible in microblogs, Personal and Ubiquitous Computing, 2010, 14, 3, 237

    CrossRef

  15. You have free access to this content15
    Thomas J. Johnson, Shannon L. Bichard, Weiwu Zhang, Communication Communities or “CyberGhettos?”: A Path Analysis Model Examining Factors that Explain Selective Exposure to Blogs, Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 2009, 15, 1
  16. You have free access to this content16
    Veronika Kalmus, Pille Pruulmann-Vengerfeldt, Pille Runnel, Andra Siibak, Mapping the Terrain of “Generation C”: Places and Practices of Online Content Creation Among Estonian Teenagers, Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 2009, 14, 4
  17. 17
    Rebecca MacKinnon, Blogs and China correspondence: lessons about global information flows, Chinese Journal of Communication, 2008, 1, 2, 242

    CrossRef

  18. 18
    Dan Li, Gina Walejko, SPLOGS AND ABANDONED BLOGS: The perils of sampling bloggers and their blogs, Information, Communication & Society, 2008, 11, 2, 279

    CrossRef

  19. 19
    Pauline Hope Cheong, Alexander Halavais, Kyounghee Kwon, The Chronicles of Me: Understanding Blogging as a Religious Practice, Journal of Media and Religion, 2008, 7, 3, 107

    CrossRef

  20. 20
    Rosanna E. Guadagno, Bradley M. Okdie, Cassie A. Eno, Who blogs? Personality predictors of blogging, Computers in Human Behavior, 2008, 24, 5, 1993

    CrossRef

  21. 21
    Stephen A. Banning, Kaye D. Sweetser, How Much Do They Think It Affects Them and Whom Do They Believe?: Comparing the Third-Person Effect and Credibility of Blogs and Traditional Media, Communication Quarterly, 2007, 55, 4, 451

    CrossRef