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RECENT PUBLICATIONS IN COMMUNICATION JOURNALS

The following list references articles (by authors name and title of article) from select communication journals published, for the most part, between 1995 and 2004. For information on articles prior to that time, consult the following source: Matlon, R. J., & Ortiz, S. P. (Eds.). (1997). Index to journals in communication studies through 1995. Annandale, VA: National Communication Association.

2 COMMUNICATION EDUCATION 2007, Vol. 56(4) Stephen Gencarella Olbrys. Dissoi logio, civic friendship, and the politics of education. 353 Paul Schrodt, Paul D. Turman & Jordan Aoliz. Perceived understanding as a mediator of perceived teacher confirmation and students ratings of instruction. 370 Rose Sprinkle, Stephen Hunt, Cheri Simonds & Mark Comadena. Fear in the classroom: An examination of teachers use of fear appeals and students learning outcomes. 389 James C. McCroskey, Virginia P;. Richmond & Vickie E. Bennett. The relationships of student end-of-class motivation with teacher communication behaviors and instructional outcomes. 403 Sherwyn Morreale, Lawrence Hugenberg & David Worley. The basic communication course at U.S. colleges and universities in the 21st century: Study VII. 415 Patricia R. W. Clasen & Ronald Lee. Teaching in a sanitized world: An exploration of the suburban scene in public communication pedagogy. 438 Mark Hickson III. Why bother attending conferences. 464 (Raising the Question # 4) 2007, Vol. 56(3) Chad Edwards, Autumn Edwards, Qingmei Qing & Shawn T. Wahl. The influence of computermediated word-of-mouth communication on student perceptions of instructors and attitudes toward learning course content. 255 Rachel A. Smith & Brittany L. Peterson. Psst . . . what do you think? The relationship between advice prestige, type of advice, and academic performance. 278 Jonathan Adams, Margaret H. DeFleur & Gary R. Heald. The acceptability of credentials earned online for obtaining employment in the health care professions. Paul Schrodt, Paul L. Witt & Paul D. Turman. Reconsidering the measurement of teacher power use in the college classroom. 308 Paul D. Turman. The influence of athlete sex, context, and performance on high school basketball coaches use of regret messages during competition. 333 Mark R. Stoner. PowerPoint in a new key. 354 Jason J. Teven. Teacher temperament: correlates with teacher caring, burnout, and organizational outcomes. 382 Steven T. Mortenson. Should we teach personal transformation as a part of interpersonal communication? If so, how is it done? 401 (Raising the Question #7) 2007, Vol. 56(2) Matthew S. McGlone & Joshua Aronson. Forewarning and forearming stereotype-threatened students. 119 Franbklin J. Boster, Garry S. Mere, Anthony J. Roberto, Lisa Lindsey, Rachel Smith, Carol Inge & Renee E. Strom. The impact of video streaming on mathematics performance. 134 Timothy P. Mottet, Jessica Parker-Raley, Steven A. Beebe & Cory Cunningham. Instructors who resist college-lite: The neutralizing effect of instructor immediacy on students courseworkload violations and perceptions of instructor credibility and affective learning. 145 Dale Cyphert. Presentation technology in the age of electronic eloquence: From visual aid to visual rhetoric. 168

3 Heather E. Canary. Teaching ethics in communication courses: An investigation of instructional methods, course foci, and student outcomes. 193 Qin Zhang. Teacher misbehaviors as learning demotivators in college classrooms: A cross-cultural investigation in China, Germany, Japan, and the United States. 209 Qin Zhang, John G. Otezel, Xiafvang Gao, Richard G. Wilcox & Jiro Takai. Teacher immediacy scales: Testing for validity across cultures. 228 Steven A. Beebe. What do communication trainers do? 249 (Raising the Question #6) 2007, Vol. 56(1) Joseph P. Mazer, Richard E. Murphy & Cheri J. Simonds. Ill see you on Facebook: The effects of computer-mediated teacher self-disclosure on student motivation, affective learning, and classroom climate. 1 Mary B. McPherson & Yuhua (Jake) Liang. Students reactions to teachers management of compulsive communication. 18 Carolyn H. Rester & Renee Edwards. Effects of sex and setting on students interpretations of teachers excessive use of immediacy. 34 Blair Thompson. The syllabus as a communication document: Constructing and presenting the syllabus. 54 Desiree C. Duff, Timothy R. Levine, Michael J. Beatty, Jessica Woolbright & he Sun Park. Testing public anxiety treatments against a control placebo control. 72 Rebecca M. Chory. Enhancing student perceptions of fairness: The relationship between instructor credibility and classroom justice. 89 Melvin L. DeFluer: What is tenure and how do I get it? 106 (Raising the question #5) Schwartzman. Refining the question: How can online instruction maximize opportunities for all students? 113 2006, Vol. 55(4) Stephen Gencarella Olbrys. Dissoi logio, civic friendship, and the politics of education. 353 Paul Schrodt, Paul D. Turman & Jordan Soliz. Perceived understanding as a mediator of perceived teacher confirmation and students ratings of instruction. 370 Cheri Simonds & Mark Comadena. Fear in the classroom: An examination of teachers use of fear appeals and students learning outcomes. 389 James C. McCroskey, Virginia Richmond & Vicki E. Bennett. The relationships of student endof-class motivation with teacher communication behaviors and instructional outcomes. 403 Sherwyn Morreale, Lawrence Hugenberg & David Worley. The basic communication course at U.S. colleges and universities in the 21st century: Study VII. 415 Patricia W. Clasen & Ronald Lee. Teaching in a sanitized world: An exploration of the suburban schene in public communication pedagogy. 438 Mark Hickson III. Why bother attending conferences? 464 (Raising the question #4) 2006, Vol. 55(3) Michael McDevitt & Spiro Kiousis. Deliberative learning: An evaluative approach to interactive civic education. 247 Paul D. Turman & Paul Schrodt. Student perceptions of teacher power as a function of perceived teacher confirmation. 265

4 Scott W. Campbell. Perceptions of mobile phones in college classrooms: Ringing, cheating, and classroom policies. 280 Timothy P. Mottet & Steven A. Beebe. The relationship between student responsive behaviors, student socio-communicative style, and instructors subjective and objective assessments of student work. 295 Qui Zhang & John G. Oetzel. A cross-cultural test of immediacy-learning models in Chinese classrooms. 313 Lanette L. Pogue & Kimo AhYun. The effect of teacher nonverbal immediacy and credibility on student motivation and affective learning. 331 Jennifer H. Waldeck. What does personalized education mean for faculty and how should it serve our students. 345 (Raising the Question #3) 2006, Vol. 55(2) Steven T. Mortenson. Cultural differences and similarities in seeking social support as a response to academic failure: A comparison of American and Chinese college students. 127 Timothy P. Mottet, Jessica Parker-Raley, Cory Cunninghman, Steven A. Beebe & Paul C. Raffeld. Testing the neutralizing effect of instructor immediacy on student course workload expectancy violations and tolerance for instructor unavailability. 147 Paul L. Witt & Ralph R. Behnke. Anticipatory speech anxiety as a function of public speaking assignment types. 167 Melissa Bekelja Wanzer, Ann Bainbridge Frymeier, Ann M. Witjtaszcsyk & Tony Smith. Appropriate and inappropriate uses of humor by teachers. 178 Jack Glascock & Thomas E. Ruggerio. The relationship of ethnicity and sex to professor credibility at a culturally diverse university. 197 Min Lui, Duana D. Sellnow & Steven Venette. Integrating nonnatives as teachers: Patterns and perceptions of compliance-gaining strategies. 208 Qin Zhang & John G. Oetzel. Constructing and validating a teaching immediacy scale: A Chinese perspective. 218 Timothy G. Plax. How much are we worth? Estimating fee for services. 242 (Raising the Question #2) 2006, Vol. 55(1) Paul Schrodt & Paul L. Witt. Students attributions of instructor credibility as a function of students explanations of instructional technology use and nonverbal immediacy. 1 Mike Allen, Paul L. Witt & Lawrence R. Wheeless. The role of teacher immediacy as a motivational factor in student learning: Using meta-analysis to test a causal model. 21 Jonathan Adams & Margaret H. DeFleur. The acceptability of online degrees earned as a credential for obtaining employment. 32 Franklin J. Boster, Gary S. Meyer, Anthony J. Roberto, Carol Inge & Renee Strom. Some effects of video streaming on educational achievement. 46 Sara R. Banfield, Virginia P. Richmond & James C. McCroskey. The effect of teacher misbehaviors on teacher credibility and affect for the teacher. 63 C. Erik Rimmerman & Kristine A. Kreupke. Computer-assisted instruction, media richness, and college student performance. 73

5 Nithya Muthuswamy, Timothy R. Levine & Jeanne Gazel. Interaction-based diversity initiative outcomes: An evaluation of an initiative aimed at bridging the racial divide on a college campus. 105 Terre H. Allen. Is the rush to provide online instruction setting our students up for failure? 122 (Raising the Question #1) 2005, Vol. 54(4) Michael W. Smith & William Connolly. The effects of interpretive authority on classroom discussions of poetry: Lessons from one teacher. 271 Prue Holmes. Ethnic Chinese students communication with cultural others in a New Zealand university. 289 Myna M. Cornett-DeVito & David W. Worley. A front row seat: A phenomenological investigation on learning disabilities. 312 Marie-Fance Daniel, Louise Lafortune, Richard Pallascio, Laurance Splitter, Christina Slade & Teresa de la Garza. Modeling the development of dialogic critical thinking in pupils aged 10 to 12 years. 334 Deborah L. Vess. Asynchronous discussion and communication patterns in online and hybrid history courses. 355 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Erina L. MacGeorge, Wendy Samter & Seth J. Gillihan. Academic stress, supportive communication, and health. 365 (Brief Report) 2005, Vol. 54(3) Christina M. Sabee & Steven R. Wilson. Students primary goals, attributions, and facework during conversations about disappointing grades. 185 Flora Kershishian. A historical-materialist critique of intercultural communication instruction. 205 Ann Neville Miller & Tina M. Harris. Communicating to develop White racial identity in an interracial communication class. 223 Deanna D. Sellnow, Jeffrey T. Child & Stephanie L. Ahlfeldt. Textbook technology supplements: What are they good for? 243 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Tina C. Russo & Joy Koesten. Prestige, centrality, and learning: A social network analysis of an online class. 254 (Brief Report) 2005, Vol. 54(2) Theodore J. Kowalski. Evolution of the school superintendent as communicator. 101 Eunsook Hyun & Genevieve Davis. Kindergartners conversations in a computer-based technology classroom. 118 Deanna P. Dannels. Performing tribal rituals: A genre analysis of crits in design studios. 136 Adam C. Jones, Cheri J. Simonds & Stephen K. Hunt. The use of application essays as an effective tool for assessing instruction in the basic communication course. 161 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Mary-Jeanette Smythe & Jon A. Hess. Are student self-reports a valid method for measuring teacher nonverbal immediacy? 170 (Brief Report)

6 2005, Vol. 54(1) (Special Issue: Communication Genres in Disciplinary Discourse Communities: Theoretical and Pedagogical Explorations of Communication Across the Curriculum and in the Discipline) Deanna P. Daniels. Introduction: learning in and letting go. 1 Janne Morton & David OBrien. Selling your design: Oral communication pedagogy in design education. 6 Ann L. Darling. Public presentations in mechanical engineering and the discourse of technology. 20 Jingzi Huang, Bruce Normandia & Sandra Geer. Communicating mathematically: Comparison of knowledge structures in teacher and student discourse in a secondary math classroom. 34 Emily R. Smith. Learning to talk like a teacher: Participation and negotiation in co-planning discourse. 52 Anthony Fleury. Liberal education and communication against the disciplines. 72 Patricia R. Palmerton. Liberal education and communication across the curriculum: A response to Anthony Fleury. 80 Charles Bazerman. A response to Anthony Fluerys Liberal education and communication against the disciplines: A view from the world of writing. 86 Kate Chanock. Investigating patterns and possibilities in an academic oral genre. 92 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) 2004, Vol. 53(4) B. Scott Titsworth. Students notetaking: The effects of teacher immediacy and clarity. 305 John T. Warren & Kathy Hytten. The faces of whiteness: Pitfalls and the critical democrat. 321 Josh Boyd. A different kind of [text]book: Using fiction in the classroom 340 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Laura K. Oster-Aaland, Timothy L. Sellnow, Paul E. Nelson & Judy C. Pearson. The status of service learning in departments of communication: A follow-up study. 348

7 2004, Vol. 53(3) Camille D. Smith & Paul E. King. Student feedback sensitivity and the efficacy of feedback interventions in public speaking performance improvement. 203 Leigh Anne Howard. Speaking theatre/doing pedagogy: Re-visiting Theatre of the Oppressed. 217 David G. Levasseur, Kevin W. Dean & Julie Pfaff. Speech pedagogy beyond the basics: A study of instructional methods in the advanced public speaking course. 234 Rebecca M. Chory-Asad & Michelle L. Paulsel. Classroom justice: Student aggression and resistance as reactions to perceived unfairness. 253 William J. Dorman. Affecting students points of view in a survey of media class. 274 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Courtney C. Kpecky, Cjris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Sensitivity to punishment and explanatory style as predictors of public speaking state anxiety. 281 (Brief Report) Deanna D. Sellnow & Kristen P. Treinen. The role of gender in perceived speaker competence: An analysis of student peer critiques. 286 (Brief Report) 2004, Vol. 53(2) Mark P. Orbe. Negotiating multiple identities within multiple frames: An analysis of firstgeneration college students. 131 Timothy P. Mottet, Steven A. Beebe, Paul C. Raffeld & Amanda L. Medlock. The effects of student verbal and nonverbal responsiveness on teacher self-efficacy and job satisfaction. 150 Ralph R. Behnke & Chris R. Sawyer. Public speaking anxiety as a function of sensitization and habituation processes. 164 Barbara Mae Gayle. Transformation in a civic discourse public speaking class: Speakers and listeners attitude change. 174 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Kelly A. Rocca. College student attendance: Impact of instructor immediacy and verbal aggression. 185 2004, Vol. 53(1) Kathleen Ellis. The impact of perceived teacher confirmation on receiver apprehension, motivation, and learning. 1 Deanna L. Fassett & John T. Warren. You get pushed back: The strategic rhetoric of educational success and failure in higher education. 21 Dawn M. Kelsey, Patricia Kearney, Timothy G. Plax, Terre H. Allen & Kerry J. Ritter. College students attributions of teacher misbehaviors. 40 Cindy Buell. Models of mentoring in communication. 56 Troy A. Murphy. Deliberative civic education and civil society: A consideration of ideals and actualities in democracy and communication education. 74 Shaun S. Wulff & Donald H. Wulff. Of course Im communicating; I lecture every day: Enhancing teaching and learning in introductory statistics. 92 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Elise J. Dallimore, Julie H. Hertenstein & Marjorie B. Platt. Classroom participation and discussion effectiveness: Student-generated strategies. 103 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning)

8 Timothy P. Mottet, Matthew M. Martin & Scott A. Meyers. Relationships among perceived instructor verbal approach and avoidance relational strategies and students motives for communicating with their instructors. 116 (Brief Report) 2003, Vol. 52(3/4) (Special Issue: Racial, Cultural, and Gendered Identities in Education Contexts: Communication Perspective on Identity Negotiation) Katherine Grace Hendrix, Ronald L. Jackson, II & Jennifer R. Warren. Shifting academic landscapes: Exploring co-identities, identity negotiation, and critical progressive pedagogy. 177 Henry A. Giroux. Spectacles of race and pedagogies of denial: Anti-Black racist pedagogies under the reign of neoliberalism. 191 Patreece R. Boone. When the amen corner comer to class: An examination of the pedagogical and cultural impact of call-response communication in the Black college classroom. 212 Julia R. Johnson & Archana J. Bjaut. Gendered and racialized identities and alliances in the classroom: Formations in/of resistive space. 230 Leda Cooks. Pedagogy, performance, and positionality: Teaching about Whiteness in interracial communication. 245 Elizabeth Mackinlay. Performing race, culture, and gender in an indigenous Australian womens music and dance classroom. 258 Amanda J. Godley. Literacy learning as gendered identity work. 273 Andrew F. Wood & Deanna L. Fassett. Remote control: Identity, power, and technology in the communication classroom. 286 Fred Fitch & Susan E. Morgan. Not a lick of English: Constructing the IRA identity through student narratives. 297 Tina M. Harris. Impacting student perceptions of and attitudes toward race in the interracial communication course. 311 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) 2003, Vol. 52(2) Paul D. Turman. Athletic coaching from an instructional communication perspective: The influence of coach experience on high school wrestlers preferences and perceptions of coaching behaviors across a season. 73 Susan S. Easton. Clarifying the instructors role in online distance learning. 87 Paul Schrodt. Students appraisals of instructors as a function of students perceptions of instructors aggressive communication. 106 Brooks Aylor & Patrice Oppliger. Out-of-class communication and student perceptions of instructor humor orientation and socio-communicative style. 122 Joseph L. Chesebro. Effects of teacher clarity and nonverbal immediacy on student learning, receiver apprehension, and affect. 135 Laurie K. Lewis & Pamela A. Hayward. Choice-based learning: Student reactions in an undergraduate organizational communication course. 148 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Jean Goodwin. Students perspectives on debate exercises in content area clusters. 157 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Nilanjana Bardhan. Creating spaces for international and multi(inter)cultural perspectives in undergraduate public relations education. 164 (Brief Report)

9 2003, Vol. 52(1) Ann L. Darling & Deanna P. Dannels. Practicing engineers talk about the importance of talk: A report on the role of oral communication in the workplace. 1 Paul Schrodt, Carol Stringer Cawyer & Renee Sanders. An examination of academic mentoring behaviors and new faculty members satisfaction with socialization and tenure processes. 17 Lesley A. Rex. Loss of the creature: The obscuring of inclusivity in classroom discourse. 30 Ann L. Darling. Scholarship of teaching and leaning in communication: New connections, new directions, new possibilities. 47 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Deanna P. Dannels, Chris M. Anson, Lisa Bullard & Steven Peretti. Challenges in learning communication skills in chemical engineering. 50 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Pat Hutchings. The scholarship of teaching and learning in communication: A few words from the Carnegie Academy. 57 (Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Chad Edwards & Jake Harwood. Social identity in the classroom: An examination of age identification between students and instructors. 60 (Brief Report) 2002, Vol. 51(4) (Special Issue) Loren Reid. The Speech Teacher: Early years. 333 Jo Sprague. Communication Education: The spiral continues. 337 Frank E. X. Dance. Speech and thought: A renewal. 355 Mary Margaret Roberts. Communication Education and communication education: On editing and teaching. 360 Kenneth L. Brown. From The Speech Teacher to Communication Education: Some reflections. 364 Gustav W. Friedrich. The communication education research agenda. 372 John A. Daly. After 50: Reflecting on the future. 376 Linda L. McCroskey, Virginia P. Richmond & James C. McCroskey. The scholarship of teaching and learning: Contributions from the discipline of communication. 383 Douglas M. Trank. Speech and theatre education: A vanishing discipline. 393 Ruth Anne Clark. Learning outcomes: The bottom line. 396 Heather Crandall & Michael Hazel. Issues in communication education: An interview with Joe Ayres. 405 Donald L. Rubin. Binocular vision for communication education. 412

10 2002, Vol. 51(3) Thomas Hugh Feeley. Evidence of halo effects in student evaluations of communication instruction. 225 Jill J. McMillan & Katy J. Harriger. College students and deliberation: A benchmark study. 237 Deanna P. Daniels. Communication across the curriculum and in the disciplines: Speaking in engineering. 254 Jennifer L. Willis-Rivera & Melissa Meeker. De que colores: A critical examination of multicultural childrens books. 269 Scott D. Johnson & Ann N. Miller. A cross-cultural study of immediacy, credibility, and learning in the U.S. and Kenya. 280 Leda Cooks & Chyng Sun. Constructing gender pedagogies: Desire and resistance in the alternative classroom. 293 Travis L. Russ, Cheri K. Simonds & Stephen K. Hunt. Coming out in the classroom . . . an occupational hazard: The influence of sexual orientation on teacher credibility and perceived student learning. 311 2002, Vol. 51(2) Caryn E. Medved & Jennifer Heisler. A negotiated order exploration of critical student-faculty interactions: Student-parents manage multiple roles. 105 Scott A. Myers, Matthew M. Martin & Timothy P. Mottet. Students motives for communicating with their instructors: Considering instructor socio-communication style, student sociocommunicative orientation, and student gender. Joseph Schmitz & Kelly Whitworth. Collaborative self-assessment in the academy: Coping with structural blockages to self-discovery. 134 Marjorie A. Jaasma. Friendship: The core value for sixth graders engaged in interethnic encounters. 152 Ann Neville Miller. An exploration of Kenyan public speaking patterns with implications for the American introductory public speaking course. 168 Mary Stairs Vaughn. A delicate balance: The praxis of empowerment at a Midwestern Montessori school. 183 Lynne Kelly, James A. Keanten, Cynthia Finch, Ilze B. Duarte, Patrizia Hoffman & Margaret M. Michels. Family communication patterns and the development of reticence. 202 (Research report) 2002, Vol. 51(1) (Special Issue on the Communication Curriculum: What Should We Teach and How Should We Teach It?) Sherwyn P. Morreale & Philip M. Backlund. Communication curricula: History, recommendations, resources. 2 Ann Rosenthal. Report of the Hope College Conference on Designing the Undergraduate Curriculum in Communication. 19 Terre H. Allen. Charting a communication pathway: Using assessment to guide curriculum development in a re-vitalized general education plan. 26 Rock Roddic & Linda Dickmeyer. Providing undergraduate research opportunities for communication students: A curricular approach. 40

11 Colleen Garside. Seeing the forest through the trees: A challenge facing communication across the curriculum programs. 51 Richard K. Olsen, David E. Weber & Frank P. Trimble. Cornerstones and capstones: A case study on the value of a holistic core in the discipline of communication studies. 65 Stephen K. Hunt, Cheri J. Simonds & Pamela J. Copper. Communication and teacher education: Exploring a communication course for all teachers. 81 Bettina Heinz. Enga(y)ging the discipline: Sexual minorities and communication studies. 95 2001, Vol. 50(4) B. Scott Titsworth. The effects of teacher immediacy, use of organizational lecture cues, and students notetaking on cognitive learning. 283 Judith N. Martin & Olga Idriss Davis. Conceptual foundations for teaching Whiteness in intercultural communication classes. 298 Ann Bainbridge Frymier & Benjamin Weser. The role of student predispositions on student expectations for instructor communication behavior. 314 Paul L. Witt & Lawrence R. Wheeless. An experimental study of teachers verbal and nonverbal immediacy and students affective and cognitive learning. 327 Scott A. Myers & Ronda L. Knox. The relationship between college student information-seeking behaviors and perceived instructor verbal behaviors 343 Shirley D. Fortney, Danette Ifert Johnson & Kathleen M. Long. The impact of compulsive communicators on the self-perceived competence of classroom peers: An investigation and test of instructional strategies. 357 2001, Vol. 50(3) Sally Jackson & Staci Wolski. Identification and adaptation to students preinstructional believes in introductory communication research methods: Contributions of interactive web technology. 189 Leonard Shedletsky & Joan E. Aitken. The paradoxes of online academic work. 206 Joe Downing & Cecile Garmon. Teaching students in the basic course how to use presentation software. 218. Lori J. Carrell & Kent E. Menzel. Variations in learning, motivation, and perceived immediacy between live and distance education classrooms. 230 Derek R. Lane & Michael W. Shelton. The centrality of communication education in classroom computer-mediated communication: Toward a practical and evaluative pedagogy. 241 Jeff Kerssen-Griep. Teacher communication activities relevant to student motivation: Classroom facework and instructional communication competence. 256 (Research Report) 2001, Vol. 50(2) John T. Warren. Doing Whiteness: On the performative dimensions of race in the classroom. 91 Ruth Anne Clark & David Jones. A comparison of traditional and online formats in a public speaking course. 109 Laura L. Shue & Christina S. Beck. Stepping out of bounds: Performing feminist pedagogy within a dance education community. 125 Deanna P. Dannels. Time to speak up: A theoretical framework of situated pedagogy and practice for communication across the curriculum. 144

12 Jason J. Teven. The relationships among teacher characteristics and perceived caring. 159 (Brief Report) Lynne Kelly, Robert L. Duran & J. Jerome Zolten. The effects of reticence on college students use of electronic mail to communicate with faculty. 170 (Brief Report) 2001, Vol. 50(1) K. David Roach & Paul R. Byrne. A cross-cultural comparison of instructor communication in American and German classrooms. 1 Vincent R. Waldron, Melissa Lavitt & Margaret McConnaughy. Welfare-to-work: An analysis of the communication competencies taught in a job training program serving an urban poverty area. 15 Pamela L. Stepp. Sexual harassment in communication extra-curricular activities: Intercollegiate debate and individual events. 34 John Burk. Communication apprehension among masters of business administration students: Investigating a gap in communication education. 51 Joseph L. Chesebro & James C. McCroskey. The relationship of teacher clarity and immediacy with student state receiver apprehension, affect, and cognitive learning. 59 Pamela J. Lannutti, Melanie Laliker & Jerold L. Hale. Violations of expectations and social-sexual communication in student/professor interactions. 69 2000, Vol. 49(4) Ann Q. Staton & Jennifer A. Peeples. Educational reform discourse: President George Bush on America 2000. 303 Robert LaRose & Pam Whitten. Re-thinking instructional immediacy for web courses: A social cognitive exploration. 320 Linda B. Hobgood. The pursuit of speaking proficiency: A voluntary approach. 339 Carla R. Chamberlin. Nonverbal behaviors and initial impressions of trustworthiness in teachersupervisor relationships. 352 Paul E. King, Melissa J. Young & Ralph R. Behnke. Public speaking performance improvement as a function of information processing in immediate and delayed feedback interventions. 365 Mark L., Knapp & William J. Earnest. Shall ye know the truth? Student odysseys in truth-telling. 375 2000, Vol. 49(3) Ann Bainbridge Frymier & Marian L. Houser. The teacher-student relationship as an interpersonal relationship. 207 Ronald L. Pelias. The critical life. 220 Sandra L. Ragan. The critical life: An exercise in applying inapplicable critical standards. 229 Stephen P. Banks & Anna Banks: Reading The critical life: Autoethnography as pedagogy. 233 Todd S. Frobish. Jamieson meets Lucas: Eloquence and pedagogical model(s) in The Art of Public Speaking. 239 Ronald E. Rice, Lea P. Stewart & Michele Hujber. Extending the domain of instructional effectiveness assessment in student evaluations of communication courses. 253

13 Michael Anne Lord & W. J. (Jack) Lord, Jr. Effects of the Special Olympics of Texas Athletes for Outreach program on communication competence among individuals with mental retardation. 267 George W. Musambira. Top convention paper productivity in the U.S.: Analysis of National Communication Association (NCA) and International Communication (ICA) awards 19941998. 284 (Brief report) Joseph L. Chesebro & James C. McCroskey. The relationship between students reports of learning and their actual recall of lecture material: A validity test. 297 (Brief report) 2000, Vol. 49(2) Donald L. Rubin, Teresa Hafer & Kevin Arata. Reading and listening to oral-based versus literate-based discourse. 121 James A. Keaten, Lynne Kelly & Cynthia Finch. Effectiveness of the Penn State program in changing beliefs associated with reticence. 134 Timothy P. Mottet. Interactive television instructors perceptions of students nonverbal responsiveness and their influence on distance teaching. 146 James A. Keaten & Lynne Kelly. Reticence: An affirmation and revision. 165 Dorren K. Barringer & James C. McCroskey. Immediacy in the classroom: Student immediacy. 178 Ralph R. Behnke & Chris R. Sawyer. Anticipatory anxiety patterns for male and female public speakers. 187 Melanie Booth-Butterfield, Robert Anderson & Kimberly Williams. Perceived messages from schools regarding adolescent tobacco use. 196 2000, Vol. 49(1) (Special Issue: The Nature/Nurture Balance) James C. McCroskey & Michael J. Beatty. The communibiological perspective: Implications for communication in instruction. 1 Celeste Michelle Condit. Culture and biology in human communication: Toward a multi-causal model. 7 Michael J. Beatty & James C. McCroskey. A few comments about communibiology and the nature/nurture question. 25 Celeste Michelle Condit. Toward new sciences of human behavior. 29 Michael J. Beatty & James C. McCroskey. Theory, scientific evidence, and the communibiological paradigm: Reflections of misguided criticism. 36 Lynne Kelly & James A. Keaton. Treating communication anxiety: Implications of the communibiological paradigm. 45 Michael J. Beatty & Kristin Marie Balencic. Context-based apprehension versus planning demands: A communibiological analysis of anticipatory public speaking anxiety. 58 Karen Kangas Dweyer. The multidimensional model: Teaching students to self-manage high communication apprehension by self-selecting treatments. 72 David L. Bodary & Larry D. Miller. Neurobiological substrates of communicator style. 82 John T. Morello. Comparing speaking across the curriculum and writing across the curriculum programs. 99 Andrew S. Rancer, Theodore A. Avtgis, Roberta L. Kosberg & Valerie Goff Whitecap. A longitudinal assessment of trait argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness between seventh and eighth grades. 114

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1999, Vol. 48(4) Michael J. Cody, Deborah Dunn, Shari Hoppin & Pamela Wendt. Silver surfers: Training and evaluating internet use among older adult learners. 269 Joe Ayres, Tim Hopf & Patricia A. Edwards. Vividness and control: Factors in the effectiveness of performance visualization? 287 Lawrence B. Rosenfeld & Jack M. Richman. Supportive communication and school outcomes, part II: Academically at-risk low income high school students. 294 Kelly A. Rocca & James C. McCroskey. The interrelationship of student ratings of instructors immediacy, verbal aggressiveness, homophilly, and interpersonal attraction. 308 1999, Vol. 48(3) John Gastil & James P. Dillard. The aims, methods, and effects of deliberative civic education through the National Issues Forums. 179 Christine M. Bachen, Moira M. McLoughlin & Sara S. Garcia. Assessing the role of gender in college students evaluations of faculty. 193 Karla Jay Jensen & Vinne Harris. The public speaking portfolio. 211 Reflections on Undergraduate Communication Education Michael W. Shelton, Derek R. Lane & Enid S. Waldhart. A review and assessment of national educational trends in communication instruction. 228 Richard A. Katula & Elizbeth Threnhauser. Experiential education in the undergraduate curriculum. 238 William J. Wardrope. A curricular profile of U.S. communication departments. 256 1999, Vol. 48(1) Eunkyong Lee Yook & Rosita D. Albert. Perceptions of international teaching assistants: The interrelatedness of intercultural training, cognition, and emotion. 1 Mike Allen, Sandra Berkowitz, Steve Hunt & Alan Louden. A meta-analysis of the impact of forensics and communication education on critical thinking. 18 Kent E. Menzel & Lori J. Carrell. The impact of gender and immediacy on willingness to talk and perceived learning. 31 Marjorie A. Jasma & Randall J. Koper. The relationship of student-faculty out-of-class communication to instructor immediacy and trust and to student motivation. 41 Melissa Bekelja Warner & Ann Bainbridge Frymier. The relationship between student perceptions of instructor humor and students reports of learning. 48 Amy M. Bippus & John A. Daly. What do people think causes stage fright?: Naive attributions about the reasons for public speaking anxiety. 63 Robert N. Bostrom & Nancy Grant Harrington. An exploratory investigation of compulsive talkers. 73 1998, Vol. 47(4)

15 Lawrence B. Rosenfeld, Jack M. Richman & Gary L. Bowen. Supportive communication and school outcomes for academically at-risk and other low income middle school students. 309 Paul E. King & Chris R. Sawyer. Mindfulness, mindlessness, and communication instruction. 326 John O. Greene, Mary P. Rucker, Emily S. Zauss & Adam A. Harris. Communication anxiety and the acquisition of message-production skill. 337 Katherine S. Thweatt & James C. McCroskey. The impact of teacher immediacy and misbehaviors on teacher credibility. 348 Peter D. MacIntyre & J. Renee MacDonald. Public speaking anxiety: Perceived competence and audience congeniality. 359 Frances Anne Freitas, Scott A. Meyers & Theodore A. Avtgis. Student perceptions of instructor immediacy in conventional and distributed learning classrooms. 366 Melissa Bekelja Wanzer. An exploratory investigation of student and teacher perceptions of student-generated affinity-seeking behaviors. 373 1998, Vol. 47(3) Jeffrey L. Stringer. Teaching language as oral communication: Everyday life performance in foreign language instruction. 221 Carol Stringer Cawyer & Gustav W. Friedrich. Organizational socialization: Processes for new communication faculty. 234 Lawrence R. Frey, Shawny Anderson & Paul Friedman. The status of instruction in qualitative communication research methods. 246 Communication Instruction Around the World Steven A. Beebe, Maria Kharcheva & Valentina Kharacheva. Speech communication in Russia. 261 Harry Irwin. Communication studies in Australia: Tensions and new challenges. 274 Maarit Valo. Speech Communication the Finnish way: Fifteen years of university degrees in Speech Communication in Jyvaskyla, Finland. 286 Judith A. Rolls. Communication pedagogy: Whats typical across Canada and unique at the University College of Cape Breton. 292 1998, Vol. 47(2) Dee Oseroff-Varnell. Communication and the socialization of dance students: An analysis in a residential arts school. 101 Susan L. Kline & Barbara L. Clinton. Development in childrens persuasive message practices. 120 Karen Kangas Dwyer. Communication apprehension and learning style preference: Correlations and implications for teaching. 137 J. S. Hinton & Michael W. Kramer. The impact of self-directed videotape feedback on students self-reported levels of communication competence and apprehension. 151 Diane F. Witmer. Introduction to computer-mediated communication: A master syllabus for teaching communication technology. 162 (Master Syllabus) Roy M. Berko, Sherwyn P. Morreale, with Pamela J. Cooper & Carolyn D. Perry. Communication standards and competencies for kindergarten through grade 12: The role of the National Communication Association. 174 (Reflections on K-12 Standards)

16 Donald L. Rubin & Sally Hampton. National performance standards for oral communication K12: New standards and speaking/listening/viewing. 183 (Reflections on K-12 Standards) Nancy Rost Goulden. The roles of national and state standards in implementing speaking: Listening, and media literacy. 194 (Reflections on K-12 Standards) 1998, Vol. 47(1) Joe Ayers, Tanichya Keereetaweep, Pao-En Chen & Patricia A. Edwards. Communication apprehension and employment interviews. 1 Eunkyong L. Yook & Rosita D. Albert. Perceptions of the appropriateness of negotiation in educational settings: A cross-cultural comparison among Koreans and Americans. 18 Laura K. Guerrero & Tammy A. Miller. Associations between nonverbal behaviors and initial impressions of instructor competence and course content in videotaped distance education courses. 30 Melissa Bekelja Wanzer & James C. McCroskey. Teacher socio-communicative style as a correlate of student affect toward teacher and course material. 43 Vincent R. Waldron & James L. Applegate. Person-centered tactics during verbal disagreements: Effects on student perceptions of persuasiveness and social attraction. 53 Robert T. Craig & David A. Carlone. Growth and transformation of communication studies in U.S. higher education: Towards reinterpretation. 67 Laura J. Christensen & Kent E. Menzel. The linear relationship between student reports of teacher immediacy behaviors and perceptions of state motivation, and of cognitive, affective, and behavioral learning. 82 (Brief Report) 1997, Vol. 46(4) Charles A. Braithwaite. Saah Naaghai Bikeh Hozhoon: An ethnography of Navajo educational communication practices. 219 Lori J. Carrell. Diversity in the communication curriculum: Impact on student empathy. 234 John Gorham & Diane M. Millette. A comparative analysis of teacher and student perceptions of sources of motivation and demotivation in college classes. Lori J. Carrll & Kent E. Menzel. The impact of preparation and motivation on learning performance. 262 Andrew S. Rancer, Valerie Whitecap, Roberta L. Kosberg & Theodore A. Avtgis. Training in argumentativeness: Testing the efficacy of a communication training program to increase argumentativeness and argumentative behavior. Marshalita Sims Peterson. Personnel interviewers perceptions of the importance of applicants communication skills. 287 (Brief report) 1997, Vol. 46(3) Leigh Maxwell & Thomas A. McCain. Gateway or gatekeeper: The implications of copyright and digitalization on education. 141 Scott L. Althaus. Computer-mediated communication in the university classroom: An experiment with on-line discussions. 158 Terri Freeman, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Behavioral inhibition and the attribution of public speaking anxiety. 175

17 Thomas E. Robinson II. Communication apprehension and the basic public speaking course: A national survey of in-class treatment techniques. 188 Paul David Bolls, Alex Tan & Erica Austin. An exploratory comparison of Native American and Caucasian students attitudes toward teacher communication behavior. 189 (Brief Report) Barbara Ann Mastrolia. The media deprivation experience: Revealing mass media as both message and massage. 203 (Brief Report) 1997, Vol. 46(2) Micahel S. Waltman & Brant R. Burleson. Explaining bias in teacher ratings of behavior alteration techniques: An experimental test of the heuristic processing account. 75 Patricia Kearney & Timothy G. Plax. Item desirability bias and the BAT checklist: A reply to Waltman and Burleson. 95 Michael S. Waltman & Brant R. Burleson. The reality of item desirability and heuristic processing in BAT ratings: Respecting the data. 100 Rebecca B. Rubin, Alan M. Rubin & Felecia F. Jordan. Effects of instruction on communication apprehension and communication competence. 104 Symposium on Graduate Education: Reflections on the SCA Summer Conference and Beyond James L. Applegate, Ann Darling, Jo Sprague, Jody Nyquist & Janis F. Anderson. An agenda for graduate education in communication: A report from the SCA 1996 summer conference. 115 Janis F. Anderson. Graduate education trends: Implications for the communication discipline. 121 Thomas M. Steinfatt. Predicting trends in graduate communication education. 128

18 1997, Vol. 46(1) Jason J. Teven & James C. McCroskey. The relationship of perceived teacher caring with student learning and teacher evaluation. 1 Shuming Lu. Culture and compliance gaining in the classroom: A preliminary investigation of Chinese college teachers use of behavior alteration techniques. 10 Christy R. Lee, Timothy R. Levin & Ronald Cambra. Resisting compliance in the multicultural classroom. 29 Craig R. Scott & Steven C. Rockwell. The effect of communication, writing, and technology apprehension on likelihood to use new communication technologies. 44 David Lapakko. Three cheers for language: A closer examination of a widely cited study of nonverbal communication. 63 1996, Vol. 45(4) Sandra L. Hunt & Ann Q. Staton. The communication of education reform: A nation at risk. 271 Jose Rodriquez, Timothy G. Plax & Patricia Kearney. Clarifying the relationship between teacher nonverbal immediacy and student cognitive learning: Affective learning as the central causal mediator. 293 Randolph H. Witworth & Claudia Cochran. Evaluation of integrated versus unitary treatments for reducing public speaking anxiety. 306 The Womens University: A Symposium Cheris Kramarae. Centers of change: An introduction to womens own communication programs. 315 Fern L. Johnson. Loosing the boundaries of communication study: Lesson for the academy from womens studies. 322 Victoria Leto DeFranciso. The world of designing women: A narrative account of focus group plans for a womens university. 330 Marsha Houston. Beyond survival on campus: Envisioning communication studies at womencentered universities. 338 Cindy Jenesky. Public speaking as empowerment at visionary university. 343 Nina Gregg. What d want: Communication studies in which womens university where? 356 1996, Vol. 45(3) Ann Bainbridge Frymier, Gary M. Shulman & Marian Houser. The development of a learner empowerment measure. 181 James C. McCroskey, Aino Sallinen, Joan M. Fayer, Virginia P. Richmond & Robert A. Barraclough. Nonverbal immediacy and cognitive learning: A cross-cultural investigation. 200 Colleen Garside. Look whos talking: A comparison of lecture and group discussion teaching strategies in developing critical thinking skills. 212 Joe Ayers. Speech preparation processes and speech apprehension. 228 Clifford G. Christians & Edmund B. Lambeth. The state-of-the-art in teaching communication ethics. 236 Bolanle A. Olaniran, Grant T. Savage & Ritch L. Sorenson. Experimental and experiential approaches to teaching face-to-face and computer mediated group communication. 244

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1996, Vol. 45(2) Colloquy: The Place of Literature in Performance Studies Mary Frances HopKins. Cultural capital in the academic market: The place of literature in performance studies. 89 Michael S. Bowman. Performing literature in an age of textuality. 96 Paul H. Gray. The thoroughbred and the four-wheeled cab: Performance beyond literature. 102 James VanOosting. Acoustic writers and electronic readers: Literature Through the back door. 108 Nathan Stucky. Re/locating the text: Literature in performance studies practice. 112 Articles Jean A. Dobos. Collaborative learning: Effects of student expectations and communication apprehension on student motivation. 118 Tracy L. Morris, Joan Gorham, Stanley H. Cohen & Drew Huffman. Fashion in the classroom: Effects of attire on student perceptions of instructors in college classes. 135 Diane K. Ivy & Stephen Hamlet. College students and sexual dynamics: Two studies of peer sexual harassment. 149 William G. Kirkwood & Steven M. Ralston. Ethics and teaching employment interviewing. 167 1996, Vol. 45(1) Jill J. McMillan & George Cheney. The student as consumer: The implications and limitations of a metaphor. 1 Laurie L. Haleta. Student perceptions of teachers use of language: The effects of powerful and powerless language on impression formation and uncertainty. 16 Alexis Moore, John T. Masterson, Diane M. Christophel & Kathleen A. Shea. College teacher immediacy and student ratings of instruction. 29 Belle Ruth Witkin, Mae L. Lovern & Sara W. Lundsteen. Oral communication in the English language arts curriculum: A national perspective. 40 Johannes W. J. Beentjes, Cees M. Koolstra & Tom H. A. van der Voort. Combining background media with doing homework: Incidence of background media use and perceived effects. 59 Deborah Brunson & Judith F. Vogt. Empowering our students and ourselves: A liberal democratic approach to the communication classroom. 73 (Master Syllabus)

20 COMMUNICATION MONOGRAPHS 2007, Vol. 74(2) Rachel A. Smith, Edward Downs & Kim Witte. Drama theory and entertainment education: Exploring the effects of a radio drama on behavioral intentions to limit HIV transmission in Ethiopia. 133 Leanne K. Knobloch, Laure E. Miller, Bradley J. Bond & Sarah E. Mannone. Relational uncertainty and message processing in marriage. 154 Amir Hetsroni, Hila Elphariach, Rinat Kapuza & Betty Tsfoni. Geographical proximity, cultural imperialism, and the cultivation effect. 181 Paul Schrodt & Tamara D. Afifi. Communication processes that predict young adults feelings of being caught and their associations with metal health and family satisfaction. 200 Amber Marie Reinhart, Heahter M. Marshall, Thomas Hugh Feeley & Frank Tutzauer. The persuasive effects of message framing in organ donation: The mediating role of psychological reactance. 229 Issue Forum: Cultural Bias in Communication Theory Robert T. Craig. Issue forum: Introduction. 256 Brende J. Allen. Theorizing communication and race. 259 Patricia Covarrubias. (Un)biased in Western theory: Generative silence in American Indian communication. 265 Yoshitaka Miike. An Asiacentric reflection on Eurocentric bias in communication theory. 272 Min-Sun Kim. The four cultures of cultural research. 279 2007, Vol. 74(1) Torsten Reimer, Sascha Kuendig, Ulrich Hoffrage, Ernest Park & Verlin Hinsz. Effects of the information environment of group discussions and decisions in the hidden-profile paradigm. 1 Robin L. Nabi, Emily Moyer-Gus & Sahara Byrne. All joking aside: A serious investigation into the persuasive effect of funny social issue messages. 29 Marie-Louise Mares. Developmental changes in adult comprehension of a television program are modified by being a fan. 55 Tamara D. Afifi, Tara McManus, Susan Hutchinson & Brigitta Baker. Inappropriate parental divorce disclosures, the factors that prompt them, and their impact on parents and adolescents well-being. 78 Issue Forum: Theorizing Communication Problems Robert T. Craig. Issue forum introduction. 103 Sarah J. Tracy. Taking the plunge: A contextual approach top problem-based research. 106 Mark Aakhus. Communication as design. 112 Leslie Baxter. Problematizing the problem in communication: A dialogic perspective. 118 Chris Russell. Communication problems in a pragmatist perspective. 125 2006, Vol. 73(4)

21 Yahui Kang, Joseph Cappella & Martin Dishbein. The attentional mechanisms of message sensation value: interaction between message sensation value and argument quality on message effectiveness. 351 Ashley Paige Duggan & Beth A. Le Poire. One down, two involved: An application and extension of inconsistent nurturing as control theory to couples including one depressed individual. 379 Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik. Take this job and . . .: Quitting and other forms of resistance to workplace bullying. 406 Ren M. Dailey. Confirmation in parent-adolescent relationships and adolescent openness: toward extending confirmation theory. 434 Issue Forum: Negotiating Boundaries between Families and Institutions Robert T. Craig & Cindy H. White. Introduction to the issue forum. 459 Sandra Petronio. Impact of medical mistakes: Navigating work-family boundaries for physicians and their families. 462 Kristin M. Langellier & Eric E. Peterson. Somebodys got to pick eggs: Family storytelling about work. 468 Erika L. Kirby. Helping you make room in your life for your needs: When organizations appropriate family roles. 474 Steven R. Wilson. First and second-order changes in a communitys response to a child abuse fatality. 481 2006, Vol. 73(3) Timothy R. Levine, Rachel K. Kim, Hee Sun Park & Mikayla Hughes. Deception detection accuracy is a predictable linear function of message veracity base-rate: A formal test of Park and Levins probability model. 243 Matthew S. McGlone, Gary Beck & Abigail Pfiester. Contamination and camouflage in euphemisms. 261 Sarah J. Tracy, Karen K. Myers & Clifton W. Scott. Cracking jokes and crafting selves: Sensemaking and identity management among human service workers. 283 Paul Schrodt. A typological examination of communication competence and mental health in stepchildren. 309 Brian S. Southwell & Alicia Torres. Connecting interpersonal and mass communication: Science news exposure, perceived ability to understand science, and conversation. 334 2006, 73(2) Jeffrey D. Robinson. Managing trouble responsibility and relationships during conversational repair. 137 Travis L. Dixon. Psychological reactions to crime news portrayals of Black criminals: Understanding the moderating role of prior news viewing and stereotype endorsement. 162 Walid A. Afifi, Susan E. Morgan, Michael T. Stephenson, Chris Morse, Tyler Harris, Tom Reichert & Shawn D. Long. Examining the decision to talk with family about organ donation: Applying the theory of motivated information management. 188 Marie-Louise Mares. Repetition increases childrens comprehension of television contentUp to a point. 216 2006, Vol. 73(1)

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Mardi Kidwell & Don Ziummerman. Observability in the interactions of very young children. 1 Andrew J. Flanagin, Cynthia Stohl & Bruce Bimber. Modeling the structure of collective action. 29 Karen Lee Ashcraft. Feminist-bureaucratic control and other adversarial allies: Extending organized dissonance to the practice of new forms. 55 Jordan Soliz & Jake Harwood. Shared family identity, age salience, and intergroup contact: Investigation of the grandparent-grandchild relationship. 87 C. Erik Timmerman & Craig R. Scott. Virtually working: Communicative and structural predictors of media use and key outcomes in virtual work teams. 108 2005, Vol. 72(4) Jody Koenig Kellas. Family ties: Communicating identity through jointly told family stories. 365 Eric M. Eisenberg, Alexandra G. Murphy, Kathleen Sutcliffe, Robert Wears, Stephen Schenkel, Shawna Perry & Mary Vanderhoef. Communication in emergency medicine: Implications for patient safety. 390 Michael Pfau, Bobi Ivanov, Brian Houston, Michal Haigh, Jeanetta Sims, Eileen Gilchrist, Jason Russell, Shelley Wigley, Jackie Eckstein & Natalie Richert. Inoculation and mental processing: The instrumental role of associative networks in the process of resistance to counterattitudinal influence. 414 Michael Stohl & Cynthia Stohl. Human rights, nation states, and NGOs: Structural holes and the emergence of global regimes. 442 Brant R. Burleson, Amanda J. Holmstrom & Cristina M. Gilstrap. Guys cant say that to guys: Four experiments assessing the normative motivation account for deficiencies in the emotional support provided by men. 468 2005, Vol. 72(3) Sarah J. Tracy. Locking up emotion: Moving beyond dissonance for understanding emotion labor discomfort. 1261 Ryan Goei & Franklin J. Boster. The roles of obligation and gratitude in explaining the effect of favors on compliance. 284 Sorin Adam Matei & Sandra Ball-Rokeach. Watts, the 1965 Los Angeles riots, and the communicative construction of the fear epicenter of Los Angeles. 301 Jeffrey D. Niederdeppe. Syntactic indeterminacy, perceived message sensation value-enhancing features, and message processing in the context of anti-tobacco advertisements. 324 Charles Pavitt, Courtney McFeeters, Erin Towey & Vera Zingerman. Communication during resource dilemmas: 1. Effects of different replenishment rates. 345 2005, Vol. 72(2) Steven R. Corman & Timothy Kuhn. The detectability of socio-egocentric group speech: A quasiTuring test. 117 James Price Dillars & Lijiang Shen. On the nature of reactances and its role in persuasive health communication. 144 Shiv Ganesh, Heather Zoller & George Cheney. Transforming resistance, broadening our boundaries: Critical organizational communication meets globalization from below. 168

23 Tamara D. Afifi & Loreen Olson. The chilling effect in families and the pressure to conceal secrets. 192 Dmitri Williams & Marko Skoric. Internet fantasy violence: A test of aggression in an online game. 217 Catherine F. Schryer, Lorelei Lingard & Marless M. Spafford. Techne or artful science and the genre of case presentations in healthcare settings. 234 2005, Vol. 72(1) Gregory S. Larson & Phillip K. Tompkins. Ambivalence and resistance: A study of management in a concertive control system. 1 Jennifer A. Samp & Denise Haunani Solomon. Toward a theoretical account of goal characteristics in micro-level message features. 22 Barbara J. Wilson, Nicole Martins & Amy L. Marske. Childrens and parents fright reactions to kidnapping stories in the news. 46 Yan Bing Zhang, Jake Harwood & Mary Lee Hummert. Perceptions of conflict management style in Chinese intergenerational dyads. 71 Edward Schiappa, Peter B. Gregg & Dean E. Hewes. The parasocial contact hypothesis. 92 2004, Vol. 71(4) Marya L. Doelfel & Maureen Taylor. Network dynamics of interorganizational cooperation: The Croatian civil society movement. 373 Steven R. Wilson, Wendy M. Morgan, Javette Hayes, Carma Bylund & Andrew Herman. Mothers child abuse potential as a predictor of material and child behaviors during play-time interactions. 395 Artemio Ramirze, Jr., & Judee K. Burgoon. The effect of interactivity on initial interactions: The influence of information valence and modality and information richness on computermediated interaction. 422 Shelly Campo, Kenzie A. Cameron, Dominique Brossard & M. Somjen Frazer. Social norms and expectancy violation theories: Assessing the effectiveness of health communication campaigns. 448 Ren M. Daily & Nicholas A. Palomares. Strategic topic avoidance: An investigation of topic avoidance frequency, strategies used and relational correlates. 471 2004, Vol. 71(3) Timothy R. Levine, Michael J. Beatty, Sean Limon, Mark A. Hamilton, Ross Buck & Rebecca M. Chory-Assad. The dimensionality of the verbal aggressiveness scale. 245 Gary D. Bond, Daniel M. Malloy, Laura A. Thompson, Elizabeth A. Arias & Shannon N. Nunn. Post-probe decision making in a prison context. 269 Gwen M. Wittenbaum, Andrea B. Hollingshead & Isabel C. Botero. From cooperative to motivated information sharing in groups: Moving beyond the hidden profile paradigm. 286 Michael W. Kramer. Toward a communication theory of group dialectics: An ethnographic study of a community theater group. 311 Charles Pavitt. Theory-data interaction from the standpoint of scientific realism: A reaction to Bostrom. 333 Robert N. Bostrom. Empiricism, paradigms, and data. 343

24 Andrew J. Flanagin, Hee Sun Park & David R. Seibold. Group performance and collaborative technology: A longitudinal and multilevel analysis of information quality, contribution equality, and members satisfaction in computer-mediated groups. 352 2004, Vol. 71(2) Paul A. Mongeau, Mary Claire Morr Serewicz & Lona Ficara Therrien. Goals for cross-sex first dates: Identification, measurement, and the influence of contextual factors. 121 David Dryden Henningsen & Mary Lynn Miller Henningsen. Pre-deliberative moderation on choice dilemmas: Proposing a moderation-elasticity theory of choice shift. 148 Jennifer H. Waldeck, David R. Seibold & Andrew J. Flanagin. Organizational assimilation and communication technology use. 161 Paul L. Witt, Lawrence R. Wheeless & Mike Allen. A meta-analytical review of the relationship between teacher immediacy and student learning. 184 Gwen A. Hullman. Interpersonal communication motives and message design logic: Exploring their interaction on perceptions of compliance. 208 Joy Koesten. Family communication patterns, sex of subject, and communication competence. 226 2004, Vol. 71(1) Dawna I. Ballard & David R. Seibold. Communication-related organizational structures and work group temporal experiences: The effects of coordination method, technology type, and feedback cycle on members construals and enactments of time. 1 Betty H. La France, Alan D. Heisel & Michael J. Beatty. Is there empirical evidence for a nonverbal profile of extraversion? A meta-analysis and critique of the literature. 28 David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen, H. Jessy Yu & Nancy Rhodes. Fear appeal messages affect accessibility of attitudes toward the threat and adaptive behaviors. 49 J. Kevin Barge. Reflexivity and managerial practice. 70 Jennifer Butler Ellis & Sandi W. Smith. Memorable messages as guides to self-assessment of behavior: A replication and extension diary study. 97 2003, Vol. 70(4) Robert N. Bostrom. Theories, data, and communication research. 275 Edward L. Fink, Deborah A. Cai, Stan A. Kaploqitz, Sungeun Chung, Mark A. Van Dyke & Jeong-Nam Kim. The semantics of social influence: Threats vs. persuasion. 295 Scott W. Campbell & Tracy C. Russo. The social construction of mobile telephony: An application of the social influence model to perceptions and uses of mobile phones within personal communication networks. 317 William L. Benoit, Glenn J. Hansen & Rebecca M. Verser. A meta-analysis of the effects of viewing U.S. presidential debates. 335 Rachel A. Smith & Norbert Schwarz. Language, social comparison, and college football: Is your school less similar to the rival school than the rival school is to your school? 2003, Vol. 70(3)

25 Mary Lynn Miller Henningsen, David Dryden Henningsen, Michael G. Cruz & Joshua Morrill. Social influence in groups: A comparative application of relational framing theory and the elaboration likelihood model of persuasion. 175 Timothy Kuhn & Steven R. Corman. The emergence of homogeneity and heterogeneity in knowledge structures during a planned organizational change. 198 Amy Janan Johnson, Elaine Wittenberg, Melinda Morris Villagran, Michelle Mazur & Paul Villagran. Relational progression as a dialectic: Examining turning points in communication among friends. 230 Craig R. Hullett, Allan D. Loudon & Ananda Mitra. Emotion and political cognition: A test of bipolar, two-dimensional, and discrete models of emotion in predicting involvement and learning. 250 Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. Health communication on the web: The roles of web use motivation and information completeness. 264 2003, Vol. 70(2) Joseph A. Bonito. A social relations analysis of participation in small groups. 83 Dana E. Mastro. A social identity approach to understanding the impact of television messages. 98 Jungsu Yim. Audience concentration in the media: Cross-media comparisons and the introduction of the uncertainty measure. 114 Minque Mitchell Turner, Michelle A. Mazor, Nicole Wendel & Robert Winslow. Relational ruin or social glue? The joint effect of relationship type and gossip valence on liking, trust, and expertise. 129 Tamara D. Afifi & Paul Schrodt. Feeling caught as a mediator of ado9lescents and young adults avoidance and satisfaction with their parents in divorced and non-divorced households. 142

26 2003, Vol. 70(1) Alan D. Heisel, Betty H. La France & Michael J. Beatty. Self-reported extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism as predictors of peer rated verbal aggressiveness and affinity-seeking competence. 1 Nancy Grant Harrington, Derek R. Lane, Lewis Donohue, Rick S. Zimmerman, Gretchen R. Norling, Jeong-Hyuan An, Wai Hasien Cheah, Leola McClure, Tim Buckingham, Elizabeth Garoalo & Carla C. Bevins. Persuasive strategies for effective anti-drug messages. 16 Michael Pfau, David Roskos-Wswoldsen, Michelle Wood, Suya Yin, Jaeho Cho, Kerr-Hsin Lu & Lijiang Shen. Attitude accessibility as an alternative explanation for how inoculation confers resistance. 39 Craig R. Hullett & Timothy R. Levine. The overestimation of effect sizes from F values in metaanalysis: The cause and a solution. 52 Jennifer L. Bevan. Expectancy violation theory and sexual resistance in close, cross-sex relationships. 68 2002, Vol. 69(4) John P. Caughlin & Tamara D. Golish. An analysis of the association between topic avoidance and dissatisfaction: Comparing perceptional and interpersonal explanations. 275 R. Lance Holbert, William L. Benoit, Glenn J. Hansen & Wei-Chun Wen. The role of communication in the formation of an issue-based citizenry. 296 Anthony Mulac, Laura L. Jansma & Daniel G. Linz. Mens behavior toward women after viewing sexually-explicit films: Degradation makes a difference. 311 Annika Hylm & Patrice M. Buzzanell. Telecommuting as viewed through cultural lenses: An empirical investigation of the discourses of utopia, identity, and mystery. 329 Jennifer L. Monahan & Melanie Laliker. Intensifying the dominant response II: Nonconscious negative affect, cognitive demand and conversations. 357 Loril M. Gossett. Kept at arms length: Questioning the organizational desirability of member identification. 385 2002, Vol. 69(3) Janet R. Meyer. Contextual influences on the pursuit of secondary goals in request messages. 189 Robin L. Nabi. Anger, fear, uncertainty, and attitudes: A test of the cognitive-functional model. 204 Sandra G. Lakey & Daniel J. Canary. Actor goal achievement and sensitivity to partner as critical factors in understanding interpersonal communication competence and conflict strategies. 217 Su Ahn Jang, Sandi W. Smith & Timothy R. Levine. To stay or to leave? The role of attachment styles in communication patterns and potential termination of romantic relationships following discovery of deception. 236 Susan E. Morgan, Jenny Miller & Lily A. Arasaratnam. Signing cards, saving lives: An evaluation of the worksite organ donation promotion project. 253 2002, Vol. 69(2)

27 C. Erik Timmerman. The moderating effect of mindlessness/mindfulness upon media richness and social influence explanations of organizational media use. 111 Timothy R. Levine & John Banas. One-tailed F-tests in communication research. 132 Hee Sun Park, Timothy R. Levine, Steven A. McCornack, Kelly Morrison & Merissa Ferrara. How people really detect lies. 144 Craig R. Hullett. Charting the process underling the change of value-expressive attitudes: The importance of value-relevance in predicting the matching effect. 158 Eric R. Igou, Herbet Bless & Norbert Schwarz. Making sense of standardized survey questions: The influence of reference periods and their repetition. 179 2002, Vol. 69(1) Michael J. Beatty, Alan D. Heisel, Alice R. Hall, Timothy R. Levine & Better H. La France. What can we learn from the study of twins about genetic and environmental influences on interpersonal affiliation, aggressiveness, and social anxiety?: A meta-analytic study. 1 Charles Pavitt & Kelly Kline Johnson. Scheidel and Crowell revisited: A descriptive study of group proposal sequencing. 19 Ascan F. Foerner & Mary Ann Fitzpatrick. Nonverbal communication and martial adjustment and satisfaction: The role of decoding relationship relevant and relationship irrelevant affect. 33 Marianne Dainton & Brooks Aylor. Routine and strategic maintenance efforts: Behavioral patterns, variations associated with relational length, and the prediction of relational characteristics. 52 Deborah A. Cai & Edward L. Fink. Conflict style differences between individualistis and collectivists. 67 Karen Lee Ashcraft & April Kedrowicz. Self-direction or social support? Nonprofit empowerment and the tacit employment contract of organizational communication studies. 88 2001, Vol. 68(4) Sandi W. Smith, Jennifer Butler Ellis & Hyo-Jin Yoo. Memorable messages as guides to selfassessment of behavior: The role of instrumental values. 325 Franklin J. Boster, Thomas A. Fediuk & Michael Ryan Kotowski. The effectiveness of an altruistic appeal in the presence and absence of favors. 340 Monique M. Mitchell, Kenneth M. Brown, Melinda Morris-Villagran & Paul D. Villagran. The effects of anger and happiness on persuasive message processing: A test of the negative state relief model. 347 James C. McCroskey, Alan D. Heisel & Virginia P. Richmond. Eysencks BIG THREE and communication traits: Three correlational studies. 360 Kathy Kellerman. The meaning of means: The means dont justify the ends. 367 Paul E. King. Automatic responses, target resistance, and the adaptation of compliance-seeking requests. 386 Amy S. Ebesu Hubbard. Conflict between relationally uncertain romantic partners: The influence of relational responsiveness and empathy. 400 2001, Vol. 68(3)

28 Betty H. La France & Franklin J. Boster. To match or mismatch? That is only one important question. 211 John Oetzel, Stella Ting-Toomey, Tomoko Masumoto, Yumiko Yorochi, Xiaohui Pan, Juro Takai & Richard Wilcox. Face and facework in conflict: A cross-cultural comparison of China, Germany, Japan, and the United States. 235 William L. Benoit, Mitchell S. McKinney & R. Lance Holbert. Beyond leading and persona: Extending the scope of presidential debate effects. 259 John L. Sherry. Toward an etiology of media use motivations: The role of temperament in media use. 274 Kristen M. Berkos, Terre H. Allen, Patricia Kearney & Timothy G. Plax. When norms are violated: Imagined interactions as processing and coping mechanisms. 289 Amy M. Bippus. Recipients criteria for evaluating the skillfulness of comforting communication and the outcomes of comforting interactions. 301 Maria Knight Lapinski & Franklin J. Boster. Modeling the ego-defensive function of attitudes. 314 2001, Vol. 68(2) Anne P. Hubbell, Monique M. Mitchell & Jennifer C. Gee. The relative effects of timing of suspicion and outcome involvement on biased message processing. 115 Craig R. Hullett & Franklin J. Boster. Matching messages to the values underlying valueexpressive and social-adjustive attitudes: Reconciling an old theory with a contemporary measurement approach. 133 Sandi W. Smith & Jennifer Butler Ellis. Memorable messages as guides to self-assessment of behavior: An initial investigation. 154 Vanessa B. Beasley. The rhetoric of ideological consensus in the United States: American principles and American pose in presidential inaugurals. 169 Susan J. Messman & Jennifer Jones-Corley. Effects of communication environment, immediacy, and communication apprehension on cognitive and affective learning. 184 Hee Sun Park & Timothy R. Levine. A probability model of accuracy in deception detection experiments. 201 2001, Vol. 68(1) Anita L. Vangelisti, John P. Caughlin & Lindsay Timmerman. Criteria for revealing family secrets. 1 Timothy R. Levine & Franklin J. Boster. The effects of power and message variables on compliance. 28 Michael T. Stephenson & Philip Palmgreen. Sensation seeking, perceived message sensation value, personal involvement, and processing of anti-marijuana PSAs. 49 Rerina L. MacGeorge. Support providers interaction goals: The influence of attributions and emotions. 72 Glenn G. Sparks & Will Miller. Investigating the relationship between exposure to television programs that depict paranormal phenomenon and beliefs in the paranormal. 2000, Vol. 67(4)

29 Guerrero, L. K., Jones, S. M., & Burgoon, J. K. Responses to nonverbal immediacy change in romantic dyads: Effects of behavioral valence and degree of behavioral change on nonverbal and verbal reactions. 325 Kory Floyd & Mark T. Morman. Affection received from fathers as a predictor of mens affection with their own sons: Tests of the modeling and compensation hypotheses. 347 Alexis Tan, Yuki Fujioka & Gerdean Tan. Television use, stereotypes of African Americans, and opinions on affirmative action: An affective model of public reasoning. 362 Deborah Dunn & Michael J. Cody. Account credibility and public images: Excuses, justifications, denials, and sexual harassment. 372 Donald C. Shields. Symbolic convergence and special communication theories: Sensing and examining dis/enchantment with the theoretical robustness of critical autoethnography. 392 2000, Vol. 67(3) Kenneth L. Hacker, Walter R. Zakahi, Maury J. Giles & Shaun McQuitty. Components of candidate images: Statistical analysis of the issue-persona dichotomy in the presidential campaign of 1996. 227 April R. Trees. Nonverbal communication and the support process: Interactional sensitivity in interactions between mothers and young adult children. 239 Min-Sun Kim, Renee Storm Klingle, William F. Sharkey, Hee Sun Park, David H. Smith & Deborah Cai. A test of a cultural model of patients motivation for verbal communication in patient-doctor interactions. 262 Walid A. Afifi & Josephine W. Lee. Balancing instrumental and identity goals in relationships: The role of request directness and request persistence in the selection of sexual resistance strategies. 284 Laura Stafford, Marianne Dainton & Stephen Haas. Measuring routine and strategic relational maintenance: Scale revision, sex versus gender roles, and the prediction of relational characteristics. 306 2000, Vol. 67(2) Timothy R. Levine, Lori N. Anders, John Banas, Karie Leigh Baum, Keriane Endo, Allison D. S. Hu & Norman C. W. Wong. Norms, expectations, and deception: A norm violation model of veracity judgments. 123 Keith V. Erickson. Presidential rhetorics visual turn: Performance fragments and the politics of illusionism. 138 John C. Reinard & Darin J. Arsenault. The impact of strategic and non-strategic voir dire questions on jury verdicts. 158 William L. Benoit. Beyond genre theory: The genesis of rhetorical action. 178 Timothy Stephen. Concept analysis of gender, feminist, and womens studies research in the communication literature. 193 Monique M. Mitchell. Able but not motivated: The relative effects of happy and sad mood on persuasive message processing. 215 2000, Vol. 67(1) Daena J. Goldsmith. Soliciting advice: The role of sequential placement in mitigating face threat. 1

30 Jake Harwood, Jordan McKee & Mei-Chen Lin. Younger and older adults schematic representations of intergenerational communication. 20 Marouf Hasian, Jr., & A. Cheree Carlson. Revisions and collective memory: The struggle for meaning in the Amistad affair. 42 Dale E. Brashers, Judith L. Neidig, Stephen M. Haas, Linda K. Dobbs, Linda W. Cardillo & Jane A. Russell. Communication in the management of uncertainty: The case of persons living with HIV or AIDS. 63 Virginia P. Richmond & James C. McCroskey. The impact of supervisor and subordinate immediacy on relational and organizational outcomes. 85 Judee K. Burgoon & Norah E. Dunbar. An interactionist perspective on dominance-submission: Interpersonal dominance as a dynamic, situationally contingent social skill. 96 1999, Vol. 66(4) Beth A Le Poire, Carolyn Shepard & Ashley Duggan. Nonverbal involvement, expressiveness, and pleasantness as predicted by parental and partner attachment style. 293 Daniel J. OKeefe & Marianne Figge. Guilt and expected guilt in the door-in-the-face technique. 312 Laura Leets & Peggy J. Bowers. Loud and angry voices: The insidious influence. 325 William L. Benoit & Allison Harthcock. Functions of the great debates: Acclaims, attacks, and defenses in the 1960 presidential debates. 341 Michael W. Kramer & Vernon D. Miller. A response to criticisms of organizational socialization research: In support of contemporary conceptualization of organizational assimilation. 358 Connie Bullis. Mad or Bad: A response to Kramer and Miller. 368 Robin Patric Clair. Ways of Seeing: A Review of Kramer and Millers manuscript. 374 Paaige K. Turner. What if you dont? A response to Kramer and Miller. 382 Vernon D. Miller & Michael W. Kramer. A reply to Bullis, Turner, and Clair. 390 1999, Vol. 66(3) Hee Sun Park & Timothy R. Levine. The theory of reasoned action and self-construal: Evidence from three cultures. 199 Kory Floyd & Judee K. Burgoon. Reacting to nonverbal expressions of liking: A test of interaction adaptation theory. 219 Marifran Mattson. Toward a reconceptualization of communication cues to action in the health belief model: HIV test counseling. 240 Charles J. Wigley III. Verbal aggressiveness and communicator style characteristics of summoned jurors as predictors of actual jury selection. 266 James M. Honeycutt. Typological differences in predicting marital happiness from oral history behaviors and imagined interactions. 276 1999, Vol. 66(2) Judee K. Burgoon & Beth A. Le Poire. Nonverbal cues and interpersonal judgments: Participant and observer perceptions of intimacy, dominance, composure, and formality. 105 Timothy R. Levine, Hee Sun Park & Steven A. McCornack. Accuracy in detecting truths and lies: Documenting the veracity effect. 125

31 Sheryl L. Lindsay. A layered model of problematic intercultural communication in U.S.-owned maruiladoras in Mexico. 145 Franklin J. Boster, Monique M. Mitchell. Maria Knight Lupinski, Heather Cooper, Victoria O. Orrego & Ronald Reinke. The impact of guilt and type of compliance-gaining message on compliance. 168 Mark Hickson, III, Don W. Stacks & Jean Bodon. The status of research productivity in communication: 1915-1995. 178 1998, Vol. 66(1) Beth A. Le Poire & Stephen M. Yoshimura. The effects of expectancies and actual communication on nonverbal adaptation and communication outcomes: A test of interaction adaptation theory. 1 Scott E. Caplan & John O. Greene. Acquisition of message-production skill by younger and older adults: Effects of age, task complexity, and practice. 31 James P. Dillard, Denise H. Solomon & Mark T. Palmer. Structuring the concept of relational communication. 49 John P. Caughlin & Anita L. Vangelisti. Desire for change in ones partner as a predictor of the demand/withdrawal pattern of marital communication. 66 James C. McCroskey & Jason J. Teven. Goodwill: A reexamination of the construct and its measurement. 90 1998, Vol. 65(4) Renee A. Meyers & Dale E. Brashers. Argument in decision making: Explication of a process model and investigating the argument-outcome link. 261 Sunwolf & David R. Seibold. Jurors intuitive rules for deliberation: A structurational approach to communication in jury decision making. 282 Judee K. Burgoon, Michelle L. Johnson & Pamela T. Koch. The nature and measurement of interpersonal dominance. 308 Rebecca W. Tardy & Claudia L. Hale. Getting plugged in: A network analysis of healthinformation seeking among stay-at-home-moms. 336 1998, Vol. 65(3) Anita L. Vangelisti & Linda P. Crumley. Reactions to messages that hurt: The influence of relational context. 173 Michael J. Beatty, James C. McCroskey, & Alan D. Heisel. Communication apprehension as temperamental expression: A communibiological paradigm. 197 Larry D. Browning & Janice M. Beyer. The structuring of shared vocabulary standards in the U.S. semiconductor industry: Communicating to reach agreement. 220 Al Weitzel & Patricia Geist. Parliamentary procedure in a community group: Communication and vigilant decision making. 244 1998, Vol. 65(2) Gerard A. Hauser. Vernacular dialogue and the rhetoricality of public opinion. 83

32 John R. Sparks, Charles S. Areni & K. Chris Cox. An investigation of the effects of language style and communication modality on persuasion. 108 Richard J. Jensen & John C. Hammerback. Your tools are really the people: The rhetoric of Robert Parris Moses. 126 Keither V. Erickson. Presidential spectacles: Political illusionism and the rhetoric of travel. 141 Grant W. Smith. The political impact of name sounds. 154 1998, Vol. 65(1) Eric M. Eisenberg, Alexandra Murphy & Linda Andrews. Openness and decision making in the search for a university provost. 1 Robin Patric Clair & Adrianne W. Kunkel. Unrealistic realities: Child abuse and the aesthetic resolution. 24 Min-Sun Kim, Ho-Chang Shin & Deborah Cai. Cultural influences on the preferred forms of request and re-requesting. 47 William A. Ausmus. Pragmatic uses of metaphor: Models and metaphor in the nuclear winter scenario. 67 1997, Vol. 64(4) Angela Trethewey. Resistance, identity, and empowerment: A postmodern feminist analysis of clients in a human service organization. 281 Ling Chen. Verbal adaptive strategies in U.S. American dyadic interactions with U.S. American or East-Asian partners. 302 Diane F. Witmer. Communication and recovery: Structuration as an ontological approach to organizational culture. 324 Elizabeth E. Graham. Turning points and commitment in post-divorce relationships. 350

33 1997, Vol. 64(3) John O. Greene, Christoper N. Edwards, Terri L. Malek-Madani & Marianne S. Sassi. Adult acquisition of message production skill. 181-200 Jeffrey Pittam & Cynthia Gallois. Learning strategies in the attribution of blame for HIV and AIDS. 201-218. Michael J. Papa & Arvind Singhal. Organizing for social change within coercive control systems: Member identification, empowerment, and the masking of discipline. 219-249 Marouf Hasian, Jr. Judicial rhetoric in a fragmentary world: Character and storytelling in the Leon Frank case. 250-269. Thomas G. Goodnight. Opening up the spaces of public discussion. 270-275. Gerald A. Houser. On publics and public spheres: A response to Phillips. 275-279. 1997, Vol. 64(2) Denise Haunani Solomon. A developmental model of intimacy and date request explicitness. 99 Valerie Manusov, Michaela R. Winchatz & Laura M. Manning. Acting out our minds: Incorporating behavior into models of stereotype-based expectancies for cross-cultural interactions. 199 Richard Morris & Mary E. Stuckey. More rain and less thunder: Substitute vocabularies, Richard Nixon, and the construction of political reality. 140 J. Michael Hogan. George Gallup and the rhetoric of scientific democracy. 161 1997, Vol. 64(1) Laura L. Jansma, Daniel G. Linz, Anthony Mulac & Dorothy J. Imrich. Mens interactions with women after viewing sexually explicit films: Does degradation make a difference? 1 Carol J. S. Bruess & Judy C. Pearson. Interpersonal rituals in marriage and adult friendship. 25 Mark P. Moore. The cigarette as representational ideograph in the debate over environmental tobacco smoke. 47 Sandra L. Borden. Choice processes in a newspaper ethics case. 65 Alexis Tan, Leigh Nelson, Qingwen Dong & Gerdean Tan. Value acceptance in adolescent socialization: A test of a cognitive-functional theory of television effects. 82 1996, Vol. 63(4) Laura K. Guerrero. Attachment-style differences in intimacy and involvement: A test of the fourcategory model. 269 Carl Botan. Communication work and electronic surveillance: A model for predicting panoptic effects. 293 Mary Jane Collier. Communication competence problematics in ethnic friendships. 314 Shawn J. Parry-Giles & Trevor Parry-Giles. Gendered politics and presidential image construction: A reassessment of the feminine style 337 J. Donald Ragsdale. Gender, satisfaction level, and the use of relational maintenance strategies in marriage. 354 1996, Vol. 63(3)

34 Leigh A. Ford & Austin Babrow. Social support messages and the management of uncertainty in the experience of breast cancer: An application of problematic integration theory. 189 Beth A. Le Poire & Judee K. Burgoon. Usefulness of differentiating arousal responses within communication theories: Orienting response or defensive arousal within nonverbal theories of expectancy violation. 208 Kendall R. Phillips. The spaces of public dissension: Reconsidering the public sphere. 231 Robin Patric Clair. The political nature of the colloquialism, A real job: Implications for organizational socialization. 249 1996, Vol. 63(2) James Price Dillard, Terry A. Kinney & Michael G. Cruz. Influence, appraisals, and emotions in close relationships. 105 Laurie K. Lewis & David R. Seibold. Communication during intraorganizational innovation adoption: Predicting users behavioral coping responses to innovations in organizations. 131 Lyall Crawford. Personal, ethnography. 158 Patricia M. Sias. Constructing perceptions of differential treatment: An analysis of coworkers discourse. 171 1996, Vol. 63(1) Ernest G. Bormann, John F. Cragan & Donald C. Shields. An expansion of the rhetorical vision component of the symbolic convergence theory: The cold way paradigm case. 1 Min-sun Kim, John H. Hunter, Akira Miyahara, Ann-Marie Horvath, Mary Bresnahan & Hye-Jin Yoon. Individual- vs. culture-level dimensions of individualism and collectivism: Effects on preferred conversational styles. 28 Judee K. Burgoon, David B. Buller, Laura K. Guerrero, Walid A. Afifi & Clyde Feldman. Interpersonal deception: XII. Information management dimensions underlying deceptive and truthful messages. 50 Scott Jacobs, Edwin J. Dawson & Dale Brashers. Information manipulation theory: A replication and assessment. 70 Steven A. McCornack, Timothy R. Levine, Kelly Morrison & Maria Lapinski. Speaking of information manipulation: A critical rejoinder. 83 David B. Biller & Judee K. Burgoon. Another look at information management: A rejoinder to McCornack, Levine, Morrison, and Lapinski. 92 Scott Jacobs, Dale Brashers & Edin J. Dawson. Truth and deception. 98

35 COMMUNICATION QUARTERLY 2007, Vol. 55(2) Jason J. Teven. Effects of supervisor social influence, nonverbal immediacy, and biological sex on subordinates perceptions of job satisfaction, liking, and supervisor credibility. 155 Jennifer A. Theiss & Denise Haunani Solomon. Communication and the emotional, cognitive, and relational consequences of first sexual encounters between partners. 179 Robert J. Sidelinger & Melanie Booth-Butterfield. Mate value discrepancy as predictor of forgiveness and jealousy in romantic relationships. 207 Heather E. Canary & Daniel J. Canary. Making sense of ones career: An analysis and typology of supervisor careeer stories. 225 Frank E. Dardis. The role of issue-framing functions in affective beliefs and opinions about a sociopolitical issue. 247 2007, Vol. 55(1) Michaela D. E., Meyer. Women speak(ing): Forty years of feminist contributions to rhetoric and an agenda for feminist rhetorical studies. 1 Marian L. Houser, Renee L. Cowan & Daniel A. West. Investigating a new education frontier: Instructor communication behavior in CD-ROM textsDo traditionally positive behaviors translate into this new environment? 19 Jeffrey A. Hall & Betty J. La France. Attitudes and communication of homophobia in fraternizes: Separating the impact of social adjustment functions from hetero-identity concern. 39 Jennifer L. Bevan, Karin D. Tidgewell, Karissa C. Bagley, Lauren Cusaanelli, Meredith Hartstein, Domina Holbeck & Jerold L. Hale. Serial argumentation goals and their relationships to perceived resolvability and choice of conflict tactics. 61 Kory Floyd, Colin Hesse & Mark T. Haynes. Human affection exchange: XV. Metabolic and cardiovascular correlates of trait expressed affection. 79 Andrew C. Billings & James R. Angelini. Packaging the games for viewer consumption: Gender, ethnicity, and nationality in NBCs coverage of the 2004 Summer Olympics. 95 Qin Zhang. Family communication patterns and conflict styles in Chinese parent-child relationships. 113 Heidi Porter, Jason S. Wrench & Crissy Hoskinson. The influence of supervisor temperament on subordinate job satisfaction and perceptions of supervisor sociocommunicative orientation and approachability. 129 2006, Vol. 54(4) James W. Chesebro & David T. McMahon. Media constructions of mass murder-suicides as drama: The New York Times symbolic construction of mass murder-suicides. 407 Alan C. Mikkelson, Lisa Farinelli & Angela G. La Valley. The influences of brain dominance and biological sex on emotional expressivity, sensitivity, and control. 427 Jennifer A. Samp & Ann N. Miller. When drinking makes it worse: The malevolence assumption, appraisals, and communication goals. 447 Timothy R. Levine, Krystyna Strzyewski Aune & Hee Sun Park. Love styles and communication in relationships: Partner preferences, initiation, and intensification. 465

36 Jennifer Thompson & Mary Jane Collier. Toward contingent understrandings of intersecting identifications among selected U.S. interracial couples: Integrating interpretive and critical views. 487 Judy C. Pearson, Jeffrey T. Child, Jody L. Mattern & David H. Kahl, Jr. What are students being taught about ethics in public speaking textbooks? 507 Jean G. Jones. Tales of a Texas clinic: Theodore O. Windt remembered. 523 2006, Vol. 54(3) James C. McCroskey. Reliability and validity of the generalized attitude measure and generalized belief measure. 265 Sachiyo M. Shearman & Timothy R. Levine. Dogmatism updated: A scale revision and validation. 275 Scott A. Myers. Using leader-member exchange theory to explain students motives to communicate. 294 Cheryl L. Nicholas. Disciplinary-interdisciplinary GLBQR (identity) studies and Hechts layering perspective. 305 Marian L. Hauser. Expectancy violations of instructor communication as predictors of motivation and learning: A comparison of traditional and nontraditional students. 331 Judy C. Pearson, Jeffrey T. Child & David H. Kahl, Jr. Preparation meeting opportunity: How do college students prepare for public speeches? 351 Jennifer L. Bevan, Kristen A. Stetzenbach, Eric Batson & Kulamo Bullo. Factors associated with general partner and relational uncertainty within early adulthood sibling relationships. 367 Stephanie Kelley-Romano. Mythmaking in alien abduction narratives. 383 2006, Vol. 54(2) Jason J. Teven, James C. McCroskey & Virginia P. Richmond. Communication correlates of perceived Machiavellianism of supervisors: Communication orientations and outcomes. 127 Michael Pfau, Joshua Compton, Kimberly A. Parker, Chasu An, Elaine M. Wittenberg, Monica Ferguson, Heather Horton & Yuri Malyshev. The conundrum of the timing of counterarguing effects in resistance: Strategies to boost the persistence of counterarguing output. 143 Randall G. Rogan. Conflict framing categories revisited. 157 Andy J. Merolla. Decoding ability and humor production. 175 Alice Hall. Viewers perceptions of reality programs. 191 Kay B. Harris, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Predicting speech state anxiety from trait anxiety, reactivity, and situational influences. 213 Paul M. Haridakis. Men, women, and televised violence: Predicting viewer aggression in male and female television viewers. 227 Kelli Jones, Andrea Doughty & Mark Hickson, III. The effects of age, gender, and economic status on generosity in the presence of exchange: A pilot study. 257 2006, Vol. 54(1) Linda L. McCroskey, James C., McCroskey & Virginia P. Richmond. Analysis and improvement of the measurement of interpersonal attraction and homophily. 1 Sara DeTruk. The power of dialogue: Consequences of intergroup dialogue and their implications for agency and alliance building. 33

37 Chas D. Koermer & Linda L. McCroskey. Sociality communication: Its influence on customer loyalty with the service provider and service organization. 53 Keith Weber, Matthew M. Martin, Members of COMM 401 & Michael Corrigan. Creating persuasive messages advocating organ donation. 67 Pamela J. Lanuitti & Elana C. Stratuman. Classroom communication: The influence of instructor self-disclosure on student evaluations. 89 Shannon C. McCullough, Shelly G. Russell, Ralph R. Behnke, Chris R. Sawyer & Paul L. Witt. Anticipatory public speaking state anxiety as a function of body sensations and state of mind. 101 Tony E. Smith & Ann Bainbridge Frymier. Get real: Does practicing speeches before an audience improve performance? 111 2005, Vol. 53(4) Timothy P. Mottet, Steven A. Beebe, Paul C. Raffeld & Michelle L. Paulsel. The effects of student responsiveness on teachers granting power to students and essay evaluation. 421 Scott A. Myers, Matthew M. Martin & Jennifer L. Knapp. Perceived instructor in-class communicative behaviors as a predictor of student participation in out of class communication. 437 L. Patrick Devlin. Analysis of presidential primary campaign commercials of 2004. 451 David Airne & William L. Benoit. Political television advertising in Campaign 2000. 473 William L. Benoit & David Airne. Issue ownership for non-presidential television spots. 493 R. Lance Holbert, David A. Tschida, Maria Dixon, Kristin Cherry, Keli Steuber & David Airne. The West Wing and depictions of the American presidency: Expanding the domains of framing in political communication. 505 2005, Vol. 53(3) Wendy Samter & Brant R. Burleson. The role of communication in same-sex friendship: A comparison among African Americans, Asian Americans, and European Americans, 265 Kory Floyd, John A. Hess, Lisa A. Miczo, Kelby H. Halone, Alan C. Mikkelson & Kyle James Tusing. Human affection exchange VIII: Further evidence of the benefits of expressed affection. 285 Laura K. Guerrero & Suzanne M. Jones. Differences in conversational skills as a function of attachment style: A follow-up study. 305 Courtney Waite Miller & Michael E. Roloff. Gender and willingness to confront hurtful messages from romantic partners. 323 Douglas L. Kelley & Vincent R. Waldron. An investigation of forgiveness-seeking communication and relational outcomes. 339 David Dryden Henningsen, Kathleen S. Valde & Elaine Davies. Exploring the effect of verbal and nonverbal cues on perceptions of deception. 359 Juliann C. Schooll & Dan OHair. Uncovering beliefs about deceptive communication. 377 Jessica J. Eckstein. Conversation conundrums: Listener perceptions of affective influence attempts as mediated by personality and individual differences. 401 2005, Vol. 53(2)

38 Ray Baus, Deborah Dysart-Gale & Phil Haven. Caregiving and social support; A twenty-first century challenge for college students. 125 Lawrence R. Wheeless, Libby Eddelman-Spears, Lee D. Magness & Raymond W. Preisas. Informational reception apprehension and information from technology aversion: Development and test of a new construct. 143 Robert L. Durran, Lynne Kelly & James A. Keaten. College faculty use and perceptions of electronic mail to communicate with students. 159 Paul Schrodt & Paul D. Turman. The impact of instructional technology use, course design, and sex differences on students initial perceptions of instructor credibility. 177 Ann Bainbridge Frymeier. Students classroom communication effectiveness. 197 Marian L. Hauser. Are we violating their expectations? Instructor communication expectations of traditional and nontraditional students. 213 Thomas Hugh Feeley, Vivian M. Williams & Timothy J. Wise. Testing the predictive validity of the GRE exam on communication graduate student success: A case study at University of Buffalo. 229 Kristen A. Gullicks, Judy C. Pearson, Jeffrey T. Child, & Colleen R. Schwab. Diversity and power in public speaking textbooks. 247 2005, Vol. 53(1) Danette Ifert Johnson. Feminine style in presidential debate discourse, 1960-2000. 3 Linda L. McCroskey, James C. McCroskey & Virginia P. Richmond. Applying organizational orientations theory to employees of profit and non-profit organizations. 21 James W. Neuliep, Stephanie M. Hintz & James C. McCroskey. The influence of ethnocentrism in organizational contexts: Perceptions of interviewee and managerial attractiveness, credibility, and effectiveness. 41 Heather L. Walter, Carolyn M. Anderson & Matthew M. Martin. How subordinates Machiavellianism and motives relate to satisfaction with superiors. 57 Keith Weber, Matthew M. Martin & Jacob L. Cayanus. Student interest: A two study reexamination of the concept. 71 K. David Roach, Myrna M. Cornett-DeVito & Raffaele DeVito. A cross-cultural comparison of instructor communication in American and French classrooms. 87 Qin Zhang. Immediacy, humor, power distance, and classroom communication apprehension in Chinese college classrooms. 109

39 2004, Vol. 52(4) Mark Hickson, III, Jean Broden & Joshua Turner. Research productivity in communication: An analysis, 1915-2001. 323 Scott A. Myers & Keith D. Weber. Preliminary development of a measure of sibling relational maintenance behaviors: Scale development and initial findings. 334 Danette Ifert Johnson, Michael E. Roloff & Melissa A. Riffee. Responses to refusals of requests: Face threat and persistence, persuasion and forgiving statements. 347 Mary B. McPherson & Stacy L. Young. What students think when teachers get upset: Fundamental attribution error and student-generates reasons for teacher anger. 357 Chai-Fang (Sandy) Hsu. Sources of differences in communication apprehension between Chinese in Taiwan and Americans. 370 Jack Glascock & Thomas E. Ruggerio. Representations of class and gender on primetime Spanish-language television in the United States. 390 Sharon E. Jarvis. Partisan patterns in presidential campaign speeches, 1948-2000. 403 Peter M. Smudde. Implications on the practice and study of Kenneth Burkes idea of a public relations counsel with a heart. 420 2004, Vol. 52(3) James C. McCroskey, Kristen M. Valencic & Virginia P. Richmond. Toward a general model of instructional communication. 197 Nicole D. Dobrnasky & Ann Bainbridge Frymier. Developing teacher-student relationships through out of class communication. 211 Jason S. Wrench & Narissa M. Punyanunt. Advisee-advisor communication: An exploratory study examining instructional communication variables in the graduate advisee-advisor relationship. 224 Jacob L. Cayanus & Melanie Booth-Butterfield. Relationship orientation, jealousy, and equity: An examination of jealousy evoking and positive communication responses. 237 Andy J. Merolla, Keith D. Weber, Scott A. Myers & Melanie Booth-Butterfield. The impact of past dating relationship solidarity on commitment, satisfaction, and investment in current relationships. 251 Eura Jung & Michael L. Hecht. Elaborating the communication theory of identity: Identity gaps and communication outcomes. 265 Judy C. Pearson & Shannon Borke VanHorn. Communication and gender identity: A retrospective analysis. 284 Keith V. Erickson & Stephanie Thomson. Seduction theory and the recovery of feminine aesthetics: Implications for rhetorical criticism. 300 2004, Vol. 52(2) William L. Benoit. Political party affiliation and presidential campaign discourse. 81 Rebecca M. Chory-Assad & Michelle L. Paulsel. Antisocial classroom communication: Instructor influence and interactional justice as predictors of student aggression. 98 Elizabeth Preston & Cindy L. White. Commodifying kids: Branded identities and the selling of adspace on kids networks. 115 Kathleen Glenister Roberts. Textuing the narrative paradigm: Folklore and communication. 129

40 Melissa E. Steyn. Rehabilitating a Whiteness disgraced: Africaner White Talk in post-Apartheid South Africa. 143 Hye Yoon Jung & James C. McCroskey. Communication apprehension in a first language and self-perceived competence as predictors of communication apprehension in a second language: A study of speakers of English as a second language. 170 Michele L. Paulsel & Timothy P. Mottet. Interpersonal communication motives: A communiobiological perspective. 183 2004, Vol. 52(1) James T. McCroskey, Virigina P. Richmond, Aaron D. Johnson & Heather T. Smith. Organizational orientations theory and measurement: Development of measures and preliminary investigations. 1 Heidi Bartoo & Patricia M. Sias. When enough is too much: Communication apprehension and employee information experiences. 15 ]Timothy P. Mottet, Steven A. Beebe, Paul C. Raffeld & Michelle L. Paulsel. The effects of student verbal and nonverbal responsiveness on teachers liking of students and willingness to comply with student requests. 27 Jason J. Teven & Trudy L. Hanson. The impact of teacher immediacy and perceived caring on teacher competence and trustworthiness. 39 Amy Jagan Johnson, Elaine Wittenbery, Michal Haigh, Shelly Wigley, Jennifer Becker, Ken Brown & Elizabeth Craig. The process of relationship development and deterioration: Turning points in friendships that have terminated. 54 Cheolhan Lee & William L. Benoit. A functional analysis of presentation television spots: A comparison of Korean and American ads. 69 2003, Vol. 51(4) James W. Chesebro. Communication, vales, and popular television seriesa twenty-five year assessment and final conclusions. 367 Kory Floyd & Alan C. Mikkelson. Effects of brain laterality on accuracy of decoding facial displays of emotions. 419 Karen Kroman Myers & John G. Oetzel. Exploring the dimensions of organizational assimilation: Creating and validating a measure. 438 Randall S. Rogan & Betty H. La France. An examination of the relationship between verbal aggressiveness, conflict management strategies, and conflict interaction goals. 458 Amber N. Finn, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Audience-perceived anxiety patterns of public speakers. 470 Jason S. Wrench & Melanie Booth-Butterfield. Increasing patient satisfaction and compliance: A examination of physician humor orientation, compliance-gaining strategies, and perceived credibility. 482 Virginia P. Richmond, James C. McCroskey & Aaron D. Johnson. Development of nonverbal immediacy scale (NIS): Measures of self- and other-perceived nonverbal immediacy. 504 Michaela D. E. Meyer. Utilizing mythic criticism in contemporary narrative culture: Examining present-absence of shadow archetypes in Spider-Man. 518. 2003, Vol. 51(3)

41 Kory Floyd & Mary Claire Morr. Human affection exchange: VII. Affectionate communication in the sibling/spouse/sibling-in-law triad. 247 Michaela D. E. Meyer, Its me. Im it.: Defining adolescent sexual identity through relational dialectics in Dawsons Creek. 262 Laura K. Guerrero & Susanne M. Jones. Difference in ones own and ones partners perceptions of social skills as a function of attachment style. 277 Jennifer K. Wood. Justice as therapy: The Victim Rights Clarification Act. 296 Jason Edward Black. Extending the right of personhood, voice, and life to sensate others: A homology of right to life and animal rights rhetoric. 312 Melanie Booth-Butterfield. Integrating health communication, pedagogy, social science, and health interventions. 332 Theodore O. Prosise. Prejudicied, historical witness, and responsible? Collective memory and liminality in the Beit Hashoah Museum of Tolerance. 351 2003, Vol. 51(2) Dennis S. Gouran. Reflections on the type of question as a determinant of the form of interaction in decision-making and problem-solving discussions. 111 David T. McMahan & James W. Chesebro. Media and political transformations: Revolutionary changes of the worlds culture. 126 Marouf Hasian, Jr. Franklin D. Roosevelt, the holocaust, and modernitys rescue rhetorics. 154 Ann Bainbridge Frymier & Melissa Bekelja Wanzer. Examining differences in perceptions of students communication with professors: A comparison of students with and without disabilities. 174 Troy A. Murphy. Romantic democracy and the rhetoric of heroic citizenship. 192 Nichole Egbert. Support provider mood and familiar versus unfamiliar events: An investigation of social support quality. 209 Richard Hold. Bakhtins dimension of language and analysis of conversation. 225 2003, Vol. 51(1) Thomas W. Benson. Then Cornell school of rhetoric: Idiom and institution. 1 Spoma Jovanovic. Difficult conversations as moral imperative: Negotiating ethnic identities during war. 57 Jackson B. Miller. Legal or illegal? Documented or undocumented? The struggle over Brokavens Neighborhood Preservation Act. 73 Jack Glascock. Gender, race, and aggression in newer TV networks primetime programming. 90 John C. Cole & James C. McCroskey. The association of perceived communication apprehension, shyness, and verbal aggression with perceptions of source credibility and affect in organizational and interpersonal contexts. 101 2002, Vol. 50(3 & 4) (Special Issue: Identity Negotiation: An Exploration of Racial, Cultural and Gendered Identities) Part I Ronald L. Jackson, II. Introduction: Theorizing and analyzing the nexus between cultural and gendered identities and the body. 245

42 Patricia S. Parker. Negotiating identity in raced and gendered workplace interactions: The use of strategic communication by African American women senior executives within dominant cultural organizations. 251 Diane A. Forbesz. Internalized masculinity and womens discourse: A critical analysis of the (re) production of masculinity in organizations. 269 Nina M. Reich. Towards a rearticulation of women-as-victims: A thematic analysis of the construction of womens identities in surrounding gendered violence. 292 S. Lily Mendiza, Rona T. Halualani & Jolanta A. Drzewiecka. Moving the discourse on identities in intercultural communication: Structure, culture, and resignifications. 312 Bryant Keith Alexander & John T. Warren. The materiality of bodies: Critical reflections on pedagogy, politics, and positionality. 328 Part II Ronald L. Jackson, II. Cultural contracts theory: Toward an understanding of identity negotiation. 359 Rhunette C. Diggs & Kathleen D. Clark. Its a struggle but worth it: Identifying and managing identities in an interracial friendship. 368 Roberto Avant-Mier & Marouf Hasian, Jr. In search of the power of Whiteness: A genealogical exploration of negotiated racial identities in Americas ethnic past. 391 Alberto Gonzalez & JoBeth Gonzales. The color problem in sillyville: Negotiating White identity in one popular kid-vid. 410 Kenton T. Wilkenson. Collective situational ethnicity and Latino sub-groups struggle for influence in U.S. Spanish-language television. 422 Kim Purnell. Listening to lady day: An exploration of the creative (re)negotiation of identity revealed in the life narratives and music lyrics of Billie Holiday. 444 Leda Cooks. Zonians in cyberspace: The imagining of individual, community and nation on the Panama-L Listserve. 467. 2002, Vol. 50(2) Jon Paulson. Theodore Roosevelt and the rhetoric of citizenship: On tour in New England, 1902. 123 Kory Floyd. Human affection exchange: V. Attributes of the highly affectionate. 135 Pamela J. Lannutti & Kenzie A. Cameron. Beyond the breakup: Heterosexual and homosexual post-dissolutional relationships. 153 David W. Worley & James W. Chesebro. Goading the discipline towards unity: Teaching communication in an internet environmenta policy research analysis. 171 Amber Finn & William G. Powers. The value of instrumental and affective communication skills in different relational stages. 192Elfriede Fursich. Packaging culture: The potential and limitations of travel programs on global television. 204 John F. Stone. Using symbolic convergence theory to discern and segment motives for enrolling in professional masters degree programs. 227 2002, Vol. 50(1) Jolanta A. Drzewiecka. Reinventing and contesting identities in constitutive discourses: Between Diaspora and its others. 1 S. A. Welch & Rebecca B. Rubin. Development of relationship stage measures. 24

43 David E. Engen. The communicative imagination and its cultivation. 41 Rebecca M. Chory-Assad. Classroom justice: Perceptions of fairness as a predictor of student motivation, learning, and aggression. 58 Pekka Isotalus & Hanni Muukkonen. Animated agent immediacy and news services with handheld computers. 78 Mary M. Step & Margaret O. Fincunane. Interpersonal communication motives in everyday interactions. 93 Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Reduction in public speaking state anxiety during performance as a function of sensitization processes. 110 2001, Vol. 49(4) Marouf Hasian, Jr. & Helen A. Shugart. Melancholic nostalgia, collective memories, and the cinematic representation of nationalistic identities in Indochine. 329 M. Sean Limon & Franklin J. Boster. The impact of varying argument quality and minority size on influencing the majority and perceptions of the minority. 350 Maribeth S. Metzler. Responding to the legitimacy problems of big tobacco: An analysis of the People of Phillip Morris image advertising campaign. 366 Kathleen Ellis & Pamlea Shockley-Zalabak. Trust in top management and immediate supervisor: The relationship to satisfaction, perceived organizational effectiveness, and information receiving. 382 Alice Hall. Film reviews and the publics perception of stereotypes: Movie critics discourse about The Siege. 399 Amy Janan Johnson. Examining the maintenance of friendships: Are there differences between geographically close and long-distance friends? 424 LeAnn M. Brazeal & William L. Benoit. A functional analysis of Congressional television spots, 1986-2000. 436 2001, Vol. 49(3) James W. Chesebro & Koji Fuse. The development of a perceived masculinity scale. 203 William L. Benoit & Diana Hirson. Doonesbury versus the tobacco institute: The smoke starters coupon. 279 Matthew T. Althouse. Boris Yeltsins ascent to power: Rhetorical roles and the end of the Soviet Union. 295 Kory Floyd & Mark T. Morman. Human affection exchange III. Discriminative parental solicitude in mens affectionate communication with their biological and nonbiological sons. 310 2001, Vol. 49(2) Robert Westerfelhaus & Avrind Singhal. Difficulties in co-opting a complex sign: Our Lade of Gudalupe as a site of semiotic struggle and entanglement. 95 Gary Gumpert & Susan J. Drucker. Public boundaries: Privacy and surveillance in a technological world. 115 William L. Benoit & Glenn J. Hansen. Presidential debate questions and the public agenda. 130 Jason S. Wrench & James C. McCroskey. A temperamental understanding of humor communication and exhilaratability. 142

44 Joe Ayres, Tanichya K. Wrongprasert, John Silva, Tracy Story, Chia-Gang (Sandy) Hsu & Darshan Sawant D. Effects of performance visualization on employment interviews. 160 Marianne Dainton & Brooks Aylor. A relational uncertainty analysis of jealousy, trust, and maintenance in long-distance versus geographically close relationships. 172 Brian J. Snee. Clinton and Vietnam: A case for amnestic rhetoric. 189 2001, Vol. 49(1) Bill Yousman. Who owns identity? Malcolm X, representation, and the struggle over meaning. 1 Scott A. Myers & Members of COM 200. Relational maintenance behaviors in the sibling relationship. 19 Stacy L. Young & Amy M. Bippus. Does it make a difference if they hurt you in a funny way? Humorously and non-humorously phrased hurtful messages in personal relationships. 35 Paul Schrodt & Lawrence R. Wheeless. Aggressive communication and informational reception apprehension: The influence of listening ability and intellectual inflexibility on trait argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness. 53 Mary C. Toale & James C. McCroskey. Ethnocentrism and trait communication apprehension as predictors of interethnic communication apprehension and use of relational maintenance strategies in interethnic communication. 70 Ralph R. Behnke & Chris R. Sawyer. Patterns of psychological state anxiety in public speaking as a function of anxiety sensitivity. 84 2000, Vol. 48(4) Bryan Crable. Defending dramatism as ontological and literal. 323 Elizabeth M. Perse & Douglas A. Ferguson. The benefits and costs of web surfing. 343 Lisa M. Gring-Pemble & Diane M. Blair. The best-selling feminisms: The rhetorical production of popular press feminists romantic quest. 360 Ann Brunett & Diane M. Badzinski. An exploratory study of argument in the jury decisionmaking process. 380 John G. Oetzel, Stella Ting-Toomey, Yumiko Yokochi, Tomoko Masumoto & Jiro Takai. A typology of facework behaviors in conflicts with best friends and relative strangers. 397 Janice D. Hamlet. Assessing womanist thought: The rhetoric of Susan L. Taylor. 420 Stephen D. Bruning. Examining the role that personal, professional, and community relationships play in respondent relationship recognition and intended behavior. 437 2000, Vol. 48(3) Deborah Carol Robson. Stereotypes and the female politician: A case study of Senator Barbara Mikulski. 205 Timothy P. Mottet. The role of sexual orientation in predicting outcome value and anticipated communication. 223 Donna M. Kowal. One cause, two paths: Militant vs. adjustive strategies in British American womens suffrage movements 240 John O. Greene, Michael W. Kirch & Crystal S. Grady. Cognitive foundations of message encoding: An investigation of message production as coalition formation. 256 John Arthos. Locating the instability of topic places: Rhetoric, phronesis and neurobiology. 272

45 Tamara D. Golish & Loreen N. Olson. Students use of power in the classroom: An investigation of student power, teacher power, and teacher immediacy. 293 Margaret O. Finucane & Cary W. Hovarth. Lazy leisure: A qualitative investigation of the relational uses of television in marriage. 311 2000, Vol. 48(2) Thomas H. Feeley & Melissa J. Young. Self-reported cues about deceptive and truthful communication: The effects of cognitive capacity and communicator veracity. 101 John Sanchez & Mary E. Stuckey. The rhetoric of American Indian activism in the 1960s and 1970s. 120 Tamara D. Golish. Is openness always better?: Exploring the role of topic avoidance, satisfaction, and parenting styles of stepparents. 137 Arla G. Bernstein. The effects of message theme, policy explicitness, and candidate gender. 159 Rebecca Dumalo & Renee A. Botta. Family communication patterns and the conflict styles young adults use with their fathers. 174 Robert McKenzie. Audience involvement in the epideictic discourse of television talk shows. 190 2000, Vol. 48(1) Beth A. Messner & Jacqueline J. Buckrop. Restoring order: Interpreting suicide through a Burlean lens. 1 Joe Ayres, Tim Hopf & Anthony Will. Are reductions in CA an experimental artifact? A Solomon four-group answer. 19 Judith P. Burns & Michael S. Bruner. Revisiting the theory of image restoration strategies. 27 William L. Benoit. Another visit to the theory of image restoration strategies. 40 Kevin Wright. Perceptions of on-line support providers: An examination of perceived homophilly, source credibility, communication and social support within on-line support groups. 44 Paul Schrodt, Lawrence R. Wheeless & Karen M. Ptacek. Informal reception apprehension, educational motivation, and achievement. 60 Paul E. King & Ralph R. Behnke. Effects of communication load, affect, and anxiety on the perception of information processing tasks. 74 R. S. Zaharna. Intercultural communication and international public relations: Exploring parallels. 85 1999, Vol. 47(4) Donald A. Fishman. ValuJet flight 592: Crisis communication theory blended and extended. 345 William L. Benoit & Kimberly A. Kennedy. On reluctant testimony. 376 Michael Tollefson & Mike Allen. Mirror, mirror on the wall: Examining the National Association of Scholars and Teachers for Democratic Culture Debate. 388 Kevin B. Wright. Computer-mediated support groups: An examination of relationships among social support, perceived stress, and coping strategies. 402 Jawsub Lee. Leader-member exchange, gender, and members communication expectations with leaders. 415 Kaidren Leigh Winniecki & Joe Ayres. Communication apprehension and receiver apprehension in the workplace4. 430

46 1999, Vol. 47(3) Scott E. Caplan & Wendy Samter. The role of facework in younger and older adults evaluations of social support messages. 245 William L. Benoit & John P. McHale. Kenneth Starrs image repair discourse viewed in 20/20. 265 Joan Gorham, Stanley H. Cohen & Tracy L. Morris. Fashion in the classroom III: Effects of instructor attire and immediacy in natural classroom interactions. 281 Anne E. Lucchetti. Deception in disclosing ones sexual history: Safe-sex avoidance or ignorance? 300 Amir Hetsroni & Linda-Renee Bloch. Choosing the right mate when everyone is watching: Cultural and sex differences in television dating games. 315 Terry Robertson, Kristin Froemling, Scott Wells & Shannon McGraw. Sex, lies and videotapes: An analysis of gender in campaign advertisements. 333 1999, Vol. 47(2) Charles Pavitt & Bradley Kemp. Contextual and relational factors in interpersonal negotiation strategy choice. 133 Sherry R. Shepler & Anne F. Mattina. The revolt against war: Jane Addams rhetorical challenge to the patriarchy. 151 K. David Roach. The influence of teaching assistant willingness to communicate and communication anxiety in the classroom. 166 Michael Z. Hackman, Kathleen Ellis, Craig E. Johnson & Constance Staley. Self-construal orientation: Validation of an instrument and a student of the relationship to leadership communication style. 183 Katsuya Tasaki, Min-Sun Kim & Michael D. Miller. The effects of social status on cognitive elaboration and post-message attitude: Focusing on self-construals. 196 Peter D. MacIntrye, Patricia A. Babin & Richard Clement. Willingness to communicate: Antecedents & consequences. 215 Li-Ning Huang. Family communication patterns and personality characteristics. 230 1999, Vol. 47(1) Rebecca M. Chory & James C. McCroskey. The relationship between teacher management communication style and affective learning. 1 Tamara D. Golish. Students use of compliance gaining strategies with graduate teaching assistants: Examining the other end of the power spectrum. 12 Scott A. Myers & Ronda L. Knox. Verbal aggression in the college classroom: Perceived instructor use and student affective learning. 33 Laurie Pratt, Richard L. Wiseman, Michael J. Cody & Pamela F. Wendt. Interrogative strategies and information exchange in computer-mediated communication. 46 Kevin L. Sager & John Gastil. Reaching consensus on consensus: A study of the relationships between individual decision-making styles and use of the consensus decision rule. 67 Aimee Futch & Renee Edwards. The effects of sense of humor, defensiveness, and gender on the interpretation of ambiguous messages. 80 Lisa Bradford, Renee A. Myers & Kristine A. Kane. Latino expectations of communicative competence: A focus group interview study. 98

47 Victor J. Viser. Thematics and products in American magazine advertising containing children, 1940-1950. 118 1998, Vol. 46(4) Donald Fishman. Reform Judaism and the anti-zionist persuasive campaign, 1897-1915. 375 Donna R. Pawlowski. Dialectical tensions in marital partners accounts of their relationships. 396 Jennifer D. Mlandenka, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Anxiety sensitivity and speech trait anxiety as predictors of state anxiety as predictors of state anxiety during public speaking. 417 Marouf Hasian, Jr. The domestication of legal argumentation: A case study of the formalism of the legal realists. 430 Joseph L. Chesebro & James C. McCroskey. The relationship of teacher clarity and teacher immediacy with students experiences of state receiver apprehension. 446 Sandra J. Berkowitz & Amy C. Lewis. Debating anti-semitism: Ernestine Rose vs. Horace Seaver in the Boston Investigator, 1863-1864. 457 Robin L. Nabi. The effect of disgust-eliciting visuals on attitudes toward animal experimentation. 472 1998, Vol. 46(3) Walid A. Afifi & Laura A. Guerrero. Some things are better left unsaid II: Topic avoidance in friendships. 231 Lisa M. Flaherty, Kevin J. Pearce & Rebecca B. Rubin. Internet and face-to-face communication: Not functional alternatives. 250 Robert Westerfelhaus & Diane Ciekawy. Cleansing the social body: Witchcraft association in an African society as an example of multi-hierarchical victimage. 269 Glenn G. Sparks, Marianne Pellechia & Chris Irvine. Does television news about UFOs affect viewers UFO beliefs?: An experimental investigation. 284 Melanie Booth-Butterfield & Robert Sidelinger. The influence of family communication on the college-aged child: Openness, attitudes and actions about sex and alcohol. 295 Mitchell R. Hammer, Richard L. Wiseman, J. Lewis Rasmussen & Jon C. Bruschke. A test of anxiety/uncertainty management theory: The intercultural adaptation context. 309 Kristin Marie Valencic, Michael J. Beatty, Jill E. Rudd, Jean A. Dobos & Alan D. Heisel. An empirical test of a communibiological model of trait verbal aggressiveness. 327 James M. Honeycutt & Renee Brown. Did you hear the one about?: Typological and spousal differences in the planning of jokes and sense of humor in marriage. 342 Craig R. Scott, Laura Quinn, C. Erik Timmerman & Diana M. G. Barrett. Ironic uses of group communication technology: Evidence from meeting transcripts and interviews with group decision support system users. 353 1998, Vol. 46(2) Thomas H. Feeley & Melissa J. Young. Humans as lie detectors: Some more second thoughts. 109 William L. Benoit & Dawn M. Nill. Oliver Stones defense of JFK. 127 Kory Floyd & Mark T. Morman. The measurement of affectionate communication. 144

48 Janis L. Edwards. The very model of a modern major (media) candidate: Colin Powell and the theory of reasoned action. 163 Robert A. Steward & J. Kadvic Roach. Argumentativeness and the theory of reasoned action. 177 Audrey M. Van Mersbergen. Rhetorical prototypes in architecture: Measuring the Acropolis with a philosophical polemic. 194 Joy Swenson & Fred L. Casmir. The impact of culture-sameness, gender, foreign travel, and academic background on the ability to interpret facial expression of emotions in others. 214 1998, Vol. 46(1) Jill E. Rudd, Sally Vogl-Bauser, Jean A. Dobos, Michael J. Beatty & Kristin Marie Valencic. Interactive effects of parents self-reported anger. 1 Michael J. Hostetler. Gov. Al Smith confronts the catholic question: The rhetorical legacy of the 1928 campaign. 12 Timothy P. Mottet & Virginia P. Richmond. An inductive analysis of verbal immediacy: Alternative conceptualization of relational verbal approach/avoidance strategies. 25 Jeffrey W. Murray. Constructing the ordinary: The dialectical development of Nazi ideology. 41 Timothy L. Sellnow, Robert R. Ulmer & Michelle Snider. The compatibility of corrective action in organizational crisis communication. 60 Susan K. Opt. Confirming and disconfirming American myth: Stories within the suggestion box. 75 James W. Neuliep & Daniel J. Ryan. The influence of intercultural communication apprehension and socio-communicative orientation on uncertainty reduction during initial cross-cultural interaction. 88 Melissa M. Spirek & Jack Glascock. Gender analysis of frightening film newspaper advertisements: A 50-year overview (1940-1990). 100 1997, Vol. 45(4) Patrick di Battista. Deceivers responses to challenges of their truthfulness: Difference between familiar lies and unfamiliar lies. 319 Jennifer J. Willis. Latino night: Performances of Latino/a culture in northwest Ohio. 335 Beth A. Semic & Daniel J. Canary. Trait argumentativeness, verbal aggressiveness, and minimally rational argument: An observational analysis of friendship discussions. 355 Jill E. Rudd, Michael J. Beatty, Sally Vogl-Bauer & Jean A. Dobos. Trait verbal aggressiveness and the appropriateness and effectiveness of fathers interaction pans II: Fathers selfassessment. 379 Lisa M. Skow & George N. Dionisopoulos. A struggle to contextualize photographic images: American print media and the burning monk. 393 Virginia P. Richmond, James C. McCroskey & K. David Roach. Communication and decisionmaking styles, power base usage, and satisfaction in marital dyads. 410 Bradley K. Schumacher & Lawrence R. Wheeless. Relationships of continuing uncertainty and state-receiver apprehension to information-seeking and predictions in dyadic interactions. 427 Michael J. Beatty & James C. McCroskey. Its in our nature: Verbal aggressiveness as temperamental expression. 446 Michael Pfau, Kyle James Tusing, Waipeng Lee, Linda C. Godblod, Ascan Koerner, Linda J. Penaloza, Yah-huei Hong & Violet Shu-huei Yang. Nuances in inoculation: The role of inoculation approach, ego-involvement, and message processing disposition in resistance. 461

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1997, Vol. 45(3) Jennifer H. Waldeck, Victoria O. Oggero, Timothy G. Plax & Patricia Kearney. Graduate student/faculty mentoring relationships: Who gets mentored, how it happens, and to what end. 93 Jerry D. Feezel & Scott A. Meyers. Assessing graduate assistant teacher communication concerns. 110 K. David Roach. Effects of graduate teaching assistant attire on student learning, misbehaviors, and ratings of instruction. 125 Neil M. Alperstein & Barbara H. Vann. Star gazing: A socio-cultural approach to the study of dreaming about media figures. 142 Christie M. Odden & Patricia M. Sias. Peer communication relationships and psychological climate. 153 Julia R. Krahl & Lawrence R. Wheeless. Retrospective analysis of previous relationship disengagement and current attachment style. 167 Tim Kuhn. The discourse of issues management: A genre of organizational communication. 188 Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Communication apprehension and implicit memories of public speaking state anxiety. 211 Mark Meister. Sustainable development in visual imagery: Rhetorical function in the Jeep Cherokee. 223 Steve Booth-Butterfield, Rebecca Chory & William Beynon. Communication apprehension and health communication and behaviors. 235 William L. Benoit. Hugh Grants image restoration discourse: An actor apologizes. 251 Stephen C. Hines, Alvin H. Moss & Laurie Badzek. Being involved or just being informed: Communication preferences of seriously ill, older adults. 268 Lindsey M. Grob, Renee A. Meyers & Renee Schuh. Powerful/powerless language use in group interactions: Sex differences or similarities? 282 Matthew M. Martin, Carolyn M. Anderson, Patricia A. Burant & Keith Weber. Verbal aggression in sibling relationships. 304 1997, Vol. 45(2) (Special Issue: The Way it WasAll the Way: A Documentary Accounting, Robert T. Oliver) 1997, Vol. 45(1) William L. Benoit, P. M. Pier & Joseph R. Blaney. Sustainable development in visual imagery: A functional approach to televised political spots: Attacking, acclaiming, defending. 1 Anthony J. Roberto & Margaret E. Finucane. The assessment of argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness in adolescent populations. 21 James Keaten, Lynne Kelly & Cynthia Finch. Development of an instrument to measure reticence. 37 Danette E. Ifert & Michael E. Roloff. Overcoming expressed obstacles to compliance: The role of sensitivity to the expressions of others and ability to modify self-presentation. 55 Kory Floyd. Communicating affection in dyadic relationships: An assessment of behavior and expectancies. 68 1996, Vol. 44(4)

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Tullen E. Bach, Carole Blair, William L. Nothstine & Anne L. Pym. How to read How to Get Published. 399 Robert James Branham & W. Barnett Pearce. The conversational frame in public address. 423 A. Elizabeth Lindsey. Affect-congruency in message content: A preliminary evaluation of two accounts. 400 Jim A. Kuypers. Doxa and a critical rhetoric: Accounting for the rhetorical agent through prudence. 452 William L. Benoit & Bruce Dorries. Dateline NBCs persuasive attack on Wal-Mart. 463 R. Kelly Aune, Pamela U. Ching & Timothy R. Levine. Attributions of deception as a function of reward value: A test of two explanations. 478 Kevin R. McClure. The institutional subordination of contested issues: The case of Pittsburghs steelworkers and ministers. 487 Raka Shome. Race and popular cinema: The rhetorical strategies of Whiteness in City of Joy. 502 Colloquy: Whither Scholarship? Gary Gumpert. The urban dilemma and research gaps: Explorations into scholarship and identity. 519 Deborah Borisoff & Dan F. Hahn. Responses to The Urban Dilemma. 527 1996, Vol. 44(3) Mary Boor Tonn. Donning sackcloth and ashes: Webster vs. Reproductive Health Services and moral agony in abortion right rhetoric. 265 Susan J. Drucker & Gary Gumpert. The regulation of social life: Communication law revisited. 280 James C. McCrockey, Joan M. Fayer, Virginia P. Richmond, Aino Sallinen & Robert A. Barraclough. A multi-cultural examination of the relationship between nonverbal immediacy and affective learning. 297 Shereen G. Bingham & Brant R. Burleson. The development of the sexual harassment proclivity scale: Construct validation and relationship to communication competence. 308 Deanna Geddes & Frank Linnehan. Exploring the dimensionality of positive and negative performance feedback. 326 Timothy R. Levine & Franklin J. Boster. The impact of self and others argumentativeness on talk about controversial issues. 345 Thomas W. Benson. Rhetoric, civility, and community: Political debate on computer bulletin boards. 359 Jasmine Tata & Susan R. Rhodes. Impression management messages and reactions to organizational reward allocations: The mediating influence of fairness and responsibility. 379 1996, Vol. 44(2) Judith N. Martin, Robert L. Krizek, Thomas K. Nakayama & Lisa Bradford. Exploring Whiteness: A study of self labels for White Americans. 125 Kathy Kellerman & B. Christine Shea. Threats, suggestions, hints, and promises: Gaining compliance efficiently and politely. 145 Tara M. Emmers & Daniel J. Canary. The effect of uncertainty reducing strategies on young couples relational repair and intimacy. 166

51 Barbara Warnick. Argument schemes and construction of social reality: John F. Kennedys address to the Houston Ministerial Association. 183 Craig R. Smith & Scott Lybarge. Bitzers model reconstructed. 197 Mike Allen & John Bourhis. The relationship of communication apprehension to communication behavior: A meta-analysis. 214 M. Kathryn Cirksena. Sources of access and competence in womens political persuading, 19641984. 227 Gary M. Weier. Perspectivism and form in drama: A Burkean analysis of Julius Ceasar. 246 1996, Vol. 44(1) Michael J. Beatty, Patricia A. Burant, Jean A. Dobos & Jill E. Rudd. Trait verbal aggressiveness and the appropriateness and effectiveness of fathers interaction plans. 1 Susan Schultz Huxman. Mary Wollstonecraft, Margaret Fuller, and Angelina Grimke: Symbolic convergence and a nascent rhetorical vision. 16 Susan L. Brinson & William L. Benoit. Attempting to restore a public image: Dow Corning and the breast implant crisis. 29 Melissa Bekelja Wanzer, Melanie Booth-Butterfield & Steve Booth-Butterfield. Are funny people popular? An examination of humor orientation, loneliness, and social attraction. 42 Min-Sun Kim & Mary Bresnahan. Cognitive basis of gender communication: A cross-cultural investigation of perceived constraints in requesting. 53 Dreama G. Moon. Concepts of culture: Implications for intercultural communication discourse. 70 Hui-Ching Chang & G. Richard Holt. The changing Chinese interpersonal world: Popular themes in interpersonal communication books in modern Taiwan. 85 Robert Alan Bell, Matthew F. Abrams, Catherine L. Clark & Christina Schlatter. The door-in-theface compliance strategy: An individual differences analysis of two models in an AIDS fundraising context. 107

52 COMMUNICATION REPORTS 2006, Vol. 19(1-2) Paul L. Witt & Paul Schrodt. The influence of instructional technology use and teacher immediacy on student affect for teacher and course. 1 Rodney A. Reynolds. Discouraging messages. 16 Jennifer L. Bevan. Testing and refining a consequence model of jealousy across relational contexts and jealousy expression messages. 31 Guy Foster Bachman & Laura K. Guerrero. Forgiveness, apology, and communicative responses to hurtful events. 45 John S. Seiter, Haold J. Kinzer & Harry Weger, Jr. Background behavior in live debates: the effects of the implicit ad hominem fallacy. 57 Eli Dresner & Segev Barak. Conversational multitasking in interactive written discourse as a communication competence. 70 Jeffrey W. Kassing. Employees expression of upward dissent as a function of current and past work experiences. 79 Thomas Hugh Feeley, heather M. Marshall & Amber M. Reinhart. Reactions to narrative and statistical written messages promoting organ donation. 89 Dimitri A. Christakis, Michelle M. Garrison & Frederick J. Zimmerman. Television viewing in child care programs: A national survey. 101 2005, Vol. 18(1-2) Bradley S. Greenberg, Matthew S. Eastin, Paul Skaleski, Len Cooper, Mark Levy & Ken Lachlan. Comparing survey and diary measures of internet and traditional media use. 1 Gary D. Bond, Daniel M. Malloy, Eilzabeth A. Arias, Shgannon N. Nunn & Laura A. Thompson. Lie-based decision making in prison. 9 Glenn G. Sparks, John Sherry & Graig Lubsen. The appeal of media violence in a full-length motion picture: An experimental investigation. 21 Camille D. Smith, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Physical symptoms of discomfort associated with worry about giving a public speech. 31 Jack Glascock. Degrading content and character sex: Accounting for men and womens differential reactions to pornography. 43 Joe Ayres. Performance visualization and behavioral disruption: A clarification. 55 Li Luo, Amy M. Bippus & Borah E. Dunbar. Causal attributions for collaborative public speaking presentations in college classes. 65 Patrick C. Meirick. Political knowledge and sponsorship in backlash from party- and candidatesponsored attacks. 75 Guy Foster Buchanan & Amy M. Bippus. Evaluations of supportive messages provided by friends and romantic partners: An attachment theory approach. 85 Ele Clay, Rachel L. Fisher, Shuang Xie, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Affect intensity and sensitivity to punishment as predictors of sensitization (arousal) during public speaking. 95 2004, Vol. 17(2) John P. Caughlin & Rachel S. Malis. Demand/withdraw communication between parents and adolescents as a correlate of relational satisfaction. 59

53 Peter A. Andersen & Tammy R. Blackburn. An experimental study of language intensity and response rate in e mail surveys. 73 Stephen M. Yoshimura. Emotional and behavioral responses to romantic jealousy expressions. 85 Michelle L. Paulsel & Rebecca M. Chory-Assad. The relationships among instructors antisocial behavior alteration techniques and student resistance. 103 Jeffrey W. Kassing & Rachel L. DiCioccio. Testing a workplace experience explanation of displaced dissent. 113 Phillip Sullivan. Communication differences between male and female team sport athletes. 121 Scott A. Myers. The relationship between perceived instructor credibility and college student inclass and out-of-class communication. 129 2004, Vol. 17(1) Tara M. Emmers-Sommer, Mike Allen, John Bourhis, Erin Sahlstein, Kara Laskowski, Wendy L. Falato, Jeff Ackerman, Marian Erian, Doreen Barringer, Judith Weiner, Jan Curey, Janice Krieger, Gren Moramba & Laurie Cashman. A meta-analysis of the relationship between social skills and sexual offenders. 1 Susan L. Kline & Laura Stafford. A comparison of interaction rules and interaction frequency in relationship to marital quality. 11 Michaell A. Mazur & Amy S. Ebesu Hubbard. Is there something I should know?: Topic avoidant responses in parent-adolescent communication. 27 Heather L. Hundley. Keeping the score: The hegemonic everyday practices in golf. 39 Melissa J. Young, Ralph R. Behnke & Yvonne M. Mann. Anxiety patterns in employment interviews. 49 2003, Vol. 16(2) Robert McCann, Hiroshi Ota, Howard Giles & Richard Caraker. Accommodation and nonaccommodation across the lifespan: Perspectives from Thailand, Japan, and the United States of America. 69 Dawn O. Braithwaite, M. Chad McBride & Paul Schrodt. Parent teams and the everyday interactions of co-parenting in stepfamilies. 93 Amy M. Bippus & Emma Rollin. Attachment style differences in relational maintenance and conflict behaviors: Friends perceptions. 113 Penny Addison, Ele Clay, Shuang Xie, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Worry as a function of public speaking state anxiety type. 125 Nicolas Gueguen & Marie-Agnes De Gail. The effects of smiling on helping behavior: Smiling and good samartian behavior. 133

54 2003, Vol. 16(1) Howard Giles, Jennifer Fortman, James Honeycutt & Hiroshi Ota. Future selves and others: A lifespan and cross-cultural perspective. 1 Norah E. Dunbar, Artemio Ramirez, Jr. & Judee K. Burgoon. The effects of participation on the ability to judge deceit. 23 Andrew S. Rancer, Felicia F. Joradn-Jackson & Dominic A. Infante. Observers perceptions of an interpersonal dispute as a function of mode of presentation. 35 Joe Ayres & Tracy A. Ayres. Using images to enhance the impact of visualization. 47 William D. McIntosh, Rebecca M. Murray, John D. Murray & Debra Sabia. Are the liberal good in Hollywood? Characteristics of political figures in popular films from 1945 to 1998. 57 2002, Vol. 15(2) Jake Harwood & Karen Anderson. The presence and portrayal of social groups on prime-time television. 81 Amy Janan Johnson. Beliefs about arguing: A comparison of public issue and personal issue arguments. 99 Scott A. Myers. Perceived aggressive instructor communication and student state motivation, learning, and satisfaction. 113 Chia-Fang (Sandy) Hsu. The influence of self-construals, family and teacher communication patterns on communication apprehension among college students in Taiwan. 123 Ling Chen. Perceptions of intercultural interaction and communication satisfaction: A study on initial encounters. 133 2002, Vol. 15(1) (Special Issue: Psychological Mediators of Sex Differences in Emotional Support) Brant R. Burleson. Introduction to the special issue: Psychological mediators of sex differences in emotional support. 1 Wendy Samter. How gender and cognitive complexity influence the provision of emotional support: A study of indirect effects. 5 Erina L. MacGeorge, Ruth Anne Clark & Set J. Gillhan. Sex differences in the provision of skillful emotional support: The mediating role of self-efficacy. 17 Adiranne Kinkel. Explaining sex differences in the evaluation of comforting messages: The mediating role of interaction goals. 29 Brant R. Burleson & Christina M. Gilstrap. Explaining sex differences in interaction goals in support situations: Some mediating effects of expressivity and instrumentality. 43 Steven T. Mortenson. Sex, communication values, and cultural values: Individualism-collectivism as a mediator of sex differences in communication values in two cultures. 57 Brant R. Burleson. Afterword: Psychological mediators of sex differences in emotional support: A reflection on the mosaic. 71

55 2001, Vol. 14(2) Ralph R. Behnke & Chris R. Sawyer. Public speaking arousal as a function of anticipatory activation and autonomic reactivity. 73 Stella Ting-Toomey, John G. Oetzel & Kimberlie Yee-Jung. Self-construal types and conflict management styles. 87 Hee Sun Park. Self-construals as motivating factors in opinion shifts resulting from exposure to majority opinions. 105 Randall J. Koper & Marjorie A. Jaasma. Interpersonal style: Are human social orientations guided by generalized interpersonal needs? 117 Scott R. Stroud. Moral judgment and communicative action: Connections between moral development and formal-pragmatic presupposition awareness. 131 2001, Vol. 14(1) Leslie A. Baxter & Garth Pittman. Communicatively remembering turning points of relational development in heterosexual romantic relationships. 1 Brian H. Spitzberg, Linda Marshall & William R. Cupach. Obsessive relational intrusion, coping, and sexual coercion victimization. 19 Daniel J. OKeefe & Scott L. Hale. An odds-ratio-based meta-analysis of research on the door-inthe-face influence strategy. 31 Nathan Miczo, Chris Segrin & & Lisa E. Allspach. Relationship between nonverbal sensitivity, encoding, and relational satisfaction. 39 Wendy Geiger, Jon Bruning & Jake Harwood. Talk about TV: Television viewers interpersonal communication about programming. 49 Kelby K. Halone & Loretta L. Pecchioni. Relational listening: A grounded theory model. 59 2000, Vol. 13(2) Gary Rudd & Jo Sprague. Cant see the (old growth) forest for the logs: Dialectical tensions in the interpretive practices of environmentalists and loggers. 55 James W. Neuliep & Erica L. Grobskopf. Uncertainty reduction and communication satisfaction during initial interaction: An initial test and replication of a new axiom. 67 Taramra D. Golish. Changes in closeness between adult children and their parents: A turning point analysis. 79 Jonathan Cohen & Gabriel Wiemann. Cultivation revisited: Some genres have some effects on some viewers. 99 Bryan B. Whaley & Rhonda G. Parker. Expressing the experience of communicative disability: Metaphors of persons who stutter. 115 2000, Vol. 13(1) David Dryden Henningsen, Michael G. Cruz & Mary Claire Morr. Pattern violations and perception of deception. 1 Guy Bachman & Walter R. Zakahi. Adult attachment and strategic relational communication: Love schemas and affinity-seeking. 11 Susan J. Messman & Rebecca L. Mikesell. Competition and interpersonal conflict in dating relationships. 21

56 Joe Ayres, Tim Hopf & Elizabeth Peterson. A test of communication-orientation motivation (COM) therapy. 35 William G. Powers & Don E. Love. Exploring a consensual instructional communication strategy with elder adult development. 45 1999, Vol. 12(2) Daniel J. Wiegel & Deborah S. Ballard-Reisch. The influence of marital duration and the use of relationship maintenance behaviors. 59 Scott A. Meyers, Ronda L. Knox, Donna S. Pawlowski & Barbara Lorene Ropog. Perceived communication openness and functional communication skills among organizational peers. 71 Jake Harwood. Age identity and television viewing preferences. 85 Craig R. Scott & Jolie C. Fontenot. Multiple identifications during team meetings: A comparison of conventional and computer-supported interactions. 91 Sherry J. Holladay & Kathleen S. Kerns. Do age differences matter in close and casual friendships?: A comparison of age discrepant and age peer friendships. 101 1999, Vol. 12(1) Lorrita N. T. Young, Timothy R. Levine & Kazuo Nishiyama. Information manipulation theory and perceptions of deception in Hong Kong. 1 William R. Cupach & Susan J. Messman. Face predilections and friendship solidarity. 13 Carolyn M. Anderson & Matthew M. Martin. The relationship of argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness to cohesion, consensus, and satisfaction in small groups 21. Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. State anxiety patterns for public speaking and the behavior inhibition system. 33 Barbara Mae Gayle & Raymond W. Priess. Language intensity plus: A methodological approach to validate emotions in conflicts. 43 Margaret Dsilva. Individual differences and choice of information source: Sensation seeking in drug abuse prevention. 51 1998, Vol. 11(2) Marianne Dainton. Everyday interaction in marital relationships: Variations in relative importance and event duration. 101 Laura K. Guerrero & Walid A. Afifi. Communicative responses to jealousy as a function of selfesteem and relationship maintenance goals: A test of Brysons dual motivation model. 111 Michael E. Mayer. Behaviors leading to more effective decisions in small groups embedded in organizations. 123 John G. Oetzel. The effects of self-construals and ethnicity on self-reported conflict styles. 133 Dannette E. Ifert & Leeza Bearden. The influences of argumentativeness and verbal aggression on responses to refused requests. 145 Vincent R. Waldron & James L. Applegate. Similarity in the use of person-centered tactics: Effects on social attraction and persuasiveness in dyadic verbal disagreements. 155 Edward Woods. Communication abilities as predictors of verbal and nonverbal performance in persuasive interaction. 167 Jason J. Teven, Matthew M. Martin & Nicholas C. Neupauer. Sibling relationships: Verbally aggressive messages and their effects on relational satisfaction. 179

57 Patricia Kearney. Remembering Gail Sorenson. 198 (Afterwards) 1998, Vol. 11(1) Matthew M. Martin & Carolyn M. Anderson. The cognitive flexibility scale: Three validity studies. 1 Ann House, Judith M. Dallinger & Danni-Lynn Kilgallen. Androgyny and rhetorical sensitivity: The connection of gender and communication. 11 John S. Seiter, Jarrod Larsen & Jacey Skinner. Handicapped or Handi-capable?: The effects of language about persons with disabilities on perceptions of source credibility and persuasiveness. 21 Brian H. Spitzberg, Alana M. Nicastro & Amber V. Cousins. Exploring the interactional phenomenon of stalking and obsessive relational intrusion. 33 Mike Allen, John Bourhis, Tara Emmers-Sommer & Erin Sahlstein. Reducing dating anxiety: A meta-analysis. 49 Murray G. Millar & Kevin U. Millar. The effects of suspicion on the recall of cues used to make veracity judgments. 57 C. A. Tuglle. The bias toward finding bias in television news. 65 Joe Ayers, Brian Heuett & Debbie Ayers Sonandre. Testing a refinement in an intervention of communication apprehension. 73 Lori J. Carrell & S. Clay Willmington. The relationship between self-report measures and communication apprehension and observers ratings of communication competence. 87 Myron Lustig. Lessons from Andalusia. 97 (Afterwords) 1997, Vol. 10(2) Ruth Anne Clark & Jesse G. Delia. Individuals preferences for friends approaches to providing support in distressing situations. 115 Melissa Winters & Michael S. Waltman. Feminine gender identity and interpersonal cognitive differentiation as correlates of person-centered comforting. 123 Krystyna Stryzewski Aune. Self and partner perceptions of the appropriateness of emotions. 133 Paul A. Mongeau & Bobbi E. Schulz. What he doesnt know wont hurt him (or me): Verbal responses and attributions following sexual infidelity. 143 William L. Benoit & Shirley Drew. Appropriateness and effectiveness of image repair strategies. 153 Glenn G. Sparks & Marianne Pellechia. The effect of news stories about UFOs on readers UFO beliefs: The role of confirming or disconfirming testimony from a scientists. 165 Sherry Holladay, Kim Crutcher, Karen Gustavson, Jennifer Jones, Lori Laughlin & Sherry McKown. Older adults motives for mediated interpersonal communication: An examination of telephone communication and loneliness. 173 Bruce C. McKinney, Lynne Kelly & Robert L. Duran. The relationship between conflict message styles and dimensions of communication competence. 185 David C. Schrader. Role relationships, goal structure, and characteristics of interpersonal influence messages. 197 David Sutton. On mythic criticism: A proposed compromise. 211 Marjorie A. Jaasma. Classroom communication apprehension: Does being male or female make a difference? 219

58 1997, Vol. 10(1) Michael E. Holmes. Optimal matching analysis of negotiation phase sequences in simulated and authentic hostage negotiations. 1 Mitchell Mize Menees. The role of coping, social support, and family communication in explaining the self-esteem of adult children of alcoholics. 9 Kathryn Greene, Jerold L. Hale & Donald L. Rubin. A test of the theory of reasoned action in the context of condom use and AIDS. 21 Thomas H. Feeley & Mark A deTurck. Case-relevant vs. case-irrelevant questioning in experimental lie detection. 35 Mark V. Redmond & Denise A. Vrchota. The effects of varying lengths of initial interaction on attraction. 47 Charles Markham Shaw & Renee Edwards. Self-concepts and self-presentations of males and females: Similarities and differences. 55 Charles A. Braithwaite. Blood money: The routine violation of conversational rules. 63 John Meyer & Gerald Driskill. Children and relationship development: Communication strategies in a day care center. 75 Joe Ayers & Brian Heuett. The relationship between visual imagery and public speaking apprehension. 87 Matthew Lombard, Theresa B. Ditton, Maria Elizabeth Grabe & Robert D. Reich. The role of screen size in viewer response to television fare. 95 Kenneth L. Hacker & Dennis L. Wignall. Issues in predicting user acceptance of computermediated communication (CMC) in inter-university classroom discussion as an alternative to face-to-face interaction. 107 1996, Vol. 9(2) Walid A. Afifi & Tom Reichert. Understand the role of uncertainty in jealousy experience and expression. 93 Kori I. Egland, Brian H. Spitzberg & Michelle M. Zormeier. Flirtation and conversational competence in cross-sex platonic and romantic relationships. 105 Dannette E. Ifert & Michael E. Roloff. Responding to refusals of requests: The role of requester sex on persistence. 119 Brant R. Burleson & Wendy Samter. Similarity in the communication skills of young adults: Foundations of attraction, friendship, and relationship satisfaction 127 Mary Beth Oliver. Influences of authoritarianism and portrayals of race on Caucasian viewers responses to reality-based crime dramas. 141 Joe Gow. Reconsidering gender roles on MTV: Depictions in the most popular music videos of the early 1990s. 151 Kathy B. McKee & Carol J. Pardun. Mixed messages: The relationship between sexual and religious imagery in rock, country, and Christian videos. 163 Judith A. Kolb. A comparison of leadership behaviors and competencies in high and averageperformance teams. 173 Lori J. Carrell & S. Clay Willmington. A comparison of self-report and performance data in assessing speaking and listening competence. 185 Bolanle A. Olaniran & Robert A. Stewart. Instructional practices and classroom communication apprehension: A cultural explanation. 193

59 1996, Vol. 9(1) Ling Chen. Cognitive complexity, situational influences, and topic selection in intracultural and intercultural dyadic interactions. 1 Edward Woods. Associations of nonverbal decoding ability with indices of person-centered communicative ability. 13 Anne Maydan Nicotera. An assessment of the argumentativeness scale for social desirability bias. 23 Elizabeth M. Perse. Sensation seeking and the use of television for arousal. 37 William N. Elwood & Ali N. Ataabadi. Tuned in and turned off: Out-of-treatment injection drug and crack users response to media intervention campaigns. 49 Karen A. Foss & Alison F. Alexander. Exploring the margins of television viewing. 61 Aleksander Bogdanic. Hooked for a week on two Yugoslav TV channels: PALMA AND RTS2. 69 James G. Cantrill & Michelle D. Masluk. Place and privilege as predictors of how the environment is described in discourse. 79 Laura Stafford & Susan L. Kline. Married womens name choices and sense of self. 85.

60 COMMUNICATION RESEARCH 2007, Vol. 34(4) Michael D. Slater, Andrew F. Hayes & Valerie L. Ford. Examining the moderating and mediating roles of news exposure and attention on adolescent judgments of alcohol-related risks,. 355 Jeff Niederdeppe, Matthew C. Farrelly, Kristin Y. Thomas, Dana Wenter & David Witzenkamp. Newspaper coverage as indirect effects of a health communication intervention: The Florida Tobacco Control Program and youth smoking. 382 Hye-Jin Paek & Albert C. Gunther. How peer proximity moderates indirect media influences on adolescent smoking. 407 Lijiang Shen & James Price Dillard. The influence of behavioral inhibition/approach systems and message framing on the processing of persuasive health messages. 433 Lisa L. Massi Lindsey, Kimo Ah Yun & Jennifer B. Hill. Anticipated guilt as motivation to help unknown others: An examination of empathy as a moderator. 468 2007, Vol. 34(3) Brian L. Quick & Michael T. Stephenson. Further evidence that psychological reactance can be modeled as a combination of anger and negative cognitions. 255 Julai R. Fox, Byungho Park & Annie Lang. When available resources become negative resources: The effects of cognitive overload on memory sensitivity and criterion bias. 277 Lyn M. Van Swol & Cara L. Ludutsky. Tell me something I dont know: Decision makers preference for advisors with unshared information. 297 Jorge Pea, Joseph B. Walther & Jeffret T. Hancock. Effects of geographic distribution on dominance perceptions in computer-mediated groups. 313 Jennifer L. Monahan & Jennifer A. Samp. Alcohols effects on goal-related appraisals and communicative behaviors. 332 2007, Vol. 34(2) Y. Connie Yuan, Janet Fulk & Peter R. Monge. Access to information in connective and communal Transactive memory systems. 131 Alex M. Susskind. Downsizing survivors communication networks and reactions: A longitudinal examination of information flow and turnover intentions. 156 Young Mie Kium. How intrinsic and extrinsic motivations interact in selectivity: Investigating the moderating effects of situational information processing goals in issue publics web behavior. 185 Monick Biuzen, Juliette H. Walma van der Molen & Patricia Sondij. Parental mediation of childrens emotional responses to a violent news event. 212 Matthias Kohring & Jorg Matthes. Trust in news media: Development and validation of a multidimensional scale. 231

61 2007, Vol. 34(1) Dietram A. Scheufele, Eunkyung Kim & Dominique Brossard. My friends enemy: How splitscreen debate coverage influences evaluation of presidential debates. 3 Jisu Huh & Rita Langteau. Presumed influence of DTC prescription drug advertising: Do experts and novices think differently? 25 Charles R. Berger & Eun-Ju Lee. Dynamic representations of threatening trends: The role of rationality and experientiality in potentiating trepidation. 53 Michael Pfau, Michal M. Haigh, Jeanatta Simms & Shelly Wigley. The influence of corporate front-group stealth campaigns. 73 Stephen A. Rains. The impact of anonymity on perceptions of source credibility and influence in computer-mediated group communication: A test of two competing hypotheses. 100 2006, Vol. 33(6) Eun-Ju Lee. When and how does depersonalization increase conformity to group norms in computer-mediated communication? 423 Matthew S. Eastin & Robert P. Griffiths. Beyond the shooter game: Examining presence and hostile outcomes among male game players. 448 Walid A. Afifi & John P. Caughlin. A close look at revealing secrets and some consequences that follow. 467 Marcus Maurer & Carsten Reinemann. Learning versus knowing: Effects of misinformation in televised debates. 489 Kristen Harrison, Laramie D. Taylor & Amy Lee Marske. Womens and mens eating behavior following exposure to ideal-body images and text. 507 2006, Vol. 33(5) Zhongdang Pan, Lijiang Shen, Hye-Jin Pack & Ye Sun. Mobilizing political talk in a presidential campaign: An examination of campaign effects in a deliberative framework. 315 Maria Elizabeth Grabe & Rasha Kamhawi. Hard wired for negative news? Gender differences in processing broadcast news. 346 Ulrike Cress, Joachim Kimmerle & Frederich W. Hesse. Information exchange with shared databases as a social dilemma: The effect of metaknowledge, bonus systems, and costs. 370 Jennifer A. Theiss & Denise Haunani Solomon. A relational turbulence model of communication about irritations in romantic relationships. 391 2006, Vol. 33(4) Leanne K. Knobloch, Denise Haunani Solomon & Jennifer A. Theiss. The role of intimacy in the production and perception of relationship talk within courtship. 211 Guowei Jian & Leo W. Jeffres. Understanding employees willingness to contribute to shared electronic databases: A three-dimensional framework. 242 Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick & Matthias R. Hastall. Social comparisons within new personae: Selective exposure to news portrayals of same-sex and same-age characters. 262 Ronald A. Yaros. Is it the medium or the message? Structuring complex news to enhance engagement and situational understanding by nonexperts. 285

62 2006, Vol. 33(3) Josh Pasek, Kate Jenski, Daniel Romer & Kathleen Hall Jamieson. Americas youth and community engagement: How use of mass media is related to civic activity and political awareness in 14- to 22-year-olds. 115 Jaeho Cho, Homero Gil de Zuniga, Dhavan V. Shah & Douglas M. McLeod. Cue convergence: Associative effects on social intolerance. 136 Miriam J. Metzger. Effects of site, vendor, and consumer characteristics on we site trust and disclosure. 155 Y-Hui Huang. Crisis situations, communication strategies, and media coverage: A multicase study revisiting the communicative response model. 180 2006, Vol. 33(2) Reinout E. de Vries, Bart van den Hoof & Jan A. de Ridder. Explaining knowledge sharing: The role of team communication styles, job satisfaction, and performance beliefs. 115 Bob M. Fennis, Enny Das & Ad Th. H. Pruyn. Interpersonal communication and compliance: The disrupt-then-reframe technique in dyadic influence settings. 136 Jennifer L. Gibbs, Nicole B. Eillison & Rebecca D. Heino. Self-presentation in online personals: The role of anticipated future interaction, self-disclosure, and perceived success in internet dating. 152 Jochen Peter & Patti M. Valkenburg. Adolescents exposure to sexually explicit material on the internet. 178 2006, Vol. 33(1) Julie L. Andsager, Victoria Bemker, Hong-Lim Choi & Vitalis Torwel. Perceived similarity of exemplary traits and behaviors: Effects on message evaluation. 3 Claes H. de Vreese & Hajo G. Boomgaarden. Media message flows and interpersonal communication: The conditional nature of effects on public opinion. 19 Brant R. Burleson, Meina Liu, Yan Liu & Steven T. Mortenson. Chinese evaluations of emotional support skills, goals, and behaviors: An assessment of gender-related similarities and differences. 38 Charles Pavitt, Vera Zingerman, Erin Towey & Courtney McFeeters. Group communication during resource dilemmas: 2. Effects of harvest limit and reward asymmetry. 64 Jorge Pea & Jeffrey T. Hancock. An analysis of socioemotional and task communication in online multiplayer video games. 92

63 2005, Vol. 32(6) Criag R. Scott & C. Erik Timmerman. Relating computer, communication, and computermediated communication apprehensions to new communication technology use in the workplace. 683 Edward T. Palazzolo. Organizing for information retrieval in transactive memory systems. 726 Youngmin Yoon. Legitimacy, public relations, and media access: Proposing and testing a media access model. 762 Yariv Tsfati & Johnathan Cohen. The influence of presumed media influence on democratic legitimacy: The case of Gaza settlers. 794 Patrick C. Merrick. Rethinking the target corollary: The effects of social distance, perceived exposure, and perceived predispositions on first-person and third-person perceptions. 822 2005, Vol. 32(5) Dhavan V. Shah, Jaeho Cho, William P. Eveland, Jr. & Nojin Kwak. Information and expression in a digital age: Modeling internet effects on civic participation. 531 Yuki Fujioka. Emotional TV viewing and minority audience: How Mexican Americans process and evaluate TV news about in-group members. 566 Sung-Yeon Park. The influence of presumed media influence on womens desire to be thin. 594 Eun-Ju Lee. When placebic information differs from real information: Cognitive and motivational bases of mindful reactions to informational social influence. 615 Reza Barkhi. Information exchange and induced cooperation in group decision support systems. 646 2005, Vol. 32(4) Craig R. Hullett. The impact of mood on persuasion: A meta-analysis. 423 Anita L. Vangelisti, Stacy L. Young, Katy E. Carpenter-Theune & Alicia L. Alexander. Why does it hurt? The perceived causes of hurt feelings. 443 Joseph N. Cappella, Caryn Lerman, Anca Romantan & Lemi Baruh. News about genetics and smoking: Priming, family smoking history, and news story believability on inferences of genetic susceptibility to tobacco addiction. 478 John D. Richardson. Switching social identities: The influence of editorial framing on reader attitudes toward affirmative action and African Americans. 503 2005, Vol. 32(3) Marina Krcmar & Edward T. Vieira, Jr. Imitating life, imitating television: The effects of family and television models on childrens moral reasoning. 267 Jaeho Cho. Media, interpersonal discussion, and electoral choice. 295 Dana E. Mastro, Ron Tamborini & Craig R. Hullett. Linking media to prototype activation and subsequent celebrity attraction: An application of self-categorization theory. 323 Leanne K. Knobloch & Denise Haunani Solomon. Relational uncertainty and relational information processing: Questions without answers? 349 Rajiv N. Rimal & Kevin Real. How behaviors are influenced by perceived norms: A test of the theory of normative social behavior. 389

64 2005, Vol. 32(2) Hye-Jin Paek, Zhongdang Pan, Ye Sun, Joseph Abisaid & Debra Houden. The third-person perception as social judgment: An exploration of social distance and uncertainty in perceived effects of political attack ads. 143 Phyllis A. Anastasio, Karen C. Rose & Joseph C. Chapman. The divisive coverage effect: How media may cleave differences of opinion between social groups. 171 Stephen A. Rains. Leveling the organizational playing fieldvirtually: A meta-analysis of experimental research assessing the impact of group support system use on member influence behaviors. 193 Hyunyi Cho & Franklin J. Boster. Development and validation of value-, outcome-, and impression-relevant involvement scales. 235 2005, Vol. 32(1) Charles R. Berger. Slippery slopes to apprehension: Rationality and graphical depictions of increasingly threatening trends. 2 Eun-Ju Lee. Effects of the influence agents sex and self-confidence on informational social influence in computer-mediated communication: Quantitative versus verbal presentation. 29 Patricia Moy, Marcos Torres, Keiko Tanaka & Michael R. McCluskey. Knowledge or trust? Investigating linkages between media reliance and participation. 59 Nojin Kwak, Ann E. Williams, Xiaoru Wang & Hoon Lee. Talking politics and engaging politics: An examination of the interactive relationships between structural features of political talk and discussion engagement. 87 Brian G. Southwell. Between messages and people: A multilevel model of memory for television content. 112 2004, Vol. 31(6) Kathleen M. Schmitt, Albert C. Gunther & Janice L. Liebhart. Why partisans see mass media as biased. 623 Michael D. Slater, Kimberly L. Henry, Randall C. Swaim & Joe Cardador. Vulnerable teens, vulnerable times: How sensation seeking, alienation, and victimization moderate the violence media content-aggressiveness relation. 642 Kurt Neuwirth & Edward Frederick. Peer and social influence on opinion expression: Combining the theories of planned behavior and the spiral of silence. 669 Joseph A. Bonito. Shared cognition and participation in small groups: Similarity of member prototypes. 704

65 2004, Vol. 31(5) Krisen Lucas & John L. Sherry. Sex differences in video game play: A communication-based explanation. 499 Julia R. Fox. A signal detection analysis of audio/video redundancy effects in televisions news video. 524 Fangfang Diao & S. Shyam Sundar. Orienting response and memory for web advertisements: Exploring effects of pop-up window and animation. 537 Jisu Huh, Denise E. DeLorne & Leonard N. Reid. The third-person effect and its influence on behavioral outcomes in a product advertising context: The case of direct-to-consumer prescription drug advertising. 568 Better Kaman Lee. Audience-oriented approach to crisis communication: A study of Hong Kong consumers evaluation of an organizational crisis. 600 2004, Vol. 31(4) Craig R. Yillett. Using functional theory to promote sexually transmitted disease (STD) testing: The impact of value-expressive messages and guilt. 363 Kathy Kellerman. A goal-directed approach to gaining compliance: Relating differences among goals to differences in behaviors. 397 Christopher E. Beaudoin & Esther Thorson. Testing the cognitive mediation model: The roles of news reliance and three gratifications sought. 446 Dianne Ricinski. Community boundedness, personal relevance, and the knowledge gap. 472 2004, Vol. 31(3) Silbia Knobloch, Grit Patzig, Anna-Maria Mende & Matthias Hastall. Affective news: Effects of discourse structures in narratives on suspense, curiosity, and enjoyment while reading news and novels. 259 Patti M. Valkenburg & Marjolein Vroone. Developmental changes in infants and toddlers attention to television entertainment. 288 Osei Appiah. Effects of ethnic identification on web broswers attitudes toward and navigational patterns on race-targeted sites. 312 Susanne Jones. Putting the person into person-centered and immediate emotional support: Emotional change and perceived helper competence as outcomes of comforting in helping situations. 338 2004, Vol. 31(2) Dawna I. Ballard & David R. Seibold. Organizational members communication and temporal experience: Scale development and validation. 135 Leanne K. Knobloch & Kathy E. Carpenter-Theune. Topic avoidance in developing romantic relationships: Associations with intimacy and relational uncertainty. 173 Prabu David, Kaiya Liu & Michael Myser. Methodological artifact or persistent bias? Testing the robustness of the third-person and reverse third-person effects for alcohol messages. 206 Patrick C. Merrick. Topic-relevant reference groups and dimensions of distance: Political advertising and first- and third-person effects. 234

66 2004, Vol. 31(1) Mary Claire Morr & Paul A. Mongeau. First-date expectations: The impact of sex of initiator, alcohol consumption, and relationship type. 3 Sprio Kiousis & Max McCombs. Agenda-setting effects and attitude strength: Political figures during the 1996 presidential election. 36 Dolf Zillman, Lei Chen, Silvia Knobloch & Coy Callison. Effects of lead framing on selective exposure to internet news reports. 58 William P. Eveland, Jr., Krisztina Marton & Mihye Seo. Moving behind just the facts: The influence of online news on the content and structure of political affairs knowledge. 82 Stella C. Chia, Kerr-hsin Lu & Douglas M. McLeod. Sex, lies, and video compact disk: A case study on third-person perception and motivations for media censorship. 109 2003, Vol. 30(6) Arun Vishwanath. Comparing online information effects: A cross-cultural comparison of online information and uncertainty avoidance. 579 John G. Oetzel & Stella Ting Toomey. Face concerns in interpersonal conflict: A cross-cultural empirical test of the face negotiation theory. 599 Scott E. Caplan. Preference for online social interaction: A theory of problematic internet use and psychosocial well-being. 625 Zhongdang Pan & Joseph Man Chen. Shifting journalistic paradigm: How Chinas journalists assess media exemplars. 649 Jochen Peter. Country characteristics as contingent conditions of agenda setting: The moderating influence of polarized elite opinion. 683 Michael D. Slater, Kimberly L. Henry, Randall C. Swaim & Lori L. Anderson. Violent media content and aggressiveness in adolescents: A downward spiral model. 713 Charles R. Berger, Eun-Ju Lee & Joel T. Johnson. Gender, rationality, and base-rate explanations for increasing trends. 737 2003, Vol. 30(5) Moniek Buijzen & Patti M. Valkenburg. The unintended effects of television advertising: A parent-child survey. 483 Yariv Tsfati & Joseph N. Cappella. Do people watch what they do not trust? Exploring the association between news media skepticism and exposure. 504 Rick W. Busselle. Television exposure, parents precautionary warnings, and young adults perceptions of crime. 530 Fang Yang & James Shanahan. Economic openness and media penetration. 557

67 2003, Vol. 30(4) William P. Eveland, Jr., Dhavan V. Shah, & Nojin Kwak. Assessing causality in the cognitive mediation model: A panel study of motivations, information processing and learning during Campaign 2000. 359 Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Annie Lang & Xiaoquan Zhao. News content and form: Implications for memory and audience evaluations. 387 Cindt T. Christen & Albert C. Gunther. The influence of mass media and other culprits on the projection of personal opinion. 414 Jennifer Stevens Aurbey, Kristen Harrison, Leila Kramer & Jennifer Yellin. Variety versus timing: Gender differences in college students sexual expectations as predicted by exposure to sexually oriented television. 432 Lyn M. Van Swol. The effects of nonverbal mirroring on perceived persuasiveness, agreement with an imitator, and reciprocity in a group discussion. 461 2003, Vol. 30(3) Charles R. Berger. Effects of discounting cues and gender on apprehension: Quantitative versus verbal depictions of threatening trends. 251 Erina L. MacGeorge, Seth J. Gillihan, Wendy Samter & Ruth Anne Clark. Skill deficit or differential motivation? Testing alternative explanations for gender differences in the provision of emotional support. 272 Amy I. Nathanson & Renee A. Botta. Shaping the effects of television on adolescents body image disturbance: The role of parental mediation. 304 Michael T. Stephenson & R. Lance Holbert. A Monte Carlo simulation of observable versus latent variable structural equation modeling techniques. 332 2003, Vol. 30(2) Brant R. Burleson & Steven R. Mortenson. Explaining cultural differences in evaluations of emotional support behaviors: Exploring the mediating influence of value systems and interaction goals. 113 Caroline Cornelius & Margarete Boos. Enhancing mutual understanding in synchronous computer-mediated communication by training: Trade-offs in judgmental tasks. 147 Ryan Goei, Lisa L. Massi Lindsey, Franklin J. Boster, Paul D. Skalski & Jonathan M. Bowen. The mediating roles of liking and obligation on the relationships between favors and compliance. 178 Charles R. Berger, Joel T. Johnson & Eun-Ju Lee. Antidotes for anthrax anecdotes: The role of rationality and base-rate data in assuaging apprehension. 198 Robin L. Nabi. Exploring the framing effects of emotions: Do discrete emotions differentially influence information accessibility, information seeking, and policy preference? 224

68 2003, Vol. 30(1) Silvia Knobloch, Matthias Hastall, Dolf Zillmann & Coy Callison. Imagery effects on the selective reading of internet newsmagazines. 3 S. Shyam Sundar, Sriram Kalyanaraman & Justin Brown. Explicating web site interactivity: Impression formation effects in political campaign sites. 30 Daniel G. McDonald & John Dimmick. The conceptualization and measurement of diversity. 60 Naewon Kang & Nojin Kwak. A multilevel approach to civic participation: Individual length of residence, neighborhood residential stability, and their interactive effects with media use. 80 2002, Vol. 29(6) Claes H. de Vreese & Holli A. Semetko. Cynical and engaged: Strategic campaign coverage, public opinion, and mobilization in a referendum. 615 Yuki Fujioka & Erica Weintraub Austin. The relationship of family communication patterns to parental mediation styles. 642 Murray Miller. Effects of guilt induction and guilt reduction on door in the face. 666 Erica Scharrer. Third-person perception and television violence: The role of out-group stereotyping in perceptions of susceptibility to effects. 681 Robert J. Griffin, Kurt Neuwirth, James Giese & Sharon Dunwoody. Linking the heuristicsystematic model and depth of processing. 705 2002, Vol. 29(5) Chingching Chang. Self-congruence as a cue in different advertising-processing contexts. 503 Paul D. Bolls. I can hear you, but can I see you? The use of visual cognition during exposure to high-imagery radio advertisements. 537 Klaus Schoenbach & Edmund Lauf. The trap effect of television and its competitors. 564 Matthew C. Nisbet, Dietram A. Scheufele, James Shanahan, Patricia May, Dominique Brossard & BruceV. Lewenstein. Knowledge, reservations, or promise? A media effects model for public perceptions of science and technology. 584 2002, Vol. 29(4) Michael D. Slater & Kathleen J. Kelly. Testing alternative explanations for exposure effects in media campaigns: The case of a community-based in-school media drug prevention program. 367 Pamela J. Lannutti & Jennifer L. Monahan. When the frame paints the picture: Alcohol consumption, relational framing, and sexual communication. 390 Itzhak Yanovitsky. Effects of news coverage on policy attention and actions: A closer look into the media-policy connection. 422 Marilyn Roberts, Wayne Wanta & Tzong-Horng (Dustin) Dzwo. Agenda setting and issue salience online. 452 Jonathan J. H. Zhuo & Zhou He. Perceived characteristics, perceived needs, and perceived popularity: Adoption and use of the internet in China. 466 2002, Vol. 29(3)

69 Annie Lang, Jennifer Borse, Kevin Wise & Prabu David. Captured by the world wide web: Orienting to structural and content features of computer-presented information. 215 Julie L. Andsager, Erica Weintraub Austin & Bruce E. Pinkleton. Gender as a variable in interpretation of alcohol-related messages. 246 Prabu David, Glenda Morrison, Melissa A. Johnson & Felecia Ross. Body image, race, and fashion models: Social distance and social identification in third-person effects. 270 Eric W. Groenendyk & Nicholas A. Valentino. Of dark clouds and silver linings: Effects of exposure to issue versus candidate advertising on persuasion, Information retention, and issue salience. 295 Kurt Neuwirth, Edward Frederick & Charles Mayo. Person-effects and heuristic-systematic processing. 320 2002, Vol. 29(2) Charles R. Berger. Base-rate bingo: Ephemeral effects of population data on cognitive responses, apprehension, and perceived risk. 99 Michael E. Kalman, Peter Monge, Janet Fulk & Rebecca Heino. Motivations to resolve communication dilemmas in database-mediated collaboration. 125 Erica Weintraub Austin, Amber Coral-Reaume Miller, John Silva, Petra Guerra, Neva Geisler, Luxelvira Gamoa, Orlalak Phakakayi & Bryant Kuechle. The effects of increased cognitive involvement on college students interpretations of magazine advertisements for alcohol. 155 Scott L. Althaus & David Tewksbury. Agenda setting and the new news: Patterns of issue importance among readers of the paper and online versions of the New York Times. 180 2002, Vol. 29(1) Robert P. Hawkins, Suzanne Pingree, Jacqueline Bush Hitchon, Eileen Gilligan, LeeAnn Kahlor, Bradley W. Gorham, Barry Radler, Prathana Kannovakun, Toni Schmidt, Gudbjorg Hildur Kolbeins, Chin-I Wang & Ronald C. Serlin. What holds attention to television? Strategic inertia of looks at content boundaries. 3 Johannes W. J. Beentjes, Marianne van Oordt & Tom H. A. van der Voort. How television commentary affects childrens judgments on soccer fouls. 31 Dietram A. Scheufele. Examining differential gains from mass media and their implications for participatory behavior. 46 Andrew J. Flanagan, Vaness Tiyaamornwong, Joan OConnor & David R. Seibold. Computermediated group work: The interaction of member sex and anonymity. 66 2001, Vol. 28(6) Tamir Sheafer. Charismatic skill and media legitimacy: An actor-centered approach to understanding the political communication competition. 711 Lucia Savadori, Lyn M. Van Swol & Janet Sniezek. Information sampling and confidence within groups and judge advisor systems. 737 David Domke. Racial cues and political ideology: An examination of associative priming. 772 Robin L. Nabi & John L. Sullivan. Does television viewing relate to engagement in protective action against crime? A cultivation analysis from a theory of reasoned action perspective. 802 David P. Fan, Robert O. Wyatt & Kathy Keltner. The suicidal messenger: How the press reporting affects public confidence in the press, the military, and organized religion. 826

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2001, Vol. 28(5) William P. Eveland, Jr. The cognitive mediation model of learning from the news: Evidence from nonelection, off-year election, and presidential election contexts. 571 Thomas A. Morton & Julie M. Duck. Communication and health beliefs: Mass and interpersonal influences on perceptions of risk to self and others. Paul D. Bulls, Annie Lang & Robert F. Potter. The effects of message valence and listener arousal on attention, memory, and facial muscular responses to radio advertisements. 627 Patti M. Valkenburg & Karen E. Soctors. Childrens positive and negative experiences with the internet: An exploratory survey. 652 Laura Leets. Explaining perceptions of racist speech. 676 2001, Vol. 28(4) (Special Issue: Communication Technology and Community) Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach & Elizabeth Gutierrez Hoyt. Communication technology and community. 355 Lewis A. Friedland. Communication, community, and democracy: Toward a theory of the communicatively integrated community. 358 Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach, Yong-Chan Kim & Sorin Matei. Storytelling neighborhood: Paths to belonging in diverse urban environments. 392 Sorin Matei, Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach & Jack Linchuan Qui. Fear and misperception of Los Angeles urban space: A spatial-statistical study of communication-shaped mental maps. 429 Dhavan V. Shah, Jack M. McLeod & So-Hyang Yoon. Communication, context, and community: An exploration of print, broadcast, and internet influences. 464 Joo-Young Jung, Jack Linchuan Qui & Yong-Chan Kim. Internet connectedness and inequality: Beyond the divide. 507 William E. Loges & Joo-Young Jung. Exploring the digital divide: Internet connectedness and age. 536 2001, Vol. 28(3) Amy I. Nathanson. Parents versus peers: Exploring the significance of peer mediation of antisocial television. 251 Joseph A. Bonito. An information-processing approach to participation in small groups. 275 Dietram A. Scheufele, James Shanahan & Eunjung Lee. Real talk: Manipulating the dependent variable in spiral of silence research. 304 Jeffrey T. Hancock & Philip J. Durham. Impression formation in computer-mediated communication revisited: An analysis of the breadth and intensity of impressions. 325 2001, Vol. 28(2) Daniel G. McDonald, Caroll J. Glynn, Sei-Hill Kim & Ronald E. Ostman. The spiral of silence in the 1948 presidential election. 139 Wolfram Periser & Jochen Peter. Explaining individual differences in third-person perception: A limits/possibilities perspective. 156 Glenn Leshner. Critiquing the image: Testing image adwatches as journalistic reform. 181

71 Itzhak Yanovitsky & Jo Stryker. Mass media, social norms, and health promotion efforts: A longitudinal study of media effects on youth binge drinking. 208 2001, Vol. 28(1) Kathy Kellerman & Hee Sun Park. Situational urgency and conversational retreat: When politeness and efficiency matter. 3 William P. Eveland, Jr. & Sharon Dunwoody. User control and structural isomorphism or disorientation and cognitive load? Learning from the web versus print. 48 Daniel J. Canary, William R. Cupach & Richard T. Serpe. A competence-based approach to examining interpersonal conflict: Test of a longitudinal model. 79 Joseph B. Walther, Celeste L. Slovacek & Lisa C. Tidwell. Is a picture worth a thousand words? Photographic images in long-term and short-term computer-mediated communication. 105 2000, Vol. 27(6) S. Shayam Sundar & Clifford Nass. Source orientation in human-computer interaction: Programmer, networker, or independent social actor? 683 Jennifer Butler Ellis & Gewn M. Wittenbaum. Relationships between self-construal and verbal promotion. 704 D. Lawrence Kincaid. Mass media, ideation, and behavior: A longitudinal analysis of contraceptive change in the Philippines. 723 Betty Kama Lee & Ling Chen. Cultural communication competence and psychological adjustment: A study of Chinese immigrant childrens cross-cultural adaptation in Canada. 764 2000, Vol. 27(5) Travis L. Dixon & Daniel Linz. Race and misrepresentation of victimization on local television news. 547 Koen van Eijck & Kees van Rees. Media orientation and media use: Television viewing behavior of specific reader types from 1975 to 1995. 574 Kristen Harrison. Television viewing, fat stereotyping, body shape standards, and eating disorder symptomatology in grade school children. 617 Stacy L. Smith & Barbara J. Wilson. Childrens reactions to a television news story: The impact of video footage and proximity of the crime. 641 2000, Vol. 27(4) Linda C. Godbold & Michael Pfau. Conferring resistance to peer pressure among adolescents: Using inoculation theory to discourage alcohol use. 411 Thomas A. Morton & Julie M. Duck. Social identity and media dependency in the gay community: The predication of safe sex attitudes. 438 James Price Dillard & Eugenia Peck. Affect and persuasion: Emotional responses to public service announcements. 461 Leo W. Jeffres. Ethnicity and ethnic media use: A panel study. 496 2000, Vol. 27(3)

72 Michael McDevitt & Steven Chafee. Closing gaps in political communication and knowledge: Effects of school intervention. 259 Marina M. Pool, Tom H. A. va der Voort, Johannes W. J. Beentjes & Cees M. Koolstra. Background television as an inhibitor of performance on easy and difficult homework assignments. 293 G. Blake Armstrong & Leeva Chung. Background television and reading memory in context: Assessing TV interference and facilitative context effects on encoding versus retrieval processes. 327 Alex M. Susskind. Efficacy and outcome expectations related to customer complaints about service experiences. 353 Gwen M. Wittenbaum. The bias toward discussing shared information: Why are high-status group members immune? 379 2000, Vol. 27(2) Dietram A. Scheufele & Dhavan V. Shah. Personality strength and social capital: The role of dispositional and informational variables in the production of civic participation. 107 Juliette H. Walma van der Molen & Tom H. A. van der Voort. Childrens and adults recall of television and print news in childrens and adult news formats. 132 Richard Bello. Determinants of equivocation: The influence of situational formality, interaction phase, and ambiguity tolerance. 161 Eric P. Bucy. Emotional and evaluative consequences of inappropriate leader displays. 194 John Dimmick, Susan Kline & Laura Stafford. The gratification niches of personal e-mail and the telephone: Competition, displacement, and complementarity. 227 1999, Vol. 26(6) Lisa Henriksen & June A. Flora. Third-person perception and children: Perceived impact of proand anti-smoking ads. 643 Patrick Roessler. The individual agenda-designing process: How interpersonal communication, egocentric networks, and mass media shape the perception of political issues of individuals. 666 Donna P. Wasserman. The local contours of campaign coverage: State newspapers and the 1988 Super Tuesday campaign. 701 Cynthia Hoffner, Martha Buchanan, Joel David Anderson, Lisa A. Hubbs, Stacy K. Kamigaki, Laura Kowalczyk, Angela Pastorek, Richard S. Plotkin & Kelsey J. Silberg. Support for censorship of television violence: The role of the third-person effect and news exposure. 726 Jack M. McLeod, Dietram A. Scheufele, Patricia Moy, Edward M. Horowitz, R. Lance Holbert, Weiwu Zhang, Stephen Zubric & Jessica Zubric. Understanding deliberation: The effects of discussion networks on participation in a public forum. 743 1999, Vol. 26(5) Michael B. Salwen & Michel Dupagne. The third-person effect: Perceptions of the medias influence and immoral consequences. 523 Patti M. Valkenburg, Holli A. Semetko & Claes H. de Vreese. The effects of news frames on readers thoughts and recall. 550

73 David Domke, Kelley McCoy & Marcos Torres. News media, racial perceptions, and political cognition. 570 Marina Krcmar & Patti M. Valkenburg. A scale to assess childrens moral interpretations of justified and unjustified violence and its relationship to television viewing. 608 1999, Vol. 26(4) (Special Issues: Bridging Established and Emerging Directions in Communication Research) Elizabeth Gutierrez Hoyt, Shari Hoppin, Ben Lee, Jordana Kanee Signer, Mark Latonero & Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach. Bridging established and emerging directions in communication research. 379 Nojin Kwak. Revisiting the knowledge gap hypothesis: Education, motivation, and media use. 385 Sprio Kiousis, Philemon Bantimaroudis & Hyun Ban. Candidate image attributes: Experiments on the substantive dimension of second level agenda setting. 414 Itzhak Yanovitzky & Courtney Bennett. Media attention, institutional response, and health behavior change: The case of drunk driving, 1978-1996. 429 Naewon Kang & Junho H. Choi. Structural implications of the crossposting network of international news in cyberspace. 454 Philip Graham. Critical systems theory: A political economy of language, thoughts, and technology. 482 1999, Vol. 26(3) William P. Eveland, Jr., Amy I. Nathanson, Benjamin H. Detenber & Douglas M. McLeod. Rethinking the social distance corollary: Perceived likelihood of exposure and the thirdperson perception. 275 Charles Pavitt & Kelly Kline Johnson. An examination of the coherence of group discussions. 303 Rajiv N. Rimal, June A. Flora & Caroline Schooler. Achieving improvements in overall health orientation: Effects of campaign exposure, information seeking, and health media use. 322 Michael G. Cruz, David Dryden Hennington & Brian A. Smith. The impact of directive leadership on group information sampling, decisions, and perceptions of the leader. 349 1999, Vol. 26(2) Amy I Nathanson. Identifying and explaining the relationship between parental mediation and childrens aggression. 124 Mark D. Watts, David Domke, Dhavan V. Shah, & David P. Fan. Elite cues and media bias in presidential campaigns: Explaining public perceptions of a liberal press. 144 Glenn G. Sparks, Marianne Pellechia & Chris Irvine. The repressive coping style and fright reactions to mass media. 176 Jennifer Anne Samp & Denise Haunani Solomon. Communicative responses to problematic events in close relationships II: The influence of five facets of goals on message features. 193 Dhavan V. Shah, Ronald J. Faber & Seounmi Youn. Susceptibility and severity: Perceptual dimensions underlying the third-person effect. 240 1999, Vol. 26(1)

74 David Tewksbury. Differences in how we watch the news: The impact of processing goals and expertise on evaluations of political actors. 4 Katherine McComas & James Shanahan. Telling stories about global climate change: Measuring the impact of narratives on issue cycles. 30 C. Richard Hofstetter, Thomas G. Sticht, & Carolyn Huie Hofstetter. Knowledge, literacy, and power. 58 Jennifer L. Monohan & Cynthia E. Zuckerman. Intensifying the dominant response: Participantobserver differences and nonconscious effects. 81 1998, Vol. 25(6) (Special Issue: (Mis)communicating Across Boundaries) Sandra Petronio, Naomi Ellemers, Howard Giles & Cynthia Gallois. (Mis)communicating across boundaries: Interpersonal and intergroup considerations. 471 Natalie J. Dollar & Brooke G. Zimmers. Social identity and communicative boundaries: An analysis of youth and young adult street speakers in a U.S. American community. 596 Larry L. Wilson, Michael E. Roloff, & Colleen M. Carey. Boundary rules: Factors that inhibit expressing concerns about anothers romantic relationships. 618 Anthony Mulac, Karen T. Erlandson, W. Jeffrey Farrar, Jennifer S. Hallet, Jennifer L. Molloy & Margaret E. Prescott. Uh-huh. Whats that all about? Differing interpretations of conversational backchannels and questions as sources of miscommunication across gender boundaries. 641 Gail E. Cooper & Linda C. Godbold. Convergence between racial and political identities: Boundary erasure or aversive racism? 669 Tom Postmes, Russell Speaks & Martin Lea. Breaching or building social boundaries? SIDEeffects of computer-mediated communication. 689 1998, Vol. 25(5) Jack M. McLeod, Mira Sotirovic & R. Lance Holbert. Value as sociotropic judgments influencing communication patterns. 453 Albert C. Gunther. The persuasive press inference: Effects of mass media on perceived public opinion. 486 Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. & Jonathan Baron. Inequality: Its all in the way you look at it. 505 Tsan-Kuo Chang. All countries not created equal to be news: World systems and international system. 528 1998, Vol. 25(4) (Special Issue: Communication in the Global Community) Patricia Riley & Peter R. Monge. Introduction. 355 Deborah L. Wheeler. Global culture or culture clash: New information technologies in the Islamic worlda view from Kuwait. 359 Silvio Waisbord. When the cart of media is before the horse of identity: A critique of technologycentered views on globalization. 377 Mark Meister & Phyliss MN. Japp. Sustainable development and the global economy: Rhetorical implications for improving the quality of life. 399 Gary Gumpert & Susan J. Drucker. The mediated home in the global village. 422 1998, Vol. 25(3)

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Michael B. Salwen. Perceptions of media influence and support for censorship: The third-person effect in the 1996 presidential election. 259 Daniel Romer, Kathleen H. Jamieson & Nicole J. de Coteau. The treatment of persons of color in local television news: Ethnic blame disclosure or realistic group conflict? 286 Marianne S. Sassi & John O. Greene. The impact of individual differences on message-production skill acquisition. 306 Kristen Linnea Johnson & Michael E. Roloff. Serial arguing and relational quality: Determinants and consequences of perceived resolvability. 327 1998, Vol. 25(2) Davette E. Ifert & Michael E. Roloff. Understanding obstacles preventing compliance: Conceptualization and classification. 131 Shinobu Suzuki. In-group and out-group communication patterns in international organizations: Implications for social identity theory. 154 Amber L. Besson, Michael E. Roloff & Gaylen D. Paulson. Preserving face in refusal situations. 183 Stephanie A. Skumanich & David P. Kintsfather. Individual media dependency relations within television shopping programming: A causal model reviewed and revised. 200 Matthew Hogben. Factors moderating the effect of televised aggression on viewer behavior. 220 1998, Vol. 25(1) Gregory Makoul & Michael E. Roloff. The role of efficacy and outcome expectations in the decision to withhold relational complaints. 5 Alex M. Susskind, Vernon D. Miller & J. David Johnson. Downsizing and structural holes: Their impact on layoff survivors perceptions of organizational chaos and openness to change. 30 Jennifer Anne Samp & Denise Hauuani Solomon. Communication responses to problematic events in close relationships I: The variety and facets of goals. 66 Thomas W. Valente & Walter P. Saba. Mass media and interpersonal influence in a reproductive health communication campaign in Bolivia. 96 1997, Vol. 24(6) (Special Issue: Communication in the Age of the Disposable Worker) Charles Conrad & Marshall Scott Poole. Introduction. 581 George Cheney & Craig Carroll. The person as object in discourses in and around organizations. 593 David M. Boje, Grace Ann Rosile, Robert Dennehy & Debra J. Summers. Restorying reengineering: Some deconstructions and postmodern alternatives. 631 Christopher R. Martin & Hayg Oshagan. Disciplining the workforce: The news media frame a General Motors plant closing. 669 Stuart Galup, Carol Saunders, Reed E. Nelson & Robert Cerveny. The use of temporary staff and managers in a local government environment. 698 Patricia M. Sias, Michael W. Kramer & Edith Jenkins. A comparison of the communication behaviors of temporary employees and new hires. 731 Mary K. Casey, Vernon D. Miller & John R. Johnson. Survivors information seeking following a reduction in workforce. 755

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1997, Vol. 24(5) G. Blake Armstrong & Pradeep Sopory. Effects of background television on phonological and visuo-spatial working memory. 459 Vincent Price, David Tewksbury & Elizabeth Powers. Switching trains of thought: The impact of news frames on readers cognitive responses. 481 Seth Finn. Origins of media exposure: Linking personality traits to TV, radio, print, and film use. 507 Suzanne M. Jones & Brant R. Burleson. The impact of situational variables on helpers perceptions of comforting messages: An attributional analysis. 530 Murray Miller & Karen U. Miller. The effects of cognitive capacity and suspicion on truth bias. 556

77 1997, Vol. 24(4) (Special Issue: Cultural Variability in Communication) William B. Gudykunst. Cultural variability in communication: An introduction. 327 Naoimi Sugimoto. A Japan-U.S. comparison of apology styles. 349 Angie Williams, Hiroshi Ota, Howard Giles, Herbert D. Pierson, Cynthia Gallois, Sik-Hung Ng, Tae-Seop Lim, Ellen Bouchard Ryan, LilnaBeth Somera, John Maher, Debra Cai & Jake Harwood. Young peoples beliefs about intergenerational communication: An initial crosscultural comparison. 370 Meihua Lee & George A. Barnett. A symbols-and-meaning approach to the organizational cultures of banks in the United States, Japan, and Taiwan. 394 Jinyoung Tak, Lynda Lee Kaid & Soobum Lee. A cross-cultural study of political advertising in the United States and Korea. 413 James W. Neulip. A cross-cultural comparison of teacher immediacy in American and Japanese college classrooms. 431 1997, Vol. 24(3) June Woog Rhee & Joseph N. Cappella. The role of political sophistication in learning from news: Measuring schema development. 197 Valerie Manusov, Kory Floyd & Jeff Kerssen-Griep. Yours, mine, and ours: Mutual attributions for nonverbal behaviors in couples interactions. 234 Gaylen D. Paulson & Michael E. Roloff. The effects of request form and content on constructing obstacles to compliance. 261 Michael G. Cruz, Franklin J. Boster & Jose I. Rodriguez. The impact of group size and proportion of shared information on the exchange and integration of information in groups. 291 1997, Vol. 24(2) JungKee Kim & Alan M. Rubin. The variable influence of audience activity on media effects. 107 Cynthia Hoffner & Margaret J. Haefner. Childrens comforting of frightened coviewers: Real and hypothetical television-viewing situations. 136 Douglas M. McLeod, William P. Eveland, Jr. & Amy I. Nathanson. Support for censorship of violent and misogynic rap lyrics: An analysis of the third-person effect. 152 L. David Ritchie. Parents workplace experiences and family communication patterns. 175 1996, Vol. 23(6) (Special Issue: Communication and Reality) Charles R. Berger. Communication and reality: An introduction. 647 Youngme Moon & Clifford Nass. How real are computer personalities? Psychological responses to personality types in human-computer interaction. 651 William Douglas. The fall from grace? The modern family on television. 675 James Price Dillard, Denise Haunani Solomon & Jennifer Anne Samp. Framing social reality: The relevance of relational judgments. 703 Judee K. Burgoon, David B. Buller, Kory Floyd & Joseph Grandpre. Deceptive realities: Sender, receiver, and observer perspectives in deceptive conversations. 724 Terri R. Metzger & Wayne A. Beach. Preserving alternative versions: Interactional techniques for organizing courtroom cross-examinations. 749

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1996, Vol. 23(5) Dhavan V. Shaw, David Domke & Daniel B. Wackman. To thine own self be true: Values, framing, and voter decision-making strategies. 509 Hans-Bernd Brosius & Gabriel Weimann. Who sets the agenda?: Agenda-setting as a two-step flow. 561 Janet R. Meyer. Retrieving knowledge in social situations: A test of the implicit rules model. 581 Michael Dupagne & R. Jeffrey Green. Revisiting the principle of relative constancy: Consumer mass media expenditures in Belgium. 612 1996, Vol. 23(4) Doug McCann & Chris Segrin. Communication and psychopathology: An overview. 370 Mary Ann Fitzpatrick, Linda J. Marshall, Timothy J. Leutwiler & Marina Krcmar. The effect of family communication environments on childrens social behavior during middle childhood. 379 1996, Vol. 23(3) Daniel R. Anderson, Patricia A. Collins, Kelly L. Schmitt & Robin Smith Jacobvitz. Stressful life events and television viewing. 243 Keiko Miyamoto Tanaka & Robert A. Bell. Equivocation in America and Japan: A cross-national comparison of the effects of situational conflict and status. 261 Laura E. Drake & William A. Donohue. Communicative framing theory in conflict resolution. 297 Kyungmo Kim & George A. Barnett. The determinants of international news flow: A network analysis. 323 1996, Vol. 23(2) Zhongdang Pan & Gerald M. Kosicki. Assessing news media influences on the formation of Whites racial policy preferences. 147 Jack M. McLeod, Katie Daily, Zhongshi Guo, William P. Eveland, Jr., Jan Bayer, Seungchan Yang & Hsu Wang. Community integration, local media use, and democratic processes. 179 Michael D. Slater & Donna Rouner. Value-affirmative and value-protective processing of alcohol education messages that include statistical evidence or anecdotes. 210

79 1996, Vol. 23(1) Joseph B. Walther. Computer-mediated communication: Impersonal, interpersonal, and hyperpersonal interaction. 3 James Price Dillard, Courtney A. Plotnick, Linda C. Godbold, Vicki S. Freimuth & Timothy Edgar. The multiple affective outcomes of AIDS PSAs: Fear appeals do more than scare people. 44 William Dougles & Beth M. Olson. Subversion of the American family? An examination of children and parents in television families. 73 Charles Mullin, Dorothy J. Imrich & Daniel Linz. The impact of acquaintance rape stories and case-specific pretrial publicity on juror decision making. 100

80 COMMUNICATION RESEARCH REPORTS 2006, Vol. 23(1-4) Scott A. Myers & Alan K. Goodboy. Perceived sibling use of verbally aggressive messages across the lifespan. 1 Theodore A. Avtgis & Kelly R. Taber. I laughed so hard my side hurts, or is that an ulcer? The influence of work humor on job stress, job satisfaction, and burnout among print media employees. 13 Nichole Egbert & Denise Polk. Speaking the language of relational maintenance: A validity test of Chapmans (1992) five love languages. 19 Anthony J. Roberto, Kellie E. Carlyle & Leola McClure. Communication and corporal punishment: The relationship between parents use of verbal and physical aggression. 27 Bryan Fix & Patricia M. Sias. Person-centered communication, leader-member exchange, and employee job satisfaction. 35 Mike Allen, Raymond W. Preiss & Barbara Mae Gayle. Meta-analytic examination of the baserate fallacy. 45 Ron Leone & Nicole Houle. 21st century ratings creep: PG-13 and R. 53 Keith Weber & Matthew M. Martin. Pedagogy in practice: Linking the graduate research methods course with communication theory. 63 Michelle L. Paulsel, James C. McCroskey & Virginia P. Richmond. Perceptions of health care professionals credibility as a predictor of patients satisfaction with their medical care and physician. 69 Chrisopher Hajek & Howard Giles. On communicating pride, crying in movies, and recruiting innocent bystanders: The effect of sex on communication schemas activated with gay and heterosexual targets. 77 Alicia Matthews, Valerian J. Derlega & Jennifer Morrow. What is highly personal information and how is it related to self-disclosure decision-making? The perspective of college students. 85 Lily A. Arasaratnam. Further testing of a new model of intercultural communication competence. 93 Jennifer A. Samp. Identity-processing orientations and the importance of single and multiple communication goals for managing problematic events. 101 M. Scott Barrett, Julie M. Novak, Steven J. Venette & Michelle Shumate. Validating the high reliability organization perception scale. 111 Michel Dupagne. Predictors of consumer digital television awareness in the United States. 119 Yan Tian. Political use and perceived effects of the internet: A case study of the 2004 election. 129 Merry C. Buchanan, H. Dan OHair & Jennifer A. H. Becker. Strategic communication during marital relationship dissolution: Disengagement resistance strategies. 139 Derek R. Lane, Nancy Grant Harrington, Lewis Donohew & Rick S. Zimmerman. Dimensions and validation of a perceived message cognition value scale. 149 Kevin B. Wright & Brian R. Patterson. Socioemotional selectivity theory and the macrodynamics of friendship: The role of friendship style and communication in friendship across the lifespan. 163 Carla A. Hackworth & Laura A. Brannon. Understanding and managing others: The impact of social intelligence upon social influence. 171 Shuangyue Zhang & Andy J. Merolla. Communicating dislike of close friends romantic partners. 179

81 Brent K. Simonds, Kevin R. Meyer, Margaret M. Quinlan & Stephen J. Hunt. Effects of instructor speech rate on student affective learning, recall, and perceptions of nonverbal immediacy, credibility, and clarity. 187 Qin Zhang & Jibiao Zhang. Dimensions of teacher immediacy as predictors of student learning: A Chinese perspective. 199 R. Lance Holbert, Glenn J. Hansen, Steve Mortensen & Scott E. Caplan. An analysis of the relative influences of Fahrenheit 9/11 and presidential viewing on shifting confidence in President George W. Bush. 209 Patric R. Spence, David Westeman, Paul D. Skalski, Matthew Seeger, Timothy L. Sellnow & Robert R. Ulmer. Gender and age effects on informating-seeking after 9/11. 217 Monique Mithcell Turner. The research team concept, II: (Still) an approach to graduate training. 225 Theodore A. Avtgis, Maria Brann & Sydney M. Staggers. Perceived information exchange and health control expectancies as influenced by a patients medical interview situation. 231 Janice L. Krieger, Roxanne L. Parrott & Walid A. Afifi. The role of perceived control in alcohol prevention campaigns. 239 Elaine M. Wittenberg-Lyles & Melinda M. Villagran. Disclosure of a cancer diagnosis in organizational peer relationships. 251 Deanna Sellnow, Min Liu & Steven Venette. When in Rome, do as the Romans do: A comparative analysis of Chinese and American new teachers compliance-gaining strategies. 259 Scott E. Caplan & Andrew C. High. Beyond excessive use: The interaction between cognitive and behavioral symptoms of problematic internet use. 265 Paul D. Turman. Athletes perception of coach power use and the association between playing status and sport satisfaction. 273 Matthew M. Martin & Scott A. Myers. Students communication traits and their out-of-class communication with their instructors. 283 Susanne M. Jones. Why is this happening to me?: The attributional make-up of negative emotions experienced in emotional support encounters. 291 Donald E. Vincent. Exploring college students family discussions about organ and tissue donation. 299 Timothy Levine, Craig R. Hullett, Monique Mitchell Turner & Maria Knight Lapinski. The desirability of using confirmatory factor analysis on published scales. 309 2005, Vol. 22(1-4) Lisa Sparks, Gary L. Kreps, Carl Botan & Katherine E. Rowan. Responding to terrorism: translating communication research into practice. 1. Mohan Dutta-Bergman. Depression and news gathering after September 11: The interplay of affect and cognition. 7 John C. Pollock, Christine Piccillo, Dana Leopardi, Stefanie Gratale & Kenneth V. Cabot. Nationwide newspaper coverage of Islam post-September 11: A community structure approach. 15 Steven J. Venette, Shari R. Veil & Timothy L. Sellnow. Essential communication resources for combating bioterrorism: Some practical and generalizable recommendations. 29 Patric R. Spence, David Westerman, Paul D. Skalski, Matthew Seeger, Robert R. Ulmer, Steve Venette & Timothy L. Sellnow. Proxemic effects on information seeking after the September 11 attacks. 39

82 Cheryl Campanella Bracken, Leo W. Jeffries, Kimberly A. Neundorf, Jenifer Kopfman & Fani Moulla. How cosmopolites react to messages: America under attack. 47 Michael J. Palenchar, Robert L. Heath & Emily M. Oberton. Terrorism and industrial chemical production: A new era of risk communication. 59 Elspeth Tilley. Responding to terrorism using ethical means: The propaganda index. 69 Claude H. Miller & Mark J. Landau. Communication and terrorism: A terror management theory perspective. 79 Brant R. Burleson, Wendy Samter, Susanne M. Jones, Adrianne Kunkel, Amanda J. Holmstrom, Steven T. Mortenson & Erina L. MacGeorge. Which comforting messages really work best? A different perspective on Lemieux and Tighes receiver perspective. 89 Robert Lemieux & M. Rachel Tighe. A little comfort for the theoretically distressed: A follow-up to Burleson et al.s response. 103 Yan Bing Zhang, Mei-Chen Lin, Akihiko Nonaka & Khisu Beom. Harmony, hierarchy and conservatism: A cross-cultural comparison of Confucian values in China, Korea, Japan, and Taiwan. 109 V. Orrego Dunleavy, l. Crandall & L. R. Metsch. A comparative study of sources of health information and access to preventive care among low income chronic drug users. 119 Michelle L. Paulsel, Virginia P. Richmond, James C. McCroskey & Jacob L. Cayanus. The relationships of perceived health professionals communication traits and credibility with perceived patient confidentiality. 131 Jennifer A. H. Becker, Jonathon R. B. Halbesleben & H. Dan OHair. Defensive communication and burnout in the workplace: The mediating role of leader-member exchange. 145 Rebecca M. Chory-Assad & Vincent Cicchirillo. Empathy and affective orientation as predictors of identification with television characters. 153 Jodi Saunders Wahba & James C. McCroskey. Temperament and brain systems as predictors of assertive communication traits. 159 Patrick C. Hughes, Juliann C. Scholl & Kandi L. Walker. The influence of expectations for healthrelated talk on reports of marital satisfaction. 167 Andrew J. Flanagin. IM online: Instant messaging use among college students. 175 Jacob L. Cayanus, Matthew M. Martin & Keith D. Weber. The relationships between driver anger and aggressive communication traits. 189 Jennifer L. Monahan, Irene Shtrulis & Sonja Brown Givens. Priming welfare queens and other stereotypes: The transference of media images into interpersonal contexts. 199 Michelle L. Paulsel, Rebecca M. Chory-Assad & Katie N. Dunleavy. The relationship between student perceptions of instructor power and classroom justice. 207 Maria Brann, Chad Edwards & Scott A. Myers. Perceived instructor credibility and teaching philosophy. 217 Jeffrey W. Kassing. Speaking up competently: A comparison of perceived competence in upward dissent strategies. 227 Jason J. Teven & Jane E. herring. Teacher influence in the classroom: A preliminary investigation of perceived instructor power, credibility, and student satisfaction. 235 Melinda M. Villagran & Joseph F. Lucke. Translating communication measures for use in nonEnglish-speaking populations. 247 Lisa L. Massi Lindsey & Kimo Ah Yun. The relationship between narrative content variation, affective cognitive reactions, and a persons willingness to sign an organ donor card. 253 Maria Brann. The influence of medical orientation on perceived physician credibility. 265

83 Timothy P. Mottet, Jessica Parker-Raley, Cory Cunningham & Steven A. Beebe. The relationships between teacher nonverbal immediacy and student course workload and teacher availability expectations. 275 Michelle L. Paulsel & Rebeccca M. Chory-Assad. Perceptions of instructor interactional justice as a predictor of student resistance. 283 Narissra Maria Punqanunt-Carter. Father and daughter motives and satisfaction. 293 Jason S. Wrench & Narissra M. Punyanunt-Carter. Advisor-advisee communication two: The influence of verbal aggression and humor orientation on advisee perceptions of advisor credibility and affective learning. 303 Phillip G. Clampitt & M. Lee Williams. Conceptualizing and measuring how employees and organizations manage uncertainty. 315 Erica Scharrer. Sixth graders take on television: Media literacy and critical attitudes of television violence. 325 Timothy R. Levine. Confirmatory factor analysis and scale validation in communication research. 335 2004, Vol. 21(4) Laura R. Umphrey. Message defensiveness, efficacy and health-related behavioral intentions. 329 Stacy L. Young. What the ____ is your problem? Attribution theory and perceived reasons for profanity usage during conflict. 339 Janet R. Meyer & Kyra Rothenberg. Repairing regretted messages: Effects of emotional state, relationship type, and seriousness of offense. 348 Rhonald J. Sprague. Pauses, transition relevance, and speaker change in multiple-party interactions. 357 Scarlet L. Wynns & Lawrence B. Rosenfeld. A test of competing models of the influence of social support on school engagement in the presence of neighborhood danger. 366 Kelli Jean K. Asada, Eunsoon Lee, Timothy R. Levine & Melissa Hart Ferrara. Narcissism and empathy as predictors of obsessive relational intrusion. 379 Gaelle Picherit-Duthler & Alan R. Freitag. Researching employees perceptions of benefits communication: A communication inquiry on channel preferences, understanding, decisionmaking, and benefits satisfaction. 391 James C. McCroskey, Virginia P. Richmond, Alan D. Heisel & Jamie L. Hayhurst. Eysencks BIG THREE and communication traits: Communication traits as manifestations of temperament. 404 Donna F. Henson, Kristen C. Dybvig-Pawelko & Daniel. J. Canary. The effects of loneliness on relational maintenance behaviors: An attributional perspective. 411 Leslie A. Donovan & Peter D. MacIntyre. Age and sex differences in willingness to communicate, communication apprehension, and self-perceived competence. 420 Keith Weber. The relationship between student interest and teachers use of behavior alteration techniques. 428 Jeffrey A. Wickersham, John C. Sherblom & Virginia P. Richmond. A twenty year retrospective on a research community: An analysis of scholarship published in Communication Research Reports (1984 to 2004). 437 2004, Vol. 21(3)

84 Charles Pavitt, Michael Philipp & Kelly Kline Johnson. Who owns a groups proposals: The initiator or the group as a whole? 221 Glynis A. Fitzgerald & Marya L. Doefel. The use of semantic network analysis to manage customer complaints. 231 Eric B. Meiners. Time pressure: An unexamined issue in organizational newcomers role development. 243 Jacob L. Cayanus & Matthew M. Martin. An instructor self-disclosure scale. 252 Karen Kangas Dwyer, Shereen G. Bingham, Robert E. Carlson, Marshall Prisbell, Ana M. Cruz & Dennis A. Fus. Communication and connectedness in the classroom: Development of the connected classroom climate inventory. 264 James A. Keatan & Lynne Kelly. Disposition versus situation: Neurocommunicology and the influence of trait apprehension versus situational factors on state public speaking anxiety. 273 Penny Addison, Jaime Ayala, Mark Hunter, Ralph E. Behnke & Chris R. Sawyer. Body sensations of higher and lower anxiety sensitive speakers anticipating a public presentation. 284 M. Sean Limon & Dean C. Kazoleas. A comparison of exemplar and statistical evidence in reducing counter-arguments and responses to a message. 291 Jennifer L. Lambe, Scott E. Caplan, Xiaomei Cai & Nancy Signorelli. Public perceptions of media performance at the beginning of the war on terrorism. 299 Todd C. Trautman. Concerns about crime and local television news. 310 Keith Weber, Aaron Johnson & Michael Corrigan. Communicating emotional support and its relationship to feelings of being understood, trust, and self-disclosure. 316 Timothy R. Levine & Charles Atkin. The accurate reporting of software-generate p-values: A cautionary research nite. 324 2004, Vol. 21(2) Beth A Le Poire, Howard Giles & Margaret Prescott. Stigma-by-association: The role of symbolic and instrumental attitudes. 105 Dana E. Mastro & Linda R. Tropp. The effects of interracial contact, attitudes, and stereotypical portrayals on evaluations of Black television sitcom characters. 119 Paul D. Turman & Paul Schrodt. New avenues for instructional communication research: Relationships among coaches leadership behaviors and athletes affective learning. 130 Robert Lemieux and Associates & M. Rachel Tighe. Attachment style and the evaluation of comforting responses: A receiver perspective. 144 Lisa M. Millhous. Projective measures of motivation and media choice. 154 William L. Benoit & Glenn J. Hansen. The changing media environment of presidential campaigns. Jerry L. Allen & Daniel J. Post. Source valence in assessing candidate image in a local election. 174 Tien-Tsung Lee & Faith Hsiao-Fang Hwang. Journalistic ideologies versus corporate interests: how time and Warners merger influences Times Content. 188 Lynne Kelly, James A. Keaten & Cynthia Finch. Reticent and non-reticent college students preferred communication channels for interacting with faculty. 197 Cristen I. Marek, Melissa Bekelja Wanzer & Jennifer L. Knapp. An exploratory investigation of the relationship between roommates first impressions and subsequent communication patterns. 210

85 2004, Vol. 21(1) Boris H. J. M. Brummans & Katherine Miller. The effect of ambiguity on the implementation of a social change initiative. 1 Ulla Brunz & Scott W. Canpbell. Politeness accommodation in electronic mail. 11 Xiaomei Cai. Is the computer a functional alternative to traditional media. 11 Meredith Diane Lett, Andrea Lynn DiPietro & Dannette Ifert Johnson. Examining effects of television news violence on college students through cultivation theory. 39 Charles H. Grant, Lawrence B. Rosenfeld & Kenneth N. Cissna. The effects of family-of-origin alcohol abuse on the self-perceived communication competence of the children. 47 Kevin G. Lamude, Joseph Scudder, Donna Simmons & Patricia Torres. Organizational newcomers: Temporary and regular employees, same-sex and mixed-sex superiorsubordinate dyads, supervisor influence techniques, subordinates communication satisfaction and leader-member exchange. 60 Ron Leone. Rated sex: An analysis of the MPAAs use of the R and NC-17 ratings. 68 Scott A. Meyers & Aaron D. Johnson. Perceived solidarity, self-disclosure, and trust in organizational peer relationships. 75 Carla Chamberlain Quinlisk. Communicator status and expectations in intercultural communication: Implications for language learning in a multicultural community. 84 Jason S. Wrench & Virginia P. Richmond. Understanding the psychometric properties of the humor assessment instrument through an analysis of the relationships between teacher humor assessment and instructional communication variables in the college classroom. 92 2004, Vol. 20(4) John S. Seiter & Andrea Sandry. Pierced for success? The effects of ear and nose piercing on perceptions of job candidates credibility, attractiveness, and hireability. 287 Levin Lamude, Joseph Scudder & Donna Simmons. The influence of applicant characteristics on use of verbal impression management tactics in the employment selection interview. 299 Mark Hickson, III, Joshua Turner & Jean Boden. Research productivity in communication: An analysis, 1996-2001. 308 James W. Neuliep, Michelle Chadouir & James C. McCroskey. A cross-cultural test of the association between temperament and communication apprehension. 320 Craig O. Stewart & Roger J. Kruez. On the communicative function of exaggeration: How to be a million times clearer. 331 Theodore A. Avtgis. Male sibling social and emotional support as a function of attributional confidence. 341 Anne E. Luccheti, Gina L. Phipps & Ralph R. Behnke. Trait anticipatory public speaking anxiety as a function of self-efficacy expectations and self-handicapping strategies. 348 Margarete Imhof. The social construction of the listener: Listening behavior across situations, perceived listener status, and cultures. 357 Rick W. Busselle. Television realism measures: The influence of program salience on global judgments. 367 Keith Weber. The relationship of interest to internal and external motivation. 376 2003, Vol. 20(2)

86 Laura R. Umphrey. The effects of message framing and message processing on testicular selfexamination attitudes and perceived susceptibility. 97 John Oetzel, Karen K. Myers, Mary Meares & Estefana Lara. Interpersonal conflict in organizations: Explaining conflict styles via face-negotiation theory. 106 Keith Weber, Bennie Fornash, Michael Corrigan & Nicholas C. Neupauer. The effect of interest on recall: An experiment. 116 Chas D. Koermer, Wendy S. Zabava Ford, Mary C. Toale & Andy D. Dohanos. Confirmatory analysis of the factorial structure and validity of the service provider sociality scale. 124 Julie A. Burke & Edward V. Springer. Relationship valence and attitudes as predictors of interactive intentions. 134 Joseph L. Chesebro & Matthew M. Martin. The relationship between conversational sensitivity, cognitive flexibility, verbal aggressiveness and indirect interpersonal aggressiveness. 143 James A. Keaten, Lynne Kelly & Cynthia Finch. Student perceptions of the helpfulness of the Pennsylvania State University reticence program components. 151 Bonnie Oppenheimer, Carolyn Adams-Price, Mark Goodman, Jim Codling & Jill Davis Coker. Audience perceptions of strong female characters on television. 161 Jack Glascock. Viewer perception of gender roles on network prime-time television. 173 Stephanie Lee Sargent. Enjoyment of televised sporting events: Evidence of a gender gap. 182 Yang Lin & Andrew S. Rancer. Ethnocentrism, intercultural apprehension, intercultural willingness-to-communicate, and intentions to participate in an intercultural dialogue program: Testing a proposed model. 189 (Addendum)

87 2003, Vol. 20(1) Jennifer A. Samp, Elaine M. Wittenberg & Douglas L. Gillett. Presenting and monitoring a gender-defined self on the internet. 1 M. Sean Limon & Franklin J. Boster. The effects of performance feedback on group members perceptions of prestige, task competencies, group belongings, and loafing. 13 Jason S. Wrench & James C. McCroskey. A communibiological examination of ethnocentrism and homophobia. 24 J. Kevin Barge & Sandra Hackett. The intersection of cultural and professional identity in nonprofit management. 34 Joe Ayres & Tanichya K. Wongprasert. Measuring the impact of visualization on mental imagery: Comparing prepared versus original drawings. 45 Chad C. Edwards, Scott A. Myers, Autumn Hensley-Edwards & Shawn T. Wahl. The relationship between student pre-performance concerns and evaluation apprehension. 54 Yang Lin &Andrew S. Rancer. Ethnocentrism, intercultural communication apprehension, intercultural willingness-to-communication, and intentions to participate in an intercultural dialogue program: Testing a proposed model. 62 James T. Kitchens, Larry Powell & Glenda Williams. Information please? Information seeking mass media, and the undecided voter. 73 K. David Roach. Teaching assistant anxiety and coping strategies in the classroom. 81 Scott A Myers & Aaron D. Johnson. Verbal aggression and liking in interpersonal relationships. 90 2002, Vol. 19(4) Melanie Booth-Butterfield & Steve Booth-Butterfield. The role of affective orientation in the five factor personality structure. 301 Carl J. S. Bruess & Judy C. Pearson. The function of mundane ritualizing in adult friendship and marriage. 314 Stephen D. Bruning & Kathryn Lambe. Relationship building and behavioral outcomes exploring the connection between relationship attitudes and key constituent behavior. Miriam J. Metzger & Andrew J. Flanagan. Audience orientations toward new media. 338 Scott A. Myers, Matthew M. Martin & Timothy P. Mottet. The relationship between student communication motives and information seeking. 352 Scott D. Moore, Dan OHair & Gerald R. Ledlow. The effects of health delivery systems and selfefficacy on patient compliance and satisfaction. 362 Rick Rodrick & Ronald L. Knowx. Information seeking among organizational members. 372 Lisa M. Schroeder. The effects of skills training on communication satisfaction and communication anxiety in the basic speech course. 380 Mark Hickson, III, Larry Powell, Joshua Turner, Eduardo Neiva & Carol T. Adams. The somatic marker as a short cut to verbal immediacy. 389 Guo-Ming Chen & Hsueh-Hua Chen. An examination of Peoples Republic of China business negotiating behaviors. 399

88 2002, Vol. 19(3) Beth Le Porie, Carolyn Shepard, Ashley Duggan & Judee Burgoon. Relational messages associated with nonverbal involvement, pleasantness, and expressiveness in romantic couples. 195 Virginia P. Richmond, Ralph S. Smith, Jr., Alan D. Heisel & James C. McCroskey. The association of physician socio-communicative style with physician credibility and patient satisfaction. 207 John Chapin. Third-person perception and school violence. 216 Theodore A. Avtgis. Adult-child conflict control expectancies: Effects on taking. 226 Rebecca M. Chory-Assad. The predictive validity of the verbal aggressiveness scale. 237 Nancy M. Schullery & Stephen E. Schullery. Relationships between group skills, temperament, and argumentativeness. 246 Jennifer L. Bevan & Pamela J. Lannutti. The experience and expression of romantic jealousy in same-sex and opposite-sex romantic relationships. 258 Carolyn M. Anderson & Matthew M. Martin. Communication motives (state vs. trait?) and task group outcomes. 269 Courtney C. Kopecky & William G. Powers. Relational development and self-image communication accuracy. 283 Dominique M. Gendrin & Mary L. Rucker. The impact of gender on teacher immediacy and student learning in the HBCU classroom. 291 2002, Vol. 19(2) Ernest S. Park, Timothy R. Levine, Chad M. Harms & Melissa H. Ferrara. Group and individual accuracy in deception detection. 99 Artemio Ramirez, Jr. The role of overall communication quality in the association between partners perceived decision-making style and relational satisfaction in heterosexual same-sex and cross-sex friendships. 107 Marianne Dainton & Brooks Aylor. Patterns of communication channel use in the maintenance of long-distance relationships. 118 Amy M. Bippus & Tenzin Dorjee. The validity of the PRECA as an index of interethnic communication apprehension. 130 William L. Benoit & Glenn J. Hansen. Issue adaptation of presidential television spots and debates to primary and general audiences. 138 Scott A. Meyers & Leah E. Bryant. Perceived understanding, interaction involvement, and college student outcomes. 146 James B. Roberts, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph E. Behnke. Facets of Pavlovian temperament as correlates of communication apprehension. 156 Joe Ayres & Debbie Ayres Sonandre. The Stroop test for public speaking apprehension: Validity and reliability. 167 Jack Sargent. Topic avoidance: Is this the way to a more satisfying relationship? Kristen Campbell & Kevin B. Wright. On-line support groups: An investigation of relationships among source credibility, dimensions of relational communication, and perceptions of emotional support. 183 2002, Vol. 19(1)

89 Matthew M. Martin, Kristin Marie Valencic & Alan D. Heisel. The relationship between students communication apprehension and their motives for communicating with their instructors. 1 Ron Warren & Angela Bluma. Parental mediation of childrens internet use: The influence of established media. 8 Stephanie Thomson & Mary L. Rucker. The development of a specialized public speaking competency scale: Test of reliability. 18 Karen Kangas Dweyer & Dennis A. Fus. Perceptions of communication competence, selfefficacy, and trait communication apprehension: Is there an impact on basic course success? 29 Joe Ayres & Terence S. Schlieshman. Paradoxical intention: An alternative for the reduction of communication apprehension? 38 Mike Allen & Associates. Effect of timing of communicator identification and level of source credibility on attitudes. 46 Kevin L. Sager & John Gastil. Exploring the psychological foundations of democratic group deliberation: Personality factors, confirming interaction, and democratic decision making. 56 Todd T. Holm. Public speaking students perceptions of cheating. 66 Timothy P. Mottet & Steve A. Beebe. Relationships between teacher nonverbal immediacy, student emotional response, and perceived student learning. 77 Kevin Wright. Motives for communication within on-line support groups and antecedents for interpersonal use. 89 2001, Vol. 18(4) Anthony J. Roberto, Gary Meyer & Franklin J. Boster. Predicting adolescents decisions about fighting: A test of the theory of planned behavior. 315 Laura R. Umphrey & John C. Sherblom. The role of relational interdependence, relationship thinking, and relational communication in three stages of romantic relationships. 324 John S. Seiter. Silent derogation and perceptions of deceptiveness: Does communicating nonverbal disbelief during an opponents speech affect perceptions of debaters veracity? 334 Theodore A. Avtgis. Affective learning, teacher clarity, and student motivation as a function of attributional confidence. 345 Scott A. Myers. Perceived instructor credibility and verbal aggressiveness in the college classroom. 354 Brian G. Southwell. Health message relevance and disparagement among adolescents. 365 Matthew M. Seger, Elizabeth A. Barton, Beth Heyart & Sonja Bultnyck. Crisis planning and crisis communication in the public schools: Assessing post Columbine responses. 375 Brianne M. Racer & Danette Ifert Johnson. A consumers view of crisis communication: Can an organization benefit from having a response plan? 384 Scott W. Campbell & Michael R. Neer. The relationship of communication apprehension and interaction involvement to perceptions of computer-mediated communication. 391 Kenneth L. Hacker & Robert Steiner. Hurdles of access and benefits of usage for internet communication. 399 Leo W. Jeffres, David J. Atkin & Kimberly A. Neuendorf. Expanding the range of dependent measures in mainstreaming and cultivation analysis. 408 Amir Hetsroni. What do we really need to know to be a millionaire? Content analysis of quiz shows in American and in Israel. 418 Elizabeth E. Graham & Carolyn K. Shue. Reflections on the past, directions for the future: A template for the study and instruction of interpersonal communication. 337 (Reprinted)

90

2001, Vol. 18(3) Virginia P. Richmond, Ralph S. Smith, Jr., Alan D. Heisel & James C. McCroskey. Nonverbal immediacy in the physician/patient relationship. 211 Larry Powell, Todd Hamilton, Mark Hickson, III & Janice Stuckey. The relationship of homophilly to verbal and nonverbal immediacy in the classroom. 217 Timothy Rumbough. The development and maintenance of interpersonal relationships through computer-mediated communication. 223 Timothy R. Levin. Dichotomous and continuous views of deception: A reexamination of deception ratings in information manipulation theory. 230 Carolyn M. Anderson, Matthew M. Martin & Bruce L. Riddle. Attitudes, styles, and socialization: Predictors of commitment and satisfaction in workgroups. 241 Theodore A. Avtgis & Jeffrey W. Kassing. Elucidating influences on superior-subordinate communication: Attributional confidence and organizational control expectancies. 255 Jeffrey W. Kassing & Todd A. Armstrong. Examining the association of job tenure, employment history, and organizational status with employee dissent. 264 Susan L. Kline & Kaoru Chatani. Social perception and message awareness as correlates of person-centered regulative messages. 274 Craig R. Hullett. Attributional support: Targeting attributions underlying recipient emotions. 285 Raymond D. Baus, Kate Hanizeski Ksobiech & Megan Cunninghman. The ambiguous nature of college students condom use scripts. 295 Shirley Matile Ogletree, Brad Mason, Tammy Grahmann & Paul Raffeld. Perceptions of two television cartoons: Powerpuff Girls and Johnny Bravo. 307 2001, Vol. 18(2) Emiko Kobayashi, Harold Grasmick & Gustav Friedrich. A cross-cultural study of shame, embarrassment, and management sanctions as deterrent to noncompliance with organizational rules. 105 Jeffrey W. Kassing & Theodore A. Avtgis. Dissension in the organization as it related to control expectancies. 118 Lois L. Hinkle. Perceptions of supervisor nonverbal immediacy, vocalics, and subordinate liking. 128 James W. Neuliep, Michelle Chaudoir & James C. McCroskey. A cross-cultural comparison of ethnocentrism among Japanese and United States college students. 138 Rebecca M. Chory-Assad & Melanie Booth-Butterfield. Secret test use and self-esteem in deteriorating relationships. 147 Janet R. Meyer. Effect of request type and situational features on negative politeness in requests. 158 Kimo AhYun. The impact of interaction expectancies on the relationship between attitude dissimilarity and interpersonal attraction. 166 Lega K. Strain, Chris R. Sawyer, Ralph Behnke & Paul E. King. Public speaking state anxiety and anxiety sensitivity as predictors of self-perceived speaker competence. 174 Scott A. Myers & Megan F. Ferry. Interpersonal communication motives and nonverbal immediacy behaviors. 182 N. J. Brown. A comparison of fictional television crime and crime index statistics. 192

91 John S. Dahlberg. Message attributes of advertising found during daytime fringe talk show television: A descriptive analysis. 200 2001, Vol. 18(1) Lawrence R. Wheeless & Paul Schrodt. An examination of cognitive foundations of informational reception apprehension: Political identification, religious affiliation, and family environment. 1 Jerry Monroe Jordan & C. Mo Bahke. The cognitive bases and social consequences of communication involvement. 11 K. David Roach & Bolanle A. Olaniran. Intercultural willingness to communication and communication anxiety in international teaching assistants. 26 Paige Johnson, A. Elizabeth Lindsey & Walter Zakahi. Angle American, Hispanic American, Chilean, Mexican and Spanish perceptions of competent communication in initial interaction. 36 Patricia Rockwell & Evelyn M. Theriot. Culture, gender, and gender mix in encoders of sarcasm: A self-assessment analysis. 44 John E. Spillan & Mary Mino. Special peers perceived use of communication openness and functional communication skills in specific organizational contexts. 53 Kristen L. Campbell, Matthew M. Martin & Melissa Bekelja Wanzer. Employee perceptions of manager humor orientation, assertiveness, responsiveness, approach/avoidance strategies, and satisfaction. 67 Garad J. Copstead, Claudia N. Lanzetta & Theodore A. Avtgis. Adult children conflict control expectancies: Effects on aggressive communication toward parents. 75 Larry Powell, Jean Bodon & Mark Hickson III. Rejection of crisis information: Public apathy and the macro-crisis of Y2K. 84 Stephen A. Banning. Taking the third-person effect outside the laboratory: How an unplanned real world event failed to change the third-person effect. 93 2000, Vol. 17(4) Mike Allen, Rebecca Bruflat, Renee Fucilla, Michael Kramer, Steve McKellips, Daniel Ryan & Marieke Spiefelhoff. Testing the persuasiveness of evidence: Combining narrative and statistical forms. 331 Elizabeth E. Graham & Carolyn K. Shue. Reflections on the past, directions for the future: A template for the study and instruction of interpersonal communication. 337 Kathleen M. Long, Shirley D. Fortney & Danette Ifert Johnson. An observer measure of compulsive communication. 349 Theodore A. Avtgis. Marital support giving as a function of attributional confidence. 357 Joe Ayres, Chia-Fang Sandy: Hsu & Tim Hopf. Does exposure to visualization alter speech preparation processes? 366 Pamela Shockley-Zalabak & Kathleen Ellis. Perceived organizational effectiveness, job satisfaction, culture, and communication: Challenging the traditional view. 375 Jeffrey W. Kassing. Exploring the relationship between workplace freedom of speech, organizational identification, and employee dissent. 387 Michelle A. Mazur, Ryan J. Burns & Tara M. Emmers-Sommer. Perceptions of relational interdependence in online relationships: The effects of communication apprehension and introversion. 397

92 Theodore A. Avtgis, Matthew M. Martin & Kelly A. Rocca. Social support and perceived understanding in the brother relationship. 407 Eric W. Hoffman & Gary R. Heald. Tobacco and alcohol advertisements in popular AfricanAmerican and general audience magazines. 415 Stephen D. Bruning & Meghan Ralston. The role of relationships in public relations: Examining the influence of key public member relational attitudes on behavioral intent. 426 2000, Vol. 17(3) William G. Powers & Don E. Love. Communication apprehension in the dating partner context. 221 Joe Ayres & Brian L. Heuett. An examination of the long term effect of performance visualization. 229 Jeffrey W. Kassin, Kevin J. Pearce & Dominic A. Infante. Corporal punishment and communication in father-son dyads. 237 Chris Koermer, Wendy S. Zabava Ford & Curtis Brant. Toward the development of a service provide sociability scale and its relationship to customer satisfaction and loyalty. 250 Bryan B. Whaley & Mindi Ann Golden. Stutters perceptions of more satisfying communication: Interaction strategies for fluent speakers. 260 Donna R. Pawlowski, Scott A. Meyers & Kelly A. Rocca. Relational messages in conflict situations among siblings. 271 Brian R. Patterson & Tania K. Gojdycz. The relationship between computer-mediated communication and communication related anxieties. 278 Melanie Booth-Butterfield & Tomoka Noguchi. Students perceptions of teachers nonverbal behavior: Comparison of American and international students classroom response. 288 Scott A. Myers & Ronda L. Knox. Perceived instructor argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness and student outcomes. 299 Amy M. Bippus & Stacy L. Young. What behaviors reflect involvement in a course?: Students perceptions and differences between high and low communication apprehensives. 310 John R. Chapin. Not like me: Self vs. other distinctions in first-person perception. 320 2000, Vol. 17(2) John G. Cole & James C. McCroskey. Temperament and socio-communicative orientation. 105 Carolyn M. Anderson, Paul R. Raptis, Yang Lin & Fendrich R. Clark. Motives as predictors of argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness of Black and White adolescents. 115 David Tewksbury & Scott L. Althaus. An examination of motivations for using the World Wide web. 127 Kevin B. Wright. Social support satisfaction, on-line communication apprehension, and perceived life stress within computer-mediated support groups. 139 Marifran Mattson, Mike Allen, Daniel J. Ryan & Vernon Miller. Considering organizations as a unique interpersonal context for deception detection: A meta-analytic review. 148 Scott A. Myers, Timothy P. Mottet & Matthew M. Martin. The relationship between student communication motives and perceived instructor communicator style. 161 Marianne Dainton & Laura Stafford. Predicting maintenance enactment from relational schemata, spousal behavior, and relational characteristics. 171 Larry Powell & Mark Hickson, III. Power imbalance and anticipation of conflict resolution: Positive and negative attributes of perceptual recall. 181

93 Tara L. Crowell & Tara M. Emmers-Sommer. Explaining condom use self-efficacy and coping in sexual situations. 191 John S. Seiter & Deborah Dunn. Beauty and believability in sexual harassment cases: Does physical attractiveness affect perceptions of veracity and the likelihood of being harassed. 203 Subir Sengupta. In the eyes of the beholder: The relevance of skin tone and facial features of African American female models to advertising effectiveness. 210 2000, Vol. 17(1) Scott A. Myers & Kelly A. Rocca. The relationship between perceived instructor communicator style, argumentativeness, and verbal aggressiveness. 1 Renee Edwards. Interpreting relational meanings: The influence of sex and gender-role. 13 Keith Weber & Brian R. Patterson. Student interest, empowerment and motivation. 22 Narissra Maria Punyanunt. The effects of humor on perceptions of compliance-gaining in the college classroom. 30 William A. Benoit. Comparing the Clinton and Dole advertising campaigns: Identification and division in 1996 presidential television spots. 39 Victoria Nevin Locke & M. Lee Williams. Supervisor mentoring: Does a female manager make a difference? 49 Jeffrey W. Kassing. Investigating the relationship between superior-subordinate relational quality and employee dissent. 58 Nancy Signorielli. Sex and prime-time in the 90s. 70 Philip J. Aiuter & Philip Palmgreen. Development and validation of a parasocial interaction measure: The audience-persona interaction scale. 79 John G. Cole. A temperament perspective of nonverbal immediacy. 90 Amy S. Ebesu Hubbard. Interpersonal coordination in interactions: Evaluations and social skills 95 1999, Vol. 16(4) Joe Ayres, Tim Hopf & Kiyoko Nagami. A test of COM therapy in Japan. 317 Anthony J. Roberto. Applying the argumentative skill deficiency model of interpersonal violence to adolescent boys. 325 Theodore A. Avtgis. The relationship between unwillingness to communicate and family communication patterns. 333 Scott A. Meyers, Erin K. Cavanaugh, Lisa M. Dohmen, Julie L. Freeh, Vivian W. Huang, Michelle R. Kapler, Andy Leonatti, Marlo M. Malicay, Victoria Schweig, Heather J. Sorensen, Marchell M. Vang & David C. Wise. Perceived sibling use of relational communication messages and sibling satisfaction, liking, and loving. 339 Robert Lemieux, Roxanne Parrott & Karen Ogata Jones. Im lonely and apprehensive: The presentation of stigmatizing information in personal ads. 353 Brian J. Rizzo, Melissa Bekelija Wanzer & Melanie Booth-Butterfield. Individual differences in managers use of humor: Subordinate perceptions of managers humor. 360 Matthew M. Martin, Carolyn M. Anderson & Pawena Sirimangkala. Subordinates sociocommunicative orientation and their use of conflict strategies with superiors. 370 Michelle T. Violanti. So you want to work together: Strengths and limitations of collaborative research. 377

94 Sylvia E. White, N. J. Brown & Sandra L. Ginsburg. Diversity of body types in network television programming: A content analysis. 386 Yang Lin. Using mass media in the presidential primaries: Effects on candidate issue knowledge and confidence in judging candidate viability. 393 Michael W. Shelton, Derek R. Lane & Enid S. Waldhart. Defining rules and roles in instructional contexts: A preliminary assessment of student perceptions. 402 1999, Vol. 16(3) Jean Bordon, Larry Powell & Mark Hickson III. An analysis of book versus article productivity based on top research careers. 213 Karla Kay Jensen. Training teachers to use verbal immediacy. 223 Joseph L. Chesebro. The relationship between listening styles and conversational sensitivity. 233 Kelly A. Rocca & Sally Vogl-Bauer. Trait verbal aggression, sports fan identification, and perceptions of appropriate sports fan communication. 239 Kimo Ah Yun. The effect of attitude similarity on interpersonal attraction: A test of the conversational expectations explanation. 249 A. Elizabeth Lindsey & Valerie Vigil. The interpretation and evaluation of wining in stranger dyads. 256 Kevin B. Wright & Dan OHair. Seeking and resisting compliance: Selection and evaluation of tactics in a simulated college student drinking contest. 266 Rhonda J. Sprague. The relationship of gender and topic intimacy to decisions to seek advice from parents. 276 Tara M. Emmers-Sommer. Negative relational events and event responses across relationshiptypes: Examining and comparing the impact of conflict strategy-use on intimacy in same-sex friendships, opposite sex friendships and romantic relationships. 286 Brooks Aylor. Source credibility and presidential candidates in 1996: The changing nature of character and empathy evaluations. 298 Randy Jacobs & William Yousman. Understanding cable television community access viewership. 305 1999, Vol. 16(2) Michael J. Beatty, Kristin Marie Valencic, Jill E. Rudd & Jean A. Dobos. A dark side of communication avoidance: Indirect interpersonal aggressiveness. 103 Jeffrey W. Kassin & Dominic A. Infante. Aggressive communication in the coach-athlete relationship. 110 Frank G. Hunsaker, Lynne Kelly & Robert L. Duran. Sensation seeking and communication apprehension: Biological and genetic correlates of approaching or avoiding communication events. 121 Brian Heuett, Joe Ayers & Meera Manvi. Imagery and public speaking apprehension in India. 131 Joe Ayres & Debbie Ayres Sonandre. The effect of initiating on communication apprehension and other variables in initial interactions between ablebodied persons and persons with a disability. 138 Carole A. Barbato & Elizabeth M. Perse. I dont care if you are 65, you are still my baby!: Examining parents communication motives throughout the life-span. 147 Leeva Chiling Chung & Stella Ting-Toomey. Ethnic identity and relational expectations among Asian Americans. 157

95 Katherine W. Hawkins & Bryant P. Fillion. Perceived communication skill needed for work groups. 167 Marya L. Doerfel. Interorganizational networks: The convergence of cooperative competitors. 175 Greg Boiarsky, Marilee Long & Greg Thayer. Formal features in childrens science television: Sound effects, visual pace, and topic shifts. 185 Mark R. Barner. Gender stereotyping and intended audience age: An analysis of childrens educational/informational TV programming. 193 Kevin B. Wright & Juliann C. Scholl. Heuristic-systematic processing in the classroom. 203 1999, Vol. 16(1) Alan D. Heisel, James C. McCroskey & Virginia P. Richmond. Testing theoretical relationships and non-relationships of genetically-based predictors: Getting started with communibiology. 1 Michael J. Beatty, Jill E. Rudd & Kristin Marie Valencic. A re-examination of the verbal aggressiveness scale: One factor or two? 10 Jeffrey W. Kassing, Kevin J. Pearce, Dominic A. Infante & Susan M. Pyles. Exploring the communicative nature of corporal punishment. 18 Joe Ayers & Brian L. Heuett. An examination of the impact of performance visualization. 29 Ralph R. Behnke & Chris R. Sawyer. Public speaking procrastination as a correlate of public speaking communication apprehension and self-perceived public speaking competence. 40 Lynn O. Cooper & Trey Buchanan. Interrater agreement in judgments of listening competency: An item-based analysis of the organization listening survey. 48 John Gribas. Organizational sports metaphors: Reconsidering gender bias in the team concept. 55 Theodore A. Avtgis & Shannon M. Brogan. Quality of organizational relationships as a function of work locus of control. 65 Diane M. Martin & Barbara Mae Gayle. It isnt a matter of just being funny: Humor production by organizational leaders. 72 Lois L. Hinkle. Nonverbal immediacy communication behaviors and liking in marital relationships. 81 Amy Janan Johnson, Monique M. Mitchell, Sandi W. Smith, Victoria O. Orrego & Kimo Ah Yun. Expert advice on daytime talk television: A beneficial source of information for the general public. 91 1998, Vol. 15(4) Jerry L. Allen. Continuing the tradition . . . Advancing the boundaries. 341 Virginia P. Richmond, Alan M. Heisel, Ralph S. Smith, Jr., & James C. McCroskey. The impact of communication apprehension and fear of talking with a physician on perceived medical outcomes. 344 J. David Roach. Management view, power use, and affinity-seeking: Effects on college student employee identification. 354 Melanie Booth Butterfield. Measurement of communication flexibility: Working adults vs. college students. 365 Timothy P. Mottet & Virginia P. Richmond. New is not necessarily better: A reexamination of affective learning measurement. 370

96 Barbara Mae Gayle, Raymond W. Preiss & Mike Allen. Embedded gender expectations: A covariate analysis of conflict situations and issues. 379 Monique M. Mitchell & Franklin J. Boster. Conflict management satisfaction and relational and sexual satisfaction. 388 Scott A. Meyers & Ronda L. Knox. Perceived sibling use of functional communication skills. 397 Matthew M. Martin, Keith Weber, Timothy P. Mottet & Steven C. Koehn. The relationships of trait verbal aggressiveness and frequency of viewing and enjoyment of television sitcoms. 406 Kristine Kay Johnson Fortman, Tracy Lee Clarke & Erica Weintraub Austin. Lets talk about what were watching: Parental mediation of childrens television viewing. 413 Danette E. Ifert, Kathleen M. Long & Shirley D. Forntet. Examining variation among compulsive communicators in classroom settings. 426 Karen Kangas Dwyer & Ana M. Cruz. Communication apprehension, personality, and grades in the basic course: Are there correlations? 436 Kelly A. Rocca, Matthew M. Martin & Mary C. Toale. Players perceptions of their coaches immediacy, assertiveness, and responsiveness. 445 1998, Vol. 15(3) Ralph R. Benke & Chris R. Sawyer. Productive arousal as a function of task difficulty in information processes. 235 Carolyn M. Anderson, Matthew M. Martin & Dominic A. Infante. Decision-making collaboration scale: Tests of validity. 245 John Bourhis & Mike Allen. The role of videotaped feedback in the instruction of public speaking: A quantitative synthesis of published empirical research. 256 Joseph L. Chesebro & James C. McCroskey. The development of the teacher clarity short inventory (TCSI) to measure clear teaching in the classroom. 262 Hee Sun Park. The theory of reasoned action and self construal in predicting intention of studying among Korean college students. 267 Theodore A. Avtgis, Daniel W. West & Traci L. Anderson. Relationship stages: An inductive analysis identifying cognitive, affective, and behavioral dimensions of Knapps relational stages model. 280 Jason J. Teven & Joan Gorham. A qualitative analysis of low-inference student perceptions of teacher caring and non-caring behaviors within the college classroom. 288 Aldert Vrij & Michelle Holland. Individual differences in persistence in lying and experiences while deceiving. 299 Scott A. Meyers. Sibling communication satisfaction as a function of interpersonal solidarity, individualized trust, and self-disclosure. 309 Deirdre L. Sutter & Matthew M. Martin. Verbal aggression during disengagement of dating relationships. 318 Megan Lyons, Melissa Bekelja Wanzer & Virginia P. Richmond. Amount of communication as a symptom of distressed marriages based on reports of divorced individuals. 327 Stephen C. Hines, Laurie Badzek, Nan Leslie & Jackie Glover. Managing uncertainty in conversations about treatment preferences: A study of home health care nurses. 331 1998, Vol. 15(2) Ann Bainbridge Frymier & Marian L. Houser. Does making content relevant make a difference in learning? 121

97 K. David Roach. Teaching assistant communication apprehension, willingness to communication, and state communication anxiety in the classroom. 130 Scott A. Meyers. Instructor socio-communicative style, argumentativeness, and verbal aggressiveness in the college classroom. 141 Erica Cooper & Mike Allen. A meta-analytic examination of the impact of student race on classroom interaction. 151 Barry Asker. Student reticence and oral testing: A Hong Kong study of willingness to communicate. 162 Joe Ayres, Terry Schliesman & Debbie Ayres Sondandre. Practice makes perfect but does it help reduce communication apprehension? 170 Margaret U. Dsilva, Rebecca Maddox & Bart Collins. Criticism on the internet: An analysis of participant reactions. 180 Prashant Bordia, Nicholas DiFonzo & Verity Travers. Denying rumors of organizational change: A higher source is not always better. 188 Stephen D. Bruning & John A. Ledingham. Organization-public relationships and consumer satisfaction: The role of relationships in the satisfaction mix. 198 Jason J. Teven, James C. McCroskey & Virginia P. Richmond. Measurement of tolerance for disagreement. 209 Timothy R. Levine. Modeling the psychometric properties of information manipulation ratings. 218 Theodore A. Avtgis, Andrew S. Rancer & Philip P. Amato. Self-handicapping orientation and tendencies toward verbal aggressiveness. 226 1998, Vol. 15(1) Deborah M. Rekart, Cynthia M. Finch & Mary Mino. Gender- and reticence-related vocal cues: An exploratory acoustical analysis. 1 Terri Freeman, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Differences in anticipatory anxiety and adaptation rate as a function of affect management strategy. 17 Victoria Smith, Susan A. Siltanen & Lawrence A. Hosman. The effects of powerful and powerless speech styles and speaker expertise on impression formation and attitude change. 27 Darin L. Garard, Stephen K. Hunt, Lance Lippert & Scott T. Paynton. Alternatives to traditional instruction: Using games and simulations to increase student learning and motivation. 36 Lois L. Hincle. Teacher nonverbal immediacy behaviors and student-perceived cognitive learning in Japan. 45 Dale A. Herbeck & Christopher D. Hunter. Intellectual property in cyberspace: The use of protected images on the world wide web. 57 Gary B. Randolph. Effects of hypermedia and graphics on recall and retention in on-line publishing. 64 Scott A. Meyers & Jeffrey W. Kassing. The relationship between perceived supervisory communication behaviors and subordinate organizational identification. 71 Kelly A. Rocca & Matthew M. Martin. The relationship between willingness to communicate and solidarity with frequency, breadth, and depth of communication in the sibling relationship. 82 Chia-Fang Hsu. Relationships between family characteristics and communication apprehension. 91 Vincent R. Waldron & Robert Miller. Personalizing AIDS risk through self disclosure: Implications for peer-based prevention programs. 99

98 Robert Lemieux, M. Rachel Tighe, Margaret J. Daniels, Kathryn Greene, John E. Hocking, Adrian B. Carins & Jerold L. Hale. The persuasive effect of the AIDS NAMES quilt on behavioral intentions. 113 1997, Vol. 14(4) James W. Neuliep & James C. McCroskey. The development of a U.S. and generalized ethnocentrism scale. 385 Melanie Booth-Butterfield & Robert J. Sidelinger. The relationship between parental traits and open family communication: Affective orientation and verbal aggression. 408 Erica Weintraub Austin, Christopher Knaus & Ana Menguelli. Who talks how to their kids about TV: A clarification of demographic correlates of parental mediation patterns. 418 Matthew M. Martin, Joseph L. Chesebro & Timothy P. Mottet. Students perceptions of instructors socio-communicative styles and the influence on instructor credibility and situational motivation. 431 Theodore A. Avtgis & Andrew S. Rancer. Argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness as a function of locus of control. 441 Patricia Rockwell, David B. Buller & Judee K. Burgoon. The voice of deceit: Refining and expanding vocal cues to deception. 451 William F. Sharkey, Cailin Kulp, B. Marie Carpenter, Cristy Lee & Ursula Rodillas. Embarrassment: The effects of embarrassor and target perceptions. 460 Charles Pavitt, Gail C. Whitchurch, Heather Siple & Nancy Peterson. Communication and emergent group leadership: Does content count? 470 Cheri J. Simons. Challenge behavior in the college classroom. 481 Mary Mino & Marilynn N. Butler. A traditional lecture versus a collaborative approach: A comparison of student performance outcomes. 493 1997, Vol. 14(3) Mark A. deTurck, Thomas H. Feeley & Lori A. Roman. Vocal and visual cue training in behavioral lie detection. 249 Theodore A. Avtgis & Virginia P. Richmond. An examination of the factorial stability and reliability of the communication-specific locus of control scale. 260 Rodney A. Reynolds. A validation test of a message elaboration measure. 269 Cheri J. Simonds. Classroom understanding: An expanded notion of teacher clarity. 279 Bruce E. Pinkleton, Joey Reagan, Dustin Aaronson & Chien-fei Chen. The role of individual motivations in information source use and knowledge concerning divergent topics. 291 Janie M. Harden Fritz. Responses to unpleasant work relationships. 302 Lynn O. Cooper, David R. Seibold & Robert Suchner. Listening in organizations: An analysis of error structures in models of listening competency. 312 Kory Floyd. Knowing when to say I love you: An expectancy approach to affectionate communication. 321 Matthew M. Martin, Carolyn M. Anderson & Timothy P. Mottet. The relationship between perceived understanding and self-disclosure in the sibling relationship. 331 Scott A. Myers & Theodore A. Avtgis. The association of socio-communicative style and relational type on perceptions of nonverbal immediacy. 339 James B. Weaver, III, Stephanie Lee Sargent & Christian Kiewitz. Communication apprehension and the type-A personality. 350

99 Sherri L. Kelly & Brian R. Patterson. The end of the life span: Determinants of communication apprehension. 356 Maili Porhola. Trait anxiety, experience, and the public speaking state reposes of Finish university students. 367 1997, Vol. 14(2) Mike Allen & Raymond W. Preiss. Comparing the persuasiveness of narrative and statistical evidence using meta-analysis. 125 Timothy R. Levine & Lawrence R. Wheeless. Situational intimacy as a predictor of compliancegaining tactic selection. 132 James W. Neuliep & James C. McCroskey. The development of intercultural and interethnic communication apprehension scales. 145 Peter D. MacIntrye, Kimberly A. Thivierge & J. Renee MacDonald. The effect of audience interest, responsiveness, and evaluation on public speaking anxiety and related variables. 157 Tim Hopf, Steven Michael Crosby & Joe Ayers. Tactics for getting high communication apprehensive students to attend workshops: Are they effective? 169 Amy I. Nathanson, Elizabeth M. Perse & Douglas A. Ferguson. Gender differences in television use: An exploration of the instrumental-expressive dichotomy. 176 Douglas A. Ferguson & Srinivas R. Melkote. Leisure time and channel repertoire in a multichannel environment. 189 Matthew M. Martin, Carolyn M. Anderson & Grant Cos. Verbal aggression: A study of the relationship between communication traits and feelings about a verbally aggressive television show. 195 William C. Donaghy. Perceptions of speech events and nonverbal behavior in social and personal relationships. 203 Jerold L. Hale, M. Rachel Tighe & Paul A. Mongeay. Effects of event type and sex on comforting messages. 214 Keith Weber & Brian R. Patterson. The effects of maternal verbal aggression on the adult childs future romantic relationships. 221 Daniel J. Cahill & Patricia M. Sias. The perceived social costs and importance of seeking emotional support in the workplace: Gender differences and similarities. 231 Timothy P. Mottet & Katherine S. Thweatt. The relationships between peer teasing, self-esteem and affect for school. 241 1997, Vol. 14(1) Robert J. Sidelinger & James C. McCroskey. Communication correlates of teacher clarity in the college classroom. 1 Joan Gorham, Stanley H. Cohen & Tracy L. Morris. Fashion in the classroom II: Instructor immediacy and attire. 11 Theresa H. Glenn, Jill Rhea & Lawrence R. Wheeless. Interpersonal communication satisfaction and biological sex: Nurse-physician relationships. 24 JC Bruno Teboul. Scripting the organization: New hire learning during organizational encounter. 33 Carole A. Barbato, Elizabeth E. Graham & Elizabeth M. Perse. Interpersonal communication motives and perceptions of humor among elders. 48

100 Carolyn M. Anderson, Matthew M. Martin, Mei Zhong & Daniel West. Reliability, separation of factors, and sex differences on the assertiveness-responsiveness measure: A Chinese sample. 58 Danette E. Ifert & Leeza Bearden. The use of rational, emotional, and combination appeals to respond to rejected requests. 65 Stephanie Lee Sargent, James B. Weaver, III & Christian Kiewitz. Correlates between communication apprehension and listening style preferences. 74 Dominic A. Infante, Mary M. Step & Cary L. Horvath. Counterattitudinal advocacy: When high argumentatives are more persuasible. 79 Eric R. Spangeberg & Joan L. Giese. An exploratory study of word-of-mouth communication in a hierarchy of effects contest. 88 Elizabeth M. Perse, Douglas M. McLeod, Nancy Signorielli & Juliet Dee. News coverage of abortion between Roe and Webster: Public opinion and real-world events. 97 Alan M. Rubin & Mary M. Step. Viewing television talk shows. 106 W. James Potter & Misha Vaughn. Antisocial behaviors in television entertainment: Trends and profiles. 116 1996, Vol. 13(2) Lynda Lee Kaid. Technology and political advertising: The application of ethical standards to the 1992 spots. 129 Kenneth Hacker, Lori Howl, Max Scott, Robert Steiner. Uses of computer-mediated political communication in the 1992 presidential campaign: A content analysis of the Bush, Clinton and Perot computer list. 138 David E. Proctor & William J. Schenck-Hamlin. Form and variations in negative political advertising. 147 Melanie Booth-Butterfield and Steve Booth-Butterfield. Using your emotions: Improving the measurement of affective orientation. 157 Thomas H. Feeley. Exploring sanctioned and unsanctioned lies in interpersonal deception. 164 Michelle D. Kirtley & James M. Honeycutt. Listening styles and their correspondence with second guessing. 174 Claire F. Sullivan. Recipients perceptions of support attempts across various stressful life events. 183 Stephanie A. Westmyer & Scott A. Myers. Communication skills and social support messages across friendship levels. 191 Katherine S. Thweatt & James C. McCroskey. Teaching nonimmediacy and misbehavior: Unintentional negative communication. 198 Paul Davis Bolls & Alex Tan. Communication anxiety and teacher communication competence among Native American and Caucasian students. 205 Laura Stafford & Susan L. Kline. Womens surnames and titles: Mens and womens views. 215 Mary Mino. The relative effect of content and vocal delivery during a simulated employment interview. 225 Chuka Onwumechili. Organizational culture in Nigeria: An exploratory study. 239

101 1996, Vol. 13(1) Raymond D. Baus & Jerry L. Allen. Solidarity and sexual communication as selective filters: A report on intimate relationship development. 1 Tara M. Emmers & Russell D. Hart. Romantic relationship disengagement and coping rituals. 8 Matthew M. Martin, Carolyn M. Anderson & Cary L. Hovarth. Feelings about verbal aggression: Justifications for sending and hurt from receiving verbally aggressive messages. 19 Kory Floyd. Communication closeness among siblings: An application of the gendered closeness perspective. 27 Patricia M. Sias & Christie Odden. The next best thing to being there: A test of the joint conversation reconstruction method. 35 Diane M. Christophel. Russian communication orientations: A cross-cultural examination. 43 Gary Fontaine. The experience of experiential intercultural training exercises: The role of a sense of presence and other states. 52 Matthew M. Martin & Carolyn M. Anderson. Communication traits: A cross-generalization investigation. 58 Keith D. Weber & Brian Patterson. Construction and validation of a communication based emotional support scale. 68 Nicholas C. Neupauer. Individual differences in on-air television and radio personalities. 77 Joe Ayers, Noelle Colby-Rotell, Paul Mark Wadleigh & Tim Hopf. Measuring patients communication apprehension about interacting with physicians: Instrument development. 86 Andrea G. Wooten & James C. McCroskey. Student trust of teacher as a function of sociocommunicative style of teacher and socio-communicative orientation of student. 94 Jason J. Teven & Mark E. Comadena. The effects of office aesthetic quality on students perceptions of teacher credibility and communicator style. 101 Joan OMara, Jerry L. Allen, Kathleen M. Long & Ben Judd. Communication apprehension, nonverbal immediacy, and negative expectations for learning. 109
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102 COMMUNICATION STUDIES 2007, Vol. 58(2) Craig R. Scott. Communication and social identity theory: Existing and potential connections in organizational identification research. 123 Laura Ann Janusik. Building listening theory: The validation of the conversational listening span. 139 Stephenson Beck, Sarah Elizabeth Clabaugh, Ruth Anne Clark, Megan Connelly Kosovski, Rivka Daar, Veronica Hefner, Tracy Kmetz, Sheila McDaniel, Laura Miller, Cortney Moriarty, Zhilong Qian, Siddhartha Raja, Mary Ramey & Ratnadeep Suri. Teasing among college men and women. 157 Hiroshi Ota, Howard Giles & Lilnabeth P. Somera. Beliefs about intra- and intergenerational communication in Japan, the Philippines, and the United States: Implication for older adults subjective well-being. 173 Amy Janan Johnson, Jenifer A. H. Becker, Shelley Wigley, Michael M. Haiugh & Elizabeth A. Craig. Reported argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness levels: The influence of type of argument. 189 Debra Worley, Scott Titsworth, David W. Worley & Myrna Cornett-DeVito. Instructional communication competence: Lessons learned from award-winning teachers. 207 2007, Vol. 58(1) John B. Seiter & Jon Bruschke. Deception and emotion: The effects of motivation, relationship type, and sex on expected feelings of guilt and shame following acts of deception in United States and Chinese samples. 1 David W. Worley & Myrna M. Cornett-DeVito. College students with learning disabilities (SWLD) and their responses to teacher power. 17 Kevin B. Wright, Larry Frey, & Pradeep Sopory. Willingness to communicate about health as an underlying trait of patient self-advocacy: The development of the willingness to communication about health (WTCH) measure. 35 Artemio Ramirez, Jr. The effect of anticipated future interaction and initial impression valence on relational communication in computer-mediated interaction. 53 Suzanne M. Jones & John G. Wirtz. Sad monkey see, monkey do: Nonverbal matching in emotional support encounters. 71 Joann Keyton & Kathy Menzie. Sexually harassing messages: Decoding workplace conversation. 87 Kevin T. Jones, Kenneth S. Zagacki & Todd V. Lewis. Communication, liminality, and hope: The September 11th missing person posters. 105 2006, Vol. 57(4) Jennifer L. Bevan & Jerold L. Hale. Negative jealousy-related emotion rumination as consequences of romantic partner, cross-sex friend, and sibling jealousy expression. 363 Leslie A. Baxter, Dawn O. Braithwaite & Leah E. Bryant. Types of communication triads perceived by young-adult stepchildren in established stepfamilies. 381 LeAnn M. Brazeal & William L. Benoit. On the spot: A functional analysis of Congressional television spots, 1980-2004. 401

103 Anna-Karin Magnusson. Nonverbal conversation-regulating signals of the blind adult. 421 Heather M. Marshall & Thomas Hugh Feeley. A normative approach to shaping college students attitudes toward organ donation. 436 Jennifer A. Samp, Kimberly A. Parker & Heather Duvall. Adolescents communicative goals for problematic events: Defining content and examining the influence of identity processing orientations. 455 2006, Vol. 57(3) Susan M. Wildermuth, Sally Vogl-Bauer & Julimar Rivera. Practically perfect in every way. Communication strategies of ideal relational partners. 239 Maria Brann. The influence of illness factors on physicians likelihood of disclosing confidential health information to relatives of patients. 259 Weiwu Zhang & Stella C. Chia. The effects of mass media use and social capital on civic and political participation. 277 Michael L. Kent, Tyler R. Harrison & Maureen Taylor. A critique of internet polls as symbolic representation and pseudo events. 299 Dawna I. Ballard & David R. Seibold. The experience of time at work: Relationship to communication load, job satisfaction, and interdepartmental communication. 317 Laura K. Guerrero & Guy F. Bachman. Associations among relational maintenance behaviors, attachment-style categories, and attachment dimensions. 341 2006, Vol. 57(2) Sunwolf. Decisional regret theory: Reducing the anxiety about uncertain outcomes during group decision making through shared counterfactual storytelling. 107 Abhik Roy. Regenerating masculinity in the construction of Hindu nationalist identity: A case study of Shiv Sena. 135 Traci L. Anderson & Tara M. Emmers-Sommer. Predictors of relationship satisfaction in online romantic relationships. 153 Randall A. Rose. A proposal for integrating structurational theory with coordinated management of meaning theory. 173 James A. Janack. The rhetoric of the body: Jesse Ventura and Bakhtins carnival. 197 Debbie S. Dougherty & Kristina Drumheller. Sensemaking and emotions in organizations: Accounting for emotions in a ration(ized) context. 215 2006, Vol. 57(1) (Special Issue: Spirituality and Organizing) Patrice M. Buzzanell & Lynn M. Harter. (De)centering and (re)envisioning the secular hegemony of organizations communication theory and research. 1 Mark A. Leeman. A house divided against itself cannot stand: Problematizing public and private in organized religion. 5 Jennifer Mize Smith, Colleen Arendt, Jennifer Bezek Lahman, Gina N. Settle & Ashley Duff. Framing the work of art: Spirituality and career discourse in the nonprofit arts sector. 25 Bethany Crandell Goodier & Eric M. Eisenberg. Seeking the spirit: Communication and the (re)development of a spiritual organization. 47 Sarah Bonewits Feldner. Living our mission: A study of university mission building. 67

104 Erika L. Kirby, M. Chad McBride, Sherianne Shuler, Marty J. Birkholt, Mary Ann Danielson & Donna R. Pawlowski. The Jesuit difference (?): Narratives of negotiating spiritual values and secular practices. 87 2005, Vol. 56(4) Robert M. McCann, Ren M. Daily, Howard Giles & Hiroshi Ota. Beliefs about intergenerational communication across the lifespan: Middle age and the roles of age stereotyping and respect norms. 293 Kenneth A. Lachian, Stacy L. Smith & Ron Tamborini. Models for aggressive behavior: The attributes of violent characters in popular video games. 313 Lorin Basden Arnold. Dont you know what causes that? Advice, celebration, and justification in a large families bulletin board. 331 Mary Christine Banwart & Mitchell S. McKinney. A gendered influence in campaign debates? Analysis of mixed-gender United States Senate and gubernatorial debates. 353 Patricia M. Sias. Workplace relationship quality and employee information experiences. 375 Alex M. Susskind, Donald F. Schwartz, William D. Richards & J. David Johnson. Evolution and diffusion of the Michigan State University traditional of organizational communication network research. 397 2005, Vol. 56(3) William L. Benoit & Kevin A. Stein. A functional analysis of presidential direct mail advertising. 203 Lisa M. Schroeder. Cultivation and the elaboration likelihood model: A test of the learning and construction and availability heuristic models. 227 Jennifer A. H. Becker & Glen H. Stamp. Impression management in chat rooms: A grounded theory model. 243 Patrice M. Buzzanell, Rebecca Meisenbach, Robyn Remke, Meina Liu, Venessa Bowers, & Cindy Conn. The good working mother: Managerial womens sense making and feelings about work-family issues. 261 Roberta A. Davilla. Presidential reflections. 287 2005, Vol. 56(2) Paul D. Turman & Paul Schrodt. The influence of instructional technology use on students affect: Do course designs and biological sex make a difference? 109 Shereen G. Bingham & Karen M. Battey. Communication of social support to sexual harassment victims: Professors responses to a students narrative of unwanted sexual attention. 131 John M. Jones & Robert C. Rowland. A covenant-affirming jeremiad: The post-presidential ideological appeals of Ronald Wilson Reagan. 157 Heather M. Zoller. Women caught in the multicausal web: A gendered analysis of Healthy People 2010. 175 Helen Sterk & Samuel L. Becker. How does Central rock. 193 (Keynote address) 2005, Vol. 56(1)

105 Lance R. Lippert, B. Scott Titsworth & Stephen K. Hunt. The ecology of academic risk: Relationships between communication apprehension, supportive communication, and students academic risk status. 1 Erina MacGeorge, Bo Feng, Ginger L. Butler, Jennifer L. Dane & Stacey A. Passalacqua. Sex differences in goals for supportive interactions. 23 Anne P. Hubbell & Rebecca M. Chory-Assad. Motivating factors: Perceptions of justice and their relationship with managerial and organizational trust. 47 Kathryn Greene & Marina Krcmar. Predicting exposure to and liking of media violence: A uses and gratifications approach. 71 Kathy Krone. Trends in organizational communication research: Sustaining the discipline, sustaining ourselves. 95 2004, Vol. 55(4) Michaela D. E. Meyer. Were too afraid of these imaginary tensions: Student organizing in lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender campus communities. 499 Philip J. Aust. Communicated values as indicators of organizational identity: A method for organizational assessment and its application in a case study. 515 Stacey K. Sowards & Valerie R. Renegar. The rhetorical functions of consciousness raising in third wave feminism. 535 Mayra L. Doerfel & Glynis A. Fitzgerald. A case study of cooperation in a commission-based organization. 553 2004, Vol. 55(3) Stephen D. Bruning, Janessa D. Castle & Erin Schrepfer. Building relationships between organizations and publics: Examining the linkage between organization-public relationships, evaluations of satisfaction, and behavioral intent. 435 Benjamin R. Bates. Audiences, metaphors, and the Persian Gulf War. 447 Stacey L. Connaughton & Sharon E. Jarvis. Apolitical politics: GOP efforts to foster identification from Latinos, 1984-2000. 464 W. Timothy Coombs & Sherry J. Holladay. Understanding the aggressive workplace: Development of the workplace aggression tolerance questionnaire. 481

106 2004, Vol. 55(2) Autumn Edwards & Gregory J. Shepherd. Theories of communication, human nature, and the world: Associations and implications. 197 Nathan Miczo. Humor ability, unwillingness to communicate, loneliness, and perceived stress: Testing a security theory. 209 Danette Ifert Johnson, Michael E. Roloff & Melissa A. Rifee. Politeness theory and refusals of requests: Face threat as a function of expressed obstacles. 227 Kevin B. Wright. On-line relational maintenance strategies and perceptions of partners within exclusively internet-based and primarily internet-based relationships. 239 Larry A. Erbert & Kory Floyd. Affectionate expressions as face-threatening acts: Receiver assessments. 254 Loreen N. Olson & Dawn O. Braithwaite. If you hit me again, Ill hit you back: Conflict management strategies of individuals experiencing aggression during conflicts. 271 Craig R. Hullett. A test of the initial processes of the goal-planning-action model of interpersonal influence. 286 Jake Harwood. Relational, role, and social identity as expressed in grandparents person web sites. 300 Alan D. DeSantis & Susan E. Morgan. Civil liberties, the constitution, and cigars: Anti-smoking conspiracy logic in Cigar Afficonado, 1992-2001. 319 Denise M. Bostdorff. The internet rhetoric of the Klu Klux Klan: Study in web site community building run amok. 340 Pamela J. Lannutti & Jennifer L. Monahan. Not now, maybe later: The influence of relationship type, request persistence, and alcohol consumption on womens refusal strategies. 362 Judy Pearson & Judith Trent. 2003 Keynote Address: Communication, women, and leadership. 400 Lynn M. Harter, Autumn Edwards, Andrea McClanahan, Mark C. Hopson & Evelyn CarsonStern. Organizing for survival and social change: The case of Streetwise. 407 Pamela Cooper. CSCA presidential reflection: Our stories . . . our legacy. 425 2004, Vol. 55(1) Cindy White. Welsh widows descriptions of their relationships: Themes of relational experience in long-term marriage. 1 Jennifer L. Bevan & Wendy Samter. Toward a broader conceptualization of jealousy in close relationships: Two exploratory studies. 14 Jack Glascock. The Jasper dragging death: Crisis communication and the community newspaper. 29 Lynn M. Harter & Erica L. Kirby. Socializing medical students in an era of managed care: The ideological significance of standardized virtual patients. 48 Joy Koesten & Robert C. Rowland. The rhetoric of atonement. 68 Robert M. McCann, Kathy Kellerman, Howard Giles, Cynthia Gallois & M. Angeles Viladot. Cultural and gender influences on age identification. 88 J. Kevin Barge. Antenarrative and managerial practice. 106 Caryn E. Medved. The everyday accomplishment of work and family: Exploring practical actions in daily routines. 128

107 Denise Haunani Solomon, Leanne K. Knoblock & Mary Anne Fitzpatrick. Relational power, marital schema, and decisions to withhold complaints: An investigation of the chilling effect on confrontation in marriage. 146 Janet R. Meyer. Effect of verbal aggressiveness on the perceived importance of secondary goals in message. 168 Lawrence J. Mullen & Julie D. Fisher. A visual analysis of prescription drug advertising imagery: Elaborating Fosss rhetorical techniques. 185 2003, Vol. 54(4) Corey Anton & Valerie V. Peterson. Who said what: Subject positions, rhetorical strategies and good faith. 403 Betty H. La France, Franklin J. Boster & Sherri Darrow. An analysis of role conflict and role ambiguity within the cancer information services communication network. 420 Kathryn M. Olson & Clark D. Olson. Problems of exclusionary research criteria: The case against the usable knowledge litmus test for social justice communication research. 438 Young-ok Yum. The relationships among loneliness, self/partner constructive maintenance behavior, and relational satisfaction in two cultures. 451 Shelley R. A. Hovick & Renee A. Myers. E-mail communication in workplace romantic relationships. 468 Zachary P. Hart, Vernon D. Miller & John R. Johnson. Socialization, resocialization, and communication relationships in the context of an organizational change. 483 Brooks Aylor. The impact of sex, gender, and cognitive complexity on the perceived importance of teacher communication skills. 496 Nathan Stormer. To remember, to act, to forget: Tracing collective remembrance through A Jury of Her Peers. 510 Mike Allen, Cynthia Chenh, Mariko Izumi, Shana Kopaczewsik, Stacy Tye-Williams & Kristi Wilkum. Mentor reviewing: A retrospective on an experiment. 530 2003, Vol. 54(3) Josh Boyd. A quest for cinergy: The war metaphor and the construction of identity. 249 Kanzie A. Cameron, Shelly Camp & Dominique Brossard. Advocating for controversial issues: The effect of activism on compliance-gaining strategy likelihood of use. 265 Leanne K. Knobloch & Denise Haunani Solomon. Responses to changes in relational uncertainty within dating relationships: Emotions and communication strategies. 282 Lisa L. Massi Lindsey & Kimo Ah Yun. Examining the persuasive effects of statistical messages: A test of mediating relationships. 306 Patricia M. Sias, Guy Smith & Tatyana Avdeyeva. Sex and sex-composition differences and similarities in peer workplace friendship development. 322 Jennifer K. Stitt, Cheri J. Simonds & Stephen K. Hunt. Evaluation fidelity: An examination of criterion-based assessment and rater training in the speech communication classroom. 341 Special Section: What Constitutes Publishable Rhetorical Scholarship Mike Allen. Heavy lies the editors fingers on the keyboard. 354 Sandra J. Berkowitz. Originality, conversation and reviewing rhetorical criticism. 359 Barry Brummett. Double binds in publishing rhetorical studies. 364

108 Joshua Gunn. Publishing peccadilloes and idioms of disposition: Views from the habitus of scholarly adolescence. 370 Steven B. Hunt. An essay on publishing standards for rhetorical criticism. 378 Catherine Helen Palczewski. What is good criticism? A conversation in progress. 385 John W. Jordan, Kathryn M. Olson & Steven R. Goldzwig. Continuing the conversation on What constitutes publishable rhetorical criticism?: A response. 392 2003, Vol. 54(2) Rives Collins. Dreams of children. 121 Isabelle Bauman. Responsibility in instruction: Who is doing the learning here? 127 Leah E. Bryant. Becoming a better teacher: Learning from our mistakes. 130 Stephen K. Hunt. Encouraging student involvement> An approach to teaching communication. 133 Laura Shue OHara & Marcy Meyer. I never felt more uncomfortable in my life: University students discursive constructions of The lesbian convention. 137 Mary Vaughn & Glen H. Stamp. The empowerment dilemma: The dialectic of emancipation and control in staff/client interaction at shelters for battered women. 154 Jeffrey Murray. An other-Burkean frame: Rhetorical criticism and the call of the other. 169 Kathryn M. Olson, Renee A. Myers & Kristi L. C. Wilkum. Perceptions and practices regarding M.A. capstone options and Ph.D. admission decisions: A survey of communication M.A. and Ph.D. program representatives. 188 Charles J. G. Griffin. Movement as memory: Significant form in eyes on the prize. 196 David K. Scott & Robert H. Gobetz. The U.S. Supreme Court 1969-1992: A shift toward an individualistic style of judging. 211 Suzanne LaGrande & Trudy Milburn. Keeping it real: Identity management strategies used by teens in conversation. 230 2003, Vol. 54(1) Kami J. Silk, Roxanne L. Parrott & Megan R. Dillow. Using theory to guide formative evaluation of Whos afraid of Franken-food?: Implications for health message design. 1 Nichole Egbert & Roxanne Parrott. Empathy and social support for the terminally ill: Implications for recruiting and retaining hospice and hospital volunteers. 18 Lee Ann Carroll & Pat Arneson. Communication in a shared governance hospital: Managing emergent paradoxes. 35 J. Kevin Barge. Presidential reflections. 56 Paul D. Turman & Brigitta Brunner. An analysis of CSCA member interests for the regional conference experience. 62 Meijeong Han. Body image dissatisfaction and eating disturbances among Korean college female students: Relationships to media exposure, upward comparison, and perceived reality. 65 Keith Hearit & Jeffrey L. Courtright. A social constructionist approach to crisis management: Allegations of sudden acceleration in the Audi 5000. 70 William Benoit & Mary Jeanette Smythe. Rhetorical theory as message reception: A cognitive response approach to rhetorical theory and criticism. 96 Bruce E. Gronbeck. Douglas Ehninger: Modernist rhetorician and master of rules. 115

109 2002, Vol. 53(4) (Special Issue: Health Communication and Public Health: Pedagogical and Research Insights) Kathryn Greene & Sandra L. Faulkner. Expected versus actual responses to disclosure in relationships of HIV-positive African-American adolescent females. 297 Gary L. Kreps & Daria Chapelsky Massimilla. Cancer communications research and health outcomes: Review and challenge. 318 Marifran Mattson & Maria Brann. Managed care and the paradox of patient confidentiality: A case study analysis from a communication boundary management perspective. 337 Michael T. Stephenson. Sensation seeking as a moderator of the processing of anti-heroin PSAs. 358 Lea P. Stewart, Linda C. Lederman, Mark Golubow, Joanne L. Cattafesta, Fern Walter Goodhart, Richard L. Powell & Lisa Laitman. Appling communication theories to prevent dangerous drinking among college students: The RU SURE campaign. 381 Kelly S. McNeilis. Assessing communication competence in the primary care medical interview. 400 2002, Vol. 53(3) Mary F. Huffman. Do all things with counsel!: Benedictine women and organizational democracy. 203 Dean Scheibel, Katie Gibson, & Carrie Anderson. Practicing sorority rush: Mockery and the dramatistic rehearsing of organizational conversations. 219 Ascan F. Koerner & Mary Anne Fitzpatrick. You never leave your family in a fight: The impact of family of origin on conflict-behavior in romantic relationships. 234 Joseph A. Bonito & Stacy L. Wolski. The adaptation of complaints to participation frameworks. 252 Marouf Hasian, Jr. & Geoffrey D. Klinger. Sarah Roberts and the early history of separate but equal doctrine: A study in rhetoric, law, and social change. 269 Glenn J. Hansen & William L. Benoit. Presidential television advertising and public policy priorities, 1952-2000. 284 2002, Vol. 53(2) Cynthia Berryman Fink. Presidential reflections. 91 Afsheen J. Nomai & George N. Dionisopoulous. Framing the Cubas narrative: The American dream and the capitalist reality. 97 John Gribas & Cal W. Downs. Metaphoric manifestations of talking team with team novices. 112 Marouf Hasian, Jr. Holocaust denial debates: The symbolic significance of Irving V. Penguin & Lipstadt. 129 Michael W. Kramer. Communication in a community theatre group: Managing multiple group roles. 151 Loreen N. Olson. As ugly and painful as it was, it was effective: Individuals unique assessment of communication competence during aggressive conflict episodes. 171 Paul Schrodt. The relationship between organizational identification and organizational culture: Employee perceptions of culture and identification in a retail sales organization. 189

110 2002, Vol. 53(1) (Special Issue: Communication, Globalism, and Localism) David Cratis Williams. Introduction: Communication perspectives on relationships between globalism and localism. 1 Jason Ingram. Hegemony and globalism: Kenneth Burke and paradoxes of representation. 4 M. Lane Bruner. Global constitutionalism and the arguments over free trade. 25 Jane E. Fitzgibbon & Matthew W. Seeger. Audiences and metaphors of globalization in the DaimlerChuslerAG merger. 40 Kristin M. Langellier. Performing family stories: Forming cultural identity: Franco American memere stories. 56 Tim Cole, Laura Leets & James J. Bradac. Deceptive message processing the role of attachment style and verbal immediacy markers in deceptive message judgments. 74 2001, Vol. 52(4) Bliss W. Browne. Keynote address from Cincinnati: Harnessing hope and imaginations for public life. 249 Nancy A. Burrell. Central States outstanding teachers award winners recognizing the importance of teaching: An introduction to our very best! 257 Cheri J. Simonds. Central States outstanding teaching award winners reflecting on the relationship between instructional communication theory and teaching practices. 260 Paul D. Turman. Central States outstanding teaching award winners learn to play the game: Recommendations for being successful as a graduate teaching assistant. 266 Paaige K. Turner. Central States Outstanding teaching award winners wisdom, eloquence, and a little bit of yourself: A philosophy for teaching. 272 David W. Worley. Central States outstanding teacher award winners a teaching philosophy. 278 Enid M. I. Sofcovic & Celeste M. Condit. Narrative and social change: A case study of the Wagner Act of 1935. 284 Tara L. Crowell & Tara M. Emmers-Sommer. If I knew then what I know now: Seropositive individuals perceptions of partner trust, safety, and risk prior to HIV infection. 302 Michael T. Stephenson, William L. Benoit & David A. Tschida. Testing the mediating role of cognitive responses in the elaboration likelihood model. 324

111 2001, Vol. 52(3) B. Scott Titswoth. Immediate and delayed effects of interest cues and engagement cues on students affective learning. 169 Donna R. Pawlowski, Chad Thilborger & Jode Cieloha-Meekins. Prisons, old cars, and Christmas trees: A metaphoric analysis of familia communication. 180 Jon A. Hess, M. J. Smythe & Communication 451. Is teacher immediacy actually related to student cognitive learning? 197 Carolyn M. Anderson, Matthew M. Martin & B. L. Riddle. Small group relational satisfaction scale: Development, reliability and validity. 220 Everett M. Rogers. The Department of Communication at Michigan State University as a seed institution for communication study. 234 2001, Vol. 52(2) Arlie Daniel. Presidential reflections. 103 William Benoit. The functional approach to presidential television spots: Acclaiming, attacking, defending 1952-2000. 109 Tara Emmers-Sommer & Mike Allen. HIV and AIDS: Toward increased awareness and understanding of prevention and education research using meta-analysis. 127 Monique Mitchell. Risks, threat, and information seeking about genital herpes: The effects of mood and message framing. 141 Timothy Sellnow. Exploring the boundaries of crisis communication: The case of the 1997 Red River Valley flood. 153 2001, Vol. 52(1) Craig R. Hullett & Ron Tamborini. When Im within my rights: An expectancy-based model of actor evaluative and behavioral responses to compliance-resistance strategies. 1 Jennifer A. Stamp. Dependence power, severity appraisals, and communicative decisions about problematic events in dating relationships. 17 Michael E. Roloff & Danette Ifert Johnson. Reintroducing taboo topics: Antecedents and consequences of putting topics back on the table. 37 Victoria E. Sanchez. Intertribal dance and cross cultural communication: Traditional powwos in Ohio. 51 William L. Benoit. Framing through temporary metaphor: The bridges of Bob Dole and Bill Clinton in their 1996 acceptance addresses. 70 Jayne M. Morgan. Are we out of the box yet?: A case study and critique of managerial metaphors of change. 85 2001, Vol. 51(4) (Special Issue: Identity Management) Deborah A. Cai & Steven R. Wilson. Identity implications of influence: A cross-cultural comparison of interaction goals and facework. 307 Jennifer A. Stamp. Relationship and self-driven influences on goal characteristics by problematic events: Components of a cybernetic cycle. 329 Sally O. Hastings. Self-disclosure and identity management by bereaved parents. 352

112 Michal L. Hecht & Sandra L. Faulkner. Sometimes Jewish, sometimes not: The closeting of Jewish American identity. 372 Brian L. Heisterkamp & Jess K. Alberts. Control and desire: Identity formation through teaching among gay men and lesbians. 388 Courtney Dillard, Larry D. Browning, Sim B. Sitkin & Kathleen M. Sutcliffe. Impression formation and the use of procedures at the Ritz-Carlton: Moral standards and dramaturgical discipline. 404 2001, Vol. 51(3) James S. Sass. Characterizing organizational spirituality: An organizational communication culture approach. 195 Theodore Matula. Contextualizing musical rhetoric: A critical reading of the Pixies rock music. 218 Christine Scodari & Jenna L. Felder. Creating a pocket university: Shippers, fan fiction and The X-Files. 238 John Ballotti & Lynda Lee Kaid. Examining verbal style of presidential campaign spots. 258 William L. Benoit. A functional analysis of political advertising across media, 1998. 274 Franklin J. Boster, Kenzie A. Cameron, Shelly Campo, Wen-Ying Liu, Janet K. Lillie, Esther M. Baker & Kimo Ah Yun. The persuasive effects of statistical evidence in the presence of exemplars. 296 2000, Vol. 51(2) Dreama Moon & Lisa A. Flores. Antiracism and the abolition of Whiteness: Rhetorical strategies of domination among race traitors. 97 John P. Caughlin, Tamara D. Golish, Lorren N. Olson, Jack E. Sargent, Jeff S. Cook & Sandra Petronio. Intrafamily secrets in various family configurations: A communication boundary management perspective. 116 Karen Ijams & Larry D. Miller. Perceptions of dream-disclosure: An exploratory study. 135 Harry Weger, Jr. & Leah E. Polcar. Attachment style and the cognitive representation of communication situations. 149 Hee Sun Park. Relationships among attitudes and subjective norms: Testing the theory of reasoned action across cultures. 162 Marjorie Keeshan Nadler & Lawrence B. Nadler. Out of class communication between faculty and students: A faculty perspective. 176 Judith S. Trent. Prospectus for the future: The communication scholar as citizen. 189 2000, Vol. 51(1) Cary R. W. Voss & Robert C. Rowland. Pre-inception rhetoric in the creation of a social movement: The case of Frances Wright. 1 John Arthos. Who are we and who am I? Gadamers communal ontology as palimpsest. 15 Donald K. Enholm. Robert Taft and Nuremberg: The verdict of time. 35 Maria Knight Lapinski & Timothy R. Levine. Culture and information manipulation theory: The effects of self-construal and locus of benefit on information manipulation. 55 Zhuojun (Joyce) Chen. Chinese-American childrens ethnic identity: Measurement and implications. 74

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1999, Vol. 50(4) (Special Issue: Looking forward/Looking Back: Honoring W. Charles Redding Leanne K. Knobloch & Denise Haunani Solomon. Measuring the sources and content of relational uncertainty. 261 Lynda Lee Kaid, Mitchell S. McKinney, John C. Tedesco & Kim Gaddie. Journalistic responsibility and political advertising: A content analysis of coverage by state and local media. 279 Mark T. Morman & Kory Floyd. Affectionate communication between fathers and young adult sons: Individual- and relational-level correlates. 294 Patrice M. Buzzanell. W. Charles Redding (1914-1994): The teacher-scholar model of the Redding tradition. 310 Patrice M. Buzzanell & Cynthia Stohl. The Redding tradition of organizational communication scholarship: W Charles Redding and his legacy. 324 W. Charles Redding. Communication research and the Rhetorical environment. 337 1999, Vol. 50(3) (Special Issue: Looking Forward/Looking Back: Honoring Gerald R. Miller) Sandi W. Smith, Monique M. Mitchell, James Ah Yun, Amy Janan Johnson, Victoria O. Orrego & Bradley S. Greenberg. The nature of close relationships as presented in televised talk shows. 175 David C. Shrader. Goal complexity and the perceived competence of interpersonal influence messages. 188 Jerold L. Hale & Melanie Laliker. Explaining the door-in-the-face: Is it really time to abandon reciprocal concessions? 203 Daniel J. OKeefe. Three reasons for doubting the adequacy of the reciprocal-concessions explanation of door-in-the-face effects. 211 Gerald R. Miller & Charles R. Berger. On keeping the faith in matters scientific. 221 Gerald R. Miller. Tis the season to be jolly: A yuletide 1980 assessment of communication research. 232 Robert N. Bostrom. Gerald R. Miller: A personal remembrance. 239 Erwin P. Bettinghaus. Gerald R. Miller: A colleagues view. 247 Walt R. Fisher. The presence of GR, my pal. 251 Pamela J. Kalbfleisch. A tribute to Gerald R. Miller. 253 Sandra Metts. An interview with Gerald R. Miller, 255

114 1999, Vol. 50(2) (Special Issue: Looking Forward/Looking Back: Honoring Karlyn Korhs Campbell) Sara Hayden. Negotiating femininity and power in the early twentieth century west: Domestic ideology and feminine style in Jeanette Rankins suffrage rhetoric. 83 John Sanchez & Mary E. Stucky. Communicating culture through leadership: One view from Indiana country. 103 Jimmie D. Trent. Central States Communication Association: History since 1981 and 50 years of Communication Studies Karlyn Kohrs Campbell. The rhetoric of womens liberation: An oxymoron. 125 Karlyn Korhs Campbell. The rhetoric of womens liberation: An oxymoron revisited. 138 Bonnie J. Dow. Spectacle, spectatorship, and gender anxiety in television coverage of the 1970 womens strike for equality. 143 Kyra Pearson. Mapping rhetorical interventions in natural feminist histories: Second wave feminism and Aint I a Woman. 158 1999, Vol. 50(1) (Special Issue: Looking Forward/Looking Back: Honoring Samuel Becker) Ann Bainbridge Frymier & Marian Houser. The revised learning indicators scale. 1 Loren Reid. Fanfare for fifty: A brief history of the Central States Speech Association to 1981 Samuel L. Becker. Looking forward, looking back: A personal retrospective. 22 Samuel L. Becker. Rhetorical studies for the contemporary world. 28 John Waite Bowers. Scientizing rhetoric. 45 Ronald H. Carpenter. An autobiographical tribute to Samuel L. Beckers Rhetorical studies for the contemporary world. 54 Bruce E. Gronbeck. Rhetorical studies escapes modernist psychology: Samuel Becker as subversive. 63 Leah R. Vande Berg. The critical sense: Three decades of critical media studies in the wake of Samuel L. Beckers Rhetorical studies for the contemporary world. 72 1998, Vol. 49(4) (Special Issue: Seeking and Resisting Compliance: The Vitality of ComplianceGaining Research) Steven R. Wilson. Introduction to the special issue on seeking and resisting compliance: The vitality of compliance-gaining research. 273 David C. Schrader & James Price Dillard. Goal structures and interpersonal influence. 276 Gregory J. Shepherd. Response: The trouble with goals. 294 James Price Dillard & David C. Schrader. Reply: On the utility of the goals-plans-action sequence. 200 Dale Hample & Judith M. Dallinger. On the etiology of the rebuff phenomenon: Why are persuasive messages less polite after rebuffs? 305 Christopher Pudlinski. Giving advice on a consumer-run warm line: Implicit and dilemmatic practices. 322 Linda J. Marshall & Victor M. Levy, Jr. The development of childrens perceptions of obstacles in compliance-gaining interactions. 342 Michelle A. Miller. The social process of drug resistance in a relational context. 358 1998, Vol. 49(3)

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William L. Benoit & Dawn M. Nill. A critical analysis of Judge Clarence Thomas statement before the Senate Judiciary Committee. 179 Hee Sun Park, Timothy R. Levine & William F. Sharkey. The theory of reasoned action and selfconstruals: Understanding recycling in Hawaii. 196 Valerie Manuscov, April R. Trees, Lois Adeyinka Reddick, Aimee M. Carrillo Rowe & Julie M. Easley. Explanations and impressions: Investigating attributions and their effects on judgments for friends and strangers. 209 Ruth Anne Clark, Amy J. Pierce, Kathleen Finn, Karen Hsu, Adam Toosley & Lionel Williams. The impact of alternative approaches to comforting, closeness of relationship, and gender on multiple measures of effectiveness. 224 Scott A. Meyers, Mei Zhong & Shijie Guan. Instructor immediacy in the Chinese college classroom. 240 Douglas Kelley. The communication of forgiveness. 255 1998, Vol. 49(2) Dawn O. Braithwaite, Leslie A. Baxter & Anneliese M. Harper. The role of rituals in the management of the dialectical tensions of old and new blended families. 101 Wendy Samter & William Cupach. Friendly fire: Topical variations in conflict among same- and cross-sex friends. 121 Myria Watkins Allen, Patricia Amason & Susan Holmes. Social support, Hispanic emotional acculturative stress and gender. 139 Randall L. Bertwerk. The propagandas of Nazi Germany and the German Democratic Republic. 158 Julia T. Wood. Celebrating diversity in the communication field. 172 (Keynote address) 1998, Vol. 49(1) Ronald Lee & Karen King Lee. Multicultural education in the Little Red Schoolhouse: A rhetorical exploration of ideological justification and mythic repair. 1 John H. Trindell & Martin J. Medhurst. Rhetorical reduplication in MTVs Rock the Vote Campaign. 18 Jeffrey W. Murray. An other ethics for Kenneth Burke. 29 Terry Kinner & Chris Segrin. Cognitive moderators of negative reactions to verbal aggression. 49 Robert Alan Brookey. Keeping a good wo/man down: Normalizing Deborah Sampson Gannett. 73 Bettina Heinz & Ronald Lee. Getting down to the meat: The symbolic construction of meat consumption. 86

116 1997, Vol. 48(4) (Special Issue: Communication and Organizational Democracy) George Cheney, Dennis Mumby, Cynthia Stohl & Teresa M. Harrison. Communication and organizational democracy: Introduction. 277 Raymond Russell. Workplace democracy and organizational communication. 279 Patrice Buzzanell, Laura Ellinson, Christina Silvio, Vicki Pasch, Brenna Dale, Greg Mauro, Erin Smith, Neil Weir & Couna Martin. Leadership processes in alternative organizations: Invitations and dramaturgical leadership. 285 Jeffrey W. Kassing. Articulating, antagonizing, and displacing: A model of employee dissent. 311 Maribeth Metzler. Organizations, democracy, and the public sphere: The implications of democratic (r)evolution at a nuclear weapons facility. 333 Jeanne Nelson Ratliffe. The politics of nuclear waste: An analysis of a public hearing on the proposed Yucca mountain nuclear waste repository. 359 1997, Vol. 48(3) Stephens, G. Frederick Douglass mutiracial abolitionism: Antagonistic cooperation and redeemable ideals in the July 5 speech. 175 Marof Haian, Jr. Understanding the power of conspiratorial rhetoric: A case study of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. 195 Robert R. Ulmer & Timothy L. Sellnow. Strategic ambiguity and the ethic of significant choice in the tobacco industrys crisis communication. 215 Robert Alexander Kraig. The narration of essence: Salmon P. Chases Senate oration against the Kansas-Nebraska act. 234 Ernest G. Bormann, Roxann L. Knutson & Karen Musolf. Why do people share fantasies? An empirical investigation of a basic tenet of the symbolic convergence communication theory. 254 1997, Vol. 48(2) Douglas L. Kelley & Debra-L Sequeira. Understanding family functioning in a changing America. 93 Dafna Lemish. Kindergartners understanding of television: A cross-cultural comparison. 109 J. David Johnson. A framework for interaction (FINT) scale: Extensions and refinement in an industrial setting. 127 Jacqueline C. Hitchon & Jerzy O. Jura. Allegorically speaking: Intertextuality of the postmodern culture and its impact on print and television advertising. 142 B. Lee Artz & Mark A. Pollock. The rhetorical of unconditional surrender: Locating the necessary moment for coercion. 159 1996, Vol. 47(4) (Special Issue: Theorizing Communication From Marginalized Perspectives Sonja K. Foss & Eileen Berlin Ray. Theorizing communication from marginalized perspectives. 253 Brenda J. Allen. Feminist standpoint theory: A Black womans (re)view of organizational socialization. 257 Cindy L. Griffin. A web of reasons: Mary Wolsstonecrafts A Vindication of the Rights of Woman and the re-weaving of form. 272

117 Dwight E. Brooks & Walter RE. Jacobs. Black men in the margins: Space Traders and the interpoisitional strategy against b(l)acklash. 289 Radha S. Hedge. Narratives of silence: Rethinking gender, agency and power from the communication experiences of battered women in South India. 303 Heidi M. Reeder. A critical look at gender differences in communication research. 318 1996, Vol. 47(3) Mark P. Orbe. Laying the foundation for co-cultural theory: An inductive approach to study non-dominant communication strategies and the factors that influence them. 157 Stephen H. Browne. Textual style and radical critique in William Lloyd Garrisons Thoughts on African Colonization. 177 Trevor Parry-Giles & Shawn J. Parry-Giles. Political scopophilia, presidential campaigning, and the intimacy of American politics. 191 Dialogue: Innovative Theoretical Approaches to the Study of Health Communication Renee Storm Klingle. Physician communication as a motivational tool to facilitate long-term patient compliance: Reinforcement expectancy theory. 206 Patricia Geist & Lisa Gates. The poetics and politics of re-covering identities in health communication. 218 Kim Witte, Gary Meyer, Helen Bidol, Mark K. Casey, Jenifer Kopfman, Karen Maduschke, Alicia Marshall, Kelly Morrison, Kurt M. Ribisl & Steve Robbins. Bringing order to chaos: A health communication model. 229 Dale E. Brashers & Austin S. Babrow. Theorizing communication and health. 243 1996, Vol. 47(1 & 2) Vernon Miller. An experimental study of newcomers information seeking behaviors during organizational entry. 1 Lyall Crawford. Everyday Tao: Conversation and contemplation. 25 Kathleen M. Propp & Daniel Nelson. Problem-solving performance in naturalistic groups: A test of ecological validity of the functional perspective. 35 Deanna D. Sellnow. Rhetorical strategies of continuity and change in the music of popular artists over time. 46 Mark Meister. Drama and tragedy in contemporary folk music: Nancy Griffiths Its a hard life wherever you go. 62 Bolanle A. Olaniran. Social skills acquisition: A closer look at foreign students on college campuses and factors influence their level of social difficulty in social situations. 72 Jinshi Tsao. Compensatory media use: An exploration of two paradigms. 89 Dialogue: Communication and Social Justice Lawrence R. Frey, W. Barnett Pearce, Mark A. Pollock, Lee Artz, & Bren A. O. Murphy. Looking for justice in all the wrong places: On a communication approach to social justice. 110 Julia T. Wood. Social justice research: Alive and well in the field of communication. 128 Josina Makau. Notes on communication education and social justice.135

118 Mark A. Pollock, Lee Artz, Lawrence R. Frey, W. Barnett Pearce & Bren A. O. Murphy. Navigating between Scylla and Charybdis: Continuing the dialogue on communication and social justice. 142 Continuing the Dialogue on the Genetic Debate Robert Alan Bookey. Recontextualizing the genetic debate: A response to Condit. 152

119 HEALTH COMMUNICATION 2007, Vol. 22(1) Chingching Chang. Ideal self-image congruency as a motivator for smoking: The moderating effects of personality traits. 1 Roxanne Parrott, Suellen Hopfer, Christie Ghetian & Eugene Lengerich. Mapping as a visual health communication tool: Promises and dilemmas. 13 Brian L. Quick & Michael T. Stephenson. Authoritative parenting and issue involvement as indicators of ad recall: An empirical investigation of anti-drug ads for parents. 25 Smita C. Banerjee & Kathryn Greene. Antisomoking initiatives: Effects of analysis versus production media literacy interventions on smoking-related attitude, norm, and behavioral intention. 37 Teresa Mastin, Julie L. Andsager, Jounghwa Choi & Kyungjin Lee. Health disparities and directto-consumer prescription drug advertising: A content analysis of targeted magazine genres, 1992-2002. 49 Maria L. Carpiac-Claver & Len Levy-Storm. In a manner of speaking: Communication between nurse aides and older adults in long-term care settings. 59 R. Wade Kenny. An effect of communication on medical decision making: Answerability, and the medically induced death of Paul Mills. 69 Steve Booth-Butterfield, Jennifer Welbourne, Charles Williams & Vickie Lewis. Formative field experiment of a NOSH alert to reduce the risks to firefighters from structural collapse: Applying the cascade framework. 79 2007, Vol. 21(3) Mary Bresnahan, Sun Young Lee, Sandi W. Smith, Sachiyo Shearman, Reiko Nebashi, Cheong Yi Park & Jina Yoo. A theory of planned behavior study of college students intentions to register as organ donors in Japan, Korea, and the United States. 201 Zheng Wang & Walter Gantz. Health content in local television news. 213 John Oetzel, Felicia DeVargas, Tamar Ginossar & Christina Sanchez. Hispanic womens preferences for breast health information: Subjective cultural influences on source, message, and channel. 223 Jennifer J. Bute, Erin Donovan-Kickeyn & Nicole Martins. Effects of communication-debilitating illnesses and injuries on close relationships: A relational maintenance perspective. 235 Tony N Brotn, Koji Ueno, Carrie L. Smith, Noel S. Austin & Leonard Bickman. The construction of HIV/.AIDS in Indian newspapers: A frame analysis. 257 Regina Jucks & Rainer Bromme. Choice of words in doctor-patient communication: An analysis of health-related internet sites. 267 Craig Boylstein, Maude Rittman & Ramon Hinojosa. Metaphor shifts in stroke recovery. 279 Linda Godbold Kean & Laura C. Prividera. Communicating about race and health: A content analysis of print advertisements in African American and general readership magazines. 290

120 2007, Vol. 21(2) Nancy Grant Harrington, Gretchen R. Norling, Florence M. Witte, Judith Taylor & James E. Andrews. The effects of communication skills training on pediatricians and parents communication during sick child visits. 105 Anthony J. Roberts, Rick S. Zimmerman, Kellie E. Carlyle, Erin L. Abner, Pamela K. Cupp & Gary L. Hansen. The effects of a computer-based pregnancy, STD, and HIV prevention intervention: A nine-school trial. 115 Thomas Hugh Feeley & Donald Vincent III. How organ donation is represented in newspaper articles in the United States. 125 Jim L. Query, Jr., Kevin B. Wright, Carma L. Bylund & Marifran Mattson. Health communication instruction: Toward identifying common learning goals, course content, and pedagogical strategies to guide curricula development. 133 Loretta L. Pecchioni & Lisa Sparks. Health information sources of individuals with cancer and their family members. 143 Pauline Hope Cheong. Health communication resources for uninsured and insured Hispanics. 153 Karyn Ogata Jones, Bryan E. Denham & Jeffrey K. Springston. Differing effects of mass and interpersonal communication on breast cancer risk estimates: An exploratory study of college students and their mothers. 165 Donald J. Cegala, Richard L. Street, Jr. & C. Randall Clinch. The impact of patient participation on physicians information provision during a primary care medical interview. 177 Amber Basu & Mohan J. Dutta. Centralizing context and culture in the co-construction of health: Localizing and vocalizing health meanings in rural India. 187 2007, Vol. 21(1) Mohan J. Dutta. Health information processing from television: The role of health orientation. 1 Erina L. MacGeorge, Wendy Samter, Bo Feng, Seth J. Gillihan & Angela R. graves. After 9/11: Goal disruption, emotional support, and psychological health in a lower exposure sample. 11 Bruce E. Pinkleton, Erica Weintraub Austin, Marilyn Cohen, Autumn Miller & Erin Fitzgerald. A statewide evaluation of the effectiveness of media literacy training to prevent tobacco use among adolescents. 23 Tanya R. Berry, John Wharf-Higgins & P. J. Naylor. SARS wars: An examination of the quantity and construction of health information in the news media. 35 Mary Bresnahan, Sun Young Lee, Sandi W. Smith, Sachiyo Shearman & Jina H. Yoo. Reservations of the spirit: The development of a culturally sensitive spiritual beliefs scales about organ donation. 45 Rachel A. Smith, Merissa Ferrara & Kim Witte. Social sides of health risks: Stigma and collective efficacy. 55 Margaret U. DSilva & Philip Palmgreen. Individual differences and context: Factors mediating recall of anti-drug public service announcements. 65 Jonathan Matusitz & Gerald-Mark Breen. Telemedicine: Its effects on health communication. 73 Kimberly N. Kline. Cultural sensitivity and health promotion: Assessing breast cancer education pamphlets designed for African American women. 85 2006, Vol. 20(3)

121 Rajiv N. Rimal & Dan Morrison. A uniqueness to personal threat (UPT) hypothesis: How similarity affects perceptions of susceptibility and severity in risk assessment. 209 Mohan Jyoti Dutta. Theoretical approaches to entertainment education campaigns: A subaltern critique. 221 Seth M. Noar, Ashley Clark, Christi Cole & Mia Liza A. Lustria. Review of interactive safer sex web sites: Practice and potential. 233 Maria Knight Lapinski. StarvingforPerfect.com: A theoretically based content analysis of proeating disorder web sites. 243 Denise E. DeLorme, Jisu Huh & Leonard N. Reid. Age differences in how consumers behave following exposure to DTC advertising. 255 Michael L. Hecht, John W. Graham & Elvira Elek. The drug resistance strategies intervention: Program effects on substance use. 267 Kenzie A. Cameron & Shelly Campo. Stepping back from social norms campaigns: Comparing normative influences to other predictors of health behaviors. 277 M. F. Casper, Jeffrey T. Child, Deneen Gilmour, Kristen A. McIntyre & Judy C. Pearson. Healthy research perspectives: Incorporating college student experiences with alcohol. 289 Moon J. Lee & Shannon L. Bichard. Effective message design targeting college students for the prevention of binge-drinking: basing design on rebellious risk-taking tendency. 299 2006, Vol. 20(2) (75th Issue of Health Communication) Nancy Grant Harrington. Emerging issues in health communication: The 2006 Kentucky Conference on Health Communication. 113 Teresa L. Thompson. Seventy-five (count em75!) issues of Health Communication: An analysis of emerging themes. 75 Donald J. Cegala. Emerging trends and future directions in patient communication skills training. 123 Shoba Ramanadhan & K. Viswanath. Health and information nonseeker: A profile. 131 Vicki S. Friemuth. Order out of chaos: The self-organization of communication following the anthrax attacks. 141 Michael D. Slater. Specification and misspecification of theoretical foundations and logic models for health communication campaigns. 149 Michael T. Stephenson, R. Lance Holbert & Rick S. Zimmerman. On the use of structural equation modeling in health communication research. 159 Seth M. Noar. In pursuit of cumulative knowledge in health communication: The role of metaanalysis. 169 Elaine Hsieh. Understanding medical interpreters: Reconceptualizing bilingual health communication. 177 (Research article) Ulla Talvitie & Outi Pyri. Discourse analytic study of counseling sessions in stroke physiotherapy. 187 (Research article) Mohan J. Dutta. The ten commandments of reviewing: The promise of a kinder, gentler discipline! (Commentary) 2006, Vol. 20(1) Special Section: Communication on Alcohol Sandi W. Smith, Charles K. Atkin & JoAnn Roznowski. Are drink responsibly alcohol campaigns strategically ambiguous. 1

122 C. M. Simon-Arndt, S. L. Hurtado & L. A. Patriarca-Troyk. Acceptance of web-based personalized feedback: User ratings of an alcohol misuse prevention program targeting U.S. marines. 13 Lindsey D. Polonec, Ann Marie Major & L. Erwin Atwood. Evaluating the believability and effectiveness of the social norms message Most student drink 0 to 4 drinks when they party. 23 Anne P. Hubbell. Mexican American women in a rural area and barriers to their ability to enact protective behaviors against breast cancer. 35 Nichole Egbert, Lynn Koch, Harriet Coeling & Denise Ayers. The role of social support in the family and community integration of right-hemisphere stroke survivors. 45 Craig R. Hullett. Using functional theory to promote HIV testing: The impact of value-expressive messages, uncertainty, and fear. 57 Heather M. Zoller & Tracy Worrell. Television illness depictions, identity, and social experience: Responses to multiple sclerosis on The West Wing among people with MS. 69 Carey Noland & Walter J. Carl. Its not our ass: Medical resident sense-making regarding lawsuits. 81 Hyunyi Cho & Charles T. Salmon. Fear appeals for individuals in different stages of change: Intended and unintended effects and implications on public health campaigns. 91 Akihito Hagihara, Kimio Tarumi & Joichi Nobutomo. Physicians and patients recognition of the level of the physicians explanation in medical encounters. 101 2006, Vol. 19(3) Xiaoquan Zhao, Sarah Saueed, Joseph Cappella, Robert Hornik, Martin Fishbein & R. Kirkland Ahern. Targeting norm-related beliefs about marijuanas use in an adolescent population. 187 Eric M. Eisenberg & Joan E. Pynes. Transforming emergency medicine through narrative: Qualitative action research at a community hospital. 197 Shelly Campo & Kenzie A. Cameron. Differential effects of exposure to social norms campaigns: A cause for concern. 209 Yaacov G. Bachner, Sara Carmel, Hasia Lubertzky, Nurit Heiman & Aharon Galil. Patienttherapist communication and satisfaction with the services of a child development center: A comparison between Israeli parentsJews and Bedouins. 221 Meridith E. Pearse, Laura A. Brannon & Valerie K. Pilling. Increasing selective exposure to health messages by targeting person versus behavior schemas. 231 Claude H. Miller, Michgal Burgoon, Joseph R. Grandpre & Eusebio M. Alvaro. Identifying principal risk factors for the initiation of adolescent smoking behaviors: The significance of psychological reactance. 241 Melanie Wakefield & Russil Durrant. Effects of exposure of youths at risk for smoking to television advertising for nicotine replacement therapy and Zyban: An experimental study. 253 Michael Robert Dennis. Compliance and intimacy: Young adults attempts to motivate healthpromoting behaviors by romantic partners. 259 Juanne N. Clarke. The case of the missing person: Alzheimers disease in mass print magazines 1991-2001. 269 2006, Vol. 19(2)

123 John Heritage & Jeffrey D. Robinson. The structure of patients presenting concerns: Physicians opening questions. 89 Julie A. Burke, Mark Earley, Lynda D. Dixson, Allan Wilke & Sandra Puczynski. Patients with diabetes speak: Exploring the implications of patients perspectives for their diabetes appointments. 103 Amanda J. Dillard, Kevin D. McCaul, Pamela D. Kelso & William M. P. Klein. Resisting good news: Reactions to breast cancer risk communication. 115 Wilson Lowrey & William B. Anderson. The impact of internet use on the public perception of physicians: A perspective from the sociology of professions literature. 125 Bret R. Shaw, Robert Hawkins, Fiona McTavish, Suzanne Pingree & David H. Gustafson. Effects of insightful disclosure within computer mediated support groups on women with breast cancer. 133 Josh Compton. Serious as a heart attack: Health-related content of light-night comedy television. 143 Michelle Miller-Day & Jennifer D. Marks. Perceptions of parental communication orientation, perfectionism, and disordered eating behaviors of sons and daughters. 153 Seth M. Noar, Rick S. Zimmerman, Phillip Palmgreen, Mia Lustria & Mary Lee Horosewski. Integrating personality and psychosocial theoretical approaches to understanding safer sexual behavior: Implications for message design. 165 Christopher E. Beaudoin, Esther Thorson & Traci Hong. Promoting youth health by social empowerment: A media campaign targeting social capital. 175 2006, Vol. 19(1) Itzhak Yanovitsky, Lea P. Stewart & Linda C. Lederman. Social distance, perceived drinking by peers, and alcohol use by college students. 1 Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. A formative approach to strategic message targeting soap operas: Using selective processing theories. 11 Katherine Clegg Smith & Melanie Wakefield. Newspaper coverage of youth and tobacco: Implications for public health. 19 Donna Rouner & Rebeeca Lindsey. Female adolescent communication about sexually transmitted diseases. 29 Juanne Nancarrow Clarke & Jeannine Binns. The portrayal of heart disease in mass print magazines, 1991-2001. 39 Amanda J. Young & Keri L. Rodriguez. The role of narrative in discussing end-of-life care: Eliciting values and goals from text, context, and subtext. 49 John Lynch & Tasha Dubriwny. Drugs and double binds: Racial identification and phamacogenomics in a system of binary race logic. 61 Pamela Williams-Piehota, Judith Pizarro, Stephanie A. Navarro Silvera, Linda Mowad & Peter Salovey. Need for cognition and message complexity in motivating fruit and vegetable intake among callers to the Cancer Information service. 77 2005, Vol. 18(3) Yumi Iwamitsu, Kazutaka Shimoda, Hajime Abe, Toru Tani, Masako Okawa & Ross Buck. The relation between negative emotional suppression and emotional distress in breast cancer diagnosis and treatment. 201

124 Pam McGrath. Developing a language for nonreligious spirituality in relation to serious illness through research: Preliminary findings. 217 Kelly Morrison. Motivating women and men to take protective action against rape: Examining direct and indirect persuasive fear appeals. 237 Denise M. Polk. Communication and family caregiving for Alzheimers dementia: Linking attributions and problematic integration. 257 L. Kaye Rasnake, Emily Laube, Meghan Lewis & Thomas R. Linscheid. Childrens nutritional judgments: Relation to eating attitudes. 275 Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. The relationship between health-orientation, provider-patient communication, and satisfaction: An individual-difference approach. 291 2005, Vol. 18(2) Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. Theory and practice in health communication campaigns: A critical interrogation. 103 Carma L. Bylund & Gregory Makoul. Examining empathy in medical encounters: An observational studying using the empathic communication coding system. 123 Jennifer Welbourne & Steve Booth-Butterfield. Using the theory of planned behavior and a stage model of persuasion to evaluate a safety message for firefighters. 141 Mozhdeh B. Bruss, Joseph R. Morris, Linda L. Dannison, Mark P. Orbe, Jackie A. Quitugua & Rosa T. Palacios. Food, culture, and family: Exploring the coordinated management of meaning regarding childhood obesity. 155 Carolyn A. Lin & Gren A. Hullman. Tobacco-prevention messages online: Social marketing via the web. 177 2005, Vol. 18(1) Peter Clarke, Susan H. Evans, Douglas Shook & Wanda Johanson. Information seeking and compliance in planning for critical care: Community-based health outreach to seniors about advance directives. 1 Carma L. Bylund. Mothers involvement in decision making during the birthing process: A quantitative analysis of womens online birth stories. 23 Tanya Stivers. Parent resistance to physicians treatment recommendations: One resource for initiating a negotiation of the treatment process. 41 Erica Weintraub Austin. Bruce E. Pinkleton, Stacey J. T. Hust & Marilyn Cohen. Evaluation of an American legacy foundation/Washington State Department of Health media literacy pilot study. 75 2005, Vol. 17(3) Theodore E. Zorn & Kimberly Weller Gregory. Learning the ropes together: Assimilation and friendship development among first-year male medical students. 211 Scott E. Caplan, Beth J. Haslett & Brant R. Burleson. Telling it like it is: The adaptive function of narratives in coping with loss in later life. 233 John Hammermeister, Barbara Brock, David Winterstein & Randy Page. Life without TV? Cultivation theory and psychosocial health consequences of television-free individuals and their television-viewing counterparts. 253

125 Myra A. Crawford, Lesa L. Woodby, Toya V. Russell & Richard A. Windsor. Using formative evaluation to improve a smoking cessation intervention for pregnant women. 265 Annie Lang, Youngkuk Chung, Seungwhan Lee & Xiaoquan Zhao. Its the product: Do risky products compel attention and elicit arousal in media users? 283 Michael T. Stephenson, Brian L. Qucik, Joshua Atkinson & David T. Tschida. Authoritative parenting and drug-prevention practices: Implications for antidrug ads for parents. 301 2005, Vol. 17(2) Kristen Harrison. Is fat free good for me? A panel study of television viewing and childrens nutritional knowledge and reasoning. 117 Rachel B. Fry & Steven Prentice-Dunn. Effects of coping information and value affirmation on responses to a perceived health threat. 133 Pradeep Sopory. Metaphor in formative evaluation and message design: An application to relationships and alcohol use. 149 Lisa Schreiber. The importance of precision in language: Communication research and (so-called) alternative medicine. 173 Margo Charchuk & Christy Simpson. Hope, disclosure, and control in the neonatal intensive care unit. 191 2005, Vol. 17(1) Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. Developing a profile of consumer intention to seek out additional information beyond a doctor: The role of communication and motivation variables. 1 Robert Wade Kenny. A cycle of terms implicit in the idea of medicine: Karen Ann Quinlan as a rhetorical icon and the transvaluation of the ethics of euthanasia. 17 Michelle Assa-Eley & Carole L. Kimberlin. Using interpersonal perception of characterize pharmacists and patients perceptions of the benefits of pharmaceutical care. 41 Cristel Antonio Russell, John D. Clapp & William DeJong. Done 4: Analysis of a failed social norms marketing campaign. 57 Itzhak Yanovitsky. Sensation seeking and adolescent drug use: The mediating role of association with deviant peers and pro-drug discussions. 67 Deborah Dysart-Gale. Communication models, professionalism, and the work of medical interpreters. 91 2004, Vol. 16(4) Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. An alternative approach to social capital: Exploring the linkage between health consciousness and community participation. 393 Jennifer Haard, Michael D. Slater & Marilee Long. Scientese and ambiguous citations in the selling of unproven medical treatments. 411 Heather L. Powell & Chris Segrin. The effect of family and peer communication on college students communication with dating partners about HIV and AIDS. 427 Gary Meyer, Anthony J. Roberto, Franklin J. Boster & Heather L. R Roberto. Assessing the Get Real about Violence curriculum: Processes and outcome evaluation results and implications. 451

126 Christina S. Beck, Jose Luis Benitez, Autumn Edwards, Amanda Olson, Aarthi Pai & Maria Beatriz Torres. Enacting health communication: The field of health communication as construction through publication in scholarly journals. 475 Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. Reaching unhealthy eaters: Applying a strategic approach to media vehicle choice. 493 2004, Vol. 16(3) Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. Primary sources of health information: Comparisons in the domain of health attitudes, health cognitions, and health behaviors. 273 Donald J. Cegala, Carmin Gade, Stefne Lenzmeier Brox & Leola McClure. Physicians and patients perceptions of communication competence in a primary care medical interview. 289 Dale E. Brashers, Judith L. Neidig & Daena J. Goldsmith. Social support and the management of uncertainty for people with HIV or AIDS. 305 Sandi W. Smith, Jenifer E. Kopfman, Lisa L. Massi Lindsey, Jina Yoo & Kelly Morrison. Encouraging family discussion on the decision to donate organs: The role of the willingness to communication scale. 333 Nathan Miczo. Stressors and social support perceptions predict illness attitudes and care-seeking intentions: Re-examining the sick role. 347 Melissa Bekelja Wanzer, Melanie Booth-Butterfield & Kelly Gruber. Perceptions of health care providers communication: Relationships between patient-centered communication and satisfaction. 363 2004, Vol. 16(2) Rebecca J. Welch Cline & Henry N. Young. Marketing drugs, marketing health care relationships: A content analysis of visual cues in direct-to-consumer prescription drug advertising. 131 Rose G. Campbell & Austin S. Babrow. The role of empathy in responses to persuasive risk communication: Overcoming resistance to HIV prevention messages. 159 Suzanne Pingree, Eric Boberg, Christi Patten, Kenneth Offord, Martha Gaie, Ann Schensky, David H. Gustafson, Ellen Dornelas & Jasjit Ahluwalia. Helping adolescents quit smoking: A needs assessment of current and former teen smokers. 183 James Price Dillard, Christine L. Carson, Carolynee Jane Bernard, Anita Laxova & Phillip M. Farrell. An analysis of communication following newborn screening for cystic fibrosis. 195 Michelle Miller-Day & Jacqueline M. Barnett. Im not a druggie: Adolescents ethnicity and (enormous) beliefs about drug use norms. 207 Maria Brann & Marifran Mattson. Toward a typology of confidentiality breaches in health care communication: An ethic of care analysis of provider practices and patient perceptions. 229 Joy L. Johnson, Joan L. Bottorf, Annette J. Browne, Sukhdev Grewal, B. Ann Hilton & Heather Clarke. Othering and being othered in the context of health care services. 253 2004, Vol. 16(1) (Special Issue: Religious Faith, Spirituality, and Health Communication) Roxanne Parrot. Collective amnesia: The absence of religious faith and spirituality in health communication research and practice. 1 Nichole Egbert, Jacqueline Mickley & Harriet Coeling. A review and application of social scientific measures of religiosity and spirituality: Assessing a missing component in health communication research. 7

127 Roxanne Parrott, Kami Silk, Janice Raup Krieger, Tina Harris & Celeste Condit. Behavioral health outcomes associated with religious faith and media exposure about human genetics. 29 Rema Adel Afifi Soweid, Marwan Khawaja & Mylen Tewtel Salen. Religious identity and smoking behavior among adolescents: Evidence from entering students at the American University of Beirut. 47 Jeffrey D. Robinson & Jon F. Nussbaum. Grounding research and medical education about religion in actual physician-patient interaction: Church attendance, social support, and older adults. 63 Maureen P. Keeley. Final conversations: Survivors memorable messages concerning religious faith and spirituality. 87 Tina Harris, Roxanne Parrot & Kelly Dorgan. Talking about human genetics within religious frameworks. 105 Carolyn Anderson. The delivery of health care in faith-based organizations: Parish nurses as promoters of health. 177 Michael Long. The churchs role in health and wholeness. 129 2003, Vol. 15(4) Pamela Williams-Piehota, Tamera R. Schneider, Judith Pizarro, Linda Mowad & Peter Salovey. Matching health messages to information-processing styles: Need for cognition and mammography utilization. 275 M. Robin DiMatteo, Jeffrey D. Robinson, John Heritage, Melissa Tabbarah & Sarah A. Fox. Correspondence among patients self-reports, chart records, and audio/videotapes of medical visits. 393 Amy Y. Zhang & Laura Siminoff. Silence and cancer: Why do families and patients fail to communicate? 415 Gerald R. Ledlow, H. Dan OHair & Scott Moore. Predictors of communication quality: The patient, provider, and nurse call center triad. 431 Alan D. DeSantis & Susan E. Morgan. Sometimes a cigar [magazine] is more than just a cigar [magazine]: Pro-smoking arguments in Cigar Aficionado, 1992-200. Shelly Campo, Dominique Brossard, M. Somjen Frazer, Timothy Marchell, Deborah Lewis & Janis Talbot. Are social norms campaigns really magic bullets? Assessing the effects of students misperceptions on drinking behavior. 481 Janet Audrain-McGovern, Kenneth P. Tercyak, Alexandra E. Shields, Angelita Bush, Carlos Francisco Espinel & Caryn Lerman. Which adolescents are most receptive to tobacco industry marketing? Implications for counter-advertising campaigns. 499 Thomas K. Houston, Daniel Z. Sands, Beth R. Nash & Daniel E. Ford. Experience of physicians who frequently use e-mail with patients. 515 2003, Vol. 15(3) Valerie Barker & Howard Giles. Integrating the communicative predicament and enhancement of aging models: The case of older Native Americans. 255 Linda Godbold Kean & Kelly Fudge Albada. The relationships between college students schema regarding alcohol use, their television viewing patterns, and their previous experiences with alcohol. 277 Gary Meyer, Anthony J. Roberto & Charles K. Atkin. A radio-based approach to promoting gun safety: Process and outcome evaluation implications and insights. 299

128 Juliann C. Scholl & Sandra L. Ragan. The use of humor in promoting positive provider-patient interactions in a hospital rehabilitation unit. 319 Amanda L. Kundrat & Jon F. Nussbaum. The impact of invisible illness on identity and contextual age across the life span. 331 Joseph Grandpre, Eusebio M. Alvaro, Michael Burgoon, Claude H. Miller & John R. Hall. Adolescent reactance and anti-smoking campaigns: A theoretical approach. 349 2003, Vol. 15(2) (Special Issue: Cancer Communication and Aging) Lisa Sparks. An introduction to cancer communication and aging: Theoretical and research insights. 123 Jennifer Ott Anderson & Patrician Geist-Martin. Narratives and healing: Exploring one familys stories of cancer survivorship. 133 Jake Harwood & Lisa Sparks. Social identity and health: An intergroup communication approach to cancer. 145 Gary L. Kreps. The impact of communication on cancer risk, incidence, morbidity, mortality, and quality of life. 161 Melanie Booth-Butterfield. Embedded health behaviors from adolescence to adulthood: The impact of tobacco. 171 Jon F. Nussbaum, Doreen Baringer & Amanda Kundrat. Health, communication, and aging: Cancer and older adults. 185 Dan OHair, Melinda M. Villagrin, Elaine Wittenberg, Kenneth Brown, Monica Ferguson, Harry T. Hall & Timothy Dory. Cancer survivorship and agency model: Implication for patient choice, decision making, and influence. 193 Jim L. Query, Jr. & Kevin Wright. Assessing communication competence in an online study: Toward informing subsequent interventions among older adults with cancer, their lay caregivers, and peers. 203 Sandra L. Ragan, Elaine Whittenberg & Harrt T. Hall. The communication of palliative care for the elderly cancer patient. 219 James D. Robinson & Jeanine Turner. Impersonal, interpersonal, and hyperpersonal social support: Cancer and older adults. 227 Katherine E. Rowan, Lisa Sparks, Loretta Pecchioni & Melinda M. Villagran. The CAUSE model: A research-supported aid for physicians communicating with patients about cancer risk. 235 2003, Vol. 15(1) Nurit Guttman & Hannah Peleg. Public preferences for an attribution to government or to medical research versus unattributed messages in cigarette warning labels in Israel. 1 Jeffrey D. Robinson. An interactional structure of medical activities during acute visits and its implications for patients participation. 27 Robert R. Weaver. Informatics tools and medical communication: Patient perspectives of knowledge coupling in primary care. 59 Cynthia-Lou Coleman. Examining influences of pharmacists communication with consumers about antibiotics. 79 Mohan Jyoti Dutta-Bergman. The linear interaction model of personality effects in health communication. 101

129 2002, Vol. 14(4) Philip Palmgreen, Michael T. Stephenson, Maureen W. Everett, John R. Baseheart & Regina Frances. Perceived message sensation value (PMSV) and the dimensions and validation of a PMSV scale. 403 Robin L. Nabi, Brian Southwell & Robert Hornik. Predicting intentions versus predicting behaviors: Domestic violence prevention from a theory of reasoned action perspective. 429 Philip Manning & George B. Ray. Setting the agenda: An analysis of negotiation strategies in clinical talk. 451 Sheana Salyers Bull, Jenifer Cohen, Charlene Ortiz & Tom Evans. The POWER campaign for promotion of female and male condoms: Audience research and campaign development. 475 John C. Lammers & Aashley Duggan. Bringing the physician back in: Communication predictors of physicians satisfaction with managed care. 493 Katherine Miller. Complicating the diagnosis: A response to Lammers and Duggan. 515 2002, Vol. 14(3) Wayne A. Beach. Between dad and son: Initiating, delivering, and assimilating bad cancer news. 271 Tanya Stivers. Presenting the problem in pediatric encounters: Symptoms only versus candidate diagnosis presentations. 299 Susan Eggly. Physician-patient co-construction of illness narratives in the medical interview. 339 Hisako Kakai. A double standard in bioethical reasoning for disclosure of advanced cancer diagnoses in Japan. 361 Vincent T. Covello & Richard G. Peters. Womens perceptions of the risks of age-related diseases, including breast cancer: Reports from a 3-year research study. 377 2002, Vol. 14(2) Raymond W. Gibbs, Jr. & Heather Franks. Embodied metaphor in womens narratives about their experiences with cancer. 139 Alan D. DeSantis. Smoke screen: An ethnographic study of a cigar shops collective rationalization. 167 Renee A. Botta & Rebecca Dumlao. How do conflict and communication patterns between fathers and daughters contribute to or offset eating disorders? 199 Stan A. Kaplowtiz, Shelly Campo & Wai Tat Chiu. Cancer patients desires for communication of prognosis information. 221 Robert Wade Kerry. The death of loving: Material identity as moral constraint in a narrative testimonial advocating physician assisted suicide. 243 2002, Vol. 14(1) Athena du Pre. Accomplishing the impossible: Talking about body and soul and mind during a medical visit. 1 Michael T. Stephenson, Susan E. Morhan, Elizabeth Pugzles Lorch, Philip Palmgren, Lewis Donohue & Rick H. Hoyle. Predictors of exposure from an antimarijuana media campaign: Outcome research assessing sensation seeking targeting. 23

130 Kandi L. Walker, Christa L. Arnold. Michelle Miller-Day & Lynne M. Webb. Investigating the physician-patient relationship: Examining emergent themes. 45 Amanda Young & Linda Flower. Patients as partners, patients as problem-solvers. 99 Merry C. Buchanan, Melinda Morris Villagran & Sandra L. Ragan. Women, menopause and (Ms.)information: Communication about the climacteric. 99 Susan E. Morgan & Jenny K. Miller. Beyond the organ donor card: The effect of knowledge, attitudes, and values on willingness to communicate about organ donation to family members. 121

131 2001, Vol. 13(4) Marifran Mattson & Felicia Roberts. Overcoming telling as an obstacle to initiating safer sex: Clients and health practitioners planning decision during HIV test counseling. 343 Robert Wade Kenny. Toward a better death: Applying Burkean principles of symbolic action to interpret family adaptation to Karen Ann Quinlans coma. 363 P. V. Sharada, Chitta Venkataramana & K. Rao Nirupama. Media, audience, and policy perspectives in health broadcasting. Lynn M. Harter & Phyllis M. Japp. Technology as the representative anecdote in popular discourses of health and medicine. 409 Thomas A. Workman. Finding the meanings of college drinking: An analysis of fraternity drinking stories. 427 Kelsy Lin Ulrey & Patricia Amason. Intercultural communication between patients and health care providers: An exploration of intercultural communication effectiveness, cultural sensitivity, stress, and anxiety. 449 2001, Vol. 13(3) Crystale Purvis Cooper, Michael Burgoon & Debra L. Roter. An expectancy-value analysis of viewer interest in television prevention news stories. 227 Brian A. Costello & Felicia Roberts. Medical recommendations as joint social practice. 241 Marsha L. Vanderford, Terry Stein, Robert Sheeler & Susan Shochelak. Communication challenges for experienced clinicians: Topics for an advanced communication curriculum. 261 Robin Reid Rody, Lawrence B. Rosenfeld, John P. Galassi, Joanna Parker & Rachel Schanberg. Participants perceptions of a peer-helper: Telephone-based social support intervention for melanoma patients. 285 Carol J. Germansen & Joseph B. Widerholt. Pharmacist-patient relationship development in an ambulatory clinic setting. 307 Stephen C. Hines, Austin S. Babrow, Laurie Badzek & Alvin Moss. From coping with life to coping with death: Problematic integration for the seriously ill elderly. 327 2001, Vol. 13(2) Priscilla Murphy. Framing the nicotine debate: A cultural approach to risk. 119 Kristen M. Bauer & Mark P. Orbe. Networking, coping, and communicating about a medical crisis: A phenomenological inquiry of transplant recipient communication. 141 Julie L. Andsager & Angela Powers. Framing womens health with a sense-making approach: Magazine coverage of breast cancer and implants. 163 C. Mo Bahk. Drench effects of media portrayal of fatal virus disease on health locus of control beliefs. 187 Isaac M. Lipkus, Monica Biradavolu, Kathryn Fenn, Punam Keller & Barbara K. Rimer. Informing women about their breast cancer risks: Truth or consequences. 205

132 2001, Vol. 13(1) (Special Issue: Coding Provider-Patient Interaction) Teresa Thompson. Introduction. 1 Kelly S. McNellis. Analyzing communication competence in medical consultations. 5 Leslie Meredith, Moira Stewart & Judith Belle Brown. Patient-centered communication scoring method report on nine coded interviews. 19 Debra L. Roter & Susan Larson. The relationship between residents and attending physicians communication during primary care visits: An illustrative use of the Roter interaction analysis system. 33 Ayesha Shaikh, Lynne M. Knobloch & William B. Stiles. The use of a verbal response mode coding system in determining patient and physician roles in medical interviews. 49 Richard L. Street, Jr. & Bradford Millay. Analyzing patient participation in medical encounters. 61 Marlene M. von Friederichs-Fitzwater & John Gilgun. Relational control in physician-patient encounters. 75 Rajiv N. Rimal. Analyzing the physician-patient interaction: An overview of six methods. 89 (Response) Richard M. Frankel. Cracking the code: Theory and method in clinical communication analysis. 101 (Response) 2000, Vol. 12(4) Loretta L. Pecchioni & Jon F. Nussbaum. The influence of autonomy and paternalism on communicative behaviors in mother-daughter relationships prior to dependency. 317 Jill Kroll, Marilyn Rothert, William S. Davidson II, Neal Schmitt, Margaret Holmes-Rovner, Georgia Padona & Thomas M. Reischl. Predictors of participation in health care at menopause. 339 Lisa Sparks Bethea, Shirley S. Travis & Loretta Pecchioni. Family caregivers use of humor in conveying information about caring for dependent older adults. 361 Mark J. Bergstrom & Michael E. Holmes. Lay theories of successful aging after the death of a spouse: A network text analysis of bereavement advice. 377 2000, Vol. 12(3) Rajiv N. Rimal. Closing the knowledge-behavior gap in health promotion: The mediating role of self-efficacy. 219 Cynthia Baur. Limiting factors on the transformative powers of e-mail in patient-physician relationships: A critical analysis. 239 David B. Buller, Michael Burgoon, John R. Hall, Norman Levine, Ann M. Taylor, Barbara Beach, Mary Klein Buller & Charlene Melcher. Long-term effects of language intensity in preventive messages on planned family solar protection. 261 Craig R. Hullett, Jill J. McMillan & Randall G. Rogan. Caregivers predispositions and perceived organizational expectations for the provision of social support to nursing home residents. 277 Christopher Stephen Knaus, Bruce E. Pinkleton & Erica Weintraub Austin. The ability of the AIDS quilt to motivate information seeking, personal discussion, and preventive behavior as a health communication intervention. 301 2000, Vol. 12(2)

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Pamela Whitten, Beverly Davenport Sypher & James D. Patterson II. Transcending the technology of telemedicine: An analysis of telemedicine in North Carolina. 109 Melanie Booth-Butterfield, Robert Anderson & Steve Booth-Butterfield. Adolescents use of tobacco, health locus of control, and self-mentoring. 137 Wendy S. Zabava Ford & Olivia Jane Snyder. Customer service in dental offices: Analyses of service orientations and waiting time in telephone interactions with a potential new customer. 149 Michael Greco, Arthur Brownlea, Julie McGovern & Michael Cavanagh. Consumers as educators: Implementation of patient feedback in general practice training. 173 Ashlea Troth & Candida C. Peterson. Factors predicting safe-sex talk and condom use in early sexual relationships. 195 2000, Vol. 12(1) Kimberly Nicole Kline & Marifran Mattson. Breast self-examination pamphlets: A content analysis grounded in fear appeal research. 1 Charles H. Grant, III, Kenneth N. Cissna & Lawrence B. Rosenfeld. Patients perceptions of physicians communication and outcomes of the accrual to trial process. 23 Mark P. Orbe & Granville King, III. Negotiating the tension between policy and reality: Exploring nurses communication about organizational wrongdoing. 41 Julia Hannum Rose, Karen F. Bowman & Denise Kresevic. Nurse versus family caregiver perspectives on hospitalized older patients: An exploratory study of agreement at admission and discharge. 63 Robert J. Griffin & Sharon Dunwoody. The relation of communication to risk judgment and preventive behavior related to lead in tap water. 81 1999, Vol. 11(4) Alicia M. Dorsey, Clifford W, Scherer & Kevin Real. The college tradition of drink til you drop: The relation between students social networks and engaging in risky behaviors. 313 Michael D. Slater. Integrating application of media effects, persuasion, and behavior change theories to communication campaigns: A states-of-change framework. 335 Dennis D. Cali & Carlos Estrada. The medical interview as rhetorical counterpart of the case presentation. 355 Sally J. McMillan. Health communication and the internet: Relations between interactive characteristics of the medium and site creators, content, and purpose 375

134 1998, Vol. 10(4) (Special issue: Mentoring and Nurturing Communication in Health Contexts) Jeffrey Pittam & Cynthia Gallois. Mentoring and nurturing communication in health contexts: Foreword. 289 Beth A. Le Poire, Karen T. Erlandson & Jennifer S. Hallet. Punishing versus reinforcing strategies of drug discontinuance: Effect of persuaders drug use. 293 Helen Edwards & Patricia Noller. Factors influencing caregiver-care receiver communication and its impact on the well-being of older care receivers. 317 Bernadette Watson & Cynthia Gallois. Nurturing communication by health professionals toward patients: A communication accommodation theory approach. 343 Pamela A. Saunders. Youre out of your mind!: Humor as a face-saving strategy during neuropsychological examinations. 357 Pamela J. Kalbfleisch & Betsy W. Bach. The language of mentoring in a health care environment. 373 1998, Vol. 10(3) David H. Smith. Interviews with elderly patients about side effects. 199 Murray C. Millar & Karen Millar. Processing messages about disease detection and health promotion behaviors: The effects of anxiety. 211 Fiona Chew, Sushma Palmer & Soohong Kim. Testing the influence of the health belief model and a television program on nutrition behavior. 227 Shari McMahan, Kim Witte & Jon a Meyer. The perception of risk messages regarding electromagnetic fields: Extending the extended parallel process model to an unknown risk. 247 Donald J. Cegala, Mary Thoesen Coleman & Jeanine Warisse Turner. The development and partial assessment of the medical communication competence scale. 261 1998, Vol. 10(2) Annette Harres. But basically youre feeling well, are you? Tag questions in medical consultations. 111 Denise Wigginton Cecil. Relational control patterns in physician-patient clinical encounters: Continuing the conversation. 125 Rebeccca W. Tardy & Claudia L. Hale. Bonding and cracking: The role of informal, interpersonal networks in health care decision making. 151 Joyce Allman. Bearing the burden or baring the soul: Physicians self-disclosure and boundary management regarding medical mistakes. 175 1998, Vol. 10(1) Austin S. Babrow, Chris R. Kasch & Leigh Ford. The many meanings of uncertainty in illness: Toward a systematic accounting. 1 Garrett J. OKeefe, Heath Hartwig Boyd & Marion R. Brown. Who learns preventive health care information from where: Cross-channel and repertoire comparisons. 25 Leigh Arden Ford & Beth Hartman Ellis. A preliminary analysis of memorable and nonsupport messages received by nurses in acute care settings. 37

135 Roger Myrick. In search of cultural sensitivity and inclusiveness: Communication strategies used in rural HIV prevention campaigns designed for African Americans. 65 Lisa Henriksen & Christine Jackson. Anti-smoking socialization: Relationship to child smoking status. 87 1997, Vol. 9(4) Nancy Signorielli & Jessica Staples. Television and childrens conceptions of nutrition. 289 Jennifer L. Monahan, Lynn Carol Miller & Sadina Rothspan. Power and intimacy: on the dynamics of risky sex. 303 Erica Weintraub Austin & Kristine Kay Johnson. Immediate and delayed effects of media literacy training on third graders decision making for alcohol. 323 Donald L. Rubin, Pamela Healy, T. Clifford Gardiner, Richard C. Zath & Cynthia Partain Moore. Nonnative physicians as message sources: Effects of accent and ethnicity on patients responses to AIDS prevention counseling. 351 Stephen C. Hines, Alvin H. Moss & John McKenzi. Prolonging life or prolonging death: Communications role in difficult dialysis decisions. 369 1997, Vol. 9(3) Stephen C. Hines, Austin S. Babrow, Laurie Badzek & Alvin H. Moss. Communication and problematic integration in end-of-life decisions: Dialysis decisions among the elderly. 199 Celeste M. Condit & Melanie Williams. Audience responses to the discourse of medical genetics: Evidence against the critique of medicalization. 219 S. Deborah Majerovitz, Michele G. Greene, Ronald D. Adelman, Gerald M. Brody, Kathleen Leber & Susan W. Healy. Older patients understanding of medical information in the emergency department. 237 A. Hafstad & L. E. Aaro. Activating interpersonal influence through provocative appeals: Evaluation of a mass media-based antismoking campaign targeting adolescents. 253 Satya P. Krishman, Tracy Durrah & Karen Winkler. Coverage of AIDS in popular African American magazines. 273 1997, Vol. 9(1) (Special Issue: The Patient as a Central Construct in Health Communication Research) Barbara F. Sharf & Richard L. Street, Jr. The patient as a central construct: Shifting the emphasis. 1 Marsha L. Vanderford, Elaine B. Jenks & Barbara F. Sharf. Exploring patients experiences as a primary source of meaning. 13 Bruce L. Lambert, Richard L. Street, Donald J. Cegala, David H. Smith, Suzanne Kurtz & Theo Schofield. Provider-patient communication, patient-centered care, and the mangle of practice. 27 John C. Lammers & Patricia Geist. The transformation of caring in the light and shadow of managed care. 45 Rajiv N. Rimal, Scott C. Ratzan, Paul Arnston & Vicki S. Freimuth. Reconceptualizing the patient: Health care promotion as increasing citizens decision-making competencies. 61 Robert M. Kaplan. Health outcomes and communication research. 75 (Response)

136 Keith C. Bennett & Harry Irwin. Shifting the emphasis to patient as central: Sea changes or ripple on the pond? 83 1996, Vol. 8(4) Rina Alcalay & Robert A. Bell. Ethnicity and health knowledge gaps: Impact of the California Wellness Guide on poor African American, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic White women. 303 Robert A. Bell, Matthew Cholerton, Veronica Davison, Kevin E. Fraczek & Heather Lauter. Making health communication self-funding: Effectiveness of pregiving in an AIDS fundraising/education campaign. 331 Satra P. Krishnan. Health education at family planning clinics: Strategies for improving information about contraception and sexually transmitted diseases for low-income women. 353 1996, Vol. 8(3) (Special Issue: Communication, Aging, and Health) Ellen Bouchard Ryan & Robert N. Butler. Communication, aging, and health: Toward understanding health provider relationships with older clients. 191 Anthony Muluc & Howard Giles. Youre only as old as you sound: Perceived vocal age and social meanings. 199 Margaret M. Baltes & Hans-Werner Wahl. Patters of communication in old age: The dependencysupport and independence-ignore script. 217 Mark J. Bergstrom & Jon F. Nussbaum. Cohort differences in interpersonal conflict: Implications for the older patient--younger care provider interaction. 233 Marie R. Haug. The effects of physician/elder patient characteristics on health communication. 249 Michele G. Greene, Ronald D. Adelman & S. Deborah Majerovitz. Physician and older patient support in the medical encounter. 263 Cathy Charles, Laurie J. Goldsmith, Larry Chambers, R. Brian Haynes & Mary Gauld. Provider-patient communication among elderly and nonelderly patients in Canadian hospitals: A national survey. 281 1996, Vol. 8(2) Caroline Schooler, Michael D. Basil & David G. Altman. Alcohol and cigarette advertising on billboards: Targeting with social cues. 109 Kathryn Greene, Donald L. Rubin, Jerold L. Hale & Lynda H. Walters. The utility of understanding adolescent egocentrism in designing health-promotion messages. 131 Stephne Herselman. Some problems in health communication in a multicultural clinical setting: A South African experience. 153 Elizabeth M. Perse, Amy I. Nathanson & Douglas M. McLeod. Effects of spokesperson sex, public service announcement appeal, and involvement of safe-sex PSAs. 171 1996, Vol. 8(1) Donald J. Cegala, Deborah Socha McGee & Kelly S. McNelis. Components of patients and doctors perceptions of communication competence during a primary care medical interview. 1

137 Marti Young & Renee Storm Klingle. Silent partners in medical care: A cross-cultural study of patient participation. 29 Subir Sengupta. Understanding less educated smokers intention to quit smoking: Strategies for antismoking communication aimed at less educated smokers. 55 Athena A. Smith-Dupre & Christina S. Beck. Enabling patients and physicians to pursue multiple goals in health care encounters: A case study. 73 Judith Bowker. Cancer, individual process, and control: A case study in metaphor analysis. 91 1995, Vol. 7(4) Alicia A. Marshall, Sandi W. Smith & Janet K. McKeon. Persuading low-income women to engage in mammography screening: Source, message, and channel preferences. 283 Dirk Scheerhorn, Jeanine Warisse & Kelly S. McNeilis. Computer-based telecommunication among an illness-related community: Design, delivery, early use, and the functions of HIGHnet. 301 Ronald B. Anderson & Priscilla Y. McMillion. Effects of similar and diversified modeling on African American womens efficacy expectations and intentions to perform breast selfexamination. 327 William J. Brown & Michael D. Basil. Media celebrities and public health: Responses to Magic Johnsons HIV disclosure and its impact on AIDS risk and high-risk behaviors. 345 Nancy Grant Harrington. The effects of college students alcohol resistance strategies. 371 1995, Vol. 7(3) Donald J. Cegala, Kelly S. McNeilis & Deborah Socha McGee. A study of doctors and patients perceptions of information processing and communication competence during the medical interview. 179 Vivian C. Sheer & Rebecca J. Welch Cline. Individual differences in sensation seeking and sexual behavior: Implications for communication intervention for HIV/AIDS prevention among college students. 205 Maureen W. Everett & Philip Palmgren. Influences of sensation seeking, message sensation value, and program context on effectiveness of anticocaine public service announcements. 225 Vincent R. Waldron, John Caughlin & Dan Jackson. Talking specifics: Facilitating effects of planning on AIDS talk in peer dyads. 249 Thomas Addington & Jeanne Wegescheide-Harris. Ethics and communication with the terminally ill. 267 1995, Vol. 7(2) Moshe Engeberg, June A. Flora & Clifford I. Nass. AIDS knowledge: Effects of channel involvement and interpersonal communication. 73 Richard W. Thomas & David R. Seibold. Interpersonal influence and alcohol-related interventions in the college environment. 93 Leslie B. Snyder & Ruby A. Rouse. The media can have more than an impersonal impact: The case of AIDS risk reduction perceptions and behavior. 125 Anne Moyer, Susan Greener, John Beauvais & Peter Salovey. Accuracy of health research reported in the popular press: Breast cancer and mammography. 147

138 Julie W. Scherz, Harold T. Edwards & Ken J. Kallal. Communicative effectiveness of doctorpatient interactions. 163 1995, Vol. 7(1) Erica Weintraub Austin & Bethe Nach-Ferguson. Sources and influences of young school-age childrens general and brand-specific knowledge about alcohol. 1 J. Michael Gotcher. Well-adjusted and maladjusted cancer patients: An examination of communication variables. 21 Anne S. Gabbard-Alley. Health communication and gender: A review and critique. 35 Danielle J. Dolin & Steve Booth-Butterfield. Foot-in-the-door and cancer prevention. 55 1994, Vol. 6(4) (Special Issue: Communicating With Patients About Their Medications) Sharon Lee Hammond & Bruce L. Lambert. Communication about medication: Directions for research. 247 M. Robin DiMatteo, Robert C. Reiter & Joseph C. Gambone. Enhancing medication adherence through communication and informed collaborative choice. 253 Roxanne Parrott. Exploring family practitioners and patients information exchange about prescribed medications: Implications for practitioners interviewing and patients understanding. 267 David H. Smith, Karen Graham Cunningham & William E. Hale. Communication about medicines: Perceptions of the ambulatory elderly. 281 Jon C. Schommer. Effects of interrole congruence on pharmacist-patient communication. 297 Bruce L. Lambert & Jeann Lee Gillespie. Patient perceptions of pharmacy students hypertension compliance-gaining messages: Effects of message design logic and content themes. 311 John C. Reid, CarolAnne M. Kardash, Richard D. Robinson & Robbie Scholes. Comprehension in patient literature: The importance of text and reader characteristics. 327 1994, Vol. 6(3) Lorraine D. Jackson. Maximizing treatment adherence among back-pain patients: An experimental study of the effects of physician-related cues in written medical messages. 173 Bryan B. Whaley. Food is to me as gas is to cars??: Using figurative language to explain illness to children. 193 Laurie K. Lewis. A challenge for health education: The enactment problem and a communicationrelated solution. 205 Renee Storm Klingle & Krystyna Strzyweski Aune. Effects of a daytime serial and a public service announcement in promoting cognitions, attitudes, and behaviors related to bonemarrow testing. 225 1994, Vol. 6(2) Beth Hartman Ellis & Katherine I. Miller. Supportive communication among nurses: Effects on commitment, burnout, and retention. 77 Michael Burgoon & John R. Hall. Myths as health belief systems: The language of slaves, sorcery, and science. 97

139 Michele J. Hindlin, D. Lawrence Kincaid, Opia Mensah Kumah, Winthrop Morgan, Young Mi Kim, & J. K. Ofori. Gender differences in media exposure and action during a family planning campaign in Ghana. 117 Mark A. Hamilton, Ruby A. Rouse, & Jeffrey Rouse. Dentist communication and patient utilization of dental services: Inhibited anxiety and enhanced competence effects. 137 Michael G. Garko. Communication styles of powerful physician-executives in upward-influence situations. 159 1994, Vol. 6(1) Sandi E. Smith, Kelly Morrison, Jenifer E. Kopfman, & Leigh Arden Ford. The influence of prior thought and intent on the memorability and persuasiveness of organ donation message strategies. 1 Inger Brannstrom & Inga-Britt Lindblad. Mass communication and health promotion: The power of the media and public opinion. 21 Gordon L. Danhne, Rick Garlick, & Dean Kazoleas. Testing a new disease-specific health locus of control scale among cancer and aplastic anemia patients. 37 Deborah Lupton. Toward the development of critical health communication praxis. 55 (Essay) Irving Rootman & Larry Hershfield. Health communication research: Broadening the scope. 69 (Essay) 1993, Vol. 5(4) Timothy Edgar & Mary Anne Fitzpatrick. Expectations for sexual interaction: A cognitive test of the sequencing of sexual communication behaviors. 239 Kathleen K. Reardon & Carolyn E. Aydin. Changes in lifestyle initiated by breast cancer patients: Who does and who doesnt. 263 Renee Storm Klingle. Bringing time into physician compliance gaining research: Toward a reinforcement expectancy theory of strategy effectiveness. 283

140 1993, Vol. 5(3) Barbara F. Sharf & Vicki S. Freimuth. The construction of illness on entertainment television: Coping with cancer on Thirtysomething. 141 Joachim Knuf & John Caughlin. Weighty issues: Semiotic notes on dieting as a secular ritual. 161 Keith Cherry & David H. Smith. Sometimes I cry: The experience of loneliness for men with AIDS. 181 Fred Molitor. Accuracy in science news reporting by newspapers: The case of aspirin for the prevention of heart attacks. 209 Lesley G. Frederikson. Development of an integrative model for medical consultation. 225 1993, Vol. 5(2) Michael L. Hecht, Steven R. Corman, & Michelle Miller-Rassulo. An evaluation of the drug resistance project: A comparison of film versus live performance media. 75 Carol Lynn Thompson & Linda M. Pledger. Doctor-patient communication: Is patient knowledge of medical terminology improving. 89 Brent D. Ruben. What patients remember: A content analysis of critical incidents in health care. 99 Hartmut B. Mokros. Communication and psychiatric diagnosis: Tales of depressive moods from two contexts. 113 David G. Dunning & Brian M. Lange. Direction in male and female dental students interaction with patients: A confirmation of similarities. 129 1993, Vol. 5(1) John V. Pavlik, John R. Finnegan, Jr., Daniel Strickland, Charles T. Salmnon, K. Viswanath, & Daniel B. Wackman. Increasing public understanding of heart disease: An analysis of data from the Minnesota heart health program. 1 James K. Hetog, John R. Finnegan, Jr., Brenda Rooney, K. Visanath, & John Potter. Self-efficacy as a target population segmentation strategy in a diet and cancer-risk reduction campaign. 21 Analee E. Beisecker & Thomas D. Beisecker. Using metaphors to characterize doctor-patient relationships: Paternalism versus consumerism. 41 Kathryn Green, Roxanne Parrott, & Julianne M. Serovich. Privacy, HIV testing and AIDS: College students versus parents perspectives. 59 1992, Vol. 4(4) Nancy Signorielii & Margaret Lears. Television and childrens conceptions of nutrition: Unhealthy messages. 245 C. Richard Hofstetter, William A. Schultze, & Mary M. Mulvihill. Communications media, public health, and public affairs: Exposure in a multimedia community. 259 Rebecca J. Welch Cline & Sarah J. Johnson. Mosquitoes, doorknobs, and sneezing: Relationships between homophobia and AIDS mythology among college students. 273 Bonnie J. Garvin, Carol W. Kennedy, Carol F. Baker, & Barbara J. Polivka. Cardiovascular responses of CCU patients when communicating with nurses, physicians, and families. 291 Bruce Watkins, Richard Lichtenstein, David Vest, & J. William Thomas. HMO advertising and enrollee health status: Marketing Medicare plans to seniors. 303

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1992, Vol. 4(3) Kristi L. Ferguson, Julie A. Burke, Samuel L. Becker, Thomas M. Reimers, Virginia S. Daughtery, & Paul R. Pomrehn. The recruitment of new smokers by adolescents. 171 J. David Johnson, Hendrika Meischke, Jennifer Grau, & Sally Jackson. Cancer-related channel selection. 183 Lorraine D. Jackson. Information complexity and medical communication: The effects of technical language and amount of information in a medical message. 197 Debra Lieberman. The computers potential role in health education. 211 Elizabeth Harper, Robert R. Broyden, & James C. Impara. Using informal caregivers to communicate with women about mammography. 227 1992, Vol. 4(2) Timothy Edgar, Vicki S. Freimuth, Sharon Lee Hammond, Deborah A. McDonald, & Edward L. Fink. Strategic sexual communication: Condom use resistance and response. 83 Juanne N. Clarke. Cancer, heart disease, and AIDS: What do the media tell us about these diseases? 105 Clay Warren. perspectives on international sex practices and American family sex communication relevant to teenage sexual behavior in the United States. 121 Michael G. Garko. Physician-executives use of influence strategies: Gaining compliance from supervisors who communicate in attractive and unattractive styles. 137 Barry J. Evans, Robb O. Stanley, & Graham D. Burrows. Communication skills training and patients satisfaction. 155 1992, Vol. 4(1) Julie A. Burke, Abran Salazar, Virginia Daughtery, & Samuel L. Becker. Activating interpersonal influence in the prevention of adolescent tobacco use: An evaluation of Iowas program against smoking. 1 David E. Scheider & Raymond K. Tucker. Measuring communicative satisfaction in doctorpatient relations: The doctor-patient communication inventory. 19 Adelaide Hass & Susan L. Puretz. Encouraging partnerships between health care providers and women recommended for gynecological surgery. 29 Rebecca J. Welch Cline, Sarah J. Johnson, & Kim E. Freeman. Talk among sexual partners about AIDS: Interpersonal communication for risk reduction or risk enhancement? 39 Roxanne Parrott, Michael Burgoon, & Cathy Ross. Parents and pediatricians talk: Compliancegaining strategies use during well-child exams. 57 Richard L. Hollowar & John C. Rogers. Physician adaptation to patients locus of control and congruence with health recommendation. 67 1991, Vol. 3(4) (Special Issue: Communication and Drug Abuse Prevention) Howard E. Sypher & Lewis Donohew. Communication and drug abuse prevention research. 191 Sara M. Baker, Richard E. Petty, & Faith Gleicher. Persuasion theory and drug abuse prevention. 193

142 Ellen Wartella & Susan Middlestadt. The evolutions of models of mass communication and persuasion. 205 Philip Palmgreen, Lewis Donohew, Elizabeth Pugzles Lorch, Mary Rogus, David Helm, & Nancy Grant. Sensation seeking, message sensation value, and drug use as mediators of PSA effectiveness. 217 Richard R. Clayton, Anne Cattarello, & Katherine P. Walden. Sensation seeking as a potential mediating variable for school-based prevention intervention: A two-year follow-up of DARE. 229 Analee E. Beisecker. Interpersonal communication strategies to prevent drug abuse by health professionals and the elderly: Contributions of the health belief model. 241 Teresa L. Thompson & Louis P. Cusella. Communication and drug abuse prevention: Information, incentives, and metaphors. 251 1991, Vol. 3(3) Mara B. Adelman. Play and incongruity: Framing safe-sex talk. 139 Nancy Wyatt. Physician-patient relationships: What do doctors say? 157 Mark S. Larson. Health-related messages embedded in prime-time television entertainment. 175 1991, Vol. 3(2) Michael D. Basil, Caroline Schooler, David G. Altman, Michael Slater, Cheryl L. Albright, & Nathan Maccoby. How cigarettes are advertised in magazines: Special messages for special markets. 75 Austin S. Babrow. Tensions between health beliefs and desires: Implications for a health communication campaign to promote a smoking-cessation program. 93 Richard M. Perloff & George B. Ray. An analysis of AIDS brochures directed at intravenous drug users. 113 Paul E. King. Communication, anxiety, and the management of postoperative pain. 127 1991, Vol. 3(1) Edward Maibach, June A. Flora, & Clifford Nass. Changes in self-efficacy and health behavior in response to a minimal contact community health campaign. 1 Marlene M. von Friederichs-Fitzwater, Edward J. Callahan, Neil Flynn, & John Williams. Relational control in physician-patient encounters. 17 Leslie B. Snyder. The impact of the Surgeon Generals understanding AIDS pamphlet in Connecticut. 37 James G. Cantrill. Inducing health care voluntarism through sequential requests: Perceptions of effort and novelty. 59 1990, Vol. 2(3) Angela Williams, Howard Giles, Nikolas Coupland, Michelle Dalby, & Hannah Manassee. The communicative contexts of elderly social support and health: A theoretical model. 123 Austin S. Babrow, David R. Black, & Stephen T. Tiffany. Beliefs, attitude, intentions, and a smoking-cessation program: A planned behavior analysis of communication campaign development. 145

143 Ronald J. Chenail, Paul E. Douthit, Jerry E. Gale, Jeffrey L. Stormberg, G. H. Morris, Joon M. Park, Somkid Sridaromont, & Veronica Schmer. Its probably nothing serious, but . . .: Parents interpretation of referral to pediatric cardiologists. 165 1990, Vol. 2(2) Sharon Lee Hammond, Vicki S. Freimuth, & William Morrison. Radio and teens: Convincing gatekeepers to air health messages. 59 Patricia Geist & Monica Hardesty. Reliable, silent, hysterical, or absurd: Physicians assess patient cues in their medical decision making. 69 Deborah S. Ballard-Reisch. A model of participative decision making for physician-patient interaction. 91 Analee E. Beisecker. Patient power in doctor-patient communication: What do we know? 105 1990, Vol. 2(1) Walter Gantz, Michael Fitzmaurice, & Euisun Yoo. Seat belt campaigns and buckling up: Do the media make a difference. 1 Michael Burgoon, Roxanne Parrott, Judee K. Burgoon, Thomas Birk, Michael Pfau, & Ray Coker. Primary care physicians selection of verbal compliance-gaining strategies. 13 Michael Burgoon, Roxanne Parrott, Judee K. Burgoon, Ray Cocker, Michael Pfau, & Thomas Birk. Patients severity of illness, noncompliance, and locus of control and physicians compliance-gaining messages. 29 Eileen Berlin Ray & George B. Ray. The relationship of paralinguistic cues to impression formation and the recall of medical messages. 47 1989, Vol. 1(4) Virginia Eman Wheeless, Lawrence R. Wheeless, & Sharon Riffle. The role of situation, physician communicator style, and hospital rules climate on nurses decision styles and communication satisfaction. 189 Beth Hartman Ellis, Katherine I. Miller, & Charles W. Given. Caregivers in home health care situations: Measurement and relations among critical concepts. 207 J. Gregory Payne, Scott C. Ratzan, & Robert A. Baukus. Newspaper coverage of the Harvard medicare project: Regional distinctions or discreet disregard? 227 Ruby A. Rouse. A paradigm of intervention: Emotional communication in dentistry. 239 Jack C. S. Ling. New communicable diseases: A communication challenge. 253 1989, Vol. 1(3) Richard L. Street, Jr. Patients satisfaction with dentists communicative style. 137 David G. Dunning & Brian M. Lange. Male and female dental students interaction with patients: A test of sex differences. 155 Jim L. Query, Jr., & Anita C. James. The relationship between interpersonal communication competence and social support among elderly support groups in retirement communities. 165 1989, Vol. 1(2)

144 Paul Arntson, Gregory Makoul, David Pendleton, & Theo Schofield. Patients perceptions of medical encounters in Great Britain: Variations with health loci of control and sociodemographic factors. 75 Dan OHair. Dimensions of relational communication and control during physician-patient interactions. 97 David A. Brenders. Perceived control and the interpersonal dimension of health care. 117 1989, Vol. 1(1) Barbara M. Korsch. Current issues in communication research. 5 Gary L. Kreps. Setting the agenda for health communication research and development: Scholarship that can make a difference. 11 David H. Smith. Studying health communication: An agenda for the future. 17 Paul Arnston. Improving citizens health competencies. 29 Jon F. Nussbaum. Directions for research within health communication. 25 Kathleen K. Reardon & Ross Buck. Emotion, reason, and communication in coping with cancer. 41 Analee E. Beisecker. The influence of a companion on the doctor-elderly patient interaction. 55

145 HUMAN COMMUNICATION RESEARCH 2007, Vol. 33(3) Nick Yee & Jeremy Bailenson. The proteus effect: The effect of transformed self-representation on behavior. 271 Donald G. Ellis & Ifat Maoz. Online argument between Israeli Jews and Palestinians. 291 Kwan Min Lee, Katherine Liao & Seoungho Ryu. Childrens responses to computer-synthesized speech in educational media: Gender consistency and gender similarity effects. 310 Paul Schrodt & Andrew M. Ledbetter. Communication processes that mediate family communication patterns and mental well-being: A mean and covariance structures analysis of young adults from divorced and nondivorced families. 330 Michelle L. M. Wood. Rethinking the inoculation analogy: Effects on subjects with differing preexisting attitudes. 357 Narine S. Yegiyan & Maria Elizabeth Grabe. An experimental investigation of source confusion in televised messages: News versus advertisements. 379 2007, Vol. 33(2) Kory Floyd, Alan C. Mikkelson, Colin Hesse & Perry M. pauley. Affectionate writing reduces total cholesterol: Two randomized, controlled trials. 119 Scott A. Reid, Sahara Byrne, Jennifer S. Brundidge, Mirit D. Shoham & Mikaela L. Marlow. A critical test of self-enhancement, exposure, and self-categorization explanations for first- and third-person perceptions. 143 Li Gong & Clifford Nass. When a talking-face computer agent is half-human and half-humanoid: Human identity and consistency preference. 165 Hee Sun Park & Sandi W. Smith. Distinctiveness and influence of subjective norms, personal descriptive and injunctive norms, and societal descriptive and injunctive norms on behavioral intent: A case study of two behaviors critical to organ donation. 194 Claude H. Miller, Lindsay T. lane, Leslie M. Deatrick, Alice M. Young & Kimberly A. Potts. Psychological reactance and promotional health messages: The effects of controlling language, lexical concreteness, and the restoration of freedom. 219 Stephan A. Rains & Monique Mitchell Turner. Psychological reactance and persuasive health communication: A test and extension of the intertwined model. 241 2007, Vol. 33(1) Joseph B. Walther & Natalya N. Bazarova. Misattribution in virtual groups: The effects of member distribution on self-serving bias and partner blame. 1 K. Laura Keck & Jennifer A. Samp. The dynamics of goals and message productions as revealed in a sequential analysis of conflict interaction. 27 Michael J. Beatty & Alan D. Heisel. Spectrum analysis of cortical activity during verbal planning: Physical evidence for the formation of social interaction routines. 48 L. J. Shrum. The implications of survey method for measuring cultivation effects. 64 Hee Sun Park, Timothy R. Levine, Catherine Y. Kingsley Westerman, Tierney Orfgen & Sarah Foregger. The effects of argument quality and involvement type on attitude formation and attitude change. 81

146 Timothy Stephens & Renee Geel. Normative publication productivity of communication scholars at selected career milestones. 103 2006, Vol. 32(4) (Special Issue: Applications of Multilevel Modeling) Slater, M. D., Snyder, L., & Hayes, A. F. Thinking and modeling at multiple levels: the potential contribution of multilevel modeling to communication theory and research. 375 Andre F. Hayes. A primer on multilevel modeling. 385 Young-Chan Kim & Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach. Community storytelling network, neighborhood context, and civic engagement: A multilevel approach. 411 Karen Kroman Myers & Robert D. McPhee. Influences on member assimilation in workgroups in high-reliability organizations: A multilevel approach. 440 Jennifer A. Theiss & Denise Haunani Solomon. Coupling longitudinal data and multilevel modeling to examine the antecedents and consequences of jealousy experiences in romantic relationships. 469 Scott A. Reid & Sik Hung Ng. The dynamics of intragroup differentiation in an intergroup social context. 504 2006, Vol. 32(3) Suzanne M. Jones & John G. Wirtz. How does the comforting process work? An empirical test of an appraisal-based model of comforting. 217 Leanne K. Knobloch. Relational uncertainty and message production within courtship: Features of date request messages. 244 Robert M. McCann & James M. Honeycutt. A cross-cultural analysis of imagined interactions. 274 Joseph A. Bonito. A longitudinal social relations analysis of participation in small groups. 302 Arun Vishwanath. The effect of the number of opinion seekers and leaders on technology attitudes and choices. 322 Matthew S. Eastin. Video game violence and the female game player: Self- and opponent gender effects on presence and aggressive thoughts. 351 2006, Vol. 32(2) R. Lance Holbert & Glenn J. Hansen. Farenheit 9-11: Need for closure and the priming of affective ambivalence. 109. Monique Mitchell Turner, Rajiv N. Rimal, Daniel Morrison & Hyojin Kim. The role of anxiety in seeking and retaining risk information. 130 Christopher E. Beaudoin & Esther Thorson. The social capital of Blacks and Whites: Differing effects of the mass media in the United States. 157 Lyn M. Van Swol & Emily Seinfeld. Differences between minority, majority, and unanimous group members in the communication of information. 178 Rachel S. Malis & Michael E. Roloff. Demand/withdraw patterns in serial arguments. 198 2006, Vol. 32(1)

147 Stephen I. Reid, Lynn C. Miller, Paul Robert Appleby, Mary E. Nwosu, Sadina Reunaldo, Ada Lauren & Anila Putcha. Socially optimized learning in a virtual environment: Reducing risky sexual behavior among men who have sex with men. 1 Walid A. Afifi & Judith L. Weiner. Seeking information about sexual health: Applying the theory of motivated information management. 35 Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick & Scott Alter. Mood adjustment to social situations through mass media use. 58 Robert M. McCann & Howard Giles. Communication with people of different ages in the workplace. 74 2005, Vol. 31(4) Lisa L. Massi Lindsey. Anticipated guilt as behavioral motivation: An examination of appeals to help unknown others through bone marrow donation. 453 Michelle Shumate, Janet Fulk & Peter Monge. Predictors of the international HIV-AIDS INGO network over time. 482 Jeremy N. Bailenson, Andrew C. Beall, Jack Loomis, Jim Blascovich & Matthew Turk. Transformed social interaction, augmented gaze, and social influence in immersive virtual environments. 511 Kwan Min Lee, Namkee Park & Hayeon Song. Can a robot be perceived as a developing creature? Effects of a robots long-term cognitive developments on its social presence and peoples social responses toward it. 538 Tamara D. Afifi, Loreen N. Olson & Christine Armstrong. The chilling effect and family secrets: the role of self protection, other protection, and communication efficacy. 564 2005, Vol. 31(3) Lori Bergen, Tom Grimes & Deborah Potter. How attention partitions itself during simultaneous message presentations. 311 Heejo Keum, Elliott D. Hillback, Hernando Rojas, Homero Gil De Zunga, Dhavan V. Shah & Douglas M. McCleod. Personifying the radical: How news framing polarizing security concerns and tolerance judgments. 337 Hee Sun Park, Hee Eun Lee & Jeong An Song. I am sorry to send you SPAM: Cross-cultural differences in the use of apologies in email advertising in Korea and the U.S. 365 Richard Clement, Susan C. Baker, Gordon Josephson & Kimberly A. Noel;s. Media effects on ethnic identity among linguistic majorities and minorities. 399 Roxanne Parrott, Kami Silk, Kelly Dorgan, Celeste Condit & Tina Harris. Risk comprehension and judgments of statistical evidentiary appeals. 423

148 2005, Vol. 31(2) Scott A. Reid, Helen N. Gunter & Joanne R. Smith. Aboriginal self-determination in Australia: The effects of minority-majority frames and target universalism on majority collective guilt and compensation attitudes. 189 Yu Yuan, Janet Fulk, Michellle Shumate, Peter R. Monge, J. Alison Bryant & Matthew Matsaganis. Individual participation in organizational information commons. 212 Matthew S. McGlone, Diane Kobrynowicz & Ryan B. Alexander. A certain je ne said quoi: Violation bias in education. 241 Karen Anderson, Jake Harwood & Mary Lee Hummert. The grandparent-grandchild relationship: Implications for models of intergenerational communication. 268 Zachary P. hart & Vernon D. Miller. Context and message content during organizational socialization. 295 2005, Vol. 31(1) Leslie D. Dinauer & Edward L. Fink. Inter-attitude structure and attitude dynamics: A comparison of the hierarchical and Galileo spatial-linkage models. 1 Mary J. Breshnahan, Timothy R. Levine, Sachiyo Morinaga Shearman, Sun Young Lee, Cheong Yi Park & Toru Kiyomiya. A multi-method multi-trait validity assessment of self-construal in Japan, Korea, and the United States. 33 Leanne K. Knobloch. Evaluating a contextual model of responses to relational uncertainty increasing events: The role of intimacy, appraisals, and emotions. 60 Alan Sillars, Ascan Koerner & Mary Anne Fitzpatrick. Communication and understanding in parent-adolescent relationships. 102 Scott A. Reid & Michael A. Hogg. A self-categorization explanation for the third-person effect. 129 Robert P. Hawkins, Suzanne Pingree, Jacqueline Hitchon, Barry Radler, Bradley W. Gorham, Leeann Kahlor, Eileen Gilligan, Ronad C. Serlin, Toni Schmidt, Prathana Kannovakun & Gudbjorg Hildur Kolneins. What produces television attention and attention style? Genre, situation, and individual differences as predictors. 162 2004, Vol. 30(4) Paul J. Taylor & Ian Donald. The structure of communication behavior in stimulated and actual crisis negotiations. 443 John Caughlin & Tamara D. Affifi. When is topic avoidance unsatisfying: Examining moderators of the association between avoidance and dissatisfaction. 479 Valerie Manuscov, Jody Koenig Kellas &April R. Treets. Do unto others? Conversational moves and perceptions of attentiveness toward other face in accounting sequences between friends. 514 David Dryden Henningsen &Mary Lynn Miller Henningsen. The effect of individual difference variables on information sharing in decision-making groups. 540 Nicholas A. Palomares. Gender schematicity, gender identity salience, and gender-linked language use. 556 Patricia M. Sias & Tara Perry. Disengaging from workplace relationships. 589 2004, Vol. 30(3)

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Nurit Tal-Or, David S. Bonniger, Amir Poran & Faith Gleicher. Counterfactual thinking as a mechanism in narrative persuasion. 301 Michael Pfau, Joshua Compton, Kimberly A. Parker, Elaine M. Wittenberg, Chasu An, Monica Ferguson, Heather Horton & Yuri Malyshev. The traditional explanation for resistance versus attitude accessibility. 329 Edward F. Schneider, Annie Lang, Mija Shin & Samuel D. Bradley. Death with a story: How story impacts em0tional, motivation, and physiological responses to first-person shooter video games. 361. Felicia Roberts & Jeffrey D. Robinson. Interobserver agreement on first-stage conversation analytic transcription. 376 Klaus Krippendorf. Reliability in content analysis. 411 Matthew Lombard, Jennifer Snyder-Duch & Cheryl Cammpanella Bracken. A call for standardization in content analysis reliability. 434 2004, Vol. 30(2) Tom Grimes, Lori Bergen, Kathie Nichols, Eric Vernberg & Peter Fonagy. Is psychopathology the key to understanding who some children become aggressive when they are exposed to violent television programming? 153 Kwan Min Lee & Clifford Nass. The multiple source effect and synthesized speech: Doublydisembodied language as a conceptual framework. 182 William P. Eveland, Jr., Juliann Cortese, Heesun Park & Sharon Dunwoody. How web site organization influences free recall, factual knowledge, and knowledge structure diversity. 208 Eun-Ju Lee. Effects of visual representation on social influence in computer-mediated communication 234. Tanya Stivers. No, no no and other types of multiple sayings in social interaction. 260 2004, Vol. 30(1) Aldert Brij, Lucy Akehurst & Stavcroula Soukara. Detecting deceit via analyses of verbal and nonverbal behavior in children and adults. 8 Erina L. MacGeorge, Bo Feng, Ginger L. Butler & Sara K. Budarz. Understanding advice in supportive interactions: Beyond the facework and message evaluation paradigm. 42 Michael W. Kramer, Debbie S. Dougherty & Tamyra A. Pierce. Managing uncertainty during a corporate acquisition: A longitudinal study of communication during an airline acquisition. 71 Dhavan V. Shah, Nojin Kwak, Mike Schmierback & Jessica Zubric. The interplay of news frames on cognitive complexity. 102 William L. Benoit & Glenn J. Hansen. Presidential debate watching, issue knowledge, character evaluation, and vote choice. 145 2003, Vol. 29(4) Leanne K. Knobloch & Denise Haunani Solomon. Manifestations of relationship conceptualization in conversation. 482 Tamara D. Afifi & Paul Schrodt. Uncertainty and avoidance of the state of ones family in stepfamilies, postdivorce single-parent families, and first-marriage families. 516

150 Joseph A. Bonito. Information processes and exchange in mediated groups: Interdependence and interaction. 533 Michele H. Jackson & Marshall Scott Poole. Idea-generation in naturally occurring contexts: Complex appropriation of a simple group procedure. 560 Colloquy: Do Interacting Groups Perform Better than Aggregates of Individuals? Charles Pavitt. Why we have to be reductionists about group memory. 592 Kathleen M. Propp. In search of the assembly bonus effect: Continued exploration of communications role in group memory. 600 Andrea B. Hollingshead & David P. Brandon. Potential benefits of communication in transactive memory systems. 607 Gwen M. Wittenbaum. Putting communication into the study of group memory. 615 Charles Pavitt. Why we still have to be reductionists about group memory. 624 2003, Vol. 29(3) Chris Segrin. Age moderates the relationship between social support and psychosocial problems. 317 Michael T. Stephenson. Examining adolescents responses to antimarijuana PSAs. 343 Rajiv N. Rimal & Kevin Real. Perceived risk and efficacy beliefs as motivators of change: Use of the risk perception attitude (RPA) framework to understand health behaviors. 3760 Laurie K. Lewis, Brian K. Richardson & Stephanie AS. Hamel. When the stakes are communicative: The lambs and the lions share during nonprofit planned change. 400 Colloquy: Should Stepfamily Alpha be Adjusted? Daniel J. OKeefe. Against familywise alpha adjustment. 431 Dean E. Hewes. Methods as tools: A response to OKeefe. 448 Frank Tutzauer. On the sensible application of familywise alpha adjustment. 455 Daniel J. OKeefe. Searching for a defensible application of alpha adjustment. 464 Matthew Lombard, Jennifer Snyder-Duch & Cheryl Campanella Bracken. Correction. 469 2003, Vol. 29(2) Maureen Taylor & Marya L. Doefel. Building interorganizational relationships that build nations. 153 Ling Chen. Conversation orientation and cognitive processes: A comparison of U.S. students in initial interaction with native- versus nonnative-speaking partners. 182 Colloquy: Are Self-construal Scales Valid? Timothy R. Levine, Mary Jiang Bresnahan, Hee Sun Park, Maria Knight Lapinski, Gewn M. Wittenbaum, Sachiyo Morinaga Sheamna, Sun Young Leee, Donghun Chung, Rie Ohashi. Self-construal scales lack validity. 210 William B. Gudykunst & Carmen M. Lee. Assessing the validity of self construal scales: A response to Levine et al. 253 Min-Sun Kim & Narayan S. Raja. When validity testing lacks validity: Comment on Levine et al. 275 Timothy R. Levine, Mary Jiang Bresnahan, Hee Sun Park, Maria Knight Lapinski, Tai Sik Lee & Dong Wook Lee. The (in)validity of self-construal scales revisited. 291

151

2003, Vo. 29(1) John P. Caughlin. Family communication standards: What counts as excellent family communication and how are such standards associated with family satisfaction. 5 Tamara D. Golish. Stepfamily communication strengths: Understanding the ties that bind. 41 Rachel Oakley Hsuing & Richard P. Bagozzi. Validating the relationship qualities of influence and persuasion with the family social relations model. 81 Amy I. Nathanson & Mong-Shan Yang. The effects of mediation content and form on childrens responses to violent television. 111 Anthony J. Roberto, Gary Meyer, Franklin J. Boster & Heather L. Roberto. Adolescents decisions about verbal and physical aggression: An application of the theory of reasoned action. 135 2002, Vol. 28(4) (Special Issue: Statistical and Methodological Issues in Communication Research) Timothy R. Levine, Michael J. Beatty & Dan OKeefe. Introduction: Statistical and methodological issues in communication research. 471 Franklin J. Boster. On making progress in communication science. 473 Michael A. Shapiro. Generalizability in communication research. 491 Michael D. Basil, William J. Brown & Mihai C. Bocarnea. Differences in univariate values versus multivariate relationships: Findings from a study of Diana, Princess of Wales. 501 Rachel A. Smith, Timothy R. Levine, Kenneth A. Lachlan & Thomas A. Fediuk. The high cost of complexity in experimental design and data analysis: Type I and Type II error in multiway ANOVA. 515 R. Lance Holbert & Michael T. Stephenson. Structural equation modeling in the communication sciences, 1995-2000. 531 John E. Hunter & Mark A. Hamilton. The advantages of using standardized scores in causal analysis. 552 Hee Sun Park, Rene Dailey & Daisy Lemus. The use of exploratory factor analysis and principal components analysis in communication research. 562 Thomas Hugh Feeley. Comment on halo effects in rating and evaluation research. 578 Matthew Lombard, Jennifer Snyder-Duch & Charyl Campanella Bracken. Content analysis in mass communication: Assessment and reporting of intercoder reliability. 587 Michael J. Beatty. Do we know a vector from a scale? Why measures of association (not their squares) are appropriate indices of effect. 605 Timothy R. Levine & Craig R. Hullett. Eta squared, partial eta squared, and misreporting of effect size in communication research. 612 2002, Vol. 28(3) Lisa Collins Tidwell & Joseph B. Walther. Computer-mediated communication effects on disclosure, impressions, and interpersonal evaluations: Getting to know one another a bit at a time. 317 Eun-Ju Lee & Clifford Nass. Experimental tests of normative group influence and representation effects in computer-mediated communication: When interacting via computers differs from interacting with computers. 349

152 Pradeep Sopory and James Price Dillard. The persuasive effects of metaphor: A meta-analysis. 382 Marianne Schmid Mast. Dominance as expressed and inferred through speaking time. 420 Erina L. MacGeorge, Rochelle M. Lichtman & Lauren C. Pressey. The evaluation of advice in supportive interaction: Facework and contextual factors. 451 2002, Vol. 28(2) Steven R. Corman, Timothy Kuhn, Robert D. McPhee & Kevin J. Dooley. Studying complex discursive systems: Centering resonance analysis of communication. 157 Colloquy on Information Sharing Walid A. Afifi & Judith L. Weiner. Introduction: Information seeking across contexts. 207 Artemio Ramirez, Jr., Joseph B. Walther, Judee K. Burgoon & Michael Sunnafrank. Informationseeking strategies, uncertainty, and computer-mediated communication.: Toward a conceptual model. 213 Elizabeth Wolfe Morrison. Information seeking within organizations. 229 Leanne K. Knobloch & Denise Haunani Solomon. Information seeking beyond initial interaction: Negotiating relational uncertainty within close relationships. 243 Dale E. Brashers, Daena J. Goldsmith & Elaine Hsieh. Information seeking and avoiding in health contexts. 258 John R. Baldwin & Stephen K. Hunt. Information-seeking behavior in intercultural and intergroup communication. 272 Charles R. Berger. Strategic and nonstrategic information acquisition. 287 Hartmut B. Mokros & Mark Aakhus. From information-seeking behavior to meaning engagement practice: Implications for communication theory and research. 298 2002, Vol. 28(1) Jack McLeod & Dale Kunkel. His word respected, his judgment revered: In memory of Steven H. Chaffee. 5 Paul J. Taylor. A cylindrical model of communication behavior in child negotiations. 7 John P. Caughlin. The demand/withdraw pattern of communication as a predictor of marital satisfaction over time: Unresolved issues and future directions. 49 Melissa Nichols Saphir & Steven H. Chaffee. Adolescents contributions to family communication patterns. 86 Michael A. Shapiro & Julia R. Fox. The role of typical and atypical events in story memory. 109 Denise Haunani Solomon, James Price Dillard & Jason W. Anderson. Episode type, attachment orientation, and frame salience: Evidence for a theory of relational framing. 136 (Research Note) 2001, Vol. 27(4) Timothy R. Levine & Steven A. McCornack. Behavioral adaptation, confidence, and heuristicbased explanations of the probing effect. 471 Judee K. Burgoon, David B. Buller & Kory Floyd. Does participation affect deception success? A test of the interactivity principle. 503

153 Yan Xu & Brant R. Buleson. Effects of sex, culture, and support type on perceptions of spousal social support. 535 Suzanne M. Jones & Laura K. Guerrero. The effects of nonverbal immediacy and verbal person centeredness in the emotional and support process. 567 Renee Edwards & Richard Bello. Interpretations of messages: The influence of equivocation, face concerns, and ego-involvement. 597 2001, Vol. 27(3) Laura E. Drake. The culture-negotiation link: Integrative and distributive bargaining through an intercultural communication lens. 317 G. Blake Armstrong & Stan A. Kaplowitz. Sociolinguistic inference and intercultural coorientation: A Bayesian model of communicative competence in intercultural interaction. 350 Men-Sun Kim, Krystna S. Aune, John E. Hunter, Hyun-Joo Kim & Jung-Sik Kim. The effect of culture and self-construals on predispositions toward verbal communication. 382 John L. Sherry. The effects of violent video games on aggression: A meta-analysis. 409 Susan D. Boon & Chistrine D. Lomore. Admirer-celebrity relationships among young adults: Explaining perceptions of celebrity influence on identity. 432 2001, Vol. 27(2) L. J. Shrum & Valerie Darmann Bischak. Mainstreaming, resonance, and impersonal impact: Testing moderators of the cultivation effect for estimates of crime risk. 187 Michael Pfau, Erin Alison Szabo, Jason Anderson, Joshua Morrill, Jessica Zubric & Jua-Hsin Wan. The role and impact of affect in the process of resistance to persuasion. 216 Jeffrey D. Robinson & Tanya Stivers. Achieving activity transitions in physician-patient encounters: From history taking to physical examination. 253 Ashley P. Duggan & Roxanne L. Parrott. Physicians nonverbal rapport building and pateints talk about the subjective component of illness. 299 (Research note) 2001, Vol. 27(1) Cindy H. White & Judee K. Burgoon. Adaptation and communicative design: Patterns of interaction in truthful and deceptive conversations. 5 James Price Dillard & Eugenia Peck. Persuasion and the structure of affect: Dual systems and discrete emotions as complementary models. 38 Andrew J. Flanagan, Peter Monge & Janet Fulk. The value of formative investment in organizational federations. 69 L. J. Shrum. Processing strategy moderates the cultivation effect. 94 Anthony Mulac, James J. Bradac & Pamela Gibbons. Empirical support for the gender-as-culture hypothesis: An intercultural analysis of male/female language differences. 121 Andrew J. Flanagin & Miriam J. Metzger. Internet use in the contemporary media environment. 153 2000, Vol. 26(4)

154 Mara Olekalns & Philip L. Smith. Understanding optimal outcomes: The role of strategy sequences in competitive negotiations. 527 Tim Kuhn & Marshall Scott Poole. Do conflict management styles affect group decision making? Evidence from a longitudinal field study. 558 Deborah A. Cai, Steven R. Wilson & Laura E. Drake. Culture in the context of intercultural negotiation: Individualism-collectivism and paths to integrative agreements. 591 Andrew J. Flanagin. Social pressures on organizational website adoption. 618 Daniel J. Canary. Colloquy: Traveling the communication research highway: CARs versus SUVs and other concerns. 647 2000, Vol. 26(3) Tom Postmes, Russell Spears & Martin Lea. The formation of group norms in computermediated communication. 341 Dale E. Brashers, Stephen M. Haas, Renee S. Klingle & Judith L. Neidig. Collective AIDS activism and individuals perceived self-advocacy in physician-patient communication. 372 Patrick B. OSullivan. What you dont know wont hurt me: Impression management functions of communication channels in relationships. 403 Beth A. Le Poire, Jennifer S. Hallett & Karen T. Erlandson. An initial test of inconsistent nurturing as control theory: How partners of drug abusers assist their partners sobriety. 432 Jon A. Hess. Maintaining nonvoluntary relationships with disliked partners: An investigation into the use of distancing behaviors. 458 Chris Segrin & Jeanne Flora. Poor social skills are a vulnerability factor in the development of psychosocial problems. 489 Melanie R. Trost. Colloquy: Strategies at the edge: Negotiating relational borders. 515

155 2000, Vol. 26(2) Jennifer L. Monahan & Pamela J. Lannutti. Alcohol as social lubricant: Alcohol myopia theory, social self-esteem, and social interaction. 175 Walid A. Affifi & Judee K. Brugoon. The impact of violations of uncertainty and the consequences for attractiveness. 203 Daena J. Goldsmith & Erina L. Macgeorge. The impact of politeness and relationship on perceived quality of advice about a problem. 234 Kathleen Ellis. Perceived teacher confirmation: The development and validation of an instrument and two studies of the relationship to cognitive and affective learning. 264 Timothy G. Pollock, Robert C. Whitbred & Noshir Contractor. Social information processing and job characteristics: A simultaneous test of two theories with implications for job satisfaction. 292 John A. Daly. Colloquy: Getting older and getting better: Challenges for communication research. 331 2000, Vol. 26(1) Juliette H. Walma Van Der Molen & Tom H. A. Van Der Voort. The impact of television, print, and audio on childrens recall of the news: A study of three alternative explanations for the dual-coding hypothesis. 3 Charles R. Berger. Quantitative depictions of threatening phenomena in news reports: The scary world of frequency data. 27 William J. Schenck-Hamlin, David E. Proctor & Deborah J. Rumsey. The influence of negative advertising frames on political cynicism and politician accountability. 53 Matthew Lombard, Robert D. Reich, Maria Elizabeth Grable, Cheryl Campanella Bracken & Theresa Bolmarchich Ditton. Presence and television: The role of screen size. 75 John Newhagen. Colloquy: Information Processes: A more inclusive paradigm for the study of mass media effects. 99 Michael G. Cruz, David Dyrden Henningsen & Mary Lynn Miller Williams. The presence of norms in the absence of groups? The impact of normative influence under hidden-profile conditions. 104 Gail E. Coover & Sheila T. Murray. The communicated self: Exploring the interaction between self and social context. 125 Kyle James Tusing & James Price Dillard. The sounds of dominance: Vocal precursors of perceived dominance during interpersonal influence. 148 1999,Vol. 25(4) (Special Issue: Analysis of HCR and the Communication Discipline) Robert D. McPhee & Edward L. Fink. Introduction. 453 Dale E. Brashers & Sally Jackson. Changing conceptions of message effects: A 24-year overview. 257 Tara M. Emmers-Sommer & Mike Allen. Surveying the effect of media effects: A meta-analytic summary of media effects research in Human Communication Research. 478 Timothy Stephen. Computer-assisted concept analysis of HCRs first 25 years. 498 Michele T. Violanti. An analysis of HCRs theoretical and methodological evolution. 514 Glen H. Stamp. A qualitative constructed interpersonal communication model: A grounded theory analysis. 531

156 Leslie D. Dinauer & Kristen Ondeck. Gender and institutional affiliation as determinants of publishing in Human Communication Research. 548 Patrick OSullivan. Bridging the mass-interpersonal divide: Synthesis scholarship in HCR. 569 Marya L. Dorfel & George A. Barnett. A semantic network analysis of the International Communication Association. 589 William J. White. Academic topographies: A network analysis of disciplinarity among communication faculty. 604 Everett M. Rogers. Anatomy of the two subdisciplines of communication study. 618 1998, Vol. 25(3) Adrianne W. Kunkel & Brant R. Burleson (1999). Assessing explanations for sex differences in emotional support. 307 Kory Floyd & Michael Voloudakis. Affectionate behavior in adult platonic friendships: Interpreting and evaluating expectancy violations. 341 Anita L. Vangelisti, Susan D. Corbin, Anne E. Lucchetti & Rhonda J. Sprague. Couples concurrent cognitions: The influence of relational satisfaction on the thoughts couples have as they converse. 370 James M. Honeycutt & John M. Wiemann. Analysis of functions of talk and reports of imagined interactions (IIs) during engagement and marriage. 399 Dougles L. Kelley. Relational expectancy fulfillment as an explanatory variable for distinguishing couple types. 420 Mary Anne Fitzpatrick. Racing toward the millennium: Twenty-five years of research on communication in relationships. 443 (Colloquy) 1999, Vol. 25(2) Prashant Bordia & Ralph L. Rosnow. Rumor rest stops on the information highway: transmission patterns in a computer-mediated rumor clinic. 163 Prabu David. News concreteness and visual-verbal association: Do news pictures narrow the recall gap between concrete and abstract news? 180 John G. Oetzel. Explaining individual communication processes in homogeneous and heterogeneous groups through individualism-collectivism and self-construal. 202 Karen Tracy & Sarah K. Tracy. Rudeness at 911: Reconceptualizing face and face attack. 225 Young Yun Kim, Philip Lujan & Lynda Dee Dixon. I can walk both ways: Identity integration of American Indians in Oklahoma. 252 Ann Weatherall. Women and men in language: An analysis of seminaturalistic person descriptions. 275 Judith N. Martin & Lisa A. Flores. Colloquy: Challenges in contemporary culture and communication research. 293

157 1998, Vol. 25(1) Jerry Monroe Jordan. Executive cognitive control in communication: Extending plan-based theory. 5 James M. Honeycutt, James G. Cantrill, Pamela Kelly & David Lambkin. How do I love thee? Let me consider my options: Cognitive, verbal strategies, and the escalation of intimacy. 39 Steven R. Wilson, Carlos G. Aleman & Geoff B. Leatham. Identity implications of influence goals: A revised analysis of face-threatening acts with application to seeking compliance with same-sex friends. 64 Jeffrey David Robinson. getting down to business: Talk, gaze, and body orientation during openings of doctor-patient consultations. 97 Mary Lee Hummert, Jaye L. Shaner, Teri A. Garstka & Clark Henry. Communication with older adults: The influence of age stereotypes, context, and communicator age. 124 Austin Babrow. Colloquy: Developing multiple process theory of communication. 152 1998, Vol. 24(4) Jennifer L. Monahan. I dont know it but I like you: The influence of nonconscious affect on person perception. 480 Peter A. Andersen, Laura K. Guerrero, David B. Buller & Peter F. Jorgensen. An empirical comparison of three theories of nonverbal immediacy exchange. 501 Maureen R. Heald, Noshir S. Contractor, Laura M. Koehly & Stanley Wasserman. Formal and emergent predictors of coworkers perceptual congruence on an organizations social structure. 536 April R. Trees & Valerie Manusov. Managing face concerns in criticism: Integrating nonverbal behaviors as a dimension of politeness in female friendship dyads. 564 Audrey J. Weiss & Barbara J. Wilson. Childrens cognitive and emotional responses to the portrayal of negative emotions in family-formatted situation comedies. 584 Rajiv N. Rimal & June A. Flora. Bidirectional familial influences in dietary behavior: Test of a model of campaign influences. 610 1998, Vol. 24(3) (Special Issue: Communication Theory and Health Campaign Research) Thomas W. Valente, Patricia Paredes & Patricia R. Poppe, Matching the message to the process: The relative ordering of knowledge, attitudes, and practices in behavior change research. 366 Roxanne Parrott, Jennifer Monahan, Stuart Ainsworth & Carol Steiner. Communicating to farmers about skin cancer: The behavioral adaptation model. 386 Caroline Schooler, Steven H. Chaffee, June A. Flora & Connie Roser. Health campaign channels: Tradeoffs among reach, specificity, and impact. 410 David B. Buller, Ron Borland & Michael Burgoon. Impact of behavioral intention on effectiveness of message features; Evidence form the family sun safety project. 433 Lewis Donohue, Elizabeth Pugzles Lorch & Philip Palmgreen. Applications of a theoretic model of information exposure to health interventions. 454

158 1997, Vol. 24(2) Michael Pfau, Kyle James Tusing, Ascan F. Koerner, Waipeng Lee, Linda C. Godbold, Linda J. Penaoloza, Violet Shu-Huei Yang & Yang-Huie Hong. Enriching the inoculation construct: The role of critical components in the process of resistance. 187 John S. Seiter. Honest or deceitful? A study of persons mental models for judging veracity. 216 Laura Leets & Howard Giles. Words as weaponswhen do they wound? Investigations of harmful speech. 260 Charla L. Markham Shaw. Personal narrative: Revealing self and reflecting other. 302 J. David Johnson, Marcy E. Meyer, Judy M. Berkowitz, Caroline T. Ethington & Vernon D. Miller. testing two contrasting structural models of innovativeness in a contractual network. 320 L. J. Shrum. The role of course confusion in cultivation effects may depend on processing strategy: A comment on Mares (1996). 349 1997, Vol. 24(1) Steven W. Knowlton & Charles R. Berger. Message planning, communication failure and cognitive load: Further explorations of the hierarchy principle. 4 David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen. Implicit theories of persuasion. 31 Daniel J. OKeefe & Marianne Figge. A guilt-based explanation of the door-in-the-face influence strategy. 64 Sik Hung Ng, James H. Lui, Ann Weatherall & Cynthia S. F. Loong. Younger adults communication experiences and contact with elders and peers. 82 Patrice M. Buzzanell & Nancy A. Burrell. Family and workplace conflict: Examining metaphorical conflict schemas and expressions across context and sex. 109 Shinobu Suzuki. Cultural transmission in internal organizations: Impact of interpersonal communication patterns in intergroup contexts. 147 1997, Vol. 23(4) (Special Issue: Qualitative Contributions to Empirical Research) Deana J. Goldsmith & Kristine Fitch. The normative context of advice as social support. 453 Richard Buttny. Reported speech in talking race on campus. 477 E. Sean Rintel & Jeffrey Pittam. Strangers in a strange land: Interaction management on internet relay chat. 507 Rebecca Ann Lind. Ethical sensitivity in viewer expectations of a TV news investigative report. 535 Wayne A. Beach & Terri R. Metzger. Claiming insufficient knowledge. 562 Anita Pomerantz, B. J. Fehr & Jack Ende. When supervising physicians see patients: Strategies used in difficult situations. 589 1997, Vol. 23(3) Cynthia Hoffner. Childrens emotional reactions to a scary film: The role of prior outcome information and coping style. 323 Joseph B. Walther. Group and interpersonal effects in international computer-mediated collaboration. 342

159 Thomas S. Freeley & George A. Barnett. Predicting employee turnover from communication networks. 370 Kathryn Dindia, Mary Anne Fitzpatrick & David A. Kenny. Self-disclosure in spouse and stranger interaction: A social relations analysis. 388 Beth A. Le Poire, Julie Haynes, Jennifer Driscoll, Bennett N. Driver, Tracy F. Wheelis, Mary Kay Hyde, Matthew Prochaska & Lauria Ramos. Attachment as a function of parental and partner approach-avoidance tendencies. 413 1996, Vol. 23(2) Abran J. Salazar. Ambiguity and communication effects on small group decision-making performance. 155 Andreas B. Hollingshead. Information suppression and status persistence in group decision making: The effects of communication media. 193 Angie Williams & Howard Giles. Intergenerational conversations: Young adults retrospective accounts. 220 Marina Krcmar. Family communication patterns, discourse behavior, and child television viewing. 251 Marie-Louise Mares. The role of source confusions in televisions cultivation of social reality judgments. 278 Robert N. Bostrom. Memory, cognitive processing, and the process of listening: A reply to Thomas and Levine. 298 L. Todd Thomas & Timothy R. Levine. Further thoughts on recall, memory, and the measurement of listening: A rejoinder to Bostrom. 306 1996, Vol. 23(1) Cees M. Koolstra & Van Der Voort, T. H. A. Longitudinal effects of television on childrens leisure-time reading: A test of three explanatory models. 4 J. Gerard Power, Sheila T. Murphy & Gail Coover. Priming prejudice: How stereotypes and counter-stereotypes influence attribution of responsibility and credibility among ingroups and outgroups. 36 Michael W. Kramer. A longitudinal study of peer communication during job transfers: The impact of frequency, quality, and network multiplexity on adjustment. 59 Daena J. Goldsmith & Leslie A. Baxter. Constituting relationships in talk: A taxonomy of speech events in social and personal relationships. 87 Krystyna Strzyzewski Aune, David B. Buller & R. Kelly Aune. Display rule development in romantic relationships: Emotion management and perceived appropriateness of emotions across relationship stages. 87

160 1996, Vol. 22(4) Noshir S. Contractor, David R. Seibold & Mark A. Heller. Interactional influence in the structuring of media use in groups: Influence in members perceptions of group decision support system use. 451 L. J. Shrum. Psychological processes underlying cultivation effects: Further tests of construct accessibility. 482 William B. Gudykunst, Yuko Matsumoto, Stella Ting-Toomey, Tsukasa Nishida, Kwangsu Kim & Sam Heyman. The influence of cultural individualism-collectivism, self construals, and individual values on communication style across cultures. 510 Aldert Vrij, Gun R. Semin & Ray Bull. Insight into behavior displayed during deception. 510 Edward Truman Funkhouser. The evaluative use of citation analysis for communication journals. 563 Timothy R. Levine & Steven A. McCornack. A critical analysis of the behavioral adaptation explanation of the probing effect. 575 David R. Buller, James B. Stiff & Judee K. Burgoon. Behavioral adaptation in deceptive transactions: Fact or fiction: Reply to Levine and McCornack. 589 Timothy R. Levine & Steven A. McCornack. Can behavioral adaptation explain the probing effect: Rejoinder to Buller et al. 604 1996, Vol. 22(3) Dominic A. Infante, Andrew S. Rancer & Felecia F. Jordan. Affirming and nonaffirming style, dyad sex, and the perception of argumentation and verbal aggression in an interpersonal dispute. 315 Laura K. Guerrero & Judee K. Burgoon. Attachment styles and reactions to nonverbal involvement change in romantic dyads: Patterns of reciprocity and compensation. 335 Jeannette Schmid & Klaus Fiedler. Language and implicit attributions in the Nuremberg trials: Analyzing prosecutors and defense attorneys closing speeches. 371 Joseph M. Kayany, C. Edward Worting & Edward J. Forrest. Relational control and interactive media choice in technology-mediated communication situations. 399 Clyde W. Holsapple, Linda Ellis Johnson & Vincent R. Waldron. A formal model for the study of communication support systems. 422

161 JOURNAL OF APPLIED COMMUNICATION RESEARCH 2007, Vol. 35(2) Timothy A. Gibson. WARNINGThe existing media system may be toxic to your health: Health communication and the politics of media reform. 125 (Commentary) Elizabeth A. Gill & Austin S. Babrow. To hope or to know: Coping with uncertainty and ambivalences in womens magazine breast cancer articles. 133 Juliann C. Scholl. The use of humor to promote patient-centered care. 156 Lisa Sparks, Melinda M. Villagram, Jessica Parker-Railey & Cory B. Cunningham. A patientcentered approach to breaking bad news: Communication guidelines for health care providers. 177 Stephen A. Rains. The anonymity effect: The influence of anonymity on perceptions of sources of information on health websites. 197 2007, Vol. 35(1) (Special Issue: 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season) Dennis S. Gouran & Matthew M. Seeger. Introduction to special issue on the 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season. 1 (Editorial) Marsha L. Vanderford, Tersa Nastoff, Jana L. Telfer & Sandra E. Bonzo. Emergency communication challenges in response to hurricane Katrina: lessons from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 9 Robert S., Littlefield & Andrea M. Quenette. Crisis leadership and Hurricane Katrina: the portrayal of authority by the media in natural disasters. 26 George L. Daniels & Ginger Miller Loggins. Conceptualizing continuous coverage: A strategic model for wall-to-wall local television weather broadcasts. 48 Claire H. Procopio & Steven T. Procopio. Do you know what it means to miss New Orleans? Internet communication, geographic community, and social capital in crisis. 67 Damion Waymer & Robert L. Heath. Emergent agents: the forgotten public in crisis communication and issues management research. 88 Kenneth A. Lachlan & Patric R. Spense. Hazard and outrage: Developing a psychometric instrument in the aftermath of Katrina. 109 2006, Vol. 34(4) Vickie Cox Edmondson. Organizational surveys: A system for employee voice. 307 Melissa Bigam Stahley & Josh Boyd. Winning is(nt) everything: The paradox of excellent and the challenge of organizational epideictic. 311 Tim A. Grice. We do it, but they dont: Multiple categorizations and work team communication. 331 Matthew S. Thatcher. Bahktin applied: Employing dialogism to analyze the interplay of the ideologies of individualism and community within the discourse of Alcoholic Anonymous. 349 Johny T. Garner. Masters of the university? Resource dependency and interorganizational power relationships at NASA. 368 Spoma Jovanovic & Roy V. Wood. Communication ethics and ethical culture: A study of the ethics initiative in Denver city government. 386

162 2006, Vol. 34(3) Special Section: Best Practices in Risk and Crisis Communication Steven J. Venette. Introduction. 229 Matthew W. Seeger. Best practices in crisis communication: An expert panel process. 232 Robert L. Heath. Best practices in crisis communication: Evolution of practice through research. 245 Barbara Reynolds. Response to best practices. 249 David Ropeik. Best practices response. 253 Peter M. Sandman. Crisis communication best practices: Some quibbles and additions. 257 Amy OConnor. Merchant of mercy, merchant of death: How values advocacy messages influence jury deliberations. 263 William L. Benoit. President Bushs image repair effort on Meet the Press: The complexities of defeasibility. 285 2006, Vol. 34(2) Theodore E. Zorn, Juliet Roper, Kristen Broadfoot & C. Kay Weaver. Focus groups as sites of influential interaction: Building communication self-efficacy and effective attitudinal change in discussing controversial topics. 115 Michael W. Kramer. Shared leadership in a community theater group: Filling the leadership role. 141 Mary Ann Renz. Paving consensus: Enacting, challenging, and revising the consensus process in a cohousing community. 163 Scott W. Campbell & Michael J. Kelley. Mobile phone use in AA networks: An exploratory study. 191 Jennifer R. Warren, Michael L. Hecht, David A. Wagstaff, Elvira Elek, Khadidiatou Ndiaya, Patricia Dustman & Flavio F. Marsiglia. Communication prevention: The effects of keepin it REAL classroom videotapes and televisions PSAs on middle-school students substance use. 209. 2006, Vol. 34(1) Lynn M. Harter, Jennifer A. Scott, David R. Novak, Mark Leeman & Jerimiah F. Morris. Freedom through flight: Performing a counter-narrative of disability. 3 Dawn O. Braithwaite & Leslie A. Baxter. Youre my parent but youre not: Dialectical tensions in stepchildrens perceptions about communicating with the nonresidential parent. 30 Gerald L. Pepper & Gregory S. Larson. Cultural identity tensions in a post-acquisition organization. 49 David M. Ryfe. Narrative and deliberation in small group forums. 72 Karyn Ogata Jones, Bryan E. Denham & Jeffrey K. Springston. Effects of mass and interpersonal communication on breast cancer screening: Advancing agenda-setting theory in health contexts. 94 2005, Vol. 33(4) Brent D. R. Linking communication scholarship and professional practice in colleges and universities. 294 (Commentary)

163 Lynn M. Harter, Charlene Berquist, B. Scott Titsworth, David Novak & Ted Brokaw. The structuring of invisibility among the hidden homeless: The politics of space, stigma, and identity construction. 305 Michael Robert Dennis & Austin S. Babrow. Effects of narrative and paradigmatic judgmental orientations on the use of qualitative and quantitative evidence in health related inference. 328 Henry N. Young & Rebecca J. Welch Cline. Textual cues in direct-to-consumer prescription drug advertising: Motivators to communicate with physicians. 348 2005, Vol. 33(3) (Special Issue: Communication Research and Institutional Review Boards) Debbie S. Dougherty & Michael W. Kramer. Special issue introduction: A rationale for scholarly examination of institutional review boards: A case study. 183 Ann Hamilton. The development and operation of IRBs: Medical regulations and social science. 189 Communication scholars narratives of IRB Experiments Ascan F. Koerner. Communication scholars communication and relationship with their IRBs. 231 Craig R. Scott. Anonymity in applied communication research: Tensions between IRBs, researchers, and human subjects. 242 Betsy Wackernagel Bach. The organizational tension of othering. 258 Kristine L. Fitch. Difficult interactions between IRBs and investigators: Applications and solutions. 269 Debbie S. Dougherty & Michael W. Kramer. Special issue conclusion: Organizational power and the institutional review board. 277 2005, Vol. 33(2) Julie Apker, Kathleen M. Propp & Wendy S. Zabava Ford. Negotiating status and identity tensions in healthcare team interactions: An exploration of nurse role dialectics. 93 Paul D. Turmna. Coaches use of anticipatory and counterfactual regret messages during competition. 116 Susan Tyler Eastman, Nancy C. Schwartz & Xiaomei Cai. Promoting movies on television. 139 Michael W. Kramer. Communication and social exchange processes in community theater groups. 159

164 2005, Vol. 33(1) Patrice M. Buzzanell & Meina Liu. Struggling with maternity leave policies and practices: A poststructuralist feminist analysis of gendered organizing. 1 Amy M. Bippus & Stacy L. Young. Owning your emotions: Reactions to expressions of selfversus other-attributed positive and negative emotions. 26 Paige W. Toller. Negotiation of dialectical contradictions by parents who have experienced the death of a child. 46 Clifton Scott & Karen Kroman Myeres. The socialization of emotion: Learning emotion management at the fire station. 67 2004, Vol. 32(4) Kristen Lucas & Patrice M. Buzzanell. Blue-collar work, career, and success: Occupational narratives of Sisu. 273 Debbie S. Dougherty & Mary Jeanette Smythe. Sensemaking, organizational culture, and sexual harassment. 293 Tyler R. Harrison & Calvin Morrill. Ombuds processes and disputant reconciliation. 318 Joshua A. Compton& Michael Pfau. Use of inoculation to foster resistance to credit card marketing targeting college students. 343 2004, Vol. 32(3) H. L. Goodall, Jr. Narrative ethnography as applied communication research. 185 (Commentary) Sunwolf & Laura Leets. Being left out: Rejecting outsiders and communicating group boundaries in childhood and adolescent groups. 195 Leslie A. Baxter, Randy Hirokawa, John B. Lowe, Peter Nathan & Liz Pearce. Dialogic voices in talk about drinking and pregnancy. 224 Michael A. Gross, Laura K. Guerrero & Jess K. Alkberts. Perceptions of conflict strategies and communication competence in task-oriented dyads. 249 2004, Vol. 32(2) (Special Issue: Organized Irrationality? Coping with Paradox, Contradiction, and Irony in Organizational Communication) Angela Trethewey & Karen L. Ashcraft. Practicing disorganization: The development of applied perspectives on living with tension. 81 Lynn M. Harter. Masculinity(s), the agrarian frontier myth, and cooperative ways of organizing: Contradictions and tensions in the experience and enactment of democracy. 89 Sarah J. Tracy. Dialectic, contradiction, or double bind? Analyzing and theorizing employee reactions to organizational tensions. 119 Diane M. Martin. Humor in middle management: Women negotiating the paradoxes of organizational life. 147 Karen L. Ashcraft & Angela Trethewey. Developing tension: An agenda for applied research on the organization of irrationality. 171 2004, Vol. 32(1)

165 Mary M. Meares, John G. Oetzel, Annette Torres, Denise Derkacs & Tamar Ginossar. Employee mistreatment and muted voices in the culturally diverse workplace. 4 Lawrence B. Rosenfeld, Jack M. Richman & Steven K. May. Information adequacy, job satisfaction and organizational culture in a dispersed-network organization. 28 Michelle E. Riedlinger, Cindy Gallois, Susan McKay & Jeffrey Pittam. Impact of social group processes and functional diversity on communication in networked organizations. 55 2003, Vol. 31(4) William N. Elwood, Kathryn Greene & Karen K. Carter. Gentlemen dont speak: Communication norms and condom use in bathhouses. 277 Sandra L. French. Reflections on healing: Framing strategies utilized by acquaintance rape survivors. 298 Jordan Soliz & Jake Harwood. Perceptions of communication in a family relationship and the reduction of intergroup prejudice. 320 Xiaomei Cai, Walter Gantz, Nancy Schwartz & Xinye Wang. Childrens website adherence to the FTCs online privacy protection rule. 346 2003, Vol. 31(3) Eileen Berlin Ray. Football, social support, and war: Some musings of an applied communication scholar. 185 (Commentary) Wendy S. Zabava Ford. Communication practices of professional service providers: Predicting customer satisfaction and loyalty. 189 Marya L. Doerfel & Pamela S. Marsh. Candidate-issue positioning in the context of presidential debates. 212 Susan Tyler Eastman, Gregory D. Newton & Paul D. Bolls. How promotional content changes ratings: The impact of appeals, humor, and presentation. 236 Amy M. Bippus, Patricia Kearney, Timothy G. Plax & Catherine F. Brooks. Teacher access and mentoring abilities: Predicting the outcome value of extra class communication. 260 2003, Vol. 31(2) Laura L. Ellingsley. Interdisciplinary health care teamwork in the clinic backstage. 93 Heather M. Zoller. Health on the line: Identity and disciplinary control in employee occupational health and safety discourse. 118 J. Kevin Barge & William E. Logues. Parent, student, and teacher perceptions of parental involvement. 140 Katherine A. McComas. Citizen satisfaction with public meetings used for risk communication. 164

166 2003, Vol. 31(1) Dawn O. Braithwaite & Nancy J. Eckstein. How people with disabilities communicatively manage assistance: Helping as instrumental social support. 1 Patrice M. Buzzanell & Lynn H. Turner. Emotion work revealed by job loss discourse: Backgrounding-foregrounding of feelings, construction of normalcy, and (re)instituting of traditional masculinities. 27 Mark G. Frank & Thomas Hugh Feeley. To catch a liar: Challenges for research in lie detection training. 58 Mary B. McPherson, Patricia Kearney & Timothy G. Plax. The dark side of instruction: Teacher anger as classroom norm violations. 76 2002, Vol. 30(4) Timothy L. Sellnow, Matthew M. Seeger & Robert Ulmer. Chaos theory, informational needs, and natural disasters. 269 David E. Williams & Bolanle A. Olaniran. Crisis communication in racial issues. 293 Special Forum on Funded Research Michael D. Slater. Communication research on a broader stage: An introduction to the special forum on funded research in communication. 315 Leslie Snyder & Beth A. Le Poire. Writing your first successful grant application to conduct communication research. 321 Jane D. Brown. Doing relevant, funded mass media research. 334 Everett M. Rogers. Funding international communication research. 341 Zena Biocca & Fran Biocca. Building bridges across fields, universities, and countries: Successfully funding communication research through interdisciplinary collaboration. 350 James W. Dearing & R. Sam Larson. Private foundation funding of applied communication research. 358 Gary L. Kreps, K. Viswanath & Linda M. Harris. Advancing communication as a science: Research opportunities from the federal sector. 369 Michel L. Hecht & Roxanne Parrott. Creating a departmental culture for communication grants. 382 Nancy Grant Harrington. Funded research in communication: A chairpersons perspective. 393 James L. Applegate. Skating to where the puck will be: Engaged research as a funding strategy for the communication discipline. 402 David B. Buller. Final thoughts on funded communication research. 411 2002, Vol. 30(3) Donald G. Ellis & Ifat Moaz. Cross-cultural argument interactions between Israeli-Jews and Palestinians. 181 Kevin Wright. Social support within an on-line cancer community: An assessment of emotional support, perceptions of advantages and disadvantages, and motives for using the community from a communication perspective. 195 Anthony J. Roberto, Gary Myers, Amy Janan Johnson, Charles K. Atkin & Patricia K. Smith. Promoting gun trigger-lock use: Insights and implications from a radio-based health communication intervention. 210

167 Pamela Shockley-Zalabak. Protean places: Teams across time and space. 231 Charles K. Atkin, Sandi W. Smith, Anthony J. Roberto, Thomas Fediuk & Thomas Wagner. Correlates of verbally aggressive communication in adolescents. 251 2002, Vol. 30(2) Lisa Sparks Bethea. The impact of adult parent on communicative satisfaction and dyadic adjustment in the long-term marital relationship: Adult-children and spouses retrospective accounts. 107 Matthew W. Seeger & Robert Ulmer. A post-crisis discourse of renewal: The case of Malden Mills and Cole Hardwoods. 126 John C. Sherblom, Lisa Keranen & Lesley A. Withers. Tradition, tension, and transformation: A structuration analysis of a game warden service in transition. 143 Susan E. Morgan & Jerry K. Miller. Communicating about gifts of life: The effect of knowledge, attitudes, and altruism on behavior and behavioral intentions regarding organ donation. 163 2001, Vol. 30(1) Leslie A. Baxter, Dawn O. Braithwaite, Tamara D. Golish & Loreen N. Olson. Contradictions of interaction for wives of elderly husbands with adult dementia. 1 Michael D. Slater, David N. Karan, Donna Rouner & Denise Walters. Effects of threatening and announcer differences on responses to televised alcohol warnings. 27 Erika L. Kriby & Kathleen J. Krone. The policy exists but you cant really use it: Communication and the structuration of work-family policies. 50 Tamara D. Golish & John P. Caughlin. Id rather not talk about it: Adolescents and young adults use of topic avoidance in stepfamilies. 78 2001, Vol. 29(4) Karen Tracy & Catherine Ashcraft. Crafting policies about controversial values: How wording disputes manage a group dilemma. 297 Jayne M. Morgan & Kathleen J. Krone. Bending the rules of professional display: Emotional improvisation in caregiver performances. 317 Mark Aakhus. Technocratic and design stances toward communication expertise: How GDSS facilitators understand their work. 341 Debbie S. Dougherty. Sexual harassment as [dys]functional process: A feminist standpoint analysis. 372

168 2001, Vol. 29(3) Josephine W. Lee & Laura K. Guerrero. Types of touch in cross-sex relationships between coworkers: Perceptions of relational and emotional messages, inappropriateness, and sexual harassment. 197 Dawn O. Braithwaite, Loreen N. Olson, Tamara D. Golish, Charles Soukup & Paul Turman. Becoming a family: Developmental processes represented in blended family discourse. 221 Lynn M. Harter & Kathleen K. Krone. The boundary-spanning role of a cooperative support organization: Managing the paradox of stability and change in non-traditional organizations. 248 Timothy L. Sellnow & Jeffrey D. Brand. Establishing the structure of reality for an industry: Model and anti-model arguments as advocacy in Nikes crisis communication. 278 2001, Vol. 29(2) (Special Issue: Communication in the Age of Managed Care) Katherine Miller & Daniel J. Ryan. Introduction to the special issue. 91 S. Renee Gillespie. The politics of breathing: Asthmatic Medicaid patients under managed care. 97 J. Apker. Role development in the managed care era: A case of hospital-based nursing. 117 Caryn E. Medved, Kelly Morrison, James W. Dearing, R. Sam Larson, Greg Cline & Boris H. J. M. Brummans. Tensions in community health improvement initiatives: Communication and collaboration in a managed care environment. 137 Charles Conrad & Brad Millay. Confronting free market romanticism: Health care reform in the least likely place. 153 Sharon L. Bracci. Managing health care in Oregon: The search for a civic bioethics. 171 2001, Vol. 29(1) Wendy S. Zabava Ford. Customer expectations for interactions with service providers: Relationship versus encounter orientation and personalized service communication. Alexandra G. Murphy. The flight attendant dilemmas: An analysis of communication and sensemaking during in-flight emergencies. Jennifer H. Waldeck, Patricia Kearney & Timothy G. Plax. Teacher e-mail message strategies and students willingness to communicate online. Keith Weber, Matthew M. Martin & Brian R. Patterson. Teacher behavior, student interest, and affective leading: Putting theory to practice. 2000, Vol. 28(4) Mary A. Gerend, David P. MacKinnon & Liva Nohre. High school students knowledge and beliefs about television advertising warnings. 291 Granville King, III & Amy Hermodson. Peer reporting of coworker wrongdoing: A qualitative analysis of observer attitudes in the decision to report versus not report unethical behavior. 309 Josh Boyd. Selling home: Corporate stadium names and the destruction of commemoration. 330 Masami Nishishiba & L. David Ritchie. The concept of trustworthiness: A cross-cultural comparison between Japanese and U.S. business people. 347

169 2000, Vol. 28(3) Katherine Miller, Lori Joseph & Julie Apker. Strategic ambiguity in the role development process. 193 Christine L. Carson & William R. Cupach. Facing corrections in the workplace: The influence of perceived face threat on the consequences of managerial reproaches. 215 Robert Agne, Teresa L. Thompson & Louis P. Cusella. Stigma in the line of face: Self-disclosure of patients HIV status to health care providers. 235 Thomas Hugh Freeley. Testing a communication network model of employee turnover based on centrality. 262 James C. McCroskey & Virginia P. Richmond. Applying reciprocity and accommodation theories to supervisor/subordinate communication. 278 2000, Vol. 28(2) Matt T. Morman. The influence of fear appeals, message design, and masculinity on mens motivation to perform the testicular self-exam. 91 Gary Rudd. The symphony: Organizational discourse and the symbolic tensions between artistic and business ideologies. 117 Michael Huspek. Oppositional codes: The case of the penitentiary of New Mexico riot. 144 Forum: Defining Applied Communication Scholarship Dan OHair. Editors introduction to the forum. 164 Joann Keyton. Applied communication research should be practical. 166 Kenneth M. Cissna. Applied communication research in the 21st century. 169 William F. Eadie. Changing boundaries, changing expectations, changing results. 174 Lawrence R. Frey. To be applied or not to be applied, that isnt even the question; but wherefore art thou, applied communication researcher? Reclaiming applied communication research and redefining the role of the researcher. 178 David R. Seibold. Applied communication scholarship: Less a matter of boundaries than of emphases. 183 Julia T. Wood. Applied communication research: Unbounded and for good reason. 188 2000, Vol. 28(1) Michael J. Hyde & Kenneth Rufo. The call of conscience, rhetorical interruptions, and the euthanasia controversy. 1 Jeffrey Pittam & Cynthia Gallois. Malevolence, stigma, and social distance: Maximizing intergroup differences in HIV/AIDS discourse. 24 Laurie K. Lewis. Blindsided by that one and I saw that one coming: The relative anticipation and occurrence of communication problems and other problems in implementers hindsight. 44 Melissa K. Gibson & Michael J. Paper. The mud, the blood, and the beer guys: Organizational osmosis in blue-collar work groups. 68 1999, Vol. 27(4)

170 Ronald E. Rice, Lori Collins-Jarvis & Sharon Zydney-Walker. Individual and structural influences on information technology helping relationships. 285 Patricia Amason, Myria Watkins Allen & Susan A. Holmes. Social support and acculturative stress in the multicultural workplace. 310 Michael W. Kramer & Timothy L. Noland. Communication during job promotions: A case of ongoing assimilation. 335 Renee Guarriello Heath & Patricia M. Sias. Communicating spirit in a collaborative alliance. 356 Alicia Marshall Dorsey, Katherine I. Miller & Clifford W. Sherer. Communication, risk behavior, and perceptions of threat and efficacy: A test of a reciprocal model. 377-395 1999, Vol. 27(3) Michael T. Stephenson, Philip Palmgreen, Rick H. Hoyle, Lewis Donohew, Elizabeth Pugzles Lorch & Susan E. Colon. Short-term effects of an anti-marijuana media campaign targeting high sensation seeking adolescents. 175 Joseph N. Scudder. Influence, beliefs, appraisals, and affect: A test of appraisal theory in a mediated context. 196 Lori Melton McKinnon & Lynda Lee Kaid. Exposing negative campaigning or enhancing advertising effects: An experimental study of adwatch effects on voters evaluations of candidates and their ads. 217 Gage Chapel, Kristin M. Peterson & Roy Joseph. Exploring anti-gang advertisements: Focus group discussions with gang members and at-risk youth. 237 W. James Potter & Deborak Levine-Donnerstein. Rethinking validity and reliability in content analysis. 248 (Essay) 1999, Vol. 27(2) (Special Issue: Translating Scholarship into Practice) Sandra Petronio. Translating scholarship into practice: An alternative metaphor. 87 John F. Cragan & Donald C. Shields. Translating scholarship into practice: Communication studies reflecting the value of theory-based research to everyday life. 92 Roxanne Parrot & Ashley Duggan. Using coaches as role models of sun protection for youth: Georgias Got Youth Covered project. 107 Melanie R. Trost, Emily J. Langan & Yvonne Kellar-Gunther. Not everyone listens when you just say no: Drug resistance in relational context. 120 Leigh Arden Ford, Eileen Berlin Ray & Beth Hartman Ellis. Translating scholarship on intrafamilial sexual abuse: The utility of a dialectical perspective for adult survivors. 139 Joann Keyton & Steven C. Rhodes. Organizational sexual harassment: Translating research into application. 158

171 1999, Vol. 27(1) Grace Y. Lim & Michael E. Roloff. Attributing sexual consent. 1 Vernon D. Miller, John R. Johnson, Zachary Hart & Debra L. Peterson. A test of antecedents and outcomes of employee role negotiation ability. 24 Marifran Mattson & Patrice M. Buzzanell. Traditional and feminist organizational communication ethical analyses of messages and issues surrounding an actual job loss case. 49 Susan Tyler Eastman & Gregory D. Newton. Hitting promotion hard: A network response to channel surfing and new competition. 73 1998, Vol. 26(4) Tricia S. Jones & Andrea Bodtker. A dialectical analysis of a social justice process: International collaboration in South Africa. 357 Victoria Christie & Chris Segrin. The influence of self-efficacy and of gender on the performance of social and nonsocial tasks. 374 Sarah J. Tracy & Karen Tracy. Emotion labor at 911: A case study and theoretical critique. 390 Deborah Socha McGee & Donald J. Cegala. Patient communication skills training for improved communication competence in the primary care medical consultation. 412 1998, Vol. 26(3) Jenifer E. Kopfman, Sandi W. Smith, James K. Ah Yun & Annemarie Hodges. Affective and cognitive reactions to narrative versus statistical evidence organ donation messages. 279 James G. Cantrill. The environmental self and a sense of place: Communication foundations for regional ecosystem management. 301 Corine L. Shefner-Rogers, Nagesh Roa, Everett M. Rogers & Arun Wayangankar. The empowerment of women dairy farmers in India. 319 Aaron Castelan Cargile & Howard Giles. Language attitudes toward varieties of English: An American-Japanese context. 338 1998, Vol. 26(2) (Special Issue: Communication and Social Justice Research) Lawrence R. Frey. Communication and social justice research: Truth, justice, and the applied communication way. 155 Charlotte Ryan, Kevin M. Carragee & Cassie Schwerner. Media, movements, and the quest for social justice. 165 Robbin D. Crabtree. Mutual empowerment in cross-cultural participatory development and service learning: Lessons in communication and social justice from projects in El Salvador and Nicaragua. 182 Lee Artz. African-Americans and higher education: An exigence in need of applied communication. 210 Stephen Hartnett. Lincoln and Douglas meet the abolitionist David Walker as prisoners debate slavery: Empowering education, applied communication, and social justice 232 Sharon M. Varallo, Eileen Berlin Ray & Beth Hartman Ellis. Speaking of incest: The research interview as social justice. 254 W. Barnett Pearce. On putting social justice in the discipline of communication and putting enriched concepts of communication in social justice research and practice. 272

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1998, Vol. 26(1) (Special Issue: Applied Research in Language and Intergenerational Communication) Helen Edwards & Howard Giles. Prologue on two dimensions: The risk and management of intergenerational miscommunication. 1 Jake Harwood. Young adults cognitive representations of intergenerational conversations. 13 Deborah Cai, Howard Giles & Kimberly Noels. Elderly perceptions of communication with older and younger adults in China: Implications for mental health. 32 Svenja Sachweh. Granny darlings napies: Secondary babytalk in German nursing homes for the aged. 52 Caja Thimm, Ute Rademacher & Lenelis Kruse. Age stereotyping and patronizing messages: Features of age-adapted speech in technical instructions to the elderly. 66 Ellen Bouchard Ryan, Ann P. Anas, Mary Lee Hummert & Alison Laver-Ingram. Young and older adults views of telephone talk: Conversation problems and social uses. 83 M. Kathleen Pichora-Fuller, Carolyn E. Johnson & Kristin E. J. Roodenburg. The discrepancy between hearing impairment and handicap in the elderly: Balancing transaction and interaction in conversation. 99 J. B. Orange, Karen M. Van Gennep, Linda Miller & Andrew M. Johnson. Resolution of communication breakdown in dementia of the Alzheimers type: A longitudinal study. 120 Angela Williams & Nickolas Coupland. Epilogue: The socio-political framing of communication and aging research. 139 1997, Vol. 25(4) Gail T. Fairhurst, Jerry Monroe Jordan & Kurt Neuwith. Why are we here? Managing the meaning of an organizational mission statement. 243 Susan L. Smith. The effective use of fear appeals in persuasive immunization strategies: An analysis of national immunization intervention messages. 264 James D. Patterson II & Myria Watkins Allen. Accounting for your actions: How stakeholders respond to the strategic communication of environmental activist organizations. 293 Thomas G. Endres. Father-daughter dramas: A Q-investigation of rhetorical visions. 317 1997, Vol. 25(3) Stephen C. Hines, Laurie Badzek & Alvin H. Moss. Informed consent among chronically ill elderly: Assessing its (in)adequacy and predictors. 151 Jake Harwood, Ellen Bouchard Ryan, Howard Giles & Shirley Tysoski. Evaluations of patronizing speech and three response styles in a non-service-providing context. 170 Denise Haunani Solomon & Mary Lynn Miller Williams. Perceptions of social-sexual communication at work: The effects of message, situation, and observer characteristics on judgments of sexual harassment. 196 Travis L. Dixon & Daniel G. Linz. Obscenity law and sexually explicit rap music: Understanding the effects of sex, attitudes, and beliefs. 217 1997, Vol. 25(2)

173 Michael Hecht, Melanie R. Trost, Renee J. Bator & David MacKinnon. Ethnicity and sex similarities and differences in drug resistance. 75 G. Stonet Alder. Managing environmental uncertainty with legitimate authority: A comparative analysis of the Mann Gulch and Storm King mountain fires. 98 Sandra Petronio & Samantha Kovach. Managing privacy boundaries: Health providers perceptions of resident care in Scottish nursing homes. 115 Joseph Gemin. Dangerous liaisons: On the systemic self-production of codependent identities. 132 1997, Vol. 25(1) Lori Collins-Jarvis. Participation and consensus in collective action organizations: The influence of interpersonal versus mass-mediated channels. 1 John C. Lammers & Dean H. Krikorian. Theoretical extension and operationalization of the bona fide group construct with an application to surgical teams. 17 Abhik Roy & Jake Harwood. Underepresented, positively portrayed older adults in television commercials. 39 Katherine Miller & Eric G. Zook. Care partners for persons with AIDS: Implications for health communication. 57 1996, Vol. 24(3) John R. Johnson, Michael J. Bernhagen, Vernon Miller & Mike Allen. The role of communication in managing reductions in work force. 139 Vernon D. Miller & Patrice M. Buzzanell. Toward a research agenda for the second employment interview. 165 Sandra Petronio, Heidi M. Reeder, Michael L. Hecht & Theresa Mont Ros-Mendoza. Disclosure of sexual abuse by children and adolescents. 181 Margaret S. Leach & Dawn O. Braithwaite. A binding tie: Supportive communication of family kinkeepers. 200 Karen Lee Ashcraft & Michael E. Pacanowsky. A womans worst enemy: Reflections on a narrative of organizational life and female identity. 217 1996, Vol. 24(2) Michelle T. Violanti. Hooked on expectations: An analysis of influence and relationships in the Talihook reports. 67 Jerry Hogins. The inconvenient public interest: Policy challenges in the age of information. 83 Lisa Henriksen. Naive theories of buying and selling: Implications for teaching critical-viewing skills. 93 1996, Vol. 24(1) Robin P. Clair & Kelly Thompson. Pay discrimination as a discursive and material practice: A case concerning extended housework. 1 Priscilla Murphy & Michael L. Maynard. Using judgment analysis to improve consultant/client understanding: An advertising application. 21 Jenifer E. Kopfman & Sandi W. Smith. Understanding the audiences of a health communication campaign: A discriminant analysis of potential organ donors based on intend to donate. 33

174 Kathryn Greene & Julianne M. Serovich. Appropriateness of disclosure of HIV testing information: The perspective of PLWAs. 50

175 JOURNAL OF BROADCASTING & ELECTRONIC MEDIA 2007, Vol. 51(1) Lee Hood. Radio reverb: The impact of local news reimported to its own community. 1 R. Lance Holbert, Jennifer L. Lambe, Anthony D. Dudo & Kristin A. Carlton. Primacy effects of The Daily Show and national TV news viewing: Young viewers, political gratifications, and internal political self-efficacy. 20 Philip M. Napoli & Michael Zhaoxu Yan. Media ownership regulations and local news programming on broadcast television: An empirical analysis. 39 C. A. Tuggle, Suzanne Huffman & Dana Scott Rosengard. Reporting live from the scene: Enough to attract the 18-24 audience? 58 Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick. Gender differences in selective media use for mood management and mood adjustment. 73 Rajiv C. Shah & Jay P. Kesan. The privatization of the internets backbone network. 93 Elfriede Frsich & Seema Shrikhande. Development broadcasting in India and beyond: Redefining an old mandate in an age of media globalization. 110 John S. Armstrong. Constructing television communities: The FCC, signals, and cities, 19481957. 129 Maria Elizabeth Grabe & Dan G. Drew. Crime cultivation: Comparisons across media genres and channels. 147 Sangoak Lee. A longitudinal analysis of foreign program imports on South Korean television, 1978-2002: A case of rising indigenous capacity in programs supply. 172 2006, Vol. 50(4) Jay Newell, Charles T. Salmon & Susan Chang. The hidden history of product placement. 575 Marie-Louise Mares & Emory H. Woodard, IV. In search of the older audience: Adult age differences in television viewing. 595 Erica Scharrer, Andrea Bergstom, Angela Paradise & Quianqing Ren. Laughing to keep from crying: Humor and aggression in television commercial content. 615 Kristie M. Farra. Sexual intercourse on television: Do safe sex messages matter? 635 Dmitri Williams. Groups and goblins: The social and civic impact on an online game. 651 Philip M. Napoli & Nancy Gillis. Reassessing the potential contribution of communications research in communications policy: The case of media ownership. 671 Alan G. Stavitsky & Tad Odell. Spectrum efficiency and the public interest. 692 Yun Jung Choi & Jong Hyuk Lee. The role of a scene in framing a story: An analysis of a scenes position, length, and proportion. 703 Cheryl Campanella Bracken. Perceived source credibility of local television news: The impact of television form and presence. 723 Steven Eggermont. Developmental changes in adolescents television viewing habits: Longitudinal trajectories in a three-wave panel study. 742

176 2006, Vol. 50(3) (Special Issue: Broadcasting in the Americas) Donald G. Godfrey. Editors note: Broadcast research in the Americas. 365 David R. Spencer & Joseph D. Straubhaar. Broadcast research in the Americas: Revisiting the past and looking to the future. 368 Guillermo Avila-Saavedra. New discourses and traditional genres: The adaptation of a feminist novel into an Ecuadorian telenovela. 383 Stephen B. Crofts Wiley. Transnation: Globalization and the reorganization of Chilean television in the early 1990s. 400 Marilyn Terzic. Canadian hardware, foreign software: The political economy of pay-per-view. 421 Simon C. Darnell & Brian Wilson. Macho media: Unapologetic hypermasculinity in Vancouvers Talk Radio for Guys. 444 Jos-Carlos Lozano. Public policies and research on cultural diversity and television in Mexico. 467 Kenton T. Wilkinson. Cultural policy in a free-trade environment: Mexican television in transition. 482 From the Other Side of the Globe Elaine J. Yuan & James G. Webster. Channel repertories: Using peoplemeter data in Beijing. 524 Cassandra Van Buren. Critical analysis of racist post-9/11 web animations. 537 2006, Vol. 50(2) Featured Topic: The Internet Kate Kenski & Natalie Jomini Stroud. Connections between internet use and political efficacy, knowledge, and participation. 173 Arvind Diddi & Robert LaREose. Getting hooked on news: Uses and gratifications and the formation of news habits among college students in an internet environment. 193 Matthew S. Eastin, Mong-Shan Yang & Amy I. Nathanson. Children of the net: An empirical exploration into the evaluation of internet content. 211 Jan Van den Bulck. Television news avoidance: Exploratory results from a one-year follow-up study. 231 Ron Leone, Wendy Chapman Peek & Kimberly L. Bissell. Reality television and third-person perception. 253 Karyn Riddle, Karen Eyal, Chad Mahood & W. James Potter. Judging the degree of violence in media portrayals: A cross-genre comparison. 270 Tom Robinson & Caitlin Anderson. Older characters in childrens animated television programs: A content analysis of their portrayal. 387 Dana E. Mastro & Maria A. Kopcaz. Media representations of race, prototypicality, and policy reasoning: An application of self-categorization theory. 305 James G. Webster. Audience flow past and present: Television inheritance effects reconsidered. 323

177 2006, Vol. 50(1) Renita Coleman & H. Denis Wu. More than words alone: Incorporating broadcasters nonverbal communication into the stages of crisis coverage theoryEvidence from September 11th. 1 Paul R. Brewer & Xiaoxia Cao. Candidate appearances on soft news shows and public knowledge about primary campaigns. 18 Julia R. Fox & Byungho Park. The I of embedded reporting: An analysis of CNN coverage of the shock and awe campaign. 46 Lara Zwarun, Daniel Linz, Miriam Metzger & Dale Kunkel. Effects of showing risk in beer commercials to young drinkers. 52 Cory L. Armstrong, Michelle L. M. Wood & Michelle R. Nelson. Female news professionals in local and national broadcast news during the buildup to the Iraq war. 78 Walter Gantz, Zheng Wang, Bryant Paul & Robert F. Potter. Sports versus all comers: Comparing TV sports fans with fans of other programming genres. 95 Robert K. Goidel, Craig M. Freeman & Steven T. Procopio. The impact of television viewing on perceptions of juvenile crime. 119 Carolyn A. Lin. Predicting satellite radio adoption via listening motives, activity, and format preference. 140 2005, Vol. 49(4) Craig Allen. Discovering Joe Six Pack content in television news: The hidden history of audience research, news consultants, and the Warner class model. 363 Randall Patnode. Path not taken: Wired wireless and broadcasting in the 1920s. 383 Barry A. Hollander. Late-night learning: Do entertainment programs increase political campaign knowledge for young viewers? 402 R. Lance Holbert. Television news viewing, governmental scope, and postmaterialist spending: Assessing mediation by partnership. 416 Vincent Cicchirillo & Rebecca M. Chory-Assad. Effects of affective orientation and video game play on aggressive thoughts and behaviors. 435 Yuki Fujikowa. Black media images as a perceived threat to African American ethnic identity: Coping responses, perceived public perception, and attitudes towards affirmative action. 450 Michael Pfau, Michel M. Haigh, Lindsay Logsdon, Christopher Perrine, James P. Baldwin, Rick E. Breitenfeldt, Joe Cesar, Dawn Dearden, Greg Kuntz, Edgar Montalvo, Dwaine Roberts & Richard Romero. Embedded reporting during the invasion and occupation of Iraq: How the embedding of journalists affects television news reports. 468 Chang-Hoan Cho & Hongsik John Cheon. Childrens exposure to negative internet content: Effects of family context. 488 2005, Vol. 49(3) Zizi Papacharissi & Jan Fernback. Online privacy and consumer protection: An analysis of portal privacy statements. 259 Paul Hendricks Vettehen, Koos Nuijten & Johannes Benntjes. News in an age of competition: The case of sensationalism in Dutch television news, 1995-2001. 282 Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick, Nikhil Sharma, Derek L. Hansen & Scott Alter. Impact of popularity indications on readers selective exposure to online news. 296

178 Sean Aday, John Cluverius & Steven Livingston. As goes the statue, so goes the war: The emergence of the victory frame in television coverage of the Iraq War. 314 David Tewksbury. The seeds of audience fragmentation: Specialization in the use of online news sites. 322 2005, Vol. 49(2) Moniek Buijzen & Patti M. Valkenburg. Parental mediation of undesired advertising effects. 153 Katherine A. Bradshaw, James C. Foust & Joseph P. Bernt. Local television news anchors public appearances. 166 Rebecca M. Chory-Assad & Ashley Yanen. Hopelessness and loneliness as predictors of older adults involvement with favorite television performers. 182 Ran Tamborini, Paul Skalski, Kenneth Lachlan, David Westerman, Jeff Davis & Stacy L. Smith. The raw nature of televised professional wrestling: is the violence a cause for concern? 202 Ven-hwei Lo & Ran Wei. Exposure to internet pornography and Taiwanese adolescents sexual attitudes and behavior. 221 2005, Vol. 49(1) Annie Lang, Mija Shin, Samuel D. Bradley, Zheng Wang, Seungjo Lee & Deborah Potter. Wait! Dont turn that dial! Excitemewn to come! The effects of story length and production pacing in local television news on channel changing behavior and information processing in a free choice environment. 3 Shuhua Zhou. Effects of arousing visuals and redundancy on cognitive assessment of television news. 23 Tien-Tsung Lee. The liberal media myth revisited: An examination of factors influencing perceptions of media bias. 43 James A. Rada & K. Tim Wulfemeyer. Color coded: Racial descriptors in television coverage of intercollegiate sports. 65 Seounmi Youn. Teenagers perceptions of online privacy and coping behaviors: A risk-benefit appraisal approach. 86 Carol B. Schwalbe. Jacqueline Kenndey and cold war propaganda. 111 2004, Vol. 48(4) Deborah A. Fisher, Douglas L. Hill, Joel W. Grube & Enid L. Gruber. Sex on American television: An analysis across program genres and network types. 529 Barbara K. Kaye & Barry S. Sapolsky. Offensive language in prime-time television: Four years after television age and content ratings. 554 Marina Krcmar & Steve Sohn. The role of bleeps and warnings in viewers perceptions of on-air cursing. 570 Stacy L. Smith, Ken Lachlan, Katherine L. Pieper, Aaron R. Boyson, Barbara J. Wilson, Ron Tamborini & Rene Weber. Brandishing guns in American media: Two studies examining how often and in what context firearms appear on television and in popular video games. 584 George Bailey. Free riders, givers, and heavy givers: Predicting listener support for public radio. 607 Louisa Ha & Sylvia M. Chan-Olmsted. Cross-media use in electronic media: The role of cable television web sites in cable television network branding and viewership. 646

179 Julia R. Fox, Annie Lang, Yongkuk Chung, Seungwhan Lee, Nancy Schwartz & Deborah Potter. Picture this: Effects of graphics on the processing of television news. 646 Michael A. Shapiro & T. Makana Chock. Media dependency and perceived reality of fiction and news. 675 2004, Vol. 48(3) Ron Tamborini, Matthew S. Eastin, Paul Skalski, Kenneth Lachlan, Thomas A. Fediukk & Robert Brady. Violent virtual video games and hostile thoughts. 335 Robert LaRose & Matthew S. Eastin. A social cognitive theory of internet uses and gratifications: Toward a new model of media attendance. 358 Cary W. Horvath. Measuring television addiction. 378 Kevin C. Lee & Stephen D. Perry. Student instant message use in a ubiquitous computing environment: Effects of deficient self-regulation. 399 Nojin Kwak, Marco M. Skoric, Ann E. Williams & Nathaniel D. Poort. To broadband or not to broadband: The relationship between high-speech internet and knowledge and participation. 421 Carolyn A. Lin. Webcasting adoption: Technology fluidity, user innovativeness, and media substitution. 446 Shu-Chur Sarrina Li. Exploring the factors influencing the adoption of interactive cable television services in Taiwan. 466 Martha M. Lauzen & David M. Dozier. Evening the score in prime time: The relationship between behind-the-scenes women and on-screen portrayals in the 2002-2003 season. 484 Amanda D. Lotz & Sharon Marie Ross. Toward ethical cyberspace audience research: Strategies for using the internet for television audience studies. 501 2004, Vol. 48(2) Rita Zajcz. Liberating American communications: Foreign ownership regulations from the Radio Act of 1912 to the Radio Act of 1927. 157 Steve Craig. How American adopted radio: Demographic differences in set ownership reported in the 1930-1950 U.S. Census. 179 Amanda J. Holmstrom. The effects of the media on body image: A meta-analysis. 196 Susannah R. Stern. Expressions of identity online: Prominent features and gender differences in adolescents world wide web home pages. 218 Steven Eggermont. Television viewing, perceived similarity, and adolescents expectations of a romantic partner. 244 Jane D. Brown & Carol J. Pardun. Little in common: Racial and gender differences in adolescents television diets. 266 Nancy Signorielli. Aging on television: Messages relating the gender, race, and occupation in prime time. 279 Antonio C. La Pastina. Selling political integrity: Telenovelas, intertextuality, and local elections in rural Brazil. 302 2004, Vol. 48(1) Dannagal Goldthwaite Young. Late-night comedy in election 2000: The influence of candidate trait ratings and the moderating effects of political knowledge and partisanship. 1

180 Sorin Matei. The impact of state-level social capital on the emergence of virtual communities. 23 Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. Complementarity in consumption of new types across traditional and new media. 41 Annie Lang, Nancy Schwartz, Youngkuk Chung & Seungwhan Lee. Processing substance abuse messages: Production pacing, arousing content, and age. 61 Juliette H. Walma van der Molen & Marlies E. Klijn. Recall of television versus print news: Retesting the semantic overlap hypothesis. 89 Niklas Ravaja. Effects of image motion on a small screen on emotion, attention, and memory: Moving-face versus static-face newscaster. 108 Richard van der Wurff. Program choices of multichannel broadcasters and diversity of program supply in the Netherlands. 134 2003, Vol. 47(4) Travis L. Dixon, Cristina L. Azocar & Michael Casas. The portrayal of race and crime on television network news. 498 Paula M. Poindexter, Laura Smith & Don Heider. Race and ethnicity in local television news: Framing, story assignments, and source selections. 524 Osei Appiah. Americans online: Differences in surfing and evaluating race-targeted web sites by Black and White users. 537 R. Lance Holbert & Michael T. Stephenson. The importance of indirect effects in media effects research: Testing for mediation in structural equation modeling. 556 William T. Bielby & Denise D. Bielby. Controlling prime-time: Organizational concentration and network television programming strategies. 573 Sylia M. Chan-Olmsted & Loyisa S. Ha. Internet business models for broadcasters: How television stations perceive and integrate the internet. 597 Hames R. Walker & Sysan Tyler Eastman. On-air promotion effectiveness for programs of different genres, familiarity, and audience demographics. 618 Dana E. Mastro & Susannah R. Stern. Representations of race in television commercials: A content analysis of prime-time advertising. 638 (Research in Brief) 2003, Vol. 47(3) Jaeho Cho, Michael P. Boyle, Heejo Keum, Mark D. Shevy, Douglas M. McLeod, Dhavan V. Shah & Zhongdang Pan. Media, terrorism, and emotionality: Emotional differences in media content and public reactions to the September 11th terrorist attacks. 309 Rivka Ribak & Joseph Turow. Internet power and social context: A globalizations approach to web privacy concerns. 328 Miriam J. Metzger& Sharon Docter. Public opinion and policy initiatives for online privacy protection. 350 Chava E. Tidhar & Dafina Lemish. The making of television: Young viewers developing perceptions. 375 Ron Warren. Parental mediation of preschool childrens television viewing. 394 Yuki Fujioka & Erica Weintraub Austin. The implications of vantage point in parental mediation of television and childs attitudes toward drinking alcohol. 418 Donna Rouner, Michael D. Slater & Melanie Domenech-Rodriguez. Adolescent evaluation of gender role and sexual imagery in television advertisements. 435

181 Anthony L. Fargo. Is protection from subpoenas slipping? An analysis of three recent cases involving broadcast news outtakes. 455 Joel J. Davis. The accessibility divide: The visually-impaired and access to online news. 474 (Research in Brief) 2003, Vol. 47(2) Yariv Tsfati. Does audience skepticism of the media matter in agenda setting? 157 R. Lance Holbert, Nojin Kwak & Dhavan V. Shah. Environmental concern, patterns of television viewing, and pro-environmental behaviors: Integrating models of media consumption and effects. 177 Rebecca M. Chory-Assad & Ron Tamborini. Television exposure and the publics perceptions of physicians. 197 C. Lee Harrington. Homosexuality on All My Children: Transforming the daytime landscape. 216 Keir Keightley. Low television, high fidelity: Taste and the gendering of home entertainment technologies. 236 Chad E. Dell. The history of travelers: Recylcing in American prime time network programming. 260 Susan L. Brinson. Epilogue to the quiz show scandal: A case study of the FCC and corporate favoritism. 276 Jan Can den Bulck. Is the mainstreaming effect of cultivation an artifact of regression to the mean? 289 (Research in Brief) 2001, Vol. 45(4) Antonio C. La Pastina. Product placement in Brazilian prime time television: The case of reception of a telenovela. 541 Dafna Lemish & Chava E. Tidhar. How global does it get? The Teletubbies in Israel. 558 Bruce E. Pinkleton, Erica Weintrub Austin & Yuki Fujioka. The relationship of perceived beer ad and PSA quality to high school students alcohol-related beliefs and behaviors. 575 Hyung-Jin Woo & Joseph R. Dominik. Daytime television talk shows and the cultivation effect among U.S. and international students. 598 Erica Scharrer. Tough guys: The portrayal of hypermasculinity and aggression in televised police dramas. 615 Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Shuhua Zhou & Brooke Barnett. Explicating sensationalism in television news: Content and the bells and whistles of form. 635 Jack Glascock. Gender roles on prime-time television: Demographics and behaviors. 656 2001, Vol. 45(3) Ari Alm & Gregory Ferrell Lowe. Managing transformation in the public polymedia enterprise: Amalgamation and synergy in Finnish public broadcasting. 367 Denise D. Bielby & William T. Bielby. Audience segmentation and age stratification among television writers. 391 Gail E. Coover. Television and social identity: Race representation as White accommodation. 413 Donald L. Diefenbach & Mark D. West. Violent crime and poisson regression: A measure and a method for cultivation analysis. 432

182 Suzanne Pingree, Robert P. Hawkins, Jacqueline C. Bush Hitchon, Eileen Gilligan, Barry Radler, LeeAnn Kahlor, Bradley Gorham, Gudbjorg Hildur Kolbeins, Toni Schmidth & Prathana Kannaovakun. If college students are appointment television views . . . . 446 Kimberly A. Neuendorf, David J. Atkin & Leo W. Jeffres. Reconceptualizing channel repertoire in the urban cable environment. 464 Juliette H. Walma van der Molen. Assessing text-picture correspondence in television news: The development of a new coding scheme. 483 Rebecca M. Chory-Assad & Ron Tamborini. Television doctors: An analysis of physicians in fictional and non-fictional television programs. 2001, Vol. 45(2) Amy I. Nathanson. Parent and child perspectives on the presence and meaning of parental television mediation. 201 Erica Weintraub Austin & Bruce E. Pinkleton. The role of parental mediation in the political socialization process. 221 Daniel G. McDonald & Hyeok Kim. When I die, I feel small: Electronic game characters and the social self. 241 Shu-Chu Sarrina Li. New media and market competition: A niche analysis of television news, electronic news, and newspaper news in Taiwan. 259 Salma I. Ghanem & Wayne Wanta. Agenda-setting and Spanish cable news. 277 Karen Slattery, Mark Doremus & Linda Marcus. Shifts in public affairs reporting on the network evening news: A move toward the sensational. 290 Barbara K. Kaye & Barry S. Sapolsky. Offensive language through the lens: How television broadcasters covered campaign 96. 320 C. A. Tuggle & Suzanne Huffman. Live reporting in television news: Breaking news or black holes? 335 Kimberly A. Neuendorf. Viewing alone? Recent considerations of media audience studies. 345 (Review and Criticism) William R. Davie. Crime and passion: Journalism for the masses? 335 (Review and Criticism) 2001, Vol. 45(1) Nancy Signorelli & Susan Kahlenberg. Televisions world of work in the nineties. 4 Erica Sharrer. From wise to foolish: The portrayal of the sitcom father, 1950s-1990s. 23 Mary Strom Larson. Interactions, activities and gender in childrens television commercials: A content analysis. 41 Steven Phipps. Order out of chaos: A reexamination of the historical basis for the scarcity of channels concept. 57 Sylvia Chan-Olmsted & Yungwook Kim. Perceptions of branding among television station managers: An exploratory analysis. 75 C. Ann Hollifield, Gerald M. Kosicki & Lee B. Becker. Organizational vs. professional, culture in the newsroom: Television news directors and newspaper editors hiring decisions. 92 Rebecca Ann Lind & Naomi Rocklet. Competing ethos: Reliance on profit versus social responsibility by laypeople planning a television newscast. 118 Margaret Morrison & Dean M. Krugman. A look at mass and computer mediated technologies: Understanding the roles of television and computers in the home. 135 David J. Cann & Philip B. Mohr. Journalist and source gender in Australian television news. 163

183 Charlotte Ryan, Kevin M. Carragee & William Meinhofer. Framing, the news media, and collective action. 175 (Theory into Practice) 2000, Vol. 44(4) John C. Tedesco, Lynda Lee Kaid & Lori Melton McKinnon. Network adwatches: Policing the 1996 primary and general education presidential ads. 541 Dave DAlessio. Adoption of the world wide web by American political candidates, 1996-1998. 556 Karin Gwinn Wilkins. The role of media in public disengagement from political life. 569 Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Shuhua Zhou, Annie Lang & Paul David Bolls. Packaging television news: The effects of tabloid on information processing and evaluative responses. 581 Glenn Leschner & James R. Coyle. Memory for television news: Match and mismatch between processing and testing. 599 Erika Engstrom & Anthony J. Ferri. Looking through a gendered lens: Local U.S. television news anchors perceived career barriers. 614 Alan M. Rubin & Mary M. Step. Impact of motivation, attraction, and parasocial interaction on talk-radio listening. 635 David Gunzerath. Darn that pay TV!: STVs challenge to American television dominant economic model. 655 Marina Krcmar & Kelly Fudge Albada. The effect of educational/information rating on childrens attraction to and learning from an education program. 674 Dana E. Mastro & Bradley S. Greenberg. The portrayal of racial minorities on prime time television. 690 James A. Rada. A new piece to the puzzle: Examining effects of television portrayals of African Americans. 704 Jeffrey S. Wilkinson, Benjamin J. Bates, Todd Chambers & Steven R. McClung. What makes a good radio remote: Factors leading to perceived cost-effective and well-received on-site radio promotional sales events. 716 Mary C. Meyer. Scholarly reaction: Letter response to Dupagne and Waterman, determinants of U.S. television fiction imports in Western Europe. 731 Michael Dupagne & David Watterman. Authors response: Response to Professor Meyer. 734 2000, Vol. 44(3) Jan Van de Bulck. The influence of perceived parental guidance patterns on childrens media use: Gender differences and media displacement. 329 Mami Komaya & Jane Bowyer. College-educated mothers ideas about TV and their active mediation of three-to-five-year-old children. 349 Robbin D. Crabtree & Sheena Malhotra. The genesis and evolution of commercial television in India: Organization mechanisms of cultural imperialism. 364 Everett M. Rogers & Suruchi Sood. Dimensions of parasocial interaction by letter writers to a popular entertainment-education soap opera in India. 386 Adrian Furnham & Elena Farragher. A cross-cultural content analysis of sex-role stereotyping in television advertisements: A comparison between Great Britain and New Zealand. 415 David R. Spencer. Canadian Marconi: CFCF television from Signal Hill to the Canadian television network. 437

184 Moniek Buijen & Patti M. Valkenberg. The impact of television advertising on childrens Christmas wishes. 456 Raul Tovares. Latino USA: Constructing a news and public affairs radio program. 471 Karen Sanders & Tim Bale. The symbolic agenda of a British satellite broadcasters 1997 general election coverage. 487 Daniel Chandler & Merris Griffits. Gender-differentiated production features in toy commercials. 503 Patricia Priest. Integrating race and gender issues into the basic media writing course. 521 Carol J. Pardun. An analysis of qualitative research in the Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 1978-1998. 529 Alan G. Stavitsky. By the numbers: The use of ratings data in academic research. 535 2000, Vol. 44(2) Douglas A. Ferguson & Elizabeth M. Perse. The world wide web as a functional alternative to television. 155 Zizi Papacharissi & Alan M. Rubin. Predictors of internet use. 175 Xiaomei Cai & Walter Ganz. Online privacy issues associated with web sites for children. 197 Joseph M. Kayany & Paul Yelsma. Displacement effects of online media in the socio-technical contexts of households. 215 Patricia F. Phalen, An agenda for research on women and the organizational culture of broadcasting. 230 Susan L. Brinson. Missed opportunities: FCC commissioner Frieda Hennock and the UHF debate. 248 Stephen D. Perry & William J. Gonzenbach. Inhibiting speech through exemplar distribution: Can we predict a spiral of silence? 268 Mary Beth Oliver, James B. Weaver III & Stephanie Lee Sargent. An examination of factors related to sex differences in enjoyment of sad films. 282 W. James Potter & Stacy Smith. The context of graphic portrayals of television violence. 301 Joey Reagan. Theory into practice: Toward a set of standards for the use of factor analysis in the Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 324 2000, Vol. 44(1) Lawrence Bowen, Keith Stamm & Fiona Clark. Television reliance and political malaise: A contingency analysis. 1 Stephanie Greco Larson. Network differences in public opinion coverage during the 1996 presidential campaign. 16 Mark A. Gunsch, Sheila Brownlow, Sarah E. Haynes & Zachary Mavbe. Differential linguistic content of various forms of political advertising. 27 Thomas J. Johnson, Mahmoud Braima & Jayanthi Sothirajah. Measure for measure: The relationship between different broadcast types, formats, measures and political behaviors and cognitions. 43 Hyuhn-Suhck Bae. Product differentiation in national TV newscasts: A comparison of the cable all-news networks and the broadcast networks. 62 William J. Adams. How people watch television as investigated using focus group techniques. 78

185 Annie Lang, Shuhua Zhou, Nancy Scwartz, Paul D. Bolls & Robert F. Potter. The effects of edits on arousal, attention, and memory for television messages: When an edit is an edit can an edit be too much? 94 Leslie Jackson Turner. But the republic stood: Program producers perceived pivotal moments in network television broadcast standards of the 1970s. 110 Amy I. Nathanson & Joann Cantor. Reducing the aggression-promoting effect of violent cartoons by increasing childrens fictional involvement with the victim: A study of active mediation. 125 Robert Abelman & David Atkin. What children watch when they watch TV: Putting theory into practice. 143 1999, Vol. 43(4) Annie Lang, Paul Bolls, Robert F. Potter & Karlynn Kawahara. The effects of production pacing and arousing content on the information processing of television messages. 451 Stacy Davis. The effects of audience reaction shots and attitudes towards controversial issues. 476 C. A. Tuggle & Suzanne Huffman. Live news reporting: Professional judgment or technological pressure? A national survey of television news directors and senior reports. 492 Dina L. G. Borzekowski & Thomas N. Robinson. Viewing the viewers: Ten video cases of television viewing behaviors. 506 Robert Abelman. Preaching to the choir: Profiling TV advisory ratings users. 529 Mark R. Barner. Sex-role stereotyping in FCC-mandated childrens educational television. 551 Philip M. Napoli. The unique nature of communications regulation: Evidence and implications for communications policy analysis. 565 Ted M. Coopman. FCC enforcement difficulties with unlicensed micro radio. 582 Donna Lee King & Christopher Mele. Making public access television: Community participation, media literacy and the public sphere. 603 John W. Higgins. Community television and the vision of media literacy, social action and empowerment. 624 1999, Vol. 43(3) Louis Leung & Ran Wei. Seeking news via the pager: An expectancy-value study. 299 Jan Van den Bulck. VCR-use and patterns of time shifting and selectivity. 316 Joanathan Cohen. Favorite characters of teenage views of Israeli serials. 327 Camille Zubayr. The loyal viewer? Patterns of repeat viewing in Germany. 346 Wolfram Peiser. The television generations relation to the mass media in Germany: Accounting for the impact of private television. 364 Anandam P. Kavoori. Discursive texts, reflexive audiences: Global trends in television news texts and audience reception. 386 Paul Reis. What prevents cable TV from taking off in Brazil? 399 Kenichi Ishii, Herng Su & Satoshi Watanabe. Japanese and U.S. programs in Taiwanese television: New patterns in Taiwanese television. 416 Nikos Metallinos. The transformation of biological precepts into mental concepts in recognizing visual images. 432 (Theory-into-Practice) Nathaniel Kohn. Disappearing authors: A postmodern perspective on the practice of writing for the screen. 433 (Standpoint)

186

1999, Vol. 43(2) Patricia Moy, Michael Pfau & LeeAnn Kahlor. Media use and public confidence in democratic institutions. 137 Lawrence J. Mullen. Television news and contentiousness: An exploratory study of visual and verbal content in news about the President. 159 Erica Weintraub Austin, Paul Bolls, Yuki Fujioka & Jason Englebertson. How and why parents take on the tube. 195 Erik P. Bucy & John E. Newhagen. The micro- and macrodramas of politics on television: Effects of media format on candidate evaluations. 193 Margaret Reith. Viewing of crime drama and authoritarian aggression: An investigation of the relationship between crime viewing, fear, and aggression. 211 James R. Hallmark & Richard N. Armstrong. Gender equity in televised sports: A comparative analysis of mens and womens NCAA Division I basketball championship broadcasts, 19911995. 222 Jeremy H. Lipshultz & Michael L. Hilt. Mass media and the death penalty: Social construction of three Nebraska executions. 236 Susan Dente Ross. Doors to diversity: The first amendment implications of telephone video company options under the Telecommunications Act of 1996. 254 Vincent Kiernan & Mark R. Levy. Competition among broadcast-related web sites. 271 Gretchen S. Barbatsis. Hypermediated telepresence: Sensemaking aesthetics of the newest communication art. 280 1999, Vol. 43(1) Martha M. Lauzen & David M. Dozier. Making a difference in prime time: Women on screen and behind the scenes in the 1996-96 television season. 1 Michael G. Elasmar, Kazumi Hasegawa & Mary Brain. The portrayal of women in U.S. prime time television. 20 Denise D. Bielby, C. Lee Harrington & William T. Bielby. Whose stories are they? Fans engagement with soap opera narratives in three sites of fan activity. 35 Patti M. Valkenburg, Marina Krcmar, Alfred L. Peeters & Nies M. Marsielle. Developing a scale to assess three styles of television mediation: Instructive mediation, restrictive mediation, and social coviewing. 52 John R. Hill & Dolf Zillman. The orphanization of America: Sympathetic crime talk and leniency. 67 Philip J. Lowe & Kevin Durkin. The effect of flashback on childrens understanding of television crime content. 83 Marianne Barrett. The relationship of network affiliation change to prime time program ratings. 98 Kathy B. McKee & Carol J. Pardun. Reading the video: A qualitative study of religious images in music videos. 110 Jake Harwood. Age identification, social identity gratifications, and television viewing. 123 1998, Vol. 42(4)

187 Stephen D. McDowell & Carleen Maitland. The V-chip and the United States: Themes and variations in design and employment. 401 James E. Sneegas & Tamyra A. Plank. Gender differences in pre-adolescent reactance to agecategorized television advisory labels. 423 Elizabeth M. Perse & Debra Greenberg Dunn. The utility of home computers and media use: Implications of multimedia and connectivity. 423 Louisa Ha & E. Lincoln James. Interactivity reexamined: A baseline analysis of early business web sites. 457 David J. Atkin, Leo W. Jeffries & Kimberly A. Neuendorf. Understanding internet adoption as telecommunications behavior. 475 Carol S. Lomicky & Charles B. Salestom. Anti-abortion political advertising and access to the airwaves: A public interest doctrine dilemma. 491 Rebecca Ann Lind, Tammy Swenson-Lepper & David L. Rarick. Identifying patterns of ethical sensitivity in TV news viewers: An assessment of some critical viewing skills. 507 Alan G. Stavitsky. Counting the house in public television: A history of ratings use, 1953-1980. 520 Joey Reagan. Building a set of standards for use of regression in the Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 535 1998, Vol. 42(3) Tsan-Kuo Chang, Jian Wang & Chin-Hsien Chen. The social construction of international imagery in the post-cold war era: A comparative analysis of U.S. and Chinese national TV news. 277 Khalid Marghalani, Philip Palmgreen & Douglas Boyd. The utilization of direct satellite broadcasting in Saudi Arabia. 297 Patti M. Valkenbug, Marina Krcmar & Sandy de Roos. The impact of a cultural childrens program and adult mediation on childrens knowledge of and attitudes toward opera. 315 Hao-chieh Change. The effect of news teasers in processing TV news. 327 Ven-hwei Lo, Edward Neilan & Pu-tsung King. Television coverage of the 1995 legislative election in Taiwan: Rise of cable television as a force for balance in media coverage. 340 George Pollard & Peter Johansen. Professionalism among Canadian radio announcers. 356 Robert D. McIlwraith. Im addicted to television: The personality, imagination, and TV watching patterns of self-identified TV addicts. 371 Marwan M. Kraidy. Broadcasting regulation and civil society in postwar Lebanon. 387 1998, Vol. 42(2) Dolf Zillman, Kay Taylor, & Kelly Lewis. News as nonfiction theatre: How dispositions toward the public cast of characters affect reactions. 153 Thomas R. Lindlof & Milton J. Shatzer. Media ethnography in virtual space: Strategies, limits, and possibilities. 170 James G. Webster. The audience. 190 Michael Dupagne & David Waterman. Determinants of U.S. television fiction imports in Western Europe. 208 Louis Benjamin. Working it out together: Radio policy from Hoover to the Radio Act of 1927. 221

188 Stephen Schwan, Friedrich W. Hesse & Barbel Garsoffky. The relationship between formal filmic means and the segmentation behavior of film viewers. 237 Marina Krcmar. The contribution of family communication patterns to childrens interpretations of television violence. 250 John E. Newhagen. TV news images that induce anger, fear, and disgust: Effects on approachavoidance and memory. 265 1998, Vol. 42(1) Richard J. Schaefer. The development of the CBS news guidelines during the Salant years. 1 Glenn Leshner, Byron Reeves & Clifford Nass. Switching channels: The effects of television channels on the mental representations of television news. 21 Bruce E. Pinkleton, Erica Weintraub Austin & Kristin K. J. Fortman. Relationships of media use and political disaffection to political efficacy and voting behavior. 34 Susan Tyler Eastman & Gregory D. Newton. The impact of structural salience within on-air promotion. 50 Kimberly A. Neuendorf, David Atkin & Leo W. Jeffres. Understanding adopters of audio information innovations. 80 Gary G. Bennett, Jr. Roll em: The effects of picture motion on emotional responses. 113 Thomas A. Mollison. Television broadcasting leads Romanias march toward an open, democratic society. 128 (Standpoint) Jocelyn Steinke. Connecting theory and practice: Using women scientist role models in television programming. 142 (Theory into Practice) 1997, Vol. 41(4) Hoekyun Ahn & Barry R. Litman. Vertical integration and consumer welfare in the cable industry. 453 Kristen Harrison. Does interpersonal attraction to thin media personalities promote eating disorders? 478 C. Richard Hofstetter & Christopher L. Gianos. Political talk radio: Actions speak louder than words. 501 Jonathan Cohen. Parasocial relations and romantic attraction: Gender and dating status differences. 516 Glen Middleham & J. Mallory Wober. An anatomy of appreciation and of viewing amongst a group of fans of the series Eastenders. 530 Hans Mathia Kepplinger & Gregor Daschmann. Todays newstomorrows context: A dynamic model of news processing. 548 Robert McChesney. Wither communication? 566 (Standpoint) 1997, Vol. 41(3) James Shanahan, Michael Morgan & Mark Stenbjerre. Green or brown? Television and the cultivation of environmental concern. 305 Aviva W. Rosenstein & August E. Grant. Reconceptualizing the role of habit: A new model of television audience activity. 324 Glen G. Sparks, C. Leigh Nelson & Rose G. Campbell. The relationship between exposure to televised messages about paranormal phenomena and paranormal beliefs. 345

189 Robert Abelman, David Atkin & Michael Rand. What viewers watch when they watch TV: Affiliation change as case study. 360 Richard C. Vincent & Michael D. Basil. College students news gratifications, media use, and current events knowledge. 380 Marina Krcmar & Joanne Cantor. The role of television advisories and ratings in parent-child discussion of television viewing choices. 393 Bradley S. Greenstreet, John L. Sherry, Rich W. Busselle, Lynn Rampoldi Hnilo & Sandi Smith. Daytime television talk shows: Guests, content and interactions. 412 1997, Vol. 41(2) Joanne Cantor & Amy I. Nathanson. Predictors of childrens interest in violent television programs. 155 Any Mustonen & lea Pulkkinen. Television violence: Development of a coding scheme. 168 J. M. Wober. Violence or other routes to appreciation: TV program makers options. 190 Jake Harwood. Viewing age: Lifespan identity and television viewing choices. 203 Barbara K. Kaye & Barry S. Sapolsky. Electronic monitoring of in-home television RCD usage. 214 Stephen D. Perry & William J. Gozenbach. Effects of news exemplification extended: Considerations of controversiality and perceived future opinion. 229 Robert P. Hawkins, Suzanne Pingree, Lisa Bruce & John Tapper. Strategy and style in attention to television. 245 Susan Tyler Eastman, Gregory D. Newton, Karen E. Riggs & Jeffrey Neal-Lunsford. Accelerating the flow: A transition effect in programming theory? 265 Roger Cooper. Japanese communication research: The emphasis on macro theories of media in an information based environment. 284 (Standpoint) 1997, Vol. 41(1) Bradley S. Greenberg & Larry Collette. The changing faces on TV: A demographic analysis of network televisions new seasons, 1966-1992. 1 C. A. Tuggle. Differences in television sports reporting of mens and womens athletics: ESPN Sportscenter and CNN Sports Tonight. 14 Susan L. Brinson & L. Emmett Winn. Talk shows representations of interpersonal conflicts. 25 James M. Honeycutt, Lynn B. Wellman & Mary S. Larson. Beneath family role portrayals: An additional measure of communication influence: Using time series analyses of turn at talk on a popular television program. 40 Carol M. Liebler & Susan J. Smith. Tracking gender differences: A comparative analysis of network correspondents and their sources. 58 W. James Potter, Ron Warren, Misha Vaughn, Kevin Howley, Art Land & Jeremy Hagemeryer. Antisocial acts in reality programming on television. 69 Lauren R. Tucker. Was the revolution televised?: Professional criticism about The Cosby Show and the essentialization of black cultural expression. 90 Claudia Collins. Viewer letters as audience research: The case of Murphy Brown. 109 Raymond L. Carroll, Charles A. Tuggle, James F. McCollum, Michael A. Mitrook, Kevin J. Arlington & John M. Hoerner, Jr. Consonance in local television news program content: An examination of intermarket diversity. 132

190 1996, Vol. 40(4) Dan Berkowitz, Craig Allen & Diana Beeson. Exploring newsroom views about consultants in local TV: The effect of work roles and socialization. 447 Annie Lang, John Newhagen & Byron Reeves. Negative video as structure: Emotion, attention, capacity, and memory. 460 Michael D. Basil. Identification as a mediator of celebrity effects. 478 George Albert Gladney & Matthew C. Ehrlich. Cross-media response to digital manipulation of still and moving images. 496 1996, Vol. 40(3) Lynda Lee Kaid, John C. Tedesco & Melton McKinnon. Presidential ads as nightly news: A content analysis of 1988 and 1992 televised adwatches. 297 Frances R. Matera & Michael B. Salwen. Unwieldy questions? Circuitous answers? Journalists as panelists in presidential election debates. 309 Leo Jeffres & David Atkin. Predicting use of technologies for communication and consumer needs. 318 Suzanne Pingree, Robert P. Hawkins, David H. Gustafson, Eric Boberg, Earl Bricker, Haile Berhe & Elsa Hus. Will the disadvantaged ride the information highway? Hopeful answers from a computer-based health crisis system. 331 Patrick R. Parsons. Two tales of a city: John Walson, Sr., Mahanoy City, and the founding of cable TV. 354 Susan Tyler Eastman, Gregory D. Newton & Lindsy Pack. Promoting prime-time programs in megasporting events. 366 Cynthia Hoffner. Childrens wishful identification and parasocial interaction with favorite television characters. 389 Karen L. Slattery, Ernest A. Hakanen & Mark E. Doremus. The expression of localism: Local TV news coverage in the new video marketplace. 403 1996, Vol. 40(2) Maria Elizabeth Grabe. The South African Broadcasting Corporations coverage of the 1987 and 1989 elections: The matter of visual bias. 153 Hans-Bernd Brosius, Wolfgang Donsbach & Monika Birk. How do text-picture relations affect the informational effectiveness of television newscasts. 180 Jian Wang & Tsan-Kuo Chang. From class ideologue to state manager: TV programming and foreign imports in China, 1970-1990. 196 Xuejian Yu & Anne Sears. Localism in Chinese media context: An examination of a closed circuit community cable system. 208 James F. Kenny. TV viewing among TV set owners and non-owners in a remote Philippine province. 227 Gabriel Weimann. Cable comes to the holy land: The impact of cable TV on Israeli viewers. 243 Margaret Reith. The relationship between unemployment in society and the popularity of crime drama on TV. 258 1996, Vol. 40(1)

191 Audrey J. Weiss & Barbara J. Wilson. Emotional portrayals in family television series that are popular among children. 1 Sylvia M. Chan-Olmsted. From Sesame Street to Wall Street: An analysis of market competition in commercial childrens television. 30 John W. Dimmick, Scott Patterson & Jaspreet Sikand. personal telephone networks: A typology and two empirical studies. 45 Jan H. Samoriski, John L. Huffman & Denise M. Trauth. Electronic mail, privacy, and the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986: Technology in search of law. 60 Matthew D. Bunker & Charles N. Davis. The First Amendment as a sword: The positive liberty doctrine and cable must-carry provisions. 77 Roger Cooper. The status and future of audience duplication research: An assessment of ratingsbased theories of audience behavior. 96 Joey Reagan. The repertoire of information sources. 112 Su-lin Gan, John R. Hill, Elke Pschernig & Dolf Zillmann. The Hebron massacre, selective reports of Jewish reactions, and perceptions of volatility in Israel. 122.

192 JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION 2007, Vol. 52(2) Jong-Eun Roselyn Lee, Clifford Nass, Scott Brenner Brave, Yasunori Morishima, Hiroshi Nakajima & Ryota Yamada. The case for caring colearners: The effects of a computermediated colearner agent on trust and learning. 183 Jaeho Cho & Douglas M. McLeod. Structural antecedents to knowledge and participation: Extending the knowledge gap concept to participation. 205 Travis L. Dixson & Christine L. Azocar. Priming crime and activating Blackness: Understanding the psychological impact of the overrepresentation of Blacks as lawbreakers on television news. 229 Adam F. Simon & Jennifer Jerit. Toward a theory relating political discourse, media, and public opinion. 254 Jeff Neiderdeppe, Kevin C. Davis, Matthew C. Farrelly & Jared Yarsevich. Stylistic features, need for sensation, and confirmed recall of national smoking adolescent advertisements. 272 Hyunyi Cho & Charles T. Salmon. Unintended effects of health communication campaigns. 295 Amir Hetsroni. Three decades of sexual content on prime-time network programming: A longitudinal meta-analytic review. 318 Lynne Kelly & James A. Keaten. Development of the affect for communication channels scale. 349 Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Anita M. J. van Hoof, Dirk Oegema & Jan A. de Ridder. A test of rivaling approaches to explain news effects: News on issue positions of parties, real-world development, support and criticism, and success and failure. 366 Eun-Ju Lee. Deindividuation effects on group polarization in computer-mediated communication: The role of group identification, public self0awareness, and perceived argument quality. 385 2007, Vol. 57(1) Jon F. Nussbaum. Life span communication and quality of life. (2006 ICA Presidential Address) Special issue on Framing, Agenda Setting, & Priming David Tewksbury & Dietram A. Scheufele. Special issue on framing, agenda setting, & priming: Agendas for theory and research. 8 Dietram A. Scheufele & David Tewksbury. Framing, agenda setting, and priming: The evolution of three media effects models. 9 Tamir Sheafer. How to evaluate it: The role of story-evaluative tone in agenda setting and priming. 21 Hyunseo Hwang, Melissa R. Gottlieb, Seungahn Nah & Douglas M. McLeod. Applying a cognitive-processing model to presidential debate effects: Postdebate news analysis and primed reflection. 40 Baldwin Van Gorp. The constructionist approach to framing: Bringing culture back in. 60 Yuqiong Zhou & Patricia Moy. Parsing framing processes: The interplay between online public opinion and media coverage. 79 Dennis Chong & James N. Druckman. A theory of framing and opinion formation in competitive elite environments. 99 Jill A Edy & Patrick C. Meirick. Wanted, dead or alive: Media frames, frame adoption, and support for the war in Afghanistan. 119

193 David H. Weaver. Thoughts on agenda setting, framing, and priming. 142 Stephen D. Reese. The framing project: A bridging model for media research revisited. 148 Donald R. Kinder. Curmudgeonly advise. 155 Robert M. Entman. Framing bias: Media in the distribution of power. 163 2006, Vol. 56(4) Jochen Peter & Patti M. Valkenburg. Adolescents exposure to sexually explicit online material and recreational attitudes. 639 Galina B. Bolden. Little words that matter: Discourse markers so and oh and the doing of other-attentiveness in social interaction. 661 Robin L. Nabi, Keli Finnerty, Tricia Domschke & Shawnkia Hill. Does misery love company? Exploring the therapeutic effects of TV viewing on regretted experiences. 689 Sandi W. Smith, Stacy L. Smith, Katherine M. Pieper, Jina H. Yoo, Amber L. Ferris, Edward Downs & Becka Bowden. Altruism on American television: Examining the amount of, and context surrounding, acts of helping and sharing. 707 Dietram A. Scheufele, Bruce W. Hardy, Dominique Brossard, Israel S. Waismel-Manor & Erik Nisbet. Democracy based on difference: Examining the links between structural heterogeneity, homogeneity of discussion networks, and democratic citizenship. 728 Kawan Min Lee, Wei Peng, Seung-A Jin & Chang Yan. Can robots manifest personality? An empirical test of personality recognition, social responses, and social presence in humanrobot interaction. 754 Smita C. Banerjee & Kathryn Greene. Analysis versus production: Adolescent cognitive and attitudinal responses to antismoking interventions. 773 Michael Zhaoxu Yan & Philip M. Napoli. Market competition, station ownership, and local public affairs programming on broadcast television. 795 W. Wayne Fu. Concentration and homogenization of international movie sources: Examining foreign film import profiles. 813 Heidi Hatfield Edwards. A rhetorical typology for studying the audience role in public relations communication: The Avon 3-day disruption as exemplar. 836 2006, Vol. 56(Supplement) Martin Fishbein & Joseph N. Cappella. The role of theory in developing effective health communication. S1 Jon A. Kronick, Linchiat Chang, Steven J. Sherman, Laurie Chassin & Clark Presson. The effects of beliefs about health consequences of cigarette smoking on smoking onset. S18 Michael T. Stephenson & Brian G. Southwell. Sensation seeking, the activation model, and mass media health campaigns: Current findings and future directions for cancer research. S38 Annie Lang. Using the limited capacity model of motivated mediated message processing to design effective cancer communication messages. S57 Pablo Briol & Richard E. Petty. Fundamental processes leading to attitude change: Implications for cancer prevention communications. S81 Arie W. Kruiglanski, Xiaoyan Chen, Antonio Pierro, Lucia Mannetti, Hans-Peter Erb & Scott Spiegel. Persuasion according to the unimodel: Implications for cancer communication. S105 James Price Dillard & Robin L. Nabi. The persuasive influence of emotion in cancer prevention and detection messages. S123

194 Ellen Peters, Isaac Lipkus & Michael A. Diffenbach. The functions of affect in health communications and in the construction of health preferences. S140 Melanie C. Green. Narratives and cancer communication. S 163 Barbara K. Rimer & Matthew W. Krueter. Advancing tailored health communication: A persuasion and message effects perspective. S184 Alexander J. Rothman, Roger D. Bartels, Jhon Wlaschin & Peter Salovey. The strategic use of gain- and loss-framed messages to promote healthy behavior: How theory can inform practice. S202 Dolf Zillman. Exemplification effects in the promotion of safety and health. S221 K. Viswanath & Karen M. Emmons. Message effects and social determinants of health: Its application to cancer disparities. S238 Joseph N. Cappella. Integrating message effects and behavior change theories: Organizing comments and unanswered questions. S265 2006, Vol. 56(3) Wolfgang Donsbach. 2005 ICA Presidential Address: The identity of communication research. 437 Albert C. Gunther & Janice L. Liebhart. Broad reach or biased source? Decomposing the hostile media effect. 449 W. Lance Bennett, Regina G. Lawrence & Steven Livingston. None dare call it torture: Indexing and the limits of press independence in the Abu Ghraib scandal. 467 Matthew S. Eastin, Bradley S. Greenberg & Linda Hofschire. Parenting the internet. 486 Galina V. S Sinekopova. Building the public sphere: Bases and biases. 505 William P. Eveland, Jr. & Tiffany Thomson. Is it talking, thinking, or both? A lagged dependent variable model of discussion effects on political knowledge. 523 May-May Meijer. Issue news and corporate reputation: Applying the theories of agenda setting and issue ownership in the field of business communication. 543 Sonia Livingstone & Ellen J. Helsper. Does advertising literacy mediate the effects of advertising on children: A critical examination of two linked research literatures in relation to obsesity and food choice. 560 Stella C. Chia. How peers mediate media influence on adolescents sexual attitudes and sexual behavior. 585 Sean M. Tierney. Themes of Whiteness in Bulletproof Monk, Kill Bill, and The Last Samurai. 607

195 2006, Vol. 56(2) Michael D. Slater, Donna Rouner & Marilee Long. Television dramas and support for controversial public policies: Effects and mechanisms. 235 Daniel Romer, Patrick E. Jamieson & Kathleen H. Jamieson. Are news reports of suicide contagious? A stringent test of six U.S. cities. 253 Michael P. Boyle, Mike Schmierbach, Cory L. Armstrong, Jaeho Chao, Michael McCluskey, Douglas M. McLeod & Dhavan V. Shaw. Expressive responses to news stories about extremist groups: A framing experiment. 271 Bradley W. Gorham. News medias relationship with stereotyping: The linguistic intergroup bias in response to crime news. 289 Kevin Coe & David Domke. Petitioners or prophets? Presidential discourse, God, and the ascendancy of religious conservatives. 309 William L. Benoit. Retrospective versus prospective statements and outcome of presidential elections. 331 Kenichi Ishi. Implications of mobility: Uses of personal communication media in everyday life. 346 Jennifer Steves Aubrey. Effects of sexually objectifying media on self-objectification and body surveillance in undergraduates: Results of a 2-year panel study. 366 Kristie M. Farrar, Marina Krcmar & Kristine L. Nowak. Contextual features of violent video games, mental models, and aggression. 387 Eyun-Jung Ki, Byeng-Hee Chang & Hyoungkoo Khang. Exploring influential factors on music piracy across countries. 406 2006, Vol. 56(1) Thomas N. Robinson & Dana G. Borzekowski. Effects of the smart classroom curriculum to reduce child and family screen time. 1 Michael F. Meffert, Sungeun Chung, Amber J. Joiner, Leah Waks & Jennifer Garst. The effects of negativity and motivated information processing during a political campaign. 27 Albert C. Gunther, Daniel Bolt, Dina L. G. Borzekowski, Janice L. Liebhart & James Price Dillard. Presumed influence on peer norms: How mass media indirectly affect adolescent smoking. 52 Dmitri Williams. Virtual cultivation: Online worlds, offline perceptions. 69 Steffan Walgrave & Peter Van Aelst. The contingency of the mass medias political agenda setting power: Toward a preliminary theory. 88 Sriram Kaylanaraman & SS. Shyam Sundar. The psychological appeal of personalized content in web portals: Does customization affect attitudes and behavior? 110 Amir Hetsroni & Riva H. Tukachinsky. Television-world estimates, real-world estimates, and television viewing: A new scheme for cultivation. 133 Ji Hoon Park, Nadine G. Garbadoin & Ariel R. Chernin. Naturalizing racial differences through comedy: Asian, Black, and White views on racial stereotypes in Rush Hour 2. 157 Rebecca Verser & Robert H. Wicks. Managing voter impressions: The use of images on presidential candidate web sites during the 2000 campaign. 178 Chingching Chang. Beating the news blues: Mood repair through exposure to advertising. 198 2005, Vol. 55(4)

196 Robert T. Craig. 2004 ICA Presidential Address: How we talk about how we talk: Community theory in the public interest. 659 Linda Aldoory. A (re)constructed feminist paradigm for public relations: A case for substantial improvement. 668 Carl H. Botan & Maureen Taylor. The role of trust in channels of strategic communication for building civil society. 685 Ulla Bunz. Publish or perish: A limited author analysis of ICA and NCA journals. 703 Scott E. Caplan. A social skill account or problematic internet use. 721 Young Mie Kim. Use and disuse of contextual primes in dynamic news environments. 737 Spiro Kiousis, Michael McDevitt & Xu Wu. The genesis of civic awareness: Agenda setting in political sociation. 756 Carsten Reinemenn & Marcus Mauer. Unifying or polarizing? Short-term effects and postdebate consequences of different rhetorical strategies in televised debates. 775 Fuyuan Shen & Heidi Hatfield Edwards. Economic individualism, humanitarianism, and welfare reform: A value-based account of framing effects. 795 Michael D. Slater & Kenneth A. Rasinski. Media exposure and attention as mediating variables influencing social risk judgments. 810 Joseph B. Walther & Ulla Bunz. The rules of virtual groups: Trust, liking, and performance in computer-mediated communication. 828 Ron Warren. Parental mediation of childrens television viewing in low-income families. 847 2005, Vol. 55(3) (Special Issue: State of the Art in Communication Theory and Research, Part 2) Berger, C. R. Interpersonal communication: Theoretical perspectives, future prospectus. 415 Bonnie J. Dow & Celeste M. Condit. The state of the art in feminist scholarship in communication. 448 Doris A. Graber (with James Smith). Political communication faces the 21st century. 479 Larry Gross. The past and future of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender studies. 508 Mark A. Hamilton & Kritsine L. Nowak. Information systems concepts across two decades: An empirical analysis of trends in theory, methods, process, and research. 529 Young Yun Kim. Inquiry in intercultural and development communication. 554 Jon F. Nussbaum & Gustav Friedrich. Instructional/developmental communication: Current theory, research, and future trends. 578 John C. Reinard & Sandra M. Ortiz. Communication law and policy: The state of research and theory. 594 Joseph B. Walther, Geri Gay & Jeffrey T. Hancock. How do communication and technology researchers study the internet? 632 2005, Vol. 55(2) Ann Burnett & Diane M. Badzinski. Judge nonverbal communication on trial: Do mock jurors notice? 209 Elizabeth Blanks Hindman. Jayson Blair, The New York Times, and paradigm repair. 225 Jakob D. Jensen & Ryan J. Hurley. Third-person effects and the environment: Social distance, social desirability, and presumed behavior. 242 Michael W. Kramer. Communication in a fund-raising marathon group. 257 Jennifer L. Lambe & Douglas M. McLeod. Understanding third-person perception processes: Predicting perceived impact on self and others for multiple expressive contexts. 277

197 Byoungkwan Lee & Ron Tamborini. Third-person effect and internet pornography: The influence of collectivism and internet self-efficacy. 292 Seow Ting Lee & Crispin C. Maslog. War or peace journalism? Asian newspaper coverage of conflicts. 311 Matthew S. McGlone. Quoted out of context: Contextomy and its consequences. 330 Tamir Sheafer & Gabriel Weimann. Agenda building, agenda setting, priming, individual voting intentions, and the aggregate results: An analysis of four Israeli elections. 347 James G. Webster. Beneath the veneer of fragmentation: Television audience polarization in a multichannel world. 366 Richard Wilkins. The optimal form: Inadequacies and excessiveness within the asiallinen [matter of fact] nonverbal style in public and civic settings in Finland. 383 2005, Vol. 55(1) Melissa Wood Aleman. Embracing and resisting romantic fantasies as the rhetorical vision on a seniornet discussion board. 5 Elisabeth Anker. Villains, victims and heroes: Melodrama, media, and September 11. 22 Linda-Renee Bloch & Dafna Lemish. I know Im a freteritt, but . . .: How a key cultural frame (en)genders a discourse of inequality. 38 Katherine Frith, Ping Shaw & Hong Cheng. The construction of beauty: A cross-cultural analysis of womens magazine advertising. 56 Bruce W. Hardy & Dietram A. Scheufele. Examining differential gains from internet use: Comparing the moderating role of talk and online interactions. 71 R. Lance Holbert. Debate viewing as mediator and partisan reinforcement in the relationship between news use and vote choice. 85 Se-Hill Kim, Dietram A. Scheufele & James Shanahan. Who cares about the issues? Issue voting and the role of news media during the 2000 U.S. presidential election. 103 Silvia Knobloch, Coy Callison, Lei Chen, Annett Fritzsche & Dolf Zillman. Childrens sexstereotyped self-socialization through selective exposure to entertainment: Cross-cultural experiments in Germany, China, and the United States. 122 Edmund Lauf. National diversity of major international journals in the field of communication. 139 Maira E. Len-Riuos, Shelly Rodgers, Esther Thorson & Doyle Yoon. Representation of women in news and photos: Comparing content to perceptions. 152 Michael A. Xenos & Kristen A. Foot. Politicals as usual, or politics unusual? Position taking and dialogue on campaign websites in the 2002 U.S. elections. 169

198 2004, Vol. 54(4) (Special Issue: State of the Art in Communication Theory and Research, Part 1) James A. Anderson & Geoffrey Baym. Philosophies and philosophical issues in communication, 1995-2004. 589 Kevin G. Barnhurst, Michal Vari & Igor Rodriguez. Mapping visual studies in communication. 616 Carl H. Botan & Maureen Taylor. Public relations: State of the field. 645 Jennings Bryant & Dorina Miron. Theory and research in mass communication. 662 Joshua Gunn & Barry Brummett. Popular communication after globalization. 705 Elizabeth Jones, Bernadette Watson, John Gardner & Cindy Galois. Organizational communication: Challenges for the new century. 722 Roxanne Parrott. Emphasizing communication in health communication. 751 Karen Tracy & Kathleen Haspel. Language and social interaction: An institutional identity, intellectual landscape, and discipline-shifting agenda. 788 2004, Vol. 54(3) Jennings Bryant. 2003 ICA Presidential Address: Critical communication challenges for the new century. 389 Mike Allen, Edward Mabry, Michelle Mattrey, John Bourhis, Scott Titsworth & Nancy Burrell. Evaluating the effectiveness of distance learning: A comparison using meta-analysis. 402 Chasu An &Michael Pfau. The efficacy of inoculation in televised political debates. 421 W. Lance Bennett, Victor W. Pickard, David P. Iozzi, Carl L. Schroder, Taso Lagos &C. Evans Caswell. Managing the public sphere: Journalistic construction of the great globalization debate. 437 Renita Coleman & Ben Wasike. Visual elements in public journalism newspapers in an election: A content analysis if the photographs and graphics in Campaign 2000. 456 Andrew L. Mendelson & Esther Thorson. How verbalizers and visualizers process the newspaper environment. 474 Ananda Mitra. Voices of the marginalized on the internet: Examples from a website for women of South Asia. 492 Peter Monge & Sorin Adam Matei. The role of global telecommunications network in bridging economic and political divides, 1989 to 1999. 511 Patricia Moy, Michael R. McCluskey, Kelley McCoy & Margaret A. Spratt. Political correlates of local media use. 532 Karin Wahl-Jorgensen. How not to found a field: New evidence on the origins of mass communication research. 547 2004, Vol. 54(2) Pablo Bockzowski. The processes of adopting multimedia and interactivity in three online newsrooms. 197 Kevin M. Carragee & Wim Roefs. The neglect of power in recent framing research. 214 Kevin Coe, David Domkie, Erica S. Graham, Sue Lockett John & Victor W. Pickard. No shades of gray: The binary discourse of George W. Bush and an echoing press. 234 Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. The impact of completeness and web use motivation on the credibility of e-health information. 253

199 Rona Tamiko Halualani, Anu S. Chitgopeker, Jennifer Huynh Thi Ahn Morrison & Patrick Shaou-Whea Dodge. Diverse in name only? Intercultural interaction at a multicultural university. 270 May G. Kennedy, Ann OLeary, Vicki Beck, Katrina Pollard & Penny Simpson. Increases in calls to the CDC national STD and AIDS hotline following AIDS-related episodes in a soap opera. 287 Daisy R. Lemus, David R. Seibold, Andrew J. Flanagan & Miriam J. Metzger. Argument and decision making in computer-mediated groups. 302 Amy I. Nathanson. Factual and evaluative approaches to modifying childrens responses to violent television. 321 Nicholas A. Valentino, Vincent L. Hutchings & Dmitri Williams. The impact of political advertising on knowledge, internet information seeking, and candidate preference. 337 John D. Youngblood & J. Emmett Winn. About glory: Competing communication codes experienced by the members of the African American Pentecostal Genuine Deliverance Holiness Church. 355 2004, Vol. 54(1) Kimberly L. Bissell & Peiqin Zhou. Must-see TV or ESPN: Entertainment and sports media exposure and body-image distortion in college women. 5 Cheryl Campanella Bracken & Matthew Lombard. Social presence and children: Praise, intrinsic motivation, and learning with computers. 22 Stacey L. Connaughton & Sharon E. Jarvis. Invitations for partisan identification: Attempts to court Latino voters through televised Latino-oriented political advertisements, 1984-2000. 38 Albert C. Gunther & Kathleen Schnmitt. Mapping boundaries of the hostile media effect. 55 Spiro Kiousis. Explicating media salience: A factor analysis of New York Times issue coverage during the 2000 presidential election. 71 Mary Beth Oliver, Ronald L. Jackson, II, Nididi N. Moses & Celnisha L. Dangerfield. The face of crime: Viewers memory of race-related facial features of individuals pictured in the news. 88 Roxanne Parrott, Kami Silk, Judith Weiner, Celeste Condit, Tina Harris & Jay Bernhardt. Deriving lay models of uncertainty about genes role in illness causation to guide communication about human genetics. 105 Fuyuan Shen. Chronic accessibility and individual cognitions: Examining the effects of message frames in political advertisements. 123 David Tewksbury, Patricia Moy & Deborah S. Weis. Preparations for Y2K: Revisiting the behavioral component of the third-person effect. 138 Yan Bing Zhang & Jake Garwood. Modernization and tradition in the age of globalization: Cultural values in Chinese television commercials. 156

200 2003, Vol. 53(4) Andrew C. Billings & Susan Tyler Eastman. Framing identities: Gender, ethnic, and national parity in network announcing of the 2002 Winter Olympics. 569 William J. Brown, Michael D. Basil & Mihai C. Bocarnea. Social influence of an international celebrity: Responses to the death of Princess Diane. 587 David Domke, Philip Garland, Andre Billeaudeaux & John Hutcheson. Insights into U.S. racial hierarchy: Racial profiling, news sources, and September 11. 606 Alice Hall. Reading realism: Audiences evaluations of the reality of media texts. 624 Sorin Matei & Sandra Ball-Rokeach. The internet in the communication infrastructure of urban residential communities: Macro or mesolinkage? 642 Shelly Rodgers & Esther Torson. A socialization perspective on male and female reporting. 658 Martin Tanis & Tom Posmes. Social cues and impression formation in CMC. David Tewskbury. What do Americans really want to know? Tracking the behavior of news readers on the internet. 694 Yariv Tsfati & Jonathan Choen. On the effect of the third-person effect: Perceived influence of media coverage and residential mobility intentions. 711 2003, Vol. 53(3) William P. Eveland, Jr. A mix of attributes approach to the study of media effects and new communication technologies. 395 Kimberly Gross & Sean Aday. The scary world in your living room and neighborhood: Using local broadcast news, neighborhood crime rates, and personal experience to test agenda setting and cultivation. 411 R. Lance Holbert, Owen Pillion, David A. Tschida, Greg G. Armfield, Kelly Kinder, Kristin L. Cherry & Amy R. Daulton. The West Wing as endorsement of the U.S. presidency: Expanding the boundaries of priming in political communication. 427 Chengju Huang. Transitional media vs. normative theories: Schramm, Altschull, and China. 444. Marina Krcmar & Stephen Curtis. Mental models: Understanding the impact of fantasy violence on childrens moral reasoning. 460 Vicki Mayer. Living telenovelas/telenovelizing life: Mexican American girls identities and transnational telenovelas. 479 Divya C. McMillin. Television, gender, and labor in the global city. 496 Susan E. Morgan, Philip Palmgreen, Michael T. Stephenson, Rick H. Hoyle & Elizabeth P. Lorch. Associations between message features and subjective evaluations of the sensation value of antidrug public service announcements. 512 Robin L. Nabi & Alexandra Hendriks. The persuasive effect of host and audience reaction shots in television talk shows. 527 2003, Vol. 53(2) Albert C. Gunther & J. Douglas Storey. The influence of presumed influence. 199 Kristen Harrison & Barbara L. Fredrickson. Womens sports media, self-objectification, and mental health in Black and White adolescent females. 216 Silvia Knobloch. Mood adjustment via mass communication. 233 Marrthew S. McGlone & Jennifer A. Batchelor. Looking out for number one: Euphemism and face. 251

201 Kelly L. Schmitt, Kimberly Duyck Woolf & Daniel R. Anderson. Viewing the viewers: Viewing behaviors by children and adults during television programs and commercials. 265 Eli Avraham & Anat First. I buy American: The American image as reflected in Israeli advertising. 282 Kalai Natarajan & Hao Xiaoming. An Asian voice? A comparative study of channel news Asia and CNN. 300 W. James Potter & Tami K. Tomasello. Building upon the experimental design in media violence research: The importance of including receiver interpretations. 315 Karen M. Staller. Constructing the runaway youth problem: Boy adventures to girl prostitutes, 1960-1978. 330 Xioquan Zhao & Walter Gantz. Disruptive and cooperative interpretations in prime-time television fiction: The role of gender, status, and topic. 347 2003, Vol. 53(1) Cindy Gallois. Reconciliation through communication in intercultural encounters: Potential or peril? 5 (2002 ICA Presidential Address) Ronald Bishop. The worlds nicest grown-ups: A fantasy theme analysis of news media coverage of Fred Rogers. 16 Jessica M. Fishman & Carolyn Marvin. Portrayals of violence and group differences in newspaper photographs: Nationalism and media. 32 R. Lance Holbert, Dhavan V. Shah & Nojin Kwak. Political implications of prime-time drama and sitcom uses: Genres of representation and opinions concerning womens rights. 45 Dennis T. Lowry, Tam Ching Josephine Nio & Dennis W. Leitner. Setting the public fear agenda: A longitudinal analysis of network TV crime reporting, public perceptions of crime, and FBI crime statistics. 61 Marina M. Pool, Cees M. Koolstra & Tom H. A. van der Voort. The impact of background radio and television on high school students homework performance. 74 Daniel Romer, Kathleen Hall Jamieson & Sean Aday. Television news and the cultivation of fear of crime. 88 Michael D. Slater. Alienation, aggression, and sensation seeking as predictors of adolescent use of violent film, computer, and website content. 105 Mira Sotirovic. How individuals explain social problems: The influences of media use. 122 Roderick P. Hart, William P. Jennings & Mary J. Dixson. Imagining the American people: Strategies for building political community. 138 Michael McDevitt. In defense of autonomy: A critique of the public journalism critique. 155 John Weispfenning. Cultural functions of reruns: Time, memory, and television. 165 2002, Vol. 52(4) Sherry J. Holliday. Have fun while you can, youre only as old as you feel, and dont ever get old!: An examination of memorable messages about aging. 681 Christopher Hajek & Howard Giles. The old man out: An intergroup analysis of intergenerational communication among gay men. 698 Loretta L. Pecchioni & Jon M. Croghan. Young adults stereotypes of older adults with their grandparents as the targets. 715 Eytan Gilboa. Global communication and foreign policy. 731

202 Steven E. Clayman & John Heritage. Questioning presidents: Journalistic deference and adversarialness in the press conferences of U.S. Presidents Eisenhower and Reagan. 749 Osei Appiah. Black and White viewers perception and recall of occupational characters on television. 776 Lynn Schofield Clark. U.S. adolescent religious identity, the media, and the funky side of religion. 794 Kathryn Greene, Marina Krcmar, Donald L. Rubin, Linda Henley Walters & Jerold L. Hale. Elaboration in processing adolescent health messages: The impact of egocentrism and sensation seeking on message processing. 812 Radhika Parameswaran. Reading fictions of romance: Gender, sexuality, and nationalism in postcolonial India. 832 Michael L. Hecht, Sandra L. Faulkner, C. R. Meyers, TA. Niles, Doug Golden & Melanie Cutler. Looking through Northern Exposure at Jewish American identity and the communication theory of identity. 852 Paul DAngelo. News framing as a multiparadigmatic research program: A response to Entman. 870 Cornelius B. Pratt, Louisa Ha & Charlotte A. Pratt. Setting the public health agenda on major diseases in Sub-Saharan Africa: African popular magazines and medical journals, 1981-1997. 889 Ying Zhu. Chinese cinemas economic reform from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s. 905 Amy I. Nathanson, Barbara J. Wilson, Jocelyn McGee & Minu Sebastian. Counteracting the effects of female stereotypes on television via active mediation. 922 Ron Leone. Contemplating ratings: An examination of what the MPAA considers too far for r and why. 938 Carine T. G. M. Ex, Jan M. A. M. Janssens & Hubert P. L. M. Korzilius. Young females images of motherhood in relation to television viewing. 955 Hans Mathias Kepplinger. Mediatization of politics: Theory and data. 972 Brian L. Massey & Li-jing Arthur Chang. Locating Asian values in Asian journalism: A content analysis of web newspapers. 987 2002, Vol. 52(3) (Special Issue: Research on the Relationship Between Verbal and Nonverbal Communication: Emerging Integrations) Stanley E. Jones & Curtis D. LeBaron. Guest editors introduction. 499 Ross Buck & C. Arthur VanLear. Verbal and nonverbal communication: Distinguishing symbolic, spontaneous, and pseudo-spontaneous nonverbal behavior. 522 Curtis D. LeBaron & Stanley E. Jones. Closing up closings: Showing the relevance of the social and material surround to the completion of interaction. 542 Janet Beavin Bavelas, Linda Coates & Trudy Johnson. Listener responses as a collaborative process: The role of gaze. 566 Jurgen Streeck. Grammars, words, and embodied meanings: On the uses and evolution of so and like. 581 Christian Heath. Demonstrative suffering: The gestural (re)embodiment of symptoms. 597 Wayne A. Beach & Curtis D. LeBaron. Body disclosures: Attending to personal problems and reported sexual abuse during a medical encounter. 617 Valerie Manusov & April R. Trees. Are you kidding me?: The role of nonverbal cues in the verbal accounting process. 640

203 Judee K. Burgoon, Joseph A. Bonito, Artemio Ramirez, Jr., Norah E. Dunbar, Karadeen Kam & Jenna Fisher. Testing the interactivity principle: Effects of mediation, propinquity, and verbal and nonverbal modalities in interpersonal interaction. 657 2002, Vol. 52(2) Chris Segrin & Robin L. Nabi. Does television viewing cultivate unrealistic expectations about marriage? 247 Alisha M. Crawly, Daniel R. Anderson, Angela Santomero, Alice Wilder, Marsha Williams, Marie K. Evans & Jennings Brytant. Do children learn how to watch television? The impact of extensive experience with Blues Clues on preschool childrens television viewing behavior. 264 Anne Johnston & Lynda Lee Kaid. Image ads and issue ads in U.S. presidential advertising: Using videostyle to explore stylistic differences in televised political ads from 1950 to 2000. 281 Michael Pfau, R. Lance Holbert, Erin Alison Szabo & Jelly Kaminiski. Issue-advocacy versus candidate advertising: Effects on candidate preferences and democratic process. 301 William L. Benoit, Mitchell S. McKinney & Michael T. Stephenson. Effects of watching primary debates in the 2000 U.S. presidential campaign. 316 Alice Hall & Joseph N. Cappella. The impact of political talk radio exposure on attributions about the outcome of the 1996 U.S. presidential election. 332 Silvia Knobloch & Dolf Zillman. Mood management via the digital jukebox. 351 Craig W. Trumbo. Information processing and risk perception: An adaptation of the heuristicsystematic model. 367 Matthew P. McAllister. Television news plugola and the last episode of Seinfeld. 383 Arthur A. Raney & Jennings Bryant. Moral judgment and crime drama: An integrated theory of enjoyment. 402 Matt Jackson. From private to public: Reexamining the technological basis for copyright. 416 Ronald L. Jackson II & Susan M. Heckman. Perceptions of White identity and White liability: An analysis of White student responses to a college campus racial hate crime. 434 2002, Vol. 52(1) Barbara J. Wilson, Stacy L. Smith, W. James Potter, Dale Kunkel, Daniel Linz, Carolyn M. Colvin & Edward Donnerstein. Violence in childrens television programming: Assessing the risks. 5 Barbara J. Wilson, Carolyn M. Colvin & Stacy L. Smith. Engaging in violence on American television: A comparison of child, teen, and adult perpetrators. 36 Stacy L. Smith & Aaron R. Byson. Violence in music videos: Examining the prevalence and context of physical aggression. 61 Stacy L. Smith, Amy I. Nathanson & Barbara J. Wilson. Prime-time television: Assessing violence during the most popular viewing hours. 84 Dale Kunkel, Wendy Jo Maynard Farinola, Kristie Farrar, Edward Donnerstein, Erica Biely & Lara Zwarun. Deciphering the V-chip: An examination of the television industrys program rating judgments. 112 Carolina Acosta-Alzuru & Peggy J. Kreshel. Im an American girl . . . whatever that means: Girls consuming Pleasant Companys American girl identity. 139 Bryan E. Denham. Advanced categorical statistics: Issues and applications in communication research. 162

204 Albert C. Gunther & Cindy T. Christen. Projection or persuasive press? Contrary effects of personal opinion and perceived news coverage on estimates of public opinion. 177 Laura A. Wachwitz. Burger on Miller: Obscene effects and the filth of a nation. Rebecca Ann Lind & Colleen Salo. The framing of feminists and feminism in news and public affairs programs in U.S. electronic media. 211 Joseph N. Cappella. 2001 ICA Presidential address: Cynicism and social trust in the new media environment. 2001, Vol. 51(4) Rajiv N. Rimal. Perceived risk and self-efficacy as motivators: Understanding individuals longterm use of health information. 633 Charles R. Berger. Making it worse than it is: Quantitative depictions of threatening trends in the news. 655 Douglas M. McLeod, Benjamin H. Detenver & William P. Eveland, Jr. Behind the third-person effect: Differentiating perceptual processes for self and other. 678 Joyce M. Wolburg. Preserving the moment, commodifying time, and improving upon the past: Insights into the depiction of time in American advertising. 696 Julia B. Corbett. Women, scientists, agitators: Magazine portrayal of Rachel Carson and Theo Colborn. 720 Mira Sotirovic. Media use and perceptions of welfare. 750 Glenn W. Richardson, Jr. Looking for meaning in all the wrong places: Why negative advertising is a suspect category. 775 Ann Mason & Marian Meyers. Living with Martha Stewart media: Chosen domesticity in the experience of fans. 801 2001, Vol. 51(3) (Special Issue: Uncertainty, Evaluation, and Communication) Austin S. Babrow. Guest editors introduction. 453 James J. Bradac. Theory comparison: Uncertainty reduction, problematic integration, uncertainty management, and other curious constructs. 456 Dale E. Brashers. Communication and uncertainty management. 477 Stephen C. Hines. Coping with uncertainties in advance care planning. 498 Deana J. Goldsmith. A normative approach to the study of uncertainty and communication. 514 Eric M. Eisenberg. Building a mystery: Toward a new theory of communication and identity. 534 Austin S. Babrow. Uncertainty, value, communication, and problematic integration. 553 Robert D. McPhee & Pamela Zaug. Organizational theory, organizational communication, organizational knowledge, and problematic integration. 574 2001, Vol. 51(2) Jeanine Warisse Turner, Jean A. Grube & Jennifer Meyers. Developing an optimal match within online communities: An exploration of CMC support communities and traditional support. 231 Tanya Stivers. Negotiating who presents the problem: Next speaker selection in pediatric encounters. 252

205 Cynthia Hoffner, Richard S. Plotkin, Martha Buchanan, Joel David Anderson, Stacy K. Kamigaki, Lisa A. Hubbs, Laura Kowalczyk, Helsey Silberg & Angela Pastorek. The third-person effect in perceptions of the influence of television violence. 283 Marina Krcmar & Mark C. Cooke. Childrens moral reasoning and their perceptions of television violence. 300 David Domke. The press, race relations, and social change. 317 Chin-Chuan Lee, Zhongdang Pan, Joseph Man Chan & Clement Y. K. So. Through the eyes of the U.S. media: Banging the democracy drum in Hong Kong. 345 Robert W. Kubey, Michael J. Lavin & John R. Barrows. Internet use and collegiate academic performance decrements: Early findings. 366 Eliza Tanner. Chilean conversations: Internet forum participants debate Augusto Pinochets detention. 383 2001, Vol. 51(1) Valerie Baker, Howard Giles, Kimberly Noels, Julie Duck, Michael Hecht & Richarde Clement. The English-only movement: A communication analysis of changing perceptions of language vitality. 3 Linda L. Putnam. Shifting voices, oppositional discourse, and new visions for communication studies. 38 (2000 ICA Presidential Address) S. Shyam Sundar & Clifford Nass. Conceptualizing sources in online news. 52 Katherine Sender. Gay readers, consumers, and a dominant gay habitus: 25 years of the Advocate magazine. 73 Bernd Henning & Peter Vorderer. Psychological escapism: Predicting the amount of television viewing by the need for cognition. 100 Julie L. Andsager, Erica Weintraub Austin & Bruce E. Pinkleton. Questioning the value of realism: Young adults processing of messages in alcohol-related public service announcements and advertising. 121 Patrick Rossler & Hans-Bernd Brosius. Do talk shows cultivate adolescents views of the world? A prolonged-exposure experiment. 143 Mary E. McCoy. Dark alliance: News repair and institutional authority in the age of the internet. 164 2000, Vol. 50(4) Renee A. Meyers, Dale E. Brashers & Jennifer Hanner. Majority-minority influence: Identifying argumentative patterns and predicting argument-outcome links. 3 Michael J. Papa, Arvind Singhal, Sweety Law, Saumya Pant, Suruchi Sood, Everett M. Rogers & Corrine L. Shefner-Rogers. Entertainment-education and social change: An analysis of parasocial interaction, social learning, collective efficacy, and paradoxical communication. 31 Jake Harwood. Communication media use in the grandparent-grandchild relationship. 56 Kelly Fudge Albada. The public and private dialogue about the American family on television. 79 Jennifer Stomer-Galley. On-line interaction and why candidates avoid it. 111 Dave DAlessio & Mike Allen. Media bias in presidential elections: A meta-analysis. 133 Anthony J. Roberto, Gary Meyer, Amy Janan Johnson & Charles K. Atkin. Using the extended parallel process model to prevent firearm injury and death: Field experience results of a video-based intervention. 157

206 Herman Galperin. Regulatory reform in the broadcasting industries of Brazil and Argentina in the 1990s. 176 2000, Vol. 50(3) (Special Issue: Negotiating Lifestyle Options in Later Life) Angie Williams & Virpi Ylanne-McEwen. Guest Editors Introduction. Elderly lifestyles in the 21st century: Dorris and Sids excellent adventure. 4 Justine Coupland. Past the perfect kind of age? Styling selves and relationships in over-50s dating advertisements. 9 Jake Harwood and Mei-Chen Lin. Affiliation, pride, exchange, and distance in grandparents accounts of relationships with their college-aged grandchildren. 31 Melanie Morgan & Mary Lee Hummert. Perceptions of communicative control strategies in mother-daughter dyads across the life span. 48 Angie Williams & Jacqui Guendouzi. Adjusting to the home: Dialectical dilemmas and personal relationships in a retirement community. 65 Virpi Ylanne-McEwen. Golden times for golden agers: Selling holidays as lifestyle for the over 50s. 83 Research Articles Kevin Wright. Computer-mediated social support, older adults, and coping. 100 Kristen Harrison. The body electric: Thin-ideal media and eating disorders in adolescents. 119 Renee A. Botta. The mirror of television: A comparison of Black and White adolescents body image. 144 2000, Vol. 50(2) Yuezki Zhao. From commercialization to conglomeration: The transformation of the Chinese press within the orbit of the party state. 3 Roopali Mukherjee. Regulating race in the California civil rights initiative: Enemies, allies, and alibis. 27 Linda-Renee Bloch. Mobile discourse: Political bumper stickers as a communication event in Israel. 48 Maxwell McCombs, Estebian Lopez-Escobar & Juan Pablo Llamas. Setting the agenda of attributes in the 1996 Spanish general election. 77 Holli A. Semetko & Patti M. Valkenburg. Framing European politics: A content analysis of press and television news. 93 H. Dennis Wu. Systemic determinants of international news coverage: A comparison of 38 countries. 110 Travis L. Dixon & Daniel Linz. Overrepresentation and underrepresentation of African Americans and Latinos as lawbreakers on television news. 131 2000, Vol. 50(1) Cynthia M. King. Effects of humorous heroes and villains in violent action films. 5 Wolfram Peiser & Jochen Peter. Third-person perception of television-viewing behavior. 25 Annie Lang. The limited capacity model of mediated message processing. 46 Robert O. Wyatt, Elihu Katz & Joochan Kim. Bridging the spheres: Political and personal conversation in public and private spheres. 71

207 Li-Ning Huang. Examining candidate information search processes: The impact of processing goals and sophistication. 93 David Domke. Strategic elites, the press, and race relations. 115 1999, Vol. 49(4) Philip M. Napoli. Deconstructing the diversity principle. 7 David Domke, Mark D. Watts, Dhavan V. Shah & David P. Fan. The politics of conservative ethics and the liberal media argument. 35 Erik P. Bucy & John E. Newhagen. The emotional appropriateness heuristic: Processing televised presidential reactions to the news. 59 David Michael Ryfe. Franklin Roosevelt and the fireside chats. 80 Jon Bruschke & William E. Loges. Relationships between pretrial publicity and trial outcomes. 104 W. James Potter & Stacy Smith. Consistency of contextual cues about violence across narrative levels. 121 Kembrey McLeod. Authenticity within hip-hop and other cultures threatened with assimilation. 134 Philip M. Napoli. The marketplace of ideas metaphor in communications regulation. 151 Howard Giles. Managing dilemmas in the silent revolution: A call to arms! (1999 ICA Presidential Address). 170

208 1999, Vol. 49(3) Douglas M. McLeod & Benjamin H. Detenber. Framing effects of television news coverage of social protest. 3 Marina Krcmar & Kathryn Greene. Predicting exposure to and uses of television violence. 24 Mary Beth Oliver. Caucasian viewers memory of Black and White criminal suspects in the news. 46 S. Elizabeth Bird. Gendered construction of the American Indian in popular media. 61 Radhika Parameswaran. Western romance fiction as English-language media in postcolonial India. 84 Yoram Peri. The media and collective memory of Yitzhak Rabins remembrance. 106 Dan Berkowitz & James V. TerKeurst. Community as interpretive community: Rethinking the journalist-source relationship. 125 James B. McOmber. Technological autonomy and three definitions of technology. 137 1999, Vol. 49(2) Patti M. Valkenburg & Sabine C. Janssen. What do children value in entertainment programs? A cross-cultural investigation. 3 Renee A. Botta. Television images and adolescent girls body image disturbance. 22 Margie Comrie. Television news and broadcast deregulation in New Zealand. 42 Michael Curtin. Feminine desire in the age of satellite television. 55 Jill A. Edy. Journalistic uses of collective memory. 71 Pablo J. Bockowski. Mutual shaping of users and technologies in a national virtual community. 86 Peter Simonson. Mediated sources of public confidence: Lazarsfeld and Merton revisited. 109 James B. Lemert, Wayne Wanta & Tien-Tsung Lee. Party identification and negative advertising in a U.S. Senate election. 123 1998, Vol. 49(1) Frederich Krotz & Susan Tyler Eastman. Orientations toward television outside the home. 5 Shawn Parry-Giles & Trevor Parry-Giles. Meta-imaging, The War Room, and the hyperreality of U.S. politics. 28 Karin Gwinn Wilkins. Developmental discourse on gender and communication in strategies for social change. 46 Julie L. Andsager & Kimberly Roe. Country music video in countrys year of the woman. 69 Lisbeth Lipari. Polling as ritual. 83 Dietram A. Sacheufele. Framing as a theory of media effects. 103 Erwin A. Blackston & Gary W. Bowman. Vertical integration in motion pictures. 123 1998, Vol. 48(3) Ronald E. Rice, John DAmbra & Elizabeth More. Cross-cultural comparison of organizational media evaluation and choice. 3 Stephanie A. Westmyer, Racheal L. DiCioccio & Rebecca B. Rubin. Appropriateness and effectiveness of communication channels in competent interpersonal communication. 27 Elizabeth M. Perse. Implications of cognitive and affective involvement for channel changing. 49 Stacy Davis & Marie-Louise Mares. Effects of talk show viewing on adolescents. 69

209 Charles R. Berger. processing quantitative data about risk and threat in news reports. 87 Christine L. Kellow & H. Leslie Steeves. The role of radio in the Rwandan genocide. 108 Rick Clifton Moore. Hegemony, agency, and dialectical tension in Elluls technological society. 129 1998, Vol. 48(2) Vincent Price, David Tewksbury & Li-Ning Huang. Third-person effects on publication of a Holocaust-denial advertisement. 3 Elizabeth Blanks Hindman. Community, democracy, and neighborhood news. 27 W. James Potter & Ron Warren. Humor as camouflage of televised violence. 40 Duane Varan. The cultural erosion metaphor and the transcultural impact of media systems. 58 Sameer Singh, Tomas Domonkos Gedeon, & Youngju Rho. Enhancing comprehension of web information for users with special linguistic needs. 86 Linda Cooper Berdayes & Vincent Berdays. The information highway in contemporary magazine narrative. 109 Victor Sampedro. Grounding the displaced: Local media reception in a transnational context. 125 1998, Vol. 48(1) (Special Issue: Symposium: Media Literacy) William G. Christ & W. James Potter. Media literacy, media education, and the academy. 5 David Buckingham. Media in the UK: Moving beyond protectionism. 33 James A. Brown. Media literacy perspectives. 44 Robert Kubey. Obstacles to the development of media education in the U.S. 58 Paul Messaris. Visual aspects of media literacy. 70 Herbert Zettl. Contextual media aesthetics as the basis for media literacy. 81 Joshua Meyrowitz. Multiple media literacies. 96 Justin Lewis & Sut Jhally. The struggle over media literacy. 109 1997, Vol. 47(4) Michael Pfau, Kathleen E. Kendall, Tom Reichert, Susan A. Hellweg, Waipeng Lee, Kyle James Tusing & Theodore O. Proisise. Influence of communication during the distant phase of the 1996 Republican presidential primary campaign. 6 Kevin G. Barnhurst & Diana Mutz. American journalism and the decline in event-centered reporting. 27 Michael Dupagne. Effect of three communication technologies on mass media spending in Belgium. 54 Jessica Allen, Sonia Livingstone & Robert Reiner. The changing generic location of crime in film: A content analysis of film synopses, 1945-1991. 89 Hans Mathias Kepplinger. Political correctness and academic principles: A reply to Simpson. 102 Stanley A. Deetz. 1997 ICA Presidential Address: Communication in the age of negotiation. 118 1997, Vol. 47(3) Serra A. Tinc. United colors and united meanings: Benneton and the commodification of social issues. 3

210 June Woong Rhee. Strategy and issue frames in election campaign coverage: A social cognitive account of framing effects. 26 David Pritchard & Karen D. Hughes. Patterns of deviance in crime news. 49 David D. Perlmutter. Manufacturing visions of society and history in textbooks. 68 Adam F. Simon. Television news and international earthquake relief. 82 1997, Vol. 47(2) Elihu Katz, Hadassah Haas & Michael Gurevitch. 20 years of television in Israel: Are there longrun effects on values, social connectedness, and cultural practices? 3 Patti M. Valkenbury & Johannes W. J. Beentjes. Childrens creative imagination in response to radio and television stories. 21 Catherine A. Luther & Douglas A. Boyd. American occupation control over broadcasting in Japan, 1945-1952. 39 Michal B. Salwen & Paul D. Driscoll. Consequences of third-person perception in support of press restrictions in the O. J. Simpson trial. 60 Matthew Kieran. news reporting and the ideological presumption. 79 John Havick. Determinants of national media attention. 97 Marcy Meyer, J. David Johnson & Caroline Ethington. Contrasting attributes of preventive health innovations. 112 1997, Vol. 47(1) Clay Calvert. Hate speech and its harms: A communication theory perspective. 4 Stephen D. Perry, Stefan A. Jenzowsky, Cynthia M. King, Huiuk Yi, Joe Bob Hester & Jeanne Gartenschlaeger. Using humorous programs as a vehicle for humorous commercials. 20 Kristen Harrison & Joanne Cantor. The relationship between media consumption and eating disorders. 40 S. Robert Lichter, Linda S. Lichter & Daniel Amundson. Does Hollywood hate business or money? 68 Kwok Glasser. patriarchy, mediated desire, and Chinese magazine fiction. 85 Charles R. Berger: 1996 ICA Presidential Address: Finding a cure for communication. 109 1996, Vol. 46(4) Symposium: Dynamic Social Impact Theory and Communication Edward L. Fink. Dynamic social impact theory and the study of human communication. 4 Bibb Latan. Dynamic social impact: The creation of culture by communication. 13 Bibb Latan & James H. Liu. The intersubjective geometry of social space. 26 Bibb Latan & Martin Bourgeois. Experimental evidence for dynamic social impact: The emergence of subcultures in electronic groups. 35 Howard Lavine & Bibb Latan. A cognitive-social theory of public opinion: Dynamic social impact and cognitive structure. 48 Pascal Huguet & Bibb Latane. Social representations as dynamic social impact. 57 Mark Schaller & Bibb Latane. Dynamic social impact and the evolution of social representations: A natural history of stereotypes. 64 Articles

211 Sidney Krause. Winners of the first 1960 televised presidential debate between Kennedy and Nixon. 78 Sharon Hartin Iorio & Susan Schultz Huxman. Media coverage of political issues and the framing of personal concerns. 97 W. James Potter & Ron Warren. Considering policies to protect children from TV violence. 116 Amy I. Nathanson. Childrens fright reactions to television news. 139 Bradley S. Greenberg & Rick W. Busselle. Soap operas and sexual activity: A decade later. 153 (Research Note) 1996, Vol. 46(3) Symposium: Biology and Communication Joseph N. Capella. Why biological explanation? 4 Neil M. Malamuth. Sexually explicit media, gender differences, and evolutionary theory. 8 Pamela J. Shoemaker. Hardwired for news: Using biological and cultural evolution to explain the surveillance function. 32 Baldwin M. Way & Roger D. Masters. Emotion and cognition in political information-processing. 48 Benjamin H. Detenber & Byron Reeves. A bio-informational theory of emotion: Motion and image size effects on viewers. 66 Symposium: Intellectual Roots of Communication Research John Durham Peters. Tangled legacies. 85 Kenneth Cmiel. On cynicism, evil, and the discovery of communication in the 1940s. 88 John Durham Peters. The uncanniness of mass communication in interway social thought. 108 Brett Gary. Communication research, the Rockefeller Foundation, and mobilization for the war on words, 1938-1944. 124 Christopher Simpson. Elizabeth Noelle-Neumanns spiral of silence and the historical context of communication theory. 149 1996, Vol. 46(2) David Miles. The CD-ROM novel Myst and McLuhans fourth law of media: Myst and its retrievals. 4 Jeanne B. Funk & Debra D. Buchman. Playing violent video and computer games and adolescent self-concept. 19 Benjamin I. Page & Jason Tannenbaum. Populist deliberation and talk radio. 33 Vincent Price & Edward J. Czilli. Modeling patterns of news recognition and recall. 55 Peter Lunt & Sonia Livingstone. Rethinking the focus group in media and communications research. 79 Robert Kubey, Reed Larson & Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. Experience sampling method applications to communication research questions. 99 Clifford Nass, Byron Reeves & Glenn Leshner. Technology and roles: A tale of two TVs. 121 (Research Note) John P. Robinson & Mark R. Levy. New media use and the informed public: A 1990s update. 129 (Research Note) 1996, Vol. 46(1)

212

Symposium: The Net John E. Newhagen & Sheizaf Rafaeli. Why communication researchers should study the internet: A dialogue. 4 John December. The units of analysis for internet communication. 14 Merrill Morris & Christine Ogan. The internet as mass medium. 39 Margaret L. McLuahglin. The art site on the world wide web. 51 Malcolm R. Parks & Kory Floyd. Making friends in cyberspace. 80 Robert W. McChesney. The internet and U.S. communication policy-making in historical and critical perspective. 98 Research Articles Eric W. Rothenbuhler. Commercial radio as communication. 125 Karen E. Riggs. Television use in a retirement communication. 144

213 JOURNAL OF FAMILY COMMUNICATION 2008, Vol. 7(1) Paul D. Turman. Parental sport involvement: Parental influence to encourage young athlete continued sports participation. 151 Jordan Solitz. Communicative predictors of a share family identity: Comparison of grandchildrens perceptions of family-of-origin grandparents and stepgrandparents. 177 Patrice M. Buzzanell, Damion Waymer, Maria Paz Tagle & Melina Liu. Different transitions into working motherhood: Discourses of Asian, Hispanic, and African American women. 195 2007, Vol. 7(2) S. S. Krouse & T. D. Afifi. Family-to-work spillover stress: Coping communicatively in the workplace. 85 Mary Claire Morr Serewicz, Fran C. Dickson, Jennifer Huynh Thi Anh Morrison & L. Lori Poole. Family privacy orientation, relational maintenance, and family satisfaction in young adults family relationships. 123 2007, Vol. 1 Mary Lee Hummert. As family members age: A research agenda for family communication. 2 Paul Schrodt, Andrew M. Ledbetter & Jennifer K. Ohrt. Parental confirmation and affection as mediators of family communication patterns and childrens mental well-being. 23 J. Donald Ragsdale & Frances E. Brandau-Brown. Could relational maintenance in marriage really be like grocery shopping? A reply to Stafford and Canary. 47 Laura Staffod & Daniel J. Canary. People wantand maintainfair marriages: Reply to Ragsdale and Brandau-Brown. 61 J. Donald Ragsdale & Fraces E. Brandau-Brown. Asked but not answered: A second reply to Staffors and Canary. 69 2006, Vol. 6(4) Laura Stafford & Daniel J. Canary. Equity and interdependence as predictors of relational maintenance strategies. 227 Todd L. Sandel, Grace E. Cho, Peggy J. Miller & Su-hua Wang. What it means to be a grandmother: A cross-cultural study of Taiwanese and Euro-American grandmothers beliefs. 255 Steven R. Wilson, Javette Hayes, Carma Bylund, Jessica J. Rack & Andrew P. Herman. Mothers trait verbal aggressiveness and child abuse potential. 279

214 2006, Vol. 6(3) Caryn E. Medved, Shannon M. Brogan, Andrea M. McClanahan, Jerimiah F. Morris & Gregory J. Shepherd. Family and work socializing communication: Messages, gender, and ideological implications. 161 Jake Harwood, Priya Raman & Miles Herstone. The family and communication dynamics of group salience. 181 Karla Mason Bergen, Elizabeth A. Suter & Karen L. Daas. About as solid as a fish net: Symbolic construction of a legitimate parental identity for nonbiological lesbian mothers. 201 2006, Vol. 6(2) Nathan Miczo, Lisa A. Miczo & Michelle Johnson. Parental support, perceived stress, and illnessrelated variables among first-year college students. 97 Gustavo S. Mesch. Family relations and the internet: Exploring a family boundaries approach. 119 Ronda M. Scantlin & Amy B. Jordan. Families experiences with the V-chip: An exploratory study. 139 2006, Vol. 6(1) Chris Segrin. Family interactions and well-being: Integrative perspectives. 3 Sylvia Niehuis, Ted L. Huston & Reva Rosenband. From courtship into marriage: A new developmental model and methodological critique. 23 Jody Koenig Kellas & April R. Trees. Finding meaning in difficulty family experiences: Sensemaking and interaction processes during joint family storytelling. 49 Daniel J. Weigel, Kymberly K. Bennett & Deborah S. Ballard-Reisch. Influence strategies in marriage: Self and partner links between equity, strategy use, marital satisfaction, and commitment. 77 2005, Vol. 5(4) Cecilia Bosticco & Teresa Thompson. The role of communication and story telling in the family grieving system. 255 Shawn T. Wahl, M. Chad McBride & Paul Schrodt. Becoming point and click parents: A case study of communication and online adoption. 279 Jennifer M. Heisler. Family communication about sex: Parents and college-aged offspring recall discussion topics, satisfaction, and parental involvement. 295 Judith L. Weiner, Kami J. Silk & Roxanne L. Parrott. Family communication and genetic health: A research note. 313

215 2005, Vol. 5(3) John Gottman, Kimberly Ruyan, Catherine Swanson & Kristin Swanson. Proximal change experiments with couples: A methodology for empirically building a science of effective interventions for changing couples interaction. 163 Laurie Heatherington, Valnetn Escudero & Myrna L. Friedlander. Couple interaction during problem discussions: Toward an integrative methodology. 191 Leslie A. Baxter, Carma L. Bylund, Rebecca S. Imes & Denise M. Scheive. Family communication environments and rule-based social control of adolescents health lifestyle choices. 2099 Michael Tannenbaum. Viewing family relations through a linguistic lens: Symbolic aspects of language maintenance in immigrant families. 229 2005, Vol. 5(2) Kory Floyd & Mark T. Haynes. Applications of the theory of natural selection to the study of family communication. 79 Deborah Eicher-Catt. Advancing family communication scholarship: Toward a communicology of the family. 103 Stacy L. Young, Tara L. Kubicka, Caralyn E. Tucker, Desi Chvez-Appel & Jamie S. Rex. Communicative responses to hurtful messages in families. 123 Michael Irvin Arrington. Shes right behind me all the way: An analysis of prostate cancer narratives and changes in family relationships. 141 2005, Vol. 5(1) Alyson F. Shapiro & John M. Gottman. Effects on marriage of a psycho-communicativeeducational intervention with couples undergoing the transition to parenthood, evaluation at 1-year post intervention. 1 Patrick C. Hughes & Fran C. Dickson. Communication, marital communication, and religious orientation in interfaith marriages. 25 Stephen M. Haas & Laura Stafford. Maintenance behaviors in same-sex and marital relationships: A matched sample comparison. 43 J. Donald Ragsdale & Frances E. Brandau-Brown. Individual differences in the use of relational maintenance strategies in marriage. 61 2004, Vols. 3 & 4 (Special Issue: Advancing Family Communication Theory and Research) Thomas J. Socha. Advancing family communication theories and methods. 151 Part 1: Re-envisioning Family Communication Theory Building Dawn O. Braithwaite. Editors note. 157 L. Edna Rogers. The development of relational communication: A personal narrative. 157 Mary Anne Fitzpatrick. Family communication patterns theory: Observation on its development and application. 167 Leslie A. Bazter. A tale of two voices: Relational dialectics theory. 181 Sandra Petronio. Road to developing communication privacy management theory: Narrative in progress, please stand by. 193

216 Loreen N. Olson. Relational control-motivated aggression: A theoretically-based typology of intimate violence. 209 Theory in Progress Norah E. Dunbar. Dyadic power theory: Constructing a communication-based theory of relational power. 235 Marceline Thompson-Hayes & Lynne M. Webb. Commitment under construction: A dyadic and communicative model of marital commitment. 249 Part II: Innovative Methods for Studying Family Communication Deborah Ballard-Reisch & Daniel J. Weigel. Editors note. 261 Deborah A. Kashy, William A. Jellison & David A. Kenny. Modeling the interdependence among family members. 265 Kory Floyd. An introduction to the uses and potential uses of physiological measurement in the study of family communication. 295 Geoffrey K. Leigh. Incorporating human energy fields into studies of family communication. 319 Steve Duck & Robin Crumm. Porteus in the family castle: Studying the inconstant using the unwieldy in unison. 337 (Point of View Article) 2004, Vol. 4(2) Tamara D. Afifi & Stacia Keith. A risk and resiliency model of ambiguous loss in postdivorce stepfamilies. 65 Joy Koesten & Karen Anderson. Exploring the influence of family communication patterns, cognitive complexity, and interpersonal competence on adolescent risk behaviors. 99 Yan Xu & Brant R. Burleson. The association of experienced spousal support with marital satisfaction: Evaluating the moderating effects of sex, ethnic culture, and type of support. 123 2004, Vol. 4(1) Barbara A. Penington. The communicative management of connection and autonomy in African American and European American mother-daughter relationships. 3 Lynne M. Webb, Amanda J. Bourgerier, Milton W. Schaper, Kayla B. Johnson, Krista LK. Dubbs, Kyie N. Mountain, Lim H. Karp & Amber M. Walker. Gender and diversity in family communication: A content analysis of four undergraduate textbooks. 35 2003, Vol. 3(4) (Special Issue: Communication and Diversity in the Contemporary Family) Lynn H. Turner & Richard West. Breaking through silence: Increasing voice for diverse families in communication research. 181 (Introduction) Stephanie Coontz. Diversity and communication values in the family. 187 (Point of View Article) Elizabeth E. Graham. Dialectic contradictions in postmarital relationships. 193 Carma L. Bylund. Ethnic diversity and family stories. 215 Kathleen Galvin. International and transracial adoption: A communication research agenda. 237 2003, Vol. 3(3)

217 Carole A. Barbato, Elizabeth E. Graham & Elizabeth M. Perse. Communicating in the family: An examination of the relationship of family communication climate and interpersonal communication motives. 123 Lori L. Montalbano-Phelps. Discourse of survival: Building families free of unhealthy relationships. 149 2003, Vol. 3(2) John Oetzel, Stella Ting-Toomey, Martha Idalia Chew-Sanchez, Richard Harris, Richard Wilcox & Siegfried Stumpf. Face and facework in conflicts with parents and siblings: A crosscultural comparison of Germans, Japanese, Mexicans, and U.S. Americans. 67 Roxanne Parrott & Robert Lemieux. When the worlds of work and wellness collide: The role of familial support on skin cancer control. 95 Jacki Fitzpatrick, Du Feng & Duane Crawford. A contextual model analysis of womens social competence, affective characteristics, and satisfaction in premarital relationships. 107 2003, Vol. 3(1) Daniel J. Weigel. A communication approach to the construction of commitment in the early years of marriage: A qualitative study. 1 Bill Strom. Communication virtue and its relation to marriage quality. 21 Paul Yelsma & Sherilyn Marrow. An examination of couples difficulties with emotional expressiveness and their marital satisfaction. 41 2002, Vol. 2(4) Michelle Miller & L. Edward Day. Family communication, maternal and paternal expectations, and college students suicidality. 167 Laura L. Winn. Strategies used by Head Start mothers while engaging their child in a picture book: Is one strategy more related to child vocabulary scores? 185 2002, Vol. 2(3) Anne E. Lucchetti, William G. Powers & Don E. Love. The empirical development of the childparent communication apprehension scale for use with young adults. 109 Ascan F. Koerner & Kristen Evis Cvancara. The influence of conformity orientation on communication patterns in family conversations. 133

218 2002, Vol. 2(2) Margaret E. Prescott & Beth A. Le Poire. Eating disorders and mother-daughter communication: A test of inconsistent nurturing as control theory. 59 Brant R. Burleson & Adrianne Kunkel. Parental and peer contributions to the emotional support skills of the child: From whom do children learn to express support? 79 2002, Vol. 2(1) Murray A. Strauss. Communicating the no-spanking message to parents. 3 (Point of View) Joy Koesten, Katherine I. Miller & Mary Lee Hummert. Family communication, self-efficacy, and White female adolescents risk behavior. 7 Krystyna S. Aune & Jamie Comstock. An exploratory investigation of jealousy in the family. 20 2001, Vol. 1(4) Ron Warren. In words and deeds: Parental involvement and mediation of childrens television viewing. 211 Annis G. Golden. Modernity and the communicative management of multiple roles: The case of the worker-parent. 233 Daniel J. Weigel & Deborah S. Ballard-Reisch. The impact of relational maintenance behaviors on marital satisfaction: A longitudinal analysis. 265 2001, Vol. 1(3) Chris Segrin & Jeanne Flora. Perceptions of relational histories, marital quality, and loneliness when communication is limited: An examination of married prison inmates. 151 Victoria O. Orrego & Jose Rodriguez. Family communication patterns and college adjustment: The effects of communication and conflictual independence on college students. 175 Reviews and Resources in Family Communication Lynne M. Webb. A modest beginning: From the latest on-line to a 1995 mainstay. 191 Ann Rosenthal. A review of internet-based resources for family communication research. 193 2001, Vol. 1(2) Timothy Stephen. Concept analysis of the communication literature on marriage and family. 91 Michelle Miller & Josephine W. Lee. Communicating disappointment: The viewpoint of sons and daughters. 111 Loretta L. Pecchioni & Jon F. Nussbaum. Mother-adult daughter discussions of caregiving prior to dependency: Exploring concepts among European-American women. 133

219 2001, Vol. 1(1) (Special Issue: Family Communication: Progressing into the 21st Century) Thomas Socha. Editors introduction: Home, family, and communication: The horizon through a wide lens. 1 Gail G. Whitchurch. Stayin applied. 9 Kathleen M. Galvin. Family communication instruction: A brief history and call. 15 Lynne M. Webb. A thoughtful critique on the right stuff: A plan for staying on top of family communication information. 21 L. Edna Rogers. Relational communication in the context of family. 25 John Gottman, Robert Levenson & Erica Woodin. Facial expressions during marital conflict. 37 Ellen Wartella & Nancy Jennings. New members of the family: The digital revolution in the home. 59 Fred Rogers. A point of view: Family communication, television, and Mister Rogers Neighborhood. 71 William B. Gudykunst & Carmen M. Lee. An agenda for studying ethnicity and family communication. 75 Harriette P. McAdoo. Point of view: Ethnicity and family dialog. 87

220 JOURNAL OF HEALTH COMMUNICATION: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES 2007, Vol. 12(4) Carol Underwood, Elizabeth Serlemitsos & Mubiana Macwangi. Health communication in multilingual contexts: A student of reading preferences, practices, and proficiencies among literate adults in Zambia. 317 Michael Give. Consent and counter-mobilization: The case of the National Smokers Alliance. 339 Sei-Hill Kim & L. Anne Willis. Talking about obesity: News framing of who is responsible for causing and fixing the problem. 359 Anthony P. Lombardo & Yves A Lger. Thinking about think again in Canada: Assessing a social marketing HIV/AIDS prevention campaign. 377 Donald W. Helme, Robert Lewis Donohue, Monika Baier & Linda Zittleman. A classroomadministered simulation of a television campaign on adolescent smoking: Testing an activation model of information exposure. 399 2007, Vol. 12(3) Lisa S. Meredith, David P. Eisenman, Hilary Rhodes, Gery Ryan & Anna Long. Trust influences response to public health messages during a bioterrorist event. 217 Rachel Smith. Media depictions of health topics: Challenge and stigma formats. 233 May O. Lwin & SAeang Mei-Saw. Protecting children from myopia: A PMT perspective for improving health marketing communications. 251 Camilla Maria Andersson, Gunilla Bjrs, Per Tillgren & Claes Gran stenson. Local media monitoring in process evaluation: Experiences from the Stockholm diabetes prevention programme. 269 Pauline Hope Cheong, Thomas Hugh Feeley & Timothy Servoss. Understanding health inequalities for uninsured Americans: A population-wide survey. 285 2007, Vol. 12(2) Shelly Rodgers, Qimei Chen, Margaret Duffy & Kenneth Fleming. Media usage as health segmentation variables. 105 Mauro P. Porto. Fighting AIDS among adolescent women: Effects of a public communication campaign in Brazil. 121 Lauren D. Harris-Kojetin, Jennifer D. Uhrig, Peyton Williams, Carla Bann, Elizabeth M. Frentzel, Lauren M. McCormack, Nancy Mitchell & Nathan West. The choose with care system Development of education materials to support informed Medicare health plan choices. 133 Angela Sun, Jian Zhang, Janice Tsoh, Evaon Wong-Kim & Edward Chow. The effectiveness in utilizing Chinese media to promote breast health among Chinese women. 157 Leen Adams & Maggie Geuens. Healthy or unhealthy slogans: Thats the question . . . . 173 John Oetzel, Bonnie Duran, Yizhou Jiang & Julie Lucero. Social support and social undermining as correlates for alcohol, drug, and mental disorders in American Indian women presenting for primary care at an Indian health service hospital. 187 2007, Vol. 12(1)

221 Natalie B. Slopen, Amy C. Watson, Gabriela Gracia & Patrick W. Corrigan. Age analysis of newspaper coverage of mental illness. 3 Carma L. Bylund, Christina M. Sabee, Rebecca S. Imes & Amy Aldreidge Sanford. Exploration of the construct of reliance among patients who talk with their providers about internet information. 17 Joel J. Davis, Emily Cross & John Crowley. Pharmaceutical websites and the communication of risk information. 29 Owen B. J. Carter & Robert J. Donovan. Public (mis)understanding of the UV index. 41 Anthony J. Roberto, Rick S. Zimmerman, Kellie E. Carlyle & Erin L. Abner. A computer-based approach to preventing pregnancy, STD, and HIV in rural adolescents. 53 Bonnie A. Leeman-Castillo, Kitty K. Corbett, Eva M. Aagaard, Judith H. Maselli, Ralph Gonzales & Thomas D. MacKenzie. Acceptability of a bilingual interactive computerized educational module in a poor, medically underserved patient population. 77 2006, Vol. 11(8) Edward W. Maibach, Deanne Weber, Holly Massett, Gregory R. Hancock & Simani Price. Understanding consumers health information preferences: Development and validation of a brief screening instrument. 717 Itamar Katz. Explaining the increase in condom use among South African young females. 737 Leanne Johnny & Claudia Mitchell. Live and let live: An analysis of HIV/AIDS-related stigma and discrimination in international campaign posters. 755 Chingching Chang. Changing smoking attitudes by strengthening weak antismoking beliefs Taiwan as an example. 769 Kenneth Fleming, Esther Thorson & Yuyan Zhang. Going beyond exposure to local news media: An information-processing examination of public perceptions of food safety. 789 2006, Vol. 11(Supplement 2) (Special Issue: cost-Effectiveness Analysis) Jane T. Bertrand. Introduction to the special issue on cost-effectiveness analysis. 3 Paul Hutchinson & Jennifer Wheeler. The cost-effectiveness of health communication programs: What do we know. 7 David K. Guilkey, Paul Hutchinson & Peter Lance. Cost-effectiveness analysis for health communication programs. 47 D. Lawrence Kincaid & Mai Phuoung Do. Multivariate causal attribution and cost-effectiveness of a national mass media campaign in the Philippines. 69 Paul Hutchinson, Peter Lance, David K. Guilkey, Mohammed Shahjahan & Shahida Haque. Measuring the cost-effectiveness of a national health communication program in rural Bangladesh. 91 Michael Sweat, Deanna Kerrigan, Luis Moreno, Santo Roasrio, Bayardo Gomez, Hector Jerez, Ellen Weiss & Clare Barrington. Cost-effectiveness of environmental-structural communication interventions for HIV prevention in the female sex industry in the Dominican Republic. 123 Suruchi Sood & Devaki Nambiar. Comparative cost-effectiveness of the components of a behavior chance communication campaign on HIV/AIDS in North India. 143 Kevin D. Frick. Cost-effectiveness of behavior change communication campaigns: Assessing the state of the science and how to move the field forward. 163

222 2006, Vol. 11(7) Elizabeth A. Smith, Nophtali Offen & Ruth E. Malone. Pictures worth a thousand words: noncommercial tobacco content in the lesbian, gay, and bisexual press. 635 Dean Schillinger, Frances Wang, Jorge Palacios, Maytrella Roriguex, Edward L. Machtinger & Andrew Bindman. Language, literacy, and communication regarding medication in an anticoagulation clinic: A comparison of verbal vs. visual assessment. 651 Cynthia Waszak Geary, Holly McClain Burke, Shailes Neupane, Laure Castelnau & Jane D. Brown. Does MTV reach an appropriate audience for HIV prevention messages? Evidence from MTV viewership data in Nepal and Brazil. 665 Janice Frates, Gloria Garcia Bohrer & David Thomas. Promoting organ donation to Hispanics: The role of the media and medicine. 683 Karen Glanz, Nicole M. Sutton & Kimberly R. Jacob Arriola. Operation storefront Hawaii: tobacco advertising and promotion in Hawaii stores. 699 2006, Vol. 11(6) Terry C. Davis, Julie Gazmararian & Estela M. Kennen. Approaches to improving health literacy: Lessons from the field. 551 Dean Schillinger, Frances Wang, Maytrella Rodriguez, Andrew Bindman & Edward L. Machtinger. The importance of establishing regimen concordance in preventing medication errors in anticoagulant care. 555 Marilyn M. Schapira, Ann B. Nattinger & Timothy L. McAuliffe. The influence of graphic format on breast cancer risk communication. 569 Felicia E. Mebane, Eileen A. Yam & Barbara K. Rimer. Sex education and the news: Lessons from how journalists framed virginity pledges. 583 Kathleen S. Kelly, Michael F. Thompson & Richard D. Waters. Improving the way we die: A coorientation study assessing agreement/disagreement in the organization-public relationship of hospices and physicians. 607 2006, Vol. 11(5) Kathleen J. Kelly, Linda R. Stanley, Maria Leonora G. Comello & Gabriel R. Gonzalez. Tobacco counteradvertisements aimed at bicultural Mexican American youth: The impact of language and theme. 455 C. Nadine Wathen. Health information seeking in context: How women make decisions regarding hormone replacement therapy. 477 Juanne N. Clarke, Lianne McLellan & Laurie Hoffman-Goetz. The portrayal of HIV/AIDS in two popular African American magazines. 495 Christian M. Simon, Stephen J. Zyzanski, Ellen Durran, Xavier Jimenez & Eric D. Kodish. Interpreter accuracy and informed consent among Spanish-speaking families with cancer. 509 Jane Pirkis, R. Warwick Blood, Catherine Francis & Kerry McCallum. On-screen portrayals of mental illness: Extent, nature, and impacts. 523 2006, Vol. 11(4) Seth M. Noar, Kellie Carlyle & Christi Cole. Why communication is crucial: meta-analysis of the relationship between safer sexual communication and condom use. 365

223 Isaac M. Lipkus & William M. P. Klein. Effects of communicating social comparison information on risk perceptions for colorectal cancer. 391 Janet Hock & Phillip Gendall. Advertising and obesity: A behavioral perspective. 409 Daniela B. Friedman & Laurie Hoffman-Goetz. Assessment of cultural sensitivity of cancer information in ethnic print media. 425 2006, Vol. 11(Supplement 1) (Special Issue: The Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS): Research from the Baseline) K. Viswanath, Nancy Breen, Helen Meissner, Richard P. Moser, Bradford Hesse, Whitney Randolph Steele & William Rakowski. Cancer knowledge and disparities in the information age. 1 Jennifer S. Ford, Elliot J. Coups & Jennifer L. Hay. Knowledge of colon cancer screening in a national probability sample in the United States. 19 Laura E. Zajac, William M./ P. Klein & Kevin D. McCaul. Absolute and comparative risk perceptions as predictors of cancer worry: Moderating effects of gender and psychological distress. 37 Paul K. J. Han, Richard P. Moser & William M. P. Klein. Perceived authority about cancer prevention recommendations: Relationship to perceptions of cancer preventability, risk, and worry. 51 Jennifer Hay, Elliot Coups & Jennifer Ford. Predictors of perceived risk for colon cancer in a national probability sample in the United States. 71 Amanda J. Dillard, Kevin D. McCaul & William M. P. Klein. Unrealistic optimism in smokers: Implications for smoking myth endorsement and self-protective motivation. 93 Jennifer L. Cerully, William M. P. Klein & Kevin D. McCaul. Lack of acknowledgment of fruit and vegetable recommendations among nonadherent individuals: Associations with information processing and cancer cognitions. 103 Linda Squires, Mary Anne Bright, Lila J. Finny Rutten, Audie A. Atienza, Katherine Treiman, Richard P. Moser & Bradford Hesse. Awareness of the National Cancer Institutes Cancer Information Service results from the Health Information National Trends Study (HINTS). 117 Lila J. Finney Rutten, Erik Augustson & Kay Wanke. Factors associated with patients perceptions of health care providers communication behavior. 135 Lila J. Finney Rutten, Linda Squires & Bradford Hesse. Cancer-related information seeking: Hints from the 2003 Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS). 147 Minsum Shim, Bridget Kelly & Robert Hornik. Cancer information scanning and seeking behavior is associated with knowledge, lifestyle choices, and screening. 157 Giang T. Nguyen & Scarlett L. Bellamy. Cancer information seeking preferences and experiences: Disparities between Asian Americans and Whites in the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS). 173 Bruce S. Ling, William M. Klein & Qianyu Dang. Relationship of communication and information measures to colorectal cancer screening utilization: Results from HINTS. 181 2006, Vol. 11(3) Forum Edward C. Green & Kim Witte. Can fear arousal in public health campaigns contribute to the decline of HIV prevalence? 245

224 Commentaries. 261 Itshak Yanovitzky. Sensation seeking and alcohol use by college students: Examining multiple pathways of effects. 269 Patricia A. Aloise-Young, Michael D. Slater & Courtney C. Cruickshank. Mediators and moderators of magazine advertisement effects on adolescent cigarette smoking. 281 Mai P. Do & D. Lawrence Kincaid. Impact of an entertainment-education television drama on health knowledge and behavior in Bangladesh: An application of propensity score matching. 301 Annabelle Mooney. Quality of life: Questionnaires and questions. 327 John Wharf Higgins, P. J. Naylor, Tanya Berry, Brian OConner & David McLean. The health buck stops where? Thematic framing of health discourse to understand the context for CVD prevention. 343 2006, Vol. 11(2) Tara M. Cousineau, David Rancourt & Traci Craig Green. Web chatter before and after the womens health initiative results: A content analysis of on-line menopause message boards. 133 Traci Hong. Contributing factors to the use of health-related websites. 149 Erika A. Waters, Neil D. Weinstein, Graham A. Colditz & Karen Emmons. Formats for improving risk communication in medical tradeoff decisions. 167 Allison C. Morrill & Carey Norland. Interpersonal issues surrounding HIV counseling and testing, and the phenomenon of testing by proxy. 183 Barbara Curbow, Linda A. Fogarty, Karen A. McDonnell, Julia Chill & Lisa Benz Scott. The role of physician characteristics in clinical trial acceptance: Testing pathways of influence. 199 Sarah Bauerle Bass, Sheryl Burt Ruzek, Thomas F. Gordon, Linda Fleisher, Nancy McKeownConn & Dirk Moore. Relationships of internet health information use with patient behavior and self-efficacy: Experiences of newly diagnosed cancer patients who contact the National Cancer Institutes Cancer Information Center. 219 2006, Vol. 11(1) Timothy Edgar & Vicki S. Freimuth. Introduction: 10 years of health communication research. 7 Vicki S. Friemuth, Holly A. Massett & Wendy Meltzer. A descriptive analysis of 10 years of research published in the Journal of Health Communication. 11 Seth M. Noar. A 10-year retrospective of research in health mass media campaigns: Where do we go from here? 21 Kimberly N. Kline. A decade of research on health content in the media: The focus on health challenges and sociocultural context and attendant informational and ideological problems. 43 L. Suggs. A 10-year retrospective of research in new technologies for health communication. 61 Katherine A. McComas. Defining moments in risk communication research: 1996-2005. 75 Ashley Duggan. Understanding interpersonal communication processes across contexts: Advances in the last decade and challenges for the next decade. 93 2005, Vol. 10(8)

225 Andrea M. Byrne, Laurie Dickson, Jeffrey L. Derevensky, Rina Gupta & Isabelle Lussier. The application of youth substance use media campaigns to problem gambling: A critical evaluation. 681 Michael T. Stephenson & Brian L. Quick. Parent ads in the national youth anti-drug media campaign. 701 Jisu Huh, Denise E. DeLorme & Leonard N. Reid. Factors affecting trust in on-line prescription drug information and impact of trust on behavior following exposure to DTC advertising. 711 D. Jane Bower, Nessa Barry, Margaret Reid & John Norrie. Designing and implementing e-health applications in the UKs National Health Service. 733 Kami J. Silk, Judith Weiner & Roxanne L. Parrott. Gene cuisine or frankenfood? The theory of reasoned action as an audience segmentation strategy for messages about genetically modified foods. 751 Erice Weintraub Austin & Stacy J. T. Hust. Targeting adolescents? The content and frequency of alcoholic and nonalcoholic beverage ads in magazine and video formats November 1999April 2000. 769 2005, Vol. 10(Supplement 1) (The National Cancer Institutes Cancer Information Service: AZ New Generation of Service and Research to the Nation) Mary Ann Bright. The National Cancer Institutes Cancer Information Service: A new generation of service and research top the nation. 7 Linda Squiers, Lila J. Finney Rutten, Katherine Treiman, Mary Anne Bright & Bradford Hesse. Cancer patients information needs across the cancer care continuum: Evidence from the cancer information service. 15 Mary Anne Bright, Linda Fleisher, Chris Tomsen, Marion E. Morra, Al Marcus & Wendy Gehrging. Exploring e-health usage and interest among Cancer Information Service users: The need for personalized interactions and multiple channels remains. 35 Maria Talosig-Garcia & Sharon W. Davis. Information-seeking behavior of minority breast cancer patients: An exploratory study. 53 Jerianne Heimendinger, Caitlin ONeill, Alfred C. Marcus, Pam Wolfve, Karen Julesburg, Marion Morra, Amy Allen, Sharon Davis, Linda Mowad, Rosemarie Slevin Peroccia, Joann Dewing Ward, Victor Stretcher, Richard Warnecke, Mike Nowak, Ingrid Graf, Diane Fairclough, Lucinda Bryant & Issac Lipkus. Multiple tailed messages are effective in increasing fruit and vegetable consumption among callers to the Cancer Information Service. 65 Alfred C. Marcus, Mondi Mason, Pam Wolfe, Barbara E. Morra, Isaac Lipkus, Victor Strecher, Richard Warneke, Marion E. Morra, Amy Reasinger Allen, Shawon W. Davis, Amy Gaier, Carlen Graves, Karen Julesberg, Lynne Nguyen, Rosemarie Perocchia, Jo Beth Speuer, Doug Wagner, Chris Thomsen & Mary Anne Bright. The efficacy of tailored print materials in promoting colorectal cancer screening: results from a randomized trial involving callers to the National Cancer Institutes Cancer Information Service. Victor J. Stretcher, Al Marcus, Kathy Bishop, Linda Fleisher, William Stengle, Aronld Levinson, Diane L. Fairclough, Pam Wolfe, Marion Morra, Sharon Davis, Richard Warnecke, Jerianne Heimendinger & Mike Nowak. A randomized controlled trial of multiple tailored messages for smoking cessation using callers to the Cancer Information Service. 105 Suzanne M. Miller, Linda Fleisher, Pagona Rousi, Joanne S. Buzaglo, Robert Schnoll, Elyse Slater, Susan Raysor & Melania Popa-Mabe. Facilitating informed decision making about

226 breast cancer risk and genetic counseling among women calling the NCIs Cancer Information service. 119 Amy E. Latimer, Nicole A. Katulak, Linda Mowad & Peter Salovey. Motivating cancer prevention and early detection behaviors using psychologically tailed messages. 137 Rosemarie Selvin Perocchia, Bruce Rapkin, Julie Keany Hodorowski, Nydia Lassalle Davis, Anita Redriock Mcfarlane & Rose Carpenter. Raising awareness of on-line cancer information: Helping providers empower patients. 157 David H. Gustafson, Fiona M. McTavish, William Stengle, Denis Ballard, Ellen Jones, Karen Julesberg, Helene McDowell, Gina Landucci & Robert Hawkins. Reducing the digital divide for low-income women with breast cancer: A feasibility study of a population-based intervention. 173 David H. Gustafson, Fiona M. McTavish, William Stengle, Denise Ballard, Robert Hawkins, Bret R. Shaw, Ellen Jones, Karen Julesberg, Helene McDowell, Wei Chih Chen, Kanittha Volrathongchai & Gina Landucci. Use and impact of ehealth system by low-income women with breast cancer. 195 Alfred C. Marcus, Jerianne Heimendinger, Ellan Berman, VictorStrecher, Mary Anne Bright, Amy Reasinger Allen, Sharon W. Davis, Karen Julesberg, Linda Z. Mowad, Lynne H. Nguyen, Rosemarie Perocchia & Chris Thomsen. A case study in dissemination: Lessons learned from a pilot study involving the National Cancer Institutes Cancer Information Service. 219 Alfred C. Marcus, Marion E. Morra, Mary Anne Bright, Linda Fleisher, Gary Kreps & Rosemarie Perocchia. The CIS model for collaborative research in health communications: A brief retrospective from the current generation of research. 235 2005, Vol. 10(7) Juanne Clarke. Portrayal of childhood cancer in English language magazines. 593 Kimberly A. Kaphingst, Rima E. Ruud, William DeJong & Lawrence H. Daltroy. Comprehension of information in three direct-to-consumer television prescription drug advertisements among adults with limited literacy. 609 Chingching Chang. Personal values, advertising, and smoking motivation in Taiwanese adolescents. 621 Jeff Niederdeppe. Assessing the validity of confirmed ad recall measures for public health communication campaign evaluation. 635 Carmen E. Guerra, Francisco Dominguez & Judy A. Shea. Literacy and knowledge, attitudes, and behavior about colorectal cancer screening. 651 John P. Anderton & Ronal O. Valdiserri. Combating syphilis and HIV among users of internet chatrooms. 665 2005, Vol. 10(6) Elizabeth C. Tilson, Colleen M. McBride & Rebecca N. Brouwer. Formative development of an intervention to stop family tobacco use: The parents and children talking (PACT) intervention. 491 Michael S. Wolf, Charles L. Bennett, Terry C. Davis, Estella Marin & Connie Arnold. A qualitative study of literacy and patient response to HIV medication adherence questionnaires. 509

227 Marc Bouley & Thomas W. Valente. The selection of family planning discussion partners in Nepal. 519 Robert M. Wolfe & Lisa K. Sharp. Vaccination or immunization? The impact of search terms on the internet. 537 Meng-Jinn Chen, Joel W. Grube, Melina Bersamin, Elizath Waiters & Deborah B. Keefe. Alochol advertising: What makes it attractive to youth? 553 Kristy Williamson. Where one size does not fit all: Understanding the needs of potential users of a portal to breast cancer knowledge online. 567 2005, Vol. 10(5) Neil Ford, Abimola Williams, Melanie Renshaw & John Nkum. Communication strategy for implementing community IMCI. 379 W. Douglas Evans & Alec Ulasevich. News media tracking of tobacco control: A review of sampling methodologies. 403 Jeffrey Jensen Arnett. Talk is cheap: The tobacco companies violations of their own cigarette advertising code. 419 Rajiv N. Rimal, Maria K. Lapinski, Rachel J. Cook & Kevin Real. Moving toward a theory of normative influences: How perceived benefits and similarity moderate the impact of descriptive norms on behaviors. 433 Maghboeba Mosavel. The use of a telephone-based communication tool by low-income substance abusers. 451 Susan Goldstein, Shereen Usdin, Esca Sheepers & Garth Japhet. Communication HIV and AIDS, what works? A report on the impact evaluation of Soul Citys fourth series. 465 2005, Vol. 10(4) Abigail Rose, Nikki Peters, Judy A. Shea & Karina Armstrong. The association between knowledge and attitudes about genetic testing for cancer risk in the United States. 309 J. David Johnson, Donald O. Case, James E. Andrews & Suzanne L. Allard. Genomicsthe perfect information-seeking research problem. 323 Susannah R. Stern. Messages from teens on the big screen: Smoking, drinking, and drug use in teen centered films. 331 Saheed N. Mohammed & Avinash Hombre. HIV/AIDS stories on the World Wide Web and transformation perspective, 347 Barbara Pillsbury & Doe Mayer. Women Connect! Strengthening communications to meet sexual and reproductive health challenges. 361 2005, Vol. 10(3) Kimberly K. Engelman, Denise L. Perpich, Shelly L. Peterson, Matthew A. Hall, Edward F. Ellerbeck & Annettee L. Statnon. Cancer information needs in rural areas. 199 Wendy Macias, Liza Stavchansky Lewis & Tenikka L. Smith. Health-related message boards/chat rooms on the web: Discussion content and implications for pharmaceutical sponsorships. 209. A. Celeste Farr, Kim Witte, Kassa Jarato & Tiffany Menard. The effectiveness of media use in health education: Evaluation of an HIV/AIDS television campaign in Ethiopia. 225 Thomas Hugh Freeley & Timothy J. Servoss. Examining college students intentions to become organ donors. 237

228 David Knapp Whittier, May G. Jennedy, Janet S. St. Lawrence, Salvatore Seeley & Vicki Beck. Embedding health messages into entertainment television: Effect on gay mens responses to a syphilis outbreak. 251 Dean M. Krugman, William H. Quinn, Youngjun Sung & Margaret Morrison. Understanding the role of cigarette promotion and youth smoking in a changing marketing environment. 261 2005, Vol. 10(2) Melissa Wanzer, Melanie Booth-Butterfield & Steve Booth-Butterfield. If we didnt use humor wed cry: Humorous coping communication in health care settings. 105 Yvonne Terry-McElrath, Melanie Wakefield, Erin Ruel, George I. Balch, Sherry Emery, Glen Szczypka, Katherine Clegg-Smith & Brian Flay. The effect of antismoking advertisement executional characteristics on youth comprehension, appraisal, recall, and engagement. 127 Laurie Hoffman-Goetz, Daniela B. Friedman & Juanne N. Clarke. HIV/AIDS risk factors as portrayed in mass media targeting first nations. Mtis, and Inuit peoples of Canada. 145 Monique Hennick & Rob Stephenson. Using research to inform health policy: Barriers and strategies in developing countries. 181 W. Douglas Evans, Simani Price & Steven Blahut. Evaluating the truth brand. 181 2005, Vol. 10(1) Timothy Edgar & James N. Hyde. An alumni-based evaluation of graduate training in health communication: Results of survey on careers, salaries, competencies, and emerging trends. 5 Jacqueline L. Stoddard, Kevin L. Delucchi, Ricardo F. Munoz, Noah M. Collins, Eliseo J. Perez Stable, Erik Auguston & Leslie L. Lenert. Smoking cessation research via the internet: A feasibility study. 27 Barbara Reynolds & Matthew M. Seeger. Crisis and emergency risk communication as an integrative model. 43 James Price Dillard & Christine L. Carson. Uncertainty management following a positive newborn screening for cystic fibrosis. 57 Nancy W. Muturi. Communication for HIV/AIDS prevention in Kenya: Social-cultural considerations. 77 2004, Vol. 9(6) Erica D. Brownfield, Jay M. Bernhardt, Jennifer L. Phan, Mark V. Williams & Ruth M. Parker. Direct-to-consumer drug advertisements on network television: An exploration of quantity frequency, and placement. 491 Aparna Despande, Afit Menon, Matthew Perri III & George Zinkhan. Direct-to-consumer advertising and its utility in health care decision making: A consumer perspective. 499 Kimberley A. Kaphingst, William DeJong, Rima E. Rudd & Lawren H. Daltroy. A content analysis of direct-to-consumer television prescription drug advertisements. 515 Jisu Huh & Brenda J. Cude. Is the information fair and balanced in direct-to-consumer prescription drub websites? 529 Benjamin R. Bates, Kristan Poirot, Tina M. Harris, Paul J. Achter & Celeste M. Condit. Evaluating direct-to-comsumer marketing of race-based pharmacogenomics: A focus group study of public understandings of applied genomic medication. 541

229 Ken Rabin. Commentary: DTC advertising for prescription medicines: Research and reflections as the second decade ends. 561 Robert Baukus. Commentary: DTC advertising. 563 2004, Vol. 9(5) D. A. Gust, P. Gangarosa, B. Hibbs, R. Pollard, G. Wallach & R. T. Chen. National immunization information hotline: Calls concerning adverse events, 1998-2000. 387 Tara L. Crowell. Seropositive individuals willingness to communicate, self-efficacy, and assertiveness prior to HIV infection. 395 W. Douglas Evans, Simani Price, Steven Blahut, James Hersey, Jeffrey Niewdercdeppe & Sarah Ray. Social imagery, tobacco independence, and the TruthSM campaign. 425 David E. Nelson, Gary L. Kreps, Bradford W. Hesse, Robert T. Coyle, Gordon Willis, Neeraj K. Arora, Barbara K. Rimmer, K. Vish Viswanath, Neil Weinstein & Sara Alden. The health information national trends survey (HINTS): Development, design, and dissemination. 443 Rene Gravois Lee, Valerie A. Taylor & Ryan McGertick. Toward reducing youth exposure to tobacco messages: Examining the breadth of brand and nonbrand communications. 461 Derek Yach. Commentary: The health information national trends survey (HINTS): Development, design, and dissemination. 481 Vicki S. Freimuth. Commentary: The health information national trends survey (HINTS): Development, design, and dissemination. 483 2004, Vol. 9(4) John C. Pollock & Spiro G. Yulis. Nationwide newspaper coverage of physician-assisted suicide: A community structure approach. 281 Sandra C. Jones. Coverage of breast cancer in the Australian print mediaDoes advertising and editorial coverage reflect correct social marketing messages? 309 Yaniv Hanoch. Improving doctor-patient understanding of probability in communication cancerscreening test findings. 327 Pivi Kiuru, Maria Poskiparta, Tarja Kettunen, Juha Saltevo & Leena Liimatainen. Advice-giving styles by Finnish nurses in dietary counseling concerning Type 2 diabetes care. 337 Sania Nishtar, Yasir Abbas Mirza, Saulat Jehan, Yasmin Hadi, Shazia Yusuf, Saqib Shahab & Asma Baddar. Newspaper articles as a tool for cardiovascular prevention programs in a developing country. 355 D. A. Gust, P. Gangarose, B. Hibbs, C. Wilkins, K. Ford, M. Stuart, R. Brown-Bryant, G. Wallach & R. T. Chen. The national immunization information hotline. 371 2004, Vol. 9(3) Esther Thorson & Christopher E. Beaudoin. The impact of a health campaign on health social capital. 167 Rima E. Rudd, Kimberly Haphingst, Tayla Colton, John Gregoire & James Hyde. Rewriting public health information in plain language. 195 Ann Blunden, Tony Lower & Terry Slevin. Knowledge, awareness, and use of the UV index among the West Australian public. 207

230 Merrill Eisenberg, Chris Ringwalt, David Driscoll, Manual Valle & Gregory Guillette. Learning from truthsm: Youth participation in field marketing techniques to counter tobacco advertising. 223 Corrine L. Shefner-Rogers & Suruchi Sood. Involving husbands in safe motherhood: Effects of the SUAMI SIAGA campaign in Indonesia. 233 Lois Beiner, Ming Ji, Elizabeth A. Gilpin & Alison B. Albers. The impact of emotional tone, message, and broadcast parameters in youth anti smoking advertisements. 259 2004, Vol. 9 (Supplement 1: Special Issue: Forty Years of Diffusion of Innovations: Utility and Value in Public Health) Muhiuddin Haider & Gary L. Kreps. Forty years of diffusion of innovations: Utility and value in public health. 3 Everett M. Rogers. A prospective and retrospective look at the diffusion model. 13 James W. Dearing. Improving the state of health programming by using diffusion theory. 21 D. Lawrence Kincaid. From innovation to social norm: Bounded normative influence. 37 Gary Meyer. Diffusion methodology: Time to innovate? 59 Leslie B. Snyder, Mark A. Hamilton, Elizabeth W. Mitchell, James Kiwanuka-Tondo, Fran Fleming-Milici & Dwayne Procotor. A meta-analysis of the effect of mediated health communication campaigns on behavior change in the United States. 71 Keri K. Stephens, Rajiv N. Rimal & June A. Flora. Expanding the reach of health campaigns: Community organizations as meta-channels for the dissemination of health information. 97 Jane T. Bertrand. Diffusion of innovation and HIV/AIDS. 113 Elaine Murphy. Diffusion of innovations: Family planning in developing countries. 124 Kriss Barker. Diffusion of innovations: A world tour. 131 William Smith. Ev Rogers: Helping to build a modern synthesis of social change. 139 Robert Hornik. Some reflections on diffusion theory and the role of Everett Rogers. 143 Stephen F. Mosley. Everett Rogers diffusion of innovations theory: Its utility and value in public health. 149 2004, Vol. 9(1) Kenneth Fleming, Esther Torson & Charles K. Atkin. Alcohol advertising exposure and perceptions: Links with alcohol expectancies and intentions to drink or drinking in underage youth and young adults. (3) Ricardo J. Wray, Robert M. Hornik, Oscar H. Gandy, Jo Stryket, Marissa Ghez & Kelly MitchellClark. Preventing domestic violence in the African American community: Assessing the impact of a dramatic radio serial. 31 Neil D. Weinstein, Kathy Atwood, Elaine Puleo, Robert Fletcher, Graham Colditz & Karen M. Emmons. Colon cancer: Risk perceptions and risk communication. 53 John Hobbs, Anne Kitter, Susannah Fox, Blackford Middleton & David W. Bates. Communicating health information to an alarmed public facing a threat such as a bioterrorist attack. 67 Rajiv Khandekar, Martin Bullard, Ton Thi Kim Thanh & Tran Quoc Binh. Knowledge and practice related to trachoma among children in Vietnam: A cross-sectional study. 77 2003, Vol. 8(6)

231 Huan Jose Igartua, Lifen Cheng & Orquidea Lopes. To think or not to thin: Two pathways towards persuasion by short films on AIDS prevention. 513. Ronald Czaja, Clara Manfredi & Jammie Price. The determinants and consequences of information seeking among cancer patients. 529 Jessica Katz Jameson. Transcending intractable conflicts in health care: An exploratory study of communication and conflict management among anesthesia providers. 563 Biance L. Guzman, Michele M. Schlehofer-Sytton, Christina M. Villanueva, Mary Ellen Dello Stritto, Bettina J. Casad & Aida Feria. Lets talk about sex: How comfortable discussions about sex impact teen sexual behavior. 583 Neil Ford, Dan Odallo & Rozanne Chorlton. Communication from a human rights perspective: Responding to the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Eastern and Southern Africa. 599 Rafael Obregon. Commentary: Communication from a human rights perspective: Responding to the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Eastern and Southern Africa. 613 2003, Vol. 8(5) Ragnar E. Lofstedt. Science communication and the Swedish acrylamide alarm. 407 David Sharp. Commentary: Going public on acrylamide. 433 Ortwin Renn. Commentary: Acrylamide: Lessons for risk management and communication. 435 Kathryn Greene & Laura S. Brinn. Messages influencing college womens tanning bed use: Statistical versus narrative evidence format and a self-assessment to increase perceive susceptibility. 443 R. Cameron Wolf & Julie Pulerwitz. The influence of peer versus adult communication on AIDSprotective behaviors among Ghanaian youth. 463 Laurie Hoffman-Goetz, Charlene Shannon & Juanne N. Clarke. Chronic disease coverage in Canadian aboriginal newspapers. 475 Pamela J. Surkan, William DeJong, Kathleen M. Herr-Zaya, Mayra Rodriguez-Howard & Kevin Fay. A paid radio advertising campaign to promote parent-child communication about alcohol. 489 2003, Vol. 8, Supplement 1 (Special Issue: Public Health Communication during the September 2001 Bioterrorism-related Anthrax Outbreaks: CDC Activities and Lessons Learned) Mary G. Kennedy. Background on the special issue. 4 Vincent T. Covello. Best practices in public health risk and crisis communication. 5 Polyxeni Potter. Electronic journal publishing in the age of bioterrorism: How fast is fast? 9 Marsha L. Vanderford. Communication lessons learned in the emergency operations center during CDCs anthrax response: A commentary. 11 David A. Shore. Communicating in times of uncertainty: The need for trust. 13 Sandra Mullin. The anthrax attacks in New York City: The Guliani press conference mode and other communication strategies that helped. 15 Susan J. Robinson & Wendy C. Newsletter. Uncertain science and certain deadlines: CDC responses to the media during the anthrax attacks of 2001. 17 Chritine E. Prue, Cheryl Lackey, Lisa Swenarski & Judy M. Gantt. Communication monitoring: Shaping CDCs emergency risk communication efforts. 35 Felicia Mebane, Sarah Temin & Claudia F. Parvanta. Communicating anthrax in 2001: A comparison of CDC information and print media accounts. 50

232 Robert J. Blendon, John M. Benson, Catherine M. DesRoches & Kathleen J. Weldon. Using opinion surveys to track the publics responses to a bioterrorist attack. 83 William E. Pollard. Public perceptions of information sources concerning bioterrorism before and after anthrax attacks: An analysis of national survey data. 93 Rima E. Rudd, John P. Comings & James N. Hyde. Leave no one behind: Improving health and risk communication through attention to literacy. 104 Ruth M. Parker & Julie A. Gazmararian. Health literacy: Essential for health communication. 166 Christina Zarcadoolas, Andrew Pleasant & David S. Greer. Elaborating a definition of health literacy: A commentary. 119 Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Kellie Lammie, Clare Wardle & Susan Krutt. Questions about hypotheticals and details in reporting on anthrax. 121 J. Gregory Payne & Skye K. Schulte. Mass media, public health, and achieving health literacy. 124 Kay Golan. Surviving a public health crisis: Tips for communicators. 126 Judith Courtney, Galen Cole & Barbara Reynolds. How the CDC is meeting the training demands of emergency risk communication. 128 Charles T. Salmon, Hyun Soon Park & Brenda J. Wrigley. Optimistic bias and perceptions of bioterrorism in Michigan corporate spokespersons, fall 2001. 130 Jeffrey P. Koplan. Communication during public health emergencies. 144 Peter M. Sandman. Bioterrorism risk communication policy. 146 Vicki Freimuth. Epilogue to the special issue on anthrax. 148 2003, Vol. 8(4) Jo Ellen Stryker. Media and marijuana: A longitudinal analysis of news media effects on adolescents marijuana use and related outcomes, 1977-1999. 305 Carol Byrd-Bredbenner, Mary Finckenor & Darlene Grasso. Health related content in prime-time television programming. 329 Sei-Hill Kim & James Shanahan. Stigmatizing smokers: Public sentiment toward cigarette smoking and its relationship to smoking behaviors. 343 Charlotte A. Pratt, Louisa Ha, Steven R. Levine & Cornelius B. Pratt. Stroke knowledge and barriers to stroke prevention among African Americans: Implications for health communication. 369 Kriss Barker. Order from chaos: Organizational aspects of information, education and communication (a case study from Mali). 383 2003, Vol. 8(3) Isaac M. Lipkus, LaSonya G. Green & Alfred Marcus. Manipulating perceptions of colorectal cancer threat: Implications for screening intentions and behaviors. 213 Melanie Wakefield, Brian Flay, Mark Nichter & Gary Giovino. Effects of antic-smoking advertising on youth smoking: A review. 229 Mary K. Casey, Mike Allen, Tara Emmers-Sommer, Erin Sahlstein, Dan DeGooyer, Alaina M. Winters, Amy Elisabeth Wagner & Tim Dun. When a celebrity contracts a disease: The example of Earvin Magic Johnsons announcement that he was HIV positive. 249 Kempe Ronald Hope, Sr. Promoting behavior change in Botswana: An assessment of the peer education HIV/AIDS prevention program at the workplace. 267

233 Felicia Mebane. Bradley vs. Gore: How media covered proposals for health insurance reform in the context of the 2000 presidential campaign. 283 2003, Vol. 8(2) Gina Agostinelli & Joel W. Grube. Tobacco counter-advertising: A review of the literature and a conceptual model for understanding effects. 107 Marco C. Yzer, Joseph NB. Cappella, Martin Fishbein, Robert Hornik & R. Kirkland Ahern. The effectiveness of getaway communications in anti-marijuana campaigns. 129 Amanda B. Bower & Valerie A. Taylor. Increasing intention to comply with pharmaceutical product instructions: An exploratory study investigating the roles of frame and plain language. 143 Erica Weintraub Austin & Yin Ju Chen. The relationship of parental reinforcement of media messages to college students alcohol-related behaviors. 157 Karoly R. Kulich, Ulf Berggren & Lillemor R.-M. Hallberg. A qualitative analysis of patientcentered dentistry in consultations with dental phobic patients. 171 2003, Vol. 8(1) Cathleen M. Connell, Benjamin A. Shaw, Dara B. Holmes, Margaret L. Hudson, Holly A. Derry & Victor J. Strecher. The development of an Alzheimers disease channel for the Michigan Interactive Health Kiosk Project. 11 Hajme Sato. Agenda setting for smoking control in Japan, 1945-1990: Influence of the mass media on national health policy making. 23 William J. Brown, Michael D. Basil & Mihai C. Bocarnea. The influence of famous athletes on health beliefs and practices: Mark McGuire, child abuse prevention, and androstenedione. 41 Sam N. Lehman-Wilzig. Political ill-health coverage: Professional-ethical questions regarding news reporting of leaders ailments. 59 Linda C. Lederman, Lea P. Stewart, Fern Walter Goodhart & Lisa Laitman. A case against binge as the term of choice: Convincing college students to personalize messages about dangerous drinking. 79 2002, Vol. 7(5) Marc Boulay, J. Douglas Storey & Suruchi Sood. Indirect exposure to a family planning mass media campaign in Nepal. 379 Renita Coleman & Esther Thorson. The effects of news stories that put crime and violence into context: Testing the public health model of reporting. 401 Kathryn Pickle, Sandra Crouse Quinn & Jane D. Brown. HIV/AIDS coverage in Black newspapers, 1991-1996: Implications for health communication and health education. 427 Brian G. Southwell, Carlin Henry Barmada, Robert C. Hornik & David M. Maklan. Can we measure encoded exposure? Validation evidence from a national campaign. 445 Wim Verbeke & Patrick Van Kenhove. Impact of emotional stability and attitude on consumption decisions under risk: The Coca-Cola crisis in Belgium. 455 2002, Vol. 7(4)

234 Thomas R. Eng. Ehealth research and evaluation: Challenges and opportunities. 267 (Commentary) Traci Hong & Michael J. Cody. Presence of pro-tobacco messages on the web. 273 Christina Zarcadoolas, Mercedes Blanco, John F. Boyer & Andrew Pleasant. Unweaving the web: An exploratory study of low-literature adults navigation skills on the world wide web. 309 Jay M. Bernhardt, Ruth Ann Weaver Lariscy, Roxanne L. Parrott, Kami J. Silk & Elizabeth M. Felter. Perceived barriers to internet-based health communication on human genetics. 325 Sarah N. Keller, Healther LaBelle, Nema Karimi & Shafali Gupta. STD/HIV prevention for teenagers: A look at the internet university. 341 Joel J. Davis. Disenfranchising the disabled: The inaccessibility of internet-based health information. 355 2002, Vol. 7(3) Fiona Chew, Sushma Palmer, Zofia Slonska & Kalyani Subbiah. Enhancing health knowledge, health beliefs, and health behavior in Poland through a health promoting television program series. 179 Yuko Mizuno, May Kennedy, Kristen Weeks-Norton & Jaana Myllyluoma. An examination of adolescents who were and were not exposed to Teens Stopping AIDS: Reaching the hardto-reach. 197 Alicia K. Matthews, Sarah A. Sellergren, Clara Manfredi & Maryann Williams. Factors influencing medical information seeking among African American cancer patients. 205 Nilanjana R. Bardhan. Accounts from the field: A public relations perspective on global AIDS/HIV. 221 2002, Vol. 7(2) Xinguang Chen, Tess Boley Cruz, Darleen V. Schuster, Jennifer B. Unger & Carl Anderson Johnson. Receptivity to protobacco media and its impact on cigarette smoking among ethnic minority youth in California. 95 Melanie A. Wakefield, Erin E. Ruel, Frank J. Cghaloupka, Sandy J. Slater & Nancy J. Kaufman. Association of point-of-purchase tobacco advertising and promotions with choice of usual brand among teenage smokers. 113 Christoper E. Beaudoin. Exploring antismoking ads: Appeals, themes, and consequences. 123 Ruth E. Malone, Lynn D. Wnger & Lisa A. Bero. High school journalists perspectives on tobacco. 139 Michael Siegel. Antismoking advertising: Figuring out what works. 157

235 2002, Vol. 7(1) Ruth Kava, Kathleen A. Meister, Elizabeth M. Whelan, Alicia M. Lukachko & Christina Mirabile. Dietary supplement safety information in magazines popular among older readers. 13 Doug Brugge, William DeJong, James Hyde, Quang Le, Chin-Shui Shih, Ann Wong & An Tran. Development of targeted message concepts for recent Asian immigrants about secondhand smoke. 25 Deborah Glik, Glen Nowak, Thomas Valente, Karena Sapsis & Chad Martin. Youth performing arts entertainment-education for HIV/AIDS prevention and health promotion: Practice and research. 39 James Kiwanuka-Tondo & Leslie B. Snyder. The influence of organizational characteristics and campaign design elements on communication campaign quality: Evidence from 91 Ugandan AIDS campaigns. 59 2001, Vol. 6(4) Thomas W. Valente & Walter P. Saba. Campaign exposure and interpersonal communication as factors in contraceptive use in Bolivia. 303 Susan Eggly & Angela Tzelepis. Relational control in difficult physician-patient encounters: Negotiating treatment for pain. 323 Lisa Murray-Johnson, Kim Witte, Kelly Morrison, Anne P. Hubbell, Wen-Ying Liu & Joe Sampson. Addressing cultural orientations in fear appeals: Promoting AIDS-protective behaviors among Mexican immigrant and African American adolescents and American and Taiwanese college students. 335 2001, Vol. 6(3) Scott Ratzan. Quality communication: The path to ideal health. 193 (Special Communication: Lecture) Nichole Egbert & Roxanne Parrott. Self-efficacy and rural womens performance of breast and cervical cancer detection practices. 219 Francisco J. Mercado-Martinez, Leticia Robles-Silva, Nora Moreno-Leal & Claudia FrancoAlmazan. Inconsistent journalism: The coverage of chronic diseases in the Mexican press. 235 William DeJong, R. Cameron Wolf & S. Bryn Austin. U.S. federally funded television public service announcements (PSAs) to prevent HIV/AIDS: A content analysis. 249 F. C. Bull, C. L. Holt, M. Krueter, E. M. Clark, & D. Scharff. Understanding the effects of printed health education materials: Which features lead to which outcomes. 265 Rebecca A. Weldon. An urban legend of global proportion: An analysis of nonfiction accounts of the Ebola virus. 281 (Forum)

236 2001, Vol. 6(2) Jill Armstrong Shultz, Maureen A. Sprague, Laurel J. Branen & Suzanne Lambeth. A comparison of views of individuals with Type 2 diabetes mellitus and diabetes educators about barriers to diet and exercise. 99 Nurit Guttman & William Harris Ressler. On being responsible: Ethical issues in appeals to personal responsibility for health campaigns. 117 Shaheed Mohammed. Personal communication networks and the effects of an entertainmenteducation radio soap opera in Tanzania. 137 Dhavel S. Patel, Kim Witte, Cynthia Zukerman, Lisa Murray-Johnson, Victoria Orrego, Andrew M. Maxfield, Suzanne Meadows-Hogan, Julie Tisdale & Edward D. Thimons. Understanding barriers to preventive health actions for occupational noise-induced hearing loss. 155 Shelly Rodgers & Esther Thorson. The reporting of crime and violence in the Los Angeles Times: Is there a public health perspective? 169 (Forum) J. Gregory Payne. Reporting of crime and violence in the Los Angeles Times: Is there public health perspective? 189 (Commentary) 2001, Vol. 6(1) Jennifer B. Unger, Tess Boley Cruz, Darleen Schuster, June A. Flora & C. Anderson Johnson. Measuring exposure to pro- and anti-tobacco marketing among adolescents: Intercorrelations among measures and associations with smoking status. 11 David Connel, Jeanne P. Goldberg & Sara C. Folta. An intervention to increase fruit and vegetable consumption using audio communications: In-store public service announcements and audiotapes. 31 Andrew Doniger. Impact evaluation of the not me, not now abstinence-oriented, adolescent pregnancy prevention communications program, Monroe County, New York. 45 Adrian Edwards, Glyn Elwyn, Judith Covery, Elaine Matthews & Roisin Pill. Presenting risk informationa review of the effects of framing and other manipulations on patient outcomes. 61 2000, Vol. 5(4) P. Tillgren, L. Eriksson, K. Guldbrandsson & M. Spiik. Impact of direct mail as a method to recruit smoking mothers into a quit and win contest. 293 D. Quigley, V. Sanchez, D. Handy, R. Goble & P. George. Participatory research strategies in nuclear risk management for native communities. 305 Maifran Mattson. Empowerment through agency-promoting dialogue: An explicit application of harm reduction theory to reframe HIV test counseling. 333 Joel J. Davis. Riskier than we think? The relationship between risk statement completeness and perceptions of direct to consumer advertised prescription drugs. 349 (Forum) Julie Yingling. Verbal responses of children and their supportive providers in a pediatric oncology unit. 371-377. 2000, Vol.5(3) Peter W. Vaughan & Everett M. Rogers. A staged model of communication effects: Evidence from an entertainment-education radio soap opera in Tanzania. 203

237 Colleen M. McBride, Susan Halabi, Geold Bepler, Pauline Lyna, Lauren McIntyre, Isaac Lipkus, Jennifer Albright & Kathy OBriant. Maximizing the motivational impact of feedback of lung cancer susceptibility on smokers desire to quite. 229 Cherly A. Maurana & Mary A. Clark. The health action fund: A community-based approach to enhancing health. 243 Scott MacStravic. The missing links in social marketing. 255 (Forum) Jacqueline Kerr & Jim McKenna. A randomized control trial of new tailored walking campaigns in an employee sample. 265 (Notes from the Field) 2000, Vol. 5(2) Barbara K. Rimer. Use of multiple media and breast cancer screening: An introduction. 113 Itzhak Yanovitzky & Cynthia L. Blitz. Effect of media coverage and physician advice on utilization of breast cancer screening by women 40 years and older. 117 Bret R. Shaw, Fiona McTavish, Robert Hawkins, David H. Gustafson & Suzanne Pingree. Experiences of women with breast cancer: Exchanging social support over the CHESS computer network. 135 Michael D. Basil, Debra Z. Basil & Caroline Schooler. Cigarette advertising to counter New Years resolutions. 161 Kathryn Pitkin Derose, Sarah A. Fox, Elean Reigadas & Jennifer Hawes-Dawson. Church-based telephone mammography counseling with peer counselors. 175 2000, Vol. 5(Supplement): Communication for HIV/AIDS Prevention, Care, and Support: Contexts for Individual and Social Change Collins O. Airhirhenbuwa & Rafael Obregon. A critical assessment of theories/models used in health communication for HIV/AIDS. 5 Srinivas R. Melkote, Sundeep R. Muppidi & Divakar Goswami. Social and economic factors in an integrated behavioral and societal approach to communications in HIV/AIDS. 17 Sonja L. Myhre & June A. Flora. HIV/AIDS communication campaigns: Progress and prospects. 29 Patricia M. Reeves. Coping in cyberspace: The impact of internet use on the ability of HIVpositive individuals to deal with their illness. 47 R. Cameron Wolf, Katherine C. Bond & Linda A. Tawfik. Peer promotion programs and social networks in Ghana: Methods for monitoring and evaluating AIDS prevention and reproductive health programs among adolescents and young adults. 61 Peter W. Vaughn, Everett M. Rogers, Arvind Singhai & Ramadhan M. Swalehe. Entertainmenteducation and HIV/AIDS prevention: A field experiment in Tanzania. 81 Collins O. Airhirhenbuwa, Bummi Makinwa & Rafaeil Obregon. Toward a new communications framework for HIV/AIDS. 101 Lessons from the Field Waly Diop. From government policy to community-based communication strategies in Africa: Lessons from Senegal and Uganda. 113 Jose Marmo da Silva & Marco Antonio Chagas Guimaraes. Odo-Ya project: HIV/AIDS prevention in the context of Afro-Brazilian religion. 119 Eka Esu-Williams. Gender and HIV/AIDS in Africaour hope lies in the future. 123

238 2000, Vol. 5(1) Erica Weintraub Austin & Christopher Knaus. Predicting the potential for risky behavior among those too young to drink as the result of appealing advertising. 13 Pita Jallinoja & Arja R. Aro. Does knowledge make a difference? The association between knowledge about genes and attitudes toward gene tests. 29 Coleen DiIorio, Ken Resnicow, William N. Dudley, Stephen Thomas, Brigittee Manteuffel, Dongquin Terry Wang, Deborah F. Van Marter & Jenny Lipana. Social cognitive factors associated with mother-adolescent communication about sex. 41 Lawrence R. Frey, Mara B. Adelman, Lyle J. Flint & Jim L. Query, Jr. Weaving meanings together in an AIDS residence: Communicative practices, perceived health outcomes, and the symbolic construction of community. 53 1999, Vol. 4(4) Douglas Storey, Yagya Karki, Karen Heckert, Dibya Man Karmacharya & Marc Boulay. Impact of the integrated radio communication project in Nepal, 1994-1997. 271 Anna Perea & Michael D. Slater. Power distances and collectivist/individualist strategies in alcohol warnings: Effects by gender and ethnicity. 295 Issac M. Lipkus, Yancey Crawford, Kathryn Fenn, Monica Biradavolu, Ruth Ann Binder, Al Marcus & Mondi Mason. Testing different formats for communicating colorectal cancer risk. 311 Karen Fowler, Carin Celebuski, Timothy Edgar, Fred Koger & Scott C. Ratzan. An assessment of the health communication job market across multiple types of organizations. 327 (Education and Evaluation) Wim Verbeke, Jacques Viane & Olivier Guiot. Health communication and consumer behavior on meat in Belgium: From BSE until Dioxin. 345 (Forum) 1999, Vol. 4(2) Dean M. Krugman, Richard J. Fox & Paul M. Fischer. Do cigarette warnings warn? Understanding what it will take to develop more effective warnings. 95 Dina L. G. Borzekowski, June A. Flora, Ellen Feghery & Caroline Schooler. The perceived influence of cigarette advertisements and smoking susceptibility among seventh graders. 105 Kimberly N. Kline. Reading and reforming breast self-examination discourse: Claiming missed opportunities for empowerment. 119 Peter Tate, John Foulkes, Roger Neighbour, Peter Campion & Steven Field. Assessing physicians interpersonal skills via videotaped encounters: A new approach for the Royal College of General Practitioners membership examination. 143 William DeJong & Lawrence Wallack. A critical perspective on the drug czars antidrug media campaign. 155 (Forum) 1999, Vol. 4(1) Alfonso Contreras, Rafael Garcia-Alonso, Mara Echenique & Fedora Daye-Contreras. The SOL formulas for converting SMOG readability scores between health education materials written in Spanish, English, and French. 21

239 Amelie G. Ramirez, Roberto Villarreal, Alfred McAlister, Kipling J. Gallion, Lucina Suarez & Paula Gomez. Advancing the role of participatory communication in the diffusion of cancer screening among Hispanics. 31 Rima E. Rudd, Jeanne Goldberg & William Dietz. A five-stage model for sustaining a community campaign. 37 Roxanne Parrott, Katherine Wilson, Carolyn Buttram, Karyn Jones & Carol Steiner. Migrant farm workers access to pesticide protection and information: Cultivando Buenos Habitos campaign development. 49 Stephen A. Buetow. Unsolicited GP advice against smoking: To give or not to give? 67 (Forum) 1998, Vol. 3(4) Claudia L. Menashe & Michael Siegel. The power of a frame: An analysis of newspaper coverage of tobacco issuesUnited States, 1985-1996. 307 Pradeep K. Krishnatray & Srinivas R. Melkote. Public communication campaigns in the destigmatization of leprosy: A comparative analysis of diffusion and participatory approaches. A case study in Gwailor, India. 327 Kim Witte, Kenzie A. Cameron, Maria Knight Lapinski & Solomon Nzyuko. A theoretically based evaluation of HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns along the Trans-Africa highway in Kenya. 345 Elayne Clift. IEC interventions for health: A 20 year retrospective on dichotomies and directions. 367 (Forum) 1998, Vol. 3(3) Donald E. Morisky & Dara L. Coan. ASIAthe new epidemic zone for HIV/AIDS. 185 Peer J. Svenkerud & Arvind Singhal. Enhancing the effectiveness of HIV/AIDS prevention programs targeted to unique population groups in Thailand: Lessons learned from applying concepts of diffusion of innovation and social marketing. 193 Constance Chay-Nemeth. Demystifying AIDS in Thailand: A dialectical analysis of the Thai sex industry. 217 Gregory Makoul. Perpetuating passivity: Reliance and reciprocal determinism in physician-patient interaction. 233 Deborah Glick, Emil Berkanovic, Kathleen Stone, Leticia Ibarra, Marcy Connell Jones, Bob Rosen, Myrl Schreibman, Lisa Gordon, Laura Minassian & Darcy Richardes. Health education goes Hollywood: Working with prime-time and daytime entertainment television for immunization promotion. 263 (Forum) 1998, Vol. 3(3; Supplement) Christy A. Thomsen & James Ter Maat. Evaluating the cancer information service: A model for health communications. Part 1. 1 Christy A. Thomsen & James Ter Maat. Appendix to Part 1: Description of survey methods for the CIS telephone service user survey and CIS outreach partner survey. 14 Linda Fleisher, Julie Kornfeld, James Ter Maat, Sharon W. Davis, Katja Laepke & Alice Bradley. Building effective partnerships: A national evaluation of the cancer information service outreach program. Part 2. 21

240 Julie Kornfeld, Linda Fleisher, James Ter Maat, Cori Vanchieri, Lisa Hohenemser & Naomi Stevens. Reaching minority and underserved populations: The impact of the cancer information services outreach program. Part 3. 36 Jo Ann Dewing Ward, Susan Baum, James Ter Maat, Christy A. Thomse & Edward W. Maibach. The value and impact of the cancer information service telephone service. Part 4. 50. Sharon W. Davis, Linda Fleisher, James Ter Maat, Catherine Muha & Katja Laepke. Treatment and clinical trials decisionmaking: The impact of the cancer information service. Part 5. 71 Sherri L. Darrow, Jobeth Speyer, Alfred C. Marcus, James Ter Maat &V Diane Krome. Coping with cancer: The impact of the cancer information service on patients and significant others. Part 6. 86 Edward W. Maibach, Sharon W. Davis, James Ter Maat & Naomi Rivera. Promoting cancer prevention and screening: The impact of the cancer information service. Part 7. 97 Catherine Muha, Kristen Slye Smith, Susan Baum, Jaames Ter Maat & Jo Ann Ward. The use and selection of sources in information seeking: The cancer information service experience. Part 8. 109 1998, Vol. 3(1) Thomas E. Backer & Everett M. Rogers. Diffusion of innovations theory and work-site AIDS programs. 17 Cecilie Gaziano & Joann OLeary. Childbirth and infant development knowledge gaps in interpersonal settings. 29 Paul Smaglik, Robert P. Hawkins, Suzanne Pingree, David H. Gustafson, Eric Boberg & Earl Bricker. The quality of interactive computer use among HIV-infected individuals. 53 Michael M. Cassell, Christine Jackson & Brian Cheuvront. Health communication on the Interned: An effective channel for health behavior change? 71 (Forum)

241 1997, Vol. 2(4) Deborah Johnson, June Flora & Rajiv Nath Rimal. HIV/AIDS public service announcements around the world: A descriptive analysis. 223 J. Michael Jaffe. Media interactivity and self-efficacy: An examination of hypermedia first aid instruction. 235 Jeffrey Huebner, David P. Fan & John Finnegan, Jr. Death of a thousand cuts: The impact of media coverage on public opinion about Clintons health security act. 253 Young Mi Kim & Caroline Marangwanda. Stimulating mens support for long-term contraception: A campaign in Zimbabwe. 271 Edward Maibach, Amy Shenker & Stephanie Singer. Consensus conference on the future of social marketing. 301 (Forum) Edward Maibach, Amy Shenker & Stephanie Singer. Result of the Delhi survey. 304 (Forum) Michael Rothschild. An historic perspective of social marketing. 308 (Forum) Bill Novelli. Barriers to effective social marketing. 310 (Forum) Bill Smith. Trends and their impact on social marketing. 311 (Forum) Fred Kroger. Governments brand of social marketing. 312 (Forum) Alan Andreasen. Investing in social marketing. 315 (Forum) Rick Delano. Overcoming the barriers to social marketing from the corporate perspective. 317 (Forum) Elaine Bratic Arkin. Advancing social marketing: The federal agenda. 319 (Forum) Beverly Schwartz. Commentary of consensus conference on the future of social marketing. 321 (Forum) 1997, Vol. 2(3) William Harris Ressler & Esther Toledo. A functional perspective on social marketing: Insights from Israels bicycle helmet campaign. 145 Tom Grimes, Eric Vernberg & Teresa Cathers. Emotionally disturbed childrens reactions to violent media segments, 157 Donald J. Cegala. A study of doctors and patients communication during a primary care consultation: Implications for communication training. 169 Renee A. Botta & Suzanne Pingree. Interpersonal communication and rape: Women acknowledge their assaults. 197 (Forum) Elayne Clift. Response to interpersonal communication and rape: Women acknowledge their assaults. 213 (Forum) 1997, Vol. 2(2) Kevin B. Wright. Shared ideology in Alcoholics Anonymous: A grounded theory approach. 83 Susan L. Brinson & Mary Helen Brown. The AIDS risk narrative in the 1994 CDC campaign. 101 Scott McLean. A communication analysis of community mobilization on the Warm Springs Indiana Reservation. 113 Lisa Sparks Bethea & Anne L. Balazs. Improving intergenerational health care communication. 129 (Forum) 1997, Vol. 2(1)

242

Michael S. Wilkes. The public dissemination of medical research: Problems and solutions. 3 Erica Weintraub Austin & Kristine Kay Johnson. Effects of general and alcohol-specific media literacy training on childrens decision making about alcohol. 17 Cornelius B. Pratt, Irma Silva-Barbeau & Charlotte A. Pratt. Toward a symmetrical and an integrated framework of norms for nutrition communication in Sub-Saharan Africa. 43 Stephen Lenier & Michael L. J. Apuzzo. Response to the public dissemination of medical research: Problems and solutions. 61 (Forum) Richard M. Hodes. The tooth extractor. 63 (Forum) Elayne Clift. What did you say? Health communicators and where we fit it. 65 (Forum) Ian Wylie. Mad cows and Englishmen. 69 (Forum) 1996, Vol. 1(4) Kim Witte, Kenzie A. Cameron, Janet K. McKeon & Judy M. Berkowitz. Predicting risk behaviors: Development and validation of a diagnostic scale. 317 James W. Dearing, Everett M. Rogers, Gary Meyer, Mark K. Casey, Nagesh Roa, Shelly Campo & Geoffrey M. Henderson. Social marketing and diffusion-based strategies for communicating with unique populations: HIV prevention in San Francisco. 343 Nurit Guttman. Values and justifications in health communication interventions: An analytic framework. 365 Michael D. Basil. Tobacco: Coopting our public health. 399 (Forum) 1996, Vol. 1(3) Thomas W. Valente, Patricia R. Poppe & Alice Payne Merritt. Mass-media-generated interpersonal communication as sources of information about family planning. 247 Michael D. Slater. Theory and method in health audience segmentation. 267 J. Gerard Power. Evaluating health knowledge: An alternative approach. 285 Michael L. Levy, Steven E. Davis, J. Gordon McComb & Michael L. J. Apuzzo. Economical, ethical, and outcome-based decisions regarding aggressive surgical management in patients with penetrating craniocerebral injury. 301 (Forum) 1996, Vol. 1(2) Charles T. Salmon, Karen Wooten, Eileen Gentry, Galen E. Cole & Fred Koger. AIDS knowledge gaps: Results from the first decade of the epidemic and implications for future information efforts. 141 Barbara F. Sharf, Vicki S. Freimuth, Pamela Greenspon & Courtney Plotnick. Confronting cancer on thirtysomething: Audience response to health content on entertainment television. 157 Liana B. Winett & Lawrence Wallack. Advancing public health goals through mass media. 173 Tim L. Tinker. Recommendations to improve health risk communication: Lessons learned from the U.S. Public Health Service. 197 Kim Witte. Notes from the field: Does publishing in academic journals make a difference? 221 (Forum) Solomon Nzyuko. Does research have any role in information/education/communication programs in Africa? An insiders view. 227 (Forum)

243 1996, Vol. 1(1) Everett M. Rogers. The field of health communication today: An up-to-date report. 15 Scott C. Ratzan, J. Gregory Payne & Carol Bishop. The status and scope of health communication. 25 Michael A. Chamberlain. Health communication: Making the most of new media technologies--an international overview. 43 Willian DeJong, Lydia ODonnell, Alexi D. San Doval & Greg John. The status of clinic-based STD patient education: The need for a commitment to innovation in health communication. 51 Terrance L. Albrecht & Carol Bryant. Advances in segmentation modeling for health communication and social marketing campaigns. 65 Stephen G. Bloom. Health legacies from Franklyn Roosevelt to Robert Dole, or how medical and health care issues took over the nations news. 83 (Forum) Gary L. Kreps. Communicating to promote justice in modern health care system. 99 (Forum)

244 MANAGEMENT COMMUNICATION QUARTERLY 2007, Vol. 20(4) Jennifer Butler Ellis. Psychological contracts: Does work status affect perceptions of making and keeping promises? 335 John A. A. Sillince. Organizational context and the discursive construction of organizing. 363 Canchu Lin & Robin Patric Clair. Measuring Mao Zedong thought and interpreting organizational communication in China. 395 Forum: Twenty years of MCQ Kathy Krone. Forum introduction. 430 Joanne Yates & Christine Kelly. The beginnings. 432 Katherine I. Miller. Steps (and missteps?) during the adolescence of MCQ. 437 Patrice M. Buzzanell. Reflecting on my Management Communication Quarterly editorship a decade later. 444 Theodore E. Zorn. Editing MCQ at the dawn of the new millennium. 451 Charles Conrad. Standing on the shoulders of others. 458 2007, Vol. 20(3) Katherine I. Miller, Jennifer Considine & Johny Garner. Let me tell you about my job: Exploring the terrain of emotion in the workplace. 231 Karen Zwijze-Koning & Menno De Jong. Evaluating the communication satisfaction questionnaire as a communication audit tool. 261 Maria Dixon. Transforming power: Expanding the inheritance of Michel Foucault in organizational studies. 283 Theresa A. Domagalski & Lisa A. Steelman. The impact of gender and organizational status on workplace anger expression. 297 2006, Vol. 20(2) Paaige K. Turner & Robert L. Krizek. A meaning-centered approach to customer satisfaction. 115 Sarah J. Tracy, Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik & Jess K. Alberts. Nightmares, demons, and slaves: Exploring the painful metaphors of workplace bullying. 148 John A. A. Sillince. Resources and organizational identities: The role of rhetoric in the creation of competitive advantage. 186 Craig Prichard. The organization of organizational discourse. 213 (Review essay) 2006, Vol. 20(1) Sarah J. Tracy & Clifton Scott. Sexuality, masculinity, and train management among firefighters and correctional officers: Getting down and dirty with Americas heroes and the scum of law enforcement. 6 Rebeccca J. Meisenbach. Habermass discourse ethics and principle of universalization as a moral framework for organizational communication. 39

245 Loril M. Gosseett & Julian Kilker. My job sucks: Examining counterinstitutional web sites as locations for organizational member voice, dissent, and resistance. Forum Kathleen J. Krone. In memory of Fred Jablin: What might have been and still might be. 91 Fredric M. Jablin. Courage and courageous communication among leaders and followers in groups, organizations, and communities. 94 2006, Vol. 19(4) George Cheney & Dana L. Cloud. Doing democracy, engaging the material: Employee participation and labor activity in an age of market globalization. 501 (Colloquy) Annika Hylm. Telecommunity and the contestability of choice: Employee strategies to legitimize personal decisions to work in a preferred location. 541 Theresa Castor & Franois Cooren. Organizations as hybrid forms of life: The implications of the selection of agency in problem formulation. 570 Walter J. Carl. Whats all the buzz about? Everyday communication and the relational basis of word-of-mouth and buzz marketing practices. 601 Forum: Whither Management Communication James R. Barker. Introduction. 635 Craig Prichard. Global politics, academic dispositions, and the tilting of organizational communication. 638 Karen Lee Ashcraft. Falling from a humble perch? Rereading organizational communication studies with an attitude of alliance. 645 Franois Cooren. The organizational communication-discourse tilt: A refugees perspective. 635 Heather M. Zoller. Suitcases and swimsuits: On the future of organizational communication. 661 2006, Vol. 19(3) Colloquy Robert D. McPhee, Karen K. Myers & Angela Trethewey. On collective mind and conversational analysis: Response to Cooren. 311 Francois Cooren. Arguments for the in-depth study of organizational interactions: A rejoinder to McPhee, Myers, and Trethewey. 327 Forum: The Processes of Dialogue Robert L. Heath, W. Barnett Pearce, John Shotter, James R. Taylor, Astrid Kersten, Ted Zorn, Juliet Ropper, Judy Motion & Stanley Deetz. The processes of dialogue: Participation and legitimation. 341 Loril M. Gossett. Falling between the cracks: Control and communication challenges of a temporary workforce. 376 Tammy McGuire, Debbie S. Dougherty & Joshua Atkinson. Paradoxing the dialectic: The impact of patients sexual harassment in the discursive construction of nurses caregiving roles. 416 James O. Olufowote. Rousing and redirecting a sleeping giant: Symbolic convergence theory and complexities in the communication constitution of collective action. 451

246 2005, Vol. 19(2) Craig R. Scott & Stephen A. Rains. Anonymous communication in organizations: Assessing use and appropriateness. 157 Earl H. McKinney, Jr., James R. Barker, Kevin J. Davis & Daryl Smith. How swift starting action teams get off the ground: What United Flight 232 and airline flight crews can tell us about team communication. 198 Laurie Lewis, The civil society sector: A review of critical issues and research agenda for organizational communication scholars. 238 Forum: Appreciating the Elsewhere James R. Barker. Forum introduction. 268 Craig Prichard. Challenging academic imperialism: Some tactics for constructing an organizational communication of the elsewhere. 270 Laurie Cohen, Gill Musson & Suanne Tietze. Teaching communication to business and management students: A view from the United Kingdom. 279 Deborah Jones. Spot the difference: Discourse in organizational communication, organizational studies, and workplace sociolinguistics. 288 James R. Taylor. In praise of ambiguity: Forum responses. 299 2005, Vol. 19(1) (Special Issue: Discourse, Resistance, and Organization) Linda L. Putnam, David Grant, Grant Michelson & Leanne Cutcher. Discourse and resistance: Targets, practices, and consequences. 5 Dennis K. Mumby. Theorizing resistance in organization studies: A dialectical approach. 19 Peter Fleming. Metaphors of resistance. 45 Karen Lee Ashcraft. Resistance through consent? Occupational identity, organizational form, and the maintenance of masculinity among commercial airline pilots. 67 Kevin Real & Linda L. Putnam. Ironies in the discursive struggle of pilots defending the profession. 91 Susan Ainsworth, Cynthia Hardy & Bill Harley. Online consultation: E-democracy and eresistance in the case of the development gateway. 120 2004, Vol. 18(3) Daniel J. Lair, Katie Sullivan & George Cheney. Marketization and the recasting of the professional self: The rhetoric and ethics of personal branding. 307 Karen K. Myers. A burning desire: Assimilation into a fire department. 344 James O. Olufowote, Venon D. Miller & Steven R. Wilson. The interactive effects of role change goals and relational exchanges on employee upward influence tactics. 385 Forum: Practicing What We Preach James R. Barker. Forum introduction. 404 Charles Bantz, Sue DeWine & Pamela Shockley-Zalabak. Practicing what we preach: Communication theories in higher education administration. 407 2004, Vol. 18(2)

247 Alexander Lyon. Participants use of cultural knowledge as cultural capital in a dot-com start-up organizations. 175 Heather M. Zoller. Dialogue as global issue management: Legitimizing corporate influence in the Transatlantic business dialogue. 204 Ying Zhu, Steven K. May & Lawrence B. Rosenfeld. Information adequacy and job satisfaction during merger and acquisition. 241 Forum: Graduation Day James R. Barker, Forum introduction. 271 Clive JH. J. Gilson. The career task before us. 273 Cynthia Stohl. Connectedness in action. 280 David M. Boje. Inside the Rabelaisian Sileni box. 288 Nick Trujillo. Freedom of careers. 296 2004, Vol. 18(1) Emamnuelle Vaast. O brother, where are thou? From communities to networks of practice through intranet use. 5 Ted M. Brimeyer, Andrea V. Eaker & Robin Patric Clair. Rhetorical strategies in union organizing: A case of labor versus management. 45 Vivian C. Sheer & Ling Chen. Improving media richness theory: A study of interaction goals, message valence, and task complexity in manager-subordinate communication. 76 (Research Note) Forum: Waking Stewart Clegg James R. Barker. Forum introduction. 94 Graham Sewell. Exploring the moral consequences of management communication theory and practice. 97 Dennis K. Mumby. Nomadic theorizing with a power compass: Clegg, instititality, and critical organizational communication studies. 115 Robert D. McPhee. Clegg and Giddens on power and (pos)modernity. 129 Stewat R. Clegg. Platypus at play: Nomadic theorizing with a power compass. 146

248 2004, Vol. 17(4) Dennis Tourish, Neil Paulsen, Elizabeth Hobman & Phrashant Bordia. The downsides of downsizing: Communication processes and information needs in the aftermath of a workforce reduction strategy. 485 Francois Cooren. The communicative achievement of collective minding: Analysis of board meeting excerpts. 517 Jianzhong Hong & Yrjo Engestrom. Changing principles of communication between Chinese managers and workers. 552 Forum: Scholars on the Spiritual Journey James R. Barker. Forum introduction. 586 Joseph W. Weiss. My journey, beliefs, and scholarship: A life in progress. 589 Margaret Benefiel. Walking the red carpet. 596 Sarah Amira De La Garza. My spiritual sensemaking: Career path as responses to interruptions of the spiritual project. 603 Charles C. Manz, Karen P. Manz, Robert D. Marx & Christopher P. Neck. Spiritual beliefs and scholarship: A journey with the wisdom of Solomon. 611 Andre L. Delbecq. How the religious tradition of calling and spiritual friendship shaped my life as a teacher/scholar. 621 James R. Barker. Afterward: Continuing the journey. 628 2003, Vol. 17(3) Jennifer Anne Thackaberry. Discursive opening and closing in organizational self-study: Culture as trap and tool in wildland firefighting safety. 319 Jayne M. Morgan, Cassandra M. Reynolds, Talia J. Nelson, Angela R. Johanningmeier, Michael Griffin & Pauline Andrade. Tales from the fields: Sources of employee identification in agribusiness. 360 Timothy Clark & David Greatbatch. Management fashion as image-spectacle: The production of best-selling management books. 396 Judy Gray & Heather Laidlaw. Improving the measurement of communication satisfaction. 425 Forum: Rock and Roll Entrepreneurship James R. Barker. Forum introduction. 449 Timothy S. Reed, Kurt A. Heppard & Andrew C. Corbett. I get by with a little help from my friends: Entrepreneurship in rock and roll networks. 452 2003, Vol. 17(2) Heather M. Zoller. Working out: Managerialism in workplace health promotion. 171 Danielle C. Perry, Maureen Taylor & Marya L. Doefel. Internet-based communication in crisis management. 206 John J. Sosik & Dong I. Jung. Impression management strategies and performance in information technology consulting: The role of self-other rating agreement on charismatic leadership. 206 Forum: Ties That Bind James R. Barker, Forum introduction. 269

249 Steven S. Taylor. Knowing in your gut and in your head: Doing theatre and my underlying epistemology of communicationPlaywright and director reflections on Ties That Bind. 272 Steven S. Taylor. Ties That Bind. 280 Michael B. Elmes. From gut knowing: Every silver cloud has a black liningactor reflections on Ties That Bind. 301 Grace Ann Rosile. To head knowledge: Critical dramaturgy and artful ambiguityaudience reflections on Ties That Bind. 308 2003, Vol. 17(1) (Special Issue: Corporate Meltdown) Charles Conrad. Setting the stage: Introduction to the special issue on the Corporate Meltdown. 5 Timothy Kuhn & Karen Lee Ashcraft. Corporate scandal and the theory of the firm: Formulating the contributions of organizational communication studies. 20 Matthew W. Seeger & Robert R. Ulmer. Explaining Enron: Communication and responsible leadership. 58 David M. Boje & Grace Ann Rosile. Life imitates art: Enrons epic and tragic narration. 85 Forum: Teaching Business Ethically James R. Barker. Forum introduction. 126 Stella M. Nkomo. Teaching business ethically in the new South Africa. 128 Elliott Jaques. Ethics for management. 1346 Nancy DiTomaso, Rochelle Perks-Yancy & Corinne Post. Structure, relationships, and community responsibility. 143 Ralph Stabelein. Teaching business ethics or teaching business ethically? 151 James A. Anderson. Forum response: Ethics in business and teaching. 155 2003, Vol. 16(4) Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik. The communicative cycle of employee emotional abuse: Generation and regeneration of workplace mistreatment. 471 William L. Gardner. Perceptions of leader charisma, effectiveness, and integrity: Effects of exemplification, delivery, and ethical reputation. 502 Gregory S. Larson & Gerald L. Pepper. Strategies for managing multiple organizational identifications: A case of competing identities. 528 Shiv Ganesh. Organizational narcissism: Technology, legitimacy, and identity in an Indian NGO. 558 Forum: Communication and Corporate Social Responsibility Steven K. May & Theodore E. Zorn. Forum introduction. 595 Nikki C. Townsley & Cynthia Stohl. Contracting corporate social responsibility: Swedish expansions in global technology agency work. 599 Stanley Deetz. Corporate governance, communication, and getting social values into the decisional chain. 606 Tanni Haas. Toward an ethic of futurity: Corporate social responsibility in the age of risk society. 612 John C. Lammers. An institutional perspective on communicating corporate responsibility. 618

250 Steve Schwarze. Corporate-state irresponsibility, critical publicity, and asbestos exposure in Libby, Montana. 625 2003, Vol. 16(3) C. Erik Timmerman. Media selection during the implementation of planned organizational change: A predictive framework based on implementation approach and phase. 301 Alf Lizzio, Keithia L. Wilson, Jan Gilchrist & Cindy Gallois. The role of gender in the construction and evaluation of feedback effectiveness. 341 Dawna I. Ballard & David R. Seibold. Communicating and organizing in time: A meso-level model of organizational temporality. 380 Forum: Challenging Change Steven K. Mary & Theodore E. Zorn, Jr. Forum introduction. 616 Steven K. May. Case study: Challenging change. 419 Paaige K. Turner. Paradox of ordering change: I insist that we work as a team. 434 Greg Hearn & Abrahan Ninan. Managing change is managing meaning. 440 Brian Nichol & Lou Raye Nichol. The psychodynamics of an organizational change initiative. Joann Keyton. Teaching a pig to sing? 453 2002, Vol. 16(2) Tamyra Pierce & Debbie S. Dougherty. The construction, enactment, and maintenance of poweras-domination through an acquisition: The case of TWA and Ozark Airlines. 129 W. Timothy Coombs & Sherry J. Holliday. Helping crisis managers protect reputational assets: Initial tests of the situational crisis communication theory. 165 Jeffrey W. Kassing. Speaking up: Identifying employees upward dissent strategies. 187 Lorna Heaton & James R. Taylor. Knowledge management and professional work: A communication perspective on the knowledge-based organization. 210 Forum: Knowledge Management and/as Organizational Communication Theodore E. Zorn & Steven K. May. Forum introduction. 237 Andrew J. Flanagan. The elusive benefits of the technological support of knowledge management. 242 Noshir S. Contractor & Peter R. Monge. Managing knowledge networks. 249 Joel O. Iverson & Robert D. McPhee. Knowledge management in communities of practice: Being true to the communicative character of knowledge. 259 Geoff Walsham. What can knowledge management systems deliver? 267 Robert D. McPhee, Steven R. Corman & Kevin Dooley. Organizational knowledge expression and management: Centering resonance analysis of organizational discourse. 274 Mats Alvesson, Dan Karreman & Jacky Swan. Departures from knowledge and/or management in knowledge management. 282 2002, Vol. 16(1) Timothy Kuhn & Natalie Nelson. Reengineering identity: A case study of multiplicity and duality in organizational identification. 5

251 Jeffrey W. Kassing & Todd A. Armstrong. Someones going to hear about this: Examining the association between dissent-triggering events and employees dissent expression. 39 Michael W. Krameer & Jon A. Hess. Communication rules for the display of emotions in organizational settings. 66 Forum: Translating Organizational Scholarship into Practice Angela Trethewey. Forum introduction. 81 Sarah J. Tracy. Altered practicealtered storiesaltered lives: Three considerations for translating organizational communication scholarship into practice. 85 George Cheney, Morgan Wilhelmsson & Theodore E. Zorn, Jr. 10 strategies for engaged scholarship. 92 Brenda J. Allen. Translating organizational communication scholarship into practice: Starting where we are. 101 Timothy Kuhn. Negotiating boundaries between scholars and practitioners: Knowledge, networks, and communities of practice. 106 Karen Lee Ashcraft. Practical ambivalence and troubles in transition. 113 2002, Vol. 15(4) Gail T. Fairhurst, Francois Cooren & Daniel J. Cahill. Discursiveness, contradiction, and unintended consequences in successive downsizings. 501 Graham Knight & Josh Greenberg. Promotionalism and subpolitics: Nike and its labor critics. 541 Katherine Miller. The experience of emotion in the workplace: Professing in the midst of tragedy. 571 Forum: The Language Dilemma Steve K. May. Forum introduction. 601 J. C. Bruno Teboul. Case study: The language of dilemma. 603 Gregory S. Walden. Legal issues posed in the language dilemma. 609 Alan Pakiela. English only: A workplace dilemma. 616 Barbara Speciher. Problems with English-only policies. 619 Alexander G. Murphy. Struggling for occupational voice. 626 2002, Vol. 15(3) Sharon M. Livesey. The discourse of the middle ground: Citizen Shell committees to sustainable development. 313 Jane Jorgenson. Engineering selves: Negotiating gender and identity in technical work. 350 Diane Susan Grimes. Challenging the status quo? Whiteness in the diversity management literature. 381 Janie M. Harden Fritz. How do I dislike thee? Let me count the ways: Constructing impressions of troublesome others at work. 410 Forum: Auditing the Communication Audit Theodore E. Zorn, Jr., & Steven K. May. Forum introduction: Current uses, critical approaches and future prospects. 439 Philip Salem. Assessment, change, and complexity. 442 Gerald M. Goldhaber. Communication audits in the age of the internet. 451

252 R. Wayne Pace. The organizational learning audit. 458 Deborah Jones. The interpretive auditor: Reframing the communication audit. 466 John C. Meyer. Organizational communication assessment: Fuzzy methods and the accessibility of symbols. 472 2001, Vol. 15(2) Faye L. Smith & Joann Keyton. Organizational storytelling: Metaphors for relational power and identity struggles. 149 Angela Trethewey. Reproducing and resisting the master narrative of decline: Midlife professional womens experiences of aging. 183 Barbara Schneider. Constructing knowledge in an organization: The role of interview notes. 227 Forum: Organizational Communication and Cultural Studies in the New Economy Bryan C. Taylor. Forum introduction. 256 Majia Holmer Nadesan. Post-Fordism, political economy, and critical organizational communication studies. 259 Dana L. Cloud. Laboring under the sign of the new: Cultural studies, organizational communication, and the fallacy of the new economy. 268 C. Kay Weaver. Dressing for battle in the new global economy: Putting power, identity, and discourse into public relations theory. 279 Bryan C. Taylor & David Carlone. Silicon communication: A reply and case study. 289 2001, Vol. 15(1) Laurie K. Lewis, Stephanie A. Hamel & Brian K. Richardson. Communicating change to stakeholders: Models and predictors of implementers approaches. 5 Patricia S. Parker. African American women executives leadership communication within dominant-culture organizations: (Re)conceptualizing notions of collaboration and instrumentality. 42 Karen M. Hopkins. Manager intervention with troubled supervisors: Help and support start at the top. 83 Forum: Organizational Communication and the Quality of Work Life Steven K. May & Theodore E. Zorn, Jr. Forum introduction. 100 Marifran Mattson & Christina W. Stage. Toward an understanding of intercultural ethical dilemmas as opportunities for engagement in new millennium global organizations. 103 Kirsten J. Broadfoot. When the cats away, do the mice play? Control/autonomy in the virtual workplace. 110 Loril M. Gossett. The long-term impact of short-term workers: The work life concerns posed by the growth of the contingent workforce. 115 Erika L. Kirby & Lynn M. Harter. Discourses of diversity and the quality of work life: The character and costs of the managerial metaphor. 121 2001, Vol. 14(4) Patricia M. Sias & Tammie D. Wyers. Employee uncertainty and information-seeking in newly formed expansion organizations. 549

253 Jaesub Lee. Leader-member exchange, perceived organizational justice, and cooperative communication. 574 Robert R. Ulmer. Effective crisis management through established stakeholder relationships: Malden Mills as a case study. 590 Forum: E-Commerce and the New Economy Theodore E. Zorn, Jr. & Steven K. May. Forum introduction. 616 Angela Trethewey & Steve Corman. Anticipating K-commerce: E-commerce, knowledge management, and organizational communication. 619 Craig R. Scott. Establishing and maintaining customer loyalty and employee identification in the new economy: A communicative response. 629 David McKie. E-scaping management communication: Old discourses, new economy, and new economies. 637 Ann M. Mayer-Guell. Business-to-business electronic commerce: The new economys challenge to traditional American business values. 644 Scott A. Chadwick. Communicating trust in e-commerce interactions. 653 Diane Tobin Johnson. Is this a real person? Communication and customer service in e-commerce. 659 2001, Vol. 14(3) Cynthia Stohl & George Cheney. Participatory processes/paradoxical practices: Communication and the dilemmas of organizational democracy. 349 Nurit Zaidman. Cultural codes and language strategies in business communication: Interactions between Israeli and Indian businesspeople. 408 Jeffrey W. Kassing. From the looks of things: Assessing perceptions of organizational dissenters. 442 Forum: Popular Management Writing Steven K. May & Theodore E. Zorn, Jr. Forum introductiongurus views and business news: Popular management discourse and its relationship to management and organizational communication. 471 Michael J. Pratt. A story of peak performance. 476 Bradley G. Jackson. Art for managements sake? The new literary genre of business books. 484 David Carlone. Enablement, constraint, and The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. 491 Majoia Holmer Nadesan. Fortune on globalization and the new economy: Manifest destiny in a technological age. 498 David M. Boje. Corporate writing in the web of postmodern culture and postindustrial capitalism. 507 Patrice M. Buzzanell. Gendered practices in the contemporary workplace: A critique of what often constitutes front page news in The Wall Street Journal. 517 2000, Vol. 14(2) Melissa K. Gibson & Nancy M. Schullery. Shifting meanings in a blue-collar worker philanthropy program: Emergent tensions in traditional and feminist organizing. 189 R. Michael Bokeno & Vernon W. Gantt. Dialogic mentoring: Core relationships for organizational learning. 237

254 Paige P. Edley. Discursive essentializing in a woman-owned business: Gendered stereotypes and strategic subordination. 271 Nick Trujillo. Baseball, business, politics, and privilege: An interview with George W. Bush. 307 (Forum) 2000, Vol. 14(1) Susan M. Kruml & Deanna Geddes. Exploring the dimensions of emotional labor: The heat of Hoschields work. 8 Sherianne Shuler & Beverly Davenport Sypher. Seeking emotional labor: When managing the heart enhances the work experience. 50 Sarah J. Tracy. Become a character for commerce: Emotion labor, self-subordination, and discursive construction of identity in a total institution. 90 Forum: Management Communication in the Age of Globalization Theodore E. Zorn, Jr. & Steven K. May. Editors introduction to the form on management communication in the age of globalization. 129 George Cheney. Thinking differently about organizational communication: Why, how, and where? 132 Elizabeth A. More & Harry T. Irwin. Management communication for the new millennium: An Australian perspective. 142 Ling Chen. Connecting to the world economy: Issues confronting organizations in Chinese societies. 152 Uggero Cesaria. Organizational communication issues in Italian multinational corporations. 161 2000, Vol. 13(4) Theodore E. Zorn, Deborah J. Page & George Cheney. Nuts about change: Multiple perspectives on change-oriented communication in a public sector organization. 515 Stephanie J. Coopman & Katherine Burnett Meidlinger. Power, hierarchy, and change: The stories of a Catholic parish staff. 567 Vernon D. Miller, Mike Allen, Mary K. Casey & John R. Johnson. Reconsidering the organizational identification questionnaire. 626 Dialogues Vernon D. Miller & Caryn E. Medved. Managing after the merger: The challenges of employee feedback and performance appraisals. 659 Louis P. Cusella. Managing the merger case analysis. 668 Sue DeWine & Mary M. Eicholtz. Manager after the merger: Feedback at BAS case analysis. 679 Juanie N. Walker & Michael G. Walker. Response to Managing the merger case analyses. 685 2000, Vol. 13(3) Karen Lee Ashcraft. Empowering professional relationships: Organizational communication meets feminist practice. 347 Jan-Erik Johanson. Intraorganizational influence: Theoretical clarification and empirical assessment of intraorganizational social influence. 393

255 Priscilla S. Rogers. CEO presentations in conjunction with earnings announcements: Extending the construct of organizational genre through competing values profiling and user-needs analysis: High speech management theory. 426 Dialogues Donald P. Cushman. Stimulating and integrating the development of organizational communication. 486 Robert D. McPhee & David R. Seibold. Response to the finalist essays. 502 1999, Vol. 13(1) Majia Holmer Nadesan. The discourses of corporate spiritualism and evangelical capitalism. 3 Laurie K. Lewis. Disseminating information and soliciting input during planned organizational change: Implementers targets, sources, and channels for communicating. 43 Jaseun Lee and Robert L. Heath. Managerial media selection and information evaluation from the receivers perspective in decision-making contexts. 76 Jeffrey W. Kassing & Theodore A. Avtgis. Examining the relationship between organizational dissent and aggressive communication. 100 Dialogues: Self-organizing Patrice M. Buzzanell. Editors introduction to the dialogues on self-organizing. 116 Renee Houston. Self-organizing systems theory: Historical challenges to new sciences. 119 Klaus Krippendorf. Beyond coherence. 135 Leonard C. Hawes. Dialogics, posthumanist theory, and self-organizing systems. 146 Noshir S. Contractor. Self-organizing systems research in the social sciences: Reconciling the metaphors and the models. 154 1999, Vol. 12(4) Susan L. Brinson & William L. Benoit. The tarnished star: Restoring Texacos damaged public image. 483 James S. Sass & Marifran Mattson. When social support is uncomfortable: The communicative accomplishment of support as a cultural term in a youth intervention program. 511 Bertah Du-Babcock. Topic management and turn taking in professional communication: Firstversus second-language strategies. 544 Dialogues T. Andrew Finn. A case of telecommunications (mis)management. 575 Priscilla S. Rogers, James R. Taylor & T. Andrew Finn. A case of telecommunications (mis)management case analyses. 580 Kathleen K. Reardon & Kevin J. Reardon. All that we can be: Leading the U.S. armys gender integration effort. 600 Alan J. Rowe, Kathleen K. Reardon & Warren Bennnis. Leadership style inventory 2.2. 618 1999, Vol. 12(3) James R. Disanze & Connie Bullis. Everybody identifies with Smokey the Bear: Employee responses to newsletter identification inducements at the U.S. Forest Service. 347

256 Craig R. Scott, Stacey L. Connaughton, Hector R. Diaz-Saenz, Katherine Maguire, Ruben Ramirez, Brian Richardson, Sandra Pride Shaw & Dianne Morgan. The impacts of communication and multiple identification on intent to leave: A multimethodological exploration. 400 Debbie S. Dougherty. Dialogue through standpoint: Understanding womens and mens standpoints of sexual harassment. 436 1998, Vol. 12(2) Fredric M. Jablin & Michael W. Kramer. Communication-related sense-making and adjustment during job transfers. 155 Jeffrey W. Kassing. Development and validation of the organizational dissent scale. 183 Mark P. Orbe. An outsider within perspective to organizational communication: Explicating the communicative practices of co-cultural group members. 230 Barbara Mae Gayle & Raymond W. Preiss. Assessing emotionality in organizational conflicts. 280 Patty Sotrin & Steven J. Tyrell. Wondering about critical management studies: A review of and commentary on selected texts. 303 (Dialogue) 1998, Vol. 12(1) William L. Gardner & Dean Cleavenger. The impression management strategies associated with transformational leadership at the world-class level: A psychohistorical assessment. 3 Larry R. Irons. Organizational and technical communication: Terminological ambiguity in representing work. 42 Tracy Callaway Russo. Organizational and professional identification: A case of newspaper journalists. 72 Dialogues Katherine Miller. Nurses at the edge of chaos: The application of new science concepts to organizational systems. 112 Elizabeth J. Van Every & James R. Taylor. Modeling the organization as a system of communication activity: A dialogue about the language/action perspective. 128 1998, Vol. 11(4) Alexandra G. Murphy. Hidden transcripts of flight attendant resistance. 499 Greg V. Fiebig & Michael W. Kramer. A framework for the study of emotions in organizational contexts. 536 Dialogues Patrice Buzzanell. Letter from the editor about MCQ dialogues. 573 Brenda J. Allen. Black womanhood and feminist standpoints. 575 Karen Lee Ashcraft. I wouldnt say Im a feminist, but . . .: Organizational micropractice and gender identity. 587 Anna L. Spadlin. The price of passing: A lesbian perspective on authenticity in organizations. 598 Maryanne Wanca-Thibault & Phillip K. Tompkins. Speaking like a man (and a woman) about organizational communication: Feminizations and feminism as a recognizable voice. 606

257 Dennis K. Mumby & Cynthia Stohl. Feminist perspectives on organizational communication. 622 (Commentary) 1998, Vol. 11(3) Ronald F. Wendt. The sound of one hand clapping: Counterintuitive lessons extracted from paradoxes and double binds in participative organizations. 323 Bairj Donabedian, Sharon M. McKinnon & William J. Bruns, Jr. Task characteristics, managerial socialization, and media selection. 372 Kim Sydow Campbell, Saroya I. Follender & Guy Shane. Preferred strategies for responding to hostile questions in environmental public meetings. 401 Kenneth L. Hacker, Blaine Goss, Charles Townley & Valerie J. Horton. Employee attitudes regarding electronic mail policies: A case study. 422 Dialogues Colleen M. Keough. The case of the aggrieved expatriate. 453 Beverly Davenport Sypher, Barbara Shwom, David M. Boje, Grace Ann Rosile & Vernon D. Miller. 460 Ted Forbes & Lynn Isabella. One more time: The art of revising case studies. 486 1997, Vol. 11(2) Denise Haunani Solomon & Mary Lynn Miller Williams. Perceptions of social-sexual communication at work as sexually harassing. 147 Roger J. Volkema, Thomas J. Bergmann & Katherine Farquhar. Use and impact of informal thirdparty discussions in interpersonal conflicts at work. 185 Khalid Mohammed Alkazraji, William L. Gardner III, Jeanette S. Martin & Joseph G. P. Paoilillo. The acculturation of immigrants to U.S. organizations: The case of Muslim employees. 217 Jaesub Lee. Leader-member exchange, the pelz effect, and cooperative communication between group members. 266 (Research Note) Cees B. M. Van Riel. Research in corporate communication: An overview of an emerging field. 288 (Dialogue) 1997, Vol. 11(1) Kathleen J. Krone, Ling Chen, Diane Kay Sloan & Linda M. Gallant. Managerial emotionality in Chinese factories. 6 Lisa Tyler. Liability means never being able to say youre sorry: Corporate guilt, legal considerations, and defensiveness in corporate communication. 51 Robert Shuter & Lynn H. Turner. African American and European American women in the workplace: Perceptions of conflict communication. 74 C. A. P. Smith & Stephen C. Hayne. Decision making under time pressure: An investigation of decision speed and decision quality of computer-supported groups. 97 Dialogue Organizational Communication in the 21st century: Informal discussion with M. Scott Poole, Linda L. Putnam, and David R. Seibold. 127

258 1997, Vol. 10(3) G. Stoney Alder & Phillip K. Tompkins. Electronic performance monitoring: An organizational justice and concertive control perspective. 259 John G. Oetzel & Keri Bolton-Oetzel. Exploring the relationship between self-construal and dimensions of group effectiveness. 289 Myria W. Allen & Robert M. Brady. Total quality management, organizational commitment, perceived organizational support, and intraorganizational communication. 316 Robert L. Heath & Christine Diana Gay. Risk communication: Involvement, uncertainty, and controls effect on information scanning and monitoring by stakeholders. 342 Edward W. Christensen & James R. Bailey. A source accessibility effect on media selection. 373 (Research Note) 1996, Vol. 10(2) Theodore E. Zorn & Michelle T. Violanti. Communication abilities and individual achievement in organizations. 139 Jasmine Tata. Accounting for untoward managerial actions: The mediating influence of appraisal. 168 Deborah Weider-Hatfield and John D. Hatfield. Superiors conflict management strategies and subordinate outcomes. 189 J. Michael Whitfield, Bruce L. Lamond, & V. Sambamurthy. The effects of organization design on media richness in multinational enterprises. 209 Rodney D. Parker & Herbert W. Hildebrandt. Business communication and architecture: Is there a parallel? 227 (Commentary) 1996, Vol. 10(1) (Special Issue: Management, Business, Organizational, and Corporate Communication: A discussion of our disciplines) Katherine Miller: Who are we and what are we doing? An editors note. 3 Larry R. Smeltzer. Communication within the managers context. 5 N. Lamar Reinsch, Jr. Business communication: Present, past, and future. 27 Dennis K. Mumby & Cynthia Stohl. Disciplining organizational communication studies. 50 Paul A. Argenti. Corporate communication as a discipline: Toward a definition. 73 Annette Shelby. A discipline orientation: Analysis and critique. 98 (Response) Kathleen Kelley Reardon. The crossroads of organizational communication: Definition or dichotomy. 106 (Response) Priscilla S. Rogers. Disciplinary distinction or responsibility? 112 (Response) Eric M. Eisenberg. Hearing voices: Speculations on the future of our disciplines. 124 (Response) 1996, Vol. 9(4) Carey H. Adams & Gregory J. Shepherd. Managing volunteer performance: Face support and situational features as predictors of volunteers evaluations of regulative messages. 363 Annette Markham. Designing discourse: A critical analysis of strategic ambiguity and workplace control. 389 David A. Morand. Whats in a name? An exploration of the social dynamics of forms of address in organizations. 422

259 Judith A. Kolb. Commentary: Lets bring structure back. 452 (Communication Forum) 1996, Vol. 9(3) Dennis K. Mumby. Feminism, postmodernism, and organizational communication studies: A critical reading. 259 Linda Kathryn Larkey. The development and validation of the workforce diversity questionnaire: An instrument to assess interactions in diverse workgroups. 296 Robert A. Baron. La vie en rose revisited: Contrasting perceptions of informal upward feedback among managers and subordinates. 338 (Research Note) N. Lamar Reinsch, Jr. Management communication ethics research: Finding the bulls eye. 349 (Communication Forum) 1995, Vol. 9(2) Elizabeth Wolfe Morrison. Information usefulness and acquisition during organizational encounter. 131 Stephen A. Cox & Michael W. Kramer. Communication during employee dismissals: Social exchange principles and group influence on employee exit. 156 James R. Disanza. Bank teller organizational assimilation in a system of contradictory practices. 191 Mina A. Vaughn. Organization symbols: An analysis of their types and functions in a reborn organization. 219 1995, Vol. 9(1) Jill J. McMillan & Nikol A. Northern. Organizational codependency: The creation and maintenance of closed systems. 6 Myrna M. Cornett-Devito & Paul G. Friedman. Communication processes and merger success: An exploratory study of four financial institution mergers. 46 William L. Gardner III & David E. Gundersen. Information system training, usage, and satisfaction: An exploratory study of the hospitality industry. 78 Paula S. Sorenson, Katherine Hawkins & Ritch Sorenson. Gender, psychological type and conflict style preference. 115 (Research Note) 1995, Vol. 8(4) Paul Hart, Lynne Svenning & John Ruchinskas. From face-to-face meeting to video teleconferencing: Potential shifts in the meeting genre. 395 Randy Y. Hirokawa & Joann Keyton. Perceived facilitators and inhibitors of effectiveness in organizational work teams. 424 W. Timothy Coombs. Choosing the right words: The development of guidelines for the selection of the appropriate crisis-response strategies. 447 Priscilla S. Rogers & John Rymer. What is the functional value of the GMAT analytic writing assessment for management education? A critical analysis, part 2. 477 (Commentary) 1995, Vol. 8(3)

260 Janet Fulk, Joseph Schmitz & Daehee Ryu. Cognitive elements in the social construction of communication technology. 259 Mark Adkins & Dale E. Brashers. The power of language in computer-mediated groups. 289 Jeffrey D. Hobbs. Treachery by any other name: A case study of the Toshiba public relations crisis. 323 Priscilla S. Rogers & Jone Rymer. What is the relevance of the GMAT analytic writing assessment for management education? A critical analysis, part I. 347 (Commentary) Daniel, J. Montgomery, Gary R. Heald, Stephen R. Macnamara & Laura B. Pincus. Malpractice and the communication consultant: A proactive approach. 368 (Commentary) 1994, Vol. 8(2) William L. Gardner, III, Joy Van Eck Peluchette, & Sharon K. Clinebell. Valuing women in management: An impression management perspective of gender diversity. 115 Sherry J. Holladay & W. Timothy Cooms. Speaking of visions and visions being sought: An exploration of the effects of content and delivery on perceptions of leader charisma. 165 JC. Bruno Teboul. Facing and coping with uncertainty during organizational encounter. 190 Athar Murtuza. Procedures documentation ought to be illuminative, not just archival. 225 (Commentary) 1994, Vol. 8(1) Katherine Miller. From the editor: Three case studies. 3 Ronald F. Wendt. Learning to walk the talk: A critical tale of the micropolitics at a total quality university. 5 David T. Bastien. A feedback loop model of postmerger performance: Customers and competitors. 46 Cornelius B. Pratt. Applying classical ethical theories to ethical decision making in public relations: Perriers product recall. 70 J. Kevin Barge. Putting leadership back to work. 95 (Commentary) 1994, Vol. 7(4) Patrice M. Buzzanell. Gaining a voice: Feminist organizational communication theorizing. 339 Michael W. Kramer. Uncertainty reduction during job transitions: An exploratory study of the communication experiences of newcomers and transferees. 384 Wendy S. Zabava Ford & Christina Nation Etienne. Can I help you: A framework for the interdisciplinary research on customer service encounters. 413 1994, Vol. 7(3) James Price Dillard, Jerold L. Hale, & Chris Segrin. Close relationships in task environments: Perceptions of relational types, illicitness, and power. 227. Bolanle A. Olaniran. Group performance in computer-mediated and face-to-face communication media. 256 Susan R. Glaser. Teamwork and communication: A 3-year case study of change. 282 David L. Sturges. Communicating through crisis: A strategy for organizational survival. 297 (Commentary)

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1993, Vol. 7(2) Robin P. Clair. The bureaucratization, commodification, and privatization of sexual harassment through institutional discourse: A study of the big ten universities. 123 Linda Kathryn Larkey. Perceptions of discrimination during downsizing. 158 Mark Heintzman, Dale Leathers, Roxanne Parrott, & Adrian D. Cairns. Nonverbal rapportbuilding behaviors effects on perceptions of a supervisor. 181 1993, Vol. 7(1) Steven R. Corman, & Robert L. Krizek. Accounting resources for organizational communication and individual differences in their use. 5. Dayna Finet. Effects of boundary spanning communication on the sociopolitical delegitimation of an organization. 36 Kathryn T. Theus. Organizations and the media: Structures of miscommunication. 67 Michael P. Thompson. The skills of inquiry and advocacy: Why managers need both. 95 (Commentary) 1993, Vol. 6(4) Gail T. Fairhurst. Echoes of the vision: When the rest of the organization talks total quality. 331 Alicia A. Marshall, & Cynthia Stohl. Being in the know in a participative management system. 372 Sheery J. Holladay, & W. Timothy Coombs. Communicating visions: An exploration of the role of delivery in the creation of leader charisma. 405 Larry R. Smeltzer. A de facto definition and focus of management communication. 428 (Commentary) Gail T. Fairhurst, & Ronald F. Wendt. The gap in total quality: A commentary. 441 (Commentary) 1993, Vol. 6(3) David O. Braaten, Michael J. Cody, & Kristen Bell deTienne. Account episodes in organizations: Remedial work and impression management. 219 Noshir S. Contractor, & Matthew C. Ehrlich. Strategic ambiguity in the birth of a loosely coupled organization: The case of a $50-million experiment. 251 Anne Maydan Nicotera. Beyond two dimensions: A grounded theory model of conflict-handling behavior. 282 Dominic A. Infante, Carolyn M. Anderson, Matthew M. Martin, Anita D. Herington, & Jungkee Kim. Subordinates satisfaction and perceptions of superiors compliance-gaining tactics, argumentativeness, verbal aggressiveness, and style. 307 1992, Vol. 6(2) Nancy A. Burrell, Patrice M. Buzzanell, & Jill J. McMillan. Feminine tensions in conflict situations as revealed by metaphoric analyses. 115 Donald L. Harville. Person/Job fit model of communication apprehension in organizations. 150

262 John W. Haas, Beverly Davenport Sypher, & Howard E. Sypher. Do shared goals really make a difference? 166. Jerry D. Jorgensen & John L. Petelle. Measuring uncertainty within organizational relationships: An analysis of the CLUES instrument. 180 (Research Instrument) 1992, Vol. 6(1) Ronald E. Rice, Shan-Ju Chang, & Jack Rorobin. Communicator style, media use, organizational level, and use and evaluation of electronic messaging. 3 Beth Hartman Elis. The effects of uncertainty and source credibility on attitudes about organizational change. 34 Elmore R. Alexander III, Larry E. Penley, & I. Edward Jernigan. The relationship of basic decoding skills to managerial effectiveness. 58 Rosita Daskal Albert. Polycultural perspectives on organizational communication. 74 (Commentary) Martha M. Lauzen. Supervisor versus practitioner perceptions: When expectations and reality meet. 85 (Research Instrument) 1992, Vol. 5(4) Ruth M. Guzley. Organizational climate and communication climate: Predictors of commitment to the organization. 379 David T. Bastien. Change in organizational culture: The use of linguistic methods in a corporate acquisition. 403 William G. Egelhoff, & Falguni Sen. An information-processing model of crisis management. 443 Annette N. Shelby. Readability formulas: One more time. 485 (Commentary) 1992, Vol. 5(3) Randy Y. Hirokawa, & Kathryn M. Rost. Effective group decision making in organizations: Field test of the vigilant interaction theory. 267 Michael G. Garko. Persuading subordinates who communicate in attractive and unattractive styles. 289 J. W. Gilsdorf. Written corporate policy on communicating: A Delphi study. 316 Charles Steinfield. Computer-mediated communications in organizational settings: Emergent conceptual frameworks and directions for research. 348 (Commentary) 1991, Vol. 5(2) Elmore R. Alexander III, Larry E. Penley, & I. Edward Jernigan. The effect of individual differences on managerial media choice. 155 Robert F. Schere, Crystal L. Owen, & James D. Brodzinski. Rater and ratee sex effects on performance evaluations in a field setting: A multivariate analysis. 174 Sandra M. Ketrow. Nonverbal communication and client satisfaction in computer-assisted transactions. 192 Jerry Sullivan, & Sully Taylor. A cross-cultural test of compliance-gaining theory. 220 Robert L. Cardy. Contextual variables in laboratory and field research: Theoretical importance versus theoretical meaningfulness. 240 (Commentary)

263 Thomas M. Steinfatt. Internal validity and the problem of context: A response to Robert L. Cardy. 247 (Commentary) 1991, Vol. 5(1) Brenda M. Wilkins, & Peter A. Andersen. Gender differences and similarities in management communication: A meta-analysis. 6 Margaret Ann Baker. Gender and verbal communication in professional settings: A review of research. 36 Debra R. Comer. Organizational newcomers acquisition of information from peers. 64 Cynthia Stohl, & Susan E. Schell. A communication-based model of a small-group dysfunction. 90 Robert L. Cadry. The applied value of laboratory research. 111 (Commentary) Thomas M. Steinfatt. External validity, internal validity, and organizational reality: A response to Robert L. Cardy. 120 (Commentary) 1991, Vol. 4(4) Donald Dean Morley, & Pamela Schockley-Zalabak. Setting the rules: An examination of the influence of organizational founders values. 422 Terri R. Lituchy, & Wendy J. Wiswall. The role of masculine and feminine speech patterns in proposal acceptance: A laboratory study. 450 Patrice M. Buzzanell, & Steve R. Goldzwig. Linear and nonlinear career models: Metaphors, paradigms, and ideologies. 466. Eileen Berlin Ray, & Katherine I. Miller. The influence of communication structure and social support on job stress and burnout. 506 Rod Troester. The corporate spokesperson in external organizational communication: What we know and what we need to know. 528 (Commentary) J. Kevin Barge & David W. Schlueter. Leadership as organizing: A critique of leadership instruments. 541 (Research Instrument) 1991, Vol. 4(3) Vincent R. Waldron & Kathleen J. Krone. The experience and expression of emotion in the workplace: A study of a corrections organizations. 287 Susan A. Komsky. A profile of users of electronic mail in a university: Frequent versus occasional users. 310 Richard Ice. Corporate publics and rhetorical strategies: The case of Union Carbides Bhopal crisis. 341. R. V. Rasmussen. A communication model based on the conduit metaphor: What do we know and what do we take for granted? 363 (Commentary) John Hagge & Charles Kostlenick. Conceptualizing research on written management communication: A comment on Stratman and Duffys article. 375 (Commentary) James F. Stratment & Thomas M. Duffy. A response to Hagge and Koslenick. 381 (Commentary Sue DeWine, Ann Maydan Nicotera, & Doug Parry. Argumentativeness and aggressiveness: The flip side of gentle persuasion. 386 (Commentary) 1990, Vol. 4(2)

264

Gail S. Russ, Richard L. Daft, & Robert H. Lengel. Media selection and managerial characteristics in organizational communications. 151 Linda Klebe Trevino, Robert H. Lengel, Wayne Bodensteiner, Edwin A. Gerloff, & Nan Kanoff Muir. The richness imperative and cognitive style: The role of individual differences in media choice behavior. 176 N. L. Reinsch, Jr., Cam Monroe Steele, Phillip V. Lewis, Michael Stano, & Raymond W. Berswick. Measuring telephone apprehension. 198 Wesley C. King, Jr., & Edward W. Miles. What we knowand dont knowabout measuring conflict: An examination of the ROCI-II and the OCCI conflict instruments. 322 Susan A. Hellweg, Patricia Geist, Peter F. Jorgensen, & Kim White-Mills. An analysis of compliance gaining instrumentation in the organizational communication literature. 244 (Research Instrument) 1990, Vol. 4(1) Young Yong Kim & Katherine I Miller. The effects of attributions and feedback goals on the generation of supervisory feedback message strategies. 6 Randy Y. Hirokawa, Rachel A. Kodama, & Nancy L. Harper. Impact of managerial power on persuasive strategy selection by female and male managers. 30 Frederick M. Jablin & Venon D. Miller. Interviewer and application questioning behavior in employment interviews. 51 James Suchan & Ronald Dulek. A reassessment of clarity in written managerial communications. 87 (Commentary) Cal W. Downs, Gerald Driskoll, & Do Wuthnow. A review of instrumentation on stress. 100 (Research Instrument) 1989, Vol. 4(4) (Special Issue: Written Management Communication) James F. Stratman & Thomas M. Duffy. Conceptualizing research on written management communication: Looking through a glass onion. 429 Larry Mikulecky. Basic skills impediments to communication between management and hourly employees. 452 Margot Northey. The need for writing skill in accounting firms. 474 Barbara Mirel. Expanding the activities of in-house manual writers: Strategies for complex audiences and purposes. 496 Claudia Monpere McIsaac & Mary Ann Aschauer. Proposal writing at Atherton Jourdna, Inc.: An ethnographic study. 527 1989, Vol. 3(3) G. H. Morris, Stasia C. Gaveras, Whitney L. Baker, & Marta L. Coursey. Aligning actions at work: How managers confront problems of employee performance. 303 Timothy M. Downs. Predictors of communication satisfaction during performance appraisal interviews. 334 Larissa A. Grunig. An exploration of the cases of job satisfaction in public relations. 355 Kathleen K. Reardon & Ben Enis. Establishing a companywide customer orientation through persuasive internal marketing. 376 (Commentary)

265 Robert F. Scherer & James D. Brodzinski. An analysis of the ways of coping questionnaire. 401 (Research Instrument) 1989, Vol. 3(2) Katherine I. Miller, Eric G. Zook, & Beth Hartman Ellis. Occupational differences in the influence of communication on stress and burnout in the workplace. 166 Michael J. Papa. A comparison of two methods of managerial selection: Employment interviews versus communication-based assessment centers. 191 Michael W. Kramer. Communication during intraorganization job transfers. 219 David E. Switzer & Jo Young Switzer. Strategies for managerial and employee intervention in the idealization-frustration-demoralization cycle. 249 (Commentary) Mary A. Konovsku, Frank Jaster, & Mary A. McDonald. Using parametric statistics to explore the construct validity of the Thomas-Kilmann Conflict MODE survey. 268 (Research Instrument) 1989, Vol. 3(1) (Special Issue: Group Facilitation) John (Sam) Keltner. Facilitation: Catalyst for group problem solving. 8 Paul G. Friedman. Upstream facilitation: A proactive approach to managing problem-solving groups. 33 Joseph C. Chilberg. A review of group process designs for facilitating communication in problemsolving groups. 51 Randy Y. Hirokawa & Dennis S. Gouran. Facilitation of group communication: A critique of prior research and an agenda for future research. 71 Theodore E. Zorn & Lawrence R. Rosenfeld. Between a rock and a hard place: Ethical dilemmas in problem-solving group facilitation. 93 Benjamin J. Broome & David B. Keever. Next generation group facilitation: Proposed principles. 107 1989, Vol. 2(4) James Suchan & Robert Colucci. An analysis of communication efficiency between high-impact and bureaucratic written communication. 454 Joanne Yates. The emergence of the memo as a managerial genre. 485 Timothy G. Plax & Louis E. Cecchi, L. E. Manager decisions based on communication facilitated in focus groups. 511 Sherron B. Kenton. The role of communication in managing perceived inequity. 536 (Commentary) Joann Keyton & Victor D. Wall, J. SYMLOG: Theory and method for measuring group and organizational communication. 544 (Research Instrument) 1989, Vol. 2(3) Leonard Greenhalgh & Todd D. Jick. Survivor sense making and reactions to organizational decline: Effects of individual differences. 305 Judith Bogert. Improving the quality of writing in the workplace: A case study. 328

266 J. Kevin Barge, Cal W. Downs, & Kenneth M. Johnson. An analysis of effective and ineffective leader conversation. 357 Vicky Gordon Martin & Donald R. Martin. The types of styles of managerial information scanning. 387 Janelle Shubert. Of ivory towers and corporate citadels. 399 (Commentary) Philip J. Salem & Robert D. Grantz. Computer use and organization effectiveness: The case of two intervening variables. 408 (Commentary) Ira T. Kaplan & Howard H. Greenbaum. Measuring work group effectiveness: A comparison of three instruments. 424 (Research Instrument) 1988, Vol. 2(2) Sue DeWine & Anita C. James. Examining the communication audit: Assessment and modification. 144 Barbara Czarniawska-Joerges & Bernward Joerges. How to control things with words: Organizational talk and control. 170 Jeremiah J. Sullivan. Financial presentation format and managerial decision making: Tables versus graphs. 194 Herbert W. Hildebrandt. A Chinese managerial view of business communication. 217 Peter M. Sandman. Risk communication: Facing public outrage. 235 (Commentary) Howard H. Greenbaum, Phillip Clampitt, & Shirley Willihnganz. Organizational communication: An examination of four instrument. 245 (Research Instrument) Howard E. Sypher & Beverly Davenport Sypher. Cognitive differentiation and communication behavior: The role category questionnaire. 283 (Research Instrument) 1988, Vol. 2(1) William I. Golden, Dominic A. Infante, & John Izzo. Variations in voice pertaining to dissatisfaction/satisfaction with subordinates. 6 Joyze Neu. Conversation structure: An explanation of bargaining behaviors in negotiations. 23 Stephen B. Knouse. The letter of recommendation: Writer familiarity with the recomendee. 46 Cynthia Stohl & W. Timothy Cooms. Cooperation or cooptation: An analysis of quality circle training manuals. 63 Mohan Limaye. Buffers in bad news messages and recipient perceptions. 90 (Research Note) Priscilla S. Rogers. Distinguishing public and presentational speaking. 102 (Commentary) J. Kevin Barge & David W. Schlueter. A critical evaluation of organizational commitment and identification. 116 (Research Instrument) 1988, Vol. 1(4) Robert D. McPhee. Vertical communication chains: Toward an integrated approach. 455 John J. Trombetta & Donald P. Rogers. Communication climate, job satisfaction, and organizational commitment: The effects of information adequacy, communication openness, and decision participation. 494 Tracy A. Wellmon. Conceptualizing organizational communication competence: A rules-based perspective. 515 James L. Horton. A zero-based approach to public relations. 535 (Commentary)

267 Cal W. Downs, Joan Archer, John McGrath, & Jeff Stafford. An analysis of communication style instrumentation. 543 (Research Instrument) 1988, Vol. 1(3) (Special Issue: Communication and Conflict Styles in Organizations) Linda L. Putnam. Organization and interpersonal conflict in organization. 293 Pamela Schockly-Zalabak. Assessing the Hall conflict management survey. 302 Deanna F. Womak. Assessing the Thomas-Kilmann conflict MODE survey. 321 Deborah Weider-Hatfield. Assessing the Rahim organizational conflict inventory-II (ROCI-II). 350 Steven R. Wilson & Michael S. Waltman. Assessing the Putnam-Wilson organizational communication conflict instrument. 367 Roseanna G. Ross & Sue DeWine. Assessing the Ross-DeWine conflict management message style (CMMS). 389 Mark L. Knapp, Linda L. Putnam, & Lillian J. Davis. Measuring interpersonal conflict in organizations: Where do we go from here? 414 Kenneth W. Thomas: The conflict-handling modes: Toward a more precise theory. 430 (Commentary) Deanna F. Womak. A review of conflict instruments in organizational settings. 437 (Research Instrument). 1987, Vol. 1(2) Elmore R. Alexander, III., Marilyn M. Helms, & Kent E. Curran. An information processing analysis of organization information adequacy/abundance. 150 Susan R. Glaser, Sonia Zamanou, & Kenneth Hacker. Measuring and interpreting organizational culture. 173 Nick Trujillo & Elizabeth Lance Toth. Organizational perspectives for public relations research and practice. 199 Kevin G. Lamude, Tom D. Daniels, & Kim D. White. Managing the boss: Locus of control and subordinates selection of compliance-gaining strategies in upward communication. 232 Frank E. X. Dance. What do you mean presentational speaking? 260 (Commentary) Valerie S. Perotti & Sue DeWine. Competence in communication: An examination of three instruments. 272 (Research Instrument) 1987, Vol. 1(1) Linda S. Henderson. The contextual nature of interpersonal communication in management theory and research. 7 Lynn H. Turner & Sally A. Henzl. Influence attempts in organizational conflict: The effects of biological sex, psychological gender, and power position. 32 Denise E. Murray. Requests at work: Negotiating the conditions for conversation. 58 Linda Suny Myrsiades. Corporate stories as cultural communication in the organizational setting. 84 Paul C. Feingold. The emergence of management communication. 121 (Commentary) Howard H. Greenbaum, Sue DeWine, & Cal W. Downs. Management and organizational communication measurement: A call for review and evaluation. 129 (Research Instrument)

268 QUALITATIVE RESEARCH REPORTS IN COMMUNICATION 2006, Vol. 7 William Self & Mark Hickson, III. United States v. Carmichael: Prior restraint and the internet. 3 Danette Ifert Johnson. Music videos and national identity in post-Soviet Kazakhstan. 9 Mary L. Kahl & Michel Leff. The rhetoric of war and remembrance: An analysis of President Bill Clintons 1994 D-Day discourses. 15 Stephanie Cushman & Richard West. Precursors to college student burnout: Developing a typology of understanding. 23 Patrick C. Hughes & Amy N. Heuman. The communication of solidarity in friendships among African American women. 33 Cynthia Irizarry & Linda Gallant. Managing diversity: Interpretation and enactment in a health care setting. 43 Elaine M. Wittenberg-Lyles. Narratives of hospice volunteers: investigating the role of peer communication. 51 Christine E. Rittenour & Melanie Booth-Butterfield. College students sexual health: Investigating the role of peer communication. 57 Elizabeth Harzold & Lisa Sparks. Adult child perceptions of communication and humor when the parent is diagnosed with cancer: A suggestive perspective from communication theory. 67 2005, Vol. 6 Jim A. Kuypers & Stephen D. Cooper. A comparative framing analysis of embedded and behindthe-lines reporting on the 2003 Iraq War. 1 Celeste Lacroix & Robert Westerfelhaus. From the closet to the loft: Liminal license and sociosexual separation in Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. 11 Walter J. Carl. The communicational basis of the organizational text as macroactor: A case study of multilevel marketing discourse. 21 Laura W. Black. Dialogue in the lecture hall: teacher-student communication and students perceptions of their learning. 31 Denise M. Polk. When dysfunction complicates caring: Critiquing a family caregiving model for Alzheimers dementia. 41 Jennifer A. H. Becker. A Goffmanian analysis of (in)attentiveness as involvement in group therapy sessions. 51 M. Scott Barrett. Spokespersons and message control: How the CDC lost credibility during the anthrax crisis. 59 Darlene K. Drummond. Diabetes management: An exploration into the verbal support attempts of relational others. 69 Joshua Atkinson. Towards an understanding of the complexities of alternative media: Portrayals of power in alternative media. 77

269 2004, Vol. 5 Mark West & John Gastil. Deliberation at the margins: Participant accounts of face-to-face public deliberation at the 1999-2000 World Trade protests in Seattle and Prague. 1 Willliam J. Kinesella. Nuclear discourse and nuclear institutions: A theoretical framework and two empirical examples. 8 Cynthia A. Irizarry. Face and female professional: A thematic analysis of face-threatening communication in the workplace. 15 Scott A. Meyers & Leah E. Bryant. College students perceptions of how instructors convey credibility. 22 Myra M. Goldschmidt. Good person stories: The favor narrative as a self-presentation strategy. 28 Maureen Keeley. Final conversations: Messages of love. 34 Mark P. Orbe & Christopher R. Groschurth. A co-cultural theoretical analysis of communicating on campus and at home: Exploring the negotiation strategies of first generation college (FGC) students. 41 Jeannette Kindred & Shannon L. Roper. Making connections via Instant Messenger (IM): Student use of IM to maintain personal relationships. 48 Alexei V. Matveev. Describing intercultural communication competence: In-depth interviews with American and Russian managers. 55 2003, Vol. 4 Troy A. Murphy. Rhetorical invention and the transformation of We Shall Overcome. 1 Scott W. Campbell. Listening to the voices in an online class. 9 Linda C. Lederman & Lea P. Stewart. Using focus groups to formulate effective language for health communication messages: A media campaign to raise awareness of domestic violence on a college campus. 16 Christopher Pudlinski. The multiplicity of response options in social support situations. 23 Melissa Wood Aleman. You should get yourself a boyfriend but lets not get serious: Communicating a code of romance in a retirement community. 31 Loreen N. Olson. From lace teddies to flannel PJs: An analysis of males experience and expressions of love. 38 Lorin Basden Arnold. Delivering empowerment: Womens narratives about the role of pregnancy bulletin boards. 45 Diane S. Kride & David E. Schneider. Preschool and elementary teachers perceptions of communication apprehension. 53 Vatz, R. E. The latest on media bias. 60 (Review) 2002, Vol. 3(4) Julie Apker. Front-line nurse manager roles, job stressors, and coping strategies in a managed care hospital. 75 Dale A. Bertelsen. Kenneth Burke and multiculturalism: A voice of ethnocentrism and apologia. 82 Radha S. Hegde & Barbara DiCicco-Bloom. Working identities: South Asian nurses and the transnational negotiations of race and gender. 90

270 John E. Spillman, Mary Mino & M. Susan Rowles. Sharing organizational messages through lateral communication. 96 2002, Vol. 3(3) Sharmila Pixy Ferris & Shannon Roper. Same and mixed-gender intimacy in a virtual environment. 47 Paul M. Leonardi. Cultural transference in perceptions and uses of communication technology: A qualitative study. 56 Judy C. Pearson, Theresa L. Hest & Ann Burnett. Heterosexual romantic relationship research within the Communication disciplinary journals. 64 2002, Vol. 3(2) Robin R. Means Coleman. Prospects for locating racial democracy in media: The NAACP network television boycott. 225 Marilyn Daniels. Teaching small group communication using first class software. 32 Jeffrey W. Murray. The paradox of Emmanuel Levinas: Knowledge of the absolute other. 39 2001, Vol. 3(1) Charlton D. McIlwain. Death in Black and White: A study of family differences in the performance of death rituals. 1 Loreen N. Olson. Compliance gaining strategies of individuals experiencing common couple violence. 7 Nathan Stormer. My life as a lacuna. 15 2001, Vol. 2(4) Linda C. Lederman, Lea P. Stewart, & Mark Golubow (with Fern Walter Goodhart, Richard L. Powell, Lisa Laitman, & Joanne Cattafesta). Using debriefing interviews to collect qualitative data on dangerous drinking: A case study. 73 Kevin R. McClure & Lisa Laidlaw McClure. Postmodern parody: Zelig and the rhetorical subversion of documentary form. 81 Susan M. Wildermuth. Love on the line: Participants descriptions of computer-mediated close relationships. 89 2001, Vol. 2(3) Lisa Sparks Betha. The function of humor within the lives of older adults. 49 Terria Chia-Chia Chen, Jolanta A. Drzewiecka & Patricia Sias. Dialectical tensions in Taiwanese international student friendships. 57 Fran C. Dickson & Kandi L. Walker. The expression of emotion in later-life married men. 66 2001, Vol. 2(2) Gary Gumpert & Susan J. Drucker. A plea for chaos: Controlled unpredictability, uncertainty and serendipitous life in the urban community. 25

271 Steven S. Vrooman. Flamethrowers, slashers and witches: Gendered communication in a virtual community. 33 Jennifer K. Wood. The rhetorical transformation of Miranda v. Arizona. 42 2001, Vol. 2(1) Brian Cogan. Resistance is futile? Hackers and the lost art of production. 1 Debbie S. Dougherty. Womens discursive construction of a sexual harassment paradox. 6 Mary Mino. Shifting from an instructional to a learning paradigm: Some options for communication educators. 14 2000, Vol. 1(4) Mary Jiang Bresnahan & Deborah H. Cai. From the other side of the desk: Conversations with international students about teaching in the U.S. 65 Zhuojun (Joyce) Chen. The impact of teacher-student relationships on college students learning: Exploring organizational cultures in the classroom. 76 Michael J. Hostetler. The rhetoric of privatized religious discourse: Rep. Glenn Poshard takes on the Christian Coalition. 84 2000, Vol. 1(3) Norma Manutu-Rupert. The filmic conception of the Black female. 45 Mark P. Orbe & Kiesha T. Warren. Different standpoints, different realities: Race, gender, and perceptions of intercultural conflict. 51 Michael M. Tollefson: Anonymous Joe Klein and Newsweek: Individual and corporate apologia. 58 2000, Vol. 1(2) Steven Y. Miura. The mediation of conflict in the traditional Hawaiin family: A collectivistic approach. 19 Kendall R. Phillips. Consuming community in Jonatahn Demmes The Silence of the Lambs. 26 Kevin Wright. The communication of social support within an on-line community for older adults: A qualitative analysis of the Seniornet community. 33 2000, Vol. 1(1) Julia T. Wood. That wasnt the real him: Womens disassociation of violence from the men who enact it. 1 James W. Chesebro. Communication technologies as symbolic form: Cognitive transformation generated by the internet. 8 Dan F. Hahn & Deborah Borisoff. How do we keep women in their place if woman is place? 14 2001, Volume 2(1) Brian Cogan. Resistance is futile? Hackers and the lost art of production. 1 Debbie S. Dougherty. Womens discursive construction of a sexual harassment paradox. 6

272 Mary Mino. Shifting from an instructional to a learning paradigm: Some options for communication educators. 14

273 SOUTHERN COMMUNICATION JOURNAL 2007, Vol. 72(2) Alane K. Smith-Sanders & Lynn M. Harter. Democracy, dialogue, and education: An exploration of conflict resolution at Jeffersoin Junior High. 109 Thomas J. St. Antoine. Making heavcen out of hell: New urbanism and the refutation of suburban spaces. 127 Michael W. Kramer, Pamela J. Benoit, Maria A. Dixson & Jennifer Benoit-Bryan. Group processes in a teaching renewal retreat: Communication functions and dialectical tensions. 145 Christine E. Rittenour, Scott A. Myers & Maria Brann. Commitment and emotional closeness in the sibling relationship. 169 Jason Edward Black. Remembrances of removal: Native resistance to allotment and the unmasking of paternal benevolence. 185 2007, Vol. 72(1) Christina M. Morus. Slobo the redeemer: the rhetoric of Slobodan Milosevic and the construction of the Serbian people. 1 Pamela L. Lannutti & Melissa O. Camero. Womens perceptions of flirtation nonverbal behavior: The effects of alcohol consumption and physical attractiveness. 21 Windy Y. Lawrence. Debiltating public deliberation: Ronald Reagans use of the conversation metaphor. 37 James. J. Kimble. My enemy, my brother: the paradox of peace and war in Abraham Lincolns rhetoric of conciliation. 55 Special Section: History of the Southern States Communication Association Mark Hickson III. Finding a place in the Southern States Communication Association: A phenomenological auto-ethnography of Where is Waldo? 71 Richard R. Ranta & Michael Osborn. Identity wars: Changing the name of Southern. 83 Larry D. Miller. How the south helped save the north when the lights went out. 87 Pat J. Gehrke. The Southern Association of Teachers of Speech v. Senator Theodore Bilbo: restrain and indirection as rhetorical strategies. 95 2006, Vol. 71(4) Charles Soukup. Hitching a ride on a star: Celebrity, fandom, and identification on the world wide web. 319 Carolyn M. Prentice & Michael W. Kramer. Dialectical tensions in the classroom: Managing tensions through communication. 339 Todd Nelson & Chris Sadler. Dialectical hegemony and the enactment of contradictory definitions in a rural community planning process. 363 Andrew C. Hansen. The religion text in Daniel Websters First Bunker Hill Address. 383 Timothy R. Levine, Kelli Jean K. Asada & Hee Sun Park. The lying chicken and the gave avoidant egg: Eye contact, deception, and causal order. 401 2006, Vol. 71(3)

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Todd F. McDorman. History, collective memory and the Supreme Court: Debating the people through the Dred Scott controversy. 213 Stephen A. King. Memory, mythmaking, and museums: Constructive authenticity and the primitive blues subject. 235 Pradeep Sopory. Metaphor and attitude accessibility. 251 Lawrence B. Rosenfeld, Jack M. Richman, Gary L. Bowen & Scarlet L. Wynns. In the face of a dangerous community: the effects on social support and neighborhood danger on high school students school outcomes. 273 Robert Danisch. Power and the celebration of the self: Michel Foucaults epideictic rhetoric. 291 2006, Vol. 71(2) (Special Issue: The Life and Scholarship of Janice Hocker Rushing) Memoriam: Janice Hocker Rushing. 107 Arthur P. Bochner & Thomas Frentz. Culture-bearing and sense-making: Introduction to the life and scholarship of Janice Hocker Rushing. 109 Joyce L. Hocker. Letting go: Remembering Janice. 115 Jane S. Sutton. Figuring forth the gift of Janice Hocker Rushing. 127 H. L. Goodall, Jr. Unfinished conversations: What Ill miss and what Ill remember about Janice Hocker Rushing. 137 Kathleen J. Turner. Descendence, ascendance, transc3endence: Critiquing popular films. 141 Michael Osborn. Memories of Miz myth. 149 Roseann M. Mandzuik. Myths worth heeding: Feminine integration of critical practices. 153 Bruce E. Gronbeck. Rushing, Frentz, and the matter of psychological rhetorical criticism. 159 Robert E. Terrill. Going deep. 165 Gale Young. Warrior of the heart. 175 Ronald H. Carpenter. Revising Janice Rushing about The Western Myth (more importance now than ever before). 179 Arthur P. Bochner. Janices voice. 183 Thomas Frentz. Ashes of love. 196 Janice Hocker Rushing. It should have been a wedding: metaphors of life and death at a funeral. 205 2006, Vol. 71(1) Kevin L. Sager & John Gastil. The origins and consequences of consensus decision making: A test of the social consensus model. 1 David R. Novak. Engaging parrhesia in a democracy: Malcolm X as a truth-teller. 25 George B. Ray & Kory Floyd. Nonverbal expressions of liking and disliking in initial interaction: Encoding and decoding perspectives. 45 Bo Feng & Erina L. MacGeorge. Predicting receptiveness to advice: Characteristics of the problem, the advice-giver, and the recipient. 67 Paul L. Witt, Kennaria C. Brown, James B. Roberts, Jessica Weisel, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Somatic anxiety patterns before, during, and after giving a public speech. 87 2005, Vol. 50(4)

275 Greg Dickinson. Selling democracy: Consumer culture and citizenship in the wake of September 271. Richard Bello. Situational formality, personality, and avoidance-avoidance conflict as causes of interpersonal equivocation. 285 Ryan K. Clark. Assessing Bohrs rhetorical success in then EPR debate. 301 Christopher R. Darr. Civility as rhetorical enactment: The John Ashcroft debates and Burkes theory of form. 316 Katherine Grace Hendrix. An invitation to dialogue: Do communication journal reviewers mute the race-related research of scholars of color? 329 2005, Vol. 70(2) (Special Issue: Computers and Communication) John Monberg. Trajectories of computer-mediated communication research. 181 David Silver. Selling cyberspace: Constructing and deconstructing the rhetoric of community. 187 John W. Jordan. A virtual death and a real dilemma: identity, trust, and community in cyberspace. 200 Glenn J. Hansen & William L. Benoit. Presidential campaigning on the web: The influence of candidate world wide web sites in the 2000 general election. 219 Pamela J. Benoit & William L. Benoit. Criteria for evaluating political campaign webpages. 230 Brian Cogan. Framing usefulness: An examination of journalistic coverage of the personal computer from 1982-1984. 248 2005, Vol. 70(1) Ashli Quesinberry Stokes. Constituting Southern feminists: Womens liberation newsletters in the South. 91 Janet R. Meyer. Effect of secondary goal importance on the anticipation of message outcomes. 109 M. Sean Limon & Betty H. La France. Communication traits and leadership emergence: Examining the impact of argumentativeness, communication apprehension, and verbal aggressiveness in work groups. 123 Gary Steven Selby. Scoffing at the enemy: The burlesque frame in the rhetoric of Ralph David Abernathy. 134 Scott R. Stroud. Ontological orientation and the practice of rhetoric: A perspective from the Bhagavad Gita. 146 James B. Robert, Amber N. Finn, Kay B. Harris, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Public speaking state anxiety as a function of trait anxiety and reactivity mechanisms. 161 2005, Vol. 70(1) Robert R. Agne & Cindy H. White. The nature of facework in discussion of everyday problems between friends. 1 Davi Johnson. The rhetoric of Huey P. Newton. 15 John Arthos. Almost speaking a new rhetoric: The strangeness of the text of La Nouvelle Rhetorique. 31 Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman. Idiocentrism, involvement, and health appeals: A social psychological framework. 46 Amos Kiewe. Wither bound? Franklin D. Roosevelts Quo Vadis. 56

276 Paul E. King & Ralph R. Behnke. Patterns of state anxiety in listening performance. 72 2004, Vol. 69(4) Diane M. Martin. Balancing on the political high wire: The role of humor in the rhetoric of Ann Richards. 273 Andrew F. Wood. Managing the lady managers: The shaping of heterotopian spaces in the 1893 Chicago Expositions womans building. 289 Nathan Crick. John Deweys aesthetics of communication. 303 Abhik Roy. The construction and scapegoating of Muslims as the other in Hindu nationalistic rhetoric. 320 Jeffrey W. Murray. The face in dialogue, Part II: Invitational rhetoric, direct moral suasion, and the asymmetry of dialogue. 333 William L. Benoit. Election outcome and topic of political campaign attacks. 348 2004, Vol. 69(3) (Special Issue: Organizational Discourse and Citizenship) John C. Meyer. Organizational discourse and citizenship: An introduction. 183 Jill J. McMillan. The potential for civic learning in higher education: Teaching democracy by being democratic. 188 Diane M. Martin, Craig O. Rich & Barbara Mae Gayle. Humor works: Communication style and human functions in manager/subordinate relationships. 206 Susan Hafen. Organizational gossip: A revolving door of regulation and resistance. 241 Dale Cyphert & David H. Saiia. In search of the corporate citizen: The emerging discourse of corporate ecology. 241 Beverly Davenport Sypher. Reclaiming civic discourse in the workplace. 257 2004, Vol. 69(2) Bradley Reel & Teresa L. Thompson, T. L. Is it a matter of politeness? Face and the effectiveness of messages about condom use. 99 J. Donald Ragsdale & Frances E. Brandau-Brown. Measuring relational maintenance in marriage: Theoretical and methodological issues. 121 Marouf Hasian, Jr. Collective amnesias: The Rudolph Kastner trial and Holocaust consciousness in Israel, 1948-1955. 136 Donald A. Fishman. Mainstreaming ethnicity: Horace Hallen, the strategy of transcendence, and cultural pluralism. 157 Naomi R. Horvath, Myrna N. Moss, Shyang Xie, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Evaluation sensitivity and physical sensations of stress as components of public speaking state anxiety. 173 2003, Vol. 69(1) (Special Issue: Community and Communication) Daniel Makagon. A search for social connection in Americas town square: Times Square and urban public life. 1 Michael S. Waltman. Stratagems and heuristics in the recruitment of children into communities of hate: The fabric of our future nightmares. 22

277 Lana F. Rakow, Besty Belter, Heidi Dyrstad, Jodi Hallsten, Jay Johnson & Keri Indvik. The talk of movers and shakers: Class conflict in the making of a community disaster. 51 Jason Ingram. Once upon a time in Hong Kong: The construction of community as collective agency. 51 J. Kevin Barge. Hope, communication, and community building. 63 Jennifer A. Peeples. Trashing south-central: Place and identity in a community-level environmental justice dispute. 82 2003, Vol. 68(4) Carol B. Mills & Austin S. Babrow. Teasing as a means of social influence. 273 David K. Scott. The Eisenhower/Khrushchev rhetorical compact: Toward a model of cooperative public discourse. 287 J. Emmett Winn. Every dream has its price: Personal failure and the American dream in Wall Street and The Firm. 307 William L. Benoit & John P. McHale. Presidential candidates television spots and personal qualities. 319 Ronald J. Pelias. Imagining a poetics of communication. 335 2003, Vol. 68(3) Adrianne Kunkel & Brat Burleson. Relational implications of communication skill evaluations and love styles. 181 Joshua Gunn & David E. Beard. On the apocalyptic Columbine. 198 Edward C. Appel. Rush to judgment: Burlesque, tragedy, and hierarchical alchemy in the rhetoric of Americans foremost political talkshow host. 217 Sandra L. Borden. Deviance mitigation in the ethical discourse of journalists. 231 Jeffrey M. Murray. The face in dialogue: Emmanual Levinas and rhetorics of disruption and supplication. 250

278 2003, Vol. 68(2) Scarlet L. Wynns & Lawrence B. Rosenfeld. Father-daughter relationships in Disneys animated films. 91 B. Wayne Howell. Ronald Reagans address at Moscow State University: A rhetoric of conciliation and subversion. 107 Jennifer L. Bevan, Kenzie A. Cameron & Megan R. Dillow. One more try: compliance-gaining strategies associated with romantic reconciliation attempts. 121 Mark E. Williams. Arguing with style: How persuasion and the enthymeme work together in On Invention, Book 3. 136 Amit Pinchevski. Ethics on the line. 136 2003, Vol. 68(1) Lisa S. Strange. Dress reform and the feminine ideal: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the coming girl. 1 Charles Soukup. Television viewing as vicarious resistance: The X-Files and conspiracy discourse. 14 Daniel A. Grano. Spiritual-material identification in the deep ecology movement. 27 Patrick C. Hughes & John R. Baldwin. Black, White, and shades of gray: Communication predictors of stereotypic impressions. 40 2002, Vol. 67(4) Dean Scheibel. The cat with the strat comes back: A Burkeian-Weickian primer for organizing narrative. 303 Kathleen Ellis. Perceived parental conformation: Development and validation of an instrument. 319 Michael T. Stephenson. Anti-drug public service announcements targeting parents: An analysis and evaluation. 335 2002, Vol. 67(3) (Special Issue: Civil Discourse) Rita Kirk Whillock. Civil discourse.213 Kathryn M. Olson. Detecting a common interpretive framework for impersonal violence: The homology in participants rhetoric on sport hunting, hate crimes and stranger rape. 216 Larry A. Williamson. Racism, tolerance, and perfected redemption: A rhetorical critique of the dragging trial. 245 Kristen Hoerl. Monstrous youth in suburbia: Disruption and recovery of the American dream. 259 Fredel M. Wiant. Exploiting factional discourse: Wedge issues in contemporary American political campaigns. 276 Raymie E. McKerrow. Coloring outside the lines. 290

279 2002, Vol. 67(2) (Special Issue: Communication and Committed Couples) Gail G. Whitchurch. Not just alliteration: Communication and committed couples. 89 Leslie A. Baxter & Dawn O. Braithwaite. Performing marriage: Marriage renewal rituals and cultural performance. 94 Fran C. Dickson, Patrick C. Hughes, Linda D. Manning, Kandi L. Walker, Tamara Bollis-Pecci & Scott Gratson. Conflict in later-life, long-term marriages. 110 Annis G. Golden. Speaking of work and family: Spousal collaboration on defining role-identities and developing shared meanings. 122 Angela Hoppe-Nagao & Stella Ting-Toomey. Relational dialectics and management strategies in marital couples. 142 Dawn O. Braithwaite. Married widowhood: Maintaining couplehood when one spouse is living in a nursing home. 160 Loreen N. O. & Tamara D. Golish. Topics of conflict and patterns of aggression in romantic relationships. 180 Julia T. Wood. A critical essay on John Grays Mars and Venus portrayals of men and women. 201 2001, Vol. 67(1) Leslie A. Baxter & Dan H. DeGooyer, Jr. Perceived aesthetic characteristics of interpersonal communication. 1 Valerie V. Peterson. The rhetorical criticism of visual elements: An alternative to Fosss schema. 19 Joann Keyton, Pat Ferguson & Steven C. Rhodes. Cultural indicators of sexual harassment. 33 Janet R. Meyer. Pursuing relational goals in requests: The effects of dispositional factors and type of relationship. 51 Lynne M. Harter & Kathleen J. Krone. Exploring the emergent identities of future physicians: Toward an understanding of the ideological socialization of osteopathic medical students. 67 2001, Vol. 66(4) Ringo Ma & Rueyling Chuang. Persuasion strategies of Chinese college students in interpersonal contexts. 267 Josh Boyd. Corporate rhetoric participates in public dialogue: A solution to the public/private conundrum. 279 James B. McOmber. Clarifying the public/private distinction by eliminating it? A response to Josh Boyd. 294 Michael W. Kramer & Julie E. Berman. Making sense of a universitys culture: An examination of undergraduate students stories. 297 Richard A. Engnell. Toward an ethic of evocative language: Contemporary uses of Holocaustrelated terminology. 312 Allison Lea Howry & Julia T. Wood. Something old, something new, something borrowed: Themes in the voices of a new generation of feminists. 323 Stephen D. Bruning & Megham Ralston. Using a relational approach to retaining students and building mutually beneficial student-university relationships. 337 2001, Vol. 66(3) (Special Issue: Service-learning in Communication Studies)

280

Richard Conville. Service-learning and the educated imagination. 183 Melissa K. Gibson, Eleanor M. Kostecki & Mary K. Lucas. Instituting principles of best practice for service-learning in the communication curriculum. 187 Joann Kewyton. Integrating service-learning in the research methods course. 201 Ann Q Staton & Stephanie D. Tomlinson. Communication education outreach in elementary school classrooms. 211 Mark J. Braun. Using self-directed teams to integrate service-learning into an organizational communication course. 226 Lee Artz. Critical ethnography for communication studies: Dialogue and social justice in servicelearning. 239 Laura Shue OHara. Service-learning: Students transformative journey from communication student to civic-minded professional. 251 2001, Vol. 66(2) J. Blake Scott. Putting women and newborns to the HIV test: A case study of a public policy topos. 101 Roseann M. Mandziuk & Suzanne Pullon Fitch. The rhetorical construction of sojourner truth. 120 Renee Edwards, Richard Bello, Frances Brandau-Brown & Diane Hollems. The effects of loneliness and verbal aggressiveness on message interpretation. 139 Michael W. Casey. From British Ciceroniamism to American Baconianism: Alexander Campbell as a case study of a shift in rhetorical theory. 151 2001, Vol. 66(1) Vincent R. Waldron & Melissa R. Lavitt. Welfare-to-work: Assessing communication competencies and client outcomes in a job training program. 1 William Kirkwood. Stories that bring peace to the mind: Communication and the education of feelings. 16 Stephen C. Hines, Mary C. Toale, Alan D. Heisel, Dorren K. Baringer, Rikke D. Amos, Jennifer S. Burkett, John V. Dalesio, Christopher E. Davis, Kimberly J. Franey, Lisa N. George, Tania K. Gojdycz, Christina A. Hall, Meg S. Lyons & Jill N. Mattiello. Communication in advance care planning: Preferences for surrogate involvement. 27 J. Emmett Winn. Mobilizing upward mobility: Investigating the myth of class mobility in Working Girl. 40 Gary Selby. The limits of accommodation: Frederick Douglass and the Grisonian abolitionists. 52 Charles J. G. Griffin. The Washington revival: Narrative and moral transformation of temperance reform in antebellum America. 67 Marouf Hasian, Jr. Colonial re-characterization and the discourse surrounding the Eyre controversy. 79 2000, Vol. 65(4) Joshua Gunn & David E. Beard. On the apocalyptic sublime. 269. Kory Floyd & Mark T. Morman. Reacting to the verbal expression of affection in same-sex interaction. 287

281 Brian R. McGee. Thomas Dixons The Clansman: Radicals, reactionaries, and the anticipated utopia. 300 Paul J. Achter. Narrative, intertextuality, and apologia in contemporary political scandals. 318 2000, Vol. 65(2/3) (Special Issue: Studies in Dialogue) Mari Lee Mifsud & Scott D. Johnson. Dialogic, dialectic, and rhetoric: Exploring human dialogue across the discipline. 91 Ronald D. Gordon. Karl Jaspers: Existential philosopher of dialogic communication. 105 John Shotter. Inside dialogical realities: From an abstract-systematic to a participatory-wholistic understanding of communication. 119 Jeffrey W. Murray. Bakhtinian answerability and Levinasian responsibility: Forging a fuller dialogical communicative ethics. 133 Richard L. Johannesen. Nel Noddings uses of Martin Bubers philosophy of dialogue. 151 W. Barnett Pearce & Kimberley A. Pearce. Combining passions and abilities: Toward dialogic virtuosity. 161 Marianne Kristiansen & Jorgen Bloch-Poulsen. The challenge of the unspoken in organizations: Caring container as a dialogic answer? 176 Heather M. Zoller. A place you havent visited before: Creating the conditions for community dialogue. 191 Bruce Hyde & Jeffery L. Bineham. From debate to dialogue: Toward a pedagogy of nonpolarized public discourse. 208 John Stewart & Karen Zediker. Dialogue as tensional, ethical practice. 224 Jeanine Czubaroff & Maurice Friedman. A conversation with Maurice Friedman. 243 1999, Vol. 65(1) Amardo Rodriguez & Robin Patric Clair. Graffiti as communication: Exploring the discursive tensions of anonymous texts. 1 Michael W. Kramer & P. M. Pier. Students perceptions of effective and ineffective communication by college teachers. 15 James A. Janack. The futures foundation as a contested past: Nostalgia and dystalgia in the 1996 Republican presidential campaign. 34 S. Elizabeth Bird. Chatting on Cynthias porch: Creating community in an email fan group. 49 William L. Benoit & Allison Harthcock. Attacking the tobacco industry: A rhetorical analysis of advertisements by the campaign for tobacco-free kids. 66 1999, Vol. 64(4) (Special Issue: Radical and Conservative Rhetorics) Jacqueline Bacon, Taking liberty, taking literacy: Signifying in the rhetoric of African-American abolitionists. 271 Sara Hayden. Reversing the discourse of sexology: Margaret Higgins Sangers What Every Girl Should Know. 288 Kimber Charles Pearce. The radical feminist manifesto as generic appropriation: Gender, genre, and second wave resistance. 307 Forum: The Evolution of Contemporary Conservative Rhetoric Lloyd Rohler. Conservative appeals to the people: George Wallaces populist rhetoric. 316

282 John C. Hammerback. Barry Goldwaters rhetorical legacy. 323 Kurt Ritter. Ronald Reagans 1960s southern rhetoric: Courting conservatives for the GOP. 333 1999, Vol. 64(3) Stephen A. Cox. Group communication and employee turnover: How coworkers encourage peers to voluntarily exit. 181 Ruth Wagoner & Vincent R. Waldron. How supervisors convey routine bad news: Facework at UPS. 193 Peter M. Kellet. Dialogue and dialectics in managing organizational change: The case of a mission-based transformation. 211 Donald R. Turk & Jennifer L. Monahan. Here I go again: An examination of repetitive behaviors during interpersonal conflicts. 232 The Forum: Free Speech on the Internet: ACLU v Reno Paul H. Gates, Jr. ACLU v. Reno: A temporary victory for free speech in cyberspace? 245 Terry W. Cole. Reno v. ACLU: An exigency for cybernetics. 251 Norman Clark. Can we have freedom and responsibility in the decent community?: Community networks and the communication decency act. 259 1999, Vol. 64(2) (Special Issue: How Should We Relate to Them) Charles J. Stewart. Championing the rights of others and challenging evils: The ego function in the rhetoric of other-directed social movements. 91 Alissa Sklar. Contested collectives: The struggle to define the we in the 1995 Quebec referendum. 106 Garth E. Pauley. Documentary desegregation: A rhetorical analysis of Crisis: Behind A Presidential Commitment. 123 Kendall R. Phillips. Tactical apologia: The American Nursing Association and assisted suicide. 143 Amos Kiewe. A dress rehearsal for a presidential campaign: FDRs embodied run for the 1928 governorship. 155

283 1998, Vol. 64(1) (Special Issue: Communication, Culture and Capstones) Ruth M. Guzley, Fumiyo Araki, & Linda E. Chalmers. Cross-cultural perspectives of perspectives of commitment: Individualism and collectivism as a framework for conceptualization. 1 Jolanta A. Drzewiecka & Thomas N. Nakayama. City sites: Postmodern urban space and the communication of identity. 20 Mark P. Orbe. Constructions of reality on MTVs The Real World: An analysis of the restrictive coding of Black masculinity. 32 Bryan B. Whaley, Anne Maydan Nicotera & Wendy Samter. African American womens perceptions of rebuttal analogy: Judgments concerning politeness, likability, and ethics. 48 The Forum: Capstone Courses Scott A. Meyers & Virginia P. Richmond. Developing the capstone course in communication: Nine essential questions. 59 William J. Seiler. Envisioning a capstone course in communication: The view from a departmental armchair. 65 Mark V. Redmond. Outcomes assessment and the capstone course in communication. 68 Grant C. Cos & Diana K. Ivy. Obscenity, blasphemy, and sedition: An experimental capstone course in first amendment rights and responsibilities, 76. 1998, Vol. 63(4) (Special Issue: Rhetorical Studies in the Twenty-first Century) Moya Ann Ball. Introduction. 271 Steven Goldzwig. Multiculturalism, rhetoric and the twenty-first century. 273 John Angus Campbell. Rhetorical theory in the twenty-first century: A neo-classical perspective. 291 Martin J. Medhurst. The rhetorical renaissance: A battlefield report. 309 Jamie E. McKerrow. Coporeality and cultural rhetoric: A site for rhetorics future. 315 The Forum Moya Ann Ball. Introduction. 329 Kathleen J. Turner. Rhetorical studies in the twenty-first century: Envisioning the possibilities. 330 Carol J. Jablonski. A reflection on curricular reform: A challenge and a role for rhetorical studies. 337 Martin J. Medhurst. Rhetorical education in the twenty-first century. 346 Raymie E. McKerrow. Rhetoric and the construction of a deliberative community. 350 1998, Vol. 63(3) (Special Issue: Race and Communication in America: On the Thirtieth Anniversary of the Assassination of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.) Cal M. Logue & Eugene F. Miller. Communication interaction and rhetorical status in Harriet Ann Jacobs slave narrative. 182 Keith D. Miller & Kevin Quashie. Slave mutiny as argument, argument as fiction, fiction as America: The case of Frederick Douglasss The Heroric Slave. 199 Brian R. McGee. Speaking about the other: W. W. B. Du Bois responds to the Klan. 208 Michael Osborn & John Bakke. The melodramas of Memphis: Contending narratives during the sanitation strike of 1968. 220

284 Bernard J. Armada. Memorial agon: An interpretive tour of the National Civil Rights Museum. 235 Carrie Crenshaw. Colorblind rhetoric. 244. 1998, Vol. 63(2) (Special Issue: Bridging the Public and the Private) Michael Pfau, Patricia Moy, Barry Radler & Michael K. Bridgeman. The influence of individual communication media on public confidence in democratic institutions. 91 John Arthos, Jr. My voice is bound to the mass of my own life: Private and public boundaries in feminist rhetoric. 113 Matthew M. Martin & Rebecca B. Rubin. Affinity-seeking in initial interactions. 131 Jaesub Lee. Maintenance communication in superior-subordinate relationships: An exploratory investigation of group social context and the pelz effect. 144 Ralph R. Behnke & Chris R. Swayer. Conceptualizing speech anxiety as a dynamic trait. 160 J. Dean Framer. Scholarly communities and the discipline of the communication discipline. 169 (The Forum) 1997, Vol. 63(1) (Special Issue: Studies in Political Rhetoric) Garth E. Pauley. Presidential rhetoric and interest group politics: Lyndon B. Johnson and the Civil Rights Act of 1964. 1 Davis W. Houch. Reading the body in the text: FDRs 1932 speech to the democratic national convention. 20 Mark P. Moore. Rhetorical subterfuge and The Principle of Perfection, part II: Bob Packwoods Senate resignation. 37 Theodore F. Sheckels. The rhetorical use of double-voiced discourse and feminine style: The U.S. Senate debate over the impact of Talihook 91 on Admiral Frank B. Kelso IIs retirement rank. 56 Roy Schwartzman. Peer review as the enforcement of disciplinary orthodoxy. 69 (The Forum) 1997, Vol. 62(4) (Special Issue: Groups, Decisions, and Satisfaction) Elizabeth E. Graham, Michal J. Papa & Mary B. McPherson. An applied test of the functional communication perspective of small group decision-making. 269 Michael E. Mayer, Kevin T. Sonoda & William B. Gudykunst. The effect of time pressure and type of information on decision quality. 280 Christi B. Taylor. Communication satisfaction: Its role in church membership satisfaction and involvement among Southern Baptist churches. 293 Susan Schultz Huxman. The tragi-comic rhetorical dance of marginalized groups: The case of Mennomites in the great war. 305 Roxanne Parrot, Robert Lemieux, Tina Harris & Lara Foreman. Interfacing of interfacing and mediated communication: Use of active and strategic self-disclosure in personal ads. 319 Brenda Cooper & David Descutner. Strategic silences and transgressive metaphors in Out of Africa: Isak Dinesens double-voiced rhetoric of complicit and subversion. 333 The Forum Edward Schiappa & Wilfred E. Major. Gorgias undeclared theory of argument revisited. 344

285 1997, Vol. 62(3) (Special Issue: Identity, Persona and the Choices We Face) Robert E. Terrill & David Zarefsky. Consistency and change in the rhetoric of Stephen A. Douglas. 179 Kimberly A. Kennedy & William L. Benoit. The Newt Gingrich book deal controversy: Self defense rhetoric. 197 Shane Miller. The woven gender: Made for a woman, but stronger for a man. 217 Nancy Grant Harrington. Strategies used by college students to persuade peers to drink. 229 David Levasseur & Kevin Dean. Accounting for Doles humor in the 1976 vice presidential debate: A response to Gruners rejoinder. 243 (Forum) Mark A. Smeltzer. Practice and theory in Gorgianic speech-making: A response to Major and Schiappa. 247 (Forum) Omar Swartz. Disciplining the other: Engaging Blair, Brown and Baxter. 253 (Forum) 1997, Vol. 62(2) (Special issue: Social Influence in Changing Times) Marouf Hasian, Jr., & Lisa A. Flores. Children of the stones: The intifada and the mythic creation of the Palestinian state. 89 David R. Roskos-Ewoldsen & Russell H. Fazio. The role of belief accessibility in attitude formation. 107 Margaret Duffy. High stakes: A fantasy theme analysis of the selling of riverboat gambling in Iowa. 117 Tyrone L. Adams. Follow the yellow brick road: Using diffusion of innovations theory to enrich virtual organizations in cyberspace. 133 Wilfred E. Major & Edward Schiappa. Gorgias undeclared theory of arrangement: A postscript to Smeltzer. 149 (The Forum) Charles R. Gruner. A rejoinder to Levasseur and Dean on the Dole humor myth. 153 (The Forum) 1996, Vol. 62(1) (Special Issue: Rhetoric, Culture and Community) Catherine Helen Palczewski. Bodies, borders and letters: Gloria Anzalduas Speaking in Tongues: A Letter to 3rd World Women Writers. 1 Kenneth L. Zagacki. Valcal Havel and the rhetoric of folly. 17 Wayne J. McMullen. Reconstruction of the frontier myth in Witness. 31 Leroy G. Dorsey. The myth of war and peace in presidential discourse: John Kennedys new frontier myth and the peace corps. 42 David G. Lavesseur & Kevin W. Dean. The Dole humor myth and the risks of recontextualizing rhetoric. 56 William L. Benoit & K. Kelby Anderson. Blending politics and entertainment: Dan Quayle versus Murphy Brown. 73 1996, Vol. 61(4) J. Michael Hogen & L. Glen Williams. Defining the enemy in revolutionary America: From the rhetoric of protest to the rhetoric of war. 227 Diane H. Miller, Cal M. Logue & Cindy Jenefsky. Civil liberties; The expansion of White womens communication activities from the antebellum south through the civil war. 289

286 Paul D. Erickson. Henry David Thoreaus apotheosis of John Brown: A study of nineteenth century rhetorical heroism. 302 Omar Swartz. Kenneth Burkes theory of form: Rhetoric, art, and cultural criticism. 312 Brenda J. Allen & Phillip K. Tompkins. Vocabularies of motives in a crisis of academic leadership. 322 David E. Schneider & Russell A. Beaubien. A naturalistic investigation of compliance-gaining strategies employed by doctors in medical interviews. 332 Gage Chapel. Rhetoric synthesis and the discourse of Jack Kemp. 342 1996, Vol. 61(3) David E. Williams. The drive for prohibition: A transition from social reform to legislative reform. 185 Myria Watkins Allen. The relationship between communication, affect, job alternatives, and voluntary turnover intentions. 198 John Meyer. Seeking organizational unity: Building bridges in response to mystery. 210 Henry L. Ewbank. The constitution: Burkean, Brandsein and Borkian perspectives. 200 Marshall G. Most & Robert Rudd. Dont bet on it . . . The representation of gambling in baseball cinema. 233 Richard Bello. A Burkean analysis of political correctness confrontation in higher education. 243 Paula Wilson. The rhythm of Jesse Jackson at the 1988 Democratic national convention. 253 Mark Hickson, III. A response to Erickson, Fleuriet and Hosmans Prolific publishing: Professional and administrative concerns. 265 (Forum) Keith V. Erickson, Cathy A. Fleuriet & Lawrence A. Hosman. Scholars and pub-junkies: Perspectives of academic concerns. 271 (Forum)

287 WESTERN JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION 2007, Vol. 71(1) Joshua Gunn. Hystericizing Huey: Emotional appeals, desire, and the psychodynamics of demagoguery. 1 Dylan P. Wolfe. Sidestepping environmental controversy through a rhetoric of security: George W. Bus in Summerhaven, Arizona. 28 Rachel S. Malis & Michael E. Roloff. The effect of legitimacy and intimacy on peer interventions into alcohol abuse. 49 Daniel C. Boruwer & Aaron Hess. Making sense of God hates fags and Thank God for 9/11: A thematic analysis of milbloggers responses to Reverent Fred Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church. 69 2006, Vol. 70(4) Mary Jane Collier. WSCA 2006 presidential address: Cultural positioning, dialogic reflexivity, and transformative/third spaces. 263 David Carlone & Gregory S. Larson. Locating possibilities for control and resistance in a self-help program. 270 Jacqueline M. Martinez. Semiotic phenomenology and intercultural communication scholarship: Meeting the challenge of racial, ethic, and cultural difference. 292 Mark P. Moore. To execute capital punishment. The motification and scapegoating of Illinois Governor George Ryan. 311 Julie Kalil Schutten. Invoking Practical Magic: new social movements, hidden populations, and the public screen. 311 2006, Vol. 70(3) Anniko Hylm. Girls on film: An examination of gendered vocational socialization messages found in motion pictures targeting girls. 167 John B. Hatch. Beyond apologia: Racial reconciliation and apologies for slavery. 186 Greg Dickinson. The Pleasantville effect: Nostalgia and the visual framing of (White) suburbia. 212 Sheryl Hurner. Discursive identity formation of suffrage women. 234 2006, Vol. 70(2) Michele A. Holling. El simpatico boxer: Underpinning Chicano masculinity with a rhetoric of familia in Resurrection Blvd. 91 Christina R. Foust & Charles Soukup. Do I exist? Transcendent subjects and secrets in The Sixth Sense. 115 Michael J. Hostetler. David Ramsey and Louisiana: Time and space in the adolescent rhetoric of America. 134 Erin M. Sahlstein. Making plans: Praxist strategies for negotiating uncertainty-certainty in longdistance relationships. 147 2006, Vol. 70(1)

288

Bryan Crable. Rhetoric, anxiety, and character armor: Burkes international rhetoric of identity. 1 Laurie K. Lewis. Employee perspectives on implementation communication as predictors of perceptions of success and resistance. 23 Kory Floyd. Human affection exchange: XII. Affectionate communication is associated with diurnal variation in salivary free cortisol. 47 Joshua Atkinson & Debbie S. Dougherty. Alternative media and social justice movements: The development of a resistance performance paradigm of audience analysis. 64 2005, Vol. 69(3) Valerie Manusov & Tema Milstein. Interpreting nonverbal behavior: Representation and transformation frames in Israeli and Palestinian media coverage of the 1993 Rabin-Arafat handshake. 183 Timothy R. Levine, Thomas Hugh Freeley, Steven A. McCornack, Mikayal Hughes & Chad M. Harms. Testing the effects of nonverbal behavior training on accuracy in deception detection with the inclusion of a bogus training control group. 203 Miles L. Patterson & Mark E. Tubbs. Through a glass darkly: Effects of smiling and visibility on recognition and avoidance in passing encounters. 219 Suzanne M. Jones. Attachment style differences and similarities in evaluations of affective communication skills and person-centered comforting messages. 233 Alexander Lyon. Intellectual capital and struggles over the perceived value of members expert knowledge in a knowledge-intensive organization. 251 Laura W. Black. Building connection while thinking together: By-products of employee training in dialogue. 273 2005, Vol. 69(4) Mary Jane Collier. Context, privilege, and contingent cultural identifications in South African group interview discourses. 295 April R. Trees. Nonverbal and verbal approach behaviors related to reported and perceived support seeking goals in conversations. 319 Laura K. Guerrero & Alana M. Chavez. Relational maintenance in cross-sex friendships characterized by different types of romantic intent: An exploratory study. 339 Paul Schrodt. Family communication schemata and the circumplex model of family functioning. 359 Myron W. Lustig. WSCA 2005 presidential address: Toward a well-functioning intercultural nation. 377

289 2005, Vol. 69(3) (Special Issue: Research on Nonverbal Communication, Supportiveness, and Cultural Competence) Valerie Manusov & Tema Milstein. Interpreting nonverbal behavior: Representation and transformation frames in Israeli and Palestinian media coverage of the 1993 Rabin-Arafat handshake. 183 Timothy R. Levine, Thomas Hugh Feeley, Steven A. McCornack, Mikayla Hughes & Chad M. Harms. Testing the nonverbal behavior training on accuracy in deception detection with the inclusion of a bogus training control group. 203 Miles L. Patterson & Mark E. Tubbs. Thought a glass darkly: Effects of smiling and visibility on recognition and avoidance in passing encounters. 219 Susanne M. Jones. Attachment style differences and similarities in evaluations of affective communication skills and person-centered comforting messages. 233 Alexander Lyon. Intellectual capital and struggles over the perceived value of members expert knowledge in a knowledge-intensive organization. 251 Laura W. Black. Building connection while thinking together: By-products of employee training in dialogue. 273 2005, Vol. 69(2) (Special Issue: Rhetorical Analyses of Myths, Media and Metaphors) Greg Dickinson, Brian L. Ott & Eric Aoki. Memory and myth at the Buffalo Bill Museum. 85 Robert Alan Brokkey & Robert Westerfelhaus. The digital auteur: Branding identity on the Monsters, Inc. DVD. 109 Jennifer K. Wood. Balancing innocence and guilt: A metaphorical analysis of the US Supreme Courts ruling on victim impact statements. 129 Craig O. Stewart. A rhetorical approach to news discourse: Media representations of a controversial study on reparative therapy. 147 Michele L. Hammers. Cautionary tales of liberation and female professionalism: The case against Ally McBeal. 167. 2005, Vol. 69(1) (Special Issue: Communication in Non-normative Relationships) Tara M. Emmers-Sommer. Non-normative relationships: Is there a norm of (non)normativity? 1 C. Arthur VanLear, Megan Sheehan, Lesley A. Withers & Robert A. Walker. AA online: The enactment of supportive computer mediated communication. 5 Allison Christian. Contesting the myth of the wicked stepmother: A narrative analysis of an online stepfamily support group. 27 Mikayla Hughes, Kelly Morrison & Kelli K. Asada. Whats love got to do with it? Exploring the impact of maintenance rules, love attitudes, and network support on friends with benefits relationships. 49 Fran C. Dickson, Patrick C. Hughes & Kandi L. Walker. An exploratory investigation into dating among later-life women. 67

290 2004, Vol. 68(4) Nancy J. Eckstein. Emergent issues in families experiencing adolescent-to-parent abuse. 365 Mary F. Hoffman & Amanda Medlock-Klyukovski. Our creator who art in heaven: Paradox, ritual, and cultural transformation. 389 Daniel C. Brouwer. Corps/corpse: The U.S. military and homosexuality. 411 Rebecca M. Chory-Assad. Effects of television sitcom exposure on the accessibility of verbally aggressive thoughts. 431 Connie Bullis. WSCA and the sustainability challenge. 454 (2004 Presidential Address) 2004, Vol. 68(3) J. Kevin Barge & David W. Schlueter. Memorable messages and newcomer socialization. 233 Jessica Katz Jameson. Negotiating autonomy and connection through politeness: A dialectical approach to organizational conflict management. 257 Heather Zoller. Manufacturing health: Employee perspectives on problematic outcomes in a workplace health promotion initiative. 278 Eric B. Meiners & Vernon D. Miller. The effect of formality and relational tone on supervisor/subordinate negotiation episodes. 302 Danielle Endres & Barbara Warnick. Text-based interactivity in candidate campaign web sites: A case study from the 2002 elections. 322 Celeste Walls. You aint just whistling Dixie: How Carol Moseley-Braun used rhetorical status to change Jesse Helms tune. 343 2004, Vol. 68(2) Kathleen S. Valde & Kristine L. Fitch. Desire and sacrifice: Seeking compliance in designated driver talk. 121 Pamela J. Lannutti & Jennifer L. Monohan. Resistance, persistence, and drinking: Examining goals of womens refusals of unwanted sexual advances. 151 Eve-Anne M. Doohan & Valerie Manusov. The communication of compliments in romantic relationships: An investigating of relational satisfaction and sex differences and similarities in compliment behavior. 170 Jennifer L. Bevan. General partner and relational uncertainty as consequences of anothers jealousy expression. 195 James B. Roberts, Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph E. Behnke. A neurological representation of speech state anxiety: Mapping salivary cortisol levels of public speakers. 219 2004, Vol. 68(1) Joshua Gunn. The rhetoric of exorcism: George W. Bush and the return of political demonology. 1 Alfred G. Mueller, II. Affirming denial through preemptive apologia: The case of the Armenian genocide resolution. Josh Boyd. Organizational rhetoric doomed to fail: R. J. Reynolds and the principle of the oxymoron. 45 Theodore O. Prosise & Ann Johnson. Law enforcement and crime on Cops and Worlds Wildest Police Videos: Anecdotal form and the justification of racial profiling. 72

291 Walter J. Carl. The interactional business of doing business: Managing legitimacy and coconstructing entrepreneurial identities in e-commerce multilevel marketing discourse. 93 2003, Vol. 67(4) Richard J. Jensen, Thomas R. Burkholder & John C. Hammerback. Martyrs for a just cause: The eulogies of Cesar Chavez. 335 Jeff Kressen-Griep, Jon A. Hess & April Trees. Sustaining the desire to learn: Dimensions of perceived instructional facework related to student involvement and motivation to learn. 357 Adrianne D. Kunkel, Steven R. Wilson, James Olufowote & Scott Robson. Identity implications of influence goals: Initiating, intensifying, and ending romantic relationships. 382 Amy M. Bippus. Humor motives, qualities, and reactions in recalled conflict episodes. 413 Teresa Begman. A critical analysis of the California state railroad museums orientation films. 427 Katherine Adams. Of all things, communication is the most wonderful. 449 (Presidential Address) 2003, Vol. 67(3) Abhik Roy & Robert C. Rowland. The rhetoric of Hindu nationalism: A narrative of mythic redefinition. 225 Brian L. Ott & Bill D. Herman. Mixed messages: Resistance and reappropriation in rave culture. 249 Roseann M. Mandzuik. Commemorating sojourner truth: Negotiating the politics of race and gender in the spaces of public memory. 271 Janet R. Meyer. Cognitive representations of request situations: The relative importance of goal specificity and situation features. 292 Olga Gershenson. A family of strangers: Metaphors of connection and separation in the Gesher Theatre in Israel. 315 2003, Vol. 67(2) Larry A. Erbert, Frank G. Perez & Elisabeth Gareis. Turning points and dialectical interpretations of immigrant experiences in the United States. 113 Marouf Hasian, Jr. The hysterical Emily Hobhouse and Boer War concentration camp controversy. 138 Marianne Dainton. Equity and uncertainty in relational maintenance. 164 C. Wesley Buerkle, Michael E. Mayer & Clark D. Olson. Our hero the buffoon: Contradictory and concurrent Burkean framing of Arizona Governor Evan Mecham. 187 Nancy M. Schullery & Stephen E. Schullery. Relationship of argumentativeness to age and higher education. 207 2003, Vol. 67(1) Helene A. Shugart. She shoots, she scores: Mediated constructions of contemporary female athletes in coverage of the 1999 U.S. womens soccer team. 1 Sarah Mahan-Hays & Roger C. Arden. Kenneth Burkes attitude at the crossroads of rhetorical and cultural studies: A proposal and case study illustration. 32 Kory Floyd & George B. Ray. Mapping the affectionate voice: Vocalic predictors of perceived affection in initial interactions. 56

292 Mark P. Moore. Making sense of salmon: Synecdoche and irony in a natural resource crisis. 74 William L. Benoit. Presidential campaign discourse as a causal factor in election outcome. 97 2002, Vol. 66(4) Mark T. Morman & Kory Floyd. A changing culture of fatherhood: Effects on affectionate communication, closeness, and satisfaction in mens relationships with their fathers and their sons. 395 Chris R. Sawyer & Ralph R. Behnke. Behavioral inhibition and the communication of public speaking state anxiety. 412 Special Section: Conspiracy Rhetoric Charles J. Stewart. The master conspiracy of the John Birch Society: From communism to the New World Order. 424 Leroy G. Dorsey. Re-reading The X-Files: The trickster in contemporary conspiracy myth. 448 James Darsey. A conspiracy of science. 469 Steven R. Goldzwig. Conspiracy rhetoric at the dawn of the new millennium: A response. 492 Sandra Petronio. The new world and scholarship translation practices: Necessary changes in defining evidence. 507 (2002 WSCA Presidential Address) 2002, Vol. 66(3) Todd L. Sandel. Kinship address: Socializing young children in Taiwan. 257 M. Lane Bruner. Rhetorical criticism as limit work. 281 Brenda Cooper & Edward C. Pease. Dont want no short people round here: Comforting heterosexisms intolerance through comic and disruptive narratives in Ally McBeal. 300 Wynton C. Hall. The invention of quantifiably safe rhetoric: Richard Wirthlin and Ronald Reagans instrumental use of public opinion research in presidential discourse. 319 Michael R. Kramer & Kathryn M. Olson. The strategic potential of sequencing apologia stases: President Clintons self-defense in the Monica Lewinsky scandal. 347 Scott R. Stroud. Multivalent narratives: Extending the narrative paradigm with insights from ancient Indian philosophical texts. 369

293 2002, Vol. 66(2) Sarah J. Tracy. When questioning turns to face threat: An interactional sensitivity in 911 calltaking. 129 John S. Seiter, Jon Bruschke & Chunsheng Bai. The acceptability of deception as a function of perceivers culture, deceiver intention, and deceiver-deceived relationship. 158 Lisa A. Flores & Dreama G. Moon. Rethinking race, revealing dilemmas: Imagining a new racial subject in Race Traitor. 181 John Arthos. Appeal to proportion in the Clinton impeachment trial: Reconciling judgment with disposition. 208 Marouf Hasian, Jr. Nostalgic longings and imaginary Indias: Postcolonial analysis, collective memories, and the impeachment trial of Warren Hastings. 229 2002, Vol. 66(1) John R. Butler. Somalia and the imperial savage: Continuities in the rhetoric of war. 1 Jennifer L. Borda. The woman suffrage parades of 1910-1913: Possibilities and limitations of an early feminist rhetorical strategy. 25 Caitlin Wills Toker. Debating what ought to be: The comic frame and public moral argument. 53 Harry Weger, Jr. & Leah E. Polcar. Attachment style and person-centered comforting. 84 Loreen N. Olson. Exploring common couple violence in heterosexual romantic relationships. 104 2001, Vol. 65(4) Hui-Jung Chang & J. David Johnson. Communication networks as predictors of organizational members media choices. 349 Brooks Aylor & Marianne Dainton. Antecedents in romantic jealousy experience, expression, and goals. 370 Brian L. Ott & Eric Aoki. Popular imagination and identity politics: Reading the future in Star Trek: The Next Generation. 392 Scott R. Stroud. Technology and mythic narrative: The Matrix as technological hero-quest. 416 Dawn O. Braithwaite. Do more, with more. 442 (2001 WSCA Presidential Address) 2001, Vol. 65(3) (Special Issue: Rhetorical Criticism: The State of the Art Revisited) David Henry. Introduction. 229 Michael C. Leff. Lincoln at Cooper Union: Neo-classical criticism revisited. 232 James Jasinski. The status of theory and method in rhetorical criticism. 249 Carole Blair. Reflections on criticism and bodies: Parables from public places. 271 Marouf Hasian, Jr. Silences and articulations in modern rhetorical criticism. 295 Leah Ceccarelli. Rhetorical criticism and the rhetoric of science. 314 Stephen Howard Browne. Context in critical theory and practice. 330 (Response) Bonnie J. Dow. Criticism and authority in the artistic mode. 336 (Response) 2001, Vol. 65(2)

294 Scott A. Myers & Kelly A. Rocca. Perceived instructor argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness in the college classroom: Effects on student perceptions of climate, apprehension, and state motivation. 113 Jennifer Anne Samp & Denise Haunani Solomon. Coping with problematic events in dating relationships: The influence of dependence power on severity appraisals and decisions to communicate. 138 Dale Cyphert. Persuading the body: A rhetoric of action in The Fugitive. 161 John T. Warren. The social drama of a rice burner: A (re)constitution of Whiteness. 184 Anne L. Apple & Beth A. Messner. Paranoia and paradox: The apocalyptic rhetoric of Christian identity. 206 2001, Vol. 65(1) Phraedra C. Pezzullo. Performing critical interruptions: Stories, rhetorical invention, and the environmental justice movement. 1 Andrew C. Hansen. Rhetorical indiscretions: Charles Dickens as abolitionist. 26 Karen Whedbee. Perspective by incongruity in Norman Thomass some wrong roads to peace. 45 Kim Golombisky. Mothers, daughters, and female identity therapy in How to Make an American Quilt. 65 Melissa W. Aleman. Complaining among the elderly: Examining multiple dialectical oppositions to independence in a retirement community. 89 2000, Vol. 64(4) Amy M. Bippus. Humor usage in comforting episodes: Factors predicting outcomes. 359 Kory Floyd. Attributions for nonverbal expressions of liking and disliking: The extended selfserving bias. 385 David Douglass. Issues in the use of I. A. Richards tenor-vehicle model of metaphor. 405 Kevin R. McClure. Frederick Douglass use of comparison in his Fourth of July oration: A textual critique. 425 Dennis C. Alexander. Communication relevance: Reflections on success. 445 (2000 WSCA Presidential Address) 2000, Vol. 64(3) Judee K. Burgoon & Kory Floyd. Testing for the motivation impairment effect during deceptive and truthful interaction. 243 Stephen Howard Browne. Counter science: African American historians and the critique of ethnology in nineteenth-century America. 268 D. Robert Dechaine. Magic, mimesis, and revolutionary praxis: Illuminating Walter Benjamins rhetoric of redemption. 285 Christine L. Carson & William R. Cupach. Fueling the flames of the green-eyed monster: The role of ruminative thought in reaction to romantic jealousy. 308 James S. Sass. Emotional labor as cultural performance: The communication of caregiving in a nonprofit nursing home. 330 2000, Vol. 64(2)

295

E. Michelle Ramsey. Inventing citizens during World War I: Suffrage cartoons in The Woman Citizen. 113 Charles J. G. Griffin. Movement as motive: Self-definition and social advocacy in social movement autobiographies. 148 John M. Sloop. Disciplining the transgendered: Brandon Teena, public representation, and normativity. 165 Nikki C. Townsley & Patricia Geist. The discursive enactment of hegemony: Sexual harassment and academic organizing. 190 Dawna I. Ballard & David R. Seibold. Time orientation and temporal variation across work groups: Implications for group and organizational communication. 218 2000, Vol. 64(1) Kim Witte & Kelly Morrison. Examining the influence of trait anxiety/repression-sensitization on individuals reactions to fear appeals. 1 Mark Stoda & George Dionisopoulos. Jeremiad at Harvard: Solzhenitsyn and The World Split Apart. 28 James R. Andrews. The imperial style: Rhetorical depiction and Queen Victorias diamond jubilee. 53 Victoria E. Sanchez & Mary E. Stuckey. Coming of age as a culture? Emancipatory and hegemonic readings of The Indian in the Cupboard. 78 Geoffrey Baym. Constructing moral authority: We in the discourse of television news. 92 1999, Vol. 63(4) Patricia A. Sullivan & Lynn H. Turner. The Zoe Baird spectacle: Silences, sins, and status. 413 Helene A. Shugart. Postmodern irony as subversive rhetorical strategy. 433 Craig R. Scott. The impact of physical and discursive anonymity on group members multiple identifications during computer-supported decision making. 456 Controversies, Politics, and Critical Rhetorics: On Paradoxical JuxtapositionsExpanding the Conversation Kendall R. Phillips. A rhetoric of controversy. 488 G. Thomas Goodnight. Messrs. Dinkins, Rangel, and Savage in colloquy on the African burial ground: A companion reading. 511 Kent A. Ono & John M. Sloop. Critical rhetorics of controversy. 526 Peter A. Andersen. 1999 WSCA Presidential Address. 539 1999, Vol. 63(3) (Special Issue: Spaces) Leah R. Vande Berg. Introduction to the special issue on spaces. 249 Donal Carbaugh. Just listen: Listening and landscape among the Blackfeet. 250 Raymie E. McKerrow. Space and time in the postmodern polity. 271 Elizabeth Birmingham. Reframing the ruins: Pruitt-Igoe, structural racism, and African American rhetoric as a space for cultural critique. 291 Timothy A. Simpson. Recycling urban spaces. 310

296 Sharon E. Croft. Creating locales through storytelling: An ethnography of a group home for men with mental retardation. 329 Richard Cavell. McLuhan and spatial communication. 348 Olga Idriss Davis. In the kitchen: Transforming the academy through safe spaces of resistance. 364 Lance Strate. The varieties of cyberspace: Problems in definition and delimitation. 382 1999, Vol. 63(2) Bradford Vivian. The veil and the visible. 115 Angela Trethewey. Isnt it ironic: Using irony to explore the contradictions of organizational life. 140 Dean Scheibel. If your roommate dies, you get a 4.0: Reclaiming rumor with Burke and organizational culture. 168 Kirt H. Wilson. Toward a discursive theory of racial identity: The Souls of Black Folk as a response to nineteenth-century biological determinism. 193 Laura K. Guerrero and Walid A. Afifi. Toward a goal-oriented approach for understanding communicative responses to jealousy. 216 1999, Vol. 63(1) Sheryl L. Lindsey. Communication and The Mexican Way: Stability and trust as core symbols in Maquiladoras. 1 D. Lynn OBrien Hallstein. A postmodern caring: feminist standpoint theories, revisioned caring, and communication ethics. 32 Joann Cantor & Becky L. Omdahl. Childrens acceptance of safety guidelines after exposure to televised dramas depicting accidents. 57 Naomi R. Rockler. From magic bullets to shooting blanks: Reality, criticism, and Beverly Hills, 90210. 72 Marouf Hasian, Jr. & Robert E. Frank. Rhetoric, history, and collective memory: Decoding the Goldhagen debates. 95 1998, Vol. 62(4) Dana L. Cloud. The rhetoric of <family values>: Scapegoating, utopia, and the privatization of social responsibility. 387 Fernando P. Delgado. When the silenced speak: The textualization and complications of Latina/o identity. 420 Daniel O. Buehler. Permanence and change in Theodore Roosevelts conversation jeremiad. 439 Daniel Dolan. Condition respect and criminal identity: The use of personal address terms in Japanese mass media. 459 Alan D. DeSantis. Selling the American dream myth to black southerners: The Chicago Defender and the great migration of 1915-1919. 474 John L. Pauley, II. Reshaping public persona and the prophetic ethos: Louis Farrakhan at the million man march. 512. 1998, Vol. 62(3)

297 Brian R. McGee. Witnessing and ethos: The Evangelical conversion of David Duke. 217 Richard A Rogers. Overcoming the objectification of nature in constitutive theories: Toward a transhuman, materialist theory of communication. 244 Patricia M. Sias & Daniel J. Cahill. From coworkers to friends: The development of peer relationships in the workplace. 273 Special Topic: Critical Nuclear Studies Bryan C. Taylor. Nuclear weapons and communication studies: A review essay. 300 Theodore O. Prosie. The collective memory of the atomic bombings misrecognized as objective history: The case of the public opposition to the National Air and Space Museums atom bomb exhibit. 316 Bryan Hubbard. Reassessing Truman, the bomb, and revisionism: The burlesque frame and entelechy in the decision to use atomic weapons against Japan. 348 1998, Vol. 62(2) Fernando Pedro Delgado. Chicano ideology revisited: Rap music and the (re)articulation of Chicanism. 95 Mark Lawrence McPhail. From complicity to coherence: Rereading the rhetoric of Afrocentricity. 114 James R. Andrews. Assaulting the English governing classes: Strategy and radical ideology in John Brights Treat Affair speech. 141 Michael J. Hostetler. William Jennings Bryan as Demosthenes: The Scopes trial and the undelivered oration, On Evaluation. 165 Jaesub Lee. Effective maintenance communication in superior-subordinate relationships. 181 E. Duff Wrobbel. A conversation analysts response to Patterson, Neupauer, Burant, Koehn, and Reed. 209 (Critical Response) 1998, Vol. 62(1) Richard A. Engnell. Materiality, symbolicity, and the rhetoric of order: Dialectical biologism as motive in Burke. 1 Garth Pauley. Rhetoric and timeliness: An analysis of Lyndon B. Johnsons voting rights address. 26 Scott A. Myers. GTAs as organizational newcomers: The association between supporting communication relationships and information seeking. 54 Robert Hanke. The mock-match situation comedy Hegemonic masculinity and its reiteration. 74 1997, Vol. 61(4) Dennis K. Mumby. The problem of hegemony: Rereading Gramsci for organizational studies. 343 Edward C. Appel. The rhetoric of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: Comedy and context in tragic collision. 376 Alan Sillars, Wesley Shellen, Anne McIntosh & Maryann Pomegranate. Relational characteristics of language: Elaboration and differentiation in marital conversations. 403 Charles A. Braithwaite. Were you there?: A ritual of legitimacy among Vietnam veterans. 423

298 Special Series: Voices Mary S. Strine. Deconstructing identity in/and difference: Voices under erasure. 448 Gordon Nakagawa. Voice travels: Ventrioquating the other, yearning for home. 460 A. Susan Owen. Learning to listen: Critical reflections on voices. 474 Roy Schwartzman. Letter to the brother I never had: Para-/dia/logically talking back to Ono. 485 1997, Vol. 61(3) Carrie Crenshaw. Resisting Whiteness rhetorical silence. 253 Kory Floyd & Mark T. Morman. Affectionate communication in nonromantic relationships: Influences of communicator, relational, and contextual factors. 279 Matthew M. Martin & Carolyn M. Anderson. Aggressive communication traits: How similar are young adults and their parents in argumentativeness, assertiveness, and verbal aggressiveness? 299 Robin Patric Clair. Organization silence: Silence as voice and voice as silence in the narrative exploration of the Treaty of New Echota. 315 (Special Series: Voices) Betsy Wackernagel Bach. Putting an end to ignorance: Tips for climbing down from the ivory tower. 338 (1997 WSCA Presidential Address) 1997, Vol. 61(2) Sara Hayden. Re-claiming bodies of knowledge: An exploration of the relationship between feminist theorizing and feminine style in the rhetoric of the Boson womens health book collective. 127 April Chatham-Carpenter & Victoria DeFrancisco. Pulling yourself up again: Womens choices and strategies for recovering and maintaining self-esteem. 164 John C. Meyer. Humor in member narratives: Uniting and dividing at work. 188 Special Series: Voices Bryan C. Taylor. Home zero: Images of home and field in nuclear-cultural studies. 209 Thomas K. Nakayama. Less voix de lautre. 235 Bonnie J. Dow. Politicizing voice. 243 1997, Vol. 61(1) Kimberly S. Barquist Hogelucht & Patricia Geist. Discipline in the classroom: Communicative strategies for negotiating order. 1 Abran J. Salazar. Communication effects on small group decision-making: Homogeneity and task as moderators of the communication-performance relationship. 35 Joseph P. Zompetti. Toward a Gramscian critical rhetoric. 66 Special Series: Voices Elizabeth Bell. Listen up, you have to: Voices from women and communication. 89 Sandra Petronio, Lisa A. Flores & Michael L. Hecht. Locating the voice of logic: Disclosure discourse of sexual abuse. 101 Kent A. Ono. A letter/essay Ive been longing to write in my personal/academic voice. 114 1997, Vol. 60(4)

299

Lori West Peterson & Terrance L. Albrecht. Message design logic, social support, and mixedstatus relationships. 291 Patrice M. Buzzanell, Nancy A. Burrell, R. Shane Stafford & Sandra Berkowitz. When I call you up and youre not there: Application of communication accommodation theory to telephone answering machine messages. 310 Jess K. Alberts, Yvonne Kellar-Guenther & Steven R. Corman. Thats not funny: Understanding recipients responses to teasing. 337 Margaret Hilton Bahniuk, Susan E. Kogler Hill & Holly J. Darus. The relationship of powergaining communication strategies to career success. 358 Thomas M. Lessl. Naturalizing science: Two episodes in the evolution of a rhetoric of scientism. 379 Judith Lancioni. The rhetoric of the frame revisioning archival photographs in The Civil War. 397 Myron Lustig. Cultures core. 415 (Poetry as Scholarship) 1996, Vol. 60(3) Paul A. Mongeau & Colleen M. Carey. Whos wooing whom II? An experimental investigation of date-initiation and expectancy violation. 195 Michael Pfau & William P. Eveland, Jr. Influence of traditional and non-traditional news media in the 1992 election campaign. 214 Janet R. Meyer. What cognitive differences are measured by the role category questionnaire? 233 Leslie A. Baxter & Catherine L. Clark. Perceptions of family communication patterns and the enactment of family rituals. 254 Edward C. Appel. Burlesque drama as rhetorical genre: The hudibrastic ridicule of William F. Buckley. 269 Jolene Koester. On disciplining ourselves. 285 (1996 Presidential address) 1996, Vol. 60(2) Beth A. Messner. Sizing up codependency recovery. 101 Lisa A. Roghaar & Anita L. Vangelisti. Expressed attributions for academic success and failure by adolescents and young adults. 124 Shawn J. Parry-Giles. Camouflaged propaganda: The Truman and Eisenhower administrations covert manipulation of news. 146 Kenneth S. Zagacki. The priestly rhetoric of neoconservatism. 168 William K. Rawlins. Teaching as evidence of learning. 188 (Continuing the Dialogue of Evidence) 1996, Vol. 60(1) Mark P. Moore. Rhetorical subterfuge and the principle of perfection: Bob Packwoods response to sexual misconduct charges. 1 Cindy L. Griffin. The essentialist roots of the public sphere: A feminist critique. 21 Robert Alan Brookley. A community like Philadelphia. 40 Frederick C. Corey. personal narratives and young men in prison: Labeling the outside inside. 57 Brian R. Patterson, Nicholas C. Neupauer, Patricia A. Burant, Steven C. Koehn & April T. Reed. A preliminary examination of conversation analytic techniques: Rates of inter-transcriber reliability. 76

300 Leslie A. Baxter & Lee West. On Whistlers mother and discourse of the fourth kind. 92 (Continuing the Dialogue of Evidence)

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