| |
original article |
Date |
Title |
Authors All Authors |
| 1 |
[GO] |
2026―May―16 |
Heat and affiliation: platform incentives in party leaders’ Facebook communication during COVID-19 |
Roy Jacobsen |
| 2 |
[GO] |
2025―Mar―14 |
Living with COVID-19 conspiracies on Chinese TikTok (Douyin): unpacking multimodal features, national identity, and user engagement |
Zituo Wang, Jiayi Zhu, Wenqing Zuo, Zihan Jiang, Jinhao Lei, Zhuoyu Wang |
| 3 |
[GO] |
2024―Feb―02 |
Political conflict on Instagram during the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe: challenges of a cross-country comparison of visual content |
Ofra Klein, Hans-Joerg Trenz, Nadine Hesse |
| 4 |
[GO] |
2023―Jul―11 |
Don’t talk to strangers? The role of network composition, WhatsApp groups, and partisanship in explaining beliefs in misinformation about COVID-19 in Brazil |
Patrícia Rossini, Antonis Kalogeropoulos |
| 5 |
[GO] |
2023―Feb―27 |
A tale of heroes and villains: Russia’s strategic narratives on Twitter during the COVID-19 pandemic |
Pablo Moral |
| 6 |
[GO] |
2022―Jul―15 |
Hashtag framing and stakeholder targeting: An affordance perspective on China’s digital public diplomacy campaign during COVID-19 |
Rui Wang, Weiai Wayne Xu |
| 7 |
[GO] |
2021―Nov―23 |
Online coverage of the COVID-19 outbreak in Anglo-American democracies: internet news coverage and pandemic politics in the USA, Canada, and New Zealand |
Udi Sommer, Or Rappel-Kroyzer |
| 8 |
[GO] |
2021―Jul―15 |
The right to stay offline? Not during the pandemic |
Oskar Wolski |
| 9 |
[GO] |
2021―Jul―07 |
Public responses to COVID-19 information from the public health office on Twitter and YouTube: implications for research practice |
Jaigris Hodson, George Veletsianos, Shandell Houlden |