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Original Articles

Twitter Use During a Weather Event: Comparing Content Associated with Localized and Nonlocalized Hashtags

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Read on this site (15)

Xianlin Jin & Patric R. Spence. (2023) Check Crisis Information on Twitter: Information Flow and Crisis Communication Patterns of Hurricane Ida. Communication Studies 74:4, pages 337-355.
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Patric R. Spence, Kenneth A. Lachlan & America L. Edwards. (2022) We Interrupt This Program, This Is an Emergency: Revisiting the Role of Radio in a Crisis. Journal of Radio & Audio Media 0:0, pages 1-22.
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Zheng Yang & Stefania Vicari. (2021) The Pandemic across Platform Societies: Weibo and Twitter at the Outbreak of the Covid-19 Epidemic in China and the West. Howard Journal of Communications 32:5, pages 493-506.
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Xianlin Jin & Patric R. Spence. (2021) Understanding crisis communication on social media with CERC: topic model analysis of tweets about Hurricane Maria. Journal of Risk Research 24:10, pages 1266-1287.
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Heather Riddell & Christopher Fenner. (2021) User-Generated Crisis Communication: Exploring Crisis Frames on Twitter during Hurricane Harvey. Southern Communication Journal 86:1, pages 31-45.
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Charles W. Meadows, Cui Zhang Meadows, Lu Tang & Wenlin Liu. (2019) Unraveling Public Health Crises Across Stages: Understanding Twitter Emotions and Message Types During the California Measles Outbreak. Communication Studies 70:4, pages 453-469.
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Xialing Lin, Renee Kaufmann, Patric R. Spence & Kenneth A. Lachlan. (2019) Agency Cues in Online Comments: Exploring Their Relationship with Anonymity and Frequency of Helpful Posts. Southern Communication Journal 84:3, pages 183-195.
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Adam M. Rainear, Kenneth A. Lachlan, Anne Oeldorf-Hirsch & Christina L. DeVoss. (2018) Examining Twitter Content of State Emergency Management During Hurricane Joaquin. Communication Research Reports 35:4, pages 325-334.
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Darren L. Linvill, Brandon C. Boatwright & Will J. Grant. (2018) “Back-stage” dissent: student Twitter use addressing instructor ideology. Communication Education 67:2, pages 125-143.
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Eisa Al Nashmi. (2018) From Selfies to Media Events. Digital Journalism 6:1, pages 98-117.
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Zheye Wang & Xinyue Ye. (2018) Social media analytics for natural disaster management. International Journal of Geographical Information Science 32:1, pages 49-72.
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Blair Thompson, Joseph P. Mazer, Holly J. Payne, Angela M. Jerome, E. Gail Kirby & William Pfohl. (2017) Social Media and Active Shooter Events: A School Crisis Communication Challenge. Qualitative Research Reports in Communication 18:1, pages 8-17.
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Patric R. Spence, Deborah D. Sellnow-Richmond, Timothy L. Sellnow & Kenneth A. Lachlan. (2016) Social media and corporate reputation during crises: the viability of video-sharing websites for providing counter-messages to traditional broadcast news. Journal of Applied Communication Research 44:3, pages 199-215.
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Patric R. Spence, Kenneth A. Lachlan, Autumn Edwards & Chad Edwards. (2016) Tweeting Fast Matters, But Only if I Think About It: Information Updates on Social Media. Communication Quarterly 64:1, pages 55-71.
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Articles from other publishers (33)

Pablo M. Flores & Martin Hilbert. (2023) Temporal communication dynamics in the aftermath of large-scale upheavals: do digital footprints reveal a stage model?. Journal of Computational Social Science 6:2, pages 973-999.
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Amber Silver & Brandon Behlendorf. (2023) Understanding your audience: The influence of social media user‐type on informational behaviors and hazard adjustments during Hurricane Dorian . Meteorological Applications 30:5.
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Seungil Yum. (2022) Spatial autocorrelation between human responses and Winter storm Grayson. The Geographical Journal 188:4, pages 546-558.
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Minni Jain, Grusha Bhalla, Amita Jain & Swati Sharma. (2022) Automatic keyword extraction for localized tweets using fuzzy graph connectivity measures. Multimedia Tools and Applications 81:30, pages 42931-42956.
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Seungil Yum. (2022) Disaster vulnerability from Winter storm Benji with Twitter data. Regional Science Policy & Practice.
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Arianna Grasso. (2022) Populist dialogues on Twitter to #PutAustraliaFirst. Journal of Pragmatics 193, pages 76-87.
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Kenneth A. Lachlan, Christine Gilbert, Patric R. Spence & Emily Hutter. (2021) Frozen while I scan: Examining the impact of media dependencies, socioeconomic status and rumination on preparation behaviours related to Hurricane Dorian. Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management 29:4, pages 357-367.
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Meng Cai, Han Luo, Xiao Meng & Ying Cui. (2021) Topic-Emotion Propagation Mechanism of Public Emergencies in Social Networks. Sensors 21:13, pages 4516.
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Sara Grøn Perlstein & Marc Verboord. (2021) Lockdowns, lethality, and laissez-faire politics. Public discourses on political authorities in high-trust countries during the COVID-19 pandemic. PLOS ONE 16:6, pages e0253175.
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Yifan Zhu, Sifan Zhang, Yinan Li, Hao Lu, Kaize Shi & Zhendong Niu. (2019) Social weather: A review of crowdsourcing‐assisted meteorological knowledge services through social cyberspace. Geoscience Data Journal 7:1, pages 61-79.
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Laura Giuffrida, Hanna Lokys & Otto Klemm. (2018) Assessing the effect of weather on human outdoor perception using Twitter. International Journal of Biometeorology 64:2, pages 205-216.
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Simon Lindgren. (2019) Movement Mobilization in the Age of Hashtag Activism: Examining the Challenge of Noise, Hate, and Disengagement in the #MeToo Campaign. Policy & Internet 11:4, pages 418-438.
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Zhao Alexandre Huang & Rui Wang. 2019. Big Ideas in Public Relations Research and Practice. Big Ideas in Public Relations Research and Practice 69 85 .
Joshua D. Eachus & Barry D. Keim. (2019) A Survey for Weather Communicators: Twitter and Information Channel Preferences. Weather, Climate, and Society 11:3, pages 595-607.
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Jaebong Son, Hyung Koo Lee, Sung Jin & Jintae Lee. (2019) Content features of tweets for effective communication during disasters: A media synchronicity theory perspective. International Journal of Information Management 45, pages 56-68.
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Jenna Currie-Mueller. (2019) Tweeting to Prepare: An Examination of Government and Organizational Messages during National Preparedness Month. Proceedings of the International Crisis and Risk Communication Conference 2:2019, pages 15-17.
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Khoa Huan Le & Duy Binh Luong. (2019) The influence of online reviews on word of mouth behavior through consumer purchase intention in e-commerce. International Journal of Research Studies in Management 8:1.
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Xialing Lin, Adam M. Rainear, Patric R. Spence & Kenneth A. Lachlan. (2018) Don’t Sleep on It: An Examination of Storm Naming and Potential Heuristic Effects on Twitter. Weather, Climate, and Society 10:4, pages 769-779.
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Julie L. Demuth, Rebecca E. Morss, Leysia Palen, Kenneth M. Anderson, Jennings Anderson, Marina Kogan, Kevin Stowe, Melissa Bica, Heather Lazrus, Olga Wilhelmi & Jen Henderson. (2018) “Sometimes da #beachlife ain't always da wave”: Understanding People’s Evolving Hurricane Risk Communication, Risk Assessments, and Responses Using Twitter Narratives. Weather, Climate, and Society 10:3, pages 537-560.
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Michele Zappavigna & J.R. Martin. (2018) #Communing affiliation: Social tagging as a resource for aligning around values in social media. Discourse, Context & Media 22, pages 4-12.
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Akiyuki Kawasaki, Michael Henry & Kimiro Meguro. (2018) Media Preference, Information Needs, and the Language Proficiency of Foreigners in Japan after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science 9:1, pages 1-15.
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Xin Ma & Justin Yates. (2017) Multi-network multi-message social media message dissemination problem for emergency communication. Computers & Industrial Engineering 113, pages 256-268.
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Stefan Stieglitz, Milad Mirbabaie & Jennifer Fromm. (2017) Understanding Sense-Making on Social Media During Crises. International Journal of Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management 9:4, pages 49-69.
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Adam M. Rainear, Kenneth A. Lachlan & Carolyn A. Lin. (2017) What’s in a #Name? An Experimental Study Examining Perceived Credibility and Impact of Winter Storm Names. Weather, Climate, and Society 9:4, pages 815-822.
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Yenni Tim, Shan L. Pan, Peter Ractham & Laddawan Kaewkitipong. (2017) Digitally enabled disaster response: the emergence of social media as boundary objects in a flooding disaster. Information Systems Journal 27:2, pages 197-232.
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Robert G. Rice & Patric R. Spence. (2016) Thor visits Lexington: Exploration of the knowledge-sharing gap and risk management learning in social media during multiple winter storms. Computers in Human Behavior 65, pages 612-618.
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Xialing Lin, Patric R. Spence, Timothy L. Sellnow & Kenneth A. Lachlan. (2016) Crisis communication, learning and responding: Best practices in social media. Computers in Human Behavior 65, pages 601-605.
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Xialing Lin, Kenneth A. Lachlan & Patric R. Spence. (2016) Exploring extreme events on social media: A comparison of user reposting/retweeting behaviors on Twitter and Weibo. Computers in Human Behavior 65, pages 576-581.
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Xialing Lin, Patric R. Spence & Kenneth A. Lachlan. (2016) Social media and credibility indicators: The effect of influence cues. Computers in Human Behavior 63, pages 264-271.
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Patric R. Spence, Kenneth A. Lachlan & Adam M. Rainear. (2016) Social media and crisis research: Data collection and directions. Computers in Human Behavior 54, pages 667-672.
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Laddawan Kaewkitipong, Charlie C. Chen & Peter Ractham. (2016) A community-based approach to sharing knowledge before, during, and after crisis events: A case study from Thailand. Computers in Human Behavior 54, pages 653-666.
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Kenneth A. Lachlan, Patric R. Spence, Xialing Lin, Kristy Najarian & Maria Del Greco. (2016) Social media and crisis management: CERC, search strategies, and Twitter content. Computers in Human Behavior 54, pages 647-652.
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Joseph P. Mazer, Blair Thompson, Jessica Cherry, Mattie Russell, Holly J. Payne, E. Gail Kirby & William Pfohl. (2015) Communication in the face of a school crisis: Examining the volume and content of social media mentions during active shooter incidents. Computers in Human Behavior 53, pages 238-248.
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