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Original Articles

“A Statistically Representative Climate Change Debate”: Satirical Television News, Scientific Consensus, and Public Perceptions of Global Warming

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Ellen Droog, Christian Burgers & David L. Mann. (2023) Cognitive, Emotional and Excitative Responses to Satirical News. Mass Communication and Society 26:6, pages 913-937.
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Eliana DuBosar & Myiah J. Hutchens. (2023) Looking beyond the punchline: the effect of political entertainment on evaluations of political candidates. Atlantic Journal of Communication 0:0, pages 1-14.
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Robin Bayes, Toby Bolsen & James N. Druckman. (2023) A Research Agenda for Climate Change Communication and Public Opinion: The Role of Scientific Consensus Messaging and Beyond. Environmental Communication 17:1, pages 16-34.
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Graham Dixon, Jay Hmielowski & Yanni Ma. (2023) More Evidence of Psychological Reactance to Consensus Messaging: A Response to van der Linden, Maibach, and Leiserowitz (2019). Environmental Communication 17:1, pages 9-15.
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Sander van der Linden, Edward Maibach & Anthony Leiserowitz. (2023) Exposure to Scientific Consensus Does Not Cause Psychological Reactance. Environmental Communication 17:1, pages 1-8.
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Brendan M. Anderson, Katherine C. Herleman, Chris Ebey & Don Haas. (2022) Consider the following: A pilot study of the effects of an educational television program on viewer perceptions of anthropogenic climate change and ocean acidification. Journal of Geoscience Education 70:4, pages 437-459.
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Edward J. R. Clarke, Anna Klas, Joshua Stevenson & E. J. Kothe. (2022) The Role of Late-Night Infotainment Comedy in Communicating Climate Change Consensus. Environmental Communication 16:3, pages 289-295.
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Miriam Kaltenbacher & Stefan Drews. (2020) An Inconvenient Joke? A Review of Humor in Climate Change Communication. Environmental Communication 14:6, pages 717-729.
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Emily K. Vraga, Sojung Claire Kim & John Cook. (2019) Testing Logic-based and Humor-based Corrections for Science, Health, and Political Misinformation on Social Media. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 63:3, pages 393-414.
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John Cook. (2017) Response by Cook to “Beyond Counting Climate Consensus”. Environmental Communication 11:6, pages 733-735.
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