Risk perceptions and risk characteristics HJ Paek, T Hove Oxford research encyclopedia of communication, 2017 | 432 | 2017 |
The networked public sphere LA Friedland, T Hove, H Rojas Javnost-the public 13 (4), 5-26, 2006 | 302 | 2006 |
Content analysis of antismoking videos on YouTube: message sensation value, message appeals, and their relationships with viewer responses HJ Paek, K Kim, T Hove Health education research 25 (6), 1085-1099, 2010 | 219 | 2010 |
Engagement across three social media platforms: An exploratory study of a cause-related PR campaign HJ Paek, T Hove, Y Jung, RT Cole Public Relations Review 39 (5), 526-533, 2013 | 216 | 2013 |
Reduced harm or another gateway to smoking? Source, message, and information characteristics of e-cigarette videos on YouTube HJ Paek, S Kim, T Hove, JY Huh Journal of health communication 19 (5), 545-560, 2014 | 199 | 2014 |
The multidimensional nature and brand impact of user-generated ad parodies in social media BG Vanden Bergh, M Lee, ET Quilliam, T Hove International Journal of Advertising 30 (1), 103-131, 2011 | 193 | 2011 |
Cognitive and emotional dimensions of perceived risk characteristics, genre-specific media effects, and risk perceptions: The case of H1N1 influenza in South Korea SH Oh, HJ Paek, T Hove Asian Journal of Communication 25 (1), 14-32, 2015 | 169 | 2015 |
Peer or expert? The persuasive impact of YouTube public service announcement producers HJ Paek, T Hove, H Ju Jeong, M Kim International Journal of Advertising 30 (1), 161-188, 2011 | 154 | 2011 |
How fear-arousing news messages affect risk perceptions and intention to talk about risk HJ Paek, SH Oh, T Hove Health communication 31 (9), 1051-1062, 2016 | 129 | 2016 |
Social cognitive factors and perceived social influences that improve adolescent eHealth literacy HJ Paek, T Hove Health communication 27 (8), 727-737, 2012 | 116 | 2012 |
When do people speak out? Integrating the spiral of silence and the situational theory of problem solving H Lee, T Oshita, HJ Oh, T Hove Journal of Public Relations Research 26 (3), 185-199, 2014 | 95 | 2014 |
Newspaper portrayals of child abuse: Frequency of coverage and frames of the issue T Hove, HJ Paek, T Isaacson, RT Cole Mass Communication and Society 16 (1), 89-108, 2013 | 93 | 2013 |
Attention cycles and the H1N1 pandemic: A cross-national study of US and Korean newspaper coverage H Jung Oh, T Hove, HJ Paek, B Lee, H Lee, S Kyu Song Asian Journal of Communication 22 (2), 214-232, 2012 | 83 | 2012 |
Communicating uncertainties during the COVID-19 outbreak HJ Paek, T Hove Health Communication 35 (14), 1729-1731, 2020 | 67 | 2020 |
Differential effects of content-oriented versus user-oriented social media on risk perceptions and behavioral intentions W Yoo, HJ Paek, T Hove Health communication, 2020 | 67 | 2020 |
Using adolescent eHealth literacy to weigh trust in commercial web sites: the more children know, the tougher they are to persuade T Hove, HJ Paek, T Isaacson Journal of Advertising Research 51 (3), 524-537, 2011 | 66 | 2011 |
Capital, consumption, communication, and citizenship: The social positioning of taste and civic culture in the United States L Friedland, DV Shah, NJ Lee, MA Rademacher, L Atkinson, T Hove The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 611 (1 …, 2007 | 62 | 2007 |
Effective strategies for responding to rumors about risks: The case of radiation-contaminated food in South Korea HJ Paek, T Hove Public Relations Review 45 (3), 101762, 2019 | 54 | 2019 |
How newspapers represent environmental risk: The case of carcinogenic hazards in South Korea T Hove, HJ Paek, M Yun, B Jwa Journal of Risk Research 18 (10), 1320-1336, 2015 | 48 | 2015 |
Social media for message testing: a multilevel approach to linking favorable viewer responses with message, producer, and viewer influence on YouTube HJ Paek, T Hove, J Jeon Health Communication 28 (3), 226-236, 2013 | 48 | 2013 |