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Keith, S., & Silcock, B. W. (2009). Beyond the “Tower of Babel”: Ideas for future research in media convergence. In A. Grant & J. Wilkerson, (Eds.), Understanding media convergence (pp. 221-‐233). New York: Oxford University Press.
Silcock, B. W., Schwalbe, C. B., & Keith, S. (2008). “Secret” casualties: Images of injury and death in the Iraq War across media platforms. Journal of Mass Media Ethics, 23 (1), 36-‐50. doi:10.1080/08900520701753205
Keith, S., & Schwalbe, C. B. (2010). Women and visual depictions of the U.S.-‐Iraq War in print and online media. Visual Communication Quarterly, 17 (1): 4-‐17. doi:10.1080/15551390903553614 (Lead article)
Keith, S. (2011). Shifting circles: Reconceptualizing Shoemaker and Reese’s theory of a hierarchy of influences on media content for a new-‐media era. Web Journal of Mass Communication Research, 29.
Keith, S. (2012). Forgetting the last big war: Collective memory and liberation images in an off-‐year anniversary. American Behavioral Scientist, 56 (2): 204-‐222. doi:10.1177/0002764211419356
Bennett, C., & Yanovitzky, I. (2000, September). Patterns of Congressional news media use: The questions of selection bias and third person effect. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, DC.
Yanovitzky, I., & Blitz, C. (2000, November). Utilization of breast cancer screening by women 40 years and older: An update. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, Boston, MA.
Yanovitzky, I. (2002, March). Direct and indirect effects of public health communication campaigns on health behavior change. Invited presentation, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC.
Yanovitzky, I. (2001, May). Beyond persuasion: The media-policy connection and health behavior change. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Communication Association, Washington, D.C.
Yanovitzky, I. (2001, May). Effects of news coverage on policy attention and actions: A closer look into the media-policy connection. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Communication Association, Washington, D.C.