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Lane, J. (revise and resubmit). Code switching on the digital street. City & Community.
Awarded 2013 Best Student Paper by Communication and Information Technologies Section of the American Sociological Association
Lane, J. 2010. Mortgaging Michael Jordan’s reputation. In D.C. Ogden & J.N. Rosen (Eds.), Fame to infamy: Race, sport, and the fall from grace (pp. 122-145).Jackson, Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi.
Patton, D.U., Lane, J., Leonard, P., MacBeth, J., & Smith-Lee, J. Gang violence on the digital street: A case study of a Southside Chicago gang member’s communication on Twitter. New Media & Society.
Lane, J. (2015). The digital Street: An ethnography of networked street life in Harlem. American Behavioral Scientist, 0002764215601711, first published on August 26, 2015 doi:10.1177/0002764215601711.
Lane, J. (2007). Under the boards: The cultural revolution in basketball. Lincoln, Nebraska, University of Nebraska Press.
Hall, M. H., & Skattebo, K. (2008, April). Communication social support in adult sibling relationships. Poster presented to the Spokane Intercollegiate Research Conference, Spokane, WA. (Communication Division).
*Presented under different name.
Faw, M. H. (2011, November). Examining differences in social support across adult sibling relationships from an evolutionary perspective. Paper presented to the National Communication Association, New Orleans, LA. (Family Communication Division).
Faw, M. H. (2012, May). Strategies for soliciting network member support in weight-loss attempts among obese and overweight young adults. Paper presented to the International Communication Association Conference, Phoenix, AZ. (Health Communication Division).
Crowley, J., & Faw, M. H. (2012, November). Support marshaling for romantic relationships: Empirical validation of a support marshaling typology. Paper presented to the National Communication Association Conference, Orlando, FL. (Interpersonal Communication Division).
Crowley, J., Faw, M. H., & Parks, M. R. (2012, November). Effects of positive and negative emotional expression on salivary cortisol and alpha-amylase. Paper presented to the National Communication Association Conference, Orlando, FL. (Interpersonal Communication Division).