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Keith, S. (2006). Searching for news headlines: Connections between unresolved hyperlinking issues and a new battle over copyright online. Presented to Die wachsende Macht von Suchmaschinen im Internet: Auswirkungen auf User, Medienpolitik und Medienbusiness/The Rising Power of Search-‐Engines on the Internet: Impacts on Users, Media Policy, and Media Business, June 26, Berlin, Germany.
Keith, S. (2010). Shifting circles: Re-‐conceptualizing Shoemaker and Reese’s theory of a hierarchy of influences on media content for a new-‐media era. Second-‐place paper, “New Media Theory: How Far Have we Traveled?” a conference co-‐sponsored by the Texas Tech Convergent Media Resource Center and the Communication Technology Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, April 16, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas
Keith, S. (2014). Spirit and practice: Literary journalism and the U.S. journalism review movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Work-‐in-‐progress submission presented at International Association for Literary Journalism Studies Ninth International Conference for Literary Journalism Studies, “Literary Journalism: Local, Regional, National, Global,” May 15-‐17, The American University of Paris.
Keith S. M., & Thornton, L.-‐J. (2009, February). Goodbye convergence, hello ‘Webvergence’: The decline of broadcast-‐print partnerships in an increasingly online media world. The Convergence Newsletter 6 (5), (The Convergence Newsletter is published by the College of Communication and Information Studies at the University of South Carolina.)
Thornton, L.-‐J., & Keith, S. M. (2009). From convergence to Webvergence: Tracking the evolution of broadcast-‐print partnerships through the lens of change theory. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 86 (2), 257-‐276. doi:10.1177/107769900908600201 (Lead article)
Elek, E., Greene, K., Magsamen-Conrad, K., Banerjee, S. C., Hecht, M., & Yanovitzky, I. (2011, November). Perceptions and effects of a brief media literacy intervention targeting adolescent alcohol use: Differences by gender and sensation seeking tendency. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association, Washington, DC.
Greene, K., Yanovitzky, I., Magsamen-Conrad, K., Elek, E., Banerjee, S. C., Hecht, M. L., & Carpenter, A. (2012, November). A theory-grounded measure of target audiences’ motivations to process media literacy interventions. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the National Communication Association, Orlando, FL.
Feldman, L., & Young, D. G. (2006). Late-night comedy as a gateway to traditional news: An analysis of time trends in news attention among late-night comedy viewers during the 2004 presidential primaries. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, PA, 30 Aug– 3 Sept.
Feldman, L., Hart, P. S., Leiserowitz, A., Maibach, E., & Roser-Renouf, C. (2014). Do hostile media perceptions lead to action? The role of hostile media perceptions, political efficacy, and ideology in predicting pro-climate change activism. Presented at the Annual Conference of the International Communication Association, Seattle, WA, 22-26 May
Feldman, L., Hart, P. S., Leiserowitz, A., Maibach, E., & Roser-Renouf, C. (2015, Advanced Online Publication). Do hostile media perceptions lead to action? The role of hostile media perceptions, political efficacy, and ideology in predicting pro-climate change activism. Communication Research.