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Sangwon Lee
Sangwon Lee
Assistant Professor, Korea University
Verified email at korea.ac.kr
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Social distraction? Social media use and political knowledge in two US Presidential elections
S Lee, M Xenos
Computers in human behavior 90, 18-25, 2019
1522019
The role of social media in protest participation: The case of candlelight vigils in South Korea
S Lee
International Journal of Communication 12, 18, 2018
682018
Incidental news exposure via social media and political participation: Evidence of reciprocal effects
S Lee, M Xenos
New Media & Society 24 (1), 178-201, 2022
542022
Do corrective effects last? Results from a longitudinal experiment on beliefs toward immigration in the US
D Carnahan, DE Bergan, S Lee
Political Behavior 43 (3), 1227-1246, 2021
472021
Probing the mechanisms through which social media erodes political knowledge: The role of the news-finds-me perception
S Lee
Social Media News and Its Impact, 51-73, 2021
412021
What motivates people to correct misinformation? Examining the effects of third-person perceptions and perceived norms
AZX Koo, MH Su, SW Lee, SY Ahn, H Rojas
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 65 (1), 111-134, 2021
412021
Testing the cognitive involvement hypothesis on social media:'News finds me'perceptions, partisanship, and fake news credibility
T Diehl, S Lee
Computers in Human Behavior 128, 107121, 2022
402022
Predicting AI News Credibility: Communicative or Social Capital or Both?
S Lee, S Nah, DS Chung, J Kim
Communication Studies 71 (3), 428-447, 2020
382020
Platform-dependent effects of incidental exposure to political news on political knowledge and political participation
S Lee, A Nanz, R Heiss
Computers in Human Behavior 127, 107048, 2022
372022
Rethinking the virtuous circle hypothesis on social media: Subjective versus objective knowledge and political participation
S Lee, T Diehl, S Valenzuela
Human Communication Research 48 (1), 57-87, 2022
372022
How partisan newspapers represented a pandemic: the case of the Middle East respiratory syndrome in South Korea
S Lee, JE Paik
Asian Journal of Communication 27 (1), 82-96, 2017
372017
Social media, messaging apps, and affective polarization in the United States and Japan
S Lee, H Rojas, M Yamamoto
Mass Communication and Society 25 (5), 673-697, 2022
362022
Connecting Social Media Use with Gaps in Knowledge and Participation in Protest Context: The Case of Candle Light Vigil in South Korea
S Lee
Asian Journal of Communication 29, 111-127, 2019
272019
Exploring vaccine hesitancy determinants during the COVID-19 pandemic: an in-depth interview study
GI Morales, S Lee, A Bradford, A De Camp, EC Tandoc Jr
SSM-Qualitative Research in Health 2, 100045, 2022
262022
Social media may hinder learning about science; social media's role in learning about COVID-19
S Lee, EC Tandoc Jr, EWJ Lee
Computers in Human Behavior 138, 107487, 2023
252023
Conspiracy beliefs, misinformation, social media platforms, and protest participation
S Boulianne, S Lee
Media and Communication 10 (4), 30-41, 2022
202022
Why people who know less think they know about COVID-19: Evidence from US and Singapore
S Lee, M Yamamoto, EC Tandoc Jr
Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 99 (1), 44-68, 2022
192022
Community storytelling network, expressive digital media use, and civic engagement
S Nah, S Lee, W Liu
Communication Research 49 (3), 327-352, 2022
152022
The banality of extremism: The role of group dynamics and communication of norms in polarization on January 6.
L Van Swol, S Lee, R Hutchins
Group Dynamics: Theory, Research, and Practice 26 (3), 239, 2022
122022
Antecedents and consequences of fake news exposure: A two-panel study on how news use and different indicators of fake news exposure affect media trust
S Lee, H Gil de Zúñiga, K Munger
Human Communication Research 49 (4), 408-420, 2023
92023
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