Narrative persuasion, identification, attitudes, and trustworthiness in crisis communication DE Clementson Public Relations Review 46 (2), 101889, 2020 | 65 | 2020 |
Truth bias and partisan bias in political deception detection DE Clementson Journal of Language and Social Psychology 37 (4), 407-430, 2018 | 41 | 2018 |
When politicians dodge questions: An analysis of presidential press conferences and debates D Clementson, WP Eveland Mass Communication and Society 19 (4), 411-429, 2016 | 29 | 2016 |
How language can influence political marketing strategy and a candidate's image: Effect of presidential candidates' language intensity and experience on college students … DE Clementson, P Pascual-Ferra, MJ Beatty Journal of Political Marketing 15 (4), 388-415, 2016 | 28 | 2016 |
Why do we think politicians are so evasive? Insight from theories of equivocation and deception, with a content analysis of US presidential debates, 1996-2012 DE Clementson Journal of Language and Social Psychology 35 (3), 247-267, 2016 | 25 | 2016 |
When does a presidential candidate seem presidential and trustworthy? Campaign messages through the lens of language expectancy theory DE Clementson, P Pascual‐Ferrá, MJ Beatty Presidential Studies Quarterly 46 (3), 592-617, 2016 | 24 | 2016 |
Narratives as viable crisis response strategies: Attribution of crisis responsibility, organizational attitudes, reputation, and storytelling DE Clementson, MJ Beatty Communication studies 72 (1), 52-67, 2021 | 21 | 2021 |
Deceptively dodging questions: A theoretical note on issues of perception and detection DE Clementson Discourse & Communication 12 (5), 478-496, 2018 | 21 | 2018 |
Effects of dodging questions: How politicians escape deception detection and how they get caught DE Clementson Journal of Language and Social Psychology 37 (1), 93-113, 2018 | 18 | 2018 |
Do public relations practitioners perceptually share ingroup affiliation with journalists? DE Clementson Public Relations Review 45 (1), 49-63, 2019 | 17 | 2019 |
How web comments affect perceptions of political interviews and journalistic control DE Clementson Political Psychology 40 (4), 815-836, 2019 | 12 | 2019 |
On the merits of transparency in crisis: Effects of answering vs. evading through the lens of deception theory DE Clementson, T Xie International Journal of Strategic Communication 15 (1), 1-17, 2021 | 8 | 2021 |
Why won’t you answer the question? Mass-mediated deception detection after journalists’ accusations of politicians’ evasion DE Clementson Journal of Communication 69 (6), 674-695, 2019 | 7 | 2019 |
(In) Sincere demeanor and (In) Sincere language in crisis communication DE Clementson, TG Page Journal of Language and Social Psychology 41 (5), 500-526, 2022 | 6 | 2022 |
Susceptibility to deception in a political news interview: Effects of identification, perceived cooperativeness, and ingroup vulnerability DE Clementson Communication Studies 69 (5), 522-544, 2018 | 6 | 2018 |
What does it mean to have a presidential image? A multiple-group confirmatory factor analysis measuring Trump and Biden in 2020 DE Clementson, MJ Beatty, T Xie Journal of Political Marketing 23 (2), 149-165, 2024 | 5 | 2024 |
How Intense Language Hurts a Politician's Trustworthiness: Voter Norms of a Political Debate via Language Expectancy Theory DE Clementson, W Zhao, S Park Journal of Language and Social Psychology 42 (4), 407-430, 2023 | 5 | 2023 |
Media relations for government/public affairs crises: ethical and unethical components of scandal and spin DE Clementson, J Watson, M Greenwell Advancing Crisis Communication Effectiveness, 63-76, 2020 | 4 | 2020 |
Are presidential candidates impervious to deception detection? A test of voters' truth‐default DE Clementson, T Xie Presidential Studies Quarterly 52 (4), 905-924, 2022 | 3 | 2022 |
Effects of a “spin doctor” in crisis communication: a serial mediation model of identification and attitudes impacting behavioral intentions DE Clementson Communication Research Reports 38 (4), 282-292, 2021 | 3 | 2021 |