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David Clementson
David Clementson
University of Georgia, Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication
Verified email at uga.edu
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Narrative persuasion, identification, attitudes, and trustworthiness in crisis communication
DE Clementson
Public Relations Review 46 (2), 101889, 2020
612020
Truth bias and partisan bias in political deception detection
DE Clementson
Journal of Language and Social Psychology 37 (4), 407-430, 2018
402018
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
282016
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
272016
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
252016
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
242016
Deceptively dodging questions: A theoretical note on issues of perception and detection
DE Clementson
Discourse & Communication 12 (5), 478-496, 2018
212018
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
192021
Do public relations practitioners perceptually share ingroup affiliation with journalists?
DE Clementson
Public Relations Review 45 (1), 49-63, 2019
172019
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
172018
How web comments affect perceptions of political interviews and journalistic control
DE Clementson
Political Psychology 40 (4), 815-836, 2019
122019
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
82021
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
62019
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
62018
(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
52022
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
42023
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
42020
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, 1-17, 2021
32021
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
32021
Dodging DeflateGate: A case study of equivocation and strategic ambiguity in a crisis
DE Clementson
International Journal of Sport Communication 9 (2), 229-243, 2016
32016
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