Seguir
Tobias Widmann
Título
Citado por
Citado por
Ano
How emotional are populists really? Factors explaining emotional appeals in the communication of political parties
T Widmann
Political Psychology, 2020
1182020
Creating and comparing dictionary, word embedding, and transformer-based models to measure discrete emotions in German political text
T Widmann, M Wich
Political Analysis 31 (4), 626-641, 2023
482023
Does radical-right success make the political debate more negative? Evidence from emotional rhetoric in German state parliaments
V Valentim, T Widmann
Political Behavior 45 (1), 243-264, 2023
372023
Fear, hope, and COVID‐19: Emotional elite rhetoric and its impact on the public during the first wave of the COVID‐19 pandemic
T Widmann
Political Psychology 43 (5), 827-850, 2022
30*2022
Affective politics: identifying determinants of emotional appeals in political discourse
T Widmann
European University Institute, 2021
12021
Do Politicians Appeal to Discrete Emotions? The Effect of Wind Turbine Construction on Elite Discourse
T Widmann
2024
The evolution of global cleavages: a historical analysis of territorial and functional world alignments based on automated text analysis, 1843− 2020
D Caramani, S Gurova, T Widmann
European University Institute, 2024
2024
The Politics of Right and Wrong: Moral Appeals in Political Communication over Six Decades in Ten Western Democracies
KB Simonsen, T Widmann
OSF Preprints, 2023
2023
When Do Political Parties Moralize? A Cross-National Study of the Strategic Use of Moral Language in Political Communication on Immigration
KB Simonsen, T Widmann
OSF Preprints, 2023
2023
Pandemic frames: how is the European Union narrated by Italian (populist) parties during COVID-19’s first wave in Italy
E Volpi, L Cicchi, T Widmann
POPULISM IN CONTEMPORARY ITALIAN POLITICS, 181, 2022
2022
How radical right success changes the political discourse within a country
V Valentim, T Widmann
LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog, 2021
2021
O sistema não pode executar a operação agora. Tente novamente mais tarde.
Artigos 1–11