Research

Peer-Reviewed Publications

For access to articles please visit my ResearchGate page or e-mail me!

†denotes graduate student co-author

Coles, S. M., & Lane, D. (2023). Race and Ethnicity as Foundational Forces in Political Communication: Special Issue Introduction. Political Communication, 40(4), 367–376.

Barnidge, M., Diehl, T., & Lane, D. S. (2023). News “Attraction” and Digital Inequalities: Incidental News Exposure and the Equalization or Stratification of Political Information. Digital Journalism, 0(0), 1–20.

Lane, D. S., Weeks, B. E., & Kwak, N. (2023). A Repertoire Approach to Studying Inequalities in Political Social Media Use. Mass Communication and Society, 26(5), 852–877.

Lane, D. S., Moxley, C.†, McLeod, C.† (2023). The Group Roots of Social Media Politics:
Social Sorting Predicts Perceptions of and Engagement in Politics on Social Media. Communication Research.

Neubaum, G., & Lane, D. S. (2023). Nevertheless, It Persists. Journal of Media Psychology. Online First

Lane, D. S., Hansia, A.†, & Saleem, M. (2023). Effects of pro-white identity cues in American political candidate communication. Human Communication Research, Online First.

Lane, D. S., Weeks, B. E., & Kwak, N. (2022). A Repertoire Approach to Studying Inequalities in Political Social Media Use. Mass Communication and Society, 0(0), 1–26.

Lane, D. S., Do, K.†, & Molina-Rogers, N.† (2021). Testing Inequality and Identity Accounts of Racial Gaps in Political Expression on Social Media. Political Communication, 0(0), 1–19.

Weeks, B. E., Lane, D. S., & Hahn, L. B. (2021). Online Incidental Exposure to News Can Minimize Interest-Based Political Knowledge Gaps: Evidence from Two U.S. Elections. The International Journal of Press/Politics. 27(1), 243–262.

Lane, D. S., Do, K.†, & Molina-Rogers, N.† (2021). What is political expression on social media anyway?: A systematic review. Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 0(0), 1–15.

Kim, D. H., Weeks, B. E., Lane, D. S., Hahn, L. B., & Kwak, N. (2021). Sharing and Commenting Facilitate Political Learning on Facebook: Evidence From a Two-Wave Panel Study. Social Media+ Society, 7(3).

Lane, D. S., Thorson, K., & Xu, Y. (2021). Uninterested and unequal?: Examining SES-based gaps in youth political behavior on social media. Information, Communication & Society, 0(0), 1–19.

Lee, S. “Sage,” Liang, F., Hahn, L., Lane, D. S., Weeks, B. E., & Kwak, N. (2021). The Impact of Social Endorsement Cues and Manipulability Concerns on Perceptions of News Credibility. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.

Kwak, N., Lane, D. S., Zhu Q., Lee, S. S., Weeks, B. E. (2021). Political Rumor Communication
on Instant Messaging Platforms: Relationships With Political Participation and Knowledge. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, 24(6), 384-389.

Kwak, N., Lane, D. S., Weeks, B. E., Kim, D. H., & Lee, S. S. (2020). Now We’re Talking?:
Understanding the Interplay Between Online Selective and Incidental Exposure and Their Influence on Online Cross-Cutting Political Discussion. Social Science Computer Review. Advanced Online Publication

Lee, S. S., Lane, D. S., & Kwak, N. (2020) When Social Media Gets Political: How Perceptions
of Open-Mindedness Influence Political Expression on Facebook. Social Media + Society. Advanced Online Publication.

Weeks, B. E., & Lane, D. S. (2020). The ecology of incidental exposure to news in digital media
environments. Journalism. Advanced Online Publication.

Lane, D. S. (2020) In Search of the Expressive Citizen: Citizenship Norms and Youth
Political Expression on Social Media. Public Opinion Quarterly. Advanced Online
Publication

Lane D. S. (2019). Social media design for youth political expression: testing the roles of
identifiability and geo-boundedness. New Media & Society. Advanced Online Publication.

Lane, D. S., Lee, S. S., Liang, F., Kim, D. H., Shen, L., Weeks, B. E., & Kwak, N. (2019).
Social Media Expression and the Political Self. Journal of Communication, 69, 49-72.

Lane D. S., Saleem M., & Noor M. (2019). Damned If You Do, Damned If You
Don’t: Effects of Empathy and Responsibility in Muslim Leaders’ Mediated Responses to Extremist Attacks. Media Psychology, 1-31.

Lane, D. S., Das, V., & Hiaeshutter-Rice, D. (2018). Civic Laboratories: Youth Political
Expression in Anonymous, Ephemeral, Geo-Bounded Social Media. Information, Communication & Society, 1-16.

Lane D. S., Coles S. M., & Saleem M. (2018). Solidarity Effects in Social Movement
Messaging: How Cueing Dominant Group Identity Can Increase Movement Support. Human Communication Research, 45, 1-26

Kwak, N., Lane, D. S., Lee, S. S., Liang, F., & Weeks. B. E. (2018). From Persuasion to
Deliberation: Do Experiences of Online Political Persuasion Facilitate Dialogic Openness? Communication Research. Advanced Online Publication.

Chinn, S., Lane, D. S., & Hart, P. S. (2018). In Consensus We Trust? Persuasive Effects of
Scientific Consensus Communication. Public Understanding of Science, 27(7), 807-823.

Lane, D. S., & Dal Cin, S. (2018). Sharing Beyond Slacktivism: The Effect of Socially
Observable Prosocial Media Sharing on Subsequent Offline Helping Behavior. Information, Communication & Society, 21, 1523-1540.

Hart, P.S., Lane, D. S., & Chinn, S. (2018) The Elusive Power of the Individual Victim: Failure
to Find a Difference in the Effectiveness of Charitable Appeals Focused on One Compared to Many Victims. PloS one, 13:e0199535.

Kwak, N., Lane, D. S., Weeks, B. E., Kim, D. H., Lee, S. S., & Bachleda, S. (2018). Perceptions
of Social Media for Politics: Testing the Slacktivism Hypothesis. Human Communication Research, 44, 197–221.

Weeks, B. E., Lane, D. S., Kim, D. H., Lee, S. S., & Kwak, N. (2017). Incidental Exposure,
Selective Exposure, and Political Information Sharing: Integrating Online Exposure Patterns and Expression on Social Media. Journal of Computer‐Mediated Communication, 22, 363–379.

Lane, D. S., Kim, D. H., Lee, S. S., Weeks, B. E., & Kwak, N. (2017). From Online
Disagreement to Offline Action: How Diverse Motivations for Using Social Media Can Increase Political Information Sharing and Catalyze Offline Political Participation. Social Media + Society, 3.

Bruneau, E., Lane, D., & Saleem, M. (2017). Giving the Underdog a Leg Up: A
Counternarrative of Nonviolent Resistance Improves Sustained Third-Party Support of a Disempowered Group. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 8, 746–757.