School of Journalism and Communication, CUHK - Communication Technology/New Media
 

Communication Technology/New Media

  1. Yang, Xiaodong, Chen, Liang, & Feng, Qiang (2015). Risk perception of food safety issue on social media. Chinese Journal of Communication, 9(2), 124-138.

  2. Tsui, Lokman. (2015). The coming colonization of Hong Kong cyberspace: government responses to the use of new technologies by the umbrella movement. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(4), 1-9.

  3. Lee, Paul. S. N., So, Clement. Y. K., & Leung, Louis (2015). Social media and Umbrella Movement: insurgent public sphere in formation. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(4), 356-375.

  4. Zeng, Fanxu & Huang, Yu (2015). The media and urban contention in China: a co-empowerment model. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(3), 233-252.

  5. Gevorgyan, Gennadi & Manucharova, Naira (2015). The effects of cultural appeal, product involvement, and ethnic identity on attitudes and recall in online advertising. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(2), 196-220.

  6. Zhang, Jian-Chuan & Chen, Yu-Che (2015). Enhancing open government information performance: a study of institutional capacity and organizational arrangement in China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(2), 160-176.

  7. Huang, J. Sonia & Dai, Jia (2015). Comparing the competitive advantages of leading news sites in mainland China and Taiwan. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(2), 142-159.

  8. Huang, Ronggui & Sun, Xiaoyi (2015). Issues and place: the hyperlink network of homeowner forums and implications for collective action. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(2), 119-141.

  9. Schlæger, Jesper & Wang, Qian (2015). The limits of planning in China: equalizing basic education through the Internet. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(1), 78-94.

  10. Schulte, Barbara (2015). (Dis) Empowering technologies: ICT for education (ICT4E) in China, past and present. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(1), 59-77.

  11. Wallis, Cara (2015). Micro-entrepreneurship, new media technologies, and the reproduction and reconfiguration of gender in rural China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(1), 42-58.

  12. Wang, Jing (2015). NGO2. 0 and social media praxis: activist as researcher. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(1), 18-41.

  13. Oreglia, Elisa, Qiu, Jack, Bu, Wei, Schulte, Barbara, Wang, Jing, Wallis, Cara, & Zhou, Baohua (2015). Studying the Sent-Down Internet: roundtable on research methods. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(1), 7-17.

  14. Oreglia, Elisa (2015). The “Sent-Down” Internet: using information and communication technologies in rural China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 8(1), 1-6.

  15. Yang, Fang, & Mueller, Milton L. (2014). Internet governance in China: a content analysis. Chinese Journal of Communication, 7(4), 446-465.

  16. Mou, Yi (2014). Presenting professorship on social media: from content and strategy to evaluation. Chinese Journal of Communication, 7(4), 389-408.

  17. Miao, Miao & Jayakar, Krishna (2014). Bounded rationality and consumer choice: an evaluation of consumer choice of mobile bundles. Chinese Journal of Communication, 7(2), 191-211.

  18. Shen, Fei & Liang, Hai (2014). Do Chinese Internet users care about news? Tracking news consumers on the Internet in a metropolis 2009–2011. Chinese Journal of Communication, 7(1), 60-79.

  19. Yang, Hongwei & Liu, Hui (2014). Prior negative experience of online disclosure, privacy concerns, and regulatory support in Chinese social media. Chinese Journal of Communication, 7(1), 40-59.

  20. Wen, Wei-Chun (2014). Facebook political communication in Taiwan: 1.0/2.0 messages and election/post-election messages. Chinese Journal of Communication, 7(1), 19-39.

  21. Poell, Thomas, de Kloet, Jeroen, & Zeng, Guohua (2014). Will the real Weibo please stand up? Chinese online contention and actor-network theory. Chinese Journal of Communication, 7(1), 1-18.

  22. Hong, Yah-Huei & Chang, Roland (2013). To click or not to click? A study of the innovation resistance of political emails. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(3), 305-324.

  23. Ji, Pan & Skoric, Marko M. (2013). Gender and social resources: digital divides of social network sites and mobile phone use in Singapore. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(2), 221-239.

  24. Chou, Chien, Wu, Huan-Chueh & Chen, Chao-Hsiu (2013). Tool, toy, telephone, territory, trade, or treasure of information: a cross-sectional study of Taiwanese students' attitudes toward the Internet. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(2), 202-220.

  25. Chao-Chen, Lin (2013). Convergence of new and old media: new media representation in traditional news. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(2), 183-201.

  26. Liu, Yu-Li & Wu, Pin-Yen (2013). Rethinking Taiwan’s universal service policy in the broadband environment. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(2), 157-182.

  27. Chou, Yuntsai (2013). Access deregulation in deploying the next-generation infrastructure: an econometric analysis of mandatory unbundling. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(2), 133-156.

  28. Xu, Yan (2013). Special theme section: Taiwan’s telecommunications in the era of the Internet. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(2), 131-132.

  29. Huang, J. Sonia, Yang, Mengchieh Jacie & Chyi, Hsiang Iris (2013). Friend or foe? Examining the relationship between news portals and newspaper sites in Taiwan. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(1), 103-119.

  30. Jiang, Jing & Wei, Ran (2013). Power distance and online organization–public relationship building: a comparative analysis of US and Chinese corporate websites. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(1), 81-102.

  31. Chib, Arul, Phuong, Tran Khanh, Si, Chia Wei & Hway, Ng Su (2013). Enabling informal digital guanxi for rural doctors in Shaanxi, China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(1), 62-80.

  32. Zhang, Weiyu & Mao, Chengting (2013). Fan activism sustained and challenged: participatory culture in Chinese online translation communities. Chinese Journal of Communication, 6(1), 45-61.

  33. Huang, Xinkai (2012). Lifestyles in virtual communities: collaborative consumption and interaction. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(1), 109-127.

  34. Lin, Trisha T. C. (2012). Prospect of mobile TV broadcasting in China: socio-technical analysis of CMMB's development. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(1), 88-108.

  35. Zhang, Yuntao, & Tomlinson, John (2012). Three constituencies of online dissent in China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(1), 55-60.

  36. Yang, Guobin (2012). A Chinese Internet? History, practice, and globalization. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(1), 49-54.

  37. Cunningham, Maura Elizabeth & Wasserstrom, Jeffrey N. (2012). Authoritarianism: there's an app for that. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(1), 43-48.

  38. Yue, Audrey (2012). Notes on the Sinophone mediascape in Australia. Chinese Journal of Communication, 5(1), 24-31.

  39. Wang, Wei-Ching (2011). Transformations of employment and occupation patterns in Taiwan's transition to an information society. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(4), 450-474.

  40. Tang, Tang (2011). Marketing higher education across borders: a cross-cultural analysis of university websites in the US and China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(4), 417-429.

  41. Chin, Yann-Ling (2011). “Platonic relationships” in China's online social milieu: a lubricant for banal everyday life? Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(4), 400-416.

  42. Leung, Louis (2011). Loneliness, social support, and preference for online social interaction: the mediating effects of identity experimentation online among children and adolescents. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(4), 381-399.

  43. Gao, Fangfang, & Martin-Kratzer, Renee (2011). Gender differences in Chinese journalists' blogs. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(2), 167-181.

  44. Liu, Jingfang (2011). Picturing a green virtual public space for social change: a study of Internet activism and Web-based environmental collective actions in China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(2), 137-166.

  45. Lugg, Alexander (2011). Chinese online fiction: taste publics, entertainment, and Candle in the Tomb. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(2), 121-136.

  46. Schiller, Dan (2011). Geopolitical-economic conflict and network infrastructures. Chinese Journal of Communication, 4(1), 90-107.

  47. Yuan, Wenli (2010). E-democracy@China: does it work? Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(4), 488-503.

  48. Cheong, Pauline Hope, & Gong, Jie (2010). Cyber vigilantism, transmedia collective intelligence, and civic participation. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(4), 471-487.

  49. Szablewicz, Marcella (2010). The ill effects of “opium for the spirit”: a critical cultural analysis of China's Internet addiction moral panic. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(4), 453-470.

  50. Yang, Hongwei, Liu, Hui, & Zhou, Liuning (2010). Predicting Chinese young consumers’ acceptance of mobile advertising: a structural equation modeling approach. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(4), 435-452.

  51. Xie, Shuang, & Huang, Jing (2010). Opportunities, restrictions, and challenges for Web TV in China. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(4), 421-434.

  52. Chu, Shu-Chuan, & Choi, Sejung Marina (2010). Social capital and self-presentation on social networking sites: a comparative study of Chinese and American young generations. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(4), 402-420.

  53. Tang, Qi, & Chao, Chin-Chung (2010). Foreigners' archive: contemporary China in the blogs of American expatriates. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(4), 384-401.

  54. Wu, Yuehua, & Bauer, Johannes M. (2010). E-government in China: deployment and driving forces of provincial government portals. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(3), 290-310.

  55. Zhao, Yuezhi (2010). China's pursuits of indigenous innovations in information technology developments: hopes, follies and uncertainties. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(3), 266-289.

  56. Sheer, Vivian C. (2010). Hong Kong adolescents' use of MSN vs. ICQ for developing friendships online: considering media richness and presentational control. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(2), 223-240.

  57. Liu, Xun (2010). Online posting anxiety: impacts on blogging. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(2), 202-222.

  58. Lo, Ven-hwei, So, Clement Y. K., & Zhang, Guoliang (2010). The influence of individualism and collectivism on Internet pornography exposure, sexual attitudes, and sexual behavior among college students. Chinese Journal of Communication, 3(1), 10-27.

  59. Chen, Xianhong, & Ding, Guilan (2009). New media as relations. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(3), 367-379.

  60. Zhang, Shixin Ivy (2009). Newsroom convergence models of China's Beijing Youth Daily and Denmark's Nordjyske. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(3), 330-347.

  61. Kuo, Cheng (2009). A study of the consumption of Chinese online fortune telling services. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(3), 288-306.

  62. Wang, Xiaopeng, & Cooper-Chen, Anne (2009). Asian images portrayed in the websites of US higher education institutions. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(2), 193-211.

  63. Li, Henry Siling (2009). The turn to the self: From “Big Character Posters” to YouTube videos. Chinese Journal of Communication, 2(1), 50-60.

  64. MacKinnon, Rebecca (2008). Blogs and China correspondence: lessons about global information flows. Chinese Journal of Communication, 1(2), 242-257.