Communication Networks
Preparation of this article was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation (IIS-0838548) and by support provided to the Annenberg Networks Network by the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.
Introduction
Network scholarship has grown substantially in the first decade of the 21st century across a wide spectrum of the academy. Network theory, concepts, tools, and techniques have become increasingly central to work in such diverse fields as biology, communication, physics, political science, and economics, to name but a few. This growth has been fostered by a recognition that many phenomena in the social and physical world that have traditionally been studied in isolation are in reality interconnected: in short, linking matters. This recognition has fostered renewed efforts to develop network theory, expand the scope of network research, and connect phenomena across disciplines. These efforts have been aided by at least three important trends. The first is the increased connectivity in social relationships provided by the Internet, mobile phones, and other new communication technologies. The second is a greater ability to gather and analyze large communication and other social data sets. And, the third is the improved computational power and higher level of analytical sophistication provided by new network computer programs. The working bibliography that follows provides an overview of this rapidly growing and changing field, with a focus on theory, method, and selected research topics.
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Article
- Advertising
- Agenda Setting
- Annenberg, Walter H.
- Argumentation
- Audience Fragmentation
- Brand Equity
- Censorship
- Codes and Cultural Discourse Analysis
- Cognitive Dissonance
- Communication Campaigns
- Communication History
- Communication Law
- Communication Networks
- Crisis Communication
- Critical and Cultural Studies
- Cross-tools and Cross-media Effects
- Cultivation
- Cyberpolitics
- Deliberation
- Diffusion of Innovations
- E-democracy/E-participation
- Elaboration Likelihood Model
- Embedded Coverage
- Entertainment
- Ethnography of Communication
- Family Communication
- Feminist Theory
- Freedom of the Press
- Gender and the Media
- Health Communication
- Hegemony
- Hostile Media Effect
- Indexing
- Information Processing
- Information and Communication Technology for Development
- Interactivity
- Intercultural Communication
- International Communications
- Interpersonal Communication
- Journalism
- Journalism and Trauma
- Knowledge Gap
- Mass Communication
- Media Convergence
- Media Credibility
- Media Dependency
- Media Ecology
- Media Economics
- Media Economics, Theories of
- Media Effects
- Media Ethics
- Media Literacy
- Media Policy and Governance
- Media Regulation
- Media Sociology
- Media, Gays and Lesbians in the
- Mobile Communication Studies
- News Framing
- Online Campaigning
- Perceived Realism
- Persuasion and Social Influence
- Political Advertising
- Political Economy
- Political Knowledge
- Priming
- Propaganda
- Public Opinion
- Public Relations
- Public Sphere
- Radio Studies
- Reality Television
- Reasoned Action Frameworks
- Religion and the Media
- Science Communication
- Scripps, E. W.
- Selective Exposure
- Semiotics
- Sex in the Media
- Small-Group Communication
- Social Change
- Social Cognition
- Social Interaction
- Social Media
- Social Movements
- Social Network Analysis
- Social Protest
- Sports Communication
- Stereotypes
- Third-Person Effect
- Time Warner
- Violence in the Media
- Web 2.0
- Youth and Media