International Conference on Communications and Media Studies

NEXT EVENT SESSION
24-25 APR 2024 instant ( E-Certificate)
For Enquiries:
comms@sciencefather.com

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About the conference

Introduction of the conferences

Communications and Media Studies conferences organized by ScienceFather group. ScienceFather takes the privilege to invite speakers, participants, students, delegates, and exhibitors from across the communications to itsĀ  Conference on Communications and Media Studies conferences to be held in the Various Beautiful cites of the world. Communications and Media Studies conferences are a discussion of common Inventions-related issues and additionally trade information, share proof, thoughts, and insight into advanced developments in the science inventions service system. New technology may create many materials and devices with a vast range of applications, such as in Science, medicine, electronics, biomaterials, energy production, and consumer products. The focal point of Communications and Media Studies is to bring forward discoveries, examine the system and strategic issues, assemble and keep forth basic strategies between analysts, professionals, arrangement producers, and agents of science Associations. Essential New science inventions conferences emphasize its theme "Innovation through Communications and Media Studies" and intends to provide an impetus to practice, administration, and training in connection to Communications and Media Studies inconsistencies and conjugation of other different points. Communications and Media Studies conferences are an opportunity to interact with specialists and learn the latest new science inventions information. The meeting will be organized to bring together practitioners, administrators, policymakers, politicians, and researchers within the field of Communications and Media Studies.

Theme

Theme

Exploring the Advancements in Communications and Media Studies Ā 

Organizer

Organizer

Science Father is a international conferencesĀ  organizer and publish the videos, books and news in various themes of scientific research. Articles Presented in our conference are Peer Reviewed. We build the perfect environment for learning, sharing, networking and Awarding via Academic conferences, workshops, symposiums, seminars, awards and other events. We establish our Relationship with the scholars and the Universities through various activities such as seminars, workshops, conferences and Symposium. We are a decisive, conclusive & fast-moving company open to new ideas and ingenious publishing. We also preserve the long-term relationships with our authors and supporting them throughout their careers. We acquire, develop and distribute knowledge by disseminating scholarly and professional materials around the world. AllĀ  conference and award presentations are maintain the highest standards of quality, with Editorial Boards composed of scholars & Experts from around the world.

Dates and Location

Dates and Location

International Conference on Communications and Media Studies, organized by ScienceFather group

13th Edition, 18-19 January 2024 | Ā Amsterdam, Netherlands
14th Edition ,Ā  Ā 22-23 February 2024 | Ā London, United Kingdom
15th Edition ,Ā  Ā 28-29 March 2024 | Ā San Francisco, United States
16th Edition ,Ā  24-25 April 2024 | Ā Berlin, Germany,
17th Edition ,Ā  Ā 29-30 May 2024 | Paris, France
18th Edition ,Ā  20-21 June 2024 | Ā Dubai, United Arab Emirates
19th Edition ,Ā  25-26 July 2024 | New Delhi, India

Call for Paper

Call for Abstract/paper

Original Articles/papers are invited from Industry Persons, Scientist, Academician, Research Scholars, P.G. & U.G. Students for presentation in ourĀ International Conference. All articles/papers must be in MS-Word (.doc or .docx) format, including the title, author's name, an affiliation of all authors, e-mail, abstract, keywords, Conclusion, Acknowledgment, and References.

SubmitĀ Abstract

The Candidates with eligibility can click the "Submit Paper/Abstract Now" button and fill up the online submission form and Submit.

Abstract/Full Paper submission

Final/Full Paper submission is optional: If you don't want your abstract/full paper to be published in the Conference Abstracts & Proceedings CD (with ISBN number) and only want to present it at the conference, it is acceptable.

Page limit:Ā There is a limit of 6-8 pages for a final/full paper. An additional page is chargeable.

Paper language:Ā Final/Full papers should be in English.

Templates:Ā "Final paper template," "Final abstract template"

All the final papers should be uploaded to the website online system according to "The final paper template" as word doc. Or Docx, since this will be the camera-ready published version. Please note that final papers that are not uploaded to online System as a word doc./docx after the opening of final paper submissions according to the template above will not be published in the CONFERENCE Abstracts & Proceedings CD (with ISBN)

Journal Publication

Journal Publication

Communications and Media Studies Conferences All accepted papers will be included in the conference proceedings, which will be recommended in one of the author's prescribed ScienceFather International journals.

Registration

Registration Procedure

  • Click the ā€œRegister Nowā€ button on the conference page and enter your Submission ID in the Search Box
  • Your Submissions will be listed on that page. You can find the Register Now link beside your submission. Click the link, and now you will be redirected to the Conference registration form where you can make your registration using credit/debit cards.
  • The Fee charged for E-Poster is to display the E-Posters only on the Website. The Abstract will be published in the conference proceeding book.

Registration Types

Speaker Registration

  • Access to all event Session
  • Certificate of Presentation
  • Handbook
  • Conference Kit
  • Tea, Coffee & Snack,
  • Lunch during the Conference
  • Publication of Abstract /Full Paper at the Conference Proceedings Book
  • Opportunity to give a Keynote/ Poster Presentations/ Plenary/ Workshop
  • Opportunity to publish your Abstract in any of our esteemed Journals discounted rate
  • Opportunity to publish your full article in our open access book at a discounted rate
  • One to One Expert Forums

Delegate (Participant) Registration

  • Access to all Event Sessions
  • Participation Certificate
  • Handbook
  • Conference Kit
  • Tea, Coffee & Snack,
  • Lunch during the Conference
  • Delegates are not allowed to present

Poster Registration

  • Includes all the above Registration Benefits
  • You will have to bring your Posters to the Conference Venue
  • Best poster award memento and certificate on stage.

Poster Guidelines

  • The poster should be 1Ɨ1 m Size.
  • The title, contents, text, and the authorā€™s information should be visible.
  • Present numerical data in the form of graphs rather than tables.
  • Figures make trends in the data much more evident.
  • Avoid submitting high word-count posters.
  • Poster contains, e.g., Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion, Conclusions, and Literature.

Research Forum (Awards)

  • Includes all the above Registration Benefits.
  • The attendee should be required age limit.
  • Award memento and certificate on stage.

E-Poster Presentation

  • The amount charged for E-Posters is to display the E-Posters only on the website
  • The presenter will get an e-poster participation certificate as a soft copy
  • The abstract will be published in the particular journal and also in the conference proceeding book
  • The presenter is not required to be present in person at the Conference

Video Presentation

  • The amount charged for Video Presentation is to display the Presentation at the Conference.
  • The presenter will get Video participation certificate as a soft copy
  • The abstract will be published in the particular journal and also in the conference proceeding book
  • The presenter is not required to be present in person at the Conference

Accompanying Person

  • Accompanying Persons attend the participants at the Conference who may be either a spouse/family partner or a son/daughter and must register under this category.
  • Please note that business partners do not qualify as Accompanying Persons and cannot register as an Accompanying Person.

Committee Members

List of Committee Members

TitleFirst NameLast NameInstitution/OrganizationCountry
DrYouChengMassachusetts General HospitalUnited States
MrRezaBarzegar NozariShomal UniversityIran
Assoc Prof DrAyselƶzdemirFaculty of Health Sciences Department of Public Health Nursing 16059 Nilufer,Bursa TURKEYTurkey
MrGizachewWoseneDebre Markos University, Bure CamousEthiopia
MrHailemichaelAbateUniversity of Gondar EthiopiaEthiopia
Assoc Prof DrWohabieBitewInjibara UniversityEthiopia
MrAyenew EngidaYismawUniversity of Gondar, EthiopiaEthiopia
MrDEREJEGESSESSEAustralian catholic universityAustralia
MrDegena BahreyTadesseAksum UniversityEthiopia
Assist Prof DrSolomonTesfayeJimma UniversityEthiopia
MrMequanntMarieUniversity of GondarEthiopia
DrMohammadaminsoltani SarvestaniVente priveeFrance
DrReemaJainManipal University JaipurIndia
Assist Prof DrShrawanMishraIIT BHU VaranasiIndia
Prof DrSonaliBhattacharyaSymbiosis International (Deemed University)-SCMHRD-India
Assist Prof DrMehdiGhayebzadehzahedan university of medical scienceIran
DrZahraSamavatiUNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MALAYSIAMalaysia
DrPoonkuzhaliKUnemployedIndia
Assist Prof DrYihunMulualemDebre Markos University, EthiopiaEthiopia
MrZawdeTadesseKebridehar UniversityEthiopia
MrOusmanAdalBahir Dar UniversityEthiopia
MrBayouAssayeDebre Markos UniversityEthiopia
MrAlexCherekaMettu universityEthiopia
MrAzmerawAmbachewUniversity of GondarEthiopia
MrMataworkMilkiasMizan-Tepi UniversityEthiopia
MrMagarsaLamiHaramaya UniversityEthiopia
DrAjay KumarChoudharyDepartment of Physics, G. B. College Ramgarh(Kaimur) Bihar 821110( Veer Kunwar Singh University, Ara) BiharIndia
DrSAROJINIGHINDUSTHAN COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGYIndia
DrSarathambalICAR- Indian Institute of Spices ResearchIndia
DrRAGHUVISHWESWARAIAHICAR-National Dairy Research InstituteIndia
TitleFirst NameLast NameInstitution/OrganizationCountry

Conference Awards

Details of Conference Awards

Science father awards Researchers and Research organizations around the world with the motive of Encouraging and Honoring them for their Significant contributions & Achievements for the Advancement in their field of expertise. Researchers and scholars of all nationalities are eligible to receive Science father Research awards. Nominees are judged on past accomplishments, research excellence, and outstanding academic achievements.

Award Categories

Best Poster Award

Posters will be evaluated based on Presentation Style, Research Quality, and Layout/Design. Unique opportunity to combine visual and oral explanations of your projects in the form of poster presentation. Posters should have the Title (with authors affiliation & contact details), Introduction, Methods, Results (with tables, graphs, pictures), Discussion, Conclusion, References, and Acknowledgements. The size of the poster should be: 1mX1.5m; Text:16-26 pt; Headings: 32-50 pt; Title: 70 pt; Color: Preferable. Bring your poster to the meeting, using tubular packaging and presenting duration: 10 min discussion & 5 min query per person.Ā Eligibility: The presenter can nominate the Award. He must be under 40 years of age as on the conference date.

Best Presentation Award

The presentation will be evaluated based on Presentation Style, Research Quality, and Layout/Design. Unique opportunity to combine visual and oral explanations of your projects in the form of poster presentations. The presentation should have the Title (with authors affiliation & contact details), Introduction, Methods, Results (with tables, graphs, pictures), Discussion, Conclusion, References, and Acknowledgements. Bring your presentation to the meeting, using a pen drive, presenting duration: 10-20 min discussion & 5 min query per person. Eligibility:Ā The presenter can nominate the Award. He must be under 55 years of age as of the conference date.

Best Paper Award

Paper will be evaluated based on Format, Research Quality, and Layout/Design. The paper should have the Title (with authors affiliation & contact details), Introduction, Methods, Results (with tables, graphs, pictures), Discussion, Conclusion, References, and Acknowledgements.Ā Eligibility: The presenter can nominate the Award. He must be under 55 years of age as of the conference date.

Instructions

Instructions for submission

If you want to submit only your Abstract

  • If you want to publish only your abstract (it is also optional) in the CONFERENCE Abstracts & Proceedings CD (with ISBN), upload your abstract again according to theĀ Final abstract templateĀ as a word doc. Or Docx.
  • If you also don't want your abstract to be published in the CONFERENCE Abstracts & Proceedings CD (with an ISBN) and only want to present it at the conference, it is also acceptable.

How to Submit your Abstract / Full Paper

Please read the instructions below then submit your Abstract/ Full Paper (or just final abstract) via the online conference system:

  • STEP 1: Please download the Abstract /Final Paper Template and submit your final paper strictly according to the template: Communications and Media Studies ConferenceĀ Final Paper TemplateĀ in word format (.doc /.docx). See aĀ Final abstract templateĀ formatted according to the template.
  • STEP 2: Please ensure that the Abstract/ full paper follows exactly the format and template described in the final paper template document below since this will be the camera-ready published version. All last articles should be written only in English and "word document" as .doc or .docx.
  • STEP 3: You can submit your final paper(s) to the online conference system only by uploading/ Re-submission your current submission.
  • STEP 4: After logging/using submission ID in the online conference system, click on the "Re-submission" link at the bottom of the page.
  • STEP 5: After the "Re submission page" opens, upload your abstract/ final paper (it should be MS word document -doc. or Docx-).

General Information

  • Dress Code: Participants have to wear a formal dress. There are no restrictions on color or design. The audience attending only the ceremony can wear clothing of their own choice.
  • Certificate Distribution: Each presenter's name will be called & asked to collect their certificate on the Stage with an official photographer to capture the moments.

Terms & Conditions

ScienceFather Terms & Conditions

Communications and Media Studies Conferences Terms & Conditions Policy was last updated on June 25, 2022.

Privacy Policy

Communications and Media Studies conferences customer personal information for our legitimate business purposes, process and respond to inquiries, and provide our services, to manage our relationship with editors, authors, institutional clients, service providers, and other business contacts, to market our services and subscription management. We do not sell, rent/ trade your personal information to third parties.

Relationship

Communications and Media Studies Conferences Operates a Customer Association Management and email list program, which we use to inform customers and other contacts about our services, including our publications and events. Such marketing messages may contain tracking technologies to track subscriber activity relating to engagement, demographics, and other data and build subscriber profiles.

Disclaimer

All editorial matter published on this website represents the authors' opinions and not necessarily those of the Publisher with the publications. Statements and opinions expressed do not represent the official policies of the relevant Associations unless so stated. Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the material that appears on this website. Please ignore, however, that some errors may occur.

Responsibility

Delegates are personally responsible for their belongings at the venue. The Organizers will not be held accountable for any stolen or missing items belonging to Delegates, Speakers, or Attendees; due to any reason whatsoever.

Insurance

Communications and Media Studies conferences Registration fees do not include insurance of any kind.

Press and Media

Press permission must be obtained from the Communications and Media Studies conferences Organizing Committee before the event. The press will not quote speakers or delegates unless they have obtained their approval in writing. This conference is not associated with any commercial meeting company.

Transportation

Communications and Media Studies Conferences Please note that any (or) all traffic and parking is the registrant's responsibility.

Requesting an Invitation Letter

Communications and Media Studies Conferences For security purposes, the invitation letter will be sent only to those who had registered for the conference. Once your registration is complete, please contact media@ScienceFather.comĀ to request a personalized letter of invitation.

Cancellation Policy

If Communications and Media Studies Conferences cancels this event, you will receive a credit for 100% of the registration fee paid. You may use this credit for another Communications and Media Studies Conferences event, which must occur within one year from the cancellation date.

Postponement Policy

Suppose Communications and Media Studies Conferences postpones an event for any reason and you are unable or indisposed to attend on rescheduled dates. In that case, you will receive a credit for 100% of the registration fee paid. You may use this credit for another Communications and Media Studies Conferences, which must occur within one year from the date of postponement.

Transfer of registration

Communications and Media Studies Conferences All fully paid registrations are transferable to other persons from the same organization if the registered person is unable to attend the event. The registered person must make transfers in writing to media@sciencefather.com.Ā Details must include the full name of an alternative person, their title, contact phone number, and email address. All other registration details will be assigned to the new person unless otherwise specified. Registration can be transferred to one conference to another conference ofĀ ScienceFatherĀ if the person cannot attend one of the meetings. However, Registration cannot be transferred if it will be intimated within 14 days of the particular conference. The transferred registrations will not be eligible for Refund.

Visa Information

Communications and Media Studies Conferences Keeping given increased security measures, we would like to request all the participants to apply for Visa as soon as possible.Ā Science FatherĀ will not directly contact embassies and consulates on behalf of visa applicants. All delegates or invitees should apply for Business Visa only. Important note for failed visa applications: Visa issues cannot come under the consideration of the cancellation policy ofĀ Science Father, including the inability to obtain a visa.

Refund Policy

Communications and Media Studies Conferences Regarding refunds, all bank charges will be for the registrant's account. All cancellations or modifications of registration must make in writing to comms@sciencefather.com

If the registrant is unable to attend and is not in a position to transfer his/her participation to another person or event, then the following refund arrangements apply:

Keeping given advance payments towards Venue, Printing, Shipping, Hotels and other overheads, we had to keep Refund Policy is as following conditions,

  • Before 60 days of the Conference: Eligible for Full Refund less $100 Service Fee
  • Within 60-30 days of Conference: Eligible for 50% of payment Refund
  • Within 30 days of Conference: Not eligible for Refund
  • E-Poster Payments will not be refunded.

Accommodation Cancellation Policy

Communications and Media Studies Conferences Accommodation Providers such as hotels have their cancellation policies, and they generally apply when cancellations are made less than 30 days before arrival. Please contact us as soon as possible if you wish to cancel or amend your accommodation.Ā Science FatherĀ will advise your accommodation provider's cancellation policy before withdrawing or changing your booking to ensure you are fully aware of any non-refundable deposits.

Our Authorization Policy

By registering for the event, award and conference, you grant ScienceFather permission to photograph, film, record, and use your name, likeness, image, voice, and comments. These materials may be published, reproduced, exhibited, distributed, broadcasted, edited, and/or digitized in publications, advertising materials, or any other form worldwide without compensation. Please note that the taking of photographs and/or videotaping during any session is prohibited. If you have any queries, please feel free to contact us.

Sponsorship

Sponsorship Details

Communications and Media Studies Conferences warmly invite you to sponsor or exhibit of International Conference. We expect participants more than 200 numbers for our International conference will provide an opportunity to hear and meet/ads to Researchers, Practitioners, and Business Professionals to share expertise, foster collaborations, and assess rising innovations across the world in the core area of mechanical engineering.

Diamond Sponsorship

  1. Acknowledgment during the opening of the conference
  2. Complimentary Booth of size 10 meters square
  3. Four (4) delegateā€™s complimentary registrations with lunch
  4. Include marketing document in the delegate pack
  5. Logo on Conference website, Banners, Backdrop, and conference proceedings
  6. One exhibition stand (1Ɨ1 meters) for the conference
  7. One full cover page size ad in conference proceedings
  8. Opportunities for Short speech at events
  9. Option to sponsors conference kit
  10. Opportunity to sponsors conference lanyards, ID cards
  11. Opportunity to sponsors conference lunch
  12. Recognition in video ads
  13. 150-word company profile and contact details in the delegate pack

Platinum Sponsorship

  1. Three (3) delegateā€™s complimentary registrations with lunch
  2. Recognition in video ads
  3. Opportunity to sponsors conference lunch
  4. Opportunity to sponsors conference lanyards, ID cards
  5. Opportunity to sponsors conference kit
  6. Opportunity for Short speech at events
  7. One full-page size ad in conference proceedings
  8. One exhibition stand (1Ɨ1 meters) for the conference
  9. Logo on Conference website, Banners, Backdrop, and conference proceedings
  10. Include marketing document in the delegate pack
  11. Complimentary Booth of size 10 meters square
  12. Acknowledgment during the opening of the conference
  13. 100-word company profile and contact details in the delegate pack

Gold Sponsorship

  1. Two (2) delegateā€™s complimentary registrations with lunch
  2. Opportunities for Short speech at events
  3. Logo on Conference website, Banners, Backdrop, and conference proceedings
  4. Include marketing document in the delegate pack
  5. Complimentary Booth of size 10 meters square
  6. Acknowledgment during the opening of the conference
  7. 100-word company profile and contact details in the delegate pack
  8. Ā½ page size ad in conference proceedings

Silver Sponsorship

  1. Acknowledgment during the opening of the conference
  2. One(1) delegateā€™s complimentary registrations with lunch
  3. Include marketing document in the delegate pack
  4. Logo on Conference website, Banners, Backdrop, and conference proceedings
  5. Ā¼ page size ad in conference proceedings
  6. 100-word company profile and contact details in the delegate pack

Individual Sponsorship

  1. Acknowledgment during the opening of the conference
  2. One(1) delegateā€™s complimentary registrations with lunch

Registration Fees

Details Registration fees
Diamond Sponsorship USD 2999
Platinum Sponsorship USD 2499
Gold Sponsorship USD 1999
Silver Sponsorship USD 1499
Individual Sponsorship USD 999

 

Exhibitions

Exhibitions Details

Exhibit your Products & Services

Exhibit your Products & Services at Communications and Media Studies Conferences. Exhibitors are welcome from Commercial and Non-Commercial Organizations related to a conference title.

  • The best platform to develop new partnerships & collaborations.
  • Best location to speed up your route into every territory in the World.
  • Our exhibitor booths were visited 4-5 times by 80% of the attendees during the conference.
  • Network development with both Academia and Business.

Exhibitor Benefits

  • Exhibit booth of Size-3X3 sqm.
  • Promotion of your logo/Company Name/Brand Name through the conference website.
  • Promotional video on company products during the conference (Post session and Breaks).
  • Logo recognition in the Scientific program, Conference banner, and flyer.
  • One A4 flyer inserts into the conference kit.
  • An opportunity to sponsor 1 Poster Presentation Award.

Session Tracks

Conference Session Tracks

Track 1: Communication

Communication is usually defined as the transmission of information. The term can also refer just to the message communicated or to the field of inquiry studying such transmissions. There are many disagreements about its precise definition. John Peters argues that the difficulty of defining communication emerges from the fact that communication is both a universal phenomenon (because everyone communicates) and a specific discipline of institutional academic study. One definitional strategy involves limiting what can be included in the category of communication (for example, requiring a "conscious intent" to persuade). By this logic, one possible definition of communication is the act of developing meaning among entities or groups through the use of sufficiently mutually understood signs, symbols, and semiotic conventions.

Track 2: Media studies

Media studies is a discipline and field of study that deals with the content, history, and effects of various media; in particular, the mass media. Media Studies may draw on traditions from both the social sciences and the humanities, but mostly from its core disciplines of mass communication, communication, communication sciences, and communication studies.

Track 3: Communication studies

Communication studies or communication science is an academic discipline that deals with processes of human communication and behavior, patterns of communication in interpersonal relationships, social interactions, and communication in different cultures. Communication is commonly defined as giving, receiving, or exchanging ideas, information, signals, or messages through appropriate media, enabling individuals or groups to persuade, seek information, give information, or express emotions effectively. Communication studies is a social science that uses various methods of empirical investigation and critical analysis to develop a body of knowledge that encompasses a range of topics, from the face-to-face conversation at a level of individual agency and interaction to social and cultural communication systems at a macro level.

Track 4: : International communication

International communication (also referred to as the study of global communication or transnational communication) is the communication practice that occurs across international borders. The need for international communication was due to the increasing effects and influences of globalization. As a field of study, international communication is a branch of communication studies, concerned with the scope of "government-to-government", "business-to-business", and "people-to-people" interactions at a global level. Currently, international communication is being taught at colleges worldwide. Due to the increasingly globalized market, employees who possess the ability to effectively communicate across cultures are in high demand. International communication "encompasses political, economic, social, cultural and military concerns".

Track 5: Models of communication

Models of communication are simplified representations of the process of communication. Most models try to describe both verbal and non-verbal communication and often understand it as an exchange of messages. Their function is to give a compact overview of the complex process of communication. This helps researchers formulate hypotheses, apply communication-related concepts to real-world cases, and test predictions. Despite their usefulness, many models are criticized based on the claim that they are too simple because they leave out essential aspects. The different components and their interactions are usually presented in the form of a diagram. Several basic components and interactions reappear in many of the models. They include the idea that a sender encodes information in the form of a message and sends it to a receiver through a channel. The receiver needs to decode the message to understand the initial idea and provides some form of feedback. In both cases, noise may interfere with and distort the message.

Track 6: Communication design

Communication design is a mixed discipline between design and information development which is concerned with how media communicate with people. A communication design approach is not only concerned with developing the message in addition to the aesthetics in media, but also with creating new media channels to ensure the message reaches the target audience. Some designers use graphic design and communication design interchangeably due to overlapping skills.

Communication design can also refer to a systems-based approach, in which the totality of media and messages within a culture or organization are designed as a single integrated process rather than a series of discrete efforts. This is done through communication channels that aim to inform and attract the attention of the people one is focusing one's skills on. Design skills must be tailored to fit different cultures of people while maintaining pleasurable visual design. These are all important pieces of information to add to a media communications kit to get the best results.

Track 7: Critical Studies in Media Communication

Critical Studies in Media Communication (CSMC) is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering media and mass communication from cultural studies and critical perspectives. The journal is published by Taylor & Francis on behalf of the National Communication Association. CSMC publishes original scholarship in mediated and mass communication from cultural studies and/or critical perspectives. It particularly welcomes submissions that enrich debates among various critical traditions, methodological and analytical approaches, and theoretical standpoints.

Track 8: Media imperialism

Media imperialism is an area in the international political economy of a communications research tradition that focuses on how "all Empires, in territorial or nonterritorial forms, rely upon communications technologies and mass media industries to expand and shore up their economic, geopolitical, and cultural influence. In the main, most media imperialism research examines how the unequal relations of economic, military, and cultural power between an imperialist country and those on the receiving end of its influence tend to be expressed and perpetuated by mass media and cultural industries.

Track 9: Business communication

Business communication is communication that is intended to help a business achieve a fundamental goal, through information sharing between employees as well as people outside the company. It includes the process of creating, sharing, listening, and understanding messages between different groups of people through written and verbal formats. The way that people communicate and operate within a business is very vital to how successful the company will be in the business world. Business communication occurs internally, employee-to-employee, or externally, business-to-business or business-to-consumer. This internal and external communication can happen through verbal or non-verbal communication methods. Often these internal and external forms of communication come with barriers, which can prevent the receiver from understanding the information sent by the sender.

Track 10: Visual communication

Visual communication is the use of visual elements to convey ideas and information which include but are not limited to signs, typography, drawing, graphic design, illustration, industrial design, advertising, animation, and electronic resources. Humans have used visual communication since prehistoric times. Within a modern culture, there are several types of characteristics when it comes to visual elements, they consist of objects, models, graphs, diagrams, maps, and photographs. Outside the different types of characteristics and elements, there are seven components of visual communication: color, shape, tones, texture, figure-ground, balance, and hierarchy.

Target Countries

Targeted Countries

Afghanistan Albania Algeria Andorra | Angola| Antigua and Barbuda Argentina| Armenia| Australia| Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas| Bahrain Bangladesh| Barbadoes Belarus|Belgium| Belize| Benin Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana| Brazil Brunei Bulgaria| Burkina Faso Burundi| Cape Verde Cambodia Cameroon| Canada| Central African Republic| Chad Chile China| Colombia| Comoros Democratic Republic of the Congo| Republic of the Congo| Costa Rica Cote d'Ivoire Croatia Try it Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark| Djibouti Dominica| Dominican Republic| Ecuador Egypt El Salvador| Equatorial Guinea| Eritrea| Estonia| Eswatini Ethiopia| Fiji| Finland France Gabon The Gambia Georgia| Germany| Ghana| Greece| Grenada Guatemala Guinea| Guinea-Bissau Guyana| Haiti Honduras| Hungary| Iceland India| Indonesia| Iran| Iraq Ireland| Israel Italy| Jamaica Japan| Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Kosovo Kuwait| Kyrgyzstan Laos| Latvia| Lebanon Lesotho| Liberia| Libya| Liechtenstein| Lithuania| Luxembourg| Madagascar| Malawi Malaysia| Maldives| Mali Maltese| Marshall Islands Mauritania Mauritius| Mexico Micronesia| Moldova Monaco| Mongolia| Montenegro| Morocco Mozambique| Myanmar (Burma)| Namibia| Nauru| Nepal| Netherlands| New Zealand Nicaragua Niger| Nigeria| North Korea| North Macedonia| Norway Oman| Pakistan| Palau| Panama| Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines| Poland| Portugal| Qatar Romania| Russia Rwanda| Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa| San Marino| Sao Tome and Principe| Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia| Seychelles| Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia| Slovenia| Solomon Islands Somalia| South Africa South Korea South Sudan Spain Sri Lanka| Sudan Suriname| Sweden Switzerland Syria Taiwan| Tajikistan Tanzania Thailand Timor-Leste| Togo Tonga| Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan| Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine| United Arab Emirates|United Kingdom| United States Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Vatican City Venezuela| Vietnam| Yemen Zambia| Zimbabwe.

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Popular Books

 

1. Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man by Marshall McLuhan, Routledge, 1st Edition, 1964Ā |Ā 2. The Medium is the Message by Marshall McLuhan, Gingko Press, Reprint Edition, 2011Ā |Ā 3. Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business by Neil Postman, Penguin Books, 1st Edition, 1985Ā |Ā 4. Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television by Jerry Mander, William Morrow Paperbacks, Revised Edition, 1978Ā |Ā 5. Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky, Pantheon, 1st Edition, 1988Ā |Ā 6. Communication Power by Manuel Castells, Oxford University Press, 1st Edition, 2009Ā |Ā 7. The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man by Marshall McLuhan, University of Toronto Press, 1st Edition, 1962Ā |Ā 8. Propaganda by Edward Bernays, Ig Publishing, 1st Edition, 1928Ā |Ā 9. The Information: A History, A Theory, A Flood by James Gleick, Pantheon, 1st Edition, 2011Ā |Ā 10. The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language by Steven Pinker, Harper Perennial, Reprint Edition, 2007Ā |Ā 11. The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception by Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer, Routledge, 1st Edition, 1944Ā |Ā 12. The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society by JĆ¼rgen Habermas, MIT Press, 1st Edition, 1989Ā |Ā 13. The Politics of Experience and The Bird of Paradise by R.D. Laing, Penguin Books, 1st Edition, 1967Ā |Ā 14. Media Control: The Spectacular Achievements of Propaganda by Noam Chomsky, Seven Stories Press, 1st Edition, 1997Ā |Ā 15. A First Look at Communication Theory by Em Griffin, McGraw-Hill Education, 10th Edition, 2015Ā |Ā 16. The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains by Nicholas Carr, W. W. Norton & Company, Reprint Edition, 2011Ā |Ā 17. The Rise of the Creative Class: And How It\'s Transforming Work, Leisure, Community and Everyday Life by Richard Florida, Basic Books, Reprint Edition, 2004Ā |Ā 18. The Wisdom of Crowds by James Surowiecki, Anchor, Reprint Edition, 2005Ā |Ā 19. The Network Society: A Cross-cultural Perspective by Manuel Castells, Edward Elgar Publishing, 1st Edition, 2004Ā |Ā 20. The Psychology of Language by Trevor A. Harley, Psychology Press, 4th Edition, 2014Ā |Ā 21. Media and Cultural Studies: Keyworks by Meenakshi Gigi Durham and Douglas M. Kellner, Wiley-Blackwell, 2nd Edition, 2005Ā |Ā 22. The Power of the Image: Essays on Representation and Sexuality by David Kunzle, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1st Edition, 1983Ā |Ā 23. Digital Culture, Play, and Identity: A World of Warcraft Reader by Hilde G. Corneliussen and Jill Walker Rettberg, MIT Press, 1st Edition, 2008Ā |Ā 24. Media and Society: An Introduction by James Curran and Michael Gurevitch, Routledge, 1st Edition, 1991Ā |Ā 25. The Handbook of Communication Science by Charles R. Berger and Steven H. Chaffee, Sage Publications,Ā |Ā 26. Understanding New Media: Extending Marshall McLuhan by Robert K. Logan, Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers, 1st Edition, 2010Ā |Ā 27. Remediation: Understanding New Media by Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin, MIT Press, Reprint Edition, 2000Ā |Ā 28. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity by Judith Butler, Routledge, 1st Edition, 1990Ā |Ā 29. The Semiotic Challenge by Roland Barthes, University of California Press, 1st Edition, 1994Ā |Ā 30. Media and Communication Research Methods: An Introduction to Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches by Arthur Asa Berger, Sage Publications, 2nd Edition, 2013Ā |Ā 31. Cultural Studies: Theory and Practice by Chris Barker, Sage Publications, 5th Edition, 2016Ā |Ā 32. Simulacra and Simulation by Jean Baudrillard, University of Michigan Press, Reprint Edition, 1994Ā |Ā 33. The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge by Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann, Anchor, 1st Edition, 1966Ā |Ā 34. The Visual Display of Quantitative Information by Edward R. Tufte, Graphics Press, 2nd Edition, 2001Ā |Ā 35. The Art of War by Sun Tzu, Dover Publications, Reprint Edition, 2002Ā |Ā 36. The Internet Galaxy: Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society by Manuel Castells, Oxford University Press, 1st Edition, 2001Ā |Ā 37. Orientalism by Edward W. Said, Vintage, Reprint Edition, 1979Ā |Ā 38. The Gutenberg Elegies: The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age by Sven Birkerts, Fawcett Columbine, 1st Edition, 1994Ā |Ā 39. Theories of Communication Networks by Peter R. Monge and Noshir Contractor, Oxford University Press, 1st Edition, 2003Ā |Ā 40. The Conquest of Cool: Business Culture, Counterculture, and the Rise of Hip Consumerism by Thomas Frank, University of Chicago Press, Reprint Edition, 1998Ā |Ā 41. Code: And Other Laws of Cyberspace by Lawrence Lessig, Basic Books, Reprint Edition, 2006Ā |Ā 42. The Social Life of Information by John Seely Brown and Paul Duguid, Harvard Business Review Press, Reprint Edition, 2002Ā |Ā 43. Communication and the Evolution of Society by Jurgen Habermas, Beacon Press, 1st Edition, 1979Ā |Ā 44. The Language of New Media by Lev Manovich, MIT Press, Reprint Edition, 2002Ā |Ā 45. Television: Technology and Cultural Form by Raymond Williams, Routledge, 1st Edition, 1974Ā |Ā 46. Understanding Television by Andrew Goodwin, Routledge, 1st Edition, 1998Ā |Ā 47. Public Opinion by Walter Lippmann, Dover Publications, Reprint Edition, 2010Ā |Ā 48. The End of History and the Last Man by Francis Fukuyama, Free Press, Reprint Edition, 2006Ā |Ā 49. Cultures and Organizations: Software of the Mind by Geert Hofstede and Gert Jan Hofstede, McGraw-Hill Education, 3rd Edition, 2010Ā |Ā 50. The Evolution of Cooperation by Robert Axelrod, Basic Books, Revised Edition, 2006Ā |Ā 51. The Tyranny of the Moment: Fast and Slow Time in the Information Age by Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Pluto Press, 1st Edition, 2001Ā |Ā 52. The Television Genre Book by Glen CreeberĀ |Ā 1. Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man by Marshall McLuhan, Routledge, 1st Edition, 1964Ā |Ā 2. Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business by Neil Postman, Penguin Books, 1st Edition, 1985Ā |Ā 3. The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects by Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore, Gingko Press, Reprint Edition, 2001Ā |Ā 4. Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky, Pantheon Books, 1st Edition, 1988Ā |Ā 5. The Society of the Spectacle by Guy Debord, Zone Books, 1st Edition, 1994Ā |Ā 6. Propaganda by Edward Bernays, Ig Publishing, Reprint Edition, 2005Ā |Ā 7. The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood by James Gleick, Pantheon Books, 1st Edition, 2011Ā |Ā 8. Communication Theory: Media, Technology and Society by David Holmes, Sage Publications, 2nd Edition, 2005Ā |Ā 9. Media and Society: An Introduction by James Curran and Michael Gurevitch, Routledge, 2nd Edition, 2005Ā |Ā 10. Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art by Scott McCloud, Harper Perennial, Reprint Edition, 1994Ā |Ā 11. Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television by Jerry Mander, William Morrow and Company, 1st Edition, 1978Ā |Ā 12. The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society by Jurgen Habermas, MIT Press, Reprint Edition, 1991Ā |Ā 13. The Politics of Reality Television: Global Perspectives by Marwan M. Kraidy and Katherine Sender, Routledge, 1st Edition, 2010Ā |Ā 14. The Internet: An Ethnographic Approach by Daniel Miller and Don Slater, Berg Publishers, 1st Edition, 2000Ā |Ā 15. Media and Communication Studies: An Introduction to Mass Communication by Pieter J. Fourie, Juta and Company Ltd., 5th Edition, 2015Ā |Ā 16. The Globalization of Nothing by George Ritzer, Pine Forge Press, 2nd Edition, 2007Ā |Ā 17. Television Studies: The Basics by Toby Miller and Glen Creeber, Routledge, 1st Edition, 2012Ā |Ā 18. Media, Gender and Identity: An Introduction by David Gauntlett, Routledge, 2nd Edition, 2008Ā |Ā 19. Mass Communication Theory: Foundations, Ferment, and Future by Stanley J. Baran and Dennis K. Davis, Wadsworth Publishing, 7th Edition, 2014Ā |Ā 20. The Handbook of Media and Mass Communication Theory by Robert S. Fortner and P. Mark Fackler, Wiley-Blackwell, 1st Edition, 2010Ā |Ā 21. A Companion to Media Studies by Angharad N. Valdivia, Wiley-Blackwell, 1st Edition, 2003Ā |Ā 22. Media Effects: Advances in Theory and Research by Jennings Bryant and Mary Beth Oliver, Routledge, 3rd Edition, 2009Ā |Ā 23. The Audiences of Media: An Introduction by Virginia Nightingale, Palgrave Macmillan, 2nd Edition, 2011Ā |Ā 24. Mediated Society: A Critical Sociology of Media by Michael K. Schudson, Sage Publications, 1st Edition, 1999Ā |Ā 25. Communication and Symbolic Behavior Scales: Development, Reliability, and Validity by Elizabeth B. Wiggins and John F. Petronio,Ā |Ā 26. Handbook of Visual Communication: Theory, Methods, and Media by Kenneth L. Smith, Sandra Moriarty, Gretchen Barbatsis, and Keith Kenney, Routledge, 2nd Edition, 2004Ā |Ā 27. The New Media Monopoly by Ben H. Bagdikian, Beacon Press, 6th Edition, 2004Ā |Ā 28. Media and Society: A Critical Perspective by Arthur Asa Berger, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1st Edition, 2012Ā |Ā 29. The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man by Marshall McLuhan, University of Toronto Press, Reprint Edition, 2011Ā |Ā 30. The Social Media Handbook: Rules, Policies, and Best Practices to Successfully Manage Your Organization\'s Social Media Presence, Posts, and Potential by Nancy Flynn and Theresa Cramer, Wiley, 1st Edition, 2011Ā |Ā 31. Understanding Digital Culture by Vincent Miller, Sage Publications, 1st Edition, 2011Ā |Ā 32. Media Studies: A Reader by Paul Marris and Sue Thornham, New York University Press, 2nd Edition, 2000Ā |Ā 33. The Handbook of Communication Ethics by George Cheney, Steve May, and Debashish Munshi, Routledge, 1st Edition, 2011Ā |Ā 34. Media, Society, World: Social Theory and Digital Media Practice by Nick Couldry and Damian Steward, Polity Press, 1st Edition, 2012Ā |Ā 35. The Globalization of World Politics: An Introduction to International Relations by John Baylis, Steve Smith, and Patricia Owens, Oxford University Press, 7th Edition, 2016Ā |Ā 36. The Media Handbook: A Complete Guide to Advertising Media Selection, Planning, Research, and Buying by Helen Katz, Routledge, 5th Edition, 2016Ā |Ā 37. Handbook of Research on Media Literacy in the Digital Age by Ana Garcia-Valdecasas, IGI Global, 1st Edition, 2020Ā |Ā 38. The Internet: A Historical Encyclopedia by Christopher Sterling, ABC-CLIO, 1st Edition, 2005Ā |Ā 39. Media Economics: Theory and Practice by Alison Alexander and James Owers, Routledge, 3rd Edition, 2013Ā |Ā 40. Media and Communication Research Methods: An Introduction to Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches by Arthur Asa Berger, Sage Publications, 4th Edition, 2016Ā |Ā 41. Interpersonal Communication: Relating to Others by Steven A. Beebe and Susan J. Beebe, Pearson, 7th Edition, 2018Ā |Ā 42. Media Studies: The Basics by Julian McDougall, Routledge, 1st Edition, 2017Ā |Ā 43. Communication and the Law by W. Wat Hopkins, Routledge, 5th Edition, 2018Ā |Ā 44. Handbook of Media Management and Economics by Alan B. Albarran, Routledge, 2nd Edition, 2015Ā |Ā 45. Media and Communication Research: An Introduction to Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches by Anders Hansen and David Machin, Palgrave Macmillan, 2nd Edition, 2014Ā |Ā 46. Communication Research Methods by Gerianne Merrigan and Carole L. Huston, Waveland Press, 2nd Edition, 2012Ā |Ā 47. The Media and Communications in Australia by Stuart Cunningham and Graeme Turner, Allen & Unwin, 4th Edition, 2014Ā |Ā 48. Digital Media and Society: An Introduction by Adrian Athique and Keith Wilkins, Polity Press, 1st Edition, 2013Ā |Ā 49. Communication: Principles for a Lifetime by Steven A. Beebe and Susan J.

Related Societies

International Communication Association (ICA) - United States | 2. European Communication Research and Education Association (ECREA) - Europe | 3. Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) - United States | 4. National Communication Association (NCA) - United States | 5. International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR) - Global | 6. Canadian Communication Association (CCA) - Canada | 7. Australian and New Zealand Communication Association (ANZCA) - Australia and New Zealand | 8. British Association for Film, Television and Screen Studies (BAFTSS) - United Kingdom | 9. Society for Cinema and Media Studies (SCMS) - United States | 10. Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR) - Global | 11. International Society for the Study of Narrative (ISSN) - Global | 12. Journalism Education and Research Association of Australia (JERAA) - Australia | 13. Association FranƧaise de Sciences Sociales des Religions (AFSR) - France | 14. Communication Institute for Online Scholarship (CIOS) - Global | 15. Digital Games Research Association (DiGRA) - Global | 16. Association of Chinese Communication Studies (ACCS) - China | 17. AsociaciĆ³n EspaƱola de InvestigaciĆ³n de la ComunicaciĆ³n (AE-IC) - Spain | 18. Latin American Association of Communication Researchers (ALAIC) - Latin America | 19. African Communication Research (ACR) - Africa | 20. Central States Communication Association (CSCA) - United States | 21. Eastern Communication Association (ECA) - United States | 22. Southern States Communication Association (SSCA) - United States | 23. Western States Communication Association (WSCA) - United States | 24. Association for Applied and Clinical Sociology (AACS) - Global | 25. Association for Business Communication (ABC) - Global | 26. Association for Consumer Research (ACR) - Global | 27. Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) - United States | 28. Association for Marketing and Health Care Research (AMHCR) - Global | 29. Association for Research in Otolaryngology (ARO) - Global | 30. Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES) - Global | 31. Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE) - Global | 32. Association of Communication Scholars and Professionals of Nigeria (ACSPN) - Nigeria | 33. Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR) - Global | 34. Association of Moving Image Archivists (AMIA) - Global | 35. Association of the Philippines for Journalism Educators (AJPE) - Philippines | 36. Belgian Association for Communication Studies (BACS) - Belgium | 37. Canadian Association of Journalists (CAJ) - Canada | 38. Canadian Communication Association (CCA) - Canada | 39. Canadian Public Relations Society (CPRS) - Canada | 40. Central European Journal of Communication (CEJC) - Central Europe | 41. Danish Society for Mass Communication Research (DSMK) - Denmark | 42. Eastern Communication Association (ECA) - United States | 43. European Public Relations Education and Research Association (EUPRERA) - Europe | 44. Finnish Society for Media and Communication Studies (FSMCS) - Finland | 45. German Communication Association (DGPuK) - Germany | 46. Hungarian Communication Studies Association (HCSA) - Hungary | 47. Indian Association for Communication Research and Education (IACRE) - India | 48. Indonesian Association for Media and Communication Studies (AMCS) - Indonesia | 49. International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR) - Global | 50. International Communication Association (ICA) | 51. International Society for the Advancement of Writing Research (ISAWR) - Global | 52. Irish Communication Association (ICA) - Ireland | 53. Israel Communication Association (ISCA) - Israel | 54. Italian Association of Communication Studies (SIC) - Italy | 55. Japan Society for Studies in Journalism and Mass Communication (JSSJMC) - Japan | 56. Korean Society for Journalism and Communication Studies (KSJCS) - South Korea | 57. Latin American Communication Research Association (ALAIC) - Latin America | 58. Malaysian Communication Association (MCA) - Malaysia | 59. Media Ecology Association (MEA) - Global | 60. Nordic Journal of Media Studies (NJMS) - Nordic Countries | 61. Norwegian Communication Association (NCA) - Norway | 62. Pacific and Asian Communication Association (PACA) - Asia-Pacific | 63. Polish Communication Association (PCA) - Poland | 64. Portuguese Association for Communication Sciences (SOPCOM) - Portugal | 65. Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) - United States | 66. Russian Communication Association (RCA) - Russia | 67. Scandinavian Journal of Media Studies (SJMS) - Nordic Countries | 68. Singapore Internet Research Centre (SiRC) - Singapore | 69. Slovenian Communication Association (SKA) - Slovenia | 70. South African Communication Association (SACOMM) - South Africa | 71. South Asian Journal of Media Studies (SAJMS) - South Asia | 72. Spanish Association of Communication Researchers (AEIC) - Spain | 73. Swedish Association for Media and Communication Research (FSMK | 85. Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR) - Global | 86. Association of Medical Illustrators (AMI) - Global | 87. Association of Moving Image Archivists (AMIA) - Global | 88. Association of Music Producers (AMP) - Global | 89. Association of Personal Historians (APH) - Global | 90. Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health (ASPPH) - Global | 91. Association of Teachers of Japanese (ATJ) - Global | 92. Australian and New Zealand Communication Association (ANZCA) - Australia and New Zealand | 93. Belgian Association for Communication Studies (BACS) - Belgium | 94. Brazilian Association of Researchers in Communication and Politics (COMPOLITICAS) - Brazil | 95. Canadian Communication Association (CCA) - Canada | 96. Caribbean Association for Feminist Research and Action (CAFRA) - Caribbean | 97. Caribbean Studies Association (CSA) - Caribbean | 98. Central European Journal of Communication (CEJC) - Central Europe | 99. China Internet Research Network (CIRN) - China | 100. Colombian Association for Communication Studies (ASCOA) - Colombia | 101. Academy of Communication in Healthcare (ACH) - United States | 102. American Advertising Federation (AAF) - United States | 103. American Journalism Historians Association (AJHA) - United States | 104. American Marketing Association (AMA) - United States | 105. American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA) - United States | 106. Arab-US Association for Communication Educators (AUSACE) - United States and Arab Countries | 107. Argentine Association of Communication Studies (AIECS) - Argentina | 108. Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA)

 

Related Researchers

Siva Vaidhyanathan - Media Studies, University of Virginia, USA | 2. Sherry Turkle - Communications and Media Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA | 3. Manuel Castells - Communication, University of Southern California, USA | 4. Sonia Livingstone - Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK | 5. James Carey - Communication and Media Studies, Columbia University, USA | 6. Henry Jenkins - Media Studies, University of Southern California, USA | 7. Mark Andrejevic - Media Studies, Monash University, Australia | 8. Geert Lovink - Media Theory, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, Netherlands | 9. Lawrence Grossberg - Media and Cultural Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA | 10. Annette Markham - Media and Communication Studies, Aarhus University, Denmark | 11. danah boyd - Communication and Media Studies, University of California, Berkeley, USA | 12. Jean Burgess - Digital Media and Communication, Queensland University of Technology, Australia | 13. Marwan M. Kraidy - Global Communication and Cultural Studies, Northwestern University, USA | 14. Gabriella Coleman - Anthropology and Communications, McGill University, Canada | 15. Charles Ess - Media Studies, University of Oslo, Norway | 16. Pablo Boczkowski - Communication Studies, Northwestern University, USA | 17. Lev Manovich - Cultural Analytics and Digital Humanities, City University of New York, USA | 18. Linda Steiner - Media and Gender Studies, University of Maryland, USA | 19. Philip Napoli - Communication and Media Studies, Duke University, USA | 20. Daya Kishan Thussu - Global Media and Communications, University of Westminster, UK | 21. Zizi Papacharissi - Communication and Political Science, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA | 22. Brian McNair - Journalism and Media, Queensland University of Technology, Australia | 23. Lawrence Lessig - Law and Communications, Harvard University, USA | 24. Tamar Liebes - Media and Communication Studies, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel | 25. Lisa Parks - Media Studies and Science and Technology Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA | 26. Jeanette Steemers - Media and Communications, King\'s College London, UK | 27. Mimi White - Communication and Media Studies, Northwestern University, USA | 28. John Durham Peters - Media and Communication Studies, Yale University, USA | 29. Christian Fuchs - Social Media and Communication, University of Westminster, UK | 30. Emily Bell - Digital Journalism, Columbia University, USA | 31. Silvio Waisbord - Media and Communication Studies, George Washington University, USA | 32. Sonia Jawaid Shaikh - Communication and Media Studies, Lahore University of Management Sciences, Pakistan | 33. Karin Wahl-Jorgensen - Journalism and Media Studies, Cardiff University, UK | 34. Shaojing Sun - Media and Communication Studies, Tsinghua University, China | 35. Leslie Regan Shade - Media and Communications, Concordia University, Canada | 36. J. Macgregor Wise - Media Studies and Science and Technology Studies, Arizona State University, USA | 37. Sirkku Kotilainen - Media and Communications, University of Helsinki, Finland | 38. Christian Sandvig - Communication and Information Studies, University of Michigan, USA | 39. Nalini Rajan - Journalism and Media Studies, Asian College of Journalism, India | 40. Silvia Lindtner - Science, Technology, and Society Studies, University of Michigan, USA | 41. Claudia Padovani - Communication and Media Studies, University of Padova, Italy | 42. Yang Guobin - Media and Communications, University of Pennsylvania, USA | 43. Kelli Marshall | 44. Jane Singer - Journalism and Media Studies, City, University of London, UK | 45. Ansgard Heinrich - Media Studies, UniversitƤt Bremen, Germany | 46. Michael X. Delli Carpini - Communication and Political Science, University of Pennsylvania, USA | 47. Jonathan Sterne - Sound Studies, McGill University, Canada | 48. Leah A. Lievrouw - Media and Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, USA | 49. Kim H. Veltman - Media and Communication Studies, Maastricht University, Netherlands | 50. Sarah Banet-Weiser - Media and Communication Studies, University of Southern California, USA | 51. Andrew Chadwick - Political Communication, Loughborough University, UK | 52. Yuezhi Zhao - Communication and Media Studies, Simon Fraser University, Canada | 53. Joost van Loon - Media and Communication Studies, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands | 54. Mirca Madianou - Media and Communication Studies, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK | 55. Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt - Media and Communication Studies, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel | 56. Yael Warshel - Media and Communication Studies, Tel Aviv University, Israel | 57. Julianne H. Newton - Journalism and Media Studies, University of Oregon, USA | 58. Jonathan Corpus Ong - Media Studies, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA | 59. Karen Ross - Media and Communication Studies, University of Newcastle, UK | 60. Thomas Tufte - Media Studies, Aarhus University, Denmark | 61. Nicholas A. John - Communication and Media Studies, Western University, Canada | 62. Scott W. Campbell - Communication and Media Studies, University of Michigan, USA | 63. Victoria Nash - Media and Communications, Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, UK | 64. Nick Couldry - Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK | 65. Zizi Papacharissi - Communication and Political Science, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA | 66. Jen Birks - Media and Communications, University of Nottingham, UK | 67. Andreas Hepp - Media and Communications, University of Bremen, Germany | 68. Kai Hafez - Media and Communication Studies, University of Erfurt, Germany | 69. Heinz Bonfadelli - Communication and Media Studies, University of Zurich, Switzerland | 70. Eugenia Siapera - Media and Communications, Dublin City University, Ireland | 71. Andrea B. Hollington - Media and Communication Studies, Ɩrebro University, Sweden | 72. Tim Dwyer - Media and Communication Studies, University of Sydney, Australia | 73. Michael Schudson - Journalism and Communications, Columbia University, USA | 74. Tiziano Bonini - Communication and Media Studies, UniversitĆ  Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy | 75. Zsolt PĆ”pai - Media and Communication Studies, University of Szeged, Hungary | 76. Christina Holtz-Bacha - Political Communication, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany | 77. Colin Sparks - Media and Communications, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong SAR | 78. Katrin Voltmer - Political Communication, University of Leeds, UK | 79. Rasmus Kleis Nielsen - Media and Communications, University of Oxford, UK | 80. Brian Loader - Political Communication, University of York, UK | 81. Susan Keith - Media and Communication Studies, Rutgers University, USA | 82. Niklas Oldemeinen - Media Studies, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands | 83. Marie Gillespie - Media and Communications, Open University, UK | 84. Terry Flew - Media and Communications, Queensland University of Technology, Australia | 85. Manuel Castells - Communication and Sociology, University of Southern California, USA | 86. Elihu Katz - Media Studies, University of Pennsylvania, USA | 87. Marshall McLuhan - Media Studies, University of Toronto, Canada | 88. Stuart Hall - Cultural Studies and Communication, Open University, UK | 89. Noam Chomsky - Media and Political Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA | 90. Jay Blumler - Communication and Political Science, University of Leeds, UK | 91. James Carey - Communication and History, Columbia University, USA | 92. George Gerbner - Communication and Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, USA | 93. John Fiske - Media and Cultural Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA | 94. Lawrence Grossberg - Cultural Studies and Communication, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA | 95. Sonia Livingstone - Media and Communication Studies, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK | 96. Manuel Puppis - Communication Studies, University of Fribourg, Switzerland | 97. Dan Schiller - Communication and Political Economy, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA | 98. James Curran - Media and Communications, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK | 99. Denis McQuail - Communication and Political Science, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands | 100. Robin Mansell - Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK | 101. David Harvey - Communication and Geography, City University of New York, USA | 102. Michael Gurevitch - Communication and Political Science, University of Maryland, USA | 103. Janice Radway - Media and Cultural Studies, Duke University, USA | 104. John Durham Peters - Communication and English, University of Iowa, USA | 105. Jan van Dijk - Communication and Information Science, University of Twente, Netherlands | 106. Siva Vaidhyanathan - Media Studies, University of Virginia, USA | 107. Mark Andrejevic - Media and Communication Studies, Monash University, Australia | 108. Lynn Schofield Clark - Media and Communication Studies, University of Denver, USA | 109. JosĆ© van Dijck - Media and Communication Studies, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands | 110. Noshir Contractor - Communication Studies, Northwestern University, USA | 111. Mimi White - Communication and Media Studies, Northwestern University, USA | 112. Ronald Rice - Communication and Organizational Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA | 113. Robert Entman - Communication and Political Science, George Washington University, USA | 114. Robert W. McChesney - Media and Communications, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA | 115. Henry Jenkins - Media and Cultural Studies, University of Southern California, USA | 116. Danah Boyd - Media and Communication Studies, University of California, Berkeley, USA | 117. Tarleton Gillespie - Media and Communication Studies, Microsoft Research, USA | 118. Sonia Virginia Moreira - Media and Communication Studies, Universidade do Minho, Portugal | 119. Robert Gehl - Media Studies, University of Utah, USA | 120. Geert Lovink - Media and Communication Studies, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, Netherlands | 121. Natalie Fenton - Media and Communications, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK | 122. David Buckingham - Media and Communications, Loughborough University, UK | 123. Greg Elmer - Communication and Political Science, Ryerson University, Canada | 124. Bart Cammaerts - Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK | 125. Mark Deuze - Media Studies, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands | 126. Axel Bruns - Media Studies, Queensland University of Technology, Australia | 127. Mireia FernĆ”ndez-A

 

Related Patents

Ā Title: System and method for encoding and decoding video Name: Gary Sullivan, Thomas Wiegand, Ajay Luthra, et al. University: Various Country: United States Patent number: US 7,062,500 B2 Year: 2006Ā |Ā 2. Title: Method and system for video transmission over heterogeneous networks Name: Shih-Fu Chang, John Apostolopoulos, et al. University: Columbia University, Hewlett-Packard Company Country: United States Patent number: US 7,200,405 B2 Year: 2007Ā |Ā 3. Title: Method and apparatus for secure transmission of multimedia content Name: Richard Reisman, Lawrence Hornak University: University of California, Los Angeles Country: United States Patent number: US 7,809,827 B2 Year: 2010Ā |Ā 4. Title: System and method for personalized electronic program guide Name: Seong-Cheol Kim, Young-Hwan Kim, Sang-Wook Kim University: Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology Country: South Korea Patent number: US 8,996,313 B2 Year: 2015Ā |Ā 5. Title: Method and apparatus for determining media content preferences of a user Name: Navid Alamatsaz, Nick Koudas, et al. University: University of Toronto, Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. Country: Canada Patent number: US 9,710,860 B2 Year: 2017Ā |Ā ā€¢ Video encoding/decodingĀ |Ā ā€¢ Image and video processingĀ |Ā ā€¢ Multimedia communicationĀ |Ā ā€¢ Media content analysisĀ |Ā ā€¢ Streaming mediaĀ |Ā ā€¢ Digital rights managementĀ |Ā ā€¢ Video transmission over networksĀ |Ā ā€¢ User preferences and recommendationsĀ |Ā ā€¢ Personalized electronic program guideĀ |Ā ā€¢ Social media analytics

Popular Researchers

Google Scholar: Google Scholar is a search engine that indexes scholarly literature across a range of disciplines, including Communications and Media Studies. You can use it to search for individual researchers and find their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 2. Scopus: Scopus is a bibliographic database that provides comprehensive coverage of scientific, technical, medical, and social sciences literature. It allows you to search for researchers and see their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 3. Web of Science: Web of Science is a bibliographic database that indexes scholarly literature across a range of disciplines. It provides citation analysis tools that allow you to search for researchers and see their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 4. Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU): ARWU is a ranking of the top universities in the world based on a range of indicators, including research output and impact. You can use it to identify the top universities in the field of Communications and Media Studies, and then explore the faculty profiles of those universities to find top researchers.Ā |Ā 5. QS World University Rankings: QS World University Rankings is another ranking of the top universities in the world based on a range of indicators, including research output and impact. You can use it to identify the top universities in the field of Communications and Media Studies, and then explore the faculty profiles of those universities to find top researchers.Ā |Ā 1. Google Scholar: Google Scholar is a freely accessible search engine that indexes scholarly literature across many disciplines, including Communications and Media Studies. You can use it to search for individual researchers and see their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 2. Scopus: Scopus is a large bibliographic database that provides comprehensive coverage of scientific, technical, medical, and social sciences literature. It allows you to search for researchers and see their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 3. Web of Science: Web of Science is another bibliographic database that indexes scholarly literature across many disciplines. It provides citation analysis tools that allow you to search for researchers and see their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 4. Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU): ARWU is a ranking of the top universities in the world based on a range of indicators, including research output and impact. You can use it to identify the top universities in the field of Communications and Media Studies, and then explore the faculty profiles of those universities to find top researchers.Ā |Ā 5. QS World University Rankings: QS World University Rankings is another ranking of the top universities in the world based on a range of indicators, including research output and impact. You can use it to identify the top universities in the field of Communications and Media Studies, and then explore the faculty profiles of those universities to find top researchers.Ā |Ā 1. Highly Cited Researchers: The Highly Cited Researchers list is an annual compilation of influential researchers in various fields, including Communications and Media Studies. This list is published by Clarivate Analytics and is based on citation metrics.Ā |Ā 2. Google Scholar Profiles: Google Scholar is a freely accessible search engine that indexes scholarly literature across many disciplines. Many researchers in Communications and Media Studies have created profiles on Google Scholar, which allow you to see their citation counts and h-indexes.Ā |Ā 3. Scopus: Scopus is a large bibliographic database that provides comprehensive coverage of scientific, technical, medical, and social sciences literature. It allows you to search for researchers and see their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 4. Web of Science: Web of Science is another bibliographic database that indexes scholarly literature across many disciplines. It provides citation analysis tools that allow you to search for researchers and see their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 5. Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU): ARWU is a ranking of the top universities in the world based on a range of indicators, including research output and impact. You can use it to identify the top universities in the field of Communications and Media Studies, and then explore the faculty profiles of those universities to find top researchers.Ā |Ā 6. Highly Cited Researchers: The Highly Cited Researchers list is an annual compilation of influential researchers in various fields, including Communications and Media Studies. This list is published by Clarivate Analytics and is based on citation metrics.Ā |Ā 7. Google Scholar Profiles: Google Scholar is a freely accessible search engine that indexes scholarly literature across many disciplines. Many researchers in Communications and Media Studies have created profiles on Google Scholar, which allow you to see their citation counts and h-indexes.Ā |Ā 8. Scopus: Scopus is a large bibliographic database that provides comprehensive coverage of scientific, technical, medical, and social sciences literature. It allows you to search for researchers and see their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 9. Web of Science: Web of Science is another bibliographic database that indexes scholarly literature across many disciplines. It provides citation analysis tools that allow you to search for researchers and see their citation count and h-index.Ā |Ā 10. Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU): ARWU is a ranking of the top universities in the world based on a range of indicators, including research output and impact. You can use it to identify the top universities in the field of Communications and Media Studies, and then explore the faculty profiles of those universities to find top researchers.Ā |Ā 1. University of Southern California, United StatesĀ |Ā 2. University of Texas at Austin, United StatesĀ |Ā 3. Stanford University, United StatesĀ |Ā 4. University of California, Los Angeles, United StatesĀ |Ā 5. University of Oxford, United KingdomĀ |Ā 6. Columbia University, United StatesĀ |Ā 7. University of Amsterdam, NetherlandsĀ |Ā 8. London School of Economics and Political Science, United KingdomĀ |Ā 9. University of Pennsylvania, United StatesĀ |Ā 10. University of California, Berkeley, United StatesĀ |Ā 11. Harvard University, United StatesĀ |Ā 12. University of Wisconsin-Madison, United StatesĀ |Ā 13. University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, United StatesĀ |Ā 14. New York University, United StatesĀ |Ā 15. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United StatesĀ |Ā 16. University of California, San Diego, United StatesĀ |Ā 17. University of Chicago, United StatesĀ |Ā 18. University of Copenhagen, DenmarkĀ |Ā 19. University of Cambridge, United KingdomĀ |Ā 20. University of Toronto, CanadaĀ |Ā 21. Manuel Castells, University of Southern California, United States, Citation count: 193,631, H-Index: 131Ā |Ā 22. Elihu Katz, University of Pennsylvania, United States, Citation count: 38,195, H-Index: 79Ā |Ā 23. James W. Carey (1934-2006), Columbia University, United States, Citation count: 23,236, H-Index: 48Ā |Ā 24. Mark Deuze, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, Citation count: 12,972, H-Index: 51Ā |Ā 25. Sonia Livingstone, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom, Citation count: 41,918, H-Index: 66Ā |Ā 26. Joseph Turow, University of Pennsylvania, United States, Citation count: 34,689, H-Index: 59Ā |Ā 27. Sherry Turkle, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States, Citation count: 57,863, H-Index: 78Ā |Ā 28. Marjorie Ferguson, University of Colorado Boulder, United States, Citation count: 10,573, H-Index: 34Ā |Ā 29. Nick Couldry, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom, Citation count: 17,437, H-Index: 46Ā |Ā 30. Manuel Puppis, University of Fribourg, Switzerland, Citation count: 4,820, H-Index: 31Ā |Ā 31. Jonathan Sterne, McGill University, Canada, Citation count: 13,251, H-Index: 40Ā |Ā 32. Barbie Zelizer, University of Pennsylvania, United States, Citation count: 19,253, H-Index: 50Ā |Ā 33. Mark Andrejevic, Monash University, Australia, Citation count: 11,115, H-Index: 37Ā |Ā 34. Tarleton Gillespie, Microsoft Research, United States, Citation count: 23,511, H-Index: 46Ā |Ā 35. John Durham Peters, Yale University, United States, Citation count: 15,989, H-Index: 34Ā |Ā 36. Lev Manovich, City University of New York, United States, Citation count: 23,259, H-Index: 49Ā |Ā 37. Jean Burgess, Queensland University of Technology, Australia, Citation count: 26,661, H-Index: 48Ā |Ā 38. Arvind Singhal, University of Texas at El Paso, United States, Citation count: 15,857, H-Index: 52Ā |Ā 39. Annette Markham, Aarhus University, Denmark, Citation count: 12,804, H-Index: 38Ā |Ā 40. Gerard Goggin, University of Sydney, Australia, Citation count: 11,401, H-Index: 35Ā |Ā 21. Stuart Hall (1932-2014), Open University, United Kingdom, Citation count: 67,207, H-Index: 77Ā |Ā 22. N. Katherine Hayles, Duke University, United States, Citation count: 26,846, H-Index: 54Ā |Ā 23. danah boyd, Microsoft Research, United States, Citation count: 38,262, H-Index: 51Ā |Ā 24. Siva Vaidhyanathan, University of Virginia, United States, Citation count: 26,226, H-Index: 44Ā |Ā 25. Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Denver, United States, Citation count: 6,848, H-Index: 28Ā |Ā 26. Natalie Fenton, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom, Citation count: 8,034, H-Index: 27Ā |Ā 27. Mirca Madianou, University of Leicester, United Kingdom, Citation count: 2,853, H-Index: 23Ā |Ā 28. Kate Lacey, University of Sussex, United Kingdom, Citation count: 2,064, H-Index: 23Ā |Ā 29. Christian Fuchs, University of Westminster, United Kingdom, Citation count: 22,337, H-Index: 46Ā |Ā 30. Julian Dibbell, Independent scholar, United States, Citation count: 5,478, H-Index: 27Ā |Ā 31. Lilie Chouliaraki, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom, Citation count: 19,871, H-Index: 39Ā |Ā 32. Tarik Sabry, University of Westminster, United Kingdom, Citation count: 3,225, H-Index: 22Ā |Ā 33. Sarah Banet-Weiser, University of Southern California, United States, Citation count: 12,206, H-Index: 32Ā |Ā 34. Lelia Green, Edith Cowan University, Australia, Citation count: 4,216, H-Index: 23Ā |Ā 35. Matthew Fuller, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom, Citation count: 9,978, H-Index: 30Ā |Ā 36. Zizi Papacharissi, University of Illinois at Chicago, United States, Citation count: 29,630, H-Index: 49Ā |Ā 37. David Morley, Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom, Citation count: 14,781, H-Index: 43Ā |Ā 38. Robin Mansell, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom, Citation count: 16,242, H-Index: 42Ā |Ā 39. Sonia Virginia Moreira, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil, Citation count: 1,609, H-Index: 18Ā |Ā 40. Michael Schudson, Columbia University, United States, Citation count: 21,190, H-Index: 54Ā |Ā 41. Henry Jenkins, University of Southern California, United States, Citation count: 24,831, H-Index: 51Ā |Ā 42. Leslie Regan Shade, Concordia University, Canada, Citation count: 6,075, H-Index: 25Ā |Ā 43. Dan Schiller, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States, Citation count: 8,775, H-Index: 32Ā |Ā 44. David Gauntlett, University of Westminster, United Kingdom, CitationĀ |Ā 45. Manuel Castells - University of Southern California, United StatesĀ |Ā 46. John Durham Peters - Yale University, United StatesĀ |Ā 47. Sonia Livingstone - London School of Economics and Political Science, United KingdomĀ |Ā 48. Elihu Katz - University of Pennsylvania, United StatesĀ |Ā 49. James W. Carey - Columbia University, United StatesĀ |Ā 50. Ien Ang - Western Sydney University, AustraliaĀ |Ā 51. Jay G. Blumler - University of Leeds, United KingdomĀ |Ā 52. Geert Lovink - University of Amsterdam, NetherlandsĀ |Ā 53. Mark Deuze - University of Amsterdam, NetherlandsĀ |Ā 54. Denis McQuail - University of Amsterdam, NetherlandsĀ |Ā 55. Annette Hill - Lund University, SwedenĀ |Ā 56. Karin Wahl-Jorgensen - Cardiff University, United KingdomĀ |Ā 57. Nick Couldry - London School of Economics and Political Science, United KingdomĀ |Ā 58. Brian McNair - Queensland University of Technology, AustraliaĀ |Ā 59. Larry Gross - University of Southern California, United StatesĀ |Ā 60. Sherry Turkle - Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United StatesĀ |Ā 61. Robert W. McChesney - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United StatesĀ |Ā 62. Michael Warner - Yale University, United StatesĀ |Ā 63. Arjun Appadurai - New York University, United StatesĀ |Ā 64. Toby Miller - University of California, Riverside, United StatesĀ |Ā 65. Manuel Castells - University of Southern California, USA - 215,284 citations - H-index: 127Ā |Ā 66. Elihu Katz - University of Pennsylvania, USA - 52,618 citations - H-index: 81Ā |Ā 67. W. Russell Neuman - New York University, USA - 40,179 citations - H-index: 69Ā |Ā 68. Everett Rogers (deceased) - University of New Mexico, USA - 111,584 citations - H-index: 63Ā |Ā 69. Michael X. Delli Carpini - University of Pennsylvania, USA - 21,222 citations - H-index: 58Ā |Ā 70. James W. Carey (deceased) - Columbia University, USA - 20,757 citations - H-index: 54Ā |Ā 71. Denis McQuail (deceased) - University of Amsterdam, Netherlands - 44,202 citations - H-index: 50Ā |Ā 72. Annette Hill - Lund University, Sweden - 17,319 citations - H-index: 45Ā |Ā 73. Ien Ang - Western Sydney University, Australia - 26,901 citations - H-index: 45Ā |Ā 74. Shanto Iyengar - Stanford University, USA - 48,342 citations - H-index: 44Ā |Ā 75. Elihu Katz (deceased) - Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel - 32,548 citations - H-index: 43Ā |Ā 76. Robert Entman - George Washington University, USA - 19,066 citations - H-index: 42Ā |Ā 77. Brian McNair - Queensland University of Technology, Australia - 18,716 citations - H-index: 42Ā |Ā 78. Joshua Meyrowitz - University of New Hampshire, USA - 13,301 citations - H-index: 41Ā |Ā 79. Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach - University of Southern California, USA - 18,414 citations - H-index: 41Ā |Ā 80. John B. Thompson - University of Cambridge, UK - 20,777 citations - H-index: 40Ā |Ā 81. Geert Lovink - University of Amsterdam, Netherlands - 15,234 citations - H-index: 39Ā |Ā 82. S. Shyam Sundar - Pennsylvania State University, USA - 22,640 citations - H-index: 39Ā |Ā 83. Clay Shirky - New York University, USA - 33,529 citations - H-index: 38Ā |Ā 84. Sonia Livingstone - London School of Economics and Political Science, UK - 31,864 citations - H-index: 38Ā |Ā 85. Arjun Appadurai - New York University, USA - 25,399 citations - H-index: 38Ā |Ā 86. Robert Putnam - Harvard University, USA - 110,726 citations - H-index: 37Ā |Ā 87. Howard Becker - Northwestern University, USA - 53,837 citations - H-index: 37Ā |Ā 88. Elihu Katz (deceased) - University of Chicago, USA - 28,344 citations - H-index: 37Ā |Ā 89. Joseph Nye - Harvard University, USA - 69,947 citations - H-index: 36Ā |Ā 90. Michael Schudson - Columbia University, USA - 19,232 citations - H-index: 36Ā |Ā 91. George Gerbner (deceased) - University of Pennsylvania, USA - 22,189 citations - H-index: 36Ā |Ā 92. Mark Deuze - University of Amsterdam, Netherlands - 12,643 citations - H-index: 36Ā |Ā 93. Janice Radway - Northwestern University, USA - 8,586 citations - H-index: 35Ā |Ā 94. Henry Jenkins - University of Southern California, USA - 26,209 citations - H-index: 35Ā |Ā 95. Manuel Puppis - University of Fribourg, Switzerland - 4,394 citations - H-index: 34Ā |Ā 96. Michael Gurevitch - University of Maryland, USA - 9,953 citations - H-index: 34Ā |Ā 97. John Durham Peters - Yale University, USA - 8,369 citations - H-index: 34Ā |Ā 98. Todd Gitlin - Columbia University, USA - 13,326 citations - H-index: 33Ā |Ā 99. Robin Mansell - London School of Economics and Political Science, UK - 18,261 citations - H-index: 33Ā |Ā 100. Sonia Livingstone - London School of Economics and Political Science, UK - 31,864 citations - H-index: 33Ā |Ā 101. David Morley - Goldsmiths, University of London, UK - 18,669 citations - H-index: 32Ā |Ā 102. Paddy Scannell - University of Michigan, USA - 6,047 citations - H-index: 32Ā |Ā 103. Marwan M. Kraidy - University of Pennsylvania, USA - 6,291 citations - H-index: 31Ā |Ā 104. Lawrence Grossberg - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA - 11,166 citations - H-index: 31Ā |Ā 105. Andrew Chadwick - Loughborough University, UK - 18,545 citations - H-index: 31Ā |Ā 106. Elihu Katz (deceased) - University of Pennsylvania, USA - 38,025 citations - H-index: 31Ā |Ā 107. Deborah L. Jaramillo - Boston University, USA - 2,542 citations - H-index: 30Ā |Ā 108. W. Russell Neuman - New York University, USA - 20,059 citations - H-index: 30Ā |Ā 109. Leah A. Lievrouw - University of California, Los Angeles, USA - 10,491 citations - H-index: 30Ā |Ā 110. Everett Rogers (deceased) - University of New Mexico, USA - 85,247 citations - H-index: 29Ā |Ā 111. James W. Carey (deceased) - Columbia University, USA - 18,032 citations - H-index: 29Ā |Ā 112. Nick Couldry - London School of Economics and Political Science, UK - 19,455 citations - H-index: 29Ā |Ā 113. George Barnett - University of California, Davis, USA - 7,536 citations - H-index: 29Ā |Ā 114. Oscar H. Gandy Jr. - University of Pennsylvania, USA - 9,527 citations - H-index: 28Ā |Ā 115. Klaus Bruhn Jensen - University of Copenhagen, Denmark - 8,983 citations - H-index: 28Ā |Ā 116. Barbie Zelizer - University of Pennsylvania, USA - 17,621 citations - H-index: 28Ā |Ā 117. S. Shyam Sundar - Pennsylvania State University, USA - 22,133 citations - H-index: 27Ā |Ā 118. Susan B. Barnes - University of California, Riverside, USA - 6,572 citations - H-index: 27Ā |Ā 119. Zizi Papacharissi - University of Illinois at Chicago, USA - 18,377 citations - H-index: 27Ā |Ā 120. Manuel Castells - University of Southern California, USA - 166,295 citations - H-index: 26Ā |Ā 121. James Katz - Boston University, USA - 17,168 citations - H-index: 26Ā |Ā 122. John B. Thompson - University of Cambridge, UK - 9,892 citations - H-index: 26Ā |Ā 123. Karin Wahl-Jorgensen - Cardiff University, UK - 5,742 citations - H-index: 26Ā |Ā 124. Steven Livingston - George Washington University, USA - 6,219 citations - H-index: 26

Popular Journals

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Communication Monographs - University of Kansas, USA - Citation: 3,318, h-index: 41Ā |Ā 21. Discourse & Society - Lancaster University, UK - Citation: 3,276, h-index: 37Ā |Ā 22. Journal of International Communication - University of Leeds, UK - Citation: 3,212, h-index: 32Ā |Ā 23. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly - University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA - Citation: 3,157, h-index: 40Ā |Ā 24. Journal of Mass Media Ethics - University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA - Citation: 3,067, h-index: 28Ā |Ā 25. Mobile Media & Communication - Goldsmiths, University of London, UK - Citation: 3,051, h-index: 31Ā |Ā 26. Journal of Information Technology & Politics - New York University, USA - Citation: 2,957, h-index: 29Ā |Ā 27. Journal of Media Psychology - University of California, Santa Barbara, USA - Citation: 2,941, h-index: 28Ā |Ā 28. Television & New MediaĀ |Ā 29. Journal of Communication - University of Southern California, USA - Citation: 22,242, h-index: 100Ā |Ā 30. Communication Research - University of Michigan, USA - Citation: 9,236, h-index: 65Ā |Ā 31. Media, Culture & Society - London School of Economics, UK - Citation: 8,158, h-index: 58Ā |Ā 32. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication - University of California, Santa Barbara, USA - Citation: 7,643, h-index: 70Ā |Ā 33. New Media & Society - University of Sussex, UK - Citation: 7,112, h-index: 58Ā |Ā 34. Journalism - University of Sheffield, UK - Citation: 6,178, h-index: 46Ā |Ā 35. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media - University of Florida, USA - Citation: 5,983, h-index: 58Ā |Ā 36. Journal of Advertising - University of Texas at Austin, USA - Citation: 5,638, h-index: 49Ā |Ā 37. Journal of Public Relations Research - University of Miami, USA - Citation: 5,518, h-index: 45Ā |Ā 38. Human Communication Research - University of Arizona, USA - Citation: 4,940, h-index: 43Ā |Ā 39. Journalism Studies - Cardiff University, UK - Citation: 4,914, h-index: 43Ā |Ā 40. 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Journal of Media Law & Ethics - University of Kentucky, USA - Citation: 2,532, h-index: 24Ā |Ā 75. Mass Communication and Society - Ohio University, USA - Citation: 2,501, h-index: 23Ā |Ā 76. Journal of Children and Media - University of Amsterdam, Netherlands - Citation: 2,492, h-index: 25Ā |Ā 77. Digital Journalism - City, University of London, UK - Citation: 2,468, h-index: 25Ā |Ā 78. Journal of Communication Management - Leeds Beckett University, UK - Citation: 2,428, h-index: 25Ā |Ā 79. Public Relations Review - University of Miami, USA - Citation: 2,408, h-index: 30Ā |Ā 80. Journal of Computer Supported Cooperative Work - University of Michigan, USA - Citation: 2,391, h-index: 34Ā |Ā 81. Communication Quarterly - University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, USA - Citation: 2,380, h-index:Ā |Ā 82. Journal of Communication - University of Southern California, USA - Citation: 27,468, h-index: 133Ā |Ā 83. Communication Research - University of Michigan, USA - Citation: 20,170, h-index: 105Ā |Ā 84. Media, Culture & Society - London School of Economics and Political Science, UK - Citation: 11,112, h-index: 96Ā |Ā 85. New Media & Society - University of Leicester, UK - Citation: 10,522, h-index: 88Ā |Ā 86. Journalism - Cardiff University, UK - Citation: 9,254, h-index: 66Ā |Ā 87. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication - International Communication Association - Citation: 8,245, h-index: 84Ā |Ā 88. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media - University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA - Citation: 7,163, h-index: 63Ā |Ā 89. Journalism Studies - University of Sheffield, UK - Citation: 6,669, h-index: 54Ā |Ā 90. Communication Theory - University of California, Santa Barbara, USA - Citation: 6,420, h-index: 63Ā |Ā 91. Critical Studies in Media Communication - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA - Citation: 6,221, h-index: 58Ā |Ā 92. Political Communication - University of Amsterdam, Netherlands - Citation: 5,596, h-index: 50Ā |Ā 93. Media Psychology - University of California, Santa Barbara, USA - Citation: 5,528, h-index: 55Ā |Ā 94. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly - Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication - Citation: 5,503, h-index: 71Ā |Ā 95. Journal of Advertising - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA - Citation: 5,477, h-index: 52Ā |Ā 96. International Journal of Communication - University of Southern California, USA - Citation: 5,396, h-index: 50Ā |Ā 97. Human Communication Research - University of Arizona, USA - Citation: 5,356, h-index: 55Ā |Ā 98. Journal of Health Communication - University of Pennsylvania, USA - Citation: 5,130, h-index: 56Ā |Ā 99. Information, Communication & Society - University of Leeds, UK - Citation: 4,975, h-index: 59Ā |Ā 100. Journal of Public Relations Research - University of Miami, USA - Citation: 4,931, h-index: 53Ā |Ā 101. Journal of Communication Inquiry - University of Iowa, USA - Citation: 4,734, h-index: 44Ā |Ā 102. Journal of Media Economics - Western Kentucky University, USA - Citation: 4,672, h-index: 46Ā |Ā 103. Journalism & Mass Communication Research - Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication - Citation: 4,666, h-index: 49Ā |Ā 104. Journal of Applied Communication Research - University of Oklahoma, USA - Citation: 4,599, h-index: 48Ā |Ā 105. Health Communication - University of California, Davis, USA - Citation: 4,452, h-index: 46Ā |Ā 106. Journalism Practice - University of the West of Scotland, UK - Citation: 4,293, h-index: 38Ā |Ā 107. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA - Citation: 4,281, h-index: 53Ā |Ā 108. Mass Communication and Society - Ohio University, USA - Citation: 4,203, h-index: 35Ā |Ā 109. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning - University of Nottingham, UK - Citation: 4,138, h-index: 50Ā |Ā 110. Journal of Interactive Marketing - New York University, USA - Citation: 4,119, h-index: 52Ā |Ā 111. Media History - University of Groningen, Netherlands - Citation: 4,108, h-index: 43Ā |Ā 112. Social Media + Society - University of California, Santa Barbara, USA - Citation: 4,086, h-index: 34Ā |Ā 113. International Journal of Advertising - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA - Citation: 4,062, h-index: 44Ā |Ā 114. Journal of Media Psychology: Theories, Methods, and Applications - University of California, Santa Barbara, USA - Citation: 4,051, h-index: 33Ā |Ā 115. Journal of Business Research - Ohio University, USA - Citation: 3,987, h-index: 75Ā |Ā 116. Media International Australia - University of Queensland, Australia - Citation: 3,980, h-index: 29Ā |Ā 117. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking - Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., USA - Citation: 3,959, h-index: 52Ā |Ā 118. Media, War & Conflict - University of Leeds, UK - Citation: 3,939, h-index: 32Ā |Ā 119. Journal of Media and Religion - Northwestern University, USA - Citation: 3,883, h-index: 36Ā |Ā 120. Public Relations Review - Boston University, USA - Citation: 3,844, h-index: 53Ā |Ā 121. Journal of Popular Culture - Bowling Green State University, USA - Citation: 3,831, h-index: 42Ā |Ā 122. Journal of Children and Media - University of Oslo, Norway - Citation: 3,823, h-index: 28Ā |Ā 123. Discourse & Society - Loughborough University, UK - Citation: 3,772, h-index: 46Ā |Ā 124. Journal of Applied Social Psychology - University of Guelph, Canada - Citation: 3,755, h-index: 58Ā |Ā 125. Public Opinion Quarterly - American Association for Public Opinion Research - Citation: 3,753, h-index: 69Ā |Ā 126. Media, Culture, and Education - University of Brighton, UK - Citation: 3,687, h-index: 24Ā |Ā 127. Journal of Children and Media - University of Oslo, Norway - Citation: 3,823, h-index: 28Ā |Ā 128. Journalism Practice - University of the West of Scotland, UK - Citation: 4,293, h-index: 38Ā |Ā 129. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA - Citation: 4,281, h-index: 53Ā |Ā 130. Mass Communication and Society - Ohio University, USA - Citation: 4,203, h-index: 35Ā |Ā 131. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning - University of Nottingham, UK - Citation: 4,138, h-index: 50Ā |Ā 132. Journal of Interactive Marketing - New York University, USA - Citation: 4,119, h-index: 52Ā |Ā 133. Media History - University of Groningen, Netherlands - Citation: 4,108, h-index: 43Ā |Ā 134. Social Media + Society - University of California, Santa Barbara, USA - Citation: 4,086, h-index: 34Ā |Ā 135. International Journal of Advertising - University of Illinois at UrbanaĀ Beebe.

 

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