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Kaye, B. K., & B. S. Sapolsky
(2007). Taboo or Not Taboo? That is the Question: Offensive Language on Prime Time Broadcast and Cable Programming..
University of Tennessee College of Communication and Information 29th Annual Research Symposium.
Kaye, B. K.
(2007). Blog Use Motivations: An Exploratory Study.
(Tremayne M., Ed.).Blogging, Citizenship, and the Future of Media. 27-148.
Johnson, T. J., B. K. Kaye, S. L. Bichard, & J. Wong
(2007). Every Blog has its Day: Politically Interested Internet Users’ Perceptions of Blog Credibility..
International Communication Association annual conference.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2007). Blog Readers: Predictors of Reliance on Warblogs.
(Tremayne M., Ed.).Blogging, Citizenship, and the Future of Media. 165-184.
Johnson, T. J., B. K. Kaye, S. L. Bichard, & J. Wong
(2007). Every Blog has its Day: Politically Interested Internet Users’ Perceptions of Blog Credibility.
International Communication Association.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2007). It’s All Greek to Me: Deciphering Credibility of Components of the Internet Among Politically Interested Internet Users.
the International Conference on Media.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2007). The Blogosphere: Can it become a Habermasian Public Sphere?.
International Association of Mass Communication Research.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2007). Choosing is Believing? How Web Gratifications and Reliance Affect Internet Credibility Among Politically Interested Users.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2007). Still Cruising and Believing? An Analysis of Online Credibility over Three Presidential Campaigns.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2007). It's All Greek to Me: Deciphering Credibility of Components of the Internet Among Politically Interested Internet Users.
International Conference on Media.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2006). Blog Day Afternoon: Are Blogs Stealing the Audience Away from Traditional Media Sources?.
(BerengerR D., Ed.).CyberMedia Go To War. 315-334.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2006). The Age of Reasons: Motives for Using Different Components of the Internet for Political Information.
(WilliamsA P., TedescoJ C., Ed.).The Internet Election: Perspectives on the Role of the Web in Campaign 2004. 147-167.
Johnson, T. J., B. K. Kaye, & D. Kim
(2006). Creating a Web of Trust and Change: Testing the Gamson Hypothesis on Politically Interested Internet Users..
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication annual conference.
Sapolsky, B. S., & B. K. Kaye
(2005). The Use of Offensive Language by Males and Females in Prime Time Television Entertainment.
Atlantic Journal of Communication. 23, 292-303.
Kaye, B. K., & B. S. Sapolsky
(2005). Talking a Blue Streak: Context of Offensive Language in Prime Time Network Television Programs.
Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly. 81, 911-927.
Kaye, B. K.
(2005). Web Site Story: An Exploratory Study of Why Weblog Users Say They Use Weblogs..
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication annual conference.
Kaye, B. K.
(2005). It’s a Blog, Blog, Blog, Blog World: Users and Uses of Weblogs.
Atlantic Journal of Communication. 13, 73-95.
Veltri, F. R., J. J. Miller, & B. K. Kaye
(2004). Consumer Perceptions of Value of Athletic Merchandise and Apparel on the Internet: Do Traditional Retailers have Anything to Fear?.
Sport Marketing Association annual convention.
Kaye, B. K., & B. S. Sapolsky
(2004). Watch Your Mouth! An Analysis of Profanity Uttered by Children on Prime Time Television.
Mass Communication and Society. 7, 429-452.
Kaye, B. K., & B. S. Sapolsky
(2004). Offensive Language in Prime Time Television: Four Years after Television Age and Content Ratings.
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 48, 554-569.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2004). A Web for All Reasons: Uses and Gratifications of Internet Resources for Political Information.
Telematics and Informatics. 21, 197-223.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2004). Weblogs as a Source of Information about the War on Iraq.
(BerengerR D., Ed.).Global Media Go To War. 293-303.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2004). Wag the Blog: How Reliance on Traditional Media and the Internet Influence Perceptions of Credibility of Weblogs among Blog Users.
Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly. 81, 622-642.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2004). How Motives for Going Online For Sports Information are Linked to Internet Activities.
Midwest Association for Public Opinion Research annual convention.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2004). For Whom the Web Toils: How Internet Experience Predicts Web Reliance and Credibility.
Atlantic Journal of Communication. 12, 19-45.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2004). Blogs of War: Reliance on Weblogs for Information about the Iraqi War.
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication annual conference.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2004). Blog Day Afternoon: Are Blogs Stealing the Audience Away from Traditional Media Sources?.
Global Fusion annual convention.
Kranenburg, K., T. J. Johnson, & B. K. Kaye
(2003). Nothing but Net: A Survey of Online Buying Among Sports Enthusiasts.
Midwest Association for Public Opinion Research annual convention.
Kaye, B. K., & B. S. Sapolsky
(2003). Watch You Mouth! An Analysis of Profanity Uttered by Children on Prime Time Television.
National Communication Association annual convention.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2003). Blog Day Afternoon: Weblogs as a Source of Information about the War on Iraq..
Global Fusion annual convention.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2003). Wag the Blog: How Reliance on Traditional Media and the Internet Influence Perceptions of Weblogs Among Blog Users.
Midwest Association for Public Opinion Research annual convention.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2003). From Here to Obscurity: The Internet and Media Substitution Theory.
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 54, 260-273.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2003). The World Wide Web of Sports: A Path Model Examining How Online Gratifications and Reliance Predict Credibility of Online Sports Information.
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication annual conference.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2003). Boost or Bust for Democracy: How the Internet Influences Political Attitudes and Behaviors.
Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics. 8, 9-34.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2003). Around the World Wide Web in 80 Ways: How Motives for Going Online are Linked to Internet Activities Among Politically Interested Internet Users.
Social Science Computer Review. 21, 304-325.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2002). Gone with the Web: Media Substitution Theory and Traditional Media in an Online World.
Broadcast Education Association annual conference.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2002). Around the World Wide Web in 80 Ways: How Motives for Going Online are Linked to Internet Activities Among Politically Interested Internet Users.
Midwest Association for Public Opinion Research annual convention.
Kaye, B. K., & T. J. Johnson
(2002). Online and In the Know: Uses and Gratifications of the Web for Political Information.
Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media. 46, 54-71.
Johnson, T. J., & B. K. Kaye
(2002). Webelievabilty: A Path Model Examining How Convenience and Reliance on the Web Predict Online Credibility.
Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly. 79, 619-642.

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