Agenda setting and international news: Media influence on public perceptions of foreign nations W Wanta, G Golan, C Lee Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 81 (2), 364-377, 2004 | 1130 | 2004 |
Inter-media agenda setting and global news coverage: Assessing the influence of the New York Times on three network television evening news programs G Golan Journalism studies 7 (2), 323-333, 2006 | 628 | 2006 |
From subservient chickens to brawny men: A comparison of viral advertising to television advertising P Lance, G Guy J Journal of interactive advertising 6 (2), 4-33, 2006 | 614 | 2006 |
Second-level agenda setting in the New Hampshire primary: A comparison of coverage in three newspapers and public perceptions of candidates G Golan, W Wanta Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 78 (2), 247-259, 2001 | 486 | 2001 |
Creative strategies in viral advertising: An application of Taylor’s six-segment message strategy wheel GJ Golan, L Zaidner Journal of computer-mediated communication 13 (4), 959-972, 2008 | 393 | 2008 |
Intermedia agenda setting in television, advertising, and blogs during the 2004 election KD Sweetser, GJ Golan, W Wanta Mass Communication & Society 11 (2), 197-216, 2008 | 337 | 2008 |
Where in the world is Africa? Predicting coverage of Africa by US television networks GJ Golan International Communication Gazette 70 (1), 41-57, 2008 | 228 | 2008 |
An integrated approach to public diplomacy GJ Golan American Behavioral Scientist 57 (9), 1251-1255, 2013 | 183 | 2013 |
International elections on US network news: An examination of factors affecting newsworthiness G Golan, W Wanta Gazette (Leiden, Netherlands) 65 (1), 25-39, 2003 | 167 | 2003 |
A social networks approach to public relations on Twitter: Social mediators and mediated public relations I Himelboim, GJ Golan, BB Moon, RJ Suto Journal of Public Relations Research 26 (4), 359-379, 2014 | 159 | 2014 |
Social media activism in response to the influence of political parody videos on YouTube JS Lim, GJ Golan Communication Research 38 (5), 710-727, 2011 | 147 | 2011 |
The first-person effect and its behavioral consequences: A new trend in the twenty-five year history of third-person effect research GJ Golan, AG Day Mass Communication and Society 11 (4), 539-556, 2008 | 144 | 2008 |
Native advertising and the future of mass communication BW Wojdynski, GJ Golan American Behavioral Scientist 60 (12), 1403-1407, 2016 | 140 | 2016 |
Native advertising as a new public relations tactic KD Sweetser, SJ Ahn, GJ Golan, A Hochman American behavioral scientist 60 (12), 1442-1457, 2016 | 127 | 2016 |
Source and content diversity in Op-Ed Pages: assessing editorial strategies in The New York Times and the Washington Post AG Day, G Golan Journalism Studies 6 (1), 61-71, 2005 | 124 | 2005 |
Likelihood to vote, candidate choice, and the third-person effect: Behavioral implications of political advertising in the 2004 presidential election GJ Golan, SA Banning, L Lundy American Behavioral Scientist 52 (2), 278-290, 2008 | 107 | 2008 |
A social networks approach to viral advertising: The role of primary, contextual, and low influencers I Himelboim, GJ Golan Social Media+ Society 5 (3), 2056305119847516, 2019 | 97 | 2019 |
Mediated public diplomacy redefined: Foreign stakeholder engagement via paid, earned, shared, and owned media GJ Golan, I Manor, P Arceneaux American Behavioral Scientist 63 (12), 1665-1683, 2019 | 90 | 2019 |
New perspectives on media credibility research GJ Golan American behavioral scientist 54 (1), 3-7, 2010 | 89 | 2010 |
The second-level agenda-building function of the Xinhua news agency: Examining the role of government-sponsored news in mediated public diplomacy Z Cheng, GJ Golan, S Kiousis Journalism practice 10 (6), 744-762, 2016 | 88 | 2016 |