Article Title,Year,Volume,Issue,Page Range,Author Social identities and risk: expert and lay imaginations on pesticide use,2008,17,2,189-209,Blok Manufacturing doubt: journalists' roles and the construction of ignorance in a scientific controversy,2009,18,1,23-42,Stocking Media scientific journals and science communication: examining the construction of scientific controversies,2009,18,3,258-274,Brossard Believing in both genetic determinism and behavioral action: a materialist framework and implications,2009,18,6,730-746,Condit The Korean press and Hwang’s fraud,2009,18,6,653-669,Park Modest witnessing and managing the boundaries between science and the media: A case study of breakthrough and scandal,2009,18,6,634-652,Haran Negotiating uncertainty: asteroids risk and the media,2010,19,1,16-33,Mellor Marginal voices in the media coverage of controversial health interventions: how do they contribute to the public understanding of science?,2010,19,1,34-51,Hivon Scientists are talking but mostly to each other: a quantitative analysis of research represented in mass media,2010,19,1,115-125,Suleski The Mach-Planck debate revisited: democratization of science or elite knowledge?,2010,19,3,293-310,Siemsen Stereotypes about scientists over time among US adults: 1983 and 2001,2010,19,3,372-382,Losh Extending the reach of research as a public good: Moving beyond the paradox of "zero-sum language games",2011,20,1,101-116,Provençal Exploring new web-based tools to identify public interest in science,2011,20,1,130-143,Baram-Tsabari Lay Experts and the Politics of Breast Implants,2003,12,4,403-421,Kent Popular press and forensic genetics in Portugal: Expectations and disappointments regarding two cases of missing children,2011,20,3,303-318,Machado Climate change flooding and the media in Britain,2011,20,3,422-438,Gavin Survival of occult practices and ideas in modern common sense,2011,20,3,292-302,Doering-Manteuffel Newspaper reporting of hazards in the UK and Sweden,2000,9,1,59-78,Sjoberg In backyards on front lawns: examining informal risk communication and communicators,2011,20,5,642-657,Rickard Organ economy: organ trafficking in Moldova and Israel,2012,21,2,226-241,Lundin The rules of engagement: Power and interaction in dialogue events,2013,22,1,65-79,Davies Risk assessment as rhetorical practice: The ironic mathematics behind terrorism banking and public policy,2013,22,2,236-251,Danisch Causal or spurious? The relationship of knowledge and attitudes to trust in science and technology,2013,22,5,624-641,Roberts It will be a disaster! How people protest against things which have not yet happened,2014,24,2,210-224,Quet Whatever happened to the 'mad bad' scientist? Overturning the stereotype,2014,25,1,31-44,Haynes Public understanding of cyclone warning in India: can wind be predicted?,2014,24,8,970-987,Dash Evaluating elements of trust: race and class in risk communication in post-Katrina New Orleans,2015,25,4,480-489,Battistoli The effects of social identity threat and social identity affirmation on laypersons' perception of scientists,2016,26,7,754-770,Rothmund The framing of two major flood episodes in the Irish print news media: implications for societal adaptation to living with flood risk,2016,26,7,872-888,Devitt Hot topics in science communication: aggressive language decreases trustworthiness and credibility in scientific debates,2019,28,4,401-416,König The ideological divide in public perceptions of self-driving cars,2020,29,4,436-451,Peng No harm in being self-corrective: self-criticism and reform intentions increase researchers' epistemic trustworthiness and credibility in the eyes of the public,2021,ePub,ePub,ePub,Gollwitzer Examining a conceptual framework of aggressive and humorous styles in science YouTube videos about climate change and vaccination,2022,ePub,ePub,ePub,Yuan