Cited by
1. Health Risk Communication During COVID-19 Emergency in Italy: The Impact of Medical Experts’ Debate on Twitter
2. Is it time to get over the X? Assessing the global impact and future of social media conferences in animal behaviour
3. Who Are the Science Audiences? A Typology Study on Digital Scientific Audiences: Persona, Performance, and Public
4. Controlled experiment finds no detectable citation bump from Twitter promotion
5. Faites de votre article un influenceur numérique
6. Space Weather in the Popular Media, and the Opportunities the Upcoming Solar Maximum Brings
7. Science communication on Twitter: Measuring indicators of engagement and their links to user interaction in communication scholars’ Tweet content
8. Relating popularity on Twitter and Linkedin to bibliometric indicators of visibility and interconnectedness: an analysis of 8512 applied researchers in Germany
9. The #Scicomm Phenomenon: Using and Analysing Big Data to Track Science Communication on Czech Research Institutional Websites
10. CIENTISTAS DA INFORMAÇÃO NO TWITTER
11. Science communication in experimental biology: experiences and recommendations
12. Post or perish? Social media strategies for disseminating orthopedic research
13. Twitter trends in #Parasitology determined by text mining and topic modelling
14. Neurofeedback on twitter: Evaluation of the scientific credibility and communication about the technique
15. Turning your paper into a digital influencer
16. Could the altmetrics wave bring a flood of confusion for anatomists?
17. Forms and functions of intertextuality in academic tweets composed by research groups
18. Birds of feather flock together: A longitudinal study of a social media outreach effort
19. Multimodal practices of research groups in Twitter: An analysis of stance and engagement
20. Scientists as Influencers: The Role of Source Identity, Self-Disclosure, and Anti-Intellectualism in Science Communication on Social Media
21. Universidades y redes sociales: De la divulgación científica a la autopromoción
22. ¿Tiene género la divulgación científica?
23. Understanding researchers’ Twitter uptake, activity and popularity—an analysis of applied research in Germany
24. Wissenschaftskommunikation und -PR im digitalen Zeitalter – Möglichkeiten sozialer Netzwerke für Forschende
25. Strategies for improving the communication of satellite-derived InSAR data for geohazards through the analysis of Twitter and online data portals
26. Editing the Final Draft
27. Characterizing Precision Nutrition Discourse on Twitter: Quantitative Content Analysis
28. Shaping Policy and Practice: Analyzing the Reach of Highly Cited and High Altmetrics Publications for Broader Impact on Physical Activity
29. Using Twitter for Public Dissemination and Engagement with Science: Metadiscourse on the Twitter Accounts of Scientific Organisations
30. Behind the lab coat: How scientists’ self-disclosure on Twitter influences source perceptions, tweet engagement, and scientific attitudes through social presence
31. An HCI Research Agenda for Online Science Communication
32. Ecosystem Services: A Social and Semantic Network Analysis of Public Opinion on Twitter
33. Social Media in Transplantation: An Opportunity for Outreach, Research Promotion, and Enhancing Workforce Diversity
34. Institutionalizing public engagement in research and innovation: Toward the construction of institutional entrepreneurial collectives
35. Effect of charismatic signaling in social media settings: Evidence from TED and Twitter
36. Engagement patterns with female and male scientists on Facebook
37. It's Beginning to Look a Lot like
#25DaysofFishmas
: Communicating Freshwater Biodiversity Using Social Media
38. The (R)evolution of Social Media in Oncology: Engage, Enlighten, and Encourage
39. Who tweets climate change papers? investigating publics of research through users’ descriptions
40. Social TV and the WWE: Exploring the fan-to-brand relationship in a highly engaged, live-viewing, interactive online space
41. Identifying widely disseminated scientific papers on social media
42. An inclusive venue to discuss behavioural biology research: the first global Animal Behaviour Twitter Conference
43. Introducing the EMPIRE Index: A novel, value-based metric framework to measure the impact of medical publications
44. ‘Give the Money Where it’s Due’: The Impact of Knowledge-Sharing via Social Media on the Reproduction of the Academic Labourer
45. Social Media Interaction as Informal Science Learning: a Comparison of Message Design in Two Niches
46. Make Your Science Go Viral: How to Maximize the Impact of Your Research
47. Social Paleontology on Twitter: A Case Study of Topic Archetypes, Network Composition, and Structure
48. Use of the Hashtag #DataSavesLives on Twitter: Exploratory and Thematic Analysis
49. Socially Responsible Consumption and Marketing in Practice
50. Exploring TikTok as a promising platform for geoscience communication
51. Retrospectively evidencing research impact using online data mining
52. Get More Eyes on Your Work: Visual Approaches for Dissemination and Translation of Education Research
53. Fewer and Later: Women as Experts in TED Talks about COVID-19
54. Goodbye to “Rough Fish”: Paradigm Shift in the Conservation of Native Fishes
55. Credibility of scientific information on social media: Variation by platform, genre and presence of formal credibility cues
56. Poetry as a Tool For Outreach in Quaternary Science: Examples From the 20th INQUA Congress
57. Themes, communities and influencers of online probiotics chatter: A retrospective analysis from 2009-2017
58. Chapter 4. Understanding academics online
59. Twitter conferences as a low‐carbon, far‐reaching and inclusive way of communicating research in ornithology and ecology
60. On the Coercive Nature of Research Impact Metrics: The Case Study of Altmetrics and Science Communication
61. Social media for clinical neurophysiology
62. Delivering eye health education to deprived communities in India through a social media‐based innovation
63. How to get your feet wet in public engagement: Perspectives from freshwater scientists
64. Innovation via social media – The importance of Twitter to science
65. March Mammal Madness and the power of narrative in science outreach
66. Self-promotion and the need to be first in science
67. A Social Media Campaign (#datasaveslives) to Promote the Benefits of Using Health Data for Research Purposes: Mixed Methods Analysis
68. Editorial: Geoscience communication – planning to make it publishable
70. Going rogue: what scientists can learn about Twitter communication from “alt” government accounts
71. Where are all the anthelmintics? Challenges and opportunities on the path to new anthelmintics
72. Five Organizational Features That Enable Successful Interdisciplinary Marine Research
73. Using interpersonal communication strategies to encourage science conversations on social media
74. The impact of preprints in Library and Information Science: an analysis of citations, usage and social attention indicators
75. Public Scholarship and CSCW
76. Social Media: A New Tool for Scientific Engagement
77. Quantifying and contextualizing the impact of bioRxiv preprints through automated social media audience segmentation
78. Expert communication on Twitter: Comparing economists and scientists’ social networks, topics and communicative styles
79. What the hashtag? Using twitter and podcasting to extend your scientific reach
80. Broadcasting Ourselves: Opportunities for Researchers to Share Their Work Through Online Video
81. Five Lessons from COVID-19 for Advancing Climate Change Mitigation
82. “People are reading your work,” scholarly identity and social networking sites
83. Who is Not Afraid of Richard Dawkins? Using Google Trends to Assess the Reach of Influential Atheists across Canadian Secular Groups
84. Altmetrics analysis of Archivos de Bronconeumología from 2014 to 2018
85. Análisis de las métricas alternativas de Archivos de Bronconeumología durante el periodo 2014-2018
86. Disseminating Research News in HCI
87. Using social media to promote academic research: Identifying the benefits of twitter for sharing academic work
88. #SoMe4Surgery: from inception to impact
89. Please, Don’t Kill It with Fire: An Exploration of Entomological Science Communication
90. Does really no one care? Analyzing the public engagement of communication scientists on Twitter
91. A Comparison of the Citing, Publishing, and Tweeting Activity of Scholars on Web of Science
92. How scientists and physicians use Twitter during a medical congress
93. Improving Climate-Change Literacy and Science Communication Through Smart Device Apps
94. Adoption of social media for scientific communication by PhD students
95. Social media to engage, communicate and interact
96. Of scientists and tweets
97. Geoscience analysis on Twitter
98. The reward and risk of social media for academics
99. Challenges and opportunities for biogeography—What can we still learn from von Humboldt?
100. Scientific Twitter: The flow of paleontological communication across a topic network
101. Measuring the Impact of Research Using Conventional and Alternative Metrics
102. Stepping Out of the Ivory Tower for Ocean Literacy
103. Getting to Know Science Tweeters: A Pilot Analysis of South African Twitter Users Tweeting about Research Articles
104. The Psychology of Connectivity: Follower Counts and Identity
105. Developing a social media strategy for R&D in energy efficiency – a case study in progress
106. Inter-disciplinary, multi-scale science to support society to adapt under global change
107. Science podcasts: analysis of global production and output from 2004 to 2018
108. Taking a Breath of the Wild: are geoscientists more effective than non-geoscientists in determining whether video game world landscapes are realistic?
109. Likes, comments, and shares of marine organism imagery on Facebook
110. Using Art To Communicate Chemistry
111. Public engagement opportunities for the indoor air community
112. Enhancing Climate Change Research With Open Science
113. Geoscientists online
114. Building and Sustaining Diverse Functioning Networks Using Social Media and Digital Platforms to Improve Diversity and Inclusivity
115. In the Search of Quality Influence on a Small Scale – Micro-influencers Discovery