ABSTRACT

The Sourcebook for Political Communication Research will offer scholars, students, researchers, and other interested readers a comprehensive source for state-of-the-art/field research methods, measures, and analytical techniques in the field of political communication.

The need for this Sourcebook stems from recent innovations in political communication involving the use of advanced statistical techniques, innovative conceptual frameworks, the rise of digital media as both a means by which to disseminate and study political communication, and methods recently adapted from other disciplines, particularly psychology, sociology, and neuroscience. Chapters will have a social-scientific orientation and will explain new methodologies and measures applicable to questions regarding media, politics, and civic life. The Sourcebook covers the major analytical techniques used in political communication research, including surveys (both original data collections and secondary analyses), experiments, content analysis, discourse analysis (focus groups and textual analysis), network and deliberation analysis, comparative study designs, statistical analysis, and measurement issues. 

part |16 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|14 pages

Advancing Methods and Measurement

Supporting Theory and Keeping Pace with the Modern Political Communication Environment

part I|61 pages

Survey Methodology

chapter 3|21 pages

The Rolling Cross-Section

Design and Utility for Political Research

chapter 4|23 pages

Political Communication Survey Research

Challenges, Trends, and Opportunities

part III|80 pages

Experimental Methods

chapter 8|20 pages

Experimental Designs for Political Communication Research

Using New Technology and Online Participant Pools to Overcome the Problem of Generalizability

chapter 10|29 pages

The Face as a Focus of Political Communication

Evolutionary Perspectives and the Ethological Method

part IV|73 pages

Content Analysis

chapter 12|29 pages

Image Bite Analysis of Political Visuals

Understanding the Visual Framing Process in Election News

part V|40 pages

Discourse Analysis

part VI|44 pages

Network and Deliberation Analysis

chapter 18|19 pages

Porous Networks and Overlapping Contexts

Methodological Challenges in the Study of Social Communication and Political behavior

part II|52 pages

Comparative Political Communication

chapter 19|16 pages

Mediatization of Politics

Toward a Conceptual Framework for Comparative Research

chapter 21|22 pages

Political Communication across the World

Methodological Issues Involved in International Comparisons

part IX|58 pages

Measurement

chapter 25|20 pages

Concept Explication in the Internet Age

The Case of Political Interactivity

chapter 26|20 pages

Beyond Self-Report

Using Latency to Respond to Model the Question Answering Process on Web-Based Public Opinion Surveys

chapter 27|16 pages

What the Body Can Tell Us About Politics

The Use of Psychophysiological Measures in Political Communication Research

part |29 pages

Conclusion

chapter 28|27 pages

Looking Back and Looking Forward

Observations on the Role of Research Methods in the Rapidly Evolving Field of Political Communication