Publications
Sawadogo, Mahamadou. 2018. The concept of complimenting in light of the Moore language in Burkina Faso. Pragmatics 28 (1) : 139–156.
Lecouteur, Amanda and Rebecca Feo. 2017. Dealing with third-party complaints on a men’s relationship-counselling helpline. Discourse Studies 19 (2) : 131–147.
Dumont, Jenny. 2016. Third Person References. Forms and functions in two spoken genres of Spanish. (Studies in Functional and Structural Linguistics 71). John Benjamins.
Jackson, Clare. 2013. ‘Why do these people’s opinions matter?’ Positioning known referents as unnameable others. Discourse Studies 15 (3) : 299–317.
Barak-Brandes, Sigal. 2011. “I'm Not Influenced by Ads, But Not Everyone's Like Me”: The Third-Person Effect in Israeli Women's Attitude Toward TV Commercials and Their Images. The Communication Review 14 (4) : 300–320.
Hatfield, Hunter and Jee-Won Hahn. 2011. Group face in Korea and the United States: Taking responsibility for the individual and the group. Multilingua 30 (1) : 25–70.
Derouwaux, Sylvie, Adrian Bangerter and Eric Chevalley. 2010. Managing Third-Party Interruptions in Conversations: Effects of Duration and Conversational Role. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 29 (2) : 235–244.
Heinemann, Trine. 2009. Participation and exclusion in third party complaints. Journal of Pragmatics 41 (11) : 2435–2451.
Cornish, Francis. 2007. Indirect pronominal anaphora in English and French: Marginal rarity, or unmarked norm? Some psycholinguistic evidence. In Schwarz-Friesel, Monika, Manfred Consten and Mareile Knees, eds. Anaphors in Text. Cognitive, formal and applied approaches to anaphoric reference. (Studies in Language Companion Series 86). John Benjamins. pp. 21–36.
Rubin, Alan M. and Paul M. Haridakis. 2005. Third-Person Effects in the Aftermath of Terrorism. Mass Communication & Society 8 (1) : 39–59.
Cho, Hyunyi and Miejeong Han. 2004. Perceived effect of the mass media on self vs. other: A cross-cultural investigation of the third person effect hypothesis. Journal of Asian Pacific Communication 14 (2) : 301–320.
Meirick, Patrick C. 2004. Topic-Relevant Reference Groups and Dimensions of Distance: Political Advertising and First- and Third-Person Effects. Communication Research 31 (2) : 234–255.
Myser, Michael, Prabu David and Kaiya Liu. 2004. Methodological Artifact or Persistent Bias?: Testing the Robustness of the Third-Person and Reverse Third-Person Effects for Alcohol Messages. Communication Research 31 (2) : 206–233.
Huh, Jisu, Denise E. Delorme and Leonard N. Reid. 2004. The Third-Person Effect and its Influence on Behavioral Outcomes in a Product Advertising Context:: The Case of Direct-to-Consumer Prescription Drug Advertising. Communication Research 31 (5) : 568–599.
Cohen, Jonathan and Y. Tsfati. 2004. Object-Subject Distance and the Third Person Perception. Media Psychology 6 (4) : 335–361.
Salwen, Michael B. and Michel Dupagne. 2003. News of Y2K and Experiencing Y2K: Exploring the Relationship Between the Third-Person Effect and Optimistic Bias. Media Psychology 5 (1) : 57–82.