Publications
Kevoe-Feldman, Heidi. 2016. “Why Are You Concerned?” A Consideration of Turn Distance and the Organization of the Interrogative Series in “Wellness Check” Calls to a University Police Department. Discourse Processes 53 (7) : 556–580.
Xie, Wenjing and John E. Newhagen. 2014. The Effects of Communication Interface Proximity on User Anxiety for Crime Alerts Received on Desktop, Laptop, and Hand-Held Devices. Communication Research 41 (3) : 375–403.
Oommen, Deepa. 2013. The Relationship between Mental Distress, Assessed in Terms of Anxiety and Depression, and Conflict Management in the Context of Cultural Adaptation. Journal of Intercultural Communication Research 42 (2) : 91–111.
Thompson, Amy S. and Junkyu Lee. 2013. Anxiety and EFL: does multilingualism matter? International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism 16 (6) : 730–749.
Torn, Alison. 2011. Chronotopes of madness and recovery: A challenge to narrative linearity. Narrative Inquiry 21 (1) : 130–150.
Zinken, Jörg, Caroline Blakemore and Katarzyna Zinken. 2011. Narrating psychological distress: Associations between cross-clausal integration and mental health difficulties. Applied Psycholinguistics 32 (2) : 263–274.
Booth-Butterfield, Melanie, Alan K. Goodboy, Katie Neary Dunleavy, Robert J. Sidelinger and Sara Banfield. 2009. Repairing Hurtful Messages in Marital Relationships. Communication Quarterly 57 (1) : 67–84.
Smith, Veronica J. and Tracie L. Stewart. 2008. Implicit Coping Responses to Racism Predict African Americans' Level of Psychological Distress. Basic and Applied Social Psychology 30 (3) : 264–277.
Lempert, Michael P. 2007. Conspicuously past: Distressed discourse and diagrammatic embedding in a Tibetan represented speech style. Language & Communication 27 (3) : 258–271.
Goodenough, Belinda and Jennifer Ford. 2005. Self-reported use of humor by hospitalized pre-adolescent children to cope with pain-related distress from a medical intervention. Humor 18 (3) : 279–298.
Minnebo, Jurgen. 2005. Psychological distress, perceived social support, and television viewing for reasons of companionship: A test of the compensation hypothesis in a population of crime victims. Communications 30 (2) : 233–250.
Kinney, Terry A. 2003. Themes And Perceptions Of Written Sexually Harassing Messages And Their Link To Distress. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 22 (1) : 8–28.