ACADEMIC JOURNAL ARTICLES

2024
  • In-jae Ihm, Minsun Shim, Chul-joo Lee, Se-hoon Jeong, & Hyojin Lee (in press). The effects of responsibility frames and headline types in COVID-19 news on policy support: The mediating role of responsibility attribution and emotions. Mass Communication & Society.
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  • Chul-joo Lee, Cabral A. Bigman, Sukyoung Choi, & Xiaoquan Zhao (in press). The role of communication in redressing health disparities: Mobilizing public support and action. Communication Research.
2023
  • David Ewoldsen, Natascha Just, Chul-joo Lee, & Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt (2023). Navigating the seas of inclusivity: A collaborative voyage at the helm of a communication flagship journal. Journal of Communication, 73, 533-538.
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  • Jennifer Ihm, & Chul-joo Lee (2023). Communication networks and individual resilience for individual well-being during a time of crisis. Health Communication, 38, 3178-3192.
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  • Stella Lee, Chul-joo Lee, & Hyunjung Hwang (2023). The role of deliberative cognitive styles in preventing belief in politicized COVID-19 misinformation. Health Communication, 38, 2904-2914.
  • Sang-hwa Oh, Chul-joo Lee, & Sanghoon Park (2023). Trust matters: The effects of social media use on the public’s health policy support through (mis)beliefs in the context of HPV vaccination. Health Communication, 38, 2628-2639.
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  • Soeun Yang, Chul-joo Lee, & Jiyen Beak (2023). Social disparities in online health-related activities and social support: Findings from Health Information National Trends Survey. Health Communication, 38, 1293-1304.
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  • Stella Lee, Chul-joo Lee, & Hyunjung Hwang (2023). The impact of COVID-19 misinformation and trust in institutions on preventive behaviors. Health Education Research, 38, 95-105.
2022
  • Kwanho Kim, Chul-joo Lee, Jennifer Ihm, & Yunjin Kim (2022). A comprehensive examination of association between belief in vaccine misinformation and vaccination intention in the COVID-19 context. Journal of Health Communication, 27, 495-509.

    Suhwoo Ahn, Chul-joo Lee, & Yena Ko (2022). Network social capital and health information acquisition. Patient Education & Counseling, 105, 2923-2933.

    Chul-joo Lee & Macarena Pena-y-Lillo (2022). A communication inequalities approach to disparities in fruit and vegetable consumption: Findings from a national survey with U.S. adults. Patient Education and Counseling, 105, 375-382.

2021
  • YoungJu Shin, Chul-joo Lee, & Kwanho Kim (2021). Communication about suicide, perceived social support, and suicidal intention in Korean adults. Journal of Health Communication, 26, 480-490.

    Kwanho Kim & Chul-joo Lee* (2021). Examining an integrative cognitive model of predicting health app use: Longitudinal observational study. Journal of Medical Internet Research mHealth and uHealth, 9(2):e24539. (*Equal authorship)

    Jennifer Ihm, & Chul-joo Lee (2021). Toward more effective public health interventions during the COVID-19 pandemic: Suggesting audience segmentation based on social and media resources. Health Communication, 36, 90-108.

2020
  • Kwanho Kim, Chul-joo Lee, & Robert C. Hornik (2020). Exploring the effects of health apps on fruit and vegetable consumption. Journal of Health Communication, 25, 283-290.

    Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt & Chul-joo Lee (2020). Speaking across communication subfields. Journal of Communication, 70, 303-309.

    Jiyoung Chae, Chul-joo Lee, & Kyungbo Kim (2020). Prevalence, predictors, and a psychosocial mechanism of cancer information avoidance: Findings from a national survey of U.S. adults. Health Communication, 35, 322-330.

2019
  • Chul-joo Lee, Kwanho Kim, & Bee-ah Kang (2019). A moderated mediation model of the relationship between media, social capital, and cancer knowledge. Health Communication. 34, 577-588. [Lead Paper]

    Jiyoung Chae & Chul-joo Lee (2019). The psychological mechanism underlying communication effects on behavioral intention: Focusing on affect and cognition in the cancer context. Communication Research, 46, 597-618.

    Jae Eun Chung, & Chul-joo Lee (2019). The impact of cancer information online on cancer fatalism: Education and eHealth literacy as moderators. Health Education Research, 34, 543-555. [Lead Paper]

    Macarena Pena-y-Lillo, & Chul-joo Lee (2019). A communication inequalities approach to disparities in physical activity: The case of the VERB campaign. Journal of Health Communication, 24, 111-120.

2018
  • Chul-joo Lee, Rebekah Nagler, & Ningxin Wang (2018). Source-specific exposure to contradictory nutrition information: Documenting prevalence and effects on adverse cognitive and behavioral outcomes. Health Communication, 33, 453-461.
2017
  • Andy Tan, Chul-joo Lee, Rebekah Nagler, & Cabral Bigman (2017). To vape or not to vape? Effects of exposure to conflicting news headlines on beliefs about harms and benefits of electronic cigarette use: Results from a randomized controlled experiment. Preventive Medicine, 105, 97-103.
2016
  • Chul-joo Lee & Dongyoung Sohn (2016). Mapping the social capital research in communication: A bibliometric analysis. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 93(4), 728-749. [Lead Paper]

    Chul-joo Lee & Jiyoung Chae (2016). An initial look at the associations of a variety of health-related online activities with cancer fatalism. Health Communication, 31(11), 1375-1384.

    Chul-joo Lee, Xiaoquan Zhao, & Macarena Pena-y-Lillo (2016). Theorizing the pathways from seeking and scanning to mammography screening. Health Communication, 31(1), 117-128.

    Andy Tan, Chul-joo Lee, & Cabral Bigman (2016). Comparison of beliefs about e-cigarettes’ harms and benefits among never users and ever users of e-cigarettes. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 158(1), 67-75.

    Jiyoung Chae, Chul-joo Lee, & Jakob Jensen (2016). Correlates of cancer information overload: Focusing on individual ability and motivation. Health Communication, 31(5), 626-634.

2015
  • Chul-joo Lee & Jennifer Kam (2015). Why does social capital matter in health communication campaigns? Communication Research, 42(4), 459-481. [Lead Paper]

    Andy Tan, Chul-joo Lee, & Jiyoung Chae (2015). Exposure to health (mis)information: Lagged effects on young adults’ health behaviors and potential pathways. Journal of Communication, 65(4), 674-698.

    Andy Tan, Chul-joo Lee, & Cabral Bigman (2015). Public support for selected e-cigarette regulations and associations with overall information exposure and contradictory information exposure about e-cigarettes: Findings from a national survey of U.S. adults. Preventive Medicine, 81, 268-274.

2014
  • Chul-joo Lee (2014). The role of social capital in health communication campaigns: The case of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign. Communication Research, 41(2), 208-235.

    Chul-joo Lee, Marilee Long, Michael D. Slater, & Wen Song (2014). Comparing local TV news with national TV news in cancer coverage. Journal of Health Communication, 19(12), 1330-1342. [Lead Paper]

2013
  • Chul-joo Lee & Daniel Kim (2013). A comparative analysis of the validity of U.S. state- and county-level social capital measures and their associations with population health. Social Indicators Research, 111(1), 307-326. 

    Jennifer Kam & Chul-joo Lee (2013). Examining the effects of mass media campaign exposure and interpersonal discussions on youth’s drug use: The mediating role of visiting pro-drug websites. Health Communication, 28(5), 473-485.

    Electra D. Paskett, Adana, A. Llanos, Gregory S. Young, Michael L. Pennell, Chul-joo Lee, & Mira L. Katz (2013). Correlates of colorectal cancer screening among residents of Ohio Appalachia. Journal of Community Health, 38(4), 609-618.

    Susana A. Ramírez, Derek Freres, Lourdes Martinez, Nehama Lewis-Persky, Angel Bourgoin, Bridget Kelly, Chul-joo Lee, Rebekah Nagler, J. Sanford Schwartz, & Robert C. Hornik (2013). Information seeking from media and family/friends increases the likelihood of engaging in healthy lifestyle behaviors. Journal of Health Communication, 18(5), 527-542.

2012
  • Chul-joo Lee, Jeff Niederdeppe, & Derek Freres (2012). Socioeconomic disparities in fatalistic beliefs about cancer prevention and the Internet. Journal of Communication, 62(6), 972-990. 

    Chul-joo Lee, Susana A. Ramírez, Nehama Lewis, Stacy W. Gray, & Robert C. Hornik (2012). Looking beyond the Internet: Examining socioeconomic inequalities in cancer information seeking among cancer patients. Health Communication, 27(8), 806-817.
2011
  • Chul-joo Lee & Jeff Niederdeppe (2011). Genre-specific cultivation effects: Lagged associations between overall TV viewing, local TV news viewing, and fatalistic beliefs about cancer prevention. Communication Research, 38(6), 731-753. [Lead Paper]

    Jean Brechman, Chul-joo Lee, & Joseph N. Cappella (2011). Distorting genetic research about cancer: From bench science to press release to published news. Journal of Communication, 61(3), 496-513.

    Keith N. Hampton, Chul-joo Lee, & Eun Ja Her (2011). How new media affords network diversity: Direct and mediated access to social capital through participation in local social settings. New Media & Society, 13(7), 1031-1049. [Lead Paper]
2010
  • Chul-joo Lee, Stacy W. Gray, & Nehama Lewis (2010). Internet use leads cancer patients to be active health care consumers. Patient Education and Counseling, 81(Supp.1), 63-69. 
2009
  • Chul-joo Lee (2009). The role of Internet engagement in the health-knowledge gap. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 53(3), 365-382. 

    Chul-joo Lee (2009). The interplay between media use and interpersonal communication in the context of healthy lifestyle behaviors: Reinforcing or substituting? Mass Communication and Society, 13(1), 48-66.

    Chul-joo Lee & Robert C. Hornik (2009). Physician trust moderates the Internet use and physician visits relationship. Journal of Health Communication, 14(1), 70-76.

    Jean Brechman, Chul-joo Lee, & Joseph N. Cappella (2009). Lost in translation? A comparison of cancer-genetics reporting in the press release and its subsequent coverage in lay press. Science Communication, 30(4), 475-505.
2008
  • Chul-joo Lee (2008). Does the Internet displace health professionals? Journal of Health Communication, 13(5), 450-464.

    Chul-joo Lee, Robert C. Hornik, & Michael Hennessy (2008). The reliability and stability of general media exposure measures. Communication Methods and Measures, 2(1&2), 6-22. [Lead Paper]

    Anne Katrin Arnold, Cabral Bigman, Jean Brechman, Jessica Fishman, Chul-joo Lee, Nehama Lewis, Lourdes Martinez, Nicole Verrochi, Deborah Wainwright, & Martin Fishbein* (2008). Linking measures of media exposure to sexual cognition and behaviors: A review. Communication Methods and Measures, 2(1&2), 23-42.

    *The authors equally contributed to the paper.

2006
  • Chul-joo Lee & Dietram A. Scheufele (2006). The influence of knowledge and deference toward scientific authority: A media effects model for public attitudes toward nanotechnology. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 83(4), 819-834.
2005
  • Chul-joo Lee, Dietram A. Scheufele, & Bruce Lewenstein (2005). Public attitudes toward emerging technologies: Examining the interactive effects of cognitions and affect on public’s attitude toward nanotechnology. Science Communication, 27(2), 240-267. 

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