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Bree McEwan

Researcher at DePaul University

Publications -  35
Citations -  943

Bree McEwan is an academic researcher from DePaul University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social media & Friendship. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 30 publications receiving 745 citations. Previous affiliations of Bree McEwan include Western Illinois University & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

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Distinguishing technologies for social interaction: The perceived social affordances of communication channels scale

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a measure to assess participants' perceptions of these affordances, including accessibility, bandwidth, social presence, privacy, network association, personalization, persistence, editability, conversation control, and anonymity.
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An Agenda for Open Science in Communication

Tobias Dienlin, +38 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose an agenda for adopting open science practices in communication, which includes the following seven suggestions: (1) publish materials, data, and code; (2) preregister studies and submit registered reports; (3) conduct replications; (4) collaborate; (5) foster open science skills; (6) implement Transparency and Openness Promotion Guidelines; and (7) incentivize open science practice.
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Sharing, caring, and surveilling: an actor-partner interdependence model examination of Facebook relational maintenance strategies.

TL;DR: An Actor-Partner Interdependence Model was utilized to examine how Facebook maintenance and surveillance affect friendship quality and found significant positive actor effects emerged for caring and surveillance.
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On Replication in Communication Science

TL;DR: The importance of replications for communication science is outlined and a framework for this special issue on replications is provided, calling for communication scholars to consider future projects and structural changes that would incentivize future replication studies.
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Attachment and Relational Satisfaction: The Mediating Effect of Emotional Communication

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated associations among one partner's relational satisfaction and the other partner's style of attachment and emotional communication and found that participants reported more relational satisfaction when their partners scored high in security and low in dismissiveness and preoccupation.