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Jeffrey T. Child

Researcher at Kent State University

Publications -  53
Citations -  1253

Jeffrey T. Child is an academic researcher from Kent State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public speaking & Interpersonal communication. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 53 publications receiving 1110 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey T. Child include North Dakota State University & University of Dayton.

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Journal IssueDOI

Blogging, communication, and privacy management: Development of the Blogging Privacy Management Measure

TL;DR: The Blogging Privacy Management Measure (BPMM) is a multidimensional, valid, and reliable construct and could explore the influence of family values about privacy on blogging privacy rule management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Blogging privacy rule orientations, privacy management, and content deletion practices: The variability of online privacy management activity at different stages of social media use

TL;DR: Examination of social media users' blogging privacy rule orientations, privacy management regulation, and content deletion practices as distinct types of activity occurring at different stages of the blogging process may aid in understanding the functioning of blogging disclosure activity overall.
Book ChapterDOI

Communication Privacy Management Theory : Significance for Interpersonal Communication

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss communication privacy management (CPM) theory as a framework for understanding how people make choices to disclose information to others or protect it from access, and highlight recent trends in interpersonal communication using the theoretical framework, including examinations of CPM and interpersonal health issues, the use of social media, and family communication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Let's Be Facebook Friends: Exploring Parental Facebook Friend Requests from a Communication Privacy Management (CPM) Perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used communication privacy management theory to investigate how young adults respond to parental Facebook friend requests, and found that users tend to accept parental friend requests from both parents and make few restrictive privacy rule adjustments when contemplating the requests.
Journal ArticleDOI

Blog scrubbing: Exploring triggers that change privacy rules

TL;DR: Bloggers' critical incidents that activate privacy rule changes demonstrate that impression management triggers, personal safety identity triggers, relational triggers, and legal/disciplinary triggers resulted in greater alteration of individual privacy rules used to protect these bloggers from the privileged online community of individuals granted access to an individual's blog.