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Victoria Y. Chen

Researcher at National Chung Cheng University

Publications -  10
Citations -  220

Victoria Y. Chen is an academic researcher from National Chung Cheng University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public opinion & European union. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications receiving 118 citations. Previous affiliations of Victoria Y. Chen include University of Texas at Austin & University of Nevada, Reno.

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‘You really have to have a thick skin’: A cross-cultural perspective on how online harassment influences female journalists:

TL;DR: In this article, 75 female journalists who work or have worked in Germany, India, Taiwan, United Kingdom, and the United States of America reveal that they face rampant online gendered discrimination.
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This Reporter is so Ugly, How can She Appear on TV?: Negotiating gender online and offline in Taiwanese media

TL;DR: In Taiwan, 25 professional female journalists were interviewed to understand how they negotiate gender and professional identities online and offline through the lens of Shoemaker and Reese's medi... as mentioned in this paper, and they were interviewed by the same authors.
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News on Facebook: How Facebook and Newspapers Build Mutual Brand Loyalty Through Audience Engagement:

TL;DR: Focusing on the value of Facebook as a distribution platform for newspapers, the authors found that news which attracts and holds readers' attention on Facebook is positively related to the brand associated with the news.
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Shut down or turn off? The interplay between news overload and consumption

TL;DR: In this article, the authors established a multi-item measure of news overload and examined the effect of media use on perceived news overload, and identified multiple attribu cation metrics.
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European Public Sphere| Online News, Social Media and European Union Attitudes: A Multidimensional Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the effect of institutional websites, news websites, online social networks, blogs, and video hosting websites on five important dimensions of public attitudes toward the EU: strengthening, performance, fear, efficacy, and utilitarianism.