Published on in Vol 22, No 10 (2020): October

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/22574, first published .
Quantifying Public Interest in Police Reforms by Mining Internet Search Data Following George Floyd’s Death

Quantifying Public Interest in Police Reforms by Mining Internet Search Data Following George Floyd’s Death

Quantifying Public Interest in Police Reforms by Mining Internet Search Data Following George Floyd’s Death

Journals

  1. Sullivan J, Eberhardt J, Roberts S. Conversations about race in Black and White US families: Before and after George Floyd’s death. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2021;118(38) View
  2. Perez J. I’m not going to have a conversation with you: Linguistic refusals of 1stAmendment YouTube auditors during police interactions. Communication and Democracy 2022;56(2):138 View
  3. Khan A, Smith M. Black Muslim perceptions of police respectfulness and stop legitimacy. Journal of Ethnicity in Criminal Justice 2022;20(2):97 View
  4. Alexander A, Waring J, Noble B, Bradley D, Olurotimi O, Fronheiser J, Sifat M, Ehlke S, Boozary L, McQuoid J, Kendzor D. Perceptions of Mental Health and Exploring the Role of Social Activism Among African Americans Exposed to Media Coverage of Police Brutality and Protests. Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities 2023;10(3):1403 View
  5. Douglas-Durham E, Tan A, Emmons K, Viswanath K. The Relationship Between News Coverage of COVID-19 Misinformation and Online Search Behavior. Health Communication 2024:1 View