Books and Articles
Books:
Boydstun, Amber E. 2013. Making the News: Politics, the Media, and Agenda Setting. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
Baumgartner, Frank R., Suzanna L. De Boef and Amber E. Boydstun. 2008. The Decline of the Death Penalty and the Discovery of Innocence. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Baumgartner, Frank R., Suzanna L. De Boef and Amber E. Boydstun. 2008. The Decline of the Death Penalty and the Discovery of Innocence. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Articles:
Glazier, Rebecca A., Amber E. Boydstun, and Jessica T. Feezell. 2021. "Self-Coding: A Method To Assess Semantic Validity and Bias when Coding Open-Ended Responses." Research & Politics, 8(3).
Barberá, Pablo, Amber E. Boydstun, Suzanna Linn, Ryan McMahon, and Jonathan Nagler. 2020. "Automated Text Classification of News Articles: A Practical Guide." Political Analysis, 1–24.
Boydstun, Amber E., and Regina G. Lawrence. 2019. "When Celebrity and Political Journalism Collide: Reporting Standards, Entertainment, and the Conundrum of Covering Donald Trump’s 2016 Campaign." Perspectives on Politics: 1-16.
Feezell, Jessica T., Rebecca A. Glazier, and Amber E. Boydstun. "Framing, identity, and responsibility: do episodic vs. thematic framing effects vary by target population?." Politics, Groups, and Identities (2019): 1-22.
Boydstun, Amber E., Jessica T. Feezell, and Rebecca A. Glazier. "In the wake of a terrorist attack, do Americans’ attitudes toward Muslims decline?." Research & Politics 5.4 (2018): 2053168018806391.
Boydstun, Amber E., Benjamin Highton, and Suzanna Linn. "Assessing the Relationship between Economic News Coverage and Mass Economic Attitudes." Political Research Quarterly 71.4 (2018): 989-1000.
Boydstun, Amber E., and Regina G. Lawrence. 2019. "When Celebrity and Political Journalism Collide: Reporting Standards, Entertainment, and the Conundrum of Covering Donald Trump’s 2016 Campaign." Perspectives on Politics: 1-16.
Boydstun, Amber E., and Peter Van Aelst. 2018. "New rules for an old game? How the 2016 US election caught the press off guard." Mass Communication and Society 21.6: 671-696.
Van Aelst, Peter, Rens Vliegenthart, and Amber E. Boydstun. 2018. "The whole world is watching: Comparing European and United States news coverage of the US 2008 and 2016 elections." International Journal of Communication 12: 23.
Acree, B. D., Gross, J. H., Smith, N. A., Sim, Y., & Boydstun, A. E. "Etch-a-sketching: Evaluating the post-primary rhetorical moderation hypothesis." American Politics Research (2018): 1532673X18800017.
Boydstun, Amber E., Alison Ledgerwood, and Jehan Sparks. Forthcoming. "A Negativity Bias in Reframing Shapes Political Preferences Even in Partisan Contexts." Social Psychological and Personality Science.
Walgrave, Stefaan, Amber E. Boydstun, Rens Vliegenthart, and Anne Hardy. 2017. “The Nonlinear Effect of Information on Political Attention Media Storms and US Congressional Hearings.” Political Communication, forthcoming.
Boydstun, Amber E., Rens Vliegenthart, and Marshall Thomas. Forthcoming. “The Conditional Nature of Presidential Agenda Influence on TV News: The Case of Education.” International Journal of Communication.
Beaulieu, Emily, Amber E. Boydstun, Nadia Brown, Kim Yi Dionne, Andra Gillespie, Samara Klar, Yanna Krupnikov, Melissa R. Michelson, Kathleen Searles, and Christina Wolbrecht. 2017. “Women Also Know Stuff: Meta-Level Mentoring to Battle Gender Bias in Political Science.” PS: Political Science & Politics, 50 (3): 779-783.
Lawrence, Regina G. and Amber E. Boydstun. 2017. “What We Should Really Be Asking About Media Attention to Trump.” Political Communication: The Forum 34 (1): 150-153.
Card, Dallas, Justin H. Gross, Amber E. Boydstun, and Noah A. Smith. 2016. “Analyzing Framing Through the Casts of Characters in the News.” In Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods for Natural Language Processing (EMNLP).
Card, Dallas, Amber E. Boydstun, Justin H. Gross, Philip Resnik and Noah A. Smith. 2015. “The Media Frames Corpus: Annotations of Frames Across Issues.” In Proceedings of Association for Computational Linguistics Conference (ACL).
Boydstun, Amber E., Shaun Bevan, and H.F. Thomas III. 2014. “The Importance of Attention Diversity and How to Measure It.” Policy Studies Journal. 42 (2): 173-196.
Boydstun, Amber E., Rebecca A. Glazier, Matthew T. Pietryka, and Philip Resnik. 2014. “Real-Time Reactions to a 2012 Presidential Debate A Method for Understanding Which Messages Matter.” Public Opinion Quarterly, 78: 330-343.
Boydstun, Amber E., Anne Hardy and Stefaan Walgrave. 2014. “Two Faces of Media Attention: Media Storms vs. General Coverage.” Political Communication. 31 (4): 509-531.
Boydstun, Amber E., Jessica Feezell, Rebecca A. Glazier, Timothy P. Jurka, and Matthew T. Pietryka. In Press. “Colleague Crowdsourcing: A Method for Incentivizing National Student Engagement and Large-N Data Collection.” PS: Political Science & Politics, 47 (4): 829-834.
Yoon, Jiso and Amber E. Boydstun. 2014. “Dominating the News: Government Officials in Front-Page News Coverage of Policy Issues in the United States and Korea.” Journal of Public Policy. 34 (2): 207-235.
Ledgerwood, Alison and Amber E. Boydstun. 2014. “Sticky Prospects: Loss Frames are Cognitively Stickier than Gain Frames.” Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. 143 (1): 376-385.
Jurka, Timothy P., Loren Collingwood, Amber E. Boydstun, Emiliano Grossman, and Wouter van Atteveldt. 2013. “RTextTools: A Supervised Learning Package for Text Classification.” The R Journal, 5 (1): 6-12.
Boydstun, Amber E. and Rebecca A. Glazier. 2013. “A Two-Tiered Method for Identifying Trends in Media Framing of Policy Issues: The Case of the War on Terror.” In Press, Policy Studies Journal. 41 (4): 706-735.
Boydstun, Amber E., Rebecca A. Glazier and Claire Phillips. 2013. “Agenda Control in the 2008 Presidential Debates.” American Politics Research. 41 (5): 863-899.
Boydstun, Amber E., Rebecca A. Glazier, and Matthew Pietryka. “Playing to the Crowd: Agenda Control in Presidential Debates.” Political Communication, 30 (2): 254-277.
Pietryka, Matthew and Amber E. Boydstun. “The Benefits of Going Maverick: How Candidates Can Use Agenda-Setting to Influence Citizen Motivations and Offset Unpopular Issue Positions.” Political Behavior. 34 (4): 428-446.
Glazier, Rebecca A. and Amber E. Boydstun. 2013. “The President, The Press, and the War: A Tale of Two Framing Agendas.” Political Communication. 30 (2): 254-277.
Dardis, Frank E., Frank R. Baumgartner, Amber E. Boydstun, Suzanna De Boef and Fuyuan Shen. 2008. “Media Framing of Capital Punishment and Its Impact of Individuals’ Cognitive Responses.” Mass Communication and Society 11 (2): 115-140.
Barberá, Pablo, Amber E. Boydstun, Suzanna Linn, Ryan McMahon, and Jonathan Nagler. 2020. "Automated Text Classification of News Articles: A Practical Guide." Political Analysis, 1–24.
Boydstun, Amber E., and Regina G. Lawrence. 2019. "When Celebrity and Political Journalism Collide: Reporting Standards, Entertainment, and the Conundrum of Covering Donald Trump’s 2016 Campaign." Perspectives on Politics: 1-16.
Feezell, Jessica T., Rebecca A. Glazier, and Amber E. Boydstun. "Framing, identity, and responsibility: do episodic vs. thematic framing effects vary by target population?." Politics, Groups, and Identities (2019): 1-22.
Boydstun, Amber E., Jessica T. Feezell, and Rebecca A. Glazier. "In the wake of a terrorist attack, do Americans’ attitudes toward Muslims decline?." Research & Politics 5.4 (2018): 2053168018806391.
Boydstun, Amber E., Benjamin Highton, and Suzanna Linn. "Assessing the Relationship between Economic News Coverage and Mass Economic Attitudes." Political Research Quarterly 71.4 (2018): 989-1000.
Boydstun, Amber E., and Regina G. Lawrence. 2019. "When Celebrity and Political Journalism Collide: Reporting Standards, Entertainment, and the Conundrum of Covering Donald Trump’s 2016 Campaign." Perspectives on Politics: 1-16.
Boydstun, Amber E., and Peter Van Aelst. 2018. "New rules for an old game? How the 2016 US election caught the press off guard." Mass Communication and Society 21.6: 671-696.
Van Aelst, Peter, Rens Vliegenthart, and Amber E. Boydstun. 2018. "The whole world is watching: Comparing European and United States news coverage of the US 2008 and 2016 elections." International Journal of Communication 12: 23.
Acree, B. D., Gross, J. H., Smith, N. A., Sim, Y., & Boydstun, A. E. "Etch-a-sketching: Evaluating the post-primary rhetorical moderation hypothesis." American Politics Research (2018): 1532673X18800017.
Boydstun, Amber E., Alison Ledgerwood, and Jehan Sparks. Forthcoming. "A Negativity Bias in Reframing Shapes Political Preferences Even in Partisan Contexts." Social Psychological and Personality Science.
Walgrave, Stefaan, Amber E. Boydstun, Rens Vliegenthart, and Anne Hardy. 2017. “The Nonlinear Effect of Information on Political Attention Media Storms and US Congressional Hearings.” Political Communication, forthcoming.
Boydstun, Amber E., Rens Vliegenthart, and Marshall Thomas. Forthcoming. “The Conditional Nature of Presidential Agenda Influence on TV News: The Case of Education.” International Journal of Communication.
Beaulieu, Emily, Amber E. Boydstun, Nadia Brown, Kim Yi Dionne, Andra Gillespie, Samara Klar, Yanna Krupnikov, Melissa R. Michelson, Kathleen Searles, and Christina Wolbrecht. 2017. “Women Also Know Stuff: Meta-Level Mentoring to Battle Gender Bias in Political Science.” PS: Political Science & Politics, 50 (3): 779-783.
Lawrence, Regina G. and Amber E. Boydstun. 2017. “What We Should Really Be Asking About Media Attention to Trump.” Political Communication: The Forum 34 (1): 150-153.
Card, Dallas, Justin H. Gross, Amber E. Boydstun, and Noah A. Smith. 2016. “Analyzing Framing Through the Casts of Characters in the News.” In Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods for Natural Language Processing (EMNLP).
Card, Dallas, Amber E. Boydstun, Justin H. Gross, Philip Resnik and Noah A. Smith. 2015. “The Media Frames Corpus: Annotations of Frames Across Issues.” In Proceedings of Association for Computational Linguistics Conference (ACL).
Boydstun, Amber E., Shaun Bevan, and H.F. Thomas III. 2014. “The Importance of Attention Diversity and How to Measure It.” Policy Studies Journal. 42 (2): 173-196.
Boydstun, Amber E., Rebecca A. Glazier, Matthew T. Pietryka, and Philip Resnik. 2014. “Real-Time Reactions to a 2012 Presidential Debate A Method for Understanding Which Messages Matter.” Public Opinion Quarterly, 78: 330-343.
Boydstun, Amber E., Anne Hardy and Stefaan Walgrave. 2014. “Two Faces of Media Attention: Media Storms vs. General Coverage.” Political Communication. 31 (4): 509-531.
Boydstun, Amber E., Jessica Feezell, Rebecca A. Glazier, Timothy P. Jurka, and Matthew T. Pietryka. In Press. “Colleague Crowdsourcing: A Method for Incentivizing National Student Engagement and Large-N Data Collection.” PS: Political Science & Politics, 47 (4): 829-834.
Yoon, Jiso and Amber E. Boydstun. 2014. “Dominating the News: Government Officials in Front-Page News Coverage of Policy Issues in the United States and Korea.” Journal of Public Policy. 34 (2): 207-235.
Ledgerwood, Alison and Amber E. Boydstun. 2014. “Sticky Prospects: Loss Frames are Cognitively Stickier than Gain Frames.” Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. 143 (1): 376-385.
Jurka, Timothy P., Loren Collingwood, Amber E. Boydstun, Emiliano Grossman, and Wouter van Atteveldt. 2013. “RTextTools: A Supervised Learning Package for Text Classification.” The R Journal, 5 (1): 6-12.
Boydstun, Amber E. and Rebecca A. Glazier. 2013. “A Two-Tiered Method for Identifying Trends in Media Framing of Policy Issues: The Case of the War on Terror.” In Press, Policy Studies Journal. 41 (4): 706-735.
Boydstun, Amber E., Rebecca A. Glazier and Claire Phillips. 2013. “Agenda Control in the 2008 Presidential Debates.” American Politics Research. 41 (5): 863-899.
Boydstun, Amber E., Rebecca A. Glazier, and Matthew Pietryka. “Playing to the Crowd: Agenda Control in Presidential Debates.” Political Communication, 30 (2): 254-277.
Pietryka, Matthew and Amber E. Boydstun. “The Benefits of Going Maverick: How Candidates Can Use Agenda-Setting to Influence Citizen Motivations and Offset Unpopular Issue Positions.” Political Behavior. 34 (4): 428-446.
Glazier, Rebecca A. and Amber E. Boydstun. 2013. “The President, The Press, and the War: A Tale of Two Framing Agendas.” Political Communication. 30 (2): 254-277.
Dardis, Frank E., Frank R. Baumgartner, Amber E. Boydstun, Suzanna De Boef and Fuyuan Shen. 2008. “Media Framing of Capital Punishment and Its Impact of Individuals’ Cognitive Responses.” Mass Communication and Society 11 (2): 115-140.
Book Chapters:
Lawrence, Regina G. and Amber E. Boydstun. Forthcoming. “Celebrities as Political Actors and Entertainment as Political Media.” In Van Aelst, Peter and Stefaan Walgrave (eds.), How Political Actors Use the Media. New York: Palgrave.
Boydstun, Amber E. and Annelise Russell. 2017. “From Crisis to Stasis: Media Dynamics and Issue Attention in the News.” In Iyengar, Shanto (ed), Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics. New York: Oxford.
Resnik, Philip, Amber E. Boydstun, Rebecca A. Glazier and Matthew T. Pietryka. 2016. “Scalable Multidimensional Response Measurement using a Mobile Platform.” In Schill, Dan, Rita Kirk and Amy E. Jasperson (eds.), Political Communication in Real Time. New York: Routledge.
Baumgartner, Frank R., Suzanna Linn, and Amber E. Boydstun. 2009. “The Decline of the Death Penalty: How Media Framing Changed Capital Punishment in America.” In Schaffner, Brian F. and Patrick Sellers (eds), Winning with Words: The Origins and Impact of Framing. New York, NY: Routledge.
Boydstun, Amber E. and Annelise Russell. 2017. “From Crisis to Stasis: Media Dynamics and Issue Attention in the News.” In Iyengar, Shanto (ed), Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics. New York: Oxford.
Resnik, Philip, Amber E. Boydstun, Rebecca A. Glazier and Matthew T. Pietryka. 2016. “Scalable Multidimensional Response Measurement using a Mobile Platform.” In Schill, Dan, Rita Kirk and Amy E. Jasperson (eds.), Political Communication in Real Time. New York: Routledge.
Baumgartner, Frank R., Suzanna Linn, and Amber E. Boydstun. 2009. “The Decline of the Death Penalty: How Media Framing Changed Capital Punishment in America.” In Schaffner, Brian F. and Patrick Sellers (eds), Winning with Words: The Origins and Impact of Framing. New York, NY: Routledge.
Other:
Lawrence, Regina G. and Amber E. Boydstun. 2017. "The Trump Conundrum." Columbia Journalism Review. Fall.
Beaulieu, Emily, Amber Boydstun, Kim Yi Dionne, Samara Klar, Yanna Krupnikov, Melissa Michelson, Kathleen Searles, and Christina Wolbrecht. 2016. “Here’s a list of smart women political scientists. They know stuff, too.” Monkey Cage post for The Washington Post (February 11, 2016).
Boydstun, Amber E. 2015. Book Review: After Broadcast News: Media Regimes, Democracy, and the New Information Environment, by Bruce A. Williams and Michael X. Delli Carpini. Political Communication, 32 (2): 336-338.
Boydstun, Amber E. and Matthew A. Baum. 2013. “Syria vs. Cyrus.” Op-ed article for HuffingtonPost.com (September 9, 2013).
Beaulieu, Emily, Amber Boydstun, Kim Yi Dionne, Samara Klar, Yanna Krupnikov, Melissa Michelson, Kathleen Searles, and Christina Wolbrecht. 2016. “Here’s a list of smart women political scientists. They know stuff, too.” Monkey Cage post for The Washington Post (February 11, 2016).
Boydstun, Amber E. 2015. Book Review: After Broadcast News: Media Regimes, Democracy, and the New Information Environment, by Bruce A. Williams and Michael X. Delli Carpini. Political Communication, 32 (2): 336-338.
Boydstun, Amber E. and Matthew A. Baum. 2013. “Syria vs. Cyrus.” Op-ed article for HuffingtonPost.com (September 9, 2013).