A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
A comprehensive review of recent advances in research on COVID in communication studies
Authors: Cyrek, Barbara; Peltonen, Jenna
Publisher: Springer Link
Publication year: 2024
Journal: Discover Public Health
Article number: 41
Volume: 21
eISSN: 3005-0774
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12982-024-00154-5
Web address : https://doi.org/10.1186/s12982-024-00154-5
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/457416702
This study aims to summarize the research on COVID-19 pandemic within communication studies, taking into account 358 articles published in SJR best ranked journals in 2020–2022.
The study uses both qualitative and quantitative methods. Using manual coding and qualitative content analysis, we investigate articles’ distribution according to journals, time, accessibility (either open, free or restricted) and methodological approaches. We also provide a qualitative summary of trending research themes. Using quantitative social network analysis (SNA) we present the distribution of institutions and countries in articles’ affiliations, and the collaboration network at institutional and country level.
Results show an in-time increase of COVID-related publications. Articles were affiliated with 490 institutions from 68 countries, with the USA having the greatest representation. There was an underrepresentation of African and South American countries, which reflects the core-periphery challenge in knowledge production. The network analysis revealed that very few of possible connections were actually achieved. There is an observable trend of using quantitative methods. A growth on the gap between qualitative and quantitative studies was observed each year. More than a half of articles using qualitative methods were published in restricted access. Our qualitative summary of the addressed topics and main findings in articles related to COVID-19, media and society revealed a wide research interest in pandemics impacts on news consumption, media use and journalism, as well as infodemic, conspiracy narratives, science mistrust and discrimination and inequalities increased by the pandemic.
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