Angela M Lee
Angela M. Lee, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the School of Arts, Technology, and Emerging Communication at the University of Texas at Dallas. She is passionate about the antecedents and effects of news consumption, journalism ethics, media management, and science communication, and her work is published in peer-reviewed journals, such as Communication Research, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Journalism, Journalism Studies, Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, and Digital Journalism.
She has received a number of highly selective awards, including the Top Faculty Paper Award and News Audience Research Paper Award from the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, the Best Paper Award from the National Communication Association, the Patricia Witherspoon Research Award from the Annett Strauss Institute for Civic Life, and the William Powers, Jr. Graduate Dissertation Fellowship from The University of Texas at Austin.
Her work has garnered mainstream attention from outlets such as The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Dallas Morning News, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and the Nieman Journalism Lab of Harvard University.
Angela really enjoys research and teaching, and believes strongly in the motto of the University of Texas System—Disciplina Praesidium Civitatis—“cultivated mind is the guardian genius of democracy.”
For her updated CV, please visit bit.ly/angelamlee
She has received a number of highly selective awards, including the Top Faculty Paper Award and News Audience Research Paper Award from the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, the Best Paper Award from the National Communication Association, the Patricia Witherspoon Research Award from the Annett Strauss Institute for Civic Life, and the William Powers, Jr. Graduate Dissertation Fellowship from The University of Texas at Austin.
Her work has garnered mainstream attention from outlets such as The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Dallas Morning News, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and the Nieman Journalism Lab of Harvard University.
Angela really enjoys research and teaching, and believes strongly in the motto of the University of Texas System—Disciplina Praesidium Civitatis—“cultivated mind is the guardian genius of democracy.”
For her updated CV, please visit bit.ly/angelamlee
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framework, this study examines the extent to which self–other asymmetry factors
into news consumers’ intentions to pay for multiplatform news products. Findings
from a web-based panel survey of 767 U.S. internet users suggest people consistently perceive others as more likely to pay for news across three news platforms (print, web, and app) and that the perceived difference in how much more likely others would pay for news than oneself widens from print to web and to app editions. Such findings reveal the economic nature of news as multiplatform products in the eyes of news consumers from a novel perspective and offer a theoretical understanding of the psychology behind consumers’ paying intent for multiplatform news products in the contemporary media environment.