Richard M. Perloff

Richard M. Perloff is an American academic. He is professor of communication at Cleveland State University,[1] where he has taught since 1979.[2] He has written on persuasion, on political communication, on the psychology of perception of the effects of mass media, and on the third-person effect.[1]

Richard M. Perloff

PhD.
Born (1951-07-28) July 28, 1951
NationalityAmerican
OccupationUniversity professor
Children2
Awards(1998)
Academic background
EducationUniversity of Wisconsin at Madison PhD., 1978, University of Pittsburgh, M.A., 1975,University of Michigan, B.A., 1972
Thesis (1978)
Academic work
EraModern
DisciplineCommunication
Sub-disciplinePolitical Science
InstitutionsCleveland State University at School of Communication
Main interestsCommunication, psychology, persuasion, behavoiral sciences
Notable works
  • The Dynamics of Persuasion (1993)
  • Political Communication: Politics, Press, and Public in America (1998)
WebsiteFaculty profile

Publications

Perloff's published work includes:

In 2006 he was editor of a special issue of American Behavioral Scientist on racial health-care disparities and communication.[1][3]

gollark: > Development will start after V 1.0, but brainstorming can already take place.
gollark: Browsers are COMPLICATED, but maybe they can manage something which displays text and perhaps even images.
gollark: oh apioforms.
gollark: I killed the one BEFORE Tony Hoare.
gollark: I don't think it has indentation-based syntax, so æ.

References

  1. Wolfgang Donsbach, Michael W. Traugott (editors) (2008). The SAGE handbook of public opinion research. Los Angeles, California; London: SAGE Publications. ISBN 9781412911771.
  2. Richard Perloff, Ph.D.. Journalism and Promotional Communication Division, Cleveland State University. Archived 3 August 2013.
  3. Richard M. Perloff (editor) (2006). Communication and Racial Disparities in Health Care (special issue). American Behavioral Scientist 49 (6): 755–884. Thousand Oaks, California: Sage.
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