Follow
Adam S. Richards
Adam S. Richards
Associate Professor of Communication Studies, Furman University
Verified email at furman.edu
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Influence of evidence type and narrative type on HPV risk perception and intention to obtain the HPV vaccine
X Nan, MF Dahlstrom, A Richards, S Rangarajan
Health communication 30 (3), 301-308, 2015
2022015
Inoculating against reactance to persuasive health messages
AS Richards, JA Banas
Health communication 30 (5), 451-460, 2015
1452015
Apprehension or motivation to defend attitudes? Exploring the underlying threat mechanism in inoculation-induced resistance to persuasion
JA Banas, AS Richards
Communication Monographs 84 (2), 164-178, 2017
732017
Message framing, perceived susceptibility, and intentions to vaccinate children against HPV among African American parents
X Nan, K Madden, A Richards, C Holt, MQ Wang, K Tracy
Health communication 31 (7), 798-805, 2016
692016
Conversation and conformity orientations as predictors of observed conflict tactics in parent-adolescent discussions
A Sillars, AJ Holman, A Richards, KA Jacobs, A Koerner, A Reynolds-Dyk
Journal of Family Communication 14 (1), 16-31, 2014
612014
More on inoculating against reactance to persuasive health messages: The paradox of threat
AS Richards, JA Banas, Y Magid
Health Communication 32 (7), 890-902, 2017
602017
A test of the conflict linkage model in the context of serial arguments
D Hample, AS Richards, L Na
Western Journal of Communication 76 (5), 459-479, 2012
582012
The role of trust in health information from medical authorities in accepting the HPV vaccine among African American parents
X Nan, K Daily, A Richards, C Holt, MQ Wang, K Tracy, Y Qin
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics 15 (7-8), 1723-1731, 2019
382019
Blurting
D Hample, AS Richards, C Skubisz
Communication Monographs 80, 503-532, 2013
352013
Reducing psychological reactance to health promotion messages: Comparing preemptive and postscript mitigation strategies
AS Richards, E Bessarabova, JA Banas, DR Bernard
Health Communication 37 (3), 366-374, 2022
312022
The effects of anger appeals on systematic processing and intentions: The moderating role of efficacy
MM Turner, AS Richards, E Bessarabova, Y Magid
Communication Reports 33 (1), 14-26, 2020
242020
Anger expression moderates the effects of psychological reactance to sexual health messages
AS Richards, M Larsen
Health Communication 32 (12), 1491-1500, 2017
242017
Parental support for HPV vaccination mandates among African Americans: The impact of message framing and consideration of future consequences
X Nan, K Daily, A Richards, C Holt
Health Communication, 2018
222018
Imagined interactions as predictors of secret revelation and health
AS Richards, AL Sillars
Communication Research 41 (2), 236-256, 2014
202014
Titling practices and their implications in communication research 1970-2010: Cutesy cues carry citation consequences
DM Keating, AS Richards, NA Palomares, JA Banas, N Joyce, SA Rains
Communication research 49 (5), 627-648, 2022
192022
Red-hot reactance: color cues moderate the freedom threatening characteristics of health PSAs
K Armstrong, AS Richards, KJ Boyd
Health communication 36 (6), 663-670, 2021
182021
Predicting attitude toward methamphetamine use: The role of antidrug campaign exposure and conversations about meth in Montana
AS Richards
Health communication 29 (2), 124-136, 2014
182014
The effects of instructor credibility, grade incentives, and framing of a technology policy on students’ intent to comply and motivation to learn
KP Moore, AS Richards
Communication Studies 70 (4), 394-411, 2019
172019
The opposing mediational effects of apprehensive threat and motivational threat when inoculating against reactance to health promotion
AS Richards, JA Banas
Southern Communication Journal 83 (4), 245-255, 2018
162018
Facial similarity mitigates the persuasive effects of source bias: An evolutionary explanation for kinship and susceptibility to influence
AS Richards, D Hample
Communication Monographs 83 (1), 1-24, 2016
162016
The system can't perform the operation now. Try again later.
Articles 1–20