Organized Section 23: Timothy Cook Best Graduate Student Paper Award
Political Communication Section Award Recipients
Timothy Cook Best Graduate Student Paper Award
The Cook Award recognizes the best paper on political communication presented by a graduate student at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
| 2016 | Nick Anspach, Temple University “The Inadvertent Audience: How Online Peer Influence Mitigates Selective Exposure.” |
| 2015 | Matthew N. Tokeshi, Princeton University “Countering Implicit Appeals: Which Strategies Work?” |
| 2014 | Brian Weeks, Ohio State University “Feeling is Believing: The Influence of Emotions on Citizens' False Political Beliefs” |
| 2013 | Brian Harrison, PhD Northwestern University “Bully Partisan or Partisan Bully? Partisanship, Elite Polarization, and U.S. Presidential Communication” |
| 2012 | Thomas Leeper, Northwestern University Learning More from Political Communication Experiments: The Importance of Pretreatment Effects |
| 2012 | James Druckman, Northwestern University Learning More from Political Communication Experiments: The Importance of Pretreatment Effects |
| 2011 | Sarah Esralew, Ohio State University “The Influence of Parodies on Mental Models: Exploring the Tina Fey-Sarah Palin Phenomenon” |
| 2011 | Dannagal Young, University of Delaware Sarah Esralew, The Ohio State University “The Influence of Parodies on Mental Models: Exploring the Tina Fey-Sarah Palin Phenomenon” |
| 2010 | Dino Christenson, Ohio State University Learning from Campaigns: Political Information and Context in Presidential Elections |
| 2009 | Blake Andrew, McGill University “Making Broadcast News Headlines: Heuristiv Signals in Television and Public Radio Campaign Coverage” |
| 2008 | “Exploring the Role of Discrete Emotions in Political Campaigns” |
| 2007 | Daniela Stockmann, Leiden University The New Chinese Media and Public Opinion: Adaptation of a Propaganda Machine or Instrument for Political Change? |
| 2006 | Michael Parkin, University of Minnesota “Engaging with Late Night Comedy's Serious Message: How Late Night Candidate Apperances Affect Young People's Political Decisions” |
