1. Abd-Alrazaq, A., Alhuwail, D. Househ, M., Hamdi, M., & Shah, Z. (2020). Top concerns of tweeters during the COVID-19 pandemic: Infoveillance study. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 22(4), e19016. https://doi.org/10.2196/19016.
2. Arroyave, J., & Erazo-Coronado, A. M. (2016). Crisis and risk communication research in Colombia. In A. Schwarz, M. Seeger, & C. Auer (Hrsg.), Handbook of international crisis communication research (S. 411–421). Wiley Blackwell.
3. Austin, L., & Jin, Y. (2017). Social media and crisis communication. Explicating the social-mediated crisis communication model. In A. Dudo & L. Kahlor (Hrsg.), Strategic communication. New agendas in communication (S. 163–186). Routledge.
4. Banda, J. M., Tekumalla, R., Wang, G., Yu, J., Liu, T., Ding, Y., & Chowell, G. (2020). A large-scale COVID-19 Twitter chatter dataset for open scientific research – an international collaboration. arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.03688.
5. Barth, H., & Donsbach, W. (1992). Aktivität und Passivität von Journalisten gegenüber Public Relations. Fallstudie am Beispiel von Pressekonferenzen zu Umweltthemen. Publizistik, 37(2), 151–165.