1Rodriguez, Raquel (2000) “University Professors as Communication Media: agenda-setting of students and professors”, doctoral dissertation, Complutense University, Madrid.
2Salwen, Michael, Garrison, Bruce and Driscoll, Paul (Eds) (2005) Online News and the Public, Mahwah, N J: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
3Soroka, Stuart (2002) Agenda Setting Dynamics in Canada, Vancouver: UBC Press.
4Takeshita, Toshio (1993) “Agenda Setting Effects of the Press in a Japanese Local Election”, Studies of Broadcasting 29, pp. 193 216.
5Walgrave, Stefan and Van ,Aelst, Peter (2004) “The Mass Media's Political Agenda-setting Power”, paper presented to the American Political Science Association's Political Communication Pre-conference, Chicago.
6Weaver, David (1977)“Political Issues and Voter Need for Orientation”, in: Donald Shaw and Maxwell McCombs (Eds), The Emergence of American Political Issues, St. Paul, MN: West.
7Winter, James, Eyal, Chaim and Rogers, Ann (1982) “Issue-specific Agenda Setting: the whole as less than the sum of the parts”, Canadian Journal of Communication 8(2), pp. 110.
8Yu, Jason (2005) “News on the Web: agenda setting of online news in web sites of major newspaper, television and online news services”, paper presented to the International Communication Association, New York.
9Zaichkowsky, Judith Lynne (1985) “Measuring the Involvement Construct”, Journal of Consumer Research 12, pp. 341-52.
10Zeller, Tom (2005) “Are Bloggers Setting the Agenda? It depends on the scandal”, http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/23/technology/23blog. html.