Jennifer Allen Catellier
Associate Professor
Health Communications
Co-Director
Communication and The Arts
Associate Professor
Communication and The Arts
Courses Taught
Graduate Courses
Communication in the Marketplace (GCOMM 500)
Health Communication (GCOMM 515)
Organizational Communication (GCOMM 525)
Patient-Provider Communication (GCOMM 545)
Philosophy and Ethics of Communication (GCOMM 600)
Communication Campaigns (GCOMM 625)
Communication Seminar (GCOMM 635)
Undergraduate Courses
Technical Communication (SPCH 110)
Public Speaking (SPCH 111)
Human Communication in Society (SPCH 113)
Media Ethics and Criticism (COMM 350)
Senior Seminar and Thesis (COMM 400)
Mass Media and Popular Culture (ENGL 371)
Educational History
University at Buffalo, Ph.D. in Communication, Dissertation: Improving communication strategies for diet and exercise initiatives, 2012
Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, M.A. in Communication, Thesis: A comparative analysis of crisis responses and apologia strategies at two religious affiliated institutions of higher education, 2007
Mercyhurst University, B.A. in Communication, 2006
Professional Societies
National Communication Association (NCA)
International Communication Association (ICA)
Eastern Communication Association (ECA)
Publications
Damiano, A. D., & Allen Catellier, J. R. (2020). A Content Analysis of Coronavirus Tweets in the United
States Just Prior to the Pandemic Declaration. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, https://doi.org/10.1089/cyber.2020.0425
Damiano, A. D., & Allen Catellier, J. R. (2020). Up in smoke: a content analysis of tweets during the vaping-related illness epidemic. Journal of Communication in Healthcare, 13, 1-9.
Allen Catellier, J. R., & Yang, Z. J. (2013). The role of affect in the decision to exercise: Does being happy lead to a more active lifestyle? Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 14(2), 275-282
Lovejoy K., Allen Catellier, J., Evans, C., Lohiser, A., & Chiu, I-H. (2013). Exploring individual’s Social Value Orientation and decisions in a Prisoner’s Dilemma. Communication & Science Journal, http://www.galileoco.com/comSciJ/comSciJ.asp.
Allen Catellier, J. & Yang, Z. J. (2012) Trust and affect: How do they impact risk information seeking in a health context? Journal of Risk Research, 15(8), 897-911.
Gibson Hancox, M. K., & Allen, J. (2007). Sins of the father: Revisiting best practices in crisis management through case study analysis. Journal of School Public Relations, 28(2), 164-188.
+1 8148715626
Office: CCA 317
Contact Jennifer Allen Catellier