2019
Markowitz, D. M. & Griffin, D. J. (in press). When context matters: How false, truthful, and genre-related communication styles are revealed in language. Psychology, Crime & Law.
Markowitz, D. M. (2019). What words are worth: National Science Foundation grant abstracts indicate award funding. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 38, 264-282.
2018
Markowitz, D. M., Laha, R., Perone, B. P., Pea, R. D., & Bailenson, J. N. (2018). Immersive virtual reality field trips facilitate learning about climate change. Frontiers in Psychology, 9, 2364.
Markowitz, D. M. & Hancock, J. T. (2018). Deception in mobile dating conversations. Journal of Communication, 68, 547-569.
Markowitz, D. M. (2018). Academy awards speeches reflect social status, cinematic roles, and winning expectations. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 37, 376-387.
Margolin, D., & Markowitz, D. M. (2018). A multi-theoretical approach to big text data: Comparing expressive and rhetorical logics in Yelp reviews. Communication Research, 45, 688-718.
Other
Markowitz, D. M., & Hancock, J. T. (2017). The 27 Club: Music lyrics reflect psychological distress. Communication Reports, 30, 1-13.
Markowitz, D. M., & Hancock, J. T. (2016). Linguistic obfuscation in fraudulent science. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 35, 435-445.
Markowitz, D. M., & Hancock, J. T. (2014). Linguistic traces of a scientific fraud: The case of Diederik Stapel. PLOS ONE, 9, e105937.
Larrimore, L., Jiang, L., Larrimore, J., Markowitz, D. M., & Gorski, S. (2011). Peer to peer lending: The relationship between language features, trustworthiness, and persuasion success. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 39, 19-37.