RESEARCH
Qualitative research. Survey studies. Systematic and integrative reviews. Expertise in heath communication, social and new media, organizational communication, visual rhetoric, science communication, and organizational communcation.
Latest Projects
HEALTH COMMUNICATION: Ramos, S., Roundtree, A. K., Schepis, T., Haskard Zolnierek, K. B., & DuBois, S. (2019). A Qualitative Approach Towards Understanding HIV-Related Stress in Texas. Texas Medicine.
Roundtree, A. K., Hwang, J., & Suarez-Almazor, M. (2012). Attitudes toward hepatitis B virus among Vietnamese, Chinese and Korean Americans in the Houston area, Texas. Journal of Community Health, 37(5), 1091–1100.
ORGANIZATIONAL COMMUNICATION: Roundtree, A. K. (2018). Hospital Tweets on H1N1 and Death Panels: Text Mining the Situational Crisis Communication Response to Health Crises and Controversies. KOME Journal of Pure Communication Inquiry, 6(1), 32–62.
Roundtree, A. (2018). Dialogic of Social Media in Healthcare Settings: Text Mining the Rules, Attitudes, and Behaviors of Health Organizations and the Public. American Communication Journal, 20(1), 1–18.
SOCIAL MEDIA: Roundtree, A. K. (2018). From Engineers’ Tweets: Text Mining Social Media for Perspectives on Engineering Communication. IEEE Professional Communication Society.
Roundtree, A. (2016). Social Health Content and Activity on Facebook: A Survey Study. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication.
TECHNOLOGY: Roundtree. Computer Simulations, Rhetoric, and the Scientific Imagination: How Virtual Evidence Shapes Science In the Making and In the News. Lexington Books. December 2013.
Roundtree. “Sizing Up Single Sourcing: Rhetorical Interventions for XML Documentation,” in Complex Worlds: Digital Culture, Rhetoric, and Professional Communication. Eds. Adrienne Lamberti and Ann Richards. Baywood. January 2011.
Testimonials
Josh Mendelsohn, Constant Contact
"Roundtree's recommendations are instructive not only for nonprofit organizations and advocates, but for media outlets looking to reach new communities and revamp their social media projects."
Angilee Shah, Reporting on Health, USC Annenberg