Table of contents Annette Leßmöllmann and Thomas Gloning
Preface - V Annette Leßmöllmann and Thomas Gloning
Introduction to the volume - XI I Perspectives of research on scholarly and science
communication Gregor Betz and David Lanius
1 Philosophy of science for science communication in twenty-two questions - 3 Friederike Hendriks and Dorothe Kienhues
2 Science understanding between scientific literacy and trust: contributions from
psychological and educational research - 29 Hans-Jürgen Bucher
3 The contribution of media studies to the understanding of science communication - 51 Mike S. Schäfer, Sabrina H. Kessler and Birte Fähnrich
4 Analyzing science communication through the lens of communication science:
Reviewing the empirical evidence - 77 Hannah Schmid-Petri and Moritz Bürger
5 Modeling science communication: from linear to more complex models - 105 Gábor Á. Zemplén
6 The contribution of laboratory studies, science studies and Science and Technology Studies (STS) to the understanding of scientific communication - 123 Nina Janich
7 The contribution of linguistics and semiotics to the understanding
of science communication - 143 Britt-Marie Schuster
8 The contribution of terminology research to the understanding of science communication - 167 Thorsten Pohl
9 The study of student academic writing - 187 II Text types, media, and practices of science communication Thomas Gloning
10 Epistemic genres - 209 Luc Pauwels
11 On the nature and role of visual representations in knowledge production
and science communication - 235 Henning Lobin
12 The lecture and the presentation - rhetorics and technology - 257 Sylvia Jaworska
13 Spoken language in science and the humanities - 271 Gerd Fritz
14 Scholarly reviewing - 289 Gerd Fritz
15 Scientific controversies - 311 Thomas Gloning
16 Symbolic notation in scientific communication: a panorama - 335 Michel Serfati +
17 The rise of symbolic notation in scientific communication: the case of mathematics - 357 Benedetto Lepori and Sara Greco
18 Grant proposal writing as a dialogic process - 377 III Science, scientists, and the public Wolf-Andreas Liebert
19 Communicative strategies of popularization of science
(including science exhibitions, museums, magazines) - 399 Sharon Dunwoody
20 Science journalism - 417 Holger Wormer
21 Teaching science journalism as a blueprint for future journalism education - 439 Charlotte Autzen and Emma Weitkamp
22 Science communication and public relations: beyond borders - 465 Philipp Schrögel and Christian Humm
23 Science communication, advising, and advocacy in public debates - 485 Philipp Niemann, Laura Bittner, Christiane Hauser and Philipp Schrögel
24 Forms of science presentations in public settings - 515 IV Historical perspectives on science communication Thomas Gloning
25 Historical perspectives on internal scientific communication - 547 Michael Prinz
26 Academic teaching: the lecture and the disputation in the history of erudition and science - 569 Monika Hanauska
27 Historical aspects of external science communication - 585 V Science communication: present and future Martina Franzen
28 Reconfigurations of science communication research in the digital age - 603 Peter Reuter and Andreas Brandtner
29 The library in a changing world of scientific communication - 625 Mareike König
30 Scholarly communication in social media - 639 Annette Leßmöllmann
31 Current trends and future visions of (research on) science communication - 657