Research
My research advances a central argument: in networked, multiplatform, and increasingly AI-mediated communication environments, visibility is not neutral. It shapes what counts as credible, whose voices are heard, and what forms of political action become possible. I examine these dynamics with particular attention to communities that are structurally marginalized in public discourse, while situating their experiences within broader transformations in digital politics and AI-mediated communication.
Methodologically, my program is grounded in computational social science — cross-platform discourse analysis, NLP, network analysis, and multimodal content analysis in R and Python — triangulated with surveys, experiments, and qualitative approaches.
Core Research Streams
I examine the intersection of technology, power, and communication through three interconnected lines of inquiry.