Biography
Writing moves and circulates in our world. With the ubiquity of digital mediation, audiences are now inherently participatory. As a consequence, what writers do after they publish matters as much as what they do before they publish. This circulation, and how it shapes writing processes, is what I study.
For example, academic researchers often use social media to promote their publications. Knowing that their work will appear on social media has an observable effect on what they will write and how they frame their research.
My research consequently reframes social media users, engineers, and scientists as writers, thereby stressing the composing practices of these contexts. This perspective also allows me to apply writing theory to digital artifacts and computational processes. To study circulation in this way, I typically combine qualitative research (interviewing, observations) with quantitative audience metrics and statistics.
Research Interests
I study ways writers contend with participatory audiences in the context networked technologies (e.g., social media). I specialize in qualitative research methods; in particular, case study methodologies. I also draw on quantitative methods, such as web-scraping and computational analysis, to study online comments and participatory audiences. I have recently begun exploring machine learning, including using it as a method to study social media writing as well as studying how scientists and researchers communicate about machine learning.
Courses Taught
- BTW 250
- BTW 490
- ENGL 582
- ENGL 380
- ENGL 482
Additional Campus Affiliations
Associate Professor, School of Information Sciences
External Links
Highlighted Publications
Gallagher, J. R. (2020). Update Culture and the Afterlife of Digital Writing. Utah State University Press. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvvh85pr
Gallagher, J. R., & DeVoss, D. N. (Eds.) (2019). Explanation Points: Publishing in Rhetoric and Composition. Utah State University Press.
Recent Publications
Gallagher, J. R. (2024). Case Study Research in the Digital Age. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003402169
Gallagher, J. R., & Wagner, K. (2024). Comparing Student and Writing Instructor Perceptions of Academic Dishonesty When Collaborators Are Artificial Intelligence or Human. Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 38(3), 266-288. https://doi.org/10.1177/10506519241239937
Gallagher, J. R., & Avgoustopoulos, R. E. (2024). Emojination Facilitates Inclusive Emoji Design Through Technical Writing: Fitting Tactical Technical Communication Inside Institutional Structures. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 54(1), 93-112. https://doi.org/10.1177/00472816231161062
Gallagher, J. R., Avgoustopoulos, R. E., Hamilton, A., & Seilkhanova, T. (2024). The challenges and writing practices of communicating artificial intelligence and machine learning in an era of hype. AI & Society. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00146-024-02049-0
Gallagher, J. R., Wang, H., Modaff, M., Liu, J., Xu, Y., & Beveridge, A. (2023). Analyses of seven writing studies journals, 2000–2019, Part I: Statistical trends in references cited and lexical diversity. Computers and Composition, 67, Article 102755. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compcom.2023.102755