• Bozdağ, U., Tóth, T., & Demeter, M. (2024). When articulating populist dichotomies is paramount: Exploring the effects of explicit and implicit populist styles on user engagement in Turkish election tweets. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly. Advance online publication. doi.org/10.1177/10776990241284579
  • Tóth, T., Demeter, M., Háló, G., Bozdag, U., & Bartóki-Gönczy, B. (2024). Time matters: What factors affect submission-to-acceptance time in the Journal of Communication? Communication Reports, 38(1), 13-24. doi.org/10.1080/08934215.2024.2424544
  • Goyanes, M., Scheffauer, R., Tóth, T., Demeter, M., & Gil de Zúñiga, H. (2024). Online news paying intent antecedents: The culture of free, fairness of having to pay for news, and the moderating role of political interest. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly. Advance online publication. doi.org/10.1177/10776990241296458
  • Tóth, T., Demeter, M., Szabó, L. P., & Török, B. (2024). Populist cues in media framing: Exploring how populism by the media emerges in Western news coverage of protests. KOME – An International Journal of Pure Communication Inquiry, 12(1). doi.org/10.17646/KOME.of.13
  • Tóth, T., Demeter, M., Csuhai, S., & Major, Z. B. (2024). When career-boosting is on the line: Equity and inequality in grant evaluation, productivity, and the educational backgrounds of Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions individual fellows in social sciences and humanities. Journal of Informetrics, 18(2), 1-14. doi.org/10.1016/j.joi.2024.101516
  • Bene, M., Tóth, T., & Goyanes, M. (2024). Teflonic social media behavior: Why users refrain from participating in political discussions and why it matters. In M. Skoric & N. Pang (Eds.), Research handbook on social media and society (pp. 148-160). Edward Elgar Publishing. doi.org/10.4337/9781800377059.00022
  • Goyanes, M., Tóth, T., & Háló, G. (2024). Gender differences in Google Scholar representation and impact: An empirical analysis of political communication, journalism, health communication, and media psychology. Scientometrics, 129, 1719-1737. doi.org/10.1007/s11192-024-04945-0
  • Tóth, T., & Ujlaki, A. (2023). Hungary: The enemy is everywhere. In I. G. Hays, J. M. Hayden, & M. Polišenská (Eds.), Leadership in the time of Covid (pp. 127–154). CEU Press.
  • Köves, A., Tóth, T., & Vicsek, L. (2023). A torn generation: Dichotomies and dissonances on sustainability and technological change in in-depth interviews with university students. Society and Economy, 46(1), 61-78. doi.org/10.1556/204.2023.00014
  • Kaiser, T., Tóth, T., & Demeter, M. (2023). Publishing trends in political science: How publishing houses, geographical positions, and international collaboration shape academic knowledge production. Publishing Research Quarterly, 39, 201-218. doi.org/10.1007/s12109-023-09957-x
  • Vicsek, L., & Tóth, T. (2023). Visions of human-centered artificial intelligence – Relations with ethics and power. In M. Filimowicz (Ed.), Algorithmic ethics (pp. 1-21). Routledge.
  • Tóth, T., Demeter, M., & Goyanes, M. (2023). Extend the context! Measuring explicit and implicit populism on three different textual levels. Communications, 1-21.
  • Goyanes, M., Demeter, M., Grané, A., Tóth, T., & Gil de Zúñiga, H. (2022). Research patterns in communication (2009-2019): Testing female representation and publication efficiency within most cited scholars and across the field. Scientometrics, 128, 137-156.
  • Goyanes, M., de-Marcos, L., Demeter, M., Tóth, T., & Jordá, B. (2022). Editorial board interlocking across the social sciences: Modelling the geographic, gender, and institutional representation within and between six academic fields. PLOS ONE, 17(9), e0273552. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273552
  • Tóth, T., Goyanes, M., Demeter, M., & Campos-Freire, F. (2022). Social implications of paywalls in a polarized society: Representations, inequalities, and effects of citizens' political knowledge. In J. Vázquez-Herrero, A. Silva-Rodríguez, M.-C. Negreira-Rey, C. Toural-Bran, & X. López-Garcia (Eds.), Total journalism: Models, techniques and challenges (Vol. 97, pp. 75-89). Springer Nature.
  • Tóth, T. (2021). Fractured implicitness: Subcategories within implicit populism. KOME – An International Journal of Pure Communication Inquiry, 9(1), 1-11.
  • Zsolt, P., Tóth, T., & Demeter, M. (2021). We are the ones who matter! Pro and anti-Trumpists' attitudes in Hungary. Journal of Contemporary European Studies, 29(4), 719-737. doi.org/10.1080/14782804.2021.1992362
  • Tóth, T. (2021). The conceptualization of explicit and implicit populism in Donald Trump's Twitter communication [Doctoral dissertation, Corvinus University of Budapest]. Budapest, Hungary.
  • Demeter, M., & Tóth, T. (2020). The world-systemic network of global elite sociology: The Western male monoculture at faculties of the top one hundred sociology departments of the world. Scientometrics, 124, 2469-2495. doi.org/10.1007/s11192-020-03592-1
  • Tóth, T. (2020). Target the enemy: Explicit and implicit populism in the rhetoric of the Hungarian right. Journal of Contemporary European Studies, 1-21.
  • Demeter, M., & Tóth, T. (2019). "None of us is an island": Toward the conception of positive populism through the analysis of Pope Francis's Twitter communication. International Journal of Communication, 13, 4507-4529.
  • Tóth, T., & Farkas, J. (2019). The terminologies of two religious leaders' rhetoric about communities in Pope Francis' and Dalai Lama's tweets. European Journal of Science and Theology, 15(5), 159-178.
  • Tóth, T., Kékesdi-Boldog, D., Bokor, T., & Veczán, Z. (2019). "Protect our homeland!" Populist communication in the 2018 Hungarian election campaign on Facebook. Central European Journal of Communication, 12(Populism and the Media across Europe), 169-186.