curriculum vitae____ (8/98) - Missouri School of Journalism
... Li, Y. & Thorson, E. (In press). A longitudinal study of the relationship between a news organization’s editorial content and its circulation and revenue. Newspaper Research Journal. Thorson, E., Karaliova, T., Kim, E. A., & Shoenberger, H. (In press). News use of mobile media: A contingency view. M ...
... Li, Y. & Thorson, E. (In press). A longitudinal study of the relationship between a news organization’s editorial content and its circulation and revenue. Newspaper Research Journal. Thorson, E., Karaliova, T., Kim, E. A., & Shoenberger, H. (In press). News use of mobile media: A contingency view. M ...
- Cornerstone - Minnesota State University, Mankato
... have been found to be much more negative than the campaign messages themselves. This line of work has also examined the topics of news coverage of general presidential debates. In the general campaign, policy was discussed significantly more in the debates than in the stories about the debates (74% ...
... have been found to be much more negative than the campaign messages themselves. This line of work has also examined the topics of news coverage of general presidential debates. In the general campaign, policy was discussed significantly more in the debates than in the stories about the debates (74% ...
PDF-1 - RUcore
... intimidating them by saying that publication of information deemed to harm national security could result in jail time, with journalists being prosecuted under the 1917 Espionage Act (Eggen, 2006). Although that never occurred, several administration officials insinuated that when The Washington Pos ...
... intimidating them by saying that publication of information deemed to harm national security could result in jail time, with journalists being prosecuted under the 1917 Espionage Act (Eggen, 2006). Although that never occurred, several administration officials insinuated that when The Washington Pos ...
Credibility of Social Network Sites for Political Information Among
... who share the users’ values and interests (Metzger, et al., 2010). In general, information that supports a receiver’s worldview is convincing and confirming and thus it is judged as more legitimate and credible than challenging information (Johnson & Kaye, 2009). SNS users have a considerable degree ...
... who share the users’ values and interests (Metzger, et al., 2010). In general, information that supports a receiver’s worldview is convincing and confirming and thus it is judged as more legitimate and credible than challenging information (Johnson & Kaye, 2009). SNS users have a considerable degree ...
Curriculum Vitae - UNC School of Media and Journalism
... Political Campaigns. (pp. 13-31). New York: New York University Press. Kreiss, D. (2015). Afterword to the Special Issue, “The Objects of Journalism.” Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism, 16(1), 153–156. Kreiss, D. (2014). A Vision of and for the Networked World: John Perry Barlow's ‘Declarat ...
... Political Campaigns. (pp. 13-31). New York: New York University Press. Kreiss, D. (2015). Afterword to the Special Issue, “The Objects of Journalism.” Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism, 16(1), 153–156. Kreiss, D. (2014). A Vision of and for the Networked World: John Perry Barlow's ‘Declarat ...
Media Power
... This paper suggests a theoretical approach to address these two issues. To deal with the …rst challenge, the paper moves away from the two-stage approach employed by the FCC’s Media Diversity Index, as well as all other existing media measures, which consists of …rst analyzing concentration for indi ...
... This paper suggests a theoretical approach to address these two issues. To deal with the …rst challenge, the paper moves away from the two-stage approach employed by the FCC’s Media Diversity Index, as well as all other existing media measures, which consists of …rst analyzing concentration for indi ...
Scandal Potential - Dartmouth College
... brand name, a collective good that the president shares with his fellow co-partisans.21 This externality creates an important additional incentive for the opposition to try to foment scandal. Similarly, the press has became far more willing to engage in aggressive coverage of scandal in social probl ...
... brand name, a collective good that the president shares with his fellow co-partisans.21 This externality creates an important additional incentive for the opposition to try to foment scandal. Similarly, the press has became far more willing to engage in aggressive coverage of scandal in social probl ...
The Politics of Negotiating Public Tragedy
... days later without ever having regained consciousness. McKinney and Henderson had been apprehended prior to his death, and as the gruesome details of that night began to unfold, it became clear that Matthew Shepard was brutally murdered for being gay. In the weeks that followed, Shepard became a sym ...
... days later without ever having regained consciousness. McKinney and Henderson had been apprehended prior to his death, and as the gruesome details of that night began to unfold, it became clear that Matthew Shepard was brutally murdered for being gay. In the weeks that followed, Shepard became a sym ...
- Wiley Online Library
... to traditional media, the current media environment, with its channel proliferation and content diversification, allows unprecedented choice. This facilitates it for people’s selective exposure to like-minded outlets, such as various cable channels, partisan radio shows, or ideological newspapers o ...
... to traditional media, the current media environment, with its channel proliferation and content diversification, allows unprecedented choice. This facilitates it for people’s selective exposure to like-minded outlets, such as various cable channels, partisan radio shows, or ideological newspapers o ...
The Impact of Reporter Gender on Print News Coverage of the 2008
... important role in how the overall coverage may have influenced voters for a variety of reasons, but primarily because research suggests that news content can have a significant impact on voter opinion – and thus behavior at the polling booths (Culbertson et al. 1985, Gentzkow and Shapiro 2006, and o ...
... important role in how the overall coverage may have influenced voters for a variety of reasons, but primarily because research suggests that news content can have a significant impact on voter opinion – and thus behavior at the polling booths (Culbertson et al. 1985, Gentzkow and Shapiro 2006, and o ...
Journal of Communication 49(1)
... audiences with schemas for interpreting events. For him, essential factors are selection and salience: “To frame is to select some aspects of a perceived reality and make them more salient in a communicating text, in such a way as to promote a particular problem definition, causal interpretation, mo ...
... audiences with schemas for interpreting events. For him, essential factors are selection and salience: “To frame is to select some aspects of a perceived reality and make them more salient in a communicating text, in such a way as to promote a particular problem definition, causal interpretation, mo ...
- Moody College of Communication
... A second means by which people may be exposed to political difference online is through blurred and porous boundaries between one communicative space and the next. These boundary characteristics translate into online news media and forums of political discussion that are tightly connected in time an ...
... A second means by which people may be exposed to political difference online is through blurred and porous boundaries between one communicative space and the next. These boundary characteristics translate into online news media and forums of political discussion that are tightly connected in time an ...
July 1, 2007 14:59 WSPC/169
... scholars in the social sciences, such as political science, sociology, and communication studies, have built on the idea of the two-step flow of communication and developed new research topics and concepts like the diffusion of innovation and the survival of disagreement (see, for example, Refs. 13 an ...
... scholars in the social sciences, such as political science, sociology, and communication studies, have built on the idea of the two-step flow of communication and developed new research topics and concepts like the diffusion of innovation and the survival of disagreement (see, for example, Refs. 13 an ...
Annex 7: Media plurality and news - a summary of
... of countries. Researchers including Norris, Curtice and Scammell have looked at the role of media coverage in UK general elections. The findings of these studies suggest that newspaper coverage within campaigns does affect readers, although they differ as to the exact nature of these effects. Howeve ...
... of countries. Researchers including Norris, Curtice and Scammell have looked at the role of media coverage in UK general elections. The findings of these studies suggest that newspaper coverage within campaigns does affect readers, although they differ as to the exact nature of these effects. Howeve ...
Get cached
... percent in 1870 to 62 percent in 1920.3 Another measure of bias is the use of charged language by the press. Negative words such as “slander,” “liar,” and “villainous” are used by papers to dismiss undesirable statements; words such as “honest,” “honorable,” and “irreproachable” are used to defend p ...
... percent in 1870 to 62 percent in 1920.3 Another measure of bias is the use of charged language by the press. Negative words such as “slander,” “liar,” and “villainous” are used by papers to dismiss undesirable statements; words such as “honest,” “honorable,” and “irreproachable” are used to defend p ...
PIP 2004 Campaign
... reflect the entire internet-using population, the preferences and needs of this audience have changed. In the early days of online politics, when the online audience was quite elite and highly politically engaged, online news consumers liked the internet most because it provided information from non ...
... reflect the entire internet-using population, the preferences and needs of this audience have changed. In the early days of online politics, when the online audience was quite elite and highly politically engaged, online news consumers liked the internet most because it provided information from non ...
Silencing Dissent - Harvard Kennedy School
... countries such as Sweden and France. This pattern is certainly suggestive of strong effects arising from state control of the media but it cannot be regarded as furnishing conclusive proof, since it remains possible that many other factors which differentiate these societies could always be generati ...
... countries such as Sweden and France. This pattern is certainly suggestive of strong effects arising from state control of the media but it cannot be regarded as furnishing conclusive proof, since it remains possible that many other factors which differentiate these societies could always be generati ...
MEPs online: Understanding communication strategies for remote
... MEPs’ policy stances and their interventions in debates. They would also be likely to seek this information in easy to access formats, including podcasts or downloads. Two key groups MEPs may connect are partisan or political activists . Activists may be mobilised through specific campaign related f ...
... MEPs’ policy stances and their interventions in debates. They would also be likely to seek this information in easy to access formats, including podcasts or downloads. Two key groups MEPs may connect are partisan or political activists . Activists may be mobilised through specific campaign related f ...
MEDIA MANAGEMENT * MCM 601
... Journalists, especially television reporters, often assert themselves into the stories they cover. This happens most often in terms of proximity, i.e. to the locus of unfolding events or within the orbit of powerful political and civic actors. This bias helps journalists establish and maintain a cul ...
... Journalists, especially television reporters, often assert themselves into the stories they cover. This happens most often in terms of proximity, i.e. to the locus of unfolding events or within the orbit of powerful political and civic actors. This bias helps journalists establish and maintain a cul ...
WORLD NEWS FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 22nd of 2006
... Globe and Mail - 11 hours ago OTTAWA — The Conservative government will force the automotive sector to comply with tough mandatory vehicle-emission requirements, using California's stringent standards as its model. The plan to reduce ... Canada set to toughen vehicle emission rules: report Reuters C ...
... Globe and Mail - 11 hours ago OTTAWA — The Conservative government will force the automotive sector to comply with tough mandatory vehicle-emission requirements, using California's stringent standards as its model. The plan to reduce ... Canada set to toughen vehicle emission rules: report Reuters C ...
Transgovernmental Networks in European Security and Defence
... In this paper, we test the transgovernmental thesis through social network analysis, a methodology that detects patterns of formal and informal social relations across a policy field. The picture that emerges from our analysis confirms a weak form of transgovernmentalism in which cross-border ties b ...
... In this paper, we test the transgovernmental thesis through social network analysis, a methodology that detects patterns of formal and informal social relations across a policy field. The picture that emerges from our analysis confirms a weak form of transgovernmentalism in which cross-border ties b ...
Unburdened by Objectivity: Political Entertainment News in the 2008
... (1) Rhetoric is the most powerful when it is not noticed, and nobody notices popular culture; (2) people are easiest to persuade when they are in a good mood, and entertainment creates such moods; (3) some of our most basic values come to us when we are young, and the young consume entertainment vor ...
... (1) Rhetoric is the most powerful when it is not noticed, and nobody notices popular culture; (2) people are easiest to persuade when they are in a good mood, and entertainment creates such moods; (3) some of our most basic values come to us when we are young, and the young consume entertainment vor ...
stock prediction using financial news and social media
... earnings(Tetlock 2007; Tetlock 2008). Vega further proves the existence of media influence by finding that stocks associated with private information experience low or insignificant drift while stocks associated with public news experience significant drift (Vega 2006). All these researchers focus o ...
... earnings(Tetlock 2007; Tetlock 2008). Vega further proves the existence of media influence by finding that stocks associated with private information experience low or insignificant drift while stocks associated with public news experience significant drift (Vega 2006). All these researchers focus o ...
Mediating racism The role of the media in the
... immigration had a more permanent character from the outset. It was initially facilitated by the fact that most of them carried metropolitan passports, although several countries, especially Britain, soon passed laws that barred unlimited immigration of their overseas, that is Black, citizens. The so ...
... immigration had a more permanent character from the outset. It was initially facilitated by the fact that most of them carried metropolitan passports, although several countries, especially Britain, soon passed laws that barred unlimited immigration of their overseas, that is Black, citizens. The so ...