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Social Effects of Mass Communication Chapter 19 © 2009, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 CHAPTER OUTLINE • • • • • • • Investigating Mass Communication Effects Effects on Knowledge and Attitudes Media Effects on Behavior: A Short History The Impact of Televised Violence Encouraging Prosocial Behavior Other Behavior Effects Research about The Social Effects of the Internet • Communication in the Future: Social Impact 2 INVESTIGATING MASS COMMUNICATION EFFECTS • Focus on scientific studies • Two methods common – Survey • Panel study – Experiment • Field experiment 3 EFFECTS ON KNOWLEDGE AND ATTITUDES • The dividing line between knowledge and attitudes is fuzzy. We will consider both • We will examine several topics that have generated the most research interest 4 Media and Socialization • Socialization is how individuals come to adopt behaviors and values of the group – Agencies of socialization include media 5 The Media as a Primary Source of Information • Learning is important part of the socialization process – Media, especially TV, are primary information source • Especially politics and public opinion – Entertainment media also provide information • About diverse topics such as occupations, crime, relationships, minorities, morals, etc 6 Shaping Attitudes, Perceptions, and Beliefs • Media can play important role in transmitting attitudes, perceptions, beliefs – Especially in young people who are heavy viewers of TV, when stereotypes consistently recur, and when they have limited exposure to alternative beliefs or other socializing agents • Creating stereotypes • Effects of heavy viewing • Absence of alternative information 7 Cultivation Analysis • Heavy TV viewing cultivates perceptions of reality consistent with the view of the world presented on TV. – Methodology – Research findings • Mainstreaming • Resonance – Criticisms of cultivation analysis • Determining cause and effect • Factors other than TV may affect people • Wording of questions on surveys 8 Children and Television Advertising • Given extent of children’s exposure to advertising, most people accept that children deserve special consideration from advertisers, due to: – Vulnerability of the audience – Effects of special selling techniques – Consumer socialization 9 Agenda Setting • When the media emphasize certain topics, we begin to think these topics are important • Most agenda-setting studies examine information-based media, especially political campaigns and issues • Agenda-setting research has led to – Framing research – Agenda-building research 10 MEDIA EFFECTS ON BEHAVIOR: A SHORT HISTORY • 1940s research was prompted by concern about political effects of mass media, especially radio • 1950s-1960s: Growth of TV shifted concern to affects on young people • 1970s-1980s-1990s: Concern about affects of violent content – 2007: FCC urged Congress to allow the agency to regulate violent content 11 THE IMPACT OF TELEVISED VIOLENCE • The impact of televised violence is a complex issue, and the definitive answer has not yet been found 12 Survey Results • Decades of surveys reveal a significant correlation between viewing violent TV and aggressive behavior in real life – Correlation does not prove causality • Panel studies have provided stronger evidence that there is a mutual causal connection between watching TV violence and performing aggressive acts – Connection is small and influenced by individual and cultural factors 13 Experimental Results: The Catharsis Versus Stimulation Debate • Two rival theories on impact of media violence – Catharsis – Stimulation • Experiments support stimulation, not catharsis 14 Bandura’s Experiment • Albert Bandura, 1960s – Experiments with Bobo doll – Found that film and TV might teach aggressive behavior to children 15 Complicating Factors • Many factors can influence the outcomes of experiments into the effects of violent content, including: – Experimental setting – Participate age, gender, social class, family history, economic background, etc – Length and type of content viewed – Reactions of others to the same content 16 Field Experiments • Field experiments are more naturalistic – People react more naturally – Harder to control for other outside influences • Field experiment results vary but tend to support the notion that viewing TV violence fosters aggressive behavior 17 What Can We Conclude • A consistent thread appears – Tentative acceptance that watching violence on television increases aggression in at least some viewers – Effects are weak or small, but are not necessarily trivial 18 ENCOURAGING PROSOCIAL BEHAVIOR • Most media research has studied potential negative effects of media • Research on prosocial behavior studies potential positive effects, including – Cooperation, sharing, self control, helping 19 Experiments • Lab experiments have shown that film and TV content can affect young children’s self control, cooperation, sharing, and helping 20 Surveys • Survey data measure what TV programs children watch, and how often they perform prosocial acts • A wide variety of prosocial behaviors have been examined 21 Research Results • Research in this area is hard to interpret – Prosocial behavior covers many areas • Experiments indicate moderate short-term impact of exposure to prosocial behavior • Surveys reveal moderate impact of voluntary exposure to prosocial programs – Positive impact about as strong as that of the negative impact from exposure to violence – Altruism is most strongly-affected prosocial behavior 22 OTHER BEHAVIOR EFFECTS • Researchers have also studied other potential effects of media exposure 23 Political Behavior • Negative advertising • Effects of mass media on voter choice – Conversion – Reinforcement – Crystallization • Effects of televised debates • Television and the political behavior of politicians 24 RESEARCH ABOUT THE SOCIAL EFFECTS OF THE INTERNET • Two trends in Internet studies – Impact of Internet use on other media • Greatest effect on TV usage • Internet important as source of news – Relationship between Internet use and social involvement • Contradictory results don’t yet support conclusions 25 COMMUNICATION IN THE FUTURE: SOCIAL IMPACT • Advances in media technology usually have an upside and a downside 26 Privacy • The widespread exchange of information has had both positive and negative consequences • Personal information is uncomfortably easy to find 27 Fragmentation and Isolation • Mass media serve needs of ever more specialized audiences – Directing people to ever more selective content exposure – Could result in smaller and smaller interest groups • The cocoon effect 28 Escape • People could always immerse themselves in world of mass media, and tune out of the real world • New technologies have caused those fears to resurface – HDTV, the Internet, virtual reality, role-playing games 29