4,501 results on '"PRESS"'
Search Results
2. Negative news positive effect: the change of consumers' cognition process.
- Author
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Li, Pengyu, Shao, Jingbo, and Wu, Hang
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SOCIAL media , *IN vitro studies , *CONSUMER psychology , *SHOPPING , *CONSUMER attitudes , *EMPIRICAL research , *SALES personnel , *MARKETING , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PRESS , *ADVERTISING , *BUSINESS , *COMMUNICATION , *HYPOTHESIS , *ANALYSIS of variance , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *COGNITION - Abstract
Development of live shopping has introduced a new form of celebrity endorsement. This study examines the impact of negative news related to streamers on viewers' purchasing behaviour during live streaming, considering different types of negative news. Drawing on research related to celebrity endorsement and information dissemination, this study presents the results from one natural experiment and four lab experiments. The findings suggest that negative news about streamers, as well as their responses to such news, positively influence viewers' purchasing behaviour during live streaming, which is mediated by their visit to the live streaming. Furthermore, the study reveals that negative news related to streamers' personal behaviour has a more positive impact than negative news related to the product they are selling. The positive effect of response to negative news is weakened when the response seems to protect the wrongdoers. This study contributes to the development of endorsement theory, retests the model of the endorser effect, and expands the literature about celebrity scandals. Additionally, the findings provide practical suggestions for retailers and streamers who are dealing with negative news. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. A Comparative Content Analysis of the News Media Framing of Trans Homicide Between Trans Men and Trans Women in the U.S. from 2016 to 2022.
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Avalos, Susana
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SOCIAL media , *VICTIM psychology , *DEATH , *LGBTQ+ people , *SEX discrimination , *MISINFORMATION , *PRESS , *HUMAN rights , *THEMATIC analysis , *HOMICIDE , *DATA analysis software , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SOCIAL stigma ,AMERICAN transgender people - Abstract
Recently, the media's coverage of trans homicides has increased in the U.S. Studies show that the news media's framing has been largely negative but has improved in recent times. Yet, research has mostly analyzed the news media's framing of victims who were trans women, thus limiting our understanding of this issue across different trans groups. The present study employs a mixed method approach to comparatively analyze articles (N = 124) published in online news media outlets of 15 trans men and 15 trans women murdered between 2016 and 2022. The findings indicate news media outlets used more positive and neutral frames than negative for both groups. However, when compared to trans women, trans men were delegitimized at higher rates. These findings highlight the ways that the police, news media, family, friends, and community members simultaneously contribute to the humanization and delegitimization of trans victims of homicide, demonstrating the importance of ensuring all information released about the victims correctly reflects who they were, or the cycle of delegitimization will continue. By studying how the news media frames trans homicide victims, we can look at how the media shapes cultural beliefs and ideologies about trans people, the role of language in reinforcing stereotypes, and the implications of these framings for trans people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. At risk or remarkably resilient? Childhood vulnerability in governmental justifications of COVID-19 school closures.
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Donaghue-Evans, Michael
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PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *POLICY sciences , *CHILD welfare , *QUALITATIVE research , *SCHOOLS , *CONTENT analysis , *CHILD health services , *STATE governments , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *STAY-at-home orders , *PRESS , *PEDIATRICS , *PUBLIC health , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability , *COVID-19 pandemic , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Children faced many challenges due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the school closure policies that were implemented to combat it. When justifying closures, governments had to decide how to frame children's vulnerability, as their decisions protected children from some harms while forcing them to endure others. Children are typically framed as vulnerable to justify implementing protective policies but given that these protective policies came with severe consequences for children, it was not an inherently appropriate framing in this case. This study compares the press releases about school closures produced by the Victorian and New South Wales state governments to examine how they framed children's vulnerability and how this positioned their obligation to protect children. It concludes that even though school closures were protective policies, neither government framed children as particularly vulnerable. This is likely explained by the fact that many of the consequences of school closures were harmful to children, so emphasising their vulnerability may have made it harder to retain public support for these policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. "It's the ideology, stupid!": Trust in the press, ideological proximity between citizens and journalists and political parallelism. A comparative approach in 17 countries.
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Curini, Luigi, Garusi, Diego, and Splendore, Sergio
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TRUST , *COMPARATIVE method , *POLITICAL news coverage , *JOURNALISTS , *PRESS - Abstract
Matching national surveys with the dataset offered by the Worlds of Journalism Study network (2012–2016), this article presents an analysis of trust in the press covering 16 European countries and the United States. Drawing from the spatial proximity model of voter utility, this article focuses on the ideological proximity between journalists' and citizens' left-right positions as a determinant of trust in the press. We expect a positive relationship between these two variables. However, we also hypothesize that the strength of such relationship is mediated by the type of media model (according to Hallin and Mancini's classification) existing in the different countries. In particular, we expect a higher impact within those contexts where the level of political parallelism is higher. The statistical results are as expected. This article highlights that news media trust research should focus more thoroughly on the interaction and interrelation of news media, audience, and politics. The article brings also implications about the concept of political parallelism in journalism and how it is received by readers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Assessing the Impact of Media on Blaming the Victim of Acquaintance Rape.
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Gravelin, Claire R., Biernat, Monica, and Kerl, Emily
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DEFENSE mechanisms (Psychology) , *VICTIM psychology , *SEX crimes , *STEREOTYPES , *CONTENT analysis , *RAPE , *SCAPEGOAT , *PUBLIC opinion , *MASS media , *PRESS - Abstract
Along with the direct trauma of their experience, many rape victims also suffer secondary victimization due to the tendency of others to blame victims for their assault, particularly in cases of acquaintance rape. We explored the role of news media coverage in promoting victim blaming tendencies. In Study 1, a content analysis of articles reporting sexual assaults from two newspapers revealed a tendency for media to overreport stranger rapes and underreport acquaintance rapes, perpetuating the stranger rape as "real rape" prototype. More victim blaming language was also used in reports of acquaintance rape than stranger rape. Perceivers responded to these differences; a high victim blaming news article resulted in greater victim blaming compared to an article low in victim blame content (Study 2 and 3), and exposure to a high blaming article produced greater victim blaming in a subsequent unrelated case of rape and increased endorsement of rape myths (Study 3). These findings demonstrate the importance of the media in shaping public perception of rape victims, particularly in cases of acquaintance rape, and suggest that news media, legislators, and other visible communicators can change the culture of victimization through intentional efforts to delegitimize rape stereotypes in their reporting and dialogs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Highlighting Victim Vividness and External Attribution to Influence Policy Support Regarding the Opioid Epidemic: The Mediating Role of Emotions.
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Lu, Hang
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *DRUG overdose , *GOVERNMENT policy , *VICTIM psychology , *FACTORIAL experiment designs , *CRIMINALS , *STATISTICAL sampling , *ANGER , *COMPASSION , *MANIPULATIVE behavior , *EMOTIONS , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *SURVEYS , *PRESS , *PHARMACEUTICAL industry , *COMMUNICATION , *PUNISHMENT , *OPIOID analgesics , *ANALYSIS of variance , *OPIOID epidemic , *SOCIAL support , *THEORY , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *FACTOR analysis , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SOCIAL stigma , *DRUG abusers - Abstract
Recognizing the need for more evidence-based interventions and the potential of well-crafted messages in communicating the opioid epidemic, this study investigates the effectiveness of two messaging strategies (i.e., victim vividness and external attribution) that have the potential to mitigate stigmatization and influence a wide range of public policies concerning the opioid epidemic. Building upon the attribution theory of interpersonal behavior, an experiment with a 2 (victim vividness: high vs. low) × 2 (external attribution: present vs. absent) between-subjects factorial design was conducted among a national sample of U.S. adults (N = 995). The findings show that the messages with greater victim vividness reduced support for victim-oriented punitive policies, whereas the messages that mentioned external attribution increased support for perpetrator-oriented punitive policies. In addition, the two messaging strategies also worked indirectly through various emotions to influence policy support. Discussions on this study's contributions to both theory and practice are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Libels, Licenses, Liberties: Conceptualising Freedom of Speech in Colonial and Postcolonial India.
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Leonard, Zak
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Analysing legal cases involving libel, rioting, sedition, and breaches of the press acts in colonial and postcolonial India, this article emphasises the continued relevance of eighteenth-century common law precedents to the conceptualisation of ‘freedom of expression’. Lawyer Thomas Erskine’s advocacy of liberty of speech in a series of seditious libel trials and Lord Mansfield’s notable commentary in the Shipley (Dean of St. Asaph) case provided a resilient framework for adjudicating the issue until the 1950s. Changes in the Indian political climate, however, prompted varying reassessments of these findings. Prior to 1910, judges and defendants in the trials of Reverend James Long, Kahanji Dharamsingh, and B. G. Tilak mined Erskine’s speeches as a resource that could help them clarify authorial intent, gauge the ‘tendency’ of texts, and specify the constitutional role of the jury. After this period, debates over freedom of expression increasingly centred upon Mansfield’s ruling — popularised by scholar A. V. Dicey — that solely associated liberty of speech with the absence of licenses for publication. Thereafter, critics of the Indian press acts weaponized Mansfield’s ruling to challenge the colonial state’s burgeoning autocracy. By the 1950s, a third shift had occurred as justices and parliamentarians offered contrary interpretations of Dicey’s
own analysis in debating the Indian government’s continued reliance on censorship laws. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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9. Changes in the quality of oil extracted by hot pressing from black cumin (Nigella sativa) seeds and by solvent from the obtained cake during refining.
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Abedinzadeh, Solmaz, Torbati, Mohammadali, Azadmard‐Damirchi, Sodeif, and Hashempour‐Baltork, Fataneh
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BLACK cumin , *HOT pressing , *OILSEEDS , *FREE fatty acids , *SEEDS , *NUTRITIONAL requirements , *SOLVENTS - Abstract
In this study, oil was extracted from black cumin (Nigella sativa) seed (BCS) by press, and oil was extracted from the obtained cake with a solvent. The changes in the quality of both crude oils obtained by pressing and by solvent were investigated during refining. Findings revealed that the p‐anisidin value (p‐AV) and fatty acid profile did not change significantly, but there were significant differences (p <.05) in the peroxide value (PV), reflective index, pigment contents, free fatty acid content (FFA%), and antioxidant activity (total phenol content (TPC), thymoquinone, and DPPH inhibition) of BCS oils obtained by the two different methods. PV and FFA decreased to less than 15 meqO2/kg and 0.3%, respectively, in the refined oil. The TPC (65%), thymoquinone (45–97%), carotenoids (86–89%), and chlorophyll (75–85%) were removed from BCS oil, but the DPPH value was raised by about 33%. The current study gives a clear picture of the changes during refining in BCS oil, which can be a useful guide in food applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Summaries of safety labeling changes approved by FDA—boxed warnings highlights, October–December 2023.
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DRUG toxicity , *PATIENT safety , *CENTRAL nervous system stimulants , *PRESS , *PHARMACY information services , *ESTRADIOL , *OPIOID analgesics , *DRUG labeling , *GLYCOSIDASES - Abstract
The article highlights the changes in safety labeling approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) from October to December 2023. Topics mentioned include the life-threatening respiratory depression caused by opioid Actiq, the risks associated with the use of central nervous system depressant benzodiazepines, and the interaction of Actiq with cytochrome P450 3A4.
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- 2024
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11. Exploration of the Content and Structure of Preferences for Leisure Activities of People Receiving Adult Day Services Using Concept Mapping.
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Rommerskirch-Manietta, Mike, Bergmann, Johannes M, Manietta, Christina, Purwins, Daniel, Haitsma, Kimberly Van, Abbott, Katherine M, and Roes, Martina
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INTELLECT , *PLAY , *MUSIC , *SELF-efficacy , *PLEASURE , *SPORTS , *ADULT day care , *INTERVIEWING , *TRAVEL , *LEARNING , *LEISURE , *PRESS , *GAMES , *SPECIAL days , *AGING in place , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEMORY , *PHYSICAL fitness , *COMMUNICATION , *MEDICAL research , *SOCIAL support , *CONCEPTS , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *THEORY , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *PATIENT participation , *CONCEPT mapping , *RELAXATION for health , *SOCIAL isolation , *GROUP process , *FRIENDSHIP - Abstract
Background and Objectives Providing preferred leisure activities appears to be an important approach to support and empower people receiving adult day services (ADS) allowing them to age in place. To provide the conceptualization for a preference instrument, we actively involved people receiving ADS in exploring the content and structure of their preferences for leisure activities. Research Design and Methods We chose a concept mapping methodology and involved 16 people receiving ADS. We systematically reviewed the literature and conducted semistructured interviews to generate a set of 80 preferences. Analysis of structuring these preferences resulted in a 3-dimensional cube with 12 clusters. A graphical representation was then interpreted , and the clusters were labeled. Results Our conceptualization divides preferences for leisure activities into the following: 1. Take a trip , 2. Revel in memories and catch up on the news (most important), 3. Do something for yourself and come to rest , 4. Play intelligence and parlor games , 5. Make/produce and try something alone or in a group , 6. Keep fit and cheer others on in sports (least important), 7. Learn, educate, and share knowledge , 8. Have contact with other people , 9. Attend at entertainment, cultural, and amusement events , 10. Enjoy music, your homeland, or other countries , 11. Engage in outdoor activities , and 12. Get involved, offer support, and provide companionship. Discussion and Implications Our results may lead to the development of instruments and thus opens the field for further research and theory building on preferences for leisure activities of people receiving ADS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. The Optimal Design of the Press Roller to Improve the Winding Molding Quality of Heat Insulation.
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Zhang, Weichao, Hou, Zengxuan, Li, Hongli, and Chen, Kaiyin
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THERMAL insulation , *ROCKET engines , *ELASTIC foundations , *FINITE element method , *PRESS - Abstract
In the heat insulation winding molding process of solid rocket motors, the pressure applied by the press roller directly affects the quality of the winding molding. Insufficient pressure can result in poor bonding quality and may cause defects. This paper aims to provide an optimal design of the press roller to improve the winding molding quality of the heat insulation. The effect of the cylindrical press roller on the pressure distribution was analyzed using the elastic foundation model and a finite element (FE) model, which was assessed by Hertz theory. Subsequently, the press roller was optimized to an elliptical concave design. The effect of the radius of the elliptical concave press roller on the pressure distribution was analyzed. A comparison of the effect of the elliptical concave press roller and the cylindrical press roller on the pressure distribution was conducted using the FE model. The results show pressure uniformity is significantly improved when the elliptical concave press roller is employed on the mandrel with the smallest radius. Additionally, the elliptical concave press roller increases the pressure at the edge of the tape, which reduces the risk of lifted edges and, thereby, improves the winding molding quality of the heat insulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Understanding Stakeholder Dissemination Preferences for an Agriculture, Forestry, and Fishing Injury Surveillance System.
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Hansen-Ruiz, Cristina S., Luschen, Kevin, Huber, John, and Scott, Erika
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SOCIAL media , *RESEARCH funding , *FORESTS & forestry , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *FISHING , *WORK-related injuries , *PRESS , *COMMUNICATION , *AGRICULTURE - Abstract
Researchers and epidemiologists are working to improve the capture of agriculture, forestry, and fishing (AgFF) injuries in a variety of ways. A critical component of any surveillance system is the dissemination of information. The purpose of this paper is to report on a survey conducted with AgFF injury surveillance stakeholders to understand preferred dissemination strategies. The survey was distributed using REDCap via web link to organizational stakeholders, which included advisory board members, safety trainers, industry managers and workers, and research collaborators. In total, there were 75 respondents (21% response rate). Occupation and industry influenced preference in update methods. Regarding the length and breadth of updates, 63% of respondents prefer reports (one to five pages), followed by 57% desiring a summary (less than one page), while only 24% wanted a detailed analysis. Social media and news preferences were also different among stakeholders. Surveillance data were desired for 1) trend analysis, 2) tailoring activities and solutions for education, training, outreach and interventions and 3) for research purposes such as grant proposals and evaluation. The dissemination of injury surveillance data should be tailored to the intended audience. Greater attention needs to be paid to the ways in which we share our findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. The Watchdog Press in the Doghouse: A Comparative Study of Attitudes about Accountability Journalism, Trust in News, and News Avoidance.
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Kalogeropoulos, Antonis, Toff, Benjamin, and Fletcher, Richard
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TRUST , *PUBLIC opinion , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *FREEDOM of the press , *PRESS - Abstract
The watchdog role has been one of the most widely discussed normative functions of the press. In this study, we examine the public's attitudes toward the news media's watchdog performance and how they correlate with trust in news and news avoidance, two important phenomena for democracy and the health of the public sphere. We further examine how individual predispositions (e.g. political interest, ideology) and contextual variables (e.g. press freedom) moderate these relationships. Based on data from the 2019 Reuters Institute Digital News Report, and controlling for a range of factors, we find that across 38 countries, watchdog performance evaluations are positively associated with trust in news but that they are also positively associated with higher levels of news avoidance. Last, we find that evaluations of media in other functions like helping citizens understand the most important topics of the day and choosing relevant topics were more strongly associated to trust in news and lower news avoidance levels than watchdog performance evaluations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. A study on the representation of mental disorders in Turkish newspapers.
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Bilkay, Halil İbrahim, Yaman, Özge, Gürhan, Nermin, and Yilmaz-Bingöl, Tülay
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PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology , *HEALTH information services , *BEHAVIOR disorders , *VIOLENCE , *MENTAL health services , *MENTAL illness , *HEALTH policy , *NEWSPAPERS , *PUBLIC opinion , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *EMOTIONS , *PRESS , *AGGRESSION (Psychology) , *THEMATIC analysis , *MASS media , *ELECTRONIC publications , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PSYCHOSES , *MEDICINE information services , *ACCESS to information , *SOCIAL stigma , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Newspapers that address mental disorders affect health care positively or negatively and can affect the public's perspective with the way they explain mental disorders. To examine the representation of news about mental disorders published in Turkish newspapers. Using the document analysis method, 230 news about mental disorders published in the six most read newspapers in 2022 were examined. It has been concluded that the descriptive characteristics of individuals with mental disorders are often stated, schizophrenia and psychotic disorders are mentioned most, mental disorders are associated with delinquency and violent behaviour, these people are mostly represented by being detained as a result of the events, and negative concepts are frequently used in newspaper reports. Five sub-themes were determined under the main theme of "Negative Concepts": "Exaggerated Discourses", "Stigmatizing Discourses", "Discourses Targeting Mental Health", "Discourses That May Cause Negative Emotions", "Discourses Containing Misdescription". Newspaper items about mental disorders are represented as stigmatizing and misleading by using negative concepts. The sensitivity of media workers, the development of mental health policies and cooperation with mental health workers contribute to the recovery process of individuals with mental disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Creating a Place in Middle America: How Spanish-Language Local News Serves the Hispanic Community.
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Tapia, Margarita H., Anderson, Chris, and Edy, Jill A.
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MASS media criticism , *COMMUNITY health services , *ACCIDENTS , *IMMIGRANTS , *CRIME , *ECOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *PREDICTION models , *HISPANIC Americans , *CONTENT analysis , *HEALTH , *TELEVISION , *HEALTH risk assessment , *QUANTITATIVE research , *CHI-squared test , *PRESS , *LINGUISTIC minorities , *BUSINESS , *RACE , *SPANISH language , *DISASTERS , *HYPOTHESIS , *ENGLISH language , *PUBLIC administration , *PRACTICAL politics , *COMMUNICATION barriers , *VIDEO recording , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) - Abstract
A fraction of Hispanic people in the U.S. uses Spanish-language news because a language barrier prevents them using English-language news. Functional theory suggests ethnic media serve ethnic community needs ignored by mainstream media. Research on how Spanish-language news serves U.S. Hispanic communities and differs from English-language news typically studies large, politically liberal cities with large Hispanic populations, neglecting Hispanic people living elsewhere. Content analysis of local newscasts to assess differences between network-affiliated, English-language television stations and the Telemundo affiliate serving a mid-sized, midwestern, politically conservative market addresses these limitations. An analytic framework derived from functional theory categorizes community needs as informational and representational. Results show significantly different agendas between Spanish- and English-language news. Spanish-language news airs more human interest and government stories and fewer crime stories. It addresses unique informational needs, helping orient newcomers and airing government stories that sustain ties to Spanish-speaking countries. Regarding representation, results show Hispanic people are invisible to a greater extent than they are negatively portrayed in English-language news. Thus, Spanish-language local television news serves the Hispanic community by making it visible to itself. However, Spanish-language news focuses on the Hispanic community rather than being a general news source, supplementing rather than substituting for English-language news. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Vernacular constructions of the relationship between freedom of speech and (potential) hate speech: The case of Finland.
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Pettersson, Katarina and Norocel, Ov Cristian
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SPEECH , *SOCIAL psychology , *LGBTQ+ people , *EQUALITY , *RACIALIZATION , *PRESS , *HUMAN rights , *PRACTICAL politics , *MINORITIES , *CIVIL rights - Abstract
The blurred distinction between freedom of expression and hate speech in ever more polarised public debates across Europe and beyond has prompted research on hate speech, particularly focusing on right‐wing populist politicians. Little is known, however, about how this distinction is construed by ordinary citizens. Deploying the concept of retrogressive mobilisation, this study examines how cases of (potential) political hate speech – one targeting racialised minorities, the other the LGBTQ+ community – are interpreted and negotiated by ordinary citizens through their comments on online news in Finland. Deploying a critical discursive psychological approach, we analyse the vernacular meanings that ordinary citizens attach to the notions of political hate speech, thereby highlighting the dynamic relationship between political and everyday discourse. We evidence three discursive constructions of the relationship between freedom of expression and (potential) hate speech. In these constructions, the same rhetorical resources, especially the liberal arguments of equality and freedom of expression, were deployed to service the opposite discursive functions – that is, for both 'liberal' and 'illiberal' ends – to condemn and justify discrimination against minoritised groups. Our study contributes to the social psychological understanding of contemporary hate speech and builds a bridge between social psychology and the more recent field of anti‐gender research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Exploring the public sentiment of local community on major infrastructure development: Evidence from media news and Twitter data.
- Author
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Khoirunurrofik, Khoirunurrofik, Endrina Dewi, Calista, and Marwah Zulkarnain, Annisa
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SENTIMENT analysis , *PRESS , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SOCIAL media , *LOCAL government , *STAKEHOLDER analysis , *COMMUNITIES , *ARCHITECTURE , *QUANTITATIVE research , *POPULATION geography , *CONSTRUCTION industry , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *RESEARCH funding , *DECISION making , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *BUSINESS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *EMOTIONS , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *EMPIRICAL research , *PUBLIC opinion , *TRANSPORTATION - Abstract
This study analyzes public sentiment on news sites and Twitter concerning the development of the Trans-Sumatra Toll Road (JTTS). Applying a lexicon-based approach to calculate sentiment scores, this study found a predominance of positive sentiments in news articles and tweets regarding the JTTS development. Employing multinomial logit estimation to examine the determining factors, this study however found no specific relationship between JTTS segment completion and public sentiment on news sites or Twitter. Nonetheless, the association changed and became noticeable on Twitter after controlling the effects of socioeconomic characteristics on sentiment scores. The development status of the JTTS segment influenced public sentiment considerably. This study highlights the potential of social media to facilitate public engagement and inform government decision making. Furthermore, it offers a comprehensive analysis of public sentiment regarding toll road infrastructure development by incorporating multiple stakeholders, including government agencies, business actors, community organizations (via news articles), and local communities (via Twitter data), and highlights various interests, concerns, and conflicts surrounding toll road projects. The investigation of socioeconomic and demographic factors in relation to public sentiment further contributes to our understanding of the underlying influences and dynamics that shape opinions on toll-road infrastructure through sentiment analysis and quantitative methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Bearing Witness to Joy and Sorrow: Narrative Medicine and Reproductive Endocrinologist and Infertility (REI) Providers' Journeys in Infertility Treatment.
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Quinlan, Margaret M., Carmack, Heather J., and Schambach, Emma
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INFERTILITY treatment , *CRITICISM , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *FAMILY conflict , *DATA analysis , *ENDOCRINOLOGISTS , *INTERVIEWING , *UNCERTAINTY , *FINANCIAL stress , *PRESS , *HAPPINESS , *PHYSICIAN-patient relations , *COMMUNICATION , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *TRUST , *STORYTELLING , *FERTILIZATION in vitro , *GRIEF , *NARRATIVE medicine , *SOCIAL support , *HONESTY , *SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
This study examines providers' perceptions of provider-patient communication in reproductive endocrinology and infertility (REI) practices. Grounded in narrative medicine, we interviewed six REI providers about their experiences providing fertility care. REI providers crafted a narrative of bearing witness by (1) situating personal and professional self in REI narratives, (2) sharing news as important medical moments, and (3) cultivating affiliation between provider and patient. These findings offer insight into the power of narrative medicine in fertility care, the role of emplotment in narrative sense-making, and the emotional labor associated with information delivery in REI treatments. We offer several recommendations for how patients and providers can improve communication experiences in REI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Calling a Spade a Spade: The Concept of Populism in the Portuguese Press.
- Author
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GAIO E SILVA, JOÃO and MARINHA, ANDRÉ
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POPULISM , *PRESS , *MASS media , *CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Populism’s increasing prominence in politics raises questions about its definition and usage. Drawing on qualitative and quantitative text analysis, this article addresses how populism is portrayed in the Portuguese press, its associations, and discrepancies with academic discourse. Over a ten-year period (2012-2021), this study examines two media outlets to assess populism’s presence in the press before Chega’s parliamentary entry. Populism is often tied to international figures, in opinion pieces, under a negative tone, and typically associated with ideological positioning. The haziness and conceptual imprecision of populism extend beyond academia halls, although the media is significantly aligned with scholarly definitions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Oshibana: Press your way into patience and harmony with this historical Japanese art form.
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Schwartz, Sandi
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JAPANESE art , *PATIENCE , *POLLINATION , *FLOWER arrangements , *FLOWERING of plants , *PRESS , *POLLINATORS - Abstract
Oshibana is a traditional Japanese art form that involves using pressed flowers and other botanical materials to create compositions. It originated in the 16th century as a Samurai discipline and has recently gained popularity as a way to relax and connect with nature. Oshibana offers benefits such as enhancing nature connection, boosting mental health, and providing therapeutic relief for physical ailments. The process involves collecting botanical materials, pressing them using various techniques, arranging them into designs, and securing them in place. Oshibana can be an accessible and affordable hobby, and there are resources available for those interested in learning more about this art form. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
22. “THE WORLD’S CHAMPION AERONAUT” VISITS AMERICA.
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WINSTONE, REG
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AERONAUTICAL flights , *PRESS , *JOURNALISM , *AIR pilots - Abstract
The article focuses on the visit of French aviator Henri Farman to America in 1908 for flight demonstrations. Topics include Farman's achievements in Europe, his reception in the U.S., challenges faced during his demonstrations at Brighton Beach, New York, and the subsequent disappointment and criticism from the public and press, leading to the premature end of his American tour.
- Published
- 2024
23. Contested languages in the contemporary Italian press: an analysis of language ideology.
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Screti, Francesco
- Abstract
Based on a critical discursive perspective, this work analyses the ideology around the languages spoken in Italy, namely Italian and contested languages such as Lombard, Neapolitan or Sicilian, which are commonly referred to as ‘dialects’. The aim is to study how journalists construct, spread and justify a monolingual ideology that favours central nationalism (or macronationalism). Seventy-one articles have been examined, which were published online by the major Italian newspaper la Repubblica (www.repubblica.it) in 2011, the year of the 150th anniversary of the unification of Italy. The analysis shows that journalists contribute to Italian macronationalism mainly through three discursive strategies: references to plurality, language hierarchisation, and suffering erasure. In the first strategy, contested languages are negatively framed as many, unintelligible and divisive. In the second, a categorisation such as ‘language/dialect’ is used which legitimises Italian and delegitimises contested languages by negating their very languageness. In the third strategy, narratives on the unification process are used that erase the suffering brought about by the eradication of contested languages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Propuestas de reforma ortográfica a finales del siglo XIX (1875-1900). Nuevas perspectivas sobre la neografía española a partir de la prensa.
- Author
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Gaviño Rodríguez, Victoriano
- Subjects
- *
SPELLING reform , *LINGUISTICS , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *PRESS ,SPANISH Royal Academy (Madrid, Spain) ,BOURBON restoration, France, 1814-1830 - Abstract
This research aims to examine the nature of the orthographic reform proposals in the late nineteenth century in Spain, when Bourbon Restoration is established. From this moment, there is a resurgence of Spanish neography that, supported by the impulse from the different international reform movements, finds new reasons to expose its proposals and reform requests in some spaces of public opinion, specially in the press, which stands as the key piece for the orthographic discussion. This work will serve, from a general point of view, to evaluate the role of the written press in the resurgence of neographic actions in Spain; from a specific perspective, it aims to bring to light the reformist proposals from the historical press and to carry out its study taking into account the conjunction of the internal and external perspectives of linguistic historiography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. FIRST AMENDMENT DISEQUILIBRIUM.
- Author
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Koningisor, Christina and Lidsky, Lyrissa
- Subjects
- *
OFFICIAL secrets , *EXECUTIVE power , *PRESS , *GOVERNMENT information - Abstract
The Supreme Court has constructed key parts of First Amendment law around two underlying assumptions. The first is that the press is a powerful actor capable of obtaining government information and checking government power. The second is that the executive branch is bound by various internal and external constraints that limit its ability to keep information secret. Judges and legislators have long assumed that these twin forces--an emboldened press and a constrained executive--maintain a rough balance between the press's desire to uncover secrets and the executive's desire to keep information hidden. Landmark First Amendment cases such as the Pentagon Papers decision embody this view. Professor Cass Sunstein has described these cases as establishing a "First Amendment equilibrium," one that arises out of the structural competition between the press and the executive. Today, judges and legislators continue to treat the press and the government as equal combatants in these disputes. Yet whatever equilibrium might once have existed between the press and executive branch has been destabilized. The institutional press has been eviscerated in recent years--hemorrhaging talent, expertise, resources, and legitimacy. Wide swaths of the country now qualify as "news deserts," lacking any local press presence at all. Public trust in the mainstream media has also plummeted. At the same time, many internal checks no longer constrain the ability of the executive branch to guard its secrets. This combination of a hollowed-out press and an insufficiently checked executive has given rise to a First Amendment disequilibrium, unsettling the foundations of this critical segment of constitutional law. This Article describes the causes and consequences of this disequilibrium and argues that recalibration is essential to fostering effective democratic self-governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
26. Crowds Can Effectively Identify Misinformation at Scale.
- Author
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Martel, Cameron, Allen, Jennifer, Pennycook, Gordon, and Rand, David G.
- Subjects
- *
PRESS , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *SOCIAL media , *COMMUNICATION , *CROWDSOURCING , *MISINFORMATION , *BLOGS - Abstract
Identifying successful approaches for reducing the belief and spread of online misinformation is of great importance. Social media companies currently rely largely on professional fact-checking as their primary mechanism for identifying falsehoods. However, professional fact-checking has notable limitations regarding coverage and speed. In this article, we summarize research suggesting that the "wisdom of crowds" can be harnessed successfully to help identify misinformation at scale. Despite potential concerns about the abilities of laypeople to assess information quality, recent evidence demonstrates that aggregating judgments of groups of laypeople, or crowds, can effectively identify low-quality news sources and inaccurate news posts: Crowd ratings are strongly correlated with fact-checker ratings across a variety of studies using different designs, stimulus sets, and subject pools. We connect these experimental findings with recent attempts to deploy crowdsourced fact-checking in the field, and we close with recommendations and future directions for translating crowdsourced ratings into effective interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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27. The Poison Pen: Slavery, Poison, and Fear in the Antebellum Press.
- Author
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Dwyer, Erin Austin
- Subjects
- *
POISONING , *SLAVERY , *PRESS , *ENSLAVED persons , *FEAR - Abstract
When enslaved people were accused of poisoning enslavers, it was newsworthy throughout the antebellum United States. Part of the broad appeal of such articles was their malleability; as reports of supposed poison plots or arsenic in a planter's coffee travelled from newspapers in slave states to the pages of Northern publications, the articles morphed in form, purpose, and emotional tone. Southern readers looked to stories about thwarted poison plots to assuage their fears of a similar fate and present a brave united front. Meanwhile, Northern newspapers invited a host of other emotions from their audience, from enjoyment and schadenfreude to sympathy and anger. This article on messaging about slavery, poison, and fear in the antebellum United States builds on my monograph, Mastering Emotions: Feelings, Power, and Slavery in the United States, to focus on the emotional politics of fear. Examining how news about enslaved poisoners circulated and shapeshifted sheds light on the relationship between the antebellum press and collective emotions, and on the role of fear in defenses and critiques of slavery. While the Southern press framed stories about enslaved poisoners to address and manage members of the slaveocracy's fears, the abolitionist press worked to invoke and amplify that terror. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. NEHA NEWS.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD safety , *PRESS , *AWARDS , *LEADERSHIP , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *PUBLIC health , *EXECUTIVES , *ENVIRONMENTAL health , *LABOR supply , *FOOD handling , *PROFESSIONAL associations , *PROFESSIONAL licensure examinations , *ADULT education workshops - Abstract
The article offers news briefs related to environmental health as of March 2024. Topics mentioned include the release of updated practice exam for the Registered Environmental Health Specialists/Registered Sanitarian credential, the launch of application for the Samuel J. Crumbine Consumer Protection Award, and the availability of updated Professional Food Handler course.
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- 2024
29. News Media Representations: Audience Perceptions of News Frames About Latinxs and Hispanics.
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Rendon, Hector
- Subjects
- *
PRESS , *ETHNICITY , *MULTICULTURALISM , *HISPANIC Americans - Abstract
This study includes a survey of 1,077 participants to explore the audiences' perceptions of news representations about the largest minoritized group in the United States: Latinxs and Hispanics. The findings suggest that news exposure, age, ethnicity, education, and income are significant variables for the public to perceive more positive portrayals of Latinxs/Hispanics. Also, some negative stereotypical interpretations of Latinx/Hispanic news frames continue to be pervasive. The results point to the need for updated theoretical approaches focused on the role of media in the minoritization process of ethnoracial populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. The Reciprocal Effects of Perceived Accuracy and Trust in News Media: A Two-Wave Online Panel Study in the Context of the 2021 German Federal Election.
- Author
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Holtrup, Stefanie, Henke, Jakob, Steffan, Dennis, and Möhring, Wiebke
- Subjects
- *
PRESS , *TRUST , *ACCURACY in journalism , *ACCURACY of information , *JOURNALISTIC ethics - Abstract
Trust in the news media is an important prerequisite for democracies. Building on media trust and accuracy research, we investigate reciprocal effects between perceived accuracy and trust in news. We implemented a two-wave online panel survey (N = 952) in the context of the 2021 German federal election. For media individuals' use, we find that trust and accuracy are reciprocally related and are influenced by media use. For the media in general, only trust has an effect on accuracy, whereas media skepticism and cynicism are only associated with trust, not with accuracy. Further results and their implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. A car of one's own? A critical discourse analysis of the representation of women drivers in the Chinese-language news media.
- Author
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Ruixia Sun
- Subjects
- *
TRANSPORTATION , *PRESS , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *DISCOURSE analysis , *DRIVERS' licenses - Abstract
Nowadays it is commonplace for Chinese women to drive cars either as a means of transportation or for a job. Meanwhile, the varied voices as to women's capacity to drive are heard in media reports. This article examines media representations of Chinese women drivers on the official news website Chinanews.com. News reports from 2012 to 2021 were collected, sorted in Nvivo 11, and analyzed under the guidance of van Leeuwen's socio-semantic approach. The results of the analysis revealed three dominant discourses about women drivers: problematic discourse, commendable discourse, and victim discourse, in which categorisation strategy, nomination strategy and passivation strategy, along with the description of material actions and semiotic actions were employed. This study sheds light on the contradictory expectations placed on Chinese women and the perplexity felt by media regarding the social context of the increased mobility and freedom women have attained due to recent economic and social changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
32. News frames and differences in their application according to the author's beliefs. Polish conservative vs. liberal press on the protests against tightening the abortion law.
- Author
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Siekiera, Rafał and Szews, Przemysław
- Subjects
- *
ABORTION laws , *JOURNALISTIC ethics , *CONSERVATIVES , *PRESS , *FRAMES (Social sciences) - Abstract
This article studies the application of framing in press publications concerning the protests against the ruling of the Polish Constitutional Tribunal respecting the legality of abortion. Using the modified method of Semetko and Valkenburg the analysis shows that both liberal- and conservative-leaning journalists employ the same types of frames but do it for different purposes and suggest different interpretations of events to the readers. At the same time, the article looks into the possibility of studying evaluative vocabulary and collective symbols as indicators, which help measure the frames used by authors of journalistic pieces. The analysis of these two elements allows for determining which particular frames serve to substantiate the opinions of the authors and to direct the recipients toward the senders' desired interpretations. The analysis also makes it possible to reconstruct the images of the protests presented by conservative and liberal press, respectively, thanks to which their attitude toward the situation in Poland between October and December 2020 becomes apparent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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33. Inteligencia artificial en la prensa: estudio comparativo y exploración de noticias con ChatGPT en un medio tradicional y otro nativo digital.
- Author
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Quian, A. and Sixto-García, J.
- Subjects
- *
CHATGPT , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DIGITAL media , *INDUSTRY 4.0 , *NEWSPAPERS , *PRESS - Abstract
In the Fourth Industrial Revolution, journalism cannot remain oblivious to the innovations brought about by the socio-technological reality. Artificial intelligence (AI) is one of the technologies on the rise, although the Spanish media have incorporated it little, experimentally and in specific sections. This research has two objectives: 1) to know the state of development of AI in the Spanish digital media and the industry's perception of the impact of this technology on the profession; 2) to explore a human vs synthetic text generation detection method to assess whether generative AI is being used in media. A comparative study was carried out between two media of reference in Spain, one matrix and conservative ideology (El Mundo), and another digital native and progressive trend (eldiario.es). The methodology was based on methodological triangulation and included a survey and an experiment with ChatGPT to detect whether a sample of texts published in these two media was created by humans or machines. The results diagnose that none of these newspapers apply AI, although they are designing plans to do so, and that there seems to be a lack of AI experts in the newsrooms, although a significantly higher predisposition towards AI in the native media is not confirmed as opposed to the matrix. The analyses carried out confirm that generative AI is not used to create texts. The method applied can be used in other studies because its validity is confirmed to provide clues about the human or artificial origin of journalistic texts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Periodismo en Twitch: análisis exploratorio de las primeras iniciativas informativas.
- Author
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González-López, R., Negreira-Rey, M. C., and Vázquez-Herrero, J.
- Subjects
- *
JOURNALISM , *NEWS consumption , *ACCESS to information , *LIVE streaming , *SOCIAL media , *PRESS - Abstract
News media and journalists must adapt to emerging platforms in order to respond to changing news consumption habits. This article addresses the trend of Social Media Live Streaming on Twitch, a platform that has experienced significant growth since 2020. The research pursues the main objective of finding out how Spanish media and journalists are adapting to this platform and what possibilities it offers to the journalistic profession, in terms of business model as well as in communicative style, formats and relationship with the audience. An exploratory analysis made it possible to identify 55 channels and to establish, in the first phase of the research, two categories of study: channels driven by journalists --with a background in digital or legacy media-- or by news media --digital natives or legacy ones--. In a second phase, seven representative cases were studied through content analysis of their profiles and streams, as well as interviews with the promoters. The results reflect an initial stage in the development of news initiatives on Twitch, characterized by experimentation and diversity of projects. In general, there is no great innovation in content and formats, which are based on conversation. There is a hybridization of information and entertainment in live broadcasts which, although providing rigorous information and featuring experts, maintain a relaxed tone and make use of humor. The relationship with the audience is built through the chat, a central element during broadcasts, and subscriptions from viewers, which are the main source of income for the channels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Competing realities, uncertain diagnoses of infectious disease: Mass self‐testing for COVID‐19 and liminal bio‐citizenship.
- Author
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Petersen, Alan and Pienaar, Kiran
- Subjects
- *
ANTIGEN analysis , *HUMAN services programs , *SELF-management (Psychology) , *RESEARCH funding , *COVID-19 testing , *POPULATION health , *HEALTH policy , *RAPID diagnostic tests , *CITIZENSHIP , *VIRAL antigens , *PRESS , *PRACTICAL politics , *SOCIOLOGY , *COVID-19 , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Diagnoses of infectious diseases are being transformed as mass self‐testing using rapid antigen tests (RATs) is increasingly integrated into public health. Widely used during the COVID‐19 pandemic, RATs are claimed to have many advantages over 'gold‐standard' polymerase chain reaction tests, especially their ease of use and production of quick results. Yet, while laboratory studies indicate the value of RATs in detecting the SARS‐CoV‐2 virus antigen, uncertainty surrounds their deployment and ultimate effectiveness in stemming infections. This article applies the analytic lens of biological citizenship (or bio‐citizenship) to explore Australia's experience of implementing a RAT‐based mass self‐testing strategy to manage COVID‐19. Drawing on Annemarie Mol's (1999, The Sociological Review, 47(1), 74–89) concept of ontological politics and analysing government statements, scientific articles and news media reporting published during a critical juncture of the strategy's implementation, we explore the kind of bio‐citizenship implied by this strategy. Our analysis suggests the emergence of what we call liminal bio‐citizenship, whereby citizens are made responsible for self‐managing infection risk without the diagnostic certitude this demands. We discuss how the different realities of mass self‐testing interact to reinforce this liminal citizenship and consider the implications for the sociology of diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Characteristics of the Pressing Process and Density Profile of MUPF-Bonded Particleboards Produced from Waste Plywood.
- Author
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Laskowska, Agnieszka
- Subjects
- *
PARTICLE board , *DENSITY , *PLYWOOD , *WOOD waste , *PRESS - Abstract
Waste plywood containing phenol–formaldehyde (PF) resin is one of the materials that are difficult to use in the production of particleboards based on UF resin. Therefore, the aim of this research was to analyze the possibility of using this type of waste in the production of particleboards bonded with melamine-urea-phenol-formaldehyde (MUPF) resin in order to determine their suitability for particleboard production. The pressing process and density profile of three-layer particleboards were presented. The press closing time for mats containing only recovered particles in the core layer (100%), produced with a face layer ratio of 50%, a resin load for a face layer of 12%, and a core layer of 10%, at a unit pressure of 3 MPa, was 29% shorter than for the industrial particle mats. Regardless of the level of variability of independent factors, the heating time of the mats containing recovered particles was 10–20% shorter than the heating time of the mats with industrial particles. The greatest impact on the maximum density of the face layer of particleboards was observed for the content of the recovered particles and then the resin load. The maximum density area of the face layer was located closer to the surface in particleboards produced with a higher (80%, 100%) content of the recovered particles, a higher (i.e., 12% and 10%, respectively, for face and core layers) resin load, a lower (35%) face layer ratio, and a higher (3 MPa) unit pressure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Dynamics of Campaign, Press, and Public Discourse in Electoral Politics.
- Author
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Arceneaux, Phillip, Albishri, Osama, Anderson, Joshua, and Kiousis, Spiro
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL campaigns , *CAMPAIGN issues , *PRESS , *DISCOURSE ,UNITED States Senate elections - Abstract
Utilizing agenda-building theory, we explore how campaigns and parties influenced press and public agendas during Florida's 2018 midterm election. We investigate if the Gubernatorial and Senate campaigns transferred issue salience and affective attributes to press coverage and online public discourse. Results of a mixed-method computer-assisted content analysis suggest weak transfer of issue salience and affective attributes by the campaigns and parties to the press and public agendas. The DeSantis campaign and Republican Party were the most successful at influencing press coverage and public discourse. First-level agenda-setting was observed by press coverage on the Gillum campaign and Democratic Party's agendas. The symmetry between these findings and election results offers correlational support for the limited effects of first- and second-level agenda-building and -setting in state elections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Marriages of love and convenience: The French dating market and the revolution of romantic love (19th-20th century)
- Author
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Gaillard, Claire-Lise
- Abstract
Did love conquer marriage between the 19th and 20th centuries in France? Does a personal choice imply a free choice? To date, no study has had access to sources that are both numerous and sufficiently stable over the vast period of the 19th and 20th centuries to allow a comprehensive examination of the simultaneous emergence of the love marriage norm and its impact on spouse selection. This paper sets out specifically to explore the issues of spouse selection and the eco-intimate changes in marriages, highlighting the evolution of the love marriage norm, using the archives of matrimonial agencies and advertisements from the 19th and 20th centuries. While the writings of the time debated the merits of marrying for money versus marrying for love, the dating market was serving a bourgeois clientele in search of homogamy. The study of agency operations shows how these marriages first unite two families and two heritages from the same milieu. This good match is seen as a necessary condition for mutual affection. When, in the 20th century, matrimonial ads more systematically enabled individuals to search for their spouse themselves, without the help of their family, these economic stakes did not disappear, but underwent a significant evolution. They are now put on the same level as moral and physical criteria. While homogamy was still preferred, it was no longer considered the only condition for a happy union. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Moving ideas? The news media's impact on ridehailing regulation in Canadian cities.
- Author
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Zwick, Austin, Spicer, Zachary, and Young, Mischa
- Subjects
- *
RIDESHARING services , *MUNICIPAL government , *PRESS , *PROFIT maximization , *METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Over the last 5 years, regulating ridehailing has risen to the top of the agenda in nearly every major city. There is an established academic literature that speaks to how traditional news media shapes and informs the regulatory agenda for municipalities. Building off this literature, we investigate the role that traditional news media played in shaping the debate about regulating ridehailing in Canadian cities. After searching and analyzing the news media coverage of six major events and four general themes in eight major news media publications in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver, we conclude that publications rarely took a consistent political/ideological viewpoint. We offer three non-mutually exclusive contributory factors to explain our results, however, the authors would like to emphasize that consolidation and profit-maximizing behavior in the news industry have led to the relinquishment of news media's historical role in municipal agenda-setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The impact of conversational interaction on users' cognitive absorption in mobile news reading context: evidence from EEG.
- Author
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Xiu, Lichao, Chen, Yao, Yu, Guoming, and Yang, Ya
- Subjects
- *
PRESS , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *ANALYSIS of variance , *MOBILE apps , *CONVERSATION , *INTERNET , *USER interfaces , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *COGNITIVE testing , *DATA analysis software , *STATISTICAL sampling , *READING - Abstract
From the perspective of the user experience of media products, the study primarily focuses on the influence of users' interaction mode on cognitive absorption. Specifically, 80 participants were recruited and randomly assigned to different interactive modes: a conversational interactive news interface and a webpage-based interactive news interface. They needed to be recorded with an EEG during the interaction and completion of the cognitive absorption (CA) scale after the interaction. The results demonstrated that there were significant differences in CA between the webpage-based interaction group and the conversational interaction group. Meanwhile, the PSD of theta and delta bands under the conversational interaction group appeared to be significantly higher. Besides, the frontal EEG asymmetry in the conversational interaction group was significantly higher than in the webpage-based interaction group. In contrast, the individual alpha frequency of the webpage-based interaction group was higher than that of the conversational interaction group. These results suggest that conversational interaction reduces the user's reading difficulty while also reduces the cognitive load in the process of task. This helps improve user's level of being immersed, enjoyment, sense of control, and curiosity while also improving users' cognitive absorption as they also exhibit stronger positive emotional experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The flashbulb-like nature of memory for the first COVID-19 case and the impact of the emergency. A cross-national survey.
- Author
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Lanciano, Tiziana, Alfeo, Federica, Curci, Antonietta, Marin, Claudia, D'Uggento, Angela Maria, Decarolis, Diletta, Öner, Sezin, Anthony, Kristine, Barzykowski, Krystian, Bascón, Miguel, Benavides, Alec, Cabildo, Anne, de la Mata-Benítez, Manuel Luis, Ergen, İrem, Filip, Katarzyna, Gofman, Alena, Janssen, Steve M. J., Kai-bin, Zhao, Markostamou, Ioanna, and Matías-García, Jose Antonio
- Subjects
- *
RESEARCH , *AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL memory , *COVID-19 , *PRESS , *MEDICINE information services , *ECONOMIC impact , *AGE distribution , *WORK , *POPULATION geography , *REGRESSION analysis , *FAMILIES , *SOCIAL factors , *MENTAL health , *HEALTH status indicators , *MEDICAL emergencies , *SEX distribution , *SURVEYS , *SEVERITY of illness index , *HEALTH information services , *EPISODIC memory , *RESEARCH funding , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESIDENTIAL patterns , *STAY-at-home orders , *STATISTICAL correlation , *DATA analysis software , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Flashbulb memories (FBMs) refer to vivid and long-lasting autobiographical memories for the circumstances in which people learned of a shocking and consequential public event. A cross-national study across eleven countries aimed to investigate FBM formation following the first COVID-19 case news in each country and test the effect of pandemic-related variables on FBM. Participants had detailed memories of the date and others present when they heard the news, and had partially detailed memories of the place, activity, and news source. China had the highest FBM specificity. All countries considered the COVID-19 emergency as highly significant at both the individual and global level. The Classification and Regression Tree Analysis revealed that FBM specificity might be influenced by participants' age, subjective severity (assessment of COVID-19 impact in each country and relative to others), residing in an area with stringent COVID-19 protection measures, and expecting the pandemic effects. Hierarchical regression models demonstrated that age and subjective severity negatively predicted FBM specificity, whereas sex, pandemic impact expectedness, and rehearsal showed positive associations in the total sample. Subjective severity negatively affected FBM specificity in Turkey, whereas pandemic impact expectedness positively influenced FBM specificity in China and negatively in Denmark. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The contribution of the parliamentary press to Oliver Cromwell's image as a military hero of the first English Civil War.
- Author
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Macadam, Joyce
- Subjects
- *
BRITISH Civil War, 1642-1649 , *CIVIL war , *REPUTATION , *PRESS - Abstract
This article examines the parliamentary press's role in promoting Oliver Cromwell's heroic image during the first civil war, a topic that has received relatively little scholarly attention. Based on a detailed study of contemporary pamphlets and newsbooks, it suggests three phases of press coverage that correspond to the conflict's campaigning seasons. It shows that Cromwell's image in print was greatly assisted by his close relationship with the Independent leadership at Westminster, and their expertise in the manipulation of the press. For them, Cromwell's successes in the field were essential for securing victory. His military reputation, initially nurtured by the civil war press, laid the foundations for his eventual role as lord protector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Beyond the spectacle: everyday witnessing for we that are here.
- Author
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Vulcan, Julie
- Subjects
- *
WILDFIRES , *SOCIAL media , *PRESS - Abstract
In this paper, I reflect on the experience of the Australian summer bushfires of 2019/2020 and the different ways forms of media reporting amplified its affects. Across broadcast media, local response, social media and personal account, I chart alternate stories during and after the event-as-spectacle. Taking into account the socio-political climate, the climatic atmosphere and the ongoing anxiety after the fires, I consider the use of apocalyptic words alongside the repetitive pairing of affective images to question what these might reveal about ourselves. Through the lens of affect attention is drawn to the many interacting conditions and forces that coalesce and gather as attachments, ideas, or assumptions and how these might influence perceptions of the event and actions in the aftermath of fire threat. Woven into the paper is my personal writing alongside details drawn from select Instagram accounts recording the everyday labours of caring for a place during and after the fires. As a counter-narrative to obliteration and all things lost, these missives disclose a different understanding of the event, long after the news media has moved on. For the authors and followers alike, lessons are revealed through attention to the land and hope in the processes of everyday encounters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Exploring Mortality Salience and Pandemic Impact in the Context of COVID-19.
- Author
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Paul, Disha and Vasudevan, Moosath Harishankar
- Subjects
- *
DEATH & psychology , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *PRESS , *MASS media , *RESEARCH methodology , *PSYCHOLOGY , *MENTAL health , *INTERVIEWING , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *COGNITIVE testing , *DEATH , *THEMATIC analysis , *CONSCIOUSNESS , *COVID-19 pandemic , *GOAL (Psychology) - Abstract
Mortality salience refers to a state of conscious awareness of death and the inevitable conclusion of life, associated with psychological terror. The COVID-19 pandemic generated increased awareness of illness and death, and effectuated changes in death cognitions and people's experiences around psychological or sociocognitive domains of media and life goals. To understand these changes, this study administered the Multidimensional Mortality Awareness Measure (Levasseur et al., 2015) to 103 emerging adults in India, post which 6 participants proceeded for a semi-structured interview exploring pandemic experiences, news consumption and goal prioritization, to examine specific areas in relation to death cognition. The thematic analysis demonstrates psychological effects, and discusses developments in health and death-related psychological processes. Focus on career goals and health maintenance, cautious news consumption and disadvantageous impacts on mental health are seen, significant in navigating healthcare measures for emerging adults, as we move forward into this 'new normal'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. To Read or Not to Read? Motives for Reading Negative COVID-19 News.
- Author
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Niehoff, Esther, Mittenbühler, Maximilian, and Suzanne Oosterwijk
- Subjects
- *
READING , *EMPATHY , *MENTAL health , *DISINFORMATION , *DECISION making , *EMOTIONS , *PRESS , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *ETHICS , *MASS media , *INFORMATION literacy , *COVID-19 pandemic , *INFORMATION-seeking behavior - Abstract
People were confronted with a barrage of negative news during the COVID-19 crisis. This study investigated how anticipated psychological impact predicted decisions to read personalized and factual COVID-19 news. First, participants chose, based on headlines, whether they wanted to read news articles (or not). Then, all headlines were rated on a set of motivational dimensions. In order to test confirmatory hypotheses, the data were divided into an exploration (n = 398) and validation data set (n = 399). Using multilevel modeling, we found robust support for four preregistered hypotheses: Choice for negative COVID-19 news was positively predicted by (a) personal versus factual news; (b) the anticipated amount of knowledge acquisition; (c) the anticipated relevance to one's own personal situation; and (d) participant's sense of moral duty. Moreover, exploratory findings suggested a positive relationship between headline choice and anticipated compassion, a negative relationship with anticipated inappropriateness and gratitude, and a quadratic relationship with anticipated strength of feelings. These results support the idea that negative content offers informational value, both in terms of understanding negative events and in terms of preparing for these events. Furthermore, engagement with negative content can be motivated by moral values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Red Media vs. Blue Media: Social Distancing and Partisan News Media Use during the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Borah, Porismita, Ghosh, Shreenita, Hwang, Juwon, Shah, Dhavan V., and Brauer, Markus
- Subjects
- *
PRESS , *MASS media , *COVID-19 , *PRACTICAL politics , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *SOCIAL media , *HEALTH literacy , *HEALTH behavior , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *SOCIAL distancing , *STAY-at-home orders , *CONTENT analysis , *STATISTICAL sampling , *THEMATIC analysis , *COVID-19 pandemic , *MEDICAL coding , *PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
Political polarization surrounding the COVID-19 health crisis has been on the rise since the beginning of the pandemic. We combine prior research on motivated reasoning, selective exposure, and news framing to understand the association between partisan media use and social distancing behavior related to COVID-19. To do so, we collected media content data and national survey data during the onset of the pandemic. We employed structural topic modeling (STM), dependency parsing, word co-occurrence, and manual coding to examine the media coverage. Next, we analyzed survey data collected with a Qualtrics panel from a sample of U.S. residents for factors explaining social distancing behaviors. Results reveal coverage from the right leaning outlets downplayed the virus and highlighted the consequences of lockdowns on the economy. Our survey findings show that even after accounting for a range of demographic, political orientation, and COVID-19 awareness variables, conservative media use was linked, although modestly, with a lower likelihood of social distancing behavior. Our findings echo past research on media framing of pandemics and their association with public attitudes and behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Role of the Narrative in Educative Suicide Awareness Materials: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
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Till, Benedikt, Arendt, Florian, Rothauer, Pascal, and Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas
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SUICIDE prevention , *HEALTH education , *PRESS , *ANALYSIS of variance , *SELF-evaluation , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *SOCIAL stigma , *HELP-seeking behavior , *FISHER exact test , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SURVEYS , *TEACHING aids , *BLIND experiment , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *STATISTICAL sampling , *INTENTION , *HEALTH promotion , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
There has been a debate about the suitability of different narratives in educative suicide prevention materials. Whereas some suicide prevention experts recommend raising awareness of suicide by highlighting its prevalence, others argue that this approach may normalize suicide and advocate focusing on help resources instead. Unfortunately, empirical evidence regarding this question is lacking. This randomized controlled trial aimed to test the impact of educative news articles that conveyed different narratives of suicide prevention. One article focused on the prevalence of suicide, one article highlighted professional help resources, and one article emphasized on how everyone can help to prevent suicide. We randomized n = 334 participants to read either one of these three articles or an article unrelated to suicide. Data on suicidal ideation, stigmatizing attitudes toward suicidal individuals, attitudes toward suicide prevention, and help-seeking intentions were collected with questionnaires, and implicit measures were used to assess participants' mental accessibility of concepts related to suicide and suicide prevention. Participants exposed to the article highlighting the high prevalence of suicide tended to show a higher accessibility of potentially detrimental cognitive concepts related to suicide. In contrast, the accessibility of the concept of "helping" and that "suicide is preventable" was higher in participants' memory when exposed to materials focusing on help. It seems that the impact of educative suicide awareness materials on readers' access to suicide- and suicide-prevention-related concepts in memory varied depending on the narrative featured in the article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Climate change in the UK press: Examining discourse fluctuation over time.
- Author
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Gillings, Mathew and Dayrell, Carmen
- Subjects
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CLIMATE change , *DISCOURSE analysis , *PRESS , *GLOBAL warming , *SKEPTICISM - Abstract
This article examines the discourses around climate change in the UK press from 2003 to 2019. Our main goal is to investigate how the media discourse developed during a period of significant world events, whilst also exploring the change in the UK public's perception of the problem. We combine the novel technique of Usage Fluctuation Analysis (UFA, McEnery et al. 2019) with corpus-assisted discourse analysis to track the fluctuation in the usage of the phrases climate change and global warming over this 17-year period. Thus, in addition to offering a methodological contribution by applying UFA to a relatively small specialized diachronic corpus, this article offers new insights on how the discourse evolved. Results indicate that the tabloids and broadsheets offer a surprisingly similar image of climate change discourse, both showing two major discoursal shifts. From an overall prevalence of articles advocating for the climate change cause, the discourse incorporated voices of climate sceptics from 2008 onwards, moving on to increased coverage and awareness of the problem in recent years when the public started to engage in it more heavily. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Misinformation as woman: anti-feminism, news media, and disinformation's feminized other.
- Author
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Goldstein, Leigh and Linde Murugan, Meenasarani
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DISINFORMATION , *PRESS , *MISINFORMATION , *FEMINISM , *SEX trafficking of minors , *UNITED States presidential election, 2016 - Abstract
This article discusses the use of gendered language and stereotypes in media coverage of disinformation campaigns and anti-feminist rhetoric. It highlights how women are often portrayed as naive consumers of misinformation, while men are seen as the astute producers of disinformation. The article also examines the Pizzagate conspiracy theory and how it was framed in the media, ignoring the role of sexism and anti-feminism in promoting the theory. The authors argue for a more nuanced understanding of disinformation and the need to challenge patriarchal expertise in journalism, politics, and academia. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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50. The Making of Imperial Public Sphere on Portuguese Colonialism.
- Author
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Fonseca, Isadora de Ataíde
- Abstract
This article explores the concept of the Imperial Public Sphere (IPS) in the Portuguese empire as a space for confrontation and negotiation within the framework of nineteenth and twentieth-century European colonial empires. In order to demonstrate the origin of political and ideological power, the emergence of IPS is characterized and its fundamental structures identified. The protagonists of IPS are revealed as the 'imperial' and 'colonial' elites. It concludes with the IPS hypothesis that the press and journalism are structures, institutions and mechanisms of political, social and cultural power that are essential for understanding colonial empires. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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