456 results
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2. Information and Communications Technology Used by Polish Speech-Language Therapists: Research Project Report
- Author
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Michniuk, Anna, Faściszewska, Maria, Filipe, Joaquim, Editorial Board Member, Ghosh, Ashish, Editorial Board Member, Zhou, Lizhu, Editorial Board Member, and Tomczyk, Łukasz, editor
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- 2024
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3. Promoting Digitally Supported Inquiry Learning in Diverse Classrooms Through Teacher Training
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Weidenhiller, Patrizia, Miesera, Susanne, Nerdel, Claudia, Hammann, Marcus, Series Editor, Yarden, Anat, Series Editor, Ergazaki, Marida, Founding Editor, Kampourakis, Kostas, Founding Editor, Zabel, Jörg, Editorial Board Member, Korfiatis, Constantinos, Editorial Board Member, Jimenez Aleixandre, Maria Pilar, Editorial Board Member, Harms, Ute, Editorial Board Member, Reiss, Michael, Editorial Board Member, Gericke, Niklas, Editorial Board Member, El-Hani, Charbel Nino, Editorial Board Member, Dawson, Vaille, Editorial Board Member, Nehm, Ross, Editorial Board Member, McComas, William, Editorial Board Member, Passmore, Cynthia, Editorial Board Member, Grace, Marcus, Editorial Board Member, Knippels, Marie Christine, Editorial Board Member, and Korfiatis, Konstantinos, editor
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- 2024
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4. Exploring a Theory-Practice Gap: An Investigation of Pre-service Biology Teachers’ Enacted TPACK
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Aumann, Alexander, Weitzel, Holger, Hammann, Marcus, Series Editor, Yarden, Anat, Series Editor, Ergazaki, Marida, Founding Editor, Kampourakis, Kostas, Founding Editor, Zabel, Jörg, Editorial Board Member, Korfiatis, Constantinos, Editorial Board Member, Jimenez Aleixandre, Maria Pilar, Editorial Board Member, Harms, Ute, Editorial Board Member, Reiss, Michael, Editorial Board Member, Gericke, Niklas, Editorial Board Member, El-Hani, Charbel Nino, Editorial Board Member, Dawson, Vaille, Editorial Board Member, Nehm, Ross, Editorial Board Member, McComas, William, Editorial Board Member, Passmore, Cynthia, Editorial Board Member, Grace, Marcus, Editorial Board Member, Knippels, Marie Christine, Editorial Board Member, and Korfiatis, Konstantinos, editor
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- 2024
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5. FOR THE LOVE OF Paper.
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Close, Cynthia
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ART materials ,MEDIA art ,PAPERMAKING ,DIGITAL media ,ILLUMINATION of books & manuscripts ,WATERCOLOR painting - Abstract
The invention of paper has had a significant impact on the world, particularly in the realm of artistic expression. From its earliest precursor, papyrus, used in ancient Egypt, to the development of papermaking in China, paper has played a crucial role in the communication of culture, the advancement of the written word, and the progression of art. Despite the rise of digital media and the push for a paperless society, paper remains important as a surface for all media and as a handmade art form. The evolution of papermaking techniques and its use in various artistic mediums, such as illuminated manuscripts, prints, and watercolors, has contributed to the democratization of art and the exploration of new artistic possibilities. Today, artists continue to value the tactile qualities of paper, even as we move towards a more digital future. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
6. Paper-Based Journalism is Melting Away: January 2024 Merger and Acquisition Activity.
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MERGERS & acquisitions , *BANKRUPTCY , *JOURNALISM , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *JOURNALISM education , *DIGITAL media , *INFORMATION technology - Abstract
The article focuses on the ongoing transition from paper-based journalism to digital platforms, highlighting the continuous merger and acquisition activity in the newspaper industry. Topics include the allure of newspaper ownership, the impact of new ownership models on local newspapers, and the challenges faced by traditional printing and paper industries amidst the shift towards digital media.
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- 2024
7. The Many Futures of Digital Journalism.
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Massey, Brian L.
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ONLINE journalism ,ELECTRONIC paper ,CULTURAL pluralism ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
This paper challenges conventional narratives about the future of digital journalism. It argues that digital journalism is not a globally uniform practice with a predictable universal future. Instead, it has many possibility-futures owing to the cultural diversity of the news outlets that engage it and the contexts in which it is engaged. To develop that argument, the paper locates digital journalism as the latest waypoint in humankind's long quest to send messages ever farther and ever faster. Next, digital journalism is decentered through interdisciplinary theory into a novel framework for forecasting the futures of digital journalism as a diverse global phenomenon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. The influence of digital media technology on immersive animation design.
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Yan, Li
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IMMERSIVE design ,DIGITAL technology ,DIGITAL media ,DIGITAL signal processing ,ELECTRONIC paper - Abstract
To improve the effect of immersive animation design, this paper combines digital media technology (DT) to establish an immersive animation design system and analyzes the media digital signal data processing algorithm. According to the advantages and disadvantages of the FHT algorithm and probabilistic algorithm, this paper proposes the FHT-SLM algorithm and the FHT-IPTS algorithm. Moreover, this paper analyzes the basic principle of TPWC transform and M-TPWC and the CO-OFDM system of cascaded FHT algorithm and M-TPWC algorithm. Finally, this paper simulates the CO-OFDM simulation system built by Matlab2018.a and Optisystem. Through the experimental analysis results, the reliability of the algorithm and the system in this paper is verified, and the design effect of immersive animation is effectively improved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. A new digital literacy framework to mitigate misinformation in social media infodemic
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Anthonysamy, Lilian and Sivakumar, Pravina
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- 2024
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10. This is our Pearl Harbor: effects of a targeted solidarity call in Ukraine’s public diplomacy
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Kim, Seon-Woo
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- 2024
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11. Shaming behavior in online communities: exploring a new configuration of digital conversations
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Roth-Cohen, Osnat and Rashi, Tsuriel
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- 2024
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12. Google Discover: uses, applications and challenges in the digital journalism of Spain, Brazil and Greece
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Lopezosa, Carlos, Giomelakis, Dimitrios, Pedrosa, Leyberson, and Codina, Lluís
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- 2024
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13. Substituting Book Reading for Screen Time Benefits Preschoolers’ Sleep Health: Results from the Ulm SPATZ Health Study
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Ricci C, Ordnung M, Rothenbacher D, and Genuneit J
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digital media ,paper book ,sleep health ,sleep quality ,children ,preschoolers ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Cristian Ricci,1,2 Madeleine Ordnung,1 Dietrich Rothenbacher,3 Jon Genuneit1,3 1Pediatric Epidemiology, Department of Pediatrics, Medical Faculty, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany; 2Africa Unit for Transdisciplinary Health Research (AUTHeR), North-West University, Potchefstroom, South Africa; 3Institute of Epidemiology and Medical Biometry, Ulm University, Ulm, GermanyCorrespondence: Madeleine Ordnung, Liebigstraße 20a, Haus 6, Leipzig, 04103, Germany, Tel +49 341 - 97 24182, Fax +49 341 - 97 28210, Email madeleine.ordnung@medizin.uni-leipzig.dePurpose: Healthy sleep is essential for the physical, cognitive, and social development of children. Several studies have reported the increase in digital media use in preschool children and its association with impaired sleep. However, there is relatively little evidence on the effects of book reading as a potentially safe alternative. The objective of this study, therefore, was to investigate whether sleep in children could benefit from book reading, and whether the negative effects of media use on sleep can be mitigated by substituting book reading for screen time.Participants and Methods: We used longitudinal data from three consecutive waves of the SPATZ Health study, including children at the ages of 4 (n=581), 5 (n=508), and 6 (n=426) years. All data were collected by self-administered questionnaires. Parent-reported child sleep was assessed by the Children’s Sleep Habits Questionnaire.Results: Across the three waves, screen-based media use increased and was associated with lower sleep quality. In contrast, the time spent with book reading decreased; however, book reading appeared to be beneficial for children’s sleep. Substitution models revealed that the theoretical substitution of an equal amount of book reading for 50% of the time spent with screen-based media benefits several domains of preschoolers’ sleep health, including parasomnias, sleep anxiety, daytime sleepiness, and sleep onset delay.Conclusion: Besides implications for population-wide and individual prevention, book reading may also be incorporated as a useful intervention to improve sleep quality in children who are already affected by sleep problems. Given that book reading is perceived as a safe alternative, the presented evidence may suffice to support recommendations in this direction.Keywords: digital media, paper book, sleep health, sleep quality, children, preschoolers
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- 2024
14. Direct interaction in digital interactive media and stock performance: Evidence from Panorama.
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Huang, Jinshui, Wang, Jun, and Jin, Xiaoman
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INTERACTIVE multimedia ,INVESTORS ,STOCK prices ,NATURAL language processing ,STOCKS (Finance) ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
Media information plays an essential role in the stock market. Recent financial research has verified that media information could shock stock price by influencing investors' expectation. Now, a new type of interactive media, called Digital Interactive Media (DIM), is popular in Chinese stock market and becomes the main channel for investors to understand listed companies. Unlike general news media or investor forums, DIM enables direct interaction between listed companies and investors. In the modern society where digital economy is booming, media information would largely affect investors' decisions. Therefore, it is urgent to use natural language processing (NLP) technology to deconstruct the massive questions and answers (Q&A) interactive information in DIM and extract valuable factors that affect stock prices and stock performances to explore the influence mechanism of digital interactive information on stock performances. This paper firstly uses web crawling technology to obtain approximately 110000 Q&A text information from the digital interactive platform ('Panoramic Network') from 2015 to 2021. Then we use big data text analysis technology and emotional quantification technology to extract valuable influencing factors from the massive text. A Multiple Linear Regression (MLR) model was created to explore specific influence mechanism of digital interactive information on stock price performance. The empirical results show that the emotions implicit in investors' questions do not significantly impact stock performance. However, the emotions and attitudes of the answers by listed companies can significantly affect corresponding stock prices, which indirectly confirms the Proximate Cause Effect of behavioral finance. This effect is particularly evident in the stock prices on the current trading day and the next trading day. In the Robustness Test, this paper replaces dependent variable and adds relevant control variables, and the conclusion remains valid. In the Endogeneity Test, this paper selects sample data before the launch of Panorama Network in 2014 as a comparison, and uses a Difference-in-Difference (DID) model to prove the significant impact of the launch of Panorama Network on Chinese stock market. In the Heterogeneity Test, the paper classifies the market value, region, and industry of listed companies and regressed the sub samples, once again confirming the reliability of the empirical conclusions. The results of Robustness Test, Endogeneity Test, and Heterogeneity Test conducted in this paper all support empirical conclusions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Middle-schoolers' reading and lexical-semantic processing depth in response to digital and print media: An N400 study.
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Froud, Karen, Levinson, Lisa, Maddox, Chaille, and Smith, Paul
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DIGITAL printing ,NEUROLINGUISTICS ,DIGITAL media ,MEDIA studies ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,READING comprehension ,EXPOSITION (Rhetoric) - Abstract
We report the first use of ERP measures to identify text engagement differences when reading digitally or in print. Depth of semantic encoding is key for reading comprehension, and we predicted that deeper reading of expository texts would facilitate stronger associations with subsequently-presented related words, resulting in enhanced N400 responses to unrelated probe words and a graded attenuation of the N400 to related and moderately related words. In contrast, shallow reading would produce weaker associations between probe words and text passages, resulting in enhanced N400 responses to both moderately related and unrelated words, and an attenuated response to related words. Behavioral research has shown deeper semantic encoding of text from paper than from a screen. Hence, we predicted that the N400 would index deeper reading of text passages that were presented in print, and shallower reading of texts presented digitally. Middle-school students (n = 59) read passages in digital and print formats and high-density EEG was recorded while participants completed single-word semantic judgment tasks after each passage. Following digital text presentation, the N400 response pattern to moderately-related words indicated shallow reading, tracking with responses to words that were unrelated to the text. Following print reading, the N400 responses to moderately-related words patterned instead with responses to related words, interpreted as an index of deeper reading. These findings provide evidence of differences in brain responses to texts presented in print and digital media, including deeper semantic encoding for print than digital texts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Revitalizing Indigenous Knowledge Systems via Digital Media Technologies for Sustainability of Indigenous Languages.
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Ajani, Yusuf Ayodeji, Oladokun, Bolaji David, Olarongbe, Shuaib Agboola, Amaechi, Margaret Nkechi, Rabiu, Nafisa, and Bashorun, Musediq Tunji
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DIGITAL technology ,TRADITIONAL knowledge ,LANGUAGE revival ,INDUSTRY 4.0 ,INTELLECTUAL property ,INDIGENOUS children ,DIGITAL media ,FERTILITY preservation - Abstract
Amidst globalization and the Fourth Industrial Revolution, indigenous language preservation and promotion gain paramount significance. These languages encapsulate rich cultural, historical, and ecological value, embodying unique knowledge systems and identities. Nevertheless, challenges stemming from historical, social, resource, and institutional constraints impede preservation, with digital media technology thus emerging as a pivotal tool in this endeavour. This paper meticulously explores the role of digital media technology in indigenous language preservation during the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Through a comprehensive review of reputable literature, including scholarly articles, case studies, and expert insights, the paper underscores the imperative of language preservation, delving into the obstacles hindering preservation efforts and spotlighting the pivotal role of digital media technology in rejuvenating indigenous languages. The paper also examines various digital tools and applications that facilitate preservation, emphasizing their accessibility and engagement, while also underscoring the importance of collaborative efforts involving indigenous communities, linguists, and technology experts. Ethical considerations, encompassing intellectual property rights and informed consent, are of paramount importance in indigenous language preservation, and thus this paper also consolidates insights derived from the findings and provides recommendations for effective preservation strategies, underlining the necessity of ethical guidelines and emphasizing the indispensable role of government support. The study concludes by addressing prospects and challenges in indigenous language preservation, providing a comprehensive view of safeguarding linguistic heritage in the digital age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Digital media interactive oil painting art exhibition method based on visual communication.
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Ping, Yang
- Abstract
In order to improve the output visual effect, display clarity better, and restore the color levels and details in oil paintings, this paper proposes a digital media interactive oil painting art exhibition method based on visual communication. Firstly, the feature points of virtual images of oil paintings are extracted and matched. On this basis, the virtual images of oil paintings are spliced to realize the fusion of virtual images of oil paintings with digital media interaction, and the virtual images of oil paintings with digital media interaction are obtained. Then, the noise model of the virtual image of oil painting artworks is constructed so that it can be restored to a noise-free image while retaining the characteristics of the image, and the virtual image of oil painting artworks can be denoised by using the optimization formula of network parameters. Finally, based on visual communication, the three-dimensional display structure of oil painting works is constructed, and the application of oil painting works is completed by determining the coordinate rotation matrix. The experimental results show that the final resolution obtained by this method is controlled above 95%, and the output visual effect and display clarity are good, which can more accurately restore the color levels and details in the original oil paintings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. How Ontologies Have Supported Digital Forensics: Review and Recommendations.
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Silva, T. J., Oliveira Jr, E., and Zorzo, A. F.
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DIGITAL forensics ,EVIDENCE gaps ,RESEARCH questions ,DIGITAL media ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
The evolution of digital media has increased the number of crimes committed using digital equipment. This has led to the evolution of the computer forensics area to digital forensics (DF). Such an area aims to analyze information through its main phases of identification, collection, organization, and presentation (reporting). As this area has evolved, many techniques have been developed, mainly focusing on the formalization of terminologies and concepts for providing a common vocabulary comprehension. This has demanded efforts on several initiatives, such as the definition of ontologies, which are a means to identify the main concepts of a given area. Hence, the existing literature provides several ontologies developed for supporting the DF area. Therefore, to identify and analyze the existing ontologies for DF, this paper presents a systematic literature review (SLR) in which primary studies in the literature are studied. This SLR resulted in the identification of ontology building methodologies, ontology types, feasibility points, evaluation/assessment methods, and DF phases and subareas ontologies have supported. These results were based on the analysis of 29 ontologies that aided in answering six research questions. Another contribution of this paper is a set of recommendations on further ontology-based support of DF investigation, which can guide researchers and practitioners in covering existing research gaps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
19. How do digital media strengthen the role of social networks in promoting farmers' adoption of climate change mitigation measures?
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Liu, Qiqi and Yan, Tingwu
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CLIMATE change mitigation ,DIGITAL media ,SOCIAL networks ,SOCIAL influence ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Purpose: This paper investigates the ways digital media applications in rural areas have transformed the influence of social networks (SN) on farmers' adoption of various climate change mitigation measures (CCMM), and explores the key mechanisms behind this transformation. Design/methodology/approach: The study analyzes data from 1,002 farmers' surveys. First, a logit model is used to measure the impact of SN on the adoption of different types of CCMM. Then, the interaction term between digital media usage (DMU) and SN is introduced to analyze the moderating effect of digital media on the impact of SN. Finally, a conditional process model is used to explore the mediating mechanism of agricultural socialization services (ASS) and the validity of information acquisition (VIA). Findings: The results reveal that: (1) SN significantly promotes the adoption of CCMM and the marginal effect of this impact varies with different kinds of technologies. (2) DMU reinforces the effectiveness of SN in promoting farmers' adoption of CCMM. (3) The key mechanisms of the process in (2) are the ASS and the VIA. Originality/value: This study shows that in the context of DMU, SN's promotion effect on farmers' adoption of CCMM is strengthened. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. The American agitator goes digital: Understanding the affective role of agitational aesthetics in the online fascist recruitment of youth.
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Lewis, Tyson E.
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AESTHETICS ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
Given the rise in extremist radicalization using digital media, antifascist education must develop its own philosophy of digital technologies. The first half of this paper turns to Leo Löwenthal and Norbert Guterman's theory of the American agitator as well as Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno's notion of fascist projection and paranoia to provide groundwork for this project. Though written in the 1940s, Frankfurt School essays on agitation and projection can be thought of as early indications of the importance of affect in fascist politics, which has only become intensified with the advent of digital media. The paper then proceeds to apply a critical concept of "agitational aesthetics" to chan culture in the present day, highlighting the affective economy of memes in the radicalization process. In conclusion, a series of questions are posed to educators to help them think through the complexities of intervening before, during, and after the online agitation of proto-fascist tendencies in youth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Chinese Film: Realism and Convention from the Silent Era to the Digital Age: JASON MCGRATH, 2022, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, pp. x + 404, notes, index, $30.00 (paper), open access (e-book).
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Zhou, Ziheng
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WESTERN films , *CONSCIOUSNESS raising , *DIGITAL technology , *SILENT films , *DIGITAL media , *CHINESE films , *DIGITAL video - Abstract
"Chinese Film: Realism and Convention from the Silent Era to the Digital Age" by Jason McGrath is a comprehensive exploration of the development of Chinese cinema through the lens of realism. McGrath examines six categories of cinematic realism and analyzes seven historical periods of Chinese films to demonstrate the complex relationship between realism and convention. The book delves into specific films and their genres, offering insights into the audience's perception of realism in different historical contexts. While some films are not discussed in depth due to space limitations, the book provides valuable analysis for scholars and enthusiasts interested in Chinese cinema. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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22. Risk mechanism evaluation of the metaverse network economy based on transformer serialization analysis.
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Li, Hongfei and Huang, Jieyu
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SHARED virtual environments ,RISK assessment ,AVATARS (Virtual reality) ,REAL economy ,BLOCKCHAINS ,DIGITAL media ,DIGITAL technology - Abstract
The metaverse network economy is built on the blockchain protocol network and occurs in the metaverse virtual space by the virtual digital avatar. This is a series of economic activities that produce, exchange, distribute and consume digital products, and interact, integrate and promote with the real economy in real space. The network economic system of the metaverse is gradually formed in the process of adapting to the development of digital economy. While these products and services bring convenience, they are accompanied by more complex and diverse economic risks. Based on transformer serialization analysis, this paper proposes an analytical method of economic risk mechanism of metacosmic network to complete the evaluation of economic risk. First, this work proposes an improved transformer (ITransformer). The probabilistic sparse self-attention (PSSA) and self-attention distillation (SAD) are proposed to improve the performance. This can mine more discriminative temporal features. Secondly, this work designed a dual-stream ITransformer (DSIT) to evaluate the economic risks of the metaverse network via ITransformer. This can process the global and local features in the metaverse economic data with high performance. Finally, this work has performed massive experiments on dual-stream ITransformer pipeline. Experimental results verify the effectiveness and feasibility of DSIT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. A Vision of the Future: Harnessing Artificial Intelligence for Strategic Social Marketing.
- Author
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Evans, William Douglas, Bardus, Marco, and French, Jeffrey
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SOCIAL marketing ,SOCIAL intelligence ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,PROSOCIAL behavior ,INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,SOCIAL impact - Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming much of society in a short time. Regardless of whether we know it, we interact with AI systems when we seek information online, shop, work, and engage with social media. AI has massive potential to promote human wellbeing but also poses considerable risks, as set out in an open letter signed by leaders in the field, such as Geoffrey Hinton, the "Godfather of AI". This paper examines how AI can be used as a powerful tool to change pro-social behaviors as part of social marketing programs. We examine opportunities to build on existing efforts to use AI for pro-social behavior changes and the challenges and potential risks that AI may pose. The specific aims of the paper are to explore how AI can be used in social marketing policy, strategy development, and operational delivery. We also explore what this means for future social marketing practice. We present an overview of case studies from the social marketing field and the application of AI in the past, present, and future. We examine the following key question: can these new technologies can be used to promote social good, and if so, how? Through examples from policy, strategy development, operations, and research in social marketing, we examine how AI has been used and successfully applied to improve consumer outcomes and analyze its implications for social marketing. We conclude that AI has substantial promise but also poses some challenges and has potential negative impacts on efforts to promote pro-social behavior changes. Used well, AI may enable social marketers to more rapidly assess how to modify programs of action to ensure maximum efficiency and effectiveness. We suggest future research and programs within this field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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24. Podfic: Cultural Accessibility Through Digital Community.
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Riley, Olivia Johnston
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DIGITAL media ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,CHRONIC pain ,MENTAL illness ,SOCIAL marginality ,SOCIAL integration - Abstract
As an audio recording of originally textual fanfiction, podfic has an implicitly, technically accessible nature for those with print impairments. In the course of twenty interviews with podfic listeners and creators, this project discovered that the podfic medium does not merely provide technical accessibility, but its supportive fan community creates rich cultural access with affective and participatory aspects. The paper argues that this accessibility can only be understood, valued, and replicated in other contexts by first disrupting calcified boundaries around the concepts of 'disability' and 'access'. This makes room for people with so-called 'invisible' disabilities such as chronic pain, mental illness, and neurodiversity, as well as those with other forms of intersecting marginalisation, such as on the basis of gender, class, and/or race, to understand their access needs within a framework of disability. Within this critical inclusive framework, the overlap between 'access' and 'convenience' in regard to digital media like podfic encourages coalition among variously marginalised and dis/abled fans. Further, podfic community conversations and norms based in strong emotional and creative ties lay the groundwork for long-term disability access support. Thus, podfic as a case study can theoretically and practically inform diverse digital communities' efforts to generate inclusive disability access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
25. Theorising Digital Afterlife as Techno-Affective Assemblage: On Relationality, Materiality, and the Affective Potential of Data.
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Harju, Anu A.
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AFTERLIFE ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,DATA management ,SOCIAL factors ,DEATH threats ,RITES & ceremonies - Abstract
In the ongoing academic discussion regarding what happens to our data after we die, how our data are utilised for commercial profit-making purposes, and what kinds of death-related practices our posthumous data figure in, the notion of digital afterlife is attracting increasing attention. While the concept of digital afterlife has been approached in different ways, the main focus remains on the level of individual loss. The emphasis tends to be on the role of posthumous digital artefacts in grief practices and death-related rituals or on data management issues relating to death. Building on a socio-technical view of digital afterlife, this paper offers, as a novel contribution, an understanding of digital afterlife as a techno-affective assemblage. It argues for the necessity of examining technological and social factors as mutually shaping and brings into the discussion of digital afterlife the notions of relationality, materiality, and the affective potential of data. The paper ends with ruminations about digital afterlife as a posthumanist project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Old age is also a time for change: trends in news intermediary preferences among internet users in Canada and Spain.
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Rosales, Andrea, Fernández-Ardèvol, Mireia, Gómez-León, Madelin, and Jacobetty, Pedro
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OLD age ,COVID-19 pandemic ,INTERNET users ,OLDER people ,DIGITAL media ,HABIT ,NEWS websites - Abstract
The social distancing imposed by the Covid-19 pandemic accelerated the digitalisation of societies, which also influenced habits related to the consumption and dissemination of news. In this context, older individuals are often blamed for contributing to disinformation, which is associated with the echo chambers fostered by social media. Mass media, social media and personal communication tools act as mass, social or personal intermediaries when it comes to keeping up to date with the news. This paper analyses the preferred intermediaries of older online adults (aged 60 and over) for following the news and how they change over time. We analysed two waves of an online survey-based longitudinal study conducted in Canada and Spain, before Covid-19 pandemic (2016/17), and during Covid-19 (in 2020). We found that most participants exclusively use mass intermediaries or combine mass with social and personal intermediaries to keep abreast of the news. However, only 28% of respondents inform themselves exclusively through the alleged echo chambers of social and personal intermediaries. Results also show that media ecologies evolve in different directions, and, despite the forced digitalisation driven by the pandemic, digital media usage did not always increase or evolve towards newer technologies. This paper contributes to understanding the diverse intermediaries used by older adults to obtain news and how such media ecologies can contribute to contrasting different sources of information beyond the alleged echo chambers of social media. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. What means civic education in a digitalized world?
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Schmitt, Josephine B., Baake, Jasmin, and Kero, Sandra
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CIVICS education ,SOCIAL media in education ,DIGITAL technology ,SCIENCE education ,HEALTH literacy - Abstract
The hope of reaching diverse and large target groups has motivated civic education practitioners to offer their content on social media. The question has therefore long ceased to be whether civic education should take place on the internet, but rather how civic education goals can be implemented digitally to foster civic literacy. At first glance, the possibility of reaching a broad audience in a short time seems tempting. At a second glance, social media reveals several challenges that can impair educational processes. The present paper discusses the following questions: What are the opportunities and pitfalls of civic education in social media? How can we ensure successful civic education in a digitalized world? In our article, we want to provide an interdisciplinary perspective on the topic by drawing among others from the literature in the fields of media psychology, communication studies, and education science. By integrating insights from various disciplines, our paper seeks to enrich the academic dialogue and to promote a nuanced understanding of the evolving dynamics of civic education in the digital realm. With its practical focus, our paper further aims to underscore the applicability of scientific research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Influence of modern technology on Ghanaian indigenous pottery and fashion trends.
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Mefful, Ophelia Ohenewa, Asante-Kyei, Kofi, and Nii Darku Dodoo, Caleb
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FASHION ,POTTERY ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
In Ghana, due to the social dynamics of modernization, there has been an increasing awareness among the population about modern ceramics and fashion owing to the influence of print and electronic media. This paper brings to light the effects of technology and the responsiveness of the ceramic and fashion industries in Ghana. The research design adopted for this study was a mixed-methods design. This design involves the collection and analysis of quantitative data followed by qualitative data to provide a comprehensive understanding of the research topic. The study adopted a stratified sample size of 105 out of a targeted population of 142 from three groups at Takoradi Technical University, Ghana. The study covered ceramic and fashion lecturers (15), ceramic and fashion students (35), and non-ceramic and fashion students (55). A structured questionnaire and interview guide were used to gather information. The questionnaire was subjected to a reliability test with Cronbach's alpha, and it resulted in a reliability coefficient of 0.82 (82%), which was above the recommended minimum of 0.7. The gathered data was analysed using both quantitative and qualitative methods. The Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 27 software and ATLAS.ti were used for data analysis. The study revealed that the availability and exposure to technologies in the twenty-first century have had a major influence on indigenous pottery and the choice of clothing in Ghanaian society. The collective evidence from the results also underscores the transformative impact of digital platforms and technology in shaping perceptions, practices, and preferences within the indigenous pottery and fashion domains. The paper recommended that the stakeholders in these creative industries strategically harness the synergy of social media and technological tools to enhance global exposure, foster economic growth, and ensure the preservation of cultural heritage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Design of English viewing, listening, and speaking mobile teaching software based on an interactive digital media algorithm.
- Author
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Zhao, Hongyan
- Subjects
MOBILE learning ,ENGLISH language ,INTERACTIVE multimedia ,DIGITAL media ,SPOKEN English ,INFORMATION technology - Abstract
China has now embraced the information era, which has had a significant impact on everyday life, employment, and educational practices. Information technology has also had a significant impact on the growth of the education sector, resulting in a fast-paced and resource-rich setting for student interaction. Through the network platform, various interactive software can improve students' learning methods, especially language teaching software. English audio-visual speaking is software for training English language listening and speaking, which can carry out relevant oral activities and topic discussions according to the imported materials. As a result, you can assist pupils in using the vocabulary and knowledge associated with the subject, which will increase their interest in learning. English teachers can fully prepare for speaking and listening tasks in the classroom by using audio-visual speaking. At the same time, through the learning of TV and movie trailers, English audio-visual speaking can provide readers with background knowledge, which is ready for readers to fully understand the language and content in the video materials. Based on information technology, this paper constructs English audio-visual and oral mobile teaching software, which depends on interactive digital media algorithms. Through the mobile teaching software for English audio-visual speaking, students can form good English listening and reading habits, which will provide important help for English language learning.First, this essay examines the value and benefits of mobile applications for providing English instruction orally and visually, which might help to illustrate the need for software development. The research then suggests various algorithms for English that are related to audio, visual, and oral input that can detect, assess, and correct students' learning mistakes. Finally, this work develops the fundamental methodology of the audio-visual and verbal mobile software for instruction in English. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. MULTIPLICITY OF MEDIA CHOICES AND PRIVATISED MOBILITY IN QUARANTINE.
- Author
-
JONTES, DEJAN, LUTHAR, BREDA, and PUŠNIK, MARUŠA
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,DIGITAL media ,EVERYDAY life ,QUARANTINE ,MULTIPLICITY (Mathematics) - Abstract
This paper deals with specific 'polymedia repertoires' of young people with the characteristics of their changing, adaptive and often parallel/simultaneous movement across different platforms and legacy media within their daily interactions during quarantine. Audiencing practices where it is especially important to examine relationships with technologies in contemporary media manifold were approached through the analysis of the media diaries of young people, aged between 21 and 25 years. The conclusions of the analysis point to a technological/media transformation, a transformation of practices in everyday life and a radical mediatisation which plays an important part in the changing generational structure of feeling. This paper argues that a generation-specific relationship with technologies forms a generation-specific structure of feeling or specific subject cultures that develop as by-products of deep mediatisation, in which digital media, especially during quarantine, expanded into all spheres of their social life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
31. A KALEIDOSCOPE OF MULTISENSORY PERCEPTIONS IN THE FILMS OF BUDDHADEB DASGUPTA.
- Author
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CHATTERJEE, MONALI
- Subjects
INDIAN films ,KALEIDOSCOPES ,DIGITAL media ,REPUTATION ,NARRATION - Abstract
Copyright of Annals of Cultural Studies / Roczniki Kulturoznawcze is the property of John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Institute of Cultural Studies and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. 'Whose Place of Speech?' Brazil's Afro- and Queer-Centric YouTube Channels and the Decentralization of TV Globo's Telenovela Discourse.
- Author
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Castro McGowan, Regina
- Subjects
SOCIAL attitudes ,LGBTQ+ communities ,DIGITAL media ,ALTERNATIVE mass media ,RADIO control ,SUBALTERN - Abstract
For several decades, Brazil's Grupo Globo, which controls radio, TV, and newspaper, served as the hegemonic voice controlling the audio, visual, and narrative dimensions of social phenomena that formed and informed social, political, and cultural attitudes among Brazilians. Of all their divisions, none has been more influential than the TV Globo network. Lately, with the popularization of free access to digital media, such as those offered by YouTube, TV Globo's viewership has substantially declined. This paper discusses the concept of controlling images to analyze examples of TV Globo's constructed visual image of the hypersexualized Afro-Brazilian female body in the network's soap operas. It also analyzes cases of TV Globo's constructed narrative over another subaltern Brazilian group: the LGBTQIA+ community. Recently, Afro-Brazilian and Queer-centric YouTube channels have attracted subscribers by emphasizing content centered on negritude, gender politics, and place of speech while deconstructing and de-normalizing Eurocentric and patriarchal controlling images. Against examples of TV Globo's normative discourse of the past decades, the YouTube channels discussed in this paper represent alternative mediums for agency, visibility, and unbiased representations of gender and racial identities in Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. DIGITALNE MEDIJSKE PUBLIKE I GENERACIJE -- TEORIJE, TRENDOVI I IZAZOVI.
- Author
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Car, Viktorija and Osmančević, Leali
- Abstract
Copyright of Social Sciences & Humanities Studies / Društvene i Humanističke Studije (DHS) is the property of Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, University of Tuzla and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Revocation of Article 370 and Digital Media: Unveiling Human Rights Violations in Kashmir.
- Author
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Malik, Humera
- Subjects
HUMAN rights violations ,STATE-sponsored terrorism ,DIGITAL media ,CONSTITUTIONAL amendments ,STATUS (Law) - Abstract
Ever since the subcontinent's partition, Kashmir has consistently remained a source of tension between India and Pakistan, two prominent South Asian nations. It's reasonable to assert that Kashmir stands as one of the most enduring and contentious disputes in history. In August 2019, the Indian government made significant constitutional amendments, revoking the special autonomous status granted to Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 of the Indian Constitution. This initiative sparked widespread global debate and heightened tensions in the region. Following such amendments, Indian-Held Kashmir (IHK) has experienced an intensified manifestation of state-sponsored violence. India has used force and deceit to obstruct Kashmiris from exercising their lawful rights. Issues such as censorship and surveillance pose obstacles to the ability of digital activism to uplift marginalized voices and ensure accountability for misconducts. This research paper highlights how the modification of constitutional provisions has impacted the digital media landscape and subsequently influenced the reporting and dissemination of human rights abuses. By critically examining this interplay, this paper contributes to a deeper understanding of the complex dynamics at play in the region. This study illuminates the Indian government's use of digital media to promote favorable narratives, aiming to sway global opinion in support of its initiatives while suppressing information regarding human rights violations in Kashmir. To conduct this research, a qualitative approach has been employed, with data primarily sourced from secondary sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
35. Transmitting stories of the longest revolution. Notes from Italy.
- Author
-
Salvatori, Lidia
- Subjects
- *
INTERNET service providers , *DIGITAL literacy , *DIGITAL media , *SEARCH engines , *DIGITAL technology , *FEMINISM - Abstract
Building on a digitally mediated autoethnography within a contemporary Italian feminist movement, the paper analyses the transformations of feminist media practices in Italy since the start of the 20th century. If during the 1960s and 1970s Italian feminism reached its higher visibility as one of the largest in Europe, since the 1980s, it continued to operate in submerged ways through the creation of feminist bookshops, publishing companies, women’s archives and centres while engaging with practices, ideologies and texts that were circulating transnationally. Since the early 1990s Italian feminist groups started engaging with digital technologies, creating new virtual spaces of dialogue, an autonomous internet service provider, an alternative search engine, digital literacy programmes and practical laboratories. Over the past two decades, the online space became the privileged sphere for activists to challenge the hegemonic gender discourse, debate topics otherwise suppressed or misrepresented by traditional media and create a record of struggle. Expanding from a conceptualization of feminist activism as a process of
transit , in this paper, I analyse how feminist media practices gradually transformed, shaped by historical and contextual specificities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Kierkegaard, Lippmann, and the Phantom Public in a Digital Age.
- Author
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Haman, John P.
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE journalism , *DIGITAL technology , *CITIZEN journalism , *DIGITAL media , *SOCIAL media - Abstract
Søren Kierkegaard and Walter Lippmann wrote in very different times and places but both characterized the public as a "phantom." Importantly, each did so within the context of a broader analysis that linked the press with specific notions about the public and democracy. This paper highlights the specific characteristics of the press that each thinker believed were responsible for the construction of the phantom public and its effects. While taking seriously the differences between Kierkegaard and Lippmann, in both their respective sociopolitical contexts and their formulations of the public and the press, this paper applies their critiques to a vastly different media terrain than either thinker could have envisioned. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. STRATEGY FOR IMPROVING COMPETENCY AND PRESENTING QUALITY DEVELOPMENT NEWS ON INDONESIAN TELEVISION MEDIA.
- Author
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Indrati, Iman, Sumardjo, Hapsari, Dwi Retno, and Fatchiya, Anna
- Subjects
TELEVISION journalists ,DIGITAL technology ,PUBLIC interest ,COMMUNICATIVE competence ,SOCIAL sciences ,TELEVISION broadcasting ,TELEVISION broadcasting of news ,ORGANIZATIONAL communication ,STAKEHOLDERS ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
Copyright of Environmental & Social Management Journal / Revista de Gestão Social e Ambiental is the property of Environmental & Social Management Journal and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Algorithms as conversational partners: Looking at Google auto-predict through the lens of symbolic interaction.
- Author
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Markham, Annette
- Subjects
GENERATIVE artificial intelligence ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,DIGITAL literacy ,YOUNG adults ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
This article showcases a speculative methodology for recreating interactions between a human and Google Search's Auto-Predict interface as conversations, to explore how AI-based systems are both persuasive and deeply personal. Using ethnomethodology tools and a symbolic interactionist lens, the paper presents three versions of a single Google search, each variation building a slightly different angle on the plausible utterances and interpersonal dynamics of the human and nonhuman partners. This thought experiment emerges from a decade of classroom-based digital literacy exercises with young adults, training them to analyze their lived experiences with digital media, algorithms, and devices. Transforming information exchanges into personal conversations provides a creative method for analyzing how relations are co-constructed in the granular processes of interaction, through which mutual intelligibility is built, meaning about the world is made, and identities are formed. This critical analysis extends methods for human–machine communication studies and elaborates notions of algorithmic identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Examining Board and Executive Staff Perceptions of Social Media in National Sport Organizations.
- Author
-
Naraine, Michael L., Thompson, Ashley, Lachance, Erik L., Séguin, Benoît, Taks, Marijke, Parent, Milena M., and Hoye, Russell
- Subjects
SOCIAL media ,SPORTS business ,MARKETING ,NONPROFIT organizations ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
The purpose of this paper was to highlight (1) how (if at all) social media is governed as a marketing communication channel and (2) whether there is conceptual congruence between board and executive staff with regards to social media in their organizations. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with one board member and one executive staff member from 22 Canadian national sport organizations. Results suggest nil governance and strategic oversight of social media; however, board and executive staff are seemingly aligned in this position. While having conceptual congruence is important for the organization's collective achievement, it is inherently problematic that neither side sees value in moving the discussion of social media to a governing level given its implications on marketing communication efforts. At the board level, NSOs should proactively establish a digital strategy considering the importance of the social (and digital) media function in the 21st century sport business landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A Look into the Future: The Impact of Metaverse on Traditional Theories and Thinking in International Business.
- Author
-
Saridakis, George, Khan, Zaheer, Knight, Gary, Idris, Bochra, Mitra, Jay, and Khan, Huda
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,SHARED virtual environments ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,DIGITAL technology ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
Recent advances in technology (e.g., the Internet of Things, Augmented Reality, Virtual Reality, Cloud Services, Artificial Intelligence, and Blockchain), the shift towards digital products, and the increased use of digitalisation by firms have enhanced consumers' experience and transformed how companies operate, create products/services, and offer value to multiple stakeholders on a global scale. These technological innovations have led to the phenomenon known as the Metaverse. The Metaverse does not refer to any one type of technology but is a broad (and often speculative) shift in how we interact with different technologies in the same space. In the context of International Business (IB), the recent emergence of Metaverse appears to make geographical, sectoral, and operational barriers less relevant, raising complex questions about how current IB theories can explain the world-spanning, sectorally fluid, and centrifugal behaviour of firms in the era of digital globalisation. In this paper, we obtain a critical understanding of the important opportunities and challenges that the Metaverse and the fluidity of digital technologies bring to the IB field. Specifically, we discuss how traditional theories can be effectively utilised to explain firms' internationalisation, and adapted to reflect the new technological era. We propose a framework for new approaches to IB research to help advance research on Metaverse and IB, which can provide important opportunities for future work in this field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Emotion AWARE: an artificial intelligence framework for adaptable, robust, explainable, and multi-granular emotion analysis.
- Author
-
Gamage, Gihan, De Silva, Daswin, Mills, Nishan, Alahakoon, Damminda, and Manic, Milos
- Subjects
LANGUAGE models ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,HUMAN behavior ,EMOTIONS ,EMOTICONS & emojis ,CORE competencies ,DIGITAL media ,WIRELESS mesh networks - Abstract
Emotions are fundamental to human behaviour. How we feel, individually and collectively, determines how humanity evolves and advances into our shared future. The rapid digitalisation of our personal, social and professional lives means we are frequently using digital media to express, understand and respond to emotions. Although recent developments in Artificial Intelligence (AI) are able to analyse sentiment and detect emotions, they are not effective at comprehending the complexity and ambiguity of digital emotion expressions in knowledge-focused activities of customers, people, and organizations. In this paper, we address this challenge by proposing a novel AI framework for the adaptable, robust, and explainable detection of multi-granular assembles of emotions. This framework consolidates lexicon generation and finetuned Large Language Model (LLM) approaches to formulate multi-granular assembles of two, eight and fourteen emotions. The framework is robust to ambiguous emotion expressions that are implied in conversation, adaptable to domain-specific emotion semantics, and the assembles are explainable using constituent terms and intensity. We conducted nine empirical studies using datasets representing diverse human emotion behaviours. The results of these studies comprehensively demonstrate and evaluate the core capabilities of the framework, and consistently outperforms state-of-the-art approaches in adaptable, robust, and explainable multi-granular emotion detection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Digital News Blindspot: Radon Awareness in Portuguese Digital Media.
- Author
-
Zocca, Ricardo
- Subjects
CARCINOGENS ,RISK communication ,RADON ,DIGITAL media ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
This study addresses the underrepresentation of radon gas within the media discourse, particularly in Portugal. Employing a comprehensive mixed-methods approach, this paper examines how major Portuguese digital newspapers have covered radon gas, aiming to deepen our understanding of this critical issue. The findings reveal a significant lack of coverage on radon gas over 24 years in the selected newspapers. Surprisingly, only a few articles were identified, failing to convey its importance effectively. Despite identifying some risk communication strategies, their impact was statistically insignificant, indicating a clear discrepancy in attention. This study emphasizes the urgent need for balanced reporting on public health risks like radon gas and offers insights into enhancing risk communication strategies. Ultimately, it contributes to advocating for more comprehensive coverage of critical public health issues in the media. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Social media ecology in an influencer group: A closer look at Chat (Fiji) as a case study.
- Author
-
TARAI, JOPE
- Subjects
ONLINE journalism ,SOCIAL media ,SOCIAL influence ,DIGITAL media ,POLITICAL campaigns - Abstract
Social media use in Fiji has expanded in recent years and has become a ubiquitous feature in wider society. Social media ecology focuses and examines the dimensions of an online environment and its interplay with human experiences in user engagement. These dimensions with human experiences in user engagement can provide an insight into how influential social media groups can become in shaping discourses and views. To examine and discuss the social media ecology of an influencer group, the article details one of Fiji's largest and most influential online groups. To do this, the paper uses digital ethnography, supplemented with social media analytics. This study provides key findings in the social media ecology of influencer groups and online behavior. These findings may have implications for further research in media, citizen journalism, viral content creation and online political campaigning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. FuSIW: fusion-based secure RGB image watermarking using hashing.
- Author
-
Mahto, Dhiran Kumar, Singh, Om Prakash, and Singh, Amit Kumar
- Subjects
DIGITAL watermarking ,COPYRIGHT ,DIGITAL media ,MASS media industry ,SOCIAL media ,SMART cities ,IMAGE encryption - Abstract
With the proliferation of the use of the Internet and social media, the digital media industry has grown enormously in recent years. However, this has brought some challenges, including issues of content security and copyright violation. In this paper, we propose a fusion-based secure watermarking algorithm that we have named "FuSIW". This uses a hashing scheme, to guarantee copyright protection and authentication of RGB images. The algorithm uses the non-subsampled contourlet transform (NSCT) to create a fused watermark image. This contourlet transform (CT) and randomised-singular-value-decomposition (RSVD) based approach allows concealment of the encrypted fused watermark image in the blue channel of the cover image. Subsequently, the hash value of the cover image is inserted into the green channels of the host image. Experimental evaluation indicates that the FuSIW algorithm provides security from geometric attacks and several other common forms of attack. Simulations indicate that the proposed system exhibits improved robustness and security compared to existing methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. From Screen to Table: How Douyin Food Bloggers Stimulate and Convert Viewer Interests.
- Author
-
Guo, Ruoqing, Yang, Ziqing, and Gao, Hao
- Subjects
MASS media influence ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,DIGITAL media ,SOCIAL influence ,SOCIAL media - Abstract
In the era of social media, the influence of food exploration bloggers is increasingly apparent. Sharing their culinary experiences stimulates the audience's interest in visiting and consuming food destinations. This paper seeks to understand how the characteristics of food exploration bloggers on the Douyin platform influence audience perceptions of food and locations and how these perceptions may relate to visiting intentions, using the stimulus–organism–response (SOR) model. A cross-sectional online survey analyzed responses from 437 individuals interested in food exploration videos on Douyin. The results indicate that source credibility is significantly associated with the stimulation of taste desires and the formation of taste awareness. The audience's taste desire and taste awareness are positively linked to the intention to visit. This study contributes to the expansion of the SOR model's application in digital media, underscoring the substantial role of social media in influencing audience consumption intentions. It highlights that as an effective communication tool, social media can significantly impact users' behavioral responses and consumption decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A Holistic and Multidimensional Methodology Proposal for a Persona with Total Visual Impairment Archetype on the Web.
- Author
-
Marin-Alvarez, Esther, Carcelen-Garcia, Sonia, and Galmes-Cerezo, María
- Subjects
DIGITAL technology ,VISION disorders ,WEB design ,DIGITAL media ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,EMPATHY - Abstract
The web was conceived in 1997 with the goal of universal accessibility. However, it still presents obstacles for users with diverse abilities. Although interactions in digital environments have improved the quality of life for many people, they remain a source of limitations and frustrations, up to twice as much for users with total visual impairment, which is commonly known as blindness. This article emphasizes the need to provide designers and developers with methodologies and tools that consider users with different abilities in all stages and from the beginning of the design, redesign, and development of digital products and services on the web, collecting their needs and goals and delving into their reactions and emotions. While an approach based on persona archetypes can optimally represent each group of users with disabilities throughout website design processes, serving as a communication and empathy tool for development teams and stakeholders, it is essential that this tool considers all dimensions involved in the experiences of people with disabilities. This conceptual paper develops a methodology that provides designers with a persona tool that effectively captures the goals and emotions of these users in their interaction with the web. This methodology proposal is multidimensional and holistic. It addresses conscious and subconscious dimensions, combines traditional user experience and neuroscientific techniques, focuses on total visual impairment, the most challenging in digital environments, and makes it adaptable to other disabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Online news in India: a quantitative appraisal of the digital news consumption landscape in the world's largest democracy (2014–2018).
- Author
-
Mukerjee, Subhayan
- Subjects
NEWS consumption ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,ATTRIBUTION of news ,DEMOCRACY ,INTERNET users - Abstract
How do people in the world's largest democracy consume news online? In this paper, I aim to answer this question by conducting a quantitative assessment of the online news consumption behavior of a large sample of Indian internet users (N≈50,000) over a period of 45 months. In doing so, I contribute to theoretical debates about global news media use, by systematically appraising the prominence and trends in audience share of different types of news sources, thereby shedding light on the digital news consumption landscape of a crucial, but understudied context. Theoretically, I engage with the displacement-complementarity hypothesis and find no evidence that digital-born media have contested the hegemony of legacy media in India online. Next, I investigate the regional-national media divide and find that regional, vernacular media have suffered significant declines in their audience shares over time. This begs the question whether the notion of 'polycentrism' – the idea that the Indian media environment is comprised of national and regional media of equivalent weight – is at all applicable online as it is offline. These findings also run counter to claims of 'internet vernacularization' that have been touted in the past. Finally, I propose the concept of audience mobility, and use it to identify qualitatively distinct dynamics in how vernacular audiences in India have migrated to national vis-à-vis international outlets. The findings and their implications are discussed in light of contemporary changes in Indian society that is characterized by rapid digitization and increasing literacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Enhancing Steganography through Optimized Quantization Tables.
- Author
-
Brūzgienė, Rasa, Venčkauskas, Algimantas, Grigaliūnas, Šarūnas, and Petraška, Jonas
- Subjects
COPYRIGHT of digital media ,CRYPTOGRAPHY ,COPYRIGHT infringement ,COPYRIGHT ,SIGNAL-to-noise ratio ,DIGITAL watermarking ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
This paper addresses the scientific problem of enhancing the security and capacity of steganographic methods for protecting digital media. The primary aim is to develop an advanced steganographic technique that optimizes quantization tables to surpass the traditional F5 algorithm in terms of security, capacity, and robustness. The novelty of this research lies in the introduction of the F5A method, which utilizes optimized quantization tables to significantly increase the capacity for concealed information while ensuring high-quality image retention and resistance to unauthorized content recovery. The F5A method integrates cryptographic keys and features to detect and prevent copyright infringement in real time. Experimental evaluations demonstrate that the F5A method improves the mean square error and peak signal-to-noise ratio indices by 1.716 and 1.121 times, respectively, compared to the traditional F5 algorithm. Additionally, it increases the steganographic capacity by up to 1.693 times for smaller images and 1.539 times for larger images. These results underscore the effectiveness of the F5A method in enhancing digital media security and copyright protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Digital Video Advertising: Breakthrough or Extension of TV Advertising in the New Digital Media Landscape?
- Author
-
Garganas, Odysseas
- Subjects
DIGITAL media ,DIGITAL video ,TELEVISION advertising ,ADVERTISING ,WEB 2.0 ,MULTIMEDIA systems - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to shape the identity of digital video advertising in the new digital media landscape, focusing on whether and to what extent popular digital ads on social media are differentiated from traditional television ads in the context of the convergence of traditional and new electronic media. Content analysis was preferred for the study of popular advertising content in social media. In this respect, the differentiation of digital video advertising from its television counterpart is examined in terms of the properties and effects of the transmission medium itself on the advertising content and of the features of the digital advertising content itself. Out of the findings emerged that digital video advertising is still in a phase of adaptation/transition, consisting of only a potential breakthrough in the contemporary media environment, since it has not yet exhausted the possibilities offered by the internet and Web 2.0. Currently, digital advertising only partially incorporates and exploits the advantages of enriched, multimedia, interactive, and personalized content, characteristics that would potentially differentiate it to a greater extent from advertising shown in traditional media, especially television. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Analyzing the Attractiveness of Food Images Using an Ensemble of Deep Learning Models Trained via Social Media Images.
- Author
-
Morinaga, Tanyaboon, Patanukhom, Karn, and Somchit, Yuthapong
- Subjects
DEEP learning ,SOCIAL media ,CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks ,CONSUMER behavior ,DIGITAL media ,IMAGE recognition (Computer vision) - Abstract
With the growth of digital media and social networks, sharing visual content has become common in people's daily lives. In the food industry, visually appealing food images can attract attention, drive engagement, and influence consumer behavior. Therefore, it is crucial for businesses to understand what constitutes attractive food images. Assessing the attractiveness of food images poses significant challenges due to the lack of large labeled datasets that align with diverse public preferences. Additionally, it is challenging for computer assessments to approach human judgment in evaluating aesthetic quality. This paper presents a novel framework that circumvents the need for explicit human annotation by leveraging user engagement data that are readily available on social media platforms. We propose procedures to collect, filter, and automatically label the attractiveness classes of food images based on their user engagement levels. The data gathered from social media are used to create predictive models for category-specific attractiveness assessments. Our experiments across five food categories demonstrate the efficiency of our approach. The experimental results show that our proposed user-engagement-based attractiveness class labeling achieves a high consistency of 97.2% compared to human judgments obtained through A/B testing. Separate attractiveness assessment models were created for each food category using convolutional neural networks (CNNs). When analyzing unseen food images, our models achieve a consistency of 76.0% compared to human judgments. The experimental results suggest that the food image dataset collected from social networks, using the proposed framework, can be successfully utilized for learning food attractiveness assessment models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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