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Journal articles on the topic 'Communication news'

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1

Edgerly, Stephanie, and Emily K. Vraga. "Deciding What’s News: News-ness As an Audience Concept for the Hybrid Media Environment." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 97, no. 2 (May 14, 2020): 416–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699020916808.

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A by-product of today’s hybrid media system is that genres—once uniformly defined and enforced—are now murky and contested. We develop the concept of news-ness, defined as the extent to which audiences characterize specific content as news, to capture how audiences understand and process media messages. In this article, we (a) ground the concept of news-ness within research on media genres, journalism practices, and audience studies, (b) develop a theoretical model that identifies the factors that influence news-ness and its outcomes, and (c) situate news-ness within discussions about fake news, partisan motivated reasoning, and comparative studies of media systems.
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John, Alison. "Internal communication and information integrity." Global Knowledge, Memory and Communication 69, no. 1/2 (September 12, 2019): 5–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/gkmc-06-2019-0064.

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Purpose Internal communication and information integrity – a professional services approach to the impact of “fake news”. This paper aims to explain how to build internal communication so that staff can recognise real from fake and the impact that “fake news” can have on organisations through global media. Design/methodology/approach The author offers a personal perspective of the potential impact of “fake news” on an organisation, and of how internal communication can be built on trust and transparency. Findings Most effective internal communications are built on the authenticity of the brand. Staff can recognise internal “fake news” and become more adept at recognising other forms of fake news from a global media perspective. Originality/value This is a personal response to the subject of fake news and information integrity. The paper illustrates an internal communications perspective within a small academic organisation.
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Cox, Amy. "Communication: Society News." Biochemist 33, no. 4 (August 1, 2011): 50–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bio03304050.

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How do you hear about the activities of the Biochemical Society? Twitter, The Biochemist or member emails? How are you reading this? Do you read the printed magazine, or browse Biochemist e-volution? If the latter, do you use your computer, iPad or Mobile?
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4

Edgerly, Stephanie, and Emily K. Vraga. "That’s Not News: Audience Perceptions of “News-ness” and Why It Matters." Mass Communication and Society 23, no. 5 (March 23, 2020): 730–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15205436.2020.1729383.

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Clausen, Lisbeth. "Global News Communication Strategies." Nordicom Review 24, no. 2 (November 1, 2003): 105–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/nor-2017-0309.

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Baker, Scott, and Morela Hernandez. "Communicating with stakeholders when bad news is uncertain." International Journal of Public Leadership 13, no. 2 (May 8, 2017): 85–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijpl-11-2016-0051.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore the question of if and when leaders should communicate bad news to their stakeholders. Previous research in the crisis communication literature has highlighted the need to communicate quickly and persuasively to minimize losses; however, the authors argue that such tactics assume certainty in negative outcomes and tend to generate predominantly one-way, company-centric communication. In this paper, the authors propose that under conditions of uncertainty (i.e. when the bad news has an unknown outcome or cause) different communication strategies are needed. Design/methodology/approach Drawing on the stakeholder theory, the authors argue that organizational decision makers have a clear moral obligation to share bad news with affected stakeholders. The authors then review the existing approach to crisis communication and discuss its limitations under conditions of uncertainty. Finally, the authors develop a set of scenarios to guide the communication of bad news under conditions of uncertainty. Findings The authors formulate a framework to guide leaders on how to communicate with stakeholders when the nature of the bad news is uncertain and open to multiple interpretations. The authors propose a situational approach for responding to stakeholders that emerges from the context of the bad news. Originality/value The authors propose a situational framework for communicating bad news that overcomes the current limitations of extant crisis communication strategies under conditions of uncertainty. This involves balancing existing crisis communication recommendations with a more collaborative sensemaking approach.
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Keightley, Emily, and John Downey. "The intermediate time of news consumption." Journalism 19, no. 1 (January 30, 2017): 93–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884916689155.

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Many accounts of contemporary mediated communication of various kinds emphasise speed, immediacy and simultaneity as overriding temporal characteristics, and accounts of journalism are no exception. Acceleration in journalistic practice and the associated changes in news content and its communication have a variety of consequences. In the most extreme accounts, this produces ever-shallower news content while the immediacy of its delivery collapses deliberative time for its interpretation. This article attempts to challenge some of the assumptions on which these assertions are based by taking an alternative starting point in analysing news time and temporality: the news audience. We argue that many accounts which emphasise the paralysing effects of fast communication and the acceleration of news in particular fail to acknowledge the complexities of news consumption, instead pessimistically reading off the effects of speed from communications technologies themselves. We go on to consider the value of social scientific audience research characterisation of practices of consuming the news in contemporary culture and suggest that these need to be accompanied by ethnographic approaches to the audience which engage with the ways in which meaning is produced from the resources that journalism provides in everyday lived contexts.
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Carroll, Raymond L., and C. A. Tuggle. "The World Outside: Local TV News Treatment of Imported News." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 74, no. 1 (March 1997): 123–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769909707400110.

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This study sought to determine whether stations located in larger or smaller markets gave different treatment to news and to resolve whether disparities noted among small and large television market news programs extended to their treatment of news imported from outside the market. McManus's economic model of inexpensive, passive discovery held true over the journalistic model of active surveillance in smaller markets, where stations not only devoted less time to news than those in larger markets, but a greater proportion of their news content was imported, thus passively discovered. The larger the market size, the more active the discovery. Some evidence that imported news supplants strictly local news in smaller television markets was found. Furthermore, although major-, large-, and medium-market stations devoted higher proportions of their news hole to sensational and human interest news, stations in the smallest markets imported a greater proportion of sensational/human interest news than they originated locally.
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Hvidtfelt Nielsen, Kristian, Carsten R. Kjaer, and Jørgen Dahlgaard. "Scientists and science communication: a Danish survey." Journal of Science Communication 06, no. 01 (March 21, 2007): A01. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/2.06010201.

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This paper summarizes key findings from a web-based questionnaire survey among Danish scientists in the natural sciences and engineering science. In line with the Act on Universities of 2003 enforcing science communication as a university obligation next to research and teaching, the respondents take a keen interest in communicating science, especially through the news media. However, they also do have mixed feeling about the quality of science communication in the news. Moreover, a majority of the respondents would like to give higher priority to science communication. More than half reply that they are willing to allocate up to 2% of total research funding in Denmark to science communication. Further, the respondents indicate that they would welcome a wider variety of science communication initiatives aimed at many types of target groups. They do not see the news media as the one and only channel for current science communication.
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Choi, Jihyang. "News Internalizing and Externalizing." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 93, no. 4 (July 10, 2016): 816–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699016628812.

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The present study sheds light on the changing patterns of news experiences by defining it as news sharing. The study attempted to explicate the concept of news sharing by identifying the subdimensions of it in the context of online social networking sites (SNSs). Findings showed that news sharing is comprised of two distinctive behaviors: news internalizing (by those who read news) and externalizing (by those who offer news to others). Furthermore, news internalizing and externalizing have two subdimensions, respectively: browsing and personalizing for internalizing, and recontextualizing and endorsing for externalizing. Data were collected through a national survey of adults in the United States.
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Haanshuus, Birgitte P., and Karoline Andrea Ihlebæk. "Recontextualising the news." Nordicom Review 42, s1 (March 1, 2021): 37–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/nor-2021-0005.

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Abstract This study explores how an extreme far-right alternative media site uses content from professional media to convey uncivil news with an antisemitic message. Analytically, it rests on a critical discourse analysis of 231 news items, originating from established national and international news sources, published on Frihetskamp from 2011–2018. In the study, we explore how news items are recontextualised to portray both overt and covert antisemitic discourses, and we identify four antisemitic representations that are reinforced through the selection and adjustment of news: Jews as powerful, as intolerant and anti-liberal, as exploiters of victimhood, and as inferior. These conspiratorial and exclusionary ideas, also known from historical Nazi propaganda, are thus reproduced by linking them to contemporary societal and political contexts and the current news agenda. We argue that this kind of recontextualised, uncivil news can be difficult to detect in a digital public sphere.
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Edy, Jill A., Scott L. Althaus, and Patricia F. Phalen. "Using News Abstracts to Represent News Agendas." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 82, no. 2 (June 2005): 434–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769900508200212.

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Many scholars rely upon the Vanderbilt Television News Index and Abstracts to represent the topics covered by network broadcast news. Earlier research has shown that the Abstracts do not adequately capture the evaluative tone of news, but the degree of topical correspondence between the abstracts and the full transcripts of newscasts has never been formally tested. This paper uses content analysis of transcripts of ABC's coverage of the 1991 Gulf War and the corresponding Vanderbilt Abstracts entries to assess the relationship between the topical content of newscasts and that of their abstracts. It demonstrates that under the right conditions, the topical content of news can be effectively represented in abstracts, but emerging topics and those not discussed by the White House are likely to be underrepresented in abstracts.
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Streckfuss, Richard. "News Before Newspapers." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 75, no. 1 (March 1998): 84–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769909807500110.

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From 1513 to 1640, news pamphlets informed and entertained the English. Such publications have been difficult to identify and little has been written about them. More than 1,200 pamphlets were identified by reviewing entries in the Short Title Catalogue. They were then analyzed by numbers produced and subject matter. Factors that news pamphlets may share with modern news formats - including subject matter, sales methods, and newsgathering techniques - are described. Their characteristic tone is also examined. It is suggested that news pamphlets may help media historians examine what is universal about the news and what is culturally influenced.
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Li, Cong, Cheng Hong, and Zifei Fay Chen. "Effects of Uniqueness, News Valence, and Liking on Personalization of Company News." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 97, no. 4 (July 17, 2020): 890–912. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699020923604.

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Many online information systems are delivering personalized news to users today. The essence of this personalization process is to match a news article to the reader’s self-identity. However, prior studies mostly focus on matching a positive news story to a person’s desired identity. No known research has discussed the possibility of matching a negative news story to a person’s undesired identity. This study aims to fill this theoretical gap by testing a three-way interaction effect among news valence, identity desirability, and uniqueness on attitude toward the news story. Through a 2 × 2 × 2 between-subjects experiment, it is shown that a positive news story tends to generate a more favorable attitude when matched to the reader’s desired self-identity, whereas a negative news story will generate a more favorable attitude when matched to the person’s undesired self-identity, and such an effect is especially pronounced when the identity is unique. Perceived news credibility is found to partially mediate these effects.
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Majeed, Fiaz, Muhammad Waqas Asif, Muhammad Awais Hassan, Syed Ali Abbas, and M. Ikramullah Lali. "Social Media News Classification in Healthcare Communication." Journal of Medical Imaging and Health Informatics 9, no. 6 (August 1, 2019): 1215–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1166/jmihi.2019.2735.

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The trend of news transmission is rapidly shifting from electronic media to social media. Currently, news channels in general, while health news channels specifically send health related news on social media sites. These news are beneficial for the patients, medical professionals and the general public. A lot of health related data is available on the social media that may be used to extract significant information and present several predictions from it to assist physicians, patients and healthcare organizations for decision making. However, A little research is found on health news data using machine learning approaches, thus in this paper, we have proposed a framework for the data collection, modeling, and visualization of the health related patterns. For the analysis, the tweets of 13 news channels are collected from the Twitter. The dataset holds approximately 28k tweets available under 280 hashtags. Furthermore, a comprehensive set of experiments are performed to extract patterns from the data. A comparative analysis is carried among the baseline method and four classification algorithms which include Naive Bayes (NB), Support Vector Machine (SVM), Logistic Regression (LR), Decision Tree (J48). For the evaluation of the results, the standard measures accuracy, precision, recall and f-measure have been used. The results of the study are encouraging and better than the other studies of such kind.
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16

Tandoc Jr., Edson C., Ryan J. Thomas, and Lauren Bishop. "What Is (Fake) News? Analyzing News Values (and More) in Fake Stories." Media and Communication 9, no. 1 (February 3, 2021): 110–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/mac.v9i1.3331.

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‘Fake news’ has been a topic of controversy during and following the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Much of the scholarship on it to date has focused on the ‘fakeness’ of fake news, illuminating the kinds of deception involved and the motivations of those who deceive. This study looks at the ‘newsness’ of fake news by examining the extent to which it imitates the characteristics and conventions of traditional journalism. Through a content analysis of 886 fake news articles, we find that in terms of news values, topic, and formats, articles published by fake news sites look very much like traditional—and real—news. Most of their articles included the news values of timeliness, negativity, and prominence; were about government and politics; and were written in an inverted pyramid format. However, one point of departure is in terms of objectivity, operationalized as the absence of the author’s personal opinion. The analysis found that the majority of articles analyzed included the opinion of their author or authors.
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Frey, Elsebeth. "Renegotiating Online News." Nordicom Review 34, no. 1 (July 1, 2013): 17–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/nor-2013-0040.

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Abstract Online journalism is negotiated and renegotiated in the newsroom of Journalen, the training website for students in journalism at Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences. Using quantitative and qualitative methods, the paper examines three spring terms of online news production by journalism students, particularly looking at sources, links and their multimedia news production. The findings are compared to the students’ professional peers in four news sites in the same period. All five sites are moving towards a convergent news modality. But the students tend to use more sources than their professional peers.
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Song, Haeyeop, Jaemin Jung, and Youngju Kim. "Perceived News Overload and Its Cognitive and Attitudinal Consequences for News Usage in South Korea." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 94, no. 4 (December 15, 2016): 1172–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699016679975.

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This study focuses on the ironic situation in which news is more available than ever but people are becoming overwhelmed and thus avoid it. A theoretical model is suggested to investigate the relationships between perceived news overload and its cognitive and attitudinal consequences among South Korean Internet users. A structural model reveals that perceived news overload induced news avoidance by increasing news fatigue and news analysis paralysis. Furthermore, this study finds evidence that news consumers are willing to use news curation services to alleviate news avoidance and thus stay informed.
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Amazeen, Michelle A. "News in an Era of Content Confusion: Effects of News Use Motivations and Context on Native Advertising and Digital News Perceptions." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 97, no. 1 (November 7, 2019): 161–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699019886589.

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This study examined the effects of news use motivations and differing native advertising contexts (hard vs. soft news) on the ability to perceive commercialized content, evaluations of native advertising, and ensuing digital news perceptions. Based upon the framework of the persuasion knowledge model, an online experiment was conducted among a sample of U.S. adults ( N = 684). Engaging with news for informational motivations conditioned perceptions of advertising as did the contextual effects of hard versus soft news. Furthermore, hard-news approaches to native advertising were perceived more unfavorably by audiences and tarnished the subsequent reporting of actual journalists.
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Pitrelli, Nico. "Vatican-branded science communication." Journal of Science Communication 06, no. 03 (September 20, 2007): E. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/2.06030501.

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The summer now gone has reported two episodes we would like to bring to the attention of the JCOM readers. Two minor pieces of news, unlikely to be in the limelight over the summer, when the media understandably focus on gossips and crime news. Even the experts – especially outside the Italian territory – would probably dismiss these events as minor, wouldn’t it be for the people involved. But let’s see the facts.
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Free, David. "In the News." College & Research Libraries News 81, no. 1 (January 6, 2020): 5. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/crln.81.1.5.

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Welcome to the January 2020 issue of C&RL News. A lot of attention gets paid to communicating library activities and value across campus, but internal communication can be just as essential for success. Starting out this month’s issue, Kelly Delevan and Natalie LoRusso discuss “Library outreach as a model for staff inreach” at Syracuse University.
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Robinson, John P., and Mark R. Levy. "Interpersonal Communication and News Comprehension." Public Opinion Quarterly 50, no. 2 (1986): 160. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/268972.

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Makulowich, John S. "AIDS and Electronic Communication News." AIDS Patient Care 7, no. 2 (April 1993): 110–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/apc.1993.7.110.

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Makulowich, John. "AIDS and Electronic Communication News." AIDS Patient Care 7, no. 1 (February 1993): 46–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/apc.1993.7.46.

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Ells, Kevin. "Breaking “News”: Majority Can’t Define Mass Communication." Journalism & Mass Communication Educator 74, no. 1 (March 5, 2018): 92–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077695818756738.

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Current communication textbooks proffer conflicting, vague, or incomplete definitions of the core concepts of “mass communication” and “news,” contributing to confusion among students, and subsequently in the public sphere, of what experts in the field mean when discussing news and mass media. The analysis in this article disentangles a clear definition of mass communication from the related concepts of mass media and mediated communication, as well as clearly differentiating the concept of “news” from the adjacent concepts of journalism and entertainment. Discussion concludes with implications for communication education and improved public understanding of the field.
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Jóhannsdóttir, Valgerður. "News consumption patterns in Iceland." Nordicom Review 42, s2 (March 1, 2021): 87–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/nor-2021-0019.

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Abstract News consumption has changed dramatically in the digital age, becoming increasingly complicated and fragmented. In this study, I analyse news consumption patterns in Iceland, drawing on data from a survey conducted in 2017, and compare it with news consumption in other Nordic countries. It is the first such study in Iceland in the digital age. The findings demonstrate that news are widely consumed by the general public, as in general in the Nordic region. Online sites are Icelanders’ most popular main source of news, followed by television and then social media. Legacy media are still most people's primary source of news, even if they are accessed on new platforms. Like in other Nordic countries, a small minority interacts with news online.
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Nindia, Bunga Shafira, Eko Harry Susanto, and Doddy Salman. "Decoding Komunikasi Nonverbal Pada Siaran Tv Kompas Malam (Riset Khalayak Pada Teman Tuli)." JURNAL SOSIAL : Jurnal Penelitian Ilmu-Ilmu Sosial 21, no. 2 (November 4, 2020): 67–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.33319/sos.v21i2.64.

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Abstract— Researchers want to find out how people with disabilities understand the content of news on television broadcasts, specifically decoding nonverbal communication on news broadcasts. Basically the communication process (message exchange) will not run well if it is not supported by various communication elements or components, namely encoding. Therefore, in communicating there are so many obstacles and constraints experienced by communication agents. Physical barriers become one of the obstacles in communication. When communicating, one's physical imperfections become a problem in the delivery and reception of messages (information). In this study, researchers used qualitative research methods and interpretive paradigms to get accurate results. After conducting research on persons with hearing impairments, the researcher saw that the resource persons could not encode or decode perfectly, the resource persons were only able to absorb a little information that was conveyed. The resource person is not able to make messages according to a certain code the cause is the unclear tempo of the sign language column movement that is too fast so the resource person is unable to capture the message conveyed by the interpreter. Keywords—: News; Communication; Encoding; Decoding; Deaf.
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Chyi, Hsiang Iris, Seth C. Lewis, and Nan Zheng. "Parasite or Partner? Coverage of Google News in an Era of News Aggregation." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 93, no. 4 (July 10, 2016): 789–815. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699016629370.

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With online news aggregators outperforming most traditional media sites, some news executives have accused Google News of stealing their content, even as they rely on Google for exposure. Through a content analysis, this study examines how leading traditional news providers and trade publications, during the 2007-2010 financial shock for U.S. newspapers, covered the newspaper industry’s delicate relationship with Google. Results indicate that such coverage de-emphasized the non-advertising nature of Google News, ignored readers’ views, and used emotion-laden language (e.g., sensational accusations against Google of “stealing” newspaper content or being a “parasite”). Although Google was often portrayed as the enemy, most coverage suggested that newspapers should work with Google, pointing to the challenge of assessing Google’s role in an unfolding era of news aggregation.
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Kraushaar, Josh. "ONLINE NEWS LEADS PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN NEWS CYCLE." Journalism Studies 10, no. 3 (June 2009): 435–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616700902987256.

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Park, Chang Sup, and Barbara K. Kaye. "What’s This? Incidental Exposure to News on Social Media, News-Finds-Me Perception, News Efficacy, and News Consumption." Mass Communication and Society 23, no. 2 (January 3, 2020): 157–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15205436.2019.1702216.

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Jan, Mohammed M. S., and John P. Girvin. "The Communication of Neurological Bad News to Parents." Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques 29, no. 1 (February 2002): 78–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0317167100001773.

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Communicating disappointing or unexpected neurological news to parents is often both difficult and emotionally unwelcome. At the same time, it is important that transfer of such information is done well and, indeed, if done well, can be a very rewarding experience. Limited references are available for physicians regarding the proper communication of neurological bad news to parents. This paper attempts to provide general guidelines regarding this process. The review is based on the available medical literature, detailed discussions with many senior physicians from different medical systems and the authors'personal experience. The manner in which neurological bad news is conveyed to parents can significantly influence their emotions, their beliefs and their attitudes towards the child, the medical staff, and the future. This review of the literature, combined with clinical experience, attests to the fact that most families describe emotional shock, upset, and subsequent depression after the breaking of news of a bad neurological disorder. However, the majority find the attitude of the news giver, combined with the clarity of the message and the news giver's knowledge to answer questions as the most important aspects of giving bad news.
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Nash, Sorariba. "International news flow cooperative study." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 2, no. 1 (November 1, 1995): 50–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v2i1.537.

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A media cooperative study of foreign news and international news flow in the 1990s is underway. The objective is to define a New World (Dis)order geography of news gathering. PNG and other Pacific nations are involved.
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Biswas, Masudul, Carrie Sipes, and Lori Brost. "An analysis of general-audience and Black news sites’ coverage of African American issues during the COVID-19 pandemic." Newspaper Research Journal 42, no. 3 (July 27, 2021): 397–415. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07395329211030625.

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This study has compared the news coverage of African American issues during the COVID-19 pandemic between general-interest online newspapers and Black news sites. Compared with COVID-19 pandemic news coverage by general-interest news sites, news coverage by Black news sites included significantly higher number of stories with African American issues. This study also identifies similarities in pandemic news coverage of African American issues between local news sites and Black news sites publishing from Black-majority cities.
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Wicks, Robert H. "Remembering the News: Effects of Medium and Message Discrepancy on News Recall over Time." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 72, no. 3 (September 1995): 666–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769909507200316.

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This article suggests a theoretical explanation of the processes related to recall and learning of media news information. It does so by linking the concepts of schematic thinking and the Search of Associative Memory (SAM) to the variable of time. It argues that learning from the news may be better than many recent studies suggest. Although humans may have trouble recalling discrete news stories in recall examinations, it seems likely that they acquire “common knowledge” from the news media. Time is an important variable in helping people to remember news if they use it to think about new information in the context of previously stored knowledge.
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Johnson, Kirsten A., and Burton St. John. "News Stories on the Facebook Platform: Millennials’ Perceived Credibility of Online News Sponsored by News and Non-News Companies." Journalism Practice 14, no. 6 (July 3, 2019): 749–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2019.1637272.

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36

Vozab, Dina. "Generational Patterns of Digital News Consumption." Medijske studije 10, no. 20 (March 24, 2020): 107–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.20901/ms.10.20.6.

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Digital high-choice media environments (Prior, 2007; Van Aelst et al., 2017) lead to fragmented and polarized news consumption. The concept of news repertoires was introduced to analyze media use in a cross-media environment. News repertoires were found to be diverse across countries, to be dependent on age groups, socioeconomic status, and to have effects on political knowledge and participation (Diehl et al., 2018; Edgerly et al., 2018; Strömbäck et al., 2018; Wolfsfeld et al., 2016). The aim of this study is to identify different news repertoires in Croatia and to test the effects of generational belonging and socioeconomic status on the formation of these repertoires. It has been shown over time that age and political interest are more important predictors of increasingly diversified and polarized news consumption (Bergström et al., 2019; Strömbäck et al., 2013). This study discusses the interplay of sociodemographic factors and political interest in driving news consumption across different generations. The analysis is based on data from Reuters Digital News Survey conducted in Croatia in 2018. Latent class analysis is used to identify news repertoires and the covariates which form them. The analysis resulted in identifying five news repertoires: minimalists, digital-born users, traditionalists, commercial media users and eclectics.
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Riffe, Daniel, Seoyeon Kim, and Meghan R. Sobel. "News Borrowing Revisited: A 50-Year Perspective." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 95, no. 4 (February 2, 2018): 909–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699018754909.

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Analyzing 50 years’ of New York Times international news coverage ( N = 20,765), this study extends research on the “shrinking international news hole,” levels of press freedom, agent (e.g., Times correspondent), and “borrowed” news—information gleaned from local media, including social media. Data show a recent, growing role for social media and an increase in news borrowing, while foreign coverage declined; slight resurgence in foreign coverage during the last quarter-century; reduced wire copy use but increased correspondent news borrowing; and increased coverage of but decreased news borrowing in news from non-free nations. Borrowing from social media was greatest in non-free nations.
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38

Farkas, Johan, and Christina Neumayer. "Mimicking News." Nordicom Review 41, no. 1 (January 19, 2020): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/nor-2020-0001.

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AbstractThis article explores the mimicking of tabloid news as a form of covert racism, relying on the credibility of an established tabloid newspaper. The qualitative case study focuses on a digital platform for letters to the editor, operated without editorial curation pre-publication from 2010 to 2018 by one of Denmark’s largest newspapers, Ekstra Bladet. A discourse analysis of the 50 most shared letters to the editor on Facebook shows that nativist, far-right actors used the platform to disseminate fear-mongering discourses and xenophobic conspiracy theories, disguised as professional news and referred to as articles. These processes took place at the borderline of true and false as well as racist and civil discourse. At this borderline, a lack of supervision and moderation coupled with the openness and visual design of the platform facilitated new forms of covert racism between journalism and user-generated content.
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39

Marchi, Regina. "News Translators." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 94, no. 1 (July 10, 2016): 189–212. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699016637119.

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40

Lugo-Ocando, Jairo, and Renata Faria Brandão. "Stabbing News." Journalism Practice 10, no. 6 (July 15, 2015): 715–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2015.1058179.

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41

Khaldarova, Irina, and Mervi Pantti. "Fake News." Journalism Practice 10, no. 7 (April 12, 2016): 891–901. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2016.1163237.

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42

Goggin, Gerard, Fiona Martin, and Tim Dwyer. "Locative News." Journalism Studies 16, no. 1 (March 14, 2014): 41–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2014.890329.

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43

Gutsche, Robert E., and Erica R. Salkin. "NEWS STORIES." Journalism Practice 5, no. 2 (April 2011): 193–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2010.512494.

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44

Wilson, Helen. "ANZCA News Australian & New Zealand Communication Association News." Media International Australia 99, no. 1 (May 2001): 3–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x0109900102.

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45

Gynnild, Astrid. "The Visual Power of News Agencies." Nordicom Review 38, s2 (November 28, 2017): 25–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/nor-2017-0412.

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Abstract While staff photographers are losing their jobs, news agency networks have become main suppliers of visual content to the news media. A global news site such as the Guardian leans to news agencies for most of its selected visuals. In tandem with the expanding visual power of new agencies, the ethical standards of the wholesalers are challenged by increasing amounts of user generated content, distant editing, and the live-streaming of breaking news. This article discusses editorial dilemmas prompted by proliferate, high tech processing of visual content by the news agencies’ global networks, exemplified by the coverage of terrorism. The analysis is grounded in a variety of empirical data, and aspects of Manuel Castells’ theory on communication power provide a theorizing framework for the discussion. The study suggests that the visual power of today’s news agencies rests on three interconnected processes of handling imagery: agency infrastructuring, technological infrastructuring and global newsroom infrastructuring.
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Chyi, Hsiang Iris, and Mengchieh Jacie Yang. "Is Online News an Inferior Good? Examining the Economic Nature of Online News among Users." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 86, no. 3 (September 2009): 594–612. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769900908600309.

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The U.S. newspaper industry is transitioning from print to online, but users' response to online news has fallen short of expectations and thus raised questions about the economic viability of the new medium. This study explores the economic concept of “inferior goods” and its applicability to online news consumption. Analysis of Pew Research Center survey data shows that as income increases, consumption of online news decreases, other things being equal. Therefore, online news is an inferior good among users.
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Sarrina Li, Shu-Chu. "Competing for the Audience’s Time: Comparing Science News with Health News and Political News." Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 63, no. 4 (October 2, 2019): 635–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08838151.2019.1689009.

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48

Falkheimer, Jesper, Mark Blach-Ørsten, Mads Kæmsgaard Eberholst, and Veselinka Möllerström. "News Media and the Öresund Region." Nordicom Review 38, no. 1 (June 15, 2017): 1–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/nor-2016-0041.

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Abstract This article presents a first attempt to investigate the news content and news routines of Danish and Swedish news media covering the Öresund region. From a theoretical perspective, the Öresund region can be considered a possible best-case example of what is categorised as horizontal Europeanisation, in other words, of the potential for increased communication linkages in news media content among European Union (EU) member states. We investigate this topic by analysing news content published by selected media outlets from 2002 to 2012 and by interviewing Danish and Swedish journalists who cover the region. We find that most news content does not mention the Öresund region, and that one reason for this lack might be that neither Danish nor Swedish reporters consider the region to be newsworthy.
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Porto Junior, Francisco Gilson Rebouças, and Joselinda Maria Rodrigues. "Teaching of sociology of communication and formative perceptions." Revista Observatório 6, no. 1 (January 3, 2020): a3en. http://dx.doi.org/10.20873/uft.2447-4266.2020v6n1a3en.

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Astonished people around the world scrutinize news programs for reliable information about the terrible Covid19 pandemic in an avalanche of false news about the reality of the facts. Real news can be the difference between living or dying for millions of people across the globe although access to real news may be the privilege of a few. News varies on the lethality of the disease, preventive measures and medications that can have an effect on the treatment of the condition, but it is also in this aspect that the peripheral citizens of peripheral countries are the most affected when it comes to reliable information.
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Segado-Boj, Francisco, and Elias Said-Hung. "Alternative approaches to news: the role of media distrust, perceived network homophily, and interests in news topics." Revista de Comunicación 20, no. 2 (September 15, 2021): 355–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.26441/rc20.2-2021-a19.

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This study focuses on three contemporary alternative users' attitudes to news previously detetected in the literature: 'News finds me', 'The information is out there' and 'I don't know what to believe. It analyzes the role of users' media distrust and social network homophily perception as predictors of each considered attitude. Secondly, the study also considers the effect of the mentioned attitude on user's interests in different news topics. Last, it compares the reciprocal influence of the aforementioned attitudes among them. A survey (n = 279) was developed among Spanish Facebook users. Data was analysed through multiple regression test. Results show that media distrust positively predicted “The Information Is Out There” but was not relevant in the cases of “News Finds Me” and “I Don’t Know What To Believe”. “News Finds Me” negatively predicted interest in hard news (domestic, international politics, and economy), and “The Information Is Out There” predicted interest in lifestyle news and stories about celebrities. Perceived network homophily was not predicted by any of the observed attitudes. A reciprocal influence was detected between “The Information Is Out There” and “News Finds Me” but no influence was identified from or to “I Don’t Know What To Believe”. We conclude that “The Information Is Out There” may have the same negative effects on political knowledge and participation that “News Finds Me” as it drives users away from hard news item and towards softer topics.
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