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1

Evans, William, and Susanna Hornig Priest. "Science content and social context." Public Understanding of Science 4, no. 4 (October 1995): 327–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0963-6625/4/4/001.

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Content analysts have made substantial progress in moving beyond the framework in which science news is assessed primarily in terms of accuracy and adequacy, but content-analytic studies of science news remain under-theorized and too narrowly focused. We recommend that content analysts (1) broaden their scope of inquiry to accommodate the great diversity of outlets and audiences for science news, and (2) offer more explicit and rigorous theoretical accounts of content-analytic data. To facilitate this latter recommendation, we suggest that content analysts borrow as needed from recent work in linguistics and rhetoric and reaffirm and rearticulate the connection between content analytic research and social theory. In addition, we discuss the need for content analysts to develop theories capable of documenting and understanding science news in the emerging era of electronic media.
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2

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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3

Kim, Mihee. "Facebook News Sharing, Hostile Perceptions of News Content, and Political Participation." Social Media + Society 7, no. 3 (July 2021): 205630512110442. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20563051211044239.

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This study explored Facebook users’ hostile perceptions of shared news content and its relationship with their political participation. This study conducted an online experiment with a 3 (news slant: pro-attitudinal, neutral, counter-attitudinal) × 3 (news sharer: in-group, neutral, out-group) between-subjects design. This experiment was administered in the context of the abortion issue in South Korea. Consistent with the hostile media effect, the news slant (pro-attitudinal, counter-attitudinal) of shared news content was found to influence Facebook users’ hostile perceptions of shared news content. Out-group sharers also significantly affected their hostile perceptions of shared news content. However, in-group sharers did not. Furthermore, the effect of Facebook users’ hostile perceptions of shared news content on their willingness for political participation was moderated by their prior minority perception in the general society. Only for Facebook users with high levels of prior minority perception in the general society, their hostile perceptions of shared news content appeared to encourage their political engagement. The implications of these findings were discussed.
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Károly, Krisztina. "Referential cohesion and news content." Target. International Journal of Translation Studies 26, no. 3 (September 22, 2014): 406–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/target.26.3.04kar.

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This study explores the (re)creation of referential cohesion in Hungarian-English translation and examines the extent to which shifts of reference are motivated by the differences between the languages, the characteristics of the translation type (news translation) and the genre (news story). As referential cohesion is hypothesized to be affected by certain universals of translation, the explicitation and the repetition avoidance hypotheses are also tested. Analyses show considerable shifts of reference in translations, but these are not statistically significant. The corpus also fails to provide evidence for the universals of translation investigated; however, the in-depth analysis of optional shifts suggests that they are conditioned by the discursive features of the genre and contribute to a more explicit presentation of news content.
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Paisana, Miguel, Ana Pinto-Martinho, and Gustavo Cardoso. "Trust and fake news: Exploratory analysis of the impact of news literacy on the relationship with news content in Portugal." Communication & Society 33, no. 2 (April 20, 2020): 105–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.15581/003.33.2.105-117.

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In order to understand the role of contemporary journalism and the media system it is vital to consider consumers’ relationship with news content in terms of trust and perception of dubious content. This analysis is particularly relevant in a context where intense flows of information raise serious questions about individual ability to interpret, validate, and reproduce content. This analysis explores a news literacy scale used by Maskl et al. (2015) and Fletcher (in Newman et al., 2018) to investigate the links between news literacy profiles and their relationship with content, with particular focus on illegitimate/doubtful news pieces. Results suggest individuals with higher news literacy tend to trust news in general but not when content originates in social media. Higher literacy profiles are also associated with increased concern regarding online content legitimacy. These conclusions are particularly relevant in the currently volatile media sphere, highly dependent on a substantially informed public to ensure the legitimacy and importance of journalistic content and to distinguish it from other kinds of content flooding communication networks. These efforts depend not only on the journalistic sphere but also on democratic systems themselves as they rely on a well-informed public to guarantee a healthy and inclusive debate.
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WALGRAVE, Stefaan, and Kurt DE SWERT. "Does News Content Matter?" Ethical Perspectives 9, no. 4 (December 1, 2002): 249–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.2143/ep.9.4.503862.

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7

Strömbäck, Jesper, Michael Karlsson, and David Nicolas Hopmann. "DETERMINANTS OF NEWS CONTENT." Journalism Studies 13, no. 5-6 (October 2012): 718–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2012.664321.

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8

Grabe, Maria Elizabeth, Annie Lang, and Xiaoquan Zhao. "News Content and Form." Communication Research 30, no. 4 (August 2003): 387–413. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0093650203253368.

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9

Sabardila, Atiqa, I. Dewa Putu Wijana, and Suhandano Suhandano. "Packaging Differences of News Content on Title." Jurnal Humaniora 29, no. 1 (February 27, 2017): 94. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/jh.22570.

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This study investigates anything that underlie the differences of the variation on the packaging variation of the news content on the title that is based on the topicalization, the materials of news title writing, clarity and complexity of the news content, reference shifting from the title to the body of the news, roles of the mediator and the source of the news, maintaining the local value of the news, comparison between the news content on the prior text, and the ideology of the news. The analysis was conducted through pragmatic identity method, referential identity method, and traditional identity method. The data were analyzed by employing discourse approach (: micro-structure), especially the connectivity between the title to the body of the news.There are many things that underlie the differences of news content packaging on the straight news. From the structure of the news element, it can be found the several topicalizations such as the topicalization of what, who, where, when, cause, manner, or the combination of two or more elements of the news. A clear and complex package of a news content on the title gives an ease to the reader to understand the news content. However, in a package which does not put the clear reference on the title, the readers are suggested to continue to read the body of the news. Then, in a package which put the source of the news and its utterance on the title, the journalist tries to enclose the relation of the reader to the source of the news. Meanwhile, in a package which put the journalist as the mediator, the readers are invited to understand the content of the news based on their understanding and interpretation. As a commodity, any packages are utilized so that the news papers are not left behind by the readers. In a news which contains local value, the local utterances are maintained for the readers from other area to learn. Finally, in the package of the news content, the selection of the news topics becomes the ideologies which are harmonized with their vision-mission.
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10

Sabardila, Atiqa, I. Dewa Putu Wijana, and Suhandano . "Packaging Differences of News Content on Title." Jurnal Humaniora 29, no. 1 (February 27, 2017): 94. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/jh.v29i1.22570.

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This study investigates anything that underlie the differences of the variation on the packaging variation of the news content on the title that is based on the topicalization, the materials of news title writing, clarity and complexity of the news content, reference shifting from the title to the body of the news, roles of the mediator and the source of the news, maintaining the local value of the news, comparison between the news content on the prior text, and the ideology of the news. The analysis was conducted through pragmatic identity method, referential identity method, and traditional identity method. The data were analyzed by employing discourse approach (: micro-structure), especially the connectivity between the title to the body of the news.There are many things that underlie the differences of news content packaging on the straight news. From the structure of the news element, it can be found the several topicalizations such as the topicalization of what, who, where, when, cause, manner, or the combination of two or more elements of the news. A clear and complex package of a news content on the title gives an ease to the reader to understand the news content. However, in a package which does not put the clear reference on the title, the readers are suggested to continue to read the body of the news. Then, in a package which put the source of the news and its utterance on the title, the journalist tries to enclose the relation of the reader to the source of the news. Meanwhile, in a package which put the journalist as the mediator, the readers are invited to understand the content of the news based on their understanding and interpretation. As a commodity, any packages are utilized so that the news papers are not left behind by the readers. In a news which contains local value, the local utterances are maintained for the readers from other area to learn. Finally, in the package of the news content, the selection of the news topics becomes the ideologies which are harmonized with their vision-mission.
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11

Geers, Sabine. "News Consumption across Media Platforms and Content." Public Opinion Quarterly 84, S1 (2020): 332–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/poq/nfaa010.

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Abstract In a changing information environment in which people increasingly select a combination of media platforms to consume news, scholars have taken a more comprehensive approach in measuring news consumption by examining news media repertoires. This study specifically (1) examines news repertoires of young people, based on their combined usage of media platforms and news content preferences; and (2) examines their variation due to social background characteristics. Results from a survey of Dutch adolescents (N = 1,084; age 16 to 21) reveal four distinct news repertoires: labeled minimalists, omnivores, traditionalists, and online news users. Findings further suggest that platform-based news repertoires are related to preferences for specific news content. Finally, this study contributes to the digital divide literature by demonstrating that inequalities in news media usage related to education do not seem to apply to younger citizens.
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12

HAMILTON, JAMES T. "News That Sells: Media Competition and News Content." Japanese Journal of Political Science 8, no. 1 (March 14, 2007): 7–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1468109907002460.

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This paper explores the economic factors that influence news coverage and discusses the difficulties of determining the impact of news content on political outcomes. Evidence from the United States clearly shows how supply and demand concepts can be used to predict content in newspapers, television, and the Internet. To demonstrate how the concept of market-driven news extends beyond the US, I trace out hypotheses about how media content in many countries should vary depending on three factors in news markets: the motivations of media outlet owners, the technologies of information dissemination available, and the property rights that govern how information is created and conveyed. I offer three different types of analyses – the measurement of product differentiation, information search patterns, and consumption patterns – to show how these ideas about competition influencing content could be tested across countries. The paper briefly discusses the degree to which market competition affects content in three Asian countries (China, Thailand, and Japan) and concludes with a section on the difficulties of designing policies to improve the operation of media markets.
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13

Károly, Krisztina. "News Discourse in Translation: Topical Structure and News Content in the Analytical News Article." Meta 57, no. 4 (December 17, 2013): 884–908. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1021223ar.

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Topical structure in news translation has received relatively little attention despite its stated significance in discourse content and in producing functionally adequate translations. Journalists write news stories with a given structure, order, viewpoint and values, which are “transferred” in translation and affect the way topics are organized. This study explores how shifts in topical development in translation influence rhetorical structure and ultimately news content. Using Lautamatti’s Topical Structure Analysis and Bell’s Event Structure Model, the paper describes the translation strategies applied in (re)producing the source text’s topical and event structures in the target language in a corpus of Hungarian–English news texts (the summary sections of analytical news articles). Results show that while translators generally preserve the sources’ structure in translation, in some cases (e.g. sequential topic progression) significant changes occur, altering the status of some information as well as the event structure, thus producing modified news contents. The paper also examines whether the claim that news translation is influenced by norms similar to those regulating news production more generally applies to this news genre, too. Findings suggest that due to the stereotypical features of this genre, the data only partially support this claim.
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14

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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15

Teboul, JC Bruno, and Donald J. Cegala. "Redefining “news” in network television news content research." Communication Reports 5, no. 1 (January 1992): 32–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08934219209367541.

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16

Francuz, Piotr. "The Impact of Audio Information Intonation on Understanding Television News Content." Psychology of Language and Communication 14, no. 1 (January 1, 2010): 71–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10057-010-0005-6.

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The Impact of Audio Information Intonation on Understanding Television News Content The goal of the research presented in this article is to verify the hypothesis that television viewers have difficulties understanding news content due to inappropriate prosodic articulation used by reporters reading the news. News texts are often read with excessive rhetorical accent and omitting logical accents. Sometimes even the prosodic rules of text segmentation are broken as well. Understanding of news is analyzed in the areas of: (1) appropriately applying words, (2) receiving important, detailed information, (3) synthesis of news content and (4) cause-effect inference. It was found that inappropriate intonation of read news text results in television viewers: (1) being unable to correctly understand the words in accordance with the context of the news content, (2) not remembering the most important details of the news and (3) having problems with pointing out the real causes of events discussed in the news. In addition, it appears that reading of the text by reporters in logical accents and in accordance with the norms of Polish language prosody does not negatively influence the evaluation of news in terms of attractiveness, usefulness and objectivity.
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17

Ramón-Hernández, Alejandro, Alfredo Simón-Cuevas, María Matilde García Lorenzo, Leticia Arco, and Jesús Serrano-Guerrero. "Towards Context-Aware Opinion Summarization for Monitoring Social Impact of News." Information 11, no. 11 (November 18, 2020): 535. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/info11110535.

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Opinion mining and summarization of the increasing user-generated content on different digital platforms (e.g., news platforms) are playing significant roles in the success of government programs and initiatives in digital governance, from extracting and analyzing citizen’s sentiments for decision-making. Opinion mining provides the sentiment from contents, whereas summarization aims to condense the most relevant information. However, most of the reported opinion summarization methods are conceived to obtain generic summaries, and the context that originates the opinions (e.g., the news) has not usually been considered. In this paper, we present a context-aware opinion summarization model for monitoring the generated opinions from news. In this approach, the topic modeling and the news content are combined to determine the “importance” of opinionated sentences. The effectiveness of different developed settings of our model was evaluated through several experiments carried out over Spanish news and opinions collected from a real news platform. The obtained results show that our model can generate opinion summaries focused on essential aspects of the news, as well as cover the main topics in the opinionated texts well. The integration of term clustering, word embeddings, and the similarity-based sentence-to-news scoring turned out the more promising and effective setting of our model.
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18

Sousa, Sonia, and Neil Bates. "Factors influencing content credibility in Facebook’s news feed." Human-Intelligent Systems Integration 3, no. 1 (March 2021): 69–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42454-021-00029-z.

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AbstractThis study reports an exploratory inquiry into the problematic phenomenon of fake news on Facebook, aiming at providing an inside view on how users in the United Kingdom (UK) value the credibility of news posts on Facebook in a post-Brexit era. Participants (n = 201) were asked to review four different Brexit-related Facebook posts that linked to news articles from UK tabloids that were published between 2016 and 2019. Two of the posts were debunked as fake news, while the other two were verified as real news. The authors of each Facebook post were different: two from UK tabloids and two from unknown individuals. Respondents were asked to identify the credibility of the news posts in Facebook’s news feed. The results indicate that the author of the post significantly influences users’ perceived credibility. For instance, a fake news post from an individual is perceived as the least trustworthy, while a real news post from an individual and a fake news post from a tabloid are somewhat similarly perceived. The content of a post is seen as most trustworthy when it is a real news post from a tabloid and as least credible when it is a fake news post from an individual. Finally, in two cases, credibility can predict willingness to interact with a post. The research concludes with a set of recommendations for future research.
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Javed, Umair, Kamran Shaukat, Ibrahim A. Hameed, Farhat Iqbal, Talha Mahboob Alam, and Suhuai Luo. "A Review of Content-Based and Context-Based Recommendation Systems." International Journal of Emerging Technologies in Learning (iJET) 16, no. 03 (February 12, 2021): 274. http://dx.doi.org/10.3991/ijet.v16i03.18851.

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In our work, we have presented two widely used recommendation systems. We have presented a context-aware recommender system to filter the items associated with user’s interests coupled with a context-based recommender system to prescribe those items. In this study, context-aware recommender systems perceive the user’s location, time, and company. The context-based recommender system retrieves patterns from World Wide Web-based on the user’s past interactions and provides future news recommendations. We have presented different techniques to support media recommendations for smartphones, to create a framework for context-aware, to filter E-learning content, and to deliver convenient news to the user. To achieve this goal, we have used content-based, collaborative filtering, a hybrid recommender system, and implemented a Web ontology language (OWL). We have also used the Resource Description Framework (RDF), JAVA, machine learning, semantic mapping rules, and natural ontology languages that suggest user items related to the search. In our work, we have used E-paper to provide users with the required news. After applying the semantic reasoning approach, we have concluded that by some means, this approach works similarly as a content-based recommender system since by taking the gain of a semantic approach, we can also recommend items according to the user’s interests. In a content-based recommender system, the system provides additional options or results that rely on the user’s ratings, appraisals, and interests.
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20

Negredo, Samuel. "Newspaper Video Content." Convergent Television(s) 3, no. 6 (December 24, 2014): 37. http://dx.doi.org/10.18146/2213-0969.2014.jethc068.

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Newspaper websites and online only news operations deliver an increasingly varied and comprehensive offer of original audiovisual content. In Spain, they cover current affairs and niche interests, complementing the video reports supplied by news agencies. The spoken word is a primary mode of expression, in the form of dialogues (interviews and debates) and speeches (comments and analyses), but more complex and visually appealing formats have been developed. There is a challenge to organise these packages and programmes in order to facilitate access and retrieval, which may help to improve user experience, and to maximise long-term consumption and value.
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Armstrong, Cory L., and Fangfang Gao. "GENDER, TWITTER AND NEWS CONTENT." Journalism Studies 12, no. 4 (November 11, 2010): 490–505. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2010.527548.

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22

Mellado, Claudia. "Professional Roles in News Content." Journalism Studies 16, no. 4 (June 27, 2014): 596–614. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2014.922276.

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Karlsson, Michael, and Helle Sjøvaag. "Content Analysis and Online News." Digital Journalism 4, no. 1 (October 28, 2015): 177–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2015.1096619.

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24

SV, Shri Bharathi, and Angelina Geetha. "Determination of news biasedness using content sentiment analysis algorithm." Indonesian Journal of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 16, no. 2 (November 1, 2019): 882. http://dx.doi.org/10.11591/ijeecs.v16.i2.pp882-889.

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<span lang="EN-US">Nowadays, i</span><span lang="EN-US">dentifying news biases in the social media is one of the most fundamental problems. News bias is a complex process that comprises several dimensions to be taken into account and it is interlinked with social, political and economic problems. In general, news bias has the ability to reflect opinion of people about a topic or government policies and actions. The proposed algorithm develops a system which can detect the biasedness of news topics from different news Websites.</span><span>This approach automatically collects the news contents from various online news media portals and then consolidates them for the determination of news biasedness. </span><span lang="EN-US">In the experimental study, the news topics are gathered from various Websites of U.S., U.K., and India. For training dataset 3265 news sentences were collected under various news topics from 20 different news Websites. The effectiveness of classification of algorithm is proved by the extensive experimental study. The proposed algorithm provides a method improves the determination of news biasedness, which in turn may help in providing impartial, unbiased and reliable information.</span>
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Sjøvaag, Helle, and Nina Kvalheim. "Eventless news: Blindspots in journalism and the 'long tail' of news content." Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies 8, no. 3 (November 1, 2019): 291–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ajms_00003_1.

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The news media is frequently criticized for ignoring, missing or overseeing important, socio-politically relevant news. Such journalistic blindspots are often part of the 'long' news agenda, requiring resources, in-depth knowledge and investigation. In this article, we analyse what news topics are most infrequently covered by the media ‐ the micro-categories of content analysis. A content analysis of 70 news outlets in Norway (n=8182) reveals that the news topics receiving less than 1 per cent of coverage are social issues, international crime and the economy. This bottom-up perspective demonstrates that under-reported news constitutes predominantly 'eventless' issues, sustaining event-centredness as an agenda-setting news value. Finding that more than half of the content categories in the Norwegian corpus receive less than 1 per cent coverage, we propose, however, that the sum of these blindspots engenders a 'long tail' of journalistic coverage that together facilitates news diversity.
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Ji, Qihao, Arthur A. Raney, Sophie H. Janicke-Bowles, Katherine R. Dale, Mary Beth Oliver, Abigail Reed, Jonmichael Seibert, and Arthur A. Raney. "Spreading the Good News: Analyzing Socially Shared Inspirational News Content." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 96, no. 3 (December 11, 2018): 872–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699018813096.

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Past research indicates that people often share awe-inspiring news online. However, little is known about the content of those stories. In this study, more broadly defined “inspirational” articles shared through The New York Times website over a 6-month period were analyzed, with the goals of describing the content and identifying characteristics that might predict inspirationality and measures of retransmission. The results provided a snapshot of content found within inspirational news stories; they also revealed that self-transcendent language use predicted the inspirationality of a news story, as well as how long an article appeared on a most shared list.
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Et.al, Normala, CheEembi @. Jamil. "Fakeheader: A Tool to Detect Deceptive Online News Based on Misleading News Headlines and Contents." Turkish Journal of Computer and Mathematics Education (TURCOMAT) 12, no. 3 (April 10, 2021): 2217–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.17762/turcomat.v12i3.1170.

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Online news has been the primary source of news content for newsreaders. Unfortunately, based on several findings, readers tend to judge on specific events based on the news headlines rather than its contents. With the advancement of mobile and web technologies, it is easier to spread the news to others with these unhealthy habits that can cause negative impacts on individuals, organizations, or nations that are victimized by the news.In the proposed work, a tool to detect deceptive news based on misleading headlines or content is developed. The tools incorporate data veracity framework for online news with Support Vector Machine and proposed combination of features. The experimental results show the proposed tool managed to produce high performance results with more than 90% precisions and recalls.
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Scott, David K., and Robert H. Gobetz. "Hard News/Soft News Content of the National Broadcast Networks, 1972–1987." Journalism Quarterly 69, no. 2 (June 1992): 406–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769909206900214.

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In recent years there has been a slight tendency for television network news programs to increase the amount of soft news presented mostly during the last one-third of the newscast. Content analysis of the Vanderbilt Television News Abstracts from 1972 through 1987 shows that, although all networks did increase the amount of soft news, this type news remained a small part of the newscast. Soft news is defined as stories that focus on a human interest topic, feature or nonpolicy issue.
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Larasaty, Gina. "Headline’s Meaning in On-Line Football Sport News." Wiralodra English Journal 2, no. 1 (February 5, 2018): 84–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.31943/wej.v2i1.20.

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The title of this study is Headline’s meaning in On-Line Football Sport News. The aims of this study are to describe the real meaning meaning contained in headline of on-line football sport news and to find out whether the meanings that appears in that headline and choice of words in the headline can represent the contents of the news, view from semantics study study. The data are taken and collected from headline of on-line football sport news from website Goal.com. In my study, the writer collected 20 data and analyzed it. The research method used in this study is descriptive method. The result shows that from 20 headlines, all of them can represent the content of the news and the words are used in the headline has conceptual and associative meaning that set in situational context. Based on the data, We can assume that headline always uses an unusual diction and has an implicit meaning to attract the attention of the reader. To attract the reader, Headline News use an unusual diction (figurative language, make it simple and direct). Then, based on this study, we can assume that from the headline we can know the contet or what the news is talking about.
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30

Prosyanik, Alexandr Igorevich. "News content on the social network Instagram." Век информации (сетевое издание) 5, no. 2(15) (May 31, 2021): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.33941/age-info.com52(15)1.

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The paper is dedicated to the question of the News values theory functioning in the social network Instagram. The conducted research allows us to assert for effective interaction of a media resource with an audience, it is necessary to take into account the relationship between the content of the news and the way of its presentation.
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31

Hurley, Ryan J., and David Tewksbury. "News Aggregation and Content Differences in Online Cancer News." Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 56, no. 1 (February 29, 2012): 132–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08838151.2011.648681.

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32

Schmitz Weiss, Amy. "Location-based news in mobile news apps: Broadcast leads in geolocated news content, newspapers lag behind." Newspaper Research Journal 39, no. 1 (March 2018): 42–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532918765469.

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This study investigates which news organizations are using location-based services, particularly with geolocating content in their mobile apps, and how they are doing so. Based on findings from a content analysis of 173 mobile news apps by top U.S. media outlets (i.e., radio, television, newspaper, digital-only), broadcast mobile apps had location-based services enabled more than other media outlets. Two news radio stations had geolocated their news content.
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33

Yaros, Ronald A., and Anne E. Cook. "Attention Versus Learning of Online Content." International Journal of Cyber Behavior, Psychology and Learning 1, no. 4 (October 2011): 49–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijcbpl.2011100104.

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Previous eye tracking studies have consistently associated increased eye fixations with comprehension difficulty. However, little research has probed this relationship in more complex news stories online. This exploratory within-subject experiment exposed participants (N = 20) to different text and graphic structures in health news stories. Results suggest enhanced learning, shorter viewing time, and fewer eye fixations for a linear text structure as compared to an “inverted pyramid” text commonly used in news. Graphics interacted with text, facilitating performance in the linear conditions but inhibiting them in the inverted pyramid structure. Graphics tended to also increase viewing time and eye fixations on text only and text combined with graphics for both structure conditions. Results discuss the importance of text structure in complex news and how the data are not entirely consistent with the assumption that explanatory graphics increase understanding.
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34

Berkowitz, Dan, and Douglas W. Beach. "News Sources and News Context: The Effect of Routine News, Conflict and Proximity." Journalism Quarterly 70, no. 1 (March 1993): 4–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769909307000102.

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This content analysis of three newspapers looks at the extent to which two context elements, routine and conflict, affect the mix of sources. The hypothesized effect (that nonroutine and conflict-based news would contain a greater diversity of sources) was found only for proximate news stories. Although journalists can develop a diverse pool of sources in their own communities, only the most visible sources are easily reachable in other locations.
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35

Haugaard, Rikke Hartmann. "Journalistic news writing." Fachsprache 40, no. 3-4 (November 2, 2018): 122–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.24989/fs.v40i3-4.1517.

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News media possess an orchestrating, manipulating power over the public debate; they create the framework in which we discuss events and learn about ourselves and our surroundings. At the same time, news products provide much of our foundation for knowing about the world we inhabit. However, we lack empirical knowledge about the process of writing news texts, i.e. knowledge about the choices made by journalists as to what to communicate and how to communicate it, in other words, the decisions they make as regards content and linguistic form, respectively. Revisions made during writing yield insights into the progression of a text, providing a signficant element to the understanding of how journalists juggle content and form in their mediation of knowledge. Thus, (NN 2016) of journalists’ revision activity when producing a text. The study was designed as a multiple case study and explored different aspects of revisions occurring during three specific instances of professional text producers’ ordinary writing practices as they unfolded in their natural setting in an editorial office of a major Spanish newspaper. Placing the research agenda at the center and with a view to presenting a description as comprehensive as possible of the revisions made during the writing processes, the study applied a mix of qualitative and quantitative methods, i.e. keystroke logging, participant observation and retrospective interviews. For each journalist, the study investigated the characteristics of the revisions of content and form separately. In this sense, the study examined time of occurrence during the writing process, revision type, such as addition, omission and substitution and the possible relation between timing and revision type. Moreover, the study analysed the distribution of revisions between content and form and the differences between and similarities shared by the three journalists. To operationalise the content-form dichotomy, the analysis builds on Faigley/Witte’s (1981) taxonomy. Accordingly, content revisions add new content or omit existing content that cannot otherwise be inferred from the extant text. By contrast, revisions that only affect the form of the text neither omit nor substitute original content that cannot be inferred from the extant text as it is, nor do they add content that cannot already be inferred. When tracking the text production process as it unfolds in computer-based writing, the continuous revisions made as part of the ongoing text production process become visible to the researcher. At any given point during writing, the written text can be revised at its leading edge, where new text is being transcribed, and in the text already written, i.e. after the text has been transcribed. This distinction between revisions according to their location, i.e. in the text currently being transcribed (pre-contextual revision) or in the text already transcribed (contextual revision) is relevant when the effect of a revision (content or form) is to be interpreted; generally, only the effect of contextual revisions is interpretable on the basis of keystroke logging alone. The approach to the analysis of revisions was inspired by the online revision taxonomy developed by Lindgren/Sullivan (2006a, 2006b) in collaboration with Stevenson/Schoonen/de Glopper (2006). However, the taxonomy proved to be insufficiently accurate to be operationalised, and too coarse to categorise all interpretable revisions in the data. Consequently, a stringent and nuanced analytical framework was developed based on existing theory and the data. This framework places the revisions made during text production on a continuum of semantically meaningful context. At one end of the continuum lies the potentially most complete semantically meaningful context represented by a sentence concluded by a sentence-completing character, and at the other end, the semantically non-meaningful context. In between the two ends, the continuum holds semantically meaningful contexts that are potentially less complete, such as semantically meaningful sentences without sentence-completing characters and semantically meaningful phrases. By introducing an interpretation as to whether a revision is conducted in a semantically meaningful context, the analytical framework distances itself from a more objective categorisation of the location of revisions at the leading edge or in the transcribed text. This allows for a systematisation of the contexts in which the effect of revisions at the leading edge can be interpreted and the contexts in which the effect of revisions made in already transcribed text cannot be interpreted. The exploratory and qualitative nature of the study provided a detailed analysis of the journalists’ revision activities, and it offered nuanced insights into their text production. The results showed a relatively homogenous picture, including certain variations, in which the form of the text was revised significantly more often than the content, both during the ongoing text production and, in particular, during the systematic review of the potentially final text in which content was only infrequently revised. Revision types and their effect on the text during the ongoing text production and in the systematic review of the potentially finalised text reflect the diverging purposes of these two phases: the first phase serves to generate cohesive and coherent text for the article, and the second phase aims to evaluate and, especially, to reduce the volume of the written text. The overall tendency of the analyses and the details which it reflects can be used as the basis for new studies and can help generate hypotheses about how other text producers, both in similar and different contexts, write and revise theirs texts and how they juggle content and form in their democratisation of knowledge.
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36

Haugaard, Rikke Hartmann. "Journalistic news writing." Fachsprache 40, no. 3-4 (November 2, 2018): 122–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.24989/fs.v50i3-4.1517.

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News media possess an orchestrating, manipulating power over the public debate; they create the framework in which we discuss events and learn about ourselves and our surroundings. At the same time, news products provide much of our foundation for knowing about the world we inhabit. However, we lack empirical knowledge about the process of writing news texts, i.e. knowledge about the choices made by journalists as to what to communicate and how to communicate it, in other words, the decisions they make as regards content and linguistic form, respectively. Revisions made during writing yield insights into the progression of a text, providing a signficant element to the understanding of how journalists juggle content and form in their mediation of knowledge. Thus, (NN 2016) of journalists’ revision activity when producing a text. The study was designed as a multiple case study and explored different aspects of revisions occurring during three specific instances of professional text producers’ ordinary writing practices as they unfolded in their natural setting in an editorial office of a major Spanish newspaper. Placing the research agenda at the center and with a view to presenting a description as comprehensive as possible of the revisions made during the writing processes, the study applied a mix of qualitative and quantitative methods, i.e. keystroke logging, participant observation and retrospective interviews. For each journalist, the study investigated the characteristics of the revisions of content and form separately. In this sense, the study examined time of occurrence during the writing process, revision type, such as addition, omission and substitution and the possible relation between timing and revision type. Moreover, the study analysed the distribution of revisions between content and form and the differences between and similarities shared by the three journalists. To operationalise the content-form dichotomy, the analysis builds on Faigley/Witte’s (1981) taxonomy. Accordingly, content revisions add new content or omit existing content that cannot otherwise be inferred from the extant text. By contrast, revisions that only affect the form of the text neither omit nor substitute original content that cannot be inferred from the extant text as it is, nor do they add content that cannot already be inferred. When tracking the text production process as it unfolds in computer-based writing, the continuous revisions made as part of the ongoing text production process become visible to the researcher. At any given point during writing, the written text can be revised at its leading edge, where new text is being transcribed, and in the text already written, i.e. after the text has been transcribed. This distinction between revisions according to their location, i.e. in the text currently being transcribed (pre-contextual revision) or in the text already transcribed (contextual revision) is relevant when the effect of a revision (content or form) is to be interpreted; generally, only the effect of contextual revisions is interpretable on the basis of keystroke logging alone. The approach to the analysis of revisions was inspired by the online revision taxonomy developed by Lindgren/Sullivan (2006a, 2006b) in collaboration with Stevenson/Schoonen/de Glopper (2006). However, the taxonomy proved to be insufficiently accurate to be operationalised, and too coarse to categorise all interpretable revisions in the data. Consequently, a stringent and nuanced analytical framework was developed based on existing theory and the data. This framework places the revisions made during text production on a continuum of semantically meaningful context. At one end of the continuum lies the potentially most complete semantically meaningful context represented by a sentence concluded by a sentence-completing character, and at the other end, the semantically non-meaningful context. In between the two ends, the continuum holds semantically meaningful contexts that are potentially less complete, such as semantically meaningful sentences without sentence-completing characters and semantically meaningful phrases. By introducing an interpretation as to whether a revision is conducted in a semantically meaningful context, the analytical framework distances itself from a more objective categorisation of the location of revisions at the leading edge or in the transcribed text. This allows for a systematisation of the contexts in which the effect of revisions at the leading edge can be interpreted and the contexts in which the effect of revisions made in already transcribed text cannot be interpreted. The exploratory and qualitative nature of the study provided a detailed analysis of the journalists’ revision activities, and it offered nuanced insights into their text production. The results showed a relatively homogenous picture, including certain variations, in which the form of the text was revised significantly more often than the content, both during the ongoing text production and, in particular, during the systematic review of the potentially final text in which content was only infrequently revised. Revision types and their effect on the text during the ongoing text production and in the systematic review of the potentially finalised text reflect the diverging purposes of these two phases: the first phase serves to generate cohesive and coherent text for the article, and the second phase aims to evaluate and, especially, to reduce the volume of the written text. The overall tendency of the analyses and the details which it reflects can be used as the basis for new studies and can help generate hypotheses about how other text producers, both in similar and different contexts, write and revise theirs texts and how they juggle content and form in their democratisation of knowledge.
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37

Costa-Sánchez, Carmen, Ana-Isabel Rodríguez-Vázquez, and Xosé López-García. "Transmedia or repurposing journalism? News brands in the era of convergence. Compared study of Greek elections coverage by El País (ES), The Guardian (UK), La Repubblica (IT), and Público (PT)." Journalism 21, no. 9 (October 9, 2017): 1300–1319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884917734053.

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Journalism is once again facing a context of technological and social changes. The current stage is characterized for being mobile, multi-screen, and visual. Citizens have adopted with ease the new mobile media for content consumption. Transmedia narratives emerge as structures that can help creators to adapt contents to all platforms and to open the door to new audiences. This article analyzes transmedia strategies in the news offered during the coverage of Greek elections (20-S) by four of the most important news media brands in Europe: El País (ES), The Guardian (UK), La Repubblica (IT), and Público (PT). Results show that mobile platforms have been incorporated into the news coverage following a repurposing strategy as regards web content. The increasing number of published stories, the prioritization of their updating, and the multimedia enrichment make the World Wide Web the main platform of the analyzed practices. The patterns for commenting and sharing do not match, but the most commented and disseminated include multimedia contents.
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38

Matthes, Jörg, Andreas Nanz, Marlis Stubenvoll, and Raffael Heiss. "Processing news on social media. The political incidental news exposure model (PINE)." Journalism 21, no. 8 (May 16, 2020): 1031–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884920915371.

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This article outlines the Political Incidental News Exposure Model. The Political Incidental News Exposure Model understands incidental news exposure as a dynamic process and distinguishes two levels of incidental news exposure: the passive scanning of incidentally encountered political information (first level) and the intentional processing of incidentally encountered content appraised as relevant (second level). After encountering political information incidentally, recipients briefly check the content for relevance (i.e., first level). If content is appraised as relevant, recipients switch to more intensive processing (i.e., second level incidental news exposure). Importantly, second-level incidental news exposure is assumed to have stronger effects on political outcome variables like participation and knowledge than first-level incidental news exposure. The Political Incidental News Exposure Model further acknowledges intention-based (i.e., incidental news exposure while not looking for political news) and topic-based incidental news exposure (i.e., incidental news exposure while looking for other political news) and it conceptualizes incidental news exposure with respect to political and non-political content. Theoretical and methodological implications are discussed.
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39

Edgerly, Stephanie, and Emily K. Vraga. "News, entertainment, or both? Exploring audience perceptions of media genre in a hybrid media environment." Journalism 20, no. 6 (September 13, 2017): 807–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884917730709.

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This study uses two experimental designs to examine how audiences make genre assessments when encountering media content that blends elements of news and entertainment. Study 1 explores how audiences characterize three different versions of a fictitious political talk show program. Study 2 considers whether audience perceptions of ‘news-ness’ are influenced by shifts in headline angle and source attribution. The implications of audience definitions of news and its social function are discussed.
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40

Ünal, Recep, and Alp Şahin Çiçeklioğlu. "The Function and Importance of Fact-Checking Organizations in the Era of Fake News." Medijske studije 10, no. 19 (October 21, 2019): 140–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.20901/ms.10.19.8.

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The recent increase in usage of concepts such as ‘fake news’ or ‘post-truth’ reveals the importance of digital literacy especially on social media. In the digital era, people’s views on different topics are attempted to be manipulated with disinformation and fake news. Fake content is rapidly replacing the reality among new media users. It is stated with concepts such as ‘filter bubbles’ and ‘echo chambers’ that there is a greater tendency for people to be fed with content that is ideologically appropriate to their own views and to believe in fake news in this content. This article analyzes the structure and functioning of fact-checking organizations in the context of preventing propagation of fake news and improving digital literacy. The research is based on content analysis of verification activities of the fact-checking organization Teyit.org, which is a member of International Fact-Checking Network in Turkey, between January 1 and June 31, 2018. By conducting in-depth interviews with the verification team, propagation of fake news on social networks, fact-checking processes and their methods of combating fake news are revealed. Our article found that fake content spreading specifically through the Internet predominantly consists of political issues.
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41

Agustian, Agung Farid, Jenny Njaju Malik, and Untung Yuwono. "Content Analysis Approach in Discourse Analysis of News Newspapers." International Journal of Humanities and Innovation (IJHI) 3, no. 1 (March 11, 2020): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.33750/ijhi.v3i1.61.

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This paper aims to explain how the content of the analysis can be used as a framework for investigating the ideologies contained in the text, especially in the reporting of election. The problem in the current ideological discourse analysis is that there is no explicit and systematic method of explaining ideology and discourse criticism to be unscientific. The research question in this paper how the content analysis framework is presented in the news? How the content analysis framework consists of a content analysis framework leading to prescriptive objectives in the form of a news content unit? In this paper, research data were taken from the 2018 West Java governor election campaign news text from online newspapers. The results of the research were news content raised topics such as social actors namely figure and groups, and also social practice namely politics, and social actions. The ideology presented in the news was an imbalance in term of the frequency of reporting in the news. The imbalance result was related to asymmetric power ideology in the newspaper.
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42

Lee, Angela M., Avery Holton, and Victoria Chen. "Unpacking overload: Examining the impact of content characteristics and news topics on news overload." Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies 8, no. 3 (November 1, 2019): 273–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ajms_00002_1.

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The proliferation of digital media has provided the public with an abundance of information and pathways to engage with that information. Alongside the opportunities offered by this wealth of content exist feelings of, and worries over, news and information overload. Research has indicated that to respond to this issue, some news consumers proactively scan the news. When such activity fails, or in some cases before it ever begins, other news consumers disconnect from the news altogether. Through a non-random online survey, this study advances empirical understandings of the news overload and individuals' responses to that overload by proposing a more holistic way to measure news overload. By examining the ways in which content characteristics and news topics influence individuals' feelings of overload and how scanning or avoidance of and from the news may result, this study finds that information overload, and news overload more specifically, can be connected to the characteristics of news content and the topic of coverage.
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43

Cossiavelou, Vassiliki. "Global Regulations in Content Industries." International Journal of Interdisciplinary Telecommunications and Networking 10, no. 3 (July 2018): 9–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijitn.2018070102.

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This article explores the role of privacy policies on internet sites as a newly emerging news gatekeeping factor as well as part of the new web world wars between regulators and internet giants' privacy policies, like the one of Google. All these developments are related to both innovation excellence and customer experience, in every aspect of life, business and entertainment, and therefore of the news industry. One of the most important fights of these recent wars is raging between Google and the EU on the field of customers' experience and their privacy protection. The author argues that even the updated news gatekeeping model by ICTs influences should be mapped more precisely in every one of its traditional pillars, focusing on the consumer's data protection. Their potential exploitation by search engines and advertisement industries from one side and the privacy protection claims from international institutions from the other, indicate the need of new variables in the equation of the updated media gatekeeping model, as derived from global regulations on the issue. The reactions of the EU to the actions of Google indicate the momentum of wars in citizen–customer's experience, which is the most reliable key performance indicator in the e/m commerce sector. A convenience sample's data show that the policy adopted by the EU and the one applied by the global content industries would remap the audiences' preferences and therefore the news industries strategies.
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44

Daradkeh, Dr Yousef Ibrahim, and Dmitry Namiot. "Network Proximity for Content Discovery." International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies (iJIM) 10, no. 1 (January 18, 2016): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.3991/ijim.v10i1.5031.

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The paper describes our approach for using wireless sensors on mobile phones for delivering new data to mobile subscribers. We propose a new practical approach for social context-aware data retrieval based on mobile phones as a sensor concept. This approach uses Wi-Fi and Bluetooth modules located on mobile phones as sensors for getting proximity information that can open (discover) access to any user generated content or content published in the social networks. A special mobile service (context-aware browser client for Android) can present that information to mobile subscribers. The potential use-cases for the proposed approach include all projects associated with hyper-local news data. For example, news services in Smart City projects, proximity marketing, indoor data delivery, etc..
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45

Daradkeh, Dr Yousef Ibrahim, and Dmitry Namiot. "Network Proximity for Content Discovery." International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies (iJIM) 9, no. 4 (September 25, 2015): 42. http://dx.doi.org/10.3991/ijim.v9i4.4657.

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The paper describes our approach for using wireless sensors on mobile phones for delivering new data to mobile subscribers. We propose a new practical approach for social context-aware data retrieval based on mobile phones as a sensor concept. This approach uses Wi-Fi and Bluetooth modules located on mobile phones as sensors for getting proximity information that can open (discover) access to any user generated content or content published in the social networks. A special mobile service (context-aware browser client for Android) can present that information to mobile subscribers. The potential use-cases for the proposed approach include all projects associated with hyper-local news data. For example, news services in Smart City projects, proximity marketing, indoor data delivery, etc.
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46

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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47

Park, Jowon. "Content Analysis of Newspapers' Travel News." Journal of the Korea Contents Association 14, no. 11 (November 28, 2014): 68–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.5392/jkca.2014.14.11.068.

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48

Gavran, Iryna, and Maryna Dubyna. "News Content in Modern Live Broadcasting." Bulletin of Kyiv National University of Culture and Arts. Series in Audiovisual Art and Production 3, no. 2 (December 9, 2020): 175–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.31866/2617-2674.3.2.2020.217637.

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49

Bae, Jong-Sik, Hae-Sool Yang, and Hyung-Jin Choi. "Content-based News Video Retrieval System." Journal of the Korea Contents Association 11, no. 2 (February 28, 2011): 54–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.5392/jkca.2011.11.2.054.

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50

Shaikh, Imlak, and Puja Padhi. "The Information Content of Macroeconomic News." Procedia Economics and Finance 5 (2013): 686–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s2212-5671(13)00080-4.

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