Academic literature on the topic 'News story'

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Journal articles on the topic "News story"

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Palca, Joseph. "[News ‘picture story’]." Nature 323, no. 6087 (October 1986): 386. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/323386b0.

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Fletcher, James C. "News 'Picture story'." Nature 320, no. 6058 (March 1986): 100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/320100d0.

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Walgate, Robert. "[News ‘picture story’]." Nature 320, no. 6060 (March 1986): 295. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/320295b0.

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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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Krstajić, Miloš, Mohammad Najm-Araghi, Florian Mansmann, and Daniel A. Keim. "Story Tracker: Incremental visual text analytics of news story development." Information Visualization 12, no. 3-4 (July 2013): 308–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1473871613493996.

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Online news sources produce thousands of news articles every day, reporting on local and global real-world events. New information quickly replaces the old, making it difficult for readers to put current events in the context of the past. The stories about these events have complex relationships and characteristics that are difficult to model: they can be weakly or strongly related or they can merge or split over time. In this article, we present a visual analytics system for temporal analysis of news stories in dynamic information streams, which combines interactive visualization and text mining techniques to facilitate the analysis of similar topics that split and merge over time. Text clustering algorithms extract stories from online news streams in consecutive time windows and identify similar stories from the past. The stories are displayed in a visualization, which (1) sorts the stories by minimizing clutter and overlap from edge crossings, (2) shows their temporal characteristics in different time frames with different levels of detail, and (3) allows incremental updates of the display without recalculating the past data. Stories can be interactively filtered by their duration and connectivity in order to be explored in full detail. To demonstrate the system’s capabilities for detailed dynamic text stream exploration, we present a use case with real news data about the Arabic Uprising in 2011.
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Boesman, Jan, Leen d'Haenens, and Baldwin Van Gorp. "Triggering the News Story." Journalism Studies 16, no. 6 (September 9, 2014): 904–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2014.953783.

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Wright, Bob. "A positive news story." Accident and Emergency Nursing 7, no. 1 (January 1999): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0965-2302(99)80092-7.

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Atkinson, Matthew D., Maria Deam, and Joseph E. Uscinski. "What’s a Dog Story Worth?" PS: Political Science & Politics 47, no. 04 (October 2014): 819–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049096514001103.

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ABSTRACTJournalists consider the importance of events and the audience’s interest in them when deciding on which events to report. Events most likely to be reported are those that are both important and can capture the audience’s interest. In turn, the public is most likely to become aware of important news when some aspect of the story piques their interest. We suggest an efficacious means of drawing public attention to important news stories: dogs. Examining the national news agenda of 10 regional newspapers relative to that of theNew York Times, we evaluated the effect of having a dog in a news event on the likelihood that the event is reported in regional newspapers. The “dog effect” is approximately equivalent to the effect of whether a story warrants front- or back-page national news coverage in theNew York Times. Thus, we conclude that dogs are an important factor in news decisions.
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Johansson, Bengt. "Secondary Crisis Communication. A question of Actual or perceived credibility?" Volume 2 2, no. 2019 (March 2019): 44–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.30658/icrcc.2019.13.

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An important aspect of crisis communication is secondary crisis communication, which focuses on how people communicate during a crisis. This study seeks to explore the mechanism of credibility in secondary crisis communication. Respondents in a large-scale experiment (N=2382) were exposed to a fictional news story about a terrorist attack and asked to what degree they would share the news story on social media. The design made it possible to test if the sharing of news stories was determined by its actual credibility (through the use of semiotic disclaimers in the news story), or by perceived credibility (the perceived credibility of the news story). Other factors, such as the severity of the threat in the story, trust in news media, to what extent emotions were evoked by the news story, gender, and age, were used as controls. Results indicated that the perceived credibility was more important than the actual message credibility.
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Chen, Dan Wen, Li Qiong Deng, Zhi Min Yuan, and Ling Da Wu. "Combining Multi-Modal Features for News Story Correlation Analysis." Advanced Materials Research 268-270 (July 2011): 1040–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.268-270.1040.

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How to combine multi-modal features effectively is a difficult problem in news story correlation analysis, this paper puts forward a new two-stage fusion approach based on visual and textual features fusion to solve this problem. First we use a co-clustering method to get the clustering groups of similar stories with the visual and semantic information of news story. And then, on the base of the result of the first step, we use different weighted strategies to analyze the news story correlation in a further way, which aim at the different type of news story. The methods can get a better result of the news story correlation analysis by experiments.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "News story"

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Fjällström, Mattis. "Shot Selection Strategies in Video News Story Tracking." Thesis, Uppsala University, Department of Information Technology, 2008. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-88730.

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When tracking a news story a user typically chooses a story as input for a query. The computer system then tries to find stories similar to the one used as input. Earlier attempts at video news tracking used all shots in a story, regardless of whether they improved the query or not. Some of those shots are bound to be disruptive to the matching process.

Due to this problem with the current methods, we propose a shot selection method which utilizes the similarity between shots within a story to automatically extract shots that are highly representative of the story content. Specifically, three methods are proposed: a) similar shot exclusion; b) similar shot inclusion; and c) length based shot selection. This paper describes experiments performed on Japanese broadcast news video. We find that being restrictive with what shots to include can improve tracking performance. In certain cases, drastically.

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von, Grothusen Beata. "User Engagement Metrics in Story Focused News Articles." Thesis, KTH, Skolan för elektroteknik och datavetenskap (EECS), 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-279507.

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Story-focused news articles are a different type of news articles, containing more visual and interactive elements, developed in order to engage a younger audience for online newspapers. User engagement has been defined as the “emotional, cognitive and behavioral connection between a user and a resource”, and different metrics are used to track the user engagement of the readers on these articles. However, there is no prior research on which of these metrics describe user engagement in the most accurate way. This study therefore aims to find out what metrics to use when measuring user engagement on story-focused articles through interviewing readers of three different story-focused articles and compare their engagement levels with actual metric values tracked. The results show that two out of the three articles can be considered engaging according to the definition, and the metrics they both have in common is high values of scroll depth, low values of bounce rate and high values of page views. The study therefore concludes that a combination of these three metrics describes user engagement in the most accurate way possible. Furthermore, both the engaging articles have a large number of images, galleries and videos compared to the non-engaging article, which indicates that visual elements in different forms are a winning concept for story-focused articles.
Nyhetsartiklar som fokuserar på berättande är en ny typ av nyhetsartiklar som innehåller fler visuella och interaktiva element, utvecklade för att engagera en yngre publik för digitala nyhetssidor. Användarengagemang har tidigare definierats som det “emotionella, kognitiva och beteendemässiga kontakten mellan användaren och resursen”, och olika mätetal används för att mäta användarengagemanget hos läsarna av nyhetsartiklar som fokuserar på berättande. Däremot finns det ingen tidigare forskning på vilka av dessa mätetal som beskriver användarengagemang på bäst sätt. Den här studien har därför som mål att ta reda på vilka mätetal som borde användas vid mätning av användarengagemang för nyhetsartiklar som fokuserar på berättande, genom att intervjua läsare av tre olika artiklar och jämföra deras engagemangsnivå med uppmätta mätetal. Resultaten visar att 2 av de 3 artiklarna kan anses engagerande enligt definitionen, och mätetalen som de båda har gemensamt är ett högt genomsnittligt scrolldjup, låg nivå av studsar och höga siffror för sidvisningar. Studien drar därför slutsatsen att en kombination av dessa tre mätetal beskriver användarengagemang på bästa möjliga sätt. Dessutom har båda de engagerande artiklarna ett stort antal bilder, gallerier och videor jämfört med den icke engagerande artikeln, vilket indikerar att visuella element av olika slag är ett vinnande koncept för historieberättande artiklar.
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White, Peter R. "Telling media tales : the news story as rhetoric." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 1998. https://hdl.handle.net/2123/27690.

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The thesis explores the rhetorical properties of the modem news report. In order to account for the distinctive style of news reporting it extends Systemic Functional Linguistic theories of the interpersonal to develop new analyses of the semantics of attitude, evaluation and inter-subjective positioning. It applies these analyses to identify three distinct interpersonal modes of news reporting style which will be termed journalistic 'voices'. These analyses are used to explicate the rhetorical properties of the voice most typically associated with 'hard news' reporting, to be termed 'reporter voice'. The thesis also examines the textual structure and genre status of two sub-types of news report, those items grounded in material activity sequences and those in communicative events such as speeches and interviews. Several chapters explore the functional connections between these two media text types and traditional narrative and argument genres. The chapters present the argument that linear, syntagmatic models of text structure of the type developed previously for analysis of, for example, the narrative are unable to account for the functionality of these news reports. An alternative 'orbital' model of textuality is presented by which relationships of specification are seen to operate between a central textual nucleus and dependent satellites. These various textual features are located in a diachronic context by means of a brief examination of the historical evolution of news reporting. The thesis then concludes by exploring how these various features of voice and text structure combine to produce a text type with a distinct rhetorical potential. It is argued that the modern news report has distinctive textual characteristics which equip it to naturalise ideologically informed judgements about social significance and the moral order.
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McGrail, J. Patrick. "Sensationalism, narrativity and objectivity---modeling ongoing news story practice." Related electronic resource: Current Research at SU : database of SU dissertations, recent titles available full text, 2008. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/syr/main.

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Palmer, Brandice. "Seeking Story: Finding the Modern Day Folktale in the Daily News." [Tampa, Fla.] : University of South Florida, 2005. http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/SFE0001306.

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Barankevych, Oleksiy Y. "Effect on online news story format on users' reading speed and recall." Virtual Press, 2003. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1265098.

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This study looked at how different formats of online news story can affect the way users read and understand it.The researcher formatted one story taken off the wire into two different ways: simple text story and a story customized for Web presentation. As an example the researcher used the style of MSNBC.com, one of nation's leading providers of original online news content.One hundred and sixty subjects who participated in the study were split into two different groups reflecting their online reading habits: the users who read news in full (or slow readers) and the users who scan and/or skim online information (fast readers). Both groups were exposed to each type of online story presentation.With the help of an online instrument created for the purpose of this study the researcher monitored subjects' reading speeds and recall of different types of story.The data collected in the experiment were analyzed through two-way Analysis of Variance, or ANOVA, with equal sample sizes.Initial analysis of the data revealed no significant difference between the way both types of readers recalled the two stories. Further analysis, however, showed that the type of story presentation had an effect on the speed with which certain categories of subjects read the stories. Subsequent analysis revealed that it was fast readers who took statistically significant less amounts of time to read the story formatted for online presentation.
Department of Journalism
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Shaw, Paul James. "An investigation into the influences on journalists in television news story construction." Thesis, University of Gloucestershire, 2005. http://eprints.glos.ac.uk/3112/.

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Television news is a key provider of information within British society, investing those who produce it with power to determine what is 'important' and 'interesting'. In this context I set out, through observation and interview in the newsrooms of Channel Four, HTV West and BBC I Midlands Today, to gain insight into how journalists think and behave when selecting and constructing news stories. I sought to examine the effects of routine practices and the extent to which reporters and editors reflect on their decision making. In addition, I conducted a close reading of the headline item from the bulletin produced in each newsroom on the same day as my visit, in order to draw comparison between what editors and reporters articulate as important in a newsroom setting, and what appears to be the case in manifest content. While considering a wide range of influential factors, an overriding objective was to assess the specific role of 'news value'. Do journalists consciously apply individual criteria? Are newsrooms organised so that editors and reporters routinely privilege certain subjects as 'news' and not others? Is there a journalistic tendency to 'notice', perceive and 'frame' events as a set of familiar types? In examining these questions, special attention was given to the conceptual model developed by Galtung & Ruge (1965), in order to assess its relevance in the 'real' newsroom environment. My findings suggested that journalists do not openly reflect on newsworthiness in a systematic way. The complex task of preparing a story ready for broadcast was achieved in a manner that was almost automatic. Attitudes and behaviour appeared to be driven by routines, with decisions made quickly and with minimal outward reflection. In conversation, the importance of visual impact and drama, and an emphasis on negativity, emerged as being significant, although subsequent analysis of output suggested that other criteria may also be influential, for example a concentration on 'elite' subject matter. Overall, however, there seemed to be a lack of ability or willingness to discuss selection in a conceptual manner and newsworthiness was explained and 'justified' by reference to actual examples of stories or subject matter.
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Gebken, Lisa M. "Metaphors in the news : the effects of metaphor usage in measuring recall and retention of information within a news story." Virtual Press, 1998. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1115752.

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This study has designed to test whether or not the use of metaphors affects audience recall and retention of news. The study is designed to test the hypotheses that metaphors help the reader recall a greater amount of information immediately after exposure (i.e., short-term memory, identified in this study as recall), and that metaphors aid in a greater amount of information retained at a later date (i.e., long-term memory, identified in this study as retention). Recall and retention help demonstrate whether or not metaphors promote reader understanding and remembering of facts in news stories better than in stories that do not use metaphors or images.The methodology of this study consisted of two tests in which subjects answered open-ended questions to see if the presence of metaphors aided in retention and recall of information. Two versions of a newspaper story with identical news were presented. The metaphor story contained one primary metaphorical image which ran continuously throughout the story. The nonmetaphor story featured no manipulation by the researcher. The first test measured the amount of information recalled immediately after exposure to a given story. The second test took place five days after the initial exposure.Using a MANOVA repeated measures design, the researcher found a difference between the metaphor and nonmetaphor variables and significant difference between the recall and retention variables, but no interaction between all of the independent variables. Therefore, this study did not support the hypothesis that news stories with metaphors aid in both recall (short-term memory) and retention (long-term memory) of information.
Department of Journalism
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Corney, Lynn Tuggle C. A. "Minorities and network news the role of race in source selection and story topic /." Chapel Hill, N.C. : University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2006. http://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/etd,145.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2006.
Title from electronic title page (viewed Oct. 10, 2007). "... in partial fulfillment of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication." Discipline: Journalism and Mass Communication; Department/School: Journalism and Mass Communication, School of.
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Mule, Jessica Loko. "The Effects of Native Advertising Disclosure and Advertising Recognition on Perceptions of News Story and News Website Credibility: A Consumer Neuroscience Approach." Master's thesis, Faculty of Commerce, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33889.

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The use of Native Advertising has sparked ethical concerns, due to its controversial nature inherent in its definition - a paid form of advertising that disguises persuasive communications as the editorial content of the publishing media outlet. The growing popularity of Native Advertising practices over the past decade in online news publishing has contributed towards the increasingly blurred lines between commercial and editorial content which in turn engenders feelings of deception in consumers and threatens to lower the trustworthiness of news publishers as an objective source. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to undertake theory testing guided by the tenets of the Persuasion Knowledge Model [PKM] (Friestad & Wright, 1994) to uncover insights on whether disclosure serves as an effective measure in publishers' efforts of mitigating the potential of consumer deception. In particular, this study investigated the relationships between: (1) effect of disclosure label positioning on advertising recognition; (2) mediating influence of visual attention on the aforementioned relationship; and (3) effect of advertising recognition on Inference of Manipulation [IMI] and perceptions of the online news publishers' credibility. The study used a quantitative multi-methodology research approach. An innovative Neuromarketing approach was undertaken through a psychophysiological-based analysis of visual attention to disclosure, measured as Fixation (ms/m) using eye-tracking technology, in addition to self-reported measures obtained via an online survey. In line with similar past studies, this study used convenience non-probability sampling and random assignment of participants to experimental groups, on a sample of 87 students between the ages of 20-29 years from the University of Cape Town (UCT). Findings showed no significant difference in the likelihood of advertising recognition, neither between the groups presented with a disclosure and those not, nor between the varying positions of disclosure. Additionally, advertising recognition had a positive influence on perceptions of credibility, contrary to theory and evidence from past studies (described in the Literature Review). Thus, it was concluded that disclosure and advertising recognition are necessary antecedents for critical processing and formation of judgement, but by themselves are not sufficient for perceived transparency and subsequent evaluations of the publisher's credibility. This study presents design implications for practitioners in the online news publishing industry and marketers: the perceived utility of the sponsored content, along with sponsorship transparency through disclosure, plays an important role in minimizing the negative influence of advertising recognition on perceived credibility.
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Books on the topic "News story"

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TV news: The inside story. London: Collins, 1989.

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Subramaniam, Chitra. Bofors: The story behind the news. New Delhi, India: Viking, 1993.

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Thompson, William G. Matthew's story: Good news for uncertain times. New York: Paulist Press, 1989.

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author, Mulcaire Glenn, ed. The news machine: Hacking : the untold story. London: Gibson Square, 2015.

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Glenn, Mulcaire, ed. The news machine: Hacking : the untold story. London: Gibson Square, 2014.

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ill, Kelley Patrick 1963, ed. Good news!: The story of the shepherds. Grand Rapids, Mich: CRC Publications, 1998.

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Flinn, Lisa. Good news travels fast!: An Easter story. Nashville, Tenn: Abingdon Press, 2001.

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Schudson, Michael. What time means in a news story. New York, N.Y. (2950 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10027): Gannett Center for Media Studies, Columbia University, 1986.

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Schudson, Michael. What time means in a news story. New York: Columbia University, 1986.

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Good news from Tinyville: Stories of hope and heart. St. Louis, Mo: Chalice Press, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "News story"

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Van Tassel, Joan, Mary Murphy, and Joseph Schmitz. "Acquiring Story Assets." In The New News, 227–60. New York : Routledge, 2020.: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003051596-8.

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Poulisse, Gert-Jan, and Marie-Francine Moens. "Multimodal News Story Segmentation." In Proceedings of the First International Conference on Intelligent Human Computer Interaction, 95–101. New Delhi: Springer India, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-81-8489-203-1_7.

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Papper, Robert A. "TV: Story Forms." In Broadcast News and Writing Stylebook, 179–91. 7th edition. | New York : Routledge, 2021.: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367823030-13.

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Johnson, Kirsten, and Jodi Radosh. "Finding Compelling Story Ideas." In The Broadcast News Toolkit, 26–33. New York: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003157243-3.

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Caple, Helen. "News values and the multisemiotic news story." In Photojournalism: A Social Semiotic Approach, 23–54. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137314901_2.

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Alonso, Omar, Dennis Fetterly, and Mark Manasse. "Duplicate News Story Detection Revisited." In Information Retrieval Technology, 203–14. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-45068-6_18.

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Caple, Helen. "Introducing the multisemiotic news story." In Photojournalism: A Social Semiotic Approach, 1–22. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137314901_1.

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Baker, Jonathan. "Storytelling: writing a news story." In Essential Journalism, 163–91. London; New York: Routledge, 2021.: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003125341-12.

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Marsh, Vivien. "Telling China's story well." In Seeking Truth in International TV News, 48–78. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003095439-3.

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Johnson, Kirsten, and Jodi Radosh. "The Reader, VO Story Forms, and Graphics." In The Broadcast News Toolkit, 67–85. New York: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003157243-7.

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Conference papers on the topic "News story"

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Hayes, Philip J., Laura E. Knecht, and Monica J. Cellio. "A news story categorization system." In the second conference. Morristown, NJ, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/974235.974238.

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Kannao, Raghvendra, and Prithwijit Guha. "Story segmentation in TV news broadcast." In 2016 23rd International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icpr.2016.7900085.

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Chu, Wei-Ta, and Han-Nung Hsu. "News story clustering with fisher embedding." In 2016 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icassp.2016.7471861.

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Merlino, Andrew, Daryl Morey, and Mark Maybury. "Broadcast news navigation using story segmentation." In the fifth ACM international conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/266180.266390.

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Poulisse, Gert-Jan, Marie-Francine Moens, and Tomas Dekens. "News Story Segmentation in Multiple Modalities." In 2009 Seventh International Workshop on Content-Based Multimedia Indexing (CBMI). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cbmi.2009.27.

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Hassan, Mehedee, and Mohammad Zahidur Rahman. "Crime news analysis: Location and story detection." In 2017 20th International Conference of Computer and Information Technology (ICCIT). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccitechn.2017.8281798.

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Liu, Zihan, Lei Xie, and Lilei Zheng. "Laplacian Eigenmaps for automatic news story segmentation." In 2010 International Conference on Audio, Language and Image Processing (ICALIP). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icalip.2010.5684548.

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Chunxi Liu, Li Su, Qingming Huang, and Shuqiang Jiang. "News video story sentiment classification and ranking." In 2011 IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo (ICME). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icme.2011.6011900.

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Krestel, Ralf, and Bhaskar Mehta. "Predicting News Story Importance Using Language Features." In 2008 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Web Intelligence and Intelligent Agent Technology. IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/wiiat.2008.193.

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Jindal, Anubha, Aditya Tiwari, and Hiranmay Ghosh. "Efficient and Language Independent News Story Segmentation for Telecast News Videos." In 2011 IEEE International Symposium on Multimedia (ISM). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ism.2011.81.

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Reports on the topic "News story"

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Ingerson-Mahar, Michael, and Ann Reid. FAQ: E. Coli: Good, Bad, & Deadly. American Society for Microbiology, November 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aamcol.1-2011.

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f you followed news headlines in the spring/summer of 2011, you may recognize E. coli as the agent responsible for outbreaks of serious diarrheal illness in Germany. But this is only one small part of the story of E. coli; its relationship to human health and the food we eat is much more complex. Not all E. coli are bad - in fact most are not - and some are even beneficial! In this report the larger story of E. coli is told: its role in human health, in food, and even in our understanding of our own biology.
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McNaught, Tim. A Problem-Driven Approach to Education Reform: The Story of Sobral in Brazil. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), March 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-ri_2022/039.

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For more than two decades, the Brazilian municipality of Sobral has focused intensively on improving the quality of its public education system; the resulting success has been remarkable. In 2005, the Brazilian federal government started calculating a Basic Education Development Index (IDEB in Portuguese), which measures the quality of education in schools across the country. In the inaugural results in 2005, 1,365 municipalities had a better score for primary education than Sobral. By 2017, Sobral made national news by ranking number one in the entire country for both primary and lower secondary education (Cruz and Loureiro, 2020). These results are even more impressive when considering that Sobral is located in the northeastern state of Ceará, which is the fifth poorest state in Brazil in terms of GDP per capita (Cruz and Loureiro, 2020). The case of Sobral exhibits many elements that are similar to Problem Driven Iterative Adaptation (PDIA), an approach wherein problems are key to driving change (Andrews et al., 2015). The PDIA approach relies on reformers to identify problems that matter, break them down into their root causes, identify entry points, act, stop to reflect, and then iterate and adapt their way to a solution.1 This process of constant feedback and experimentation by local actors allows for the development of a solution that fits the local context. This paper explores the transformation of Sobral’s education system through the lens of PDIA2 , with an emphasis on the early reform period of 2000-2004. Many excellent papers have been written, in Portuguese and English, about the case of Sobral; this paper draws heavily on this existing literature.3 The paper is also supported by interviews from key individuals who either were closely involved with the reform efforts or have studied them. The paper follows the narrative of the Sobral story, starting in 1997, and uses boxes and other diagrams to view the reform efforts through the lens of PDIA. Finally, the paper explains how the reform efforts grew and scaled over the years, not only within Sobral, but also to other municipalities in Ceará and across Brazil.
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Research Institute (IFPRI), International Food Policy. Agriculture, WASH, and safety nets: Ethiopia’s multisector story. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2499/9780896295889_16.

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Jindal-Snape, Divya, Chris Murray, Rebecca Camilleri, Ruth Debono, Maria Gauci, Damon Herd, Steven Affleck, Rebecca Elise, Tasha Leah Santiago, and Marilyn Mintoff. Living With MYALGIC ENCEPHALOMYELITIS: An Invisible Disability. University of Dundee, May 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.20933/100001243.

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Contents: Living with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) and Post-exertional Malaise - page 3 Story: Rebecca Camilleri; Script: Divya Jindal-Snape; Art: Steven Affleck Living with ME: A New Reality - page 4 Story: Rebecca Camilleri; Script: Divya Jindal-Snape; Art: Steven Affleck Working and Living with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis - page 7 Story: Maria Gauci; Script: Divya Jindal-Snape; Art: Rebecca Elysium Grocery Shopping: Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and Post-exertional Malaise - page 8 Story: Rebecca Camilleri; Script: Divya Jindal-Snape; Art: Tasha Leah Santiago Mysterious Pain - Invisible Disability - page 9 Author: Ruth DeBono; Art: Tasha Leah Santiago
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Kim, Soohyun, and Scott Hessell. New Business Exercise: The Pop-Up Store Project. Ames: Iowa State University, Digital Repository, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/itaa_proceedings-180814-410.

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Nadal-Caraballo, Norberto C., Madison C. Yawn, Luke A. Aucoin, Meredith L. Carr, Jeffrey A. Melby, Efrain Ramos-Santiago, Victor M. Gonzalez, et al. Coastal Hazards System–Louisiana (CHS-LA). US Army Engineer Research and Development Center, August 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/45286.

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The US Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC), Coastal and Hydraulics Laboratory (CHL) expanded the Coastal Hazards System (CHS) to quantify storm surge and wave hazards for coastal Louisiana. The CHS Louisiana (CHS-LA) coastal study was sponsored by the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority (CPRA) and the New Orleans District (MVN), US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) to support Louisiana’s critical coastal infrastructure and to ensure the effectiveness of coastal storm risk management projects. The CHS-LA applied the CHS Probabilistic Coastal Hazard Analysis (PCHA) framework to quantify tropical cyclone (TC) responses, leveraging new atmospheric and hydrodynamic numerical model simulations of synthetic TCs developed explicitly for the Louisiana region. This report focuses on documenting the PCHA conducted for the CHS-LA, including details related to the characterization of storm climate, storm sampling, storm recurrence rate estimation, marginal distributions, correlation and dependence structure of TC atmospheric-forcing parameters, development of augmented storm suites, and assignment of discrete storm weights to the synthetic TCs. As part of CHS-LA, coastal hazards were estimated within the study area for annual exceedance frequencies (AEFs) over the range of 10 yr-1 to 1×10-4 yr-1.
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Milligan, Kevin. Subsidizing the Stork: New Evidence on Tax Incentives and Fertility. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, March 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w8845.

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Kress, Martin A., and Samuel J. Weintraub. AIS Data Case Study : Selecting Design Vessels for New Jersey Back Bays Storm Surge Barriers Study. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/39779.

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The purpose of this Coastal and Hydraulics Engineering technical note (CHETN) is to describe how historic Automatic Identification System (AIS) vessel position data were used to identify a design vessel for use in a storm surge barrier design study. Specifically, this CHETN describes how the AIS data were accessed, how the universe of vessel data was refined to allow for design vessel selection, and how that selection was used in a storm surge barrier (SSB) study. This CHETN draws upon the New Jersey Back Bays Coastal Storm Risk Management Feasibility Study (USACE-NAP 2019), specifically the Appendix B.2 Engineering Appendix Civil document1. The New Jersey Back Bays Study itself builds upon the work of the North Atlantic Coast Comprehensive Study (NACCS) initiated after Hurricane Sandy in 2012 (USACE 2015a).
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Wissink, Andrew, Jude Dylan, Buvana Jayaraman, Beatrice Roget, Vinod Lakshminarayan, Jayanarayanan Sitaraman, Andrew Bauer, James Forsythe, Robert Trigg, and Nicholas Peters. New capabilities in CREATE™-AV Helios Version 11. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), June 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/40883.

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CREATE™-AV Helios is a high-fidelity coupled CFD/CSD infrastructure developed by the U.S. Dept. of Defense for aeromechanics predictions of rotorcraft. This paper discusses new capabilities added to Helios version 11.0. A new fast-running reduced order aerodynamics option called ROAM has been added to enable faster-turnaround analysis. ROAM is Cartesian-based, employing an actuator line model for the rotor and an immersed boundary model for the fuselage. No near-body grid generation is required and simulations are significantly faster through a combination of larger timesteps and reduced cost per step. ROAM calculations of the JVX tiltrotor configuration give a comparably accurate download prediction to traditional body-fitted calculations with Helios, at 50X less computational cost. The unsteady wake in ROAM is not as well resolved, but wake interactions may be a less critical issue for many design considerations. The second capability discussed is the addition of six-degree-of-freedom capability to model store separation. Helios calculations of a generic wing/store/pylon case with the new 6-DOF capability are found to match identically to calculations with CREATE™-AV Kestrel, a code which has been extensively validated for store separation calculations over the past decade.
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Nadal-Caraballo, Norberto, Madison Yawn, Luke Aucoin, Meredith Carr, Jeffrey Melby, Efrain Ramos-Santiago, Fabian Garcia-Moreno, et al. Coastal Hazards System–Puerto Rico and US Virgin Islands (CHS-PR). Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), December 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/46200.

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The South Atlantic Coastal Study (SACS) was completed by the US Army Corps of Engineers to quantify storm surge and wave hazards allowing for the expansion of the Coastal Hazards System (CHS) to the South Atlantic Division (SAD) domain. The goal of the CHS-SACS was to quantify coastal storm hazards for present conditions and future sea level rise (SLR) scenarios to aid in reducing flooding risk and increasing resiliency in coastal environments. CHS-SACS was completed for three regions within the SAD domain, and this report focuses on the Coastal Hazards System–Puerto Rico and US Virgin Islands (CHS-PR). This study applied the CHS Probabilistic Coastal Hazard Analysis (PCHA) framework for quantifying tropical cyclone (TC) responses, leveraging new atmospheric and hydrodynamic numerical model simulations of synthetic TCs developed explicitly for the CHS-PR region. This report focuses on documenting the PCHA conducted for CHS-PR, including the characterization of storm climate, storm sampling, storm recurrence rate estimation, marginal distributions, correlation and dependence structure of TC atmospheric-forcing parameters, development of augmented storm suites, and assignment of discrete storm weights to the synthetic TCs. As part of CHS-PR, coastal hazards were estimated for annual exceedance frequencies over the range of 10 yr⁻¹ to 10⁻⁴ yr⁻¹.
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