Journal articles on the topic 'News story'

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1

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

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2

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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4

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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7

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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8

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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9

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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10

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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11

Diel, Stan, and Chris Roberts. "News story aggregation and perceived credibility." Newspaper Research Journal 42, no. 2 (May 14, 2021): 162–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07395329211013488.

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The practice of aggregating news content—repurposing content created by other news organizations—raises questions about credibility. This experimental study suggests that news organizations can boost credibility of aggregated content by more clearly identifying originating sources than by increasing or decreasing the use of aggregation. Relationships between levels of aggregation and credibility showed little or no significance, while relationships between credibility and receivers’ confidence in identifying originating sources were significant.
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12

Telg, Ricky W. "Conducting Interviews for News Stories." EDIS 2015, no. 1 (February 3, 2015): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.32473/edis-wc194-2015.

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In order to write a good news story for print, television, or radio, you have to conduct interviews with the people who have the information you need. An interview is the process of asking good questions so you can get good answers for your news story. This 3-page fact sheet provides some tips to follow as you conduct a news story interview. Written by Ricky Telg, and published by the UF Department of Agricultural Education and Communication, January 2015. (Photo: VStock/Thinkstock.com) AEC532/WC194: Conducting Interviews for News Stories (ufl.edu)
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13

Sinaga, Finky Sahputra, Amrin Saragih, and Juli Rachmadani Hasibuan. "LEXICAL COHESIVE DEVICES IN NEWS STORY TEXTS OF THE DAILY ANALISA." LINGUISTICA 8, no. 4 (February 8, 2020): 182. http://dx.doi.org/10.24114/jalu.v8i4.17032.

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This study dealt with lexical cohesive devices in News Story Text of Daily Analisa. It employed descriptive qualitative research method. The news story textsis analyzed using cohesive devices theory by Michael Halliday and Ruqaiya Hasan. This study was aimed to analyze: (1) The kinds of Lexical Cohesive Devices which are used in News story texts of the Daily Analisa (2) How Lexical Cohesive devices used in News story text of The Daily Analisa. The result shows that not all lexical cohesive devices types are used in news story text. The findings are only has three types of the cohesive devices in the text. Based on the analysis, the lexical cohesive devices ties in the text construct the unity as well as the context in the text. in the other words, the lexical cohesive devices makes the text function in which it is embedded. It can be said that the lexical cohesive devices create the coherence of the textKeywords: coherence,context, daily Analisa, discourse analysis,lexical cohesive devices, news story texts
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14

DeAngelo, Tessa I., and Narine S. Yegiyan. "Looking for Efficiency: How Online News Structure and Emotional Tone Influence Processing Time and Memory." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 96, no. 2 (August 22, 2018): 385–405. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699018792272.

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The research reported here investigates how news story structure and emotional tone affect news story processing efficiency. Two theoretical frameworks employing the forced-choice paradigm and the free-choice paradigm are used to pose competing hypotheses about how news writing structure (inverted pyramid versus narrative) affects story reading time and memory. Participants browsed a website featuring target news stories. Time spent reading stories and story recall was measured. Participants spent less time reading stories with an inverted pyramid structure yet recalled these stories better than stories in a narrative structure, supporting the free-choice processing framework.
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15

Pietilä, Veikko. "Beyond the News Story: News as Discursive Composition." European Journal of Communication 7, no. 1 (March 1992): 37–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0267323192007001003.

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16

Johnson, Peter. "Good News—Bad News: The Medicare Cap Story." Perspectives on Swallowing and Swallowing Disorders (Dysphagia) 7, no. 2 (July 1998): 15–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/sasd7.2.15.

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17

Moiseenko, Anna V. "Characteristic of the digital news story genre." International Journal “Speech Genres” 17, no. 1 (February 21, 2022): 66–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.18500/2311-0740-2022-17-1-33-66-73.

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The article deals with the genre of news stories clustering around the theme of coronavirus infection in the English electronic newspaper The Daily Mail. The purpose of the paper is to systematize the main characteristics of various news stories within the selected topic. The key genre-forming features of electronic news stories are the explicit nature of authorship, a wide range of readers, synchronous and asynchronous comments. There is a description of three news stories with various structures – an inverted pyramid, an hourglass and a multimedia story. It has been determined that such kinds of news stories combine different types of information (factual, probabilistic, normative, program and evaluative); a significant event is described by alternating a verbal text and visual material, which is represented by illustrations, video segments and infographics. Interactivity is presented at two levels – on the one hand, in the interaction between a reader and a news story, on the other hand, between several news stories, divided by time, but written within the same topic. Key thematic lexis captures the theme of the text, and synonymic sets with literary and informal lexical units diversify the narrative and reduce the distance between the electronic newspaper and its audience.
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18

Iedema, Rick A. M. "The structure of the accident news story." Australian Review of Applied Linguistics 20, no. 2 (January 1, 1997): 95–118. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/aral.20.2.06ied.

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This paper presents an overview of 150 years of accident news writing as presented in the Sydney Morning Herald, with the aim of uncovering the genesis of the ‘hard’ news story, and locating the practice of news writing in its historical context. This overview will serve as a grounding for a discussion of current news writing practices in general. Parallels will be suggested between the nature of accident stories on the one hand, and the role and concerns of the print media in modern industrial society on the other. The paper concludes that ‘hard’ news writing is concerned with the recontextualization of socially ‘destabilizing’ events (Iedema, Feez and White 1995), as well as with the rendering relevant of these recontextualizations to a diffuse and generalised media audience.
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19

Selkoe, Dennis, and Jeffrey Cummings. "News story miscasts Alzheimer’s science." Science 377, no. 6609 (August 26, 2022): 934–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.ade1872.

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20

Garland, John M. "[News & Views ‘picture story’]." Nature 323, no. 6087 (October 1986): 398. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/323398b0.

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21

Boland, Gregory S. "[News & Views ‘picture story’]." Nature 323, no. 6091 (October 1986): 759. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/323759a0.

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22

Ward, Rebecca. "[News & Views 'picture story']." Nature 324, no. 6092 (November 1986): 15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/324015a0.

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23

David, Swinbanks. "News and views ‘Picture Story’." Nature 322, no. 6078 (July 1986): 409. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/322409a0.

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24

Benton, Michael J. "[News & Views ‘picture story’]." Nature 322, no. 6082 (August 1986): 775. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/322775b0.

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25

Levitt, Linda. "Citing the Story." Departures in Critical Qualitative Research 10, no. 3 (2021): 19–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/dcqr.2021.10.3.19.

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This essay draws on excerpts from published obituaries, interviews, and news stories to argue that the AIDS crisis led to practices modeling a good death that have since been put in practice more broadly.
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26

Saragih, Aini Melbebahwati, Sri Minda Murni, and Meisuri . "REALIZATIONS OF PROJECTION IN NEWS STORY AND EDITORIAL TEXTS." LINGUISTIK TERAPAN 18, no. 1 (June 3, 2021): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.24114/lt.v18i1.25354.

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ABSTRACTThis research deals with projection that is used in news story and editorial texts. Projection is well defined as representation of a linguistic experience in another linguistic experience. Projection is equivalent to direct and indirect or reported speech in traditional or formal grammar. As projection is an element of the logical function, it is realized as a clause complex, where there are at least two clauses. With reference to some theories, projection is also potentially realized in the form of single clause and phrase. The aim of this research is to describe similarities and differences with reference to the realizations of projection used in the news story and editorial texts. This research is conducted by using descriptive qualitative design. The data of this research are clause complexes containing projection in news story and editorial texts of Indonesian newspapers. The sources of data are taken from news story and editorial texts of four newspaper publications, namely the daily Kompas, Republika, Waspada and Sinar Indonesia Baru (SIB). The four daily newspapers are assumed to represent national and provincial or local newspapers. Each of the newspapers is represented by seven headlines for news story texts and seven leading articles for editorial texts. The data are analyzed by using interactive model in which the clause complexes are analyzed with reference to systemic functional linguistic (SFL) theory about projection. The findings indicate that there are similarities and diffrences with reference to the realizations of projetion in the news story and editorial texts of Indonesian newspapers. Keywords: Projection, News Story, Editorial, Newspaper, Systemic Functional Linguistic
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27

Vraga, Emily K., and Melissa Tully. "Who Is Exposed to News? It Depends on How You Measure: Examining Self-Reported Versus Behavioral News Exposure Measures." Social Science Computer Review 38, no. 5 (November 15, 2018): 550–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0894439318812050.

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Despite the importance of news exposure to political outcomes, news consumption is notoriously difficult to measure, and misreporting news exposure is common. In this study, we compare participants’ news behaviors measured on a news aggregator website with their self-reported story selection immediately after exposure. We find that both individual and contextual characteristics—especially the presence of political cues in news headlines—influence reporting of news story selection. As a result, the news audience profiles differ using self-reported versus behavioral measures, creating two different pictures of news exposure. More attention is needed to improve news measurement strategies to address misreporting and to improve the accuracy of news audience profiles.
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Curtain, Patricia A., Elizabeth Dougall, and Rachel Davis Mersey. "Study Compares Yahoo! News Story Preferences." Newspaper Research Journal 28, no. 4 (September 2007): 22–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073953290702800403.

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This study of choices on the Yahoo! News portal suggests that while users access more entertainment than they might find in their daily paper, they also want national/political and world events and issues.
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Jones, Susan L. "The story of stigma: Good news and bad news." Archives of Psychiatric Nursing 11, no. 2 (April 1997): 55–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0883-9417(97)80052-0.

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Alzamora, Geane, and Lorena Tárcia. "Proposed Methodology for Transmedia New Story Analysis." Interactive Film and Media Journal 1, no. 1 (November 22, 2021): 41–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.32920/ifmj.v1i1.1493.

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The study of transmedia in journalism is still evolving. Although news organizations around the world have been spreading stories through different and complementary platforms and screens, this does not necessarily constitute the use of transmedia concepts. Usually, the same story is simply distributed across multiple screens. Transmedia news reporting, in our view, would involve the expansion of content and engagement of the audience, instead of repetition and propagation. This article studies examples of possible applications of the transmedia concept to the news report, by examining The Float Project (Flutuador), in Brazil and comparing it to a potential model of engagement, The Great British Property Scandal: Every Empty Counts (2012) in the UK. The theoretical framework is provided by Henry Jenkins (2006), Carlos Scolari (2009), Kevin Moloney (2011), Renira Gambaratto (2013) Alzamora and Tárcia (2012) and proposes an evolving analytical model as a methodology for understanding transmedia applied to news features. The study points to major investments in building potential transmedia news reports by Globo Networks and suggests the necessary involvement of other departments and institutions to achieve full engagement and social relevance, as occurred in the UK project.
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31

Myrick, Jessica Gall, and Bartosz W. Wojdynski. "Moody news: The impact of collective emotion ratings on online news consumers’ attitudes, memory, and behavioral intentions." New Media & Society 18, no. 11 (July 10, 2016): 2576–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1461444815598755.

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Indicators of collective user behavior and opinion are increasingly common features of online news stories and may include information about how the story made users feel. An experiment ( N = 298) examined the effects of the presence and valence of a “mood meter” posted alongside an online human-interest story on memory for, attitude toward, emotional response to, and intentions to share the story. The presence of a mood meter led to lower recall of story content, more negative attitudes toward the story, and less positive emotional responses. The results suggest that participating in a mood meter may attenuate positive responses to human-interest stories.
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32

Merminod, Gilles. "Narrative analysis applied to text production." AILA Review 33 (October 7, 2020): 104–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/aila.00032.mer.

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Abstract The following paper adopts the vantage point of a linguistic ethnographic approach to news production, focused on the process of quoting, and combined with narrative analysis. The starting point of the analysis is an account given by a person who lived through a dramatic event. The paper investigates how the processes of recontextualization affects the account during the making of a broadcast news story. It explains how and why news practitioners adjust stretches of talk to the news text they are producing, and it reveals to what extent a pre-existing version of what happened (that of the account) can be reshaped by one in the making (that of the news story in which the account is going to figure). In the case study, the processes of recontextualization relates to three narrative issues: (1) quoting involves adapting the account’s characters’ categorizations to those of the news story; (2) quoting entails choosing between different schemes of incidence that depict what happened slightly differently; (3) quoting asks for a delimitation of the account’s spatiotemporal parameters that corresponds with those of the news story. Such a narrative adjustment is neither a tightly planned nor an arbitrary process but is embedded in the professional practice as it unfolds in the social and material world.
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Maguire, Miles. "Embedding journalists shape Iraq news story." Newspaper Research Journal 38, no. 1 (March 2017): 8–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532917696104.

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This study, based on a review of The New York Times’ inconsistent accounts of a Marine’s death while aiding two embedded Times journalists in Fallujah, illustrates the ethical challenges of embedded journalism and shows how the embedding process can shape news accounts to support military objectives at the expense of traditional journalistic values.
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Telg, Ricky W. "News Writing for Television and Radio." EDIS 2015, no. 1 (February 3, 2015): 4. http://dx.doi.org/10.32473/edis-wc193-2015.

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Creating a television or radio story is more than hitting “record” on a video camera or audio recorder. You have to learn the process of writing an effective television and radio news story first. This 4-page fact sheet was written by Ricky Telg, and published by the UF Department of Agricultural Education and Communication, January 2015. AEC531/WC193: News Writing for Television and Radio (ufl.edu)
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Banks, Jasmin. "Magnet attracted to good’ news story." Nursing Standard 18, no. 13 (December 10, 2003): 30. http://dx.doi.org/10.7748/ns.18.13.30.s46.

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36

Strachan, J. "BMA secretary responds to news story." BMJ 327, no. 7408 (July 24, 2003): 227—b—227. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.327.7408.227-b.

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37

Duarte, Stan. "Clarifications to News Story on Certifiers." American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy 50, no. 3 (March 1, 1993): 448–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ajhp/50.3.448.

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38

Cingolani, R., and E. Bizzi. "News Story on Italy's MIT Disappoints." Science 326, no. 5950 (October 8, 2009): 227–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.326_227c.

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Poulisse, Gert-Jan, Marie-Francine Moens, Tomas Dekens, and Koen Deschacht. "News story segmentation in multiple modalities." Multimedia Tools and Applications 48, no. 1 (October 21, 2009): 3–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11042-009-0358-9.

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40

Maier, Scott R., Paul Slovic, and Marcus Mayorga. "Reader reaction to news of mass suffering: Assessing the influence of story form and emotional response." Journalism 18, no. 8 (August 11, 2016): 1011–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884916663597.

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Drawing from psychological research, the study examines how story form influences reader reaction to news accounts of mass violence in Africa. An online survey with embedded experimental conditions was administered to a US Internet panel (n = 638). Results show that how the story is told affects reader emotional response and, indirectly, charitable giving. Story personification had the strongest influence, followed by stories with photographic images. Use of statistical and mobilizing information had only a small effect on reader response. The straight news story – the predominant form of news reporting – evoked the weakest emotional response. The findings underscore that simply ‘reporting the news’ is often insufficient to arouse audience response. The reader needs empathetic connection, especially when dealing with large-scale distant suffering. Applying psychological principles to practical journalism, the study is intended to guide media practitioners and activists as they seek better ways to bring attention to the world’s most deplorable conditions.
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Feng, Xiaohan, and Makoto Murakami. "Combining of Narrative News and VR Games: Comparison of Various Forms of News Games." Signal & Image Processing : An International Journal 12, no. 05 (October 31, 2021): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.5121/sipij.2021.12501.

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The information explosion makes it easier to ignore information that requires social attention, and news games can make that information stand out. There is also considerable research that shows that people are more likely to remember narrative content. Virtual environments can also increase the amount of information a person can recall. If these elements are blended together, it may help people remember important information. This research aims to provide directional results for researchers interested in combining VR and narrative, enumerating the advantages and limitations of using text or non-text plot prompts in news games. It also provides hints for the use of virtual environments as learning platforms in news games. The research method is to first derive a theoretical derivation, then create a sample of news games, and then compare the experimental data of the sample to prove the theory. The research compares the survey data of a VR game that presents a story in non-text format (Group VR), a game that presents the story in non-text format (Group NVR), a VR game that presents the story in text (Group VRIT), and a game that presents the story in text (Group NVRIT) will be compared and analyzed. This paper describes the experiment. The results of the experiment show that among the four groups, the means that can make subjects remember the most information is a VR news game with a storyline. And there is a positive correlation between subjects' experience and confidence in recognizing memories, and empathy is positively correlated with the correctness of memories. In addition, the effects of "VR," "experience," and "presenting a story from text or video" on the percentage of correct answers differed depending on the type of question.
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42

Hope, Wayne. "REVIEW: Corporate media news." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 10, no. 2 (September 1, 2004): 5–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v10i2.800.

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ON 3 October 2004, APN News and Media, owners of the New Zealand Herald launched a Sunday paper. The Herald on Sunday arrived as a major competitor for the Fairfax-owned Sunday Star-Times and Sunday News. The first issue featured a group photo of eager-looking new staff. Missing from their news coverage, however, was a timely story about media ownership and democracy. Ten days earlier, journalists at the weekday New Zealand Herald had announced plans for court action against their employers. APN had refused to extend the New Zealand Herald collective agreement to workers on the Sunday edition. This story began on July 30 with APN’s decision to launch the new paper.
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43

Sakti, Bayu Purbha. "TRAINING WRITING NONFICIAL STORIES IN STUDENTS OF THE PGSD STUDY PROGRAM WIDYA DHARMA KLATEN UNIVERSITY." Jurnal Berdaya Mandiri 1, no. 1 (August 9, 2019): 58–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.31316/jbm.v1i1.282.

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Students of the Widya Dharma University Primary School Teacher Education (PGSD) Study Program are expected to have insight and knowledge in nonfiction story writing. News that is part of a nonfiction story favored by elementary school children. Writing news will familiarize PGSD students in writing activities and later they also have no difficulty in doing thesis. PGSD students who take part in the training are expected to excel in student-level writing competitions. The trainees were also reminded to maintain the authenticity of the news written. News must be reported by prospective elementary school teachers so that students, families, and communities can avoid Liar News / hoaxes.
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Wolfgang, David, and Manu Bhandari. "Commenter and News Source Credibility: Roles of News Media Literacy, Comment Argument Strength and Civility." Southwestern Mass Communication Journal 36, no. 1 (December 18, 2020): 29–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.58997/smc.v36i1.81.

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Many news websites allow for audience comments, but there is concern, especially when these comments are negative or low-quality, that the comments could negatively influence how readers perceive the corresponding news story. This experiment explores whether quality characteristics of comments – argument strength and civility – could help improve the perceived credibility of news content. Further, the study looks at whether quality characteristics of audience members, like their level of news media literacy, might reduce the negative influence of low-quality comments on someone’s perception of the credibility of the story. The findings reveal that higher quality comments lead to improved perceptions of the credibility of the news source, even when the comments criticize the journalist. Additionally, the study finds that individuals with higher levels of news media literacy are more capable of distinguishing the quality of journalist content from user-generated content.
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45

Cameron, Glen T., and David Blount. "VNRs and Air Checks: A Content Analysis of the Use of Video News Releases in Television Newscasts." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 73, no. 4 (December 1996): 890–904. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769909607300409.

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Forty-seven television news stories generated by a video news release (VNR) were content analyzed to determine how television gatekeepers use various elements included in VNRs. A survey was also done to obtain station resource data that might predict greater use of packaged elements from a VNR. Results suggest that the production costs for a packaged story in a VNR may be wasted. Extensive use was made of B-roll, public service announcements (PSAs), and footage from planned events like news conferences that reporters are accustomed to covering. When the packaged story was used, it was heavily edited or truncated. Contrary to common wisdom, resource-poor stations did not make greater use of the packaged story in the VNR.
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46

Ain, Zamratul, and Utami Dewi Pramesti. "KORELASI PENGUASAAN KOSAKATA DENGAN KETERAMPILAN MENULIS TEKS CERITA FANTASI SISWA KELAS VII SMP NEGERI 16 PADANG." Pendidikan Bahasa Indonesia 8, no. 1 (March 18, 2019): 252. http://dx.doi.org/10.24036/103943-019883.

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ABSTRACT The purpose of this research there are three. First, describe vocabulary mastery Class VII students of SMP Negeri Padang 16. Second, it describes the text of the story of fantasy writing skills grade VII JUNIOR Country 16. Third, vocabulary mastery with correlation describes writing skills text story fantasy grade VII SMP Negeri Padang. 16. This research type is quantitative descriptive method. The design used in this research is the design korelasional. This research population is grade VII SMP Negeri Padang 16. listed on the 2018/2019 school year, that is 284 students. The sample in this research are determined by proportional random sampling of 20% of the population, i.e. 50 students. Research data is a score test results and score vocabulary mastery test results writing skills text story fantasy. Research instrument is an objective test to measure mastery of vocabulary news and performance tests to measure the writing skills text story fantasy. Based on the results of such research, it can be inferred that the skills of listening text news is correlated with writing skills text news. The better mastery of the vocabulary the better news will also enhance the story text writing skills. Kata kunci: Korelasi, Kosakata, Menulis Teks Cerita Fantasi
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Canella, Gino, and Patrick Ferrucci. "Framing Standing Rock: Market orientation and television news." Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies 9, no. 3 (October 1, 2020): 233–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ajms_00014_1.

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This article analyses news coverage by CNN and Democracy Now! of the Dakota Access Pipeline protests at Standing Rock, North Dakota. Through an ethnographic content analysis (ECA) of a strongly and weakly market-oriented television news organization, we examine frames, sources used and time devoted to the story, to understand how market orientation may influence the journalistic decisions of television news outlets. We find that although both outlets framed the story primarily through the lens of protest and violence, the ways in which this was done differed significantly.
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Mardikantoro, Hari Bakti, Muhammad Badrus Siroj, and Esti Sudi Utami. "ANALYSIS OF MACROSTRUCTURE AND SUPERSTRUCTURE OF CORRUPTION NEWS DISCOURSE IN NEWSPAPERS." RETORIKA: Jurnal Bahasa, Sastra, dan Pengajarannya 13, no. 1 (February 23, 2020): 22. http://dx.doi.org/10.26858/retorika.v13i1.10968.

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This study aims to determine the construction of news texts in newspapers, especially in the dimensions of macrostructure and superstructure. This study used a descriptive qualitative approach with the analysis of Teun van Dijk's critical discourse, specifically the dimensions of the text. The results showed that in reporting corruption cases in Suara Merdeka, Republika, Kompas, and Jawa Pos newspapers, journalists constructed the news cases by focusing on news themes about ongoing corruption. Meanwhile, in the superstructure dimension, a number of news scheme categories are formulated to build a story, which is a summary, which is marked by two elements namely the title and lead and story, namely the overall news content from introduction to the end.
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Kozman, Claudia. "Use of steroids in baseball primarily sports story." Newspaper Research Journal 38, no. 1 (March 2017): 46–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532917696103.

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A content analysis of U.S. newspapers over 10 years revealed that the issue of steroids in baseball was the result of accidental events slightly more than routine ones. While both news and sports reporters covered accidental events, the news reporters’ attention faded without government officials to adopt the issue and routinize the story.
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Lagerwerf, Luuk, and Daniël Verheij. "Hypertext in online news stories." Information Design Journal 21, no. 2 (December 31, 2014): 163–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/idj.21.2.07lag.

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News websites struggle tailoring news stories to divergent needs of online news users. We examined a way to bridge these needs by representing sources in hypertext. News items were designed to be short and concise, with hyperlinks citing sources. Readers could either ignore hyperlinks or explore additional information from the hyperlinked sources. We expected that appreciation for these news stories would be moderated by personal characteristics, namely hypertext comfort and desirability of control. In a 2 (hyperlink presence) x 2 (directness of speech) experiment, two news stories were manipulated for a Dutch national news website (NOS.nl). For each story, four variants were developed: Text containing hyperlinks, plain text only, citing the sources directly, citing in the words of the journalist. Dependent variables were perceived control, appreciation, and absorption in the story. Results showed that news stories with hyperlinked sources affected perceived control positively, especially for those with a high desirability of control. Directness of speech did not have any effects. The relation between hypertext and appreciation was mediated by perceived control.
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