6533b7dcfe1ef96bd1273127
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The two cultures: Scientists and journalists, not an outdated relationship.
Hans Peter Peterssubject
ciència en la societatcomunicació; divulgació científicacomunicación; divulgación científicascientistscomunicacióddc:370periodisme científic; científics; periodistes; nous mitjans de comunicació; ciència en la societatscience in societyciencia en la sociedaddivulgación científicacientíficsperiodisme científicperiodistescientíficoscomunicaciónperiodismo científico; científicos; periodistas; nuevos medios de comunicación; ciencia en la sociedaddivulgació científicascience communicationnous mitjans de comunicacióscience journalismperiodismo científicoscience journalism; scientists; new media; science in societynew mediaperiodistasnuevos medios de comunicacióndescription
The relationship between scientists and journalists is much better than its image. Scientists not only believe that public communication is a duty, but also that media visibility is beneficial for them. The scientific culture differs from that of journalism, which causes partly discrepant expectations; but in most cases these do not preclude satisfying interactions between journalists and scientists. The traditional relationship between science and journalism is challenged by the rise of new online media. These provide opportunities for scientists and scientific organizations to communicate directly with the public via websites, blogs and social networks. Science journalism seems to be in a crisis. However, it is unlikely that science journalism diminishes and is fully replaced by public self-presentation of science.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013-01-01 |