Search results for ""New Scientist""

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Journalistic practices of science popularization in the context of users’ agenda: A case study of „New Scientist”

2017

The article includes a discussion of two models which describe contemporary communication processes in journalism: agenda-setting and news value, indicating the need to expand their research tools to include qualitative methods, and merging the analyses of the reception and the message. It also includes indications as to the possibility, or even the social relevance, of the methods for applying those research perspectives to analysing journalism popularising science. Later, I present the results of an analysis of the content of a sample of 500 most read popular science texts available on the New Scientist website. I demonstrate which thematic areas were valued by the readers, and what value…

Hierarchybusiness.industry„New Scientist”media_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:Literature (General)"New Scientist"Context (language use)Public relationslcsh:PN1-6790Filter (software)NegotiationEliteNews valuesGeneral Earth and Planetary Sciencesagenda-settingJournalismpopularisation of scienceSociologybusinessGeneral Environmental ScienceQualitative researchmedia_commonvalue of news itemsActa Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Polonica
researchProduct

Stylistic analysis of headlines in science journalism: A case study ofNew Scientist

2016

This article explores science journalism in the context of the media competition for readers’ attention. It offers a qualitative stylistic perspective on how popular journalism colonizes science communication. It examines a sample of 400 headlines collected over the period of 15 months from the ranking of five ‘most-read’ articles on the website of the international magazine New Scientist. Dominant lexical properties of the sample are first identified through frequency and keyness survey and then analysed qualitatively from the perspective of the stylistic projection of newsworthiness. The analysis illustrates various degrees of stylistic ‘hybridity’ in online popularization of scientific r…

JournalismWritingDiscourse analysis"New Scientist"050801 communication & media studiesContext (language use)Public opinion0508 media and communicationsHybridityArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Developmental and Educational PsychologyScience communicationhybriditySociologySocial sciencediscourse analysisScience journalism060201 languages & linguisticsInformation Disseminationbusiness.industryCommunicationdiscourses of science05 social sciencesCommunity ParticipationMedia studies06 humanities and the artsheadlinesscience journalismlinguistic stylePublic Opinion0602 languages and literatureJournalismPeriodicals as TopicbusinessPeriod (music)Public Understanding of Science
researchProduct