Search results for " Communication"

showing 10 items of 4937 documents

Election Campaigning Online

2005

This article presents an integrated quantitative analysis of the functional, formal and content-related aspects of German political party websites during the 2002 National Elections. The analysis is guided by the normalization hypothesis of cyberspace, which infers a transfer of ‘real-world’ features of politics to the Internet. Results provide empirical evidence of a limited normalization in German e-campaigning: indeed, German party websites primarily serve information functions while neglecting interactive features. Yet, no overall gap in professionalism is found between major and minor parties analysed. Finally, online campaigning is dominated by a high level of self-referentiality but…

business.industryCommunication05 social sciences050801 communication & media studiesPublic relationsLanguage and Linguisticslanguage.human_language0506 political sciencePersonalizationGermanPolitics0508 media and communicationsQuantitative analysis (finance)Content analysisPolitical science050602 political science & public administrationlanguagebusinessEuropean Journal of Communication
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Diversity in British, Swedish, and German Newsrooms: Problem Awareness, Measures, and Achievements

2020

A core tenet of journalism is to contribute toward a functioning and healthy public sphere by ensuring transparency over issues and perspectives from different segments of society. However, it has become increasingly doubtful whether the news media can reflect the true diversity of society while lacking internal diversity in their newsrooms. In our study of three European countries (Germany, Sweden, and the UK), we assess how news organizations cope with the challenges of achieving diversity among their editorial staff and fostering a diversity-sensitive newsroom culture. Drawing on semi-standardized interviews with editors-in-chief and managing editors at 18 outlets, our analysis systemati…

business.industryCommunication05 social sciences050801 communication & media studiesPublic relationsTransparency (behavior)language.human_language0506 political scienceDiversity managementGerman0508 media and communicationsComparative researchPolitical science050602 political science & public administrationlanguagePublic sphereJournalismbusinessJournalism Practice
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Media’s portrayal of CAM: Exploring 40 years of narratives and meanings in public discourse

2021

The media are a key element in being able to assess how the climate of public opinion regarding Complementary and Alternative Medicines (CAM) has evolved over the years. The aim of this study is to explore the variation of the media representations along 40 years (1979–2018) in Spanish newspapers to assess if the press has contributed to legitimise, delegitimise or maintain the status quo of these therapies. From quantitative and qualitative approaches, we evaluate the media attention, the narratives, linguistic terms and tone used, and the relations between them. Results indicate the media reporting on CAM has remained relatively stable during the first 37 years (1979–2015) of the study, …

business.industryCommunication05 social sciencesMedia studies050801 communication & media studies050905 science studiesPublic opinionScientific journalism0508 media and communicationsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Public discourseKey (cryptography)NarrativeSociology0509 other social sciencesElement (criminal law)businessHealth communicationJournalism
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2020

While previous communication and media research has largely focused on either studying privacy as personal boundary management or made efforts to investigate the structural (legal or economic) condition of privacy, we observe an emergent body of research on the political underpinnings of privacy linking both aspects. A pronounced understanding of the politics of privacy is however lacking. In this contribution, we set out to push this forward by mapping four communication and media perspectives on the political implications of privacy. In order to do so, we recur on Barry’s (2002) distinction of the political and the politics and outline linkages between individual and structural dimensions…

business.industryCommunication05 social sciencesPerspective (graphical)Internet privacy050801 communication & media studiesContext (language use)Boundary management0506 political sciencePolitics0508 media and communicationsOrder (exchange)050602 political science & public administrationSociologybusinessSet (psychology)Media and Communication
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2020

The current media environment is primarily characterised by a large amount of information and, in contrast, rather fragmented audience attention. This is especially true for social media, particularly Facebook, which have become important news sources for many people. Journalists cannot help but publish content on Facebook if they want to reach the part of their audience that mainly—or even only—consumes news there. On Facebook, journalists are at the mercy of the algorithm that determines the visibility of their content. Because user engagement is a crucial factor in the algorithm, concerns have been raised that journalists are abandoning their normative quality standards to make the news …

business.industryCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050801 communication & media studiesAdvertising0506 political sciencePoliticsPresentation0508 media and communicationsContent analysisPolitical science050602 political science & public administrationSocial mediaPublic serviceJournalismQuality (business)businessPublicationmedia_commonMedia and Communication
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Powered by public relations? Mutual perceptions of PR practitioners’ bases of power over journalism

2017

Public relations practitioners depend on journalists to report information, and journalists count on public relations practitioners to provide information. This mutual dependence gives the two parties a degree of power over each other that can be wielded if certain resources are available. However, there are many unanswered questions about how public relations exerts power over journalists and how these influence attempts may affect news coverage. We differentiate six bases of power that public relations practitioners may use to influence journalists. To test the use of these bases of power, we conducted a quantitative survey among German journalists and public relations practitioners. Our…

business.industryCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050801 communication & media studiesFrench and Raven's bases of powerSpace (commercial competition)Public relationslanguage.human_languagePurchasingTest (assessment)German0508 media and communicationsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)State (polity)Political sciencePerception0502 economics and businesslanguageJournalismbusiness050203 business & managementmedia_commonJournalism
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Searching for Autonomy in Digital News Entrepreneurism Projects

2019

Digital entrepreneurism is often depicted as a positive disruption in the news ecosystem; it initiates new business models, fosters new ways of storytelling, and enables closer interaction with aud...

business.industryCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050801 communication & media studiesPublic relationsBusiness model0506 political scienceComputingMilieux_GENERAL0508 media and communications050602 political science & public administrationSociologybusinessAutonomymedia_commonStorytellingDigital Journalism
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The European media discourse on immigration and its effects: a literature review

2018

To understand public opinion about immigration in Europe, one has to understand the media’s role in it. We present a literature review on research on media discourse on immigration and their effects. Despite differences in the way immigration and migrant groups are represented in European media, we can observe common patterns. Migrants are generally under-represented and shown as delinquents or criminals. Although, media framing differs based on specific migrant groups the discourse is focusing on, immigration coverage is often negative and conflict-centred. Frequent exposure to such media messages leads to negative attitudes towards migration, may activate stereotypical cognitions of migra…

business.industryCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesImmigrationMedia studiesSocial SciencesSamhällsvetenskap050801 communication & media studiesMedia coverageMedia and CommunicationsPublic opinion0506 political science0508 media and communicationsFraming (social sciences)Medie- och kommunikationsvetenskapContent analysisPolitical science050602 political science & public administrationMigration; media coverage; content analysis; media effects; framing; Europe10. No inequalitybusinessmedia_commonAnnals of the International Communication Association
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2020

Current debates on online privacy are rooted in liberal theory. Accordingly, privacy is often regarded as a form of freedom from social, economic, and institutional influences. Such a negative perspective on privacy, however, focuses too much on how individuals can be protected or can protect themselves, instead of challenging the necessity of protection itself. In this article, I argue that increasing online privacy literacy not only empowers individuals to achieve (a necessarily limited) form of negative privacy, but has the potential to facilitate a privacy deliberation process in which individuals become agents of social change that could lead to conditions of positive privacy and infor…

business.industryCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesInternet privacy050301 education050801 communication & media studiesDeliberationLiteracyNew mediaInformational self-determination0508 media and communicationsData Protection Act 1998Information societyPsychologybusiness0503 educationSocial structuremedia_commonDigital literacyMedia and Communication
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Design and implementation of a long-range low-power wake-up radio and customized DC-MAC protocol for LoRaWAN

2019

In this paper, we present the design and implementation of a long-rage wake-up radio (WuR) and customized duty cycled (DC) MAC protocol for wireless IoT devices. The WuRx achieves a sensivity of −70 dBm by consuming just 0.032 mA, thereby optimizing the energy consumption of battery powered long-range wireless IoT devices. Reducing the power consumption of these devices minimizes the overall costs when deployed in large scale.

business.industryComputer science05 social sciencesBattery (vacuum tube)050801 communication & media studies020206 networking & telecommunications02 engineering and technologyEnergy consumptionPower (physics)0508 media and communicationsPower consumptionEmbedded systemRange (aeronautics)0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringWirelessbusinessInternet of ThingsProtocol (object-oriented programming)2019 IEEE International Conference on Advanced Networks and Telecommunications Systems (ANTS)
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