Search results for "Civility"

showing 10 items of 17 documents

Incivility in online news and Twitter: effects on attitudes toward scientific topics when reading in a second language

2021

Due to the participatory nature of Web 2.0, polite communication on social media and news sites can stand side by side with uncivil comments. Research on online incivility has been conducted with users reading in their mother tongues (L1), while the potential effects of incivility in a second language (L2) have been largely under- explored. This paper analyzes the effects of uncivil comments written in an L2 on attitudes around emerging technologies. Accordingly, study 1 replicates and extends a previous experiment on the effects of incivility to online news on risk perceptions of nanotechnology (Anderson et al., 2014), by adding an ‘L2 condition’ (uncivil comments written in an L2). Then, …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguagePolitenessEmerging technologiesmedia_common.quotation_subjectsocial media05 social sciencesMedia studiesonline deliberationCitizen journalismscience communication050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsIncivilityincivilityCivilityemotional languagePerceptionReading (process)second language reading0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSocial mediaPsychologymedia_common
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The Dignity in Free Speech: Civility Norms in Post-Terror Societies

2016

ABSTRACTIt is difficult to strike a balance between protecting freedom of speech and ensuring public safety. The attacks on 22 July 2011 in Norway, and the fear of terrorist acts inspired by public utterances on the Internet, have caused many to question whether and how we should regulate hate speech. In this article, we analyse the main arguments from the debate on freedom of speech in post-terror Norway, termed the ‘liberal’ and ‘harm’ (or ‘balance of harms’) arguments respectively. We propose a set of civility norms that may serve to uphold the wide freedom of speech advocated by the liberal argument, while being attentive to the real ethical challenges emphasised by the harm argument.

Balance (metaphysics)Sociology and Political Sciencebusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesDignityHarmCivilityArgumentLaw0502 economics and businessPolitical Science and International RelationsTerrorismThe InternetSociology050207 economicsbusinessSet (psychology)Law050203 business & managementmedia_commonNordic Journal of Human Rights
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Owning (and reading?) politeness books in the eighteenth century: an analysis through private libraries

2020

Este artículo explora la presencia en bibliotecas privadas españolas —y algunas americanas— del siglo XVIII de la literatura de urbanidad, considerada en un sentido amplio que incluye no solo manuales de civilidad propiamente dichos, sino también ensayos, periódicos, obras de educación, filosofía moral, medicina, ficción o viajes, en las que la reflexión sobre las costumbres y las pautas de vida civilizadas constituyó un eje importante. Aunque poseer libros no equivale a leerlos, el análisis de una veintena de inventarios y catálogos, complementados en ciertos casos con notas y recomendaciones de lectura, proporciona ciertos indicios sobre el lugar que la civilidad ocupó en las preocupacion…

CivilityPolitenessBibliotecasReadingEnlightenmentLibrariesGenderGéneroIlustraciónUrbanidadLecturaCivilidad
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The dynamics of online news discussions: effects of news articles and reader comments on users’ involvement, willingness to participate, and the civi…

2017

ABSTRACTThis study investigates when and why news website visitors write civil or uncivil comments in response to news articles or related user comments. In an experiment, we manipulated the news value of news articles and the presence of ‘deliberative’ or ‘detrimental’ elements of comments to compare their impact on participants’ involvement, willingness to comment, and the comments they posted. News factors and comment characteristics increased participants’ willingness to comment via cognitive and affective involvement. Cognitive involvement made it less likely and affective involvement more likely that participants wrote uncivil comments. Additionally, involvement with previous comments…

Communication05 social sciences050801 communication & media studiesCognitionLibrary and Information Sciences0506 political scienceWorld Wide Web0508 media and communicationsInteractivityCivilityDynamics (music)050602 political science & public administrationNews valuesPsychologySocial psychologyValue (mathematics)Information, Communication & Society
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The Concept of Civility and Law

2017

From Hobbes on, the concept of law-making was strongly associated with the needs of creating a third-object (dialectics) that can control force and violence. The same concept of law and violence, which is historically associated with the Occident, paved the way for the creation of borders. By studying the legacy of Foucault and R. Castel and the contribution of sociological thinking, in this chapter we will dissect the roots of national identity and the evolution of security. While industrialism emancipated medieval peasants from their attachment to the soil, a great process of urbanization produced slums and ghettos in. Against this back drop, a new concept of civility erected a barrier be…

DialecticCivilityLawUrbanizationNational identityControl forceSociologyIndustrial Revolution
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Are byline biases an issue of the past? The effect of author’s gender and emotion norm prescriptions on the evaluation of news articles on gender equ…

2021

When female journalists write about issues of gender equality, they often become the target of incivility and their work is devaluated. Research has investigated such devaluations based on journalists’ gender under the scope of byline biases, analysing if it matters to readers whether a news piece is authored by a male or female journalist. In this paper, we set out to study if gender byline biases occur when journalists write about gender equality. As gender attributions become particularly salient through the presentation of gendered emotion norms, we also inquire in how it matters for readers’ interest in reading such an article and the attributed credibility of the author when an artic…

Gender equalityCommunicationNorm (group)05 social sciences050109 social psychologyIncivilityArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Work (electrical)050903 gender studies0501 psychology and cognitive sciences0509 other social sciencesMedical prescriptionPsychologySocial psychologyJournalism
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Automatically Detecting Incivility in Online Discussions of News Media

2018

Detecting biased language in written discourse is a highly relevant area of research in political communication and other social sciences, given the large quantity of information exchanged in public online platforms. In this abstract, we discuss an approach based on the concept of "incivility"-assessing biased text on the Facebook pages of established news media. News outlets are forced to put increasing efforts into preventing heated debates from turning into disrespectful discussions on their social media platforms. By scaling the analysis from a few thousand manually coded samples to more than a million comments, we take a step towards supporting media outlets in (semi-)automatizing the …

Incivility0508 media and communicationsComputer science05 social sciences0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringMedia studies050801 communication & media studies020201 artificial intelligence & image processingSocial mediaPolitical communication02 engineering and technologyComputational linguisticsNews media2018 IEEE 14th International Conference on e-Science (e-Science)
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Coping with Audience Hostility. How Journalists’ Experiences of Audience Hostility Influence Their Editorial Decisions

2019

In digitalized media societies, many journalists encounter audience hostility in publicly visible channels. Scholars theorized on the spiral process of the influence of audience feedback on journal...

IncivilityCoping (psychology)0508 media and communicationsCommunication05 social sciences050602 political science & public administrationmedicine050801 communication & media studiesHostilitymedicine.symptomPsychologySocial psychology0506 political scienceJournalism Studies
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On-line polylogues and impoliteness: The case of postings sent in response to the Obama Reggaeton YouTube video

2011

Abstract The overall aim of this paper is to investigate impoliteness in a particular on-line polylogal setting – YouTube postings (c. 13,000 words) triggered by the ‘Obama Reggaeton’ video, which was released during the 2008 US democratic primaries. This is done through integration of quantitative/qualitative analytic tools and of (im)politeness1 and (im)politeness 2 approaches. A two-prong experimental study is used in order to examine impoliteness realisation and interpretation in the corpus. Findings reveal clear patterns in the realisation of impoliteness strategies, including a preference for on-record impoliteness saliently oriented towards attacking the positive face needs of one's …

Linguistics and LanguageCommunicationbusiness.industryPolitenessInterpretation (philosophy)media_common.quotation_subjectRealisationFace (sociological concept)Language and LinguisticsLinguisticsPreferenceCivilityArtificial IntelligencePublic discoursebusinessPsychologymedia_commonJournal of Pragmatics
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Linking News Value Theory With Online Deliberation: How News Factors and Illustration Factors in News Articles Affect the Deliberative Quality of Use…

2018

Previous research suggests that distinct characteristics of news articles, such as their news factors, account for the different participation rates in comment sections as well as the degree of interactivity among the discussants. In this study, this assumption is tested in the Facebook environment and extended to the analysis of how news factors (i.e., event characteristics) and illustration factors (i.e., characteristics resulting from a specific journalistic editing) of news articles predict the inclusiveness of discussions, as well as the occurrence of civility, rationality, and deliberative interactivity in user comments. A content analysis of 619 news articles and 11,218 related user…

Linguistics and LanguageCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050801 communication & media studies050109 social psychologyDeliberationAffect (psychology)Language and LinguisticsIncivility0508 media and communicationsNews valuesOnline deliberation0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesJournalismQuality (business)InformationSystems_MISCELLANEOUSPsychologySocial psychologymedia_commonCommunication Research
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