Search results for "communications"

showing 10 items of 3827 documents

XPL the Extensible Presentation Language

2009

The last decade has witnessed a growing interest in the development of web interfaces enabling both multiple ways to access contents and, at the same time, fruition by multiple modalities of interaction (point-and-click, contents reading, voice commands, gestures, etc.). In this paper we describe a framework aimed at streamlining the design process of multi-channel, multimodal interfaces enabling full reuse of software components. This framework is called the eXtensible Presentation architecture and Language (XPL), a presentation language based on design pattern paradigm that keeps separated the presentation layer from the underlying programming logic. The language supplies a methodology to…

Communication designMultimediaComputer Networks and CommunicationsInterface (Java)Computer scienceDesign patternmedia_common.quotation_subjectTK5101-6720computer.software_genreComputer Science ApplicationsPresentationPresentation layerHuman–computer interactionSoftware design patternComponent-based software engineeringTelecommunicationDesign patterns verbal interaction presentation languages data access multimodal interfaces for mobile systemscomputerLogic programmingmedia_commonMobile Information Systems
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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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Research Note: Reciprocal Effects of Negative Press Reports

2007

A B S T R A C T ■ The influence of negative press reports on their subjects was determined by means of a questionnaire answered by 91 persons who had complained about such reports to the Deutsche Presserat (German Press Council). The findings show that negative press reports have long-lasting emotional and social consequences, as perceived by the subjects. Plausible interactions exist between these consequences. There is a theoretical basis for attributing both types of consequences to certain characteristics of the reports. ■

Communication05 social sciences050801 communication & media studiesLanguage and Linguisticslanguage.human_language0506 political scienceGerman0508 media and communications050602 political science & public administrationlanguageSocial consequenceSociologySocial psychologyReciprocalEuropean Journal of Communication
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A Test of the Relationship Between Argumentativeness and Individualism/Collectivism in the United States and Finland

2016

This study explored relationships between argumentativeness and collectivism/individualism in Finland and the United States. Data were gathered in the United States (n = 412) and Finland (n = 261). The analysis suggested: (a) collectivism was negatively correlated with argumentativeness, (b) individualism was positively correlated with argumentativeness, and (c) Finnish participants reported lower levels of argumentativeness than Americans. Cultural differences between the United States and Finland are discussed as reasons for the differences between the nations on argumentativeness.

Communication05 social sciencesCollectivismCross-cultural communication050801 communication & media studies050109 social psychologyTest (assessment)Individualism0508 media and communicationsIndividualism collectivismCultural diversity0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesHofstede's cultural dimensions theoryPsychologySocial psychologyCommunication Research Reports
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Campaigning in the fourth age of political communication. A multi-method study on the use of Facebook by German and Austrian parties in the 2013 nati…

2016

Starting from the contribution to the discussion on a fourth age of political communication, here we argue that, as a consequence of how the Web 2.0 has changed political campaigns, the theoretical...

Communication05 social sciencesMedia studies050801 communication & media studiesPolitical communicationLibrary and Information Scienceslanguage.human_language0506 political scienceGermanFourth AgePolitics0508 media and communicationsContent analysisComparative researchNational electionPolitical science050602 political science & public administrationlanguageMulti methodInformation, Communication & Society
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Counterbalancing global media frames with nationally colored narratives: A comparative study of news narratives and news framing in the climate chang…

2018

This study disentangles national and transnational influences on international journalism by distinguishing convergent issue framing from nationally specific narrative in news texts. In a comparative quantitative content analysis of the newspaper coverage in five democratic countries (Brazil, Germany, India, South Africa, and United States) during four United Nations climate change conferences from 2010 to 2013, both textual-visual framing and narrative features were studied simultaneously for the first time. The narrative dimension consisted of variables that gauge (1) the degree of narrativity in an article, (2) the type of narrative (i.e. stories of catastrophe, conflict, success etc.),…

Communication05 social sciencesMedia studiesClimate change050801 communication & media studies0506 political scienceNarrative inquiry0508 media and communicationsFraming (social sciences)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)ColoredContent analysisComparative research050602 political science & public administrationNarrativeJournalismSociologySocial science
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Day-to-day routines of media platform use in the digital age: A structuration perspective

2020

Using Giddens's structuration theory, this study examines how the routinized use of traditional and new media platforms differently align with the structures of everyday life. We analyzed data from a quantitative diary study in Germany to find that new media platforms specifically affect societal structuration by blurring the lines between obligations and leisure time. The part played by routines in the use of new media platforms was less strongly connected to clock time compared to traditional media platforms. Consequently, the findings indicate both a vanishing potential for media platform use as a social zeitgeber and the relevance of rules as structuring elements.

Communication05 social sciencesPerspective (graphical)Media studies050801 communication & media studies050109 social psychologyStructuration theoryLanguage and LinguisticsNew media0508 media and communicationsMedia useClock time0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociologyDay to dayEveryday life
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Different World Views

2010

When we study communication systems in other animal species, we are led to the conclusion that extraterrestrial intelligent beings are likely to have systems of communication similar to the human one in at least some aspects. That is to say, communication is accomplished by means of the combination of certain information elements playing a role analogous to words, or that the system is a symbolic language (or even both things simultaneously). But in communication, it is also very important how information is transmitted (pictorially, by means of ideograms, letters, etc.), which is going to be strongly determined by the species’specific perception of the world.

CommunicationComputer sciencebusiness.industryPerceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSymbolic languageInformation elementIdeogramCommunications systemAnimal speciesbusinessInferotemporal cortexmedia_common
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How Journalists Think about Media Effects—And Why We Should Care

2019

Research suggests that journalists’ beliefs about media effects are influenced by unsystematically gathered knowledge and subjective-intuitive judgments. However, it has also been shown that these presumptions must be considered important factors for the formation of journalistic coverage. Against this background, this article synthesizes existing research on dimensions, determinants, and consequences of journalists’ presumptions of media effects. The resulting framework offers researchers in the field of journalistic content production a comprehensive overview of the possible role that presumptions of media effects could play for journalistic content creation. In a second step, we summariz…

CommunicationField (Bourdieu)05 social sciencesMedia studiesbepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Communication050801 communication & media studiesContent creation0506 political science0508 media and communicationsbepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Communication|Journalism Studiesbepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences050602 political science & public administrationJournalismSocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|CommunicationSocArXiv|Social and Behavioral SciencesSociologyContent productionSocArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Communication|Journalism StudiesAtlantic Journal of Communication
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Looking over the channel: The balance of media coverage about the “refugee crisis” in Germany and the UK

2022

Abstract This study compares the balance of newspaper and television news coverage about migration in two countries that were differently affected by the so-called “refugee crisis” in 2015 in terms of the geopolitical involvement and numbers of migrants being admitted. Based on a broad consensus among political elites, Germany left its borders open and received about one million migrants mainly from Syria during 2015. In contrast, the conservative British government was heavily attacked by oppositional parties for closing Britain’s borders and, thus, restricting immigration. These different initial situations led to remarkable differences between the news coverage in both countries. In line…

CommunicationRefugee05 social sciencesRefugee crisis050801 communication & media studiesMedia coverageInternational economics0506 political science0508 media and communicationsBalance (accounting)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Political science050602 political science & public administrationChannel (broadcasting)Communications
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