Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 14
pro vyhledávání: '"Julia R. Fox"'
Funny You Mention It: A Synthesis of Published Research on Learning from Comedic Versus Serious News
Autor:
Julia R. Fox
Publikováno v:
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 66:674-697
Autor:
Julia R. Fox
Publikováno v:
The International Encyclopedia of Media Psychology. :1-6
Autor:
Julia R. Fox
Publikováno v:
Journal of Communication. 71:E29-E31
Autor:
Julia R. Fox, Edo Steinberg
Publikováno v:
Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly. 97:235-256
Against the backdrop of continued declining public trust in media, particularly network television news, along with rising ratings and recognition for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, this research examined Stewart’s network television news critiqu
Publikováno v:
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 57:318-337
This study examined television news channel changing (AKA grazing, zapping) behavior by focusing on the viewing duration and attention paid to stories that varied in sensational content and packaging. These two message-related factors had independent
Publikováno v:
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 52:182-199
Two experiments explored differences in television viewers' responses to viewer-controlled and producer-controlled content changes. Viewers in both studies could change channels among 4 different newscasts. Orienting, sympathetic activation, cognitiv
Publikováno v:
Communication Research. 34:618-636
This study found that increasing the pacing of antisubstance radio Public Service Announcements (PSAs) increased perceived effects on self and diminished perceived differences between effects on self and on others. This was more evident for messages
Publikováno v:
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 51:213-227
This study examined substantive political coverage of the first presidential debate and the political conventions in 2004 on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and the broadcast television networks' nightly newscasts. The study found the networks' cover
Publikováno v:
Communication Research. 34:277-296
This study uses signal detection measures and secondary task reaction times (STRTs) to examine the effects of structural complexity and information density on processing television messages. Of particular interest are results pertaining to cognitive
Autor:
Julia R. Fox, Byungho Park
Publikováno v:
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 50:36-51
This study compares the use of personal pronouns in embedded and nonembedded reports during CNN coverage of the "Shock and Awe" campaign and investigates the context in which personal pronouns were used by embedded reporters. As predicted, there was