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McLeod, Jack M.; And Others – 1986
A study examined whether public perceptions of media institutions and products are multidimensional and whether the public's image of media matters. Subjects, 512 randomly selected adult residents of Dane County, Wisconsin, were surveyed by telephone. Results revealed that public perceptions of the media are complex, multifaceted, and include more…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Credibility, Mass Media, Mass Media Effects
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McLeod, Jack M.; And Others – Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 1996
Examines predictive patterns of traditional and nontraditional media forms on people's campaign interest and participation, information processing strategies, knowledge of candidates' positions, perceived votes for candidates, and issue salience. Finds nontraditional media had greatest impact on labile characteristics and weakest impact on…
Descriptors: Elections, Mass Media, Mass Media Effects, Media Research
McLeod, Jack M.; And Others – 1978
Personal interviews were conducted with 353 eligible voters in Madison, Wisconsin, in October 1976, and repeated with all but 30 after election day to examine the correlation between voters' age, paper reading (especially public affairs), and television watching (especially public affairs), and the amount of behavioral volatility (voter…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Behavior Change, Information Dissemination, Mass Media
Blumler, Jay G.; McLeod, Jack M. – 1973
The "limited effect" model originated by Lazarsfeld is not sufficient for full analysis of the political influences effected by television advertisements for candidates for political office. Newer political communication research indicates that, in both British and American politics, television political commercials have eroded party…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Mass Media, Media Research, Political Attitudes
McLeod, Jack M.; And Others – 1978
The paper investigates whether the 1976 presidential debates contributed to political participation among all sectors of American society. Evidence was obtained from 353 eligible voters in Madison, Wisconsin, before and after the debates. Effects were evaluated by taking correlations between the level of respondents' exposure to the debates and…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Change Agents, Debate, Democratic Values