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Elliott, William R.; Slater, Dan – Journalism Quarterly, 1980
Concludes that television viewing and adolescent audiences' perceptions of program reality are strongly related. (FL)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Mass Media, Perception, Television Research
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Hollenbeck, Albert R.; Slaby, Ronald G. – Child Development, 1979
Assesses television influences on infants six months of age at home. Sound only, picture only, sound plus picture, or a control stimulus of unpatterned sound plus picture conditions were designed. Findings demonstrate that infants attend to the naturalistic presentation of television stimulation and respond differentially to its visual and…
Descriptors: Attention, Infants, Speech Communication, Television Research
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Meyer, Timothy P. – Journal of Broadcasting, 1976
A study of the impact of "All in the Family" on children concentrates on why they watch, how well they understand the plot, most and least admired characters, and information conveyed about standards of adult and family behavior. (LS)
Descriptors: Children, Commercial Television, Social Influences, Socialization
Ksobiech, Kenneth – AV Communication Review, 1976
In this experiment, students were told they were expected to 1) enjoy, 2) evaluate, or 3) take a test on the subject of a presentation. The program was presented either in audio or video; students could obtain the other mode by pressing a button. Presentation format also varied. (Author/BD)
Descriptors: Educational Television, Learning Modalities, Lecture Method, Television Research
Quisenberry, Nancy L.; Klasek, Charles B. – Audiovisual Instruction, 1977
A critique of an article which identified characteristics of children who watch television. (BD)
Descriptors: Attention Span, Childhood Attitudes, Children, Television Research
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Nass, Clifford; And Others – Journal of Communication, 1996
Examines whether role assignments to television sets (assignments of particular content to particular screens) influence what viewers think about what they watch. Finds that designating TV sets for specialized functions or uses results in more positive evaluations of the content, even when the TV sets and programming are identical. (SR)
Descriptors: Audience Response, Communication Research, Television Research, Television Viewing
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Greenberg, Bradley S.; Busselle, Rick W. – Journal of Communication, 1996
Finds that soap operas analyzed in 1994 contain more frequent sexual incidence on an hourly average, both within the same soaps analyzed a decade earlier and even more so on two additional very popular soaps. Shows that the more frequent sex centers on physical intercourse, primarily among partners not married to anyone; and sexual activity is…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Sexuality, Soap Operas, Television
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Shanahan, James; McComas, Katherine – Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 1997
Finds that nature as a theme is completely absent in 80% and the outstanding theme in only 1.7% of television programming; not only less frequent, but separate from the dominant themes in prime-time; and treated as a sociopolitical "issue" (like "politics,""science,""religion," and "education").…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Environment, Programming (Broadcast), Television
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Kerkman, Dennis D.; And Others – Journalism Quarterly, 1990
Tests recent Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ruling that marketplace forces will provide sufficient high quality broadcast programing. Finds that in the period 1981 to 1983, the amount of children's programing actually declined on commercial television stations and increased slightly on public broadcasting stations. Notes that cable…
Descriptors: Cable Television, Childrens Television, Programing (Broadcast), Television Research
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Gagnard, Alice; Morris, Jim R. – Journalism Quarterly, 1988
Presents a systematic content analysis of more than 150 commercial characteristics of CLIO winners from the years 1975, 1980, and 1985. Finds that CLIO winners have different characteristics than do commercials proven to be effective in the marketplace. (RS)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Professional Recognition, Television Commercials, Television Research
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Lacy, Stephen; And Others – Journalism Quarterly, 1988
Assesses the state of satellite news gathering (SNG) among commercial broadcast, nonsatellite stations in the United States. Finds that 75 percent of the stations set SNG feeds but that only 50 percent have their own SNG equipment. (RS)
Descriptors: Commercial Television, Communications Satellites, News Media, Television Research
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Cleland, Gladys L.; Ostroff, David H. – Journalism Quarterly, 1988
Explores satellite news gathering (SNG) in the local television news room. Finds that SNG makes new demands on reporters and may result in less local news. (RS)
Descriptors: Communications Satellites, News Media, News Reporting, Television Research
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Erfle, Stephen; McMillan, Henry – Journalism Quarterly, 1989
Examines which firms and products best predict media coverage of the oil industry. Reports that price variations in testing oil and gasoline correlate with the extent of news coverage provided by network television. (MM)
Descriptors: Commercial Television, News Media, Petroleum Industry, Television Research
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Paik, Haejung; Marzban, Caren – Human Communication Research, 1995
States that in an attempt to better understand the attributes of the "average" viewer, an analysis of data characterizing television nonviewers and extreme viewers was performed. Identifies a set of demographic variables as the strongest predictor of nonviewers and the combination of family-related and lifestyle/social activity-related…
Descriptors: Demography, Models, Predictor Variables, Television Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Loshitzky, Yosefa – Journal of Communication, 1995
Examines images of World War II invoked in two live, international music concerts (one rock, one classical) celebrating the fall of the Berlin Wall. Argues that Western television's choice of imagery represented the Wall's demise as a marker of the end of the Cold War rather than a vanishing monument of Germany's conflicted struggle with Holocaust…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Imagery, Modern History, Television
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