Changing news: re-adjusting science studies to online newspapers

2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 771-777 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hauke Riesch

With the newspapers’ recent move to online reporting, traditional norms and practices of news reporting have changed to accommodate the new realities of online news writing. In particular, online news is much more fluid and prone to change in content than the traditional hard-copy newspapers – online newspaper articles often change over the course of the following days or even weeks as they respond to criticisms and new information becoming available. This poses a problem for social scientists who analyse newspaper coverage of science, health and risk topics, because it is no longer clear who has read and written what version, and what impact they potentially had on the national debates on these topics. In this note I want to briefly flag up this problem through two recent examples of UK national science stories and discuss the potential implications for PUS media research.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khanh Quoc Tran ◽  
Phap Ngoc Trinh ◽  
Khoa Nguyen-Anh Tran ◽  
An Tran-Hoai Le ◽  
Luan Van Ha ◽  
...  

In this paper, we build a new dataset UIT-ViON (Vietnamese Online Newspaper) collected from well-known online newspapers in Vietnamese. We collect, process, and create the dataset, then experiment with different machine learning models. In particular, we propose an open-domain, large-scale, and high-quality dataset consisting of 260,000 textual data points annotated with multiple labels for evaluating Vietnamese short text classification. In addition, we present the proposed approach using transformer-based learning (PhoBERT) for Vietnamese short text classification on the dataset, which outperforms traditional machine learning (Naive Bayes and Logistic Regression) and deep learning (Text-CNN and LSTM). As a result, the proposed approach achieves the F1-score of 80.62%. This is a positive result and a premise for developing an automatic news classification system. The study is proposed to significantly save time, costs, and human resources and make it easier for readers to find news related to their interesting topics. In future, we will propose solutions to improve the quality of the dataset and improve the performance of classification models.


Author(s):  
Rizal Tjut Adek ◽  
Rozzy Kesuma Dinata ◽  
Ananda Ditha

The rapid progress in the field of information technology, especially the internet, has given birth to a lot of information. The ease of publishing an article on a website causes an explosion of news pages which will certainly confuse readers. The diversity and the increasing number of news articles make it increasingly difficult for internet users to find news and large piles of news data on online newspaper sites in Aceh. The grouping of text documents is needed to classify news in online newspapers in Aceh based on the content contained in news articles. In this study, the process of grouping online news in Aceh was tried using the Agglomerative Hierarchical Clustering method. News is grouped with a Bottom-Up design strategy that starts with placing each object as a cluster then combined into a larger cluster based on the similarity of keywords in each news, then the cluster results are compared and put into each news category. The research design was carried out in a structured manner using data flow diagrams in forming the research framework. The study was conducted by taking online news text data on 10 online news websites in Aceh from July 2016 to March 2017 with 1000 randomly generated documents. The process of crawling news data is done using a php script which will only take text files from the news on the website. News grouping is done based on religion, politics, law, sports, tourism, education, culture, economy and technology. The results of the grouping performance of the Agglomerative Hierarchical Clustering method in this study have an average accuracy of 89.84%.


10.28945/4118 ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 337-359 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tapushe Rabaya Toma ◽  
Imran Mahmud ◽  
Mohamed Emran Hossain ◽  
Nusrat Jahan ◽  
T. Ramayah ◽  
...  

Aim/Purpose: In this research, we examined the influence of the information system (IS) quality dimensions proposed by Wixom and Todd on reading satisfaction of online newspaper readers in Bangladesh, especially the readers’ intention to revisit and recommendations through electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM). Background: We identified the top 50 most visited websites, of which 13 were online newspapers, although their ranking among Bangladesh online newspapers varies from month to month. The literature illustrates that, despite the wide availability of online news portals and the fluctuations in frequency of visits, little is known about the factors that affect the satisfaction, word-of-mouth, and frequency of visits of readers. An understanding of reader satisfaction will help to gain richer insights into the phenomenon of readers’ intention to revisit and recommendation by eWOM. Stakeholders of online newspapers can then focus on those factors to increase visits to their websites, which will help them attract online advertisements from different organisations. Methodology: Data were collected using a structured questionnaire, from 217 people who responded to the survey. We used SmartPLS 3 to analyze the data collected, as it is based on second-generation analysis, which in turn is based on structural equation modeling (SEM). Contribution: This research explores the impacts of technological dimensions on readers’ satisfaction, as most of the previous research has focused on cultural or social dimensions. Findings: The results supported all of the hypothesized relationships between technological dimensions and reader satisfaction with online newspapers, except for one. The first, information, was predicted with accuracy and completeness, while the second object-based belief, system quality, was predicted by its accessibility, flexibility, reliability, and timeliness. Overall, quality factors influencing readers’ satisfaction were shown to lead to word-of-mouth revisit intentions. Our proposed model was empirically tested and has contributed to a nascent body of knowledge about readers’ revisit intentions and eWOM recommendations regarding online newspapers. It was also shown that strong satisfaction leads to higher revisit intention and eWOM. Recommendations for Practitioners: To keep the users satisfied, online newspapers need to focus on improving information quality (IQ) and system quality (SQ). If they do this well, they will be rewarded with higher revisit intention and recommendations by eWOM. Recommendation for Researchers: This study extends Oh’s customer loyalty model by integrating the Wixom-Todd model. This study reinforces an alternative rationale of the construct satisfaction. Future Research: We ignored negative stimulus like technostress, which can have an impact on satisfaction. In future, we will test the relationship between technostress and its impact on online newspaper reading.


Author(s):  
Siti Aeisha Joharry ◽  
Nor Diyana Saupi

The International Convention for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (ICERD), which was not ratified in Malaysia, created a heated public discourse in the media. This cross-linguistic comparative study investigates the representation of ICERD in Malaysian news reports of two online sources in Malaysia – the widely read English portal: The Star Online, and its Malay equivalent: Berita Harian. A corpus-assisted discourse analysis was conducted to examine how news on ‘ICERD’ were reported in both English and Malay online newspapers. Initial comparative analysis of both newspapers revealed that the search term co-occurs statistically more frequently with the verb ‘ratify’ and its equivalent: ‘meratifikasi’. Patterns indicate that ‘ICERD’ was mostly referring to the act of sanctioning the agreement –particularly to ‘not ratify’ or ‘tidak akan meratifikasi’, which is concurrent with the timeframe of events. Interestingly, different patterns can be found in Berita Harian (e.g. the expression of ‘thanks’ or gratitude of not ratifying ICERD) that are not as revealing in The Star Online reports. Some inconsistencies were also reported between the two newspapers, e.g. referring to different ministers’ speech about the initial plan to ratify ICERD alongside five (The Star Online) or six (Berita Harian) other treaties in the following year.  


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
Rahmawati Aprilanita

The present study aims at observing and presenting the types of language features used by Indonesian adultscommenting on an online news using English as their foreign language to know whether Indonesians tend to be bluntor mitigate in expressing their feeling on the results of central Jakarta governor election. The comments uttered weretheir reaction and expression on the result of Central Jakarta Governor Election. The data observed was taken fromall comments on a headline of online newspaper. The comments were from 74 people. The findings are generatedbased on quantitative calculation on the major verb used to express the feelings.


2018 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veera Kangaspunta

The aim of this article is to approach one specific environmental topic and the public debate around this topic from a user-oriented perspective – through online news comments. The article analyses online news and comments sections from three Finnish online newspapers concerning the mining accident of Talvivaara company in November 2012. Discourse and discursive legitimation strategies are used as analytical tools with the focus of critical discourse analysis. The study aims to solve what kind of discourses the public debate contains and how these discourses are connected to certain legitimation strategies. In addition, the article also continues the conceptual deliberation about the concept of the public as a group of people participating in public discussion. The study shows that Talvivaara news and news comments consist four main strategies, authorization, rationalization, moral evaluations and mythopoiesis, used for legitimation, relegitimation and delegitimation. However, the parties differ in the way they utilize these strategies and different discourses. Consequently, online news commenting appears as a unique part of the public debate about the topic, rather than remaining marginal flaming. The users tend to absorb the role of the public as a part of the public showdown about the shared issue.


1991 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 503-531 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Blommaert ◽  
Jef Verschueren

ABSTRACTNewspaper reports, political policy papers, and investigations by social scientists concerning issues related to the presence of a community of migrant workers in Belgium are subjected to a systematic, pragmatic analysis. The analysis reveals an eminently coherent world of beliefs and attitudes with respect to (1) perceptions of the “other,” (2) the self-perception of majority members, (3) formulations of “the problem,” and (4) proposed solutions. This world of beliefs and attitudes is shown to be centered around stable – even if vague – notions of culture, nation and state, democracy and human rights, and around related recipes for “integration” that reveal a collective psyche profoundly troubled by the very idea of diversity in society (linguistic or otherwise). Homogeneity appears to be a strict norm for average members of Belgian society, irrespective of the specific political positions they take. (Minority politics, language and ideology, pragmatics, political rhetoric, news reporting, ethnicity)


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sagit Bar-Gill ◽  
Yael Inbar ◽  
Shachar Reichman

The digitization of news markets has created a key role for online referring channels. This research combines field and laboratory experiments and analysis of large-scale clickstream data to study the effects of social versus nonsocial referral sources on news consumption in a referred news website visit. We theorize that referrer-specific browsing modes and referrer-induced news consumption thresholds interact to impact news consumption in referred visits to an online newspaper and that news sharing motivations invoked by the referral source impact sharing behavior in these referred visits. We find that social media referrals promote directed news consumption—visits with fewer articles, shorter durations, yet higher reading completion rates—compared with nonsocial referrals. Furthermore, social referrals invoke weaker informational sharing motivations relative to nonsocial referrals, thus leading to a lower news sharing propensity relative to nonsocial referrals. The results highlight how news consumption changes when an increasing amount of traffic is referred by social media, provide insights applicable to news outlets’ strategies, and speak to ongoing debates regarding biases arising from social media’s growing importance as an avenue for news consumption. This paper was accepted by Anandhi Bharadwaj, information systems.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 43-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonya Zhang ◽  
Samuel Lee ◽  
Karen Hovsepian ◽  
Hannah Morgia ◽  
Kelli Lawrence ◽  
...  

As more print media move to online, news and media websites have evolved with increasing complexity in content, design, and monetization strategies. In this article, the authors examined and reported the web design patterns of 150 leading news and media websites in six different categories: TV news, online newspapers, online magazines, and technology news, sports news, and business news, using 28 analytics metrics in four dimensions: content structure, multimedia, social sharing, and advertising placements.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document