scholarly journals Text Channels to Identify and Forestall Hostile Hindi Substances via Online Media

YMER Digital ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 643-655
Author(s):  
Mr. Pradeep N Fale ◽  
◽  
Dr. Krishan Kumar Goyal ◽  

Individual to individual correspondence objections are very renowned these days. With over 70% of the general population using relational connection objections satisfactorily in India, Hindi correspondence is the most notable. More than 80% of Indians use Hindi as a technique for correspondence. Websites like Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, Instagram and WhatsApp have been utilized by people and particularly by teens today. Through individuals-to-individuals like Twitter, Facebook, and so on, the sound of content is shared. Finally, these structures ended up being more many-sided in addressing the necessities of customers to look at their step by step undertakings, feelings and evaluations by posting clear (information) with their associates. Reliably, huge data is shared at different levels of online media. In this article, we will present and discuss thoroughly the execution of message channels for the Hindi language to recognize and prevent harsh substances in relational associations.

Author(s):  
María-Luisa Sánchez-Calero

The evolution of participatory interview formats that appeared from 2015 to 2020 in the leading digital newspapers in Spain (El país, El mundo, ABC, AS, El diario.es, and El confidencial), as well as Facebook live because it is a new channel for content distribution via social networks, is analyzed. The content of a sample of more than 300 digital interviews was analyzed, considering the narrative scheme between the interviewee and interviewer, the style that the new format acquires on the Internet, the level of audience participation, and the interconnection of the interviewee with the audience/reader. The levels of interaction and reaction of the audiences were analyzed, as well as the possibility of a new type of journalistic storytelling with different levels of interaction that seeks to achieve audience participation, allowing them to feel part of the dialogue, and to expand other possibilities for participation with the interview. This new format encourages online media to evolve towards more dialogic spaces with their audiences using textual, graphic, or auditory language to build a narrative story that fuels curiosity and arouses interest in participation by the audience/reader. Resumen Se analiza la evolución de los formatos de entrevistas participativas aparecidos desde 2015 a 2020 en las cabeceras digitales de referencia en España (El país, El mundo, ABC, AS, El diario.es, El confidencial), y en Facebook live como canal novedoso de distribución de contenidos en redes sociales. Se analizó el contenido de una muestra de más de 300 entrevistas digitales considerando: esquema narrativo entre entrevistado-entrevistador, estilo del nuevo formato en la Red, nivel de participación de sus audiencias, y la interconexión del entrevistado con su público. Se analizaron los niveles de interacción y reacción de las audiencias, y si existe un nuevo storytelling periodístico con diferentes niveles de interacción que busca hacer partícipe a sus audiencias, permitiendo que se sientan parte del diálogo, y que amplíen otras posibilidades de participación en el escenario de la entrevista. El nuevo marco propicia que los cibermedios evolucionen hacia espacios más dialógicos con sus audiencias utilizando un lenguaje textual, gráfico o auditivo que construyan un relato narrativo, que alimente la curiosidad y suscite el interés de participación de su público/lector.


1991 ◽  
Vol 94 ◽  
pp. 95 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Viegi ◽  
P. Paoletti ◽  
L. Carrozzi ◽  
M. Vellutini ◽  
E. Diviggiano ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 3424
Author(s):  
Emil J. Khatib ◽  
María Jesús Perles Roselló ◽  
Jesús Miranda-Páez ◽  
Victoriano Giralt ◽  
Raquel Barco

The year 2020 was marked by the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic. After months of uncontrolled spread worldwide, a clear conclusion is that controlling the mobility of the general population can slow down the propagation of the pandemic. Tracking the location of the population enables better use of mobility limitation policies and the prediction of potential hotspots, as well as improved alert services to individuals that may have been exposed to the virus. With mobility in their core functionality and a high degree of penetration of mobile devices within the general population, cellular networks are an invaluable asset for this purpose. This paper shows an overview of the possibilities offered by cellular networks for the massive tacking of the population at different levels. The major privacy concerns are also reviewed and a specific use case is shown, correlating mobility and number of cases in the province of Málaga (Spain).


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 1043-1058
Author(s):  
Wenping Zhang ◽  
Wei Du ◽  
Yiyang Bian ◽  
Chih-Hung Peng ◽  
Qiqi Jiang

PurposeThe purpose of this study is to unpack the antecedents and consequences of clickbait prevalence in online media at two different levels, namely, (1) Headline-level: what characteristics of clickbait headlines attract user clicks and (2) Publisher-level: what happens to publishers who create clickbait on a prolonged basis.Design/methodology/approachTo test the proposed conjectures, the authors collected longitudinal data in collaboration with a leading company that operates more than 500 WeChat official accounts in China. This study proposed a text mining framework to extract and quantify clickbait rhetorical features (i.e. hyperbole, insinuation, puzzle, and visual rhetoric). Econometric analysis was employed for empirical validation.FindingsThe findings revealed that (1) hyperbole, insinuation, and visual rhetoric entice users to click the baited headlines, (2) there is an inverted U-shaped relationship between the number of clickbait headlines posted by a publisher and its visit traffic, and (3) this non-linear relationship is moderated by the publisher's age.Research limitations/implicationsThis research contributes to current literature on clickbait detection and clickbait consequences. Future studies can design more sophisticated methods for extracting rhetorical characteristics and implement in different languages.Practical implicationsThe findings could aid online media publishers to design attractive headlines and develop clickbait strategies to avoid user churn, and help managers enact appropriate regulations and policies to control clickbait prevalence.Originality/valueThe authors propose a novel text mining framework to quantify rhetoric embedded in clickbait. This study empirically investigates antecedents and consequences of clickbait prevalence through an exploratory study of WeChat in China.


Journalism ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 718-739 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louisa Ha ◽  
Ying Xu ◽  
Chen Yang ◽  
Fang Wang ◽  
Liu Yang ◽  
...  

Based on a 4-year longitudinal analysis of social media and mobile phone users in a Midwest US market, this study differentiates news content engagement from news medium engagement, proposes four levels of news engagement, and compares how social media and mobile media differ in their effects on engagement in news content and news medium between the general population and college students. The analysis shows a steady decline in the interest in political news but not in other types of news. Total news consumption time gradually declined among the general population, and the gap between general population and students diminished over time. Social media use positively predicts total news consumption time. Predictors of news engagement differ for different levels of news engagement.


Author(s):  
Maud S. Mandel

This introductory chapter discusses the roots of the conflict between Muslim and Jews in France. It reviews the cultural and historical connections linking these two populations. It describes the vastly different levels of Muslim and Jewish communal development in the metropole that created sharply divergent processes of integration. By the early twenty-first century, Jews proved more economically mobile, better educated, and professionally better placed than the general population and certainly than French Muslims. However, the organized community was often criticized for failing to defend Jewish interests successfully, particularly with regard to foreign policy around Israel. An overview of the subsequent chapters is also presented.


1991 ◽  
Vol 94 ◽  
pp. 95-99
Author(s):  
G Viegi ◽  
P Paoletti ◽  
L Carrozzi ◽  
M Vellutini ◽  
E Diviggiano ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher S.Y. Benwell ◽  
Rachael Beyer ◽  
Francis Wallington ◽  
Robin A. A. Ince

AbstractHuman decision-making and self-reflection often depend on context and internal biases. For instance, decisions are often influenced by preceding choices, regardless of their relevance. It remains unclear how choice history influences different levels of the decision-making hierarchy. We employed analyses grounded in information and detection theories to estimate the relative strength of perceptual and metacognitive history biases, and to investigate whether they emerge from common/unique mechanisms. Though both perception and metacognition tended to be biased towards previous responses, we observed novel dissociations which challenge normative theories of confidence. Different evidence levels often informed perceptual and metacognitive decisions within observers, and response history distinctly influenced 1st (perceptual) and 2nd (metacognitive) order decision-parameters, with the metacognitive bias likely to be strongest and most prevalent in the general population. We propose that recent choices and subjective confidence represent heuristics which inform 1st and 2nd order decisions in the absence of more relevant evidence.


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