The Influence of Chinese TV News Program Choice Factors on the Intention of Re-viewing

2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-59
Author(s):  
YanJun Gao ◽  
HyungGon Kim
Keyword(s):  
Tv News ◽  
Author(s):  
Tarek Zlitni ◽  
Walid Mahdi

Today, with increased internet access, users are often interested in new content-based multimedia applications of high added value such as interactive TV, video on demand (VoD), and catch-up TV services such as YouTube or Dailymotion frameworks. Despite the easy and rapid access to media information of these services, they present the risk of the wide propagation of fake news. As a solution, the authors propose that the input for these services must be from a trustworthy traditional media, precisely TV program content. So, the automatic process of TV program identification and their internal segmentation facilitate the availability of these programs. In this chapter, the major originality of the authors' approach is the use of contextual and operational characteristics of TV production rules as prior knowledge that captures the structure for recurrent TV news program content. The authors validate their approach by experiments conducted using the TRECVID dataset that demonstrate its robustness.


2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHRISTIAN COLLET ◽  
GENTO KATO

AbstractA fundamental component of liberal democracy – citizen knowledge – has only recently been examined in Japan; rarer still are assessments of the impact of media consumption on political awareness. In this paper, we utilize two recent sources – the Japanese Election Studies III (JESIII) and GLOPE2005 – to address two related questions: (1) what factors influence Japanese political knowledge? and (2) is the changing media environment in Japan having an influence on what citizens know about political affairs? With regard to the first question, we find, in line with previous studies in the US context, that knowledge is explained by education, gender, and politically impinged employment as base factors, with interest, efficacy, and civic duty playing a role as second-stage behavioral factors. Evidence of other traits presumed to distinguish the more informed Japanese – dissatisfaction with politics and community mobilization context (living in urban areas, districts with higher voter turnout, and having larger social networks – remains mixed. Regarding the second question, we find that the effects of media exposure on knowledge vary. Where the GLOPE2005 finds an influence of regular newspaper reading, the JESIII indicates that watching a TV news program ‘often’ also boosts knowledge. The JESIII results reveal further that,ceteris paribus, regular exposure to NHK contributes to higher levels of knowledge at a rate that is comparable to a one unit increase in educational attainment. Conversely, we find that softer news programs (e.g., Fuji TV'sSuper News) have a depressive effect that appears to decrease knowledge as exposure accumulates. The direction of the causal arrow is not entirely clear. At the same time, our findings lend credence to previous work that raises concerns about the ‘infotainization’ of Japanese (and US) news programming (e.g., Taniguchi, 2007; Prior, 2005). Rather than demystifying or democratizing Japanese politics, softer programs may simply be perpetuating extant gaps between elites and the public.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. a5en
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Barbosa e Silva

The present work tried to ponder about the communication strategies employed by a local television station, TV Anhanguera, an affiliate of Rede Globo in the state of Goiás, during the Covid-19 Pandemic period, with regard to the professional exercise of the presenters of Bom Dia Goiás, Anhanguera Newspaper 1st edition and Anhanguera Newspaper 2nd edition. From the monitoring of the three TV news programs for a period of two months, an analysis was made of the mediation built with the viewers in view of the policy of rotation of professionals adopted by the broadcaster. It was possible to conclude that there was no highlight to a presenter who represented "the face" of each news program, but the work in home office emphasized the possibility of approaching viewers by highlighting the intimacy of journalists through the exposure of their homes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 199-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teun A van Dijk

The impeachment of Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff in 2016 was the result of a coup of the economically dominant conservative oligarchy against the leftist Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT, the Worker’s Party), in power since 2003. The right wing Brazilian media played a crucial role in this coup by manipulating public opinion as well as the politicians who voted against Dilma. In particular, the media of the powerful Globo Corporation, such as O Globo newspaper, and especially Globo’s Jornal Nacional, the pervasive TV news program, systematically demonized and delegitimized Dilma, as well as ex-President Lula and the PT, in their news reports and editorials by selectively associating them with pervasive corruption and attributing the serious economic recession to them. After a summary of this sociopolitical context, and a brief theoretical definition of manipulation, this article examines some of the manipulative strategies of O Globo’s editorials during March and April 2016.


2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walid Mahdi ◽  
Tarek Zlitni

The different uses of large TV streams have continued to diversify since the appearance of digital TV. For conveniently retrieving and navigating in TV streams, users are often interested in new content-based multimedia applications of high added value such as Interactive TV, Video on Demand (VoD), YouTube or Dailymotion. These applications offer fast and easy access to best explore a particular TV program. So, the automatic process of TV program identification and their internal segmentation facilitate the availability of these programs. Therefore, it is necessary at first, to be able to retrieve a particular program within a large TV stream and secondly segment this program into semantic units related to appropriate retrieval entities. In this paper, the major originality of the authors' approach is the use of contextual and operational characteristics of TV production/post-production rules as prior knowledge that captures the structure for recurrent TV news program content. The authors validate their approach by experiments conducted using the TRECVID dataset that demonstrate its robustness.


Author(s):  
Mounira Hmayda ◽  
Ridha Ejbali ◽  
Mourad Zaied

TV stream is a major source of multimedia data. The proposed method aims to enable a good exploitation of this source of video by multimedia services social community, and video-sharing platforms In this work, we propose an approach to the automatic topics segmentation of news video. The originality of the approach is the use of Clustering of Histogram of Orientation Gradients (HOG) faces as prior knowledge. This knowledge is modeled as images which governs the structuring of TV stream content. This structuring is carried out on two levels. The first consists in the identification of anchorperson by Single-Linkage Clustering of HOG faces. The second level aims to identify the topics of news program due to the large audience because of the pertinent information they contain. Experiments comparing the proposed technique to similar works were carried out on the TREC Video Retrieval Evaluation (TRECVID) 2003 database. The results show significant improvements to TV news structuring exceeding 96 %.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 477-497
Author(s):  
Richard Pfeilstetter

Abstract This contribution investigates the stereotyping of nations in TV news text. It compares the headline appearances of the names Germany and Spain on each other’s leading national evening TV news program during the peak of the European financial crisis (2011–13). The paper combines quantitative analysis of word-frequency and topic-distribution in a 621 headline-corpus, with in-depth case analysis of news values underpinning 32 extracted headline examples. A discussion of literature in media anthropology and Critical Discourse Analysis concludes with the argument that intentions and consequences of media discourse should be separated, whereas differences between ordinary and official language should not be overvalued. The case study shows how the textual display of Germans and Spaniards supports the everyday imagining of national belonging, how othering works through the labelling of nations as “economies”, and how negativity, competition and relatedness are prevailing values underlying the examined news headlines.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. WI2-E_1-9
Author(s):  
Tomosato Nishi ◽  
Yuki Ogawa ◽  
Fumiaki Taka ◽  
Masanori Takano ◽  
Soichiro Morishita ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Tv News ◽  

2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 477-497 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Pfeilstetter

This contribution investigates the stereotyping of nations in TV news text. It compares the headline appearances of the names Germany and Spain on each other’s leading national evening TV news program during the peak of the European financial crisis (2011–13). The paper combines quantitative analysis of word-frequency and topic-distribution in a 621 headline-corpus, with in-depth case analysis of news values underpinning 32 extracted headline examples. A discussion of literature in media anthropology and Critical Discourse Analysis concludes with the argument that intentions and consequences of media discourse should be separated, whereas differences between ordinary and official language should not be overvalued. The case study shows how the textual display of Germans and Spaniards supports the everyday imagining of national belonging, how othering works through the labelling of nations as “economies”, and how negativity, competition and relatedness are prevailing values underlying the examined news headlines.


Author(s):  
Jonathon Keats

On August 24, 2006, the ninth planet in our solar system was plutoed by the International Astronomical Union. The scientists did not phrase their decision in those terms. Indeed almost nobody used pluto as a verb until January 5, 2007, when the American Dialect Society voted it Word of the Year, prompting worldwide headlines. “Pluto is finally getting some respect,” reported the Associated Press, and CNN noted, “Pluto may no longer be a planet, but it has a new claim to fame.” It was a good story for a slow news day, which is to say that the brouhaha over plutoed was a classic case of truthiness. Truthiness was the American Dialect Society’s Word of the Year for 2005, a term made up by the comedian Stephen Colbert on his satirical TV news program, The Colbert Report, to denote something one believes is true based on a desire to believe it even if contradicted by factual information. His primary satirical target was President George W. Bush, but Colbert also meant the word to be a commentary on the media and the American public. While immeasurably less consequential than Bush’s tortuous foreign policy, the anointment of plutoed by the American Dialect Society, and the widespread coverage of the selection, can also be explained as a product of wishful thinking. The word was appealing because it was timely. Yet timeliness alone cannot account for its selection, especially given some of the other timely words with far more legitimate usage, such as waterboarding, also nominated. Whereas waterboarding was a battle-hardened military euphemism, plutoed was mere wordplay, a clever turn of phrase coined for the amusement of language lovers. One of the rare appearances of the term not referencing the American Dialect Society was an article published in the Montreal Gazette on January 10, 2007 (a date that nevertheless almost guarantees Word of the Year influence): “The feeling among some was that the ever-maligned Rona Ambrose, who was moved from being environment minister to minister of intergovernmental affairs, really got plutoed in last week’s federal cabinet shuffle.”


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