1 / 43

Media effects

Media effects. And research, too. Four main research branches . Propaganda Analysis Marketing Research Public Opinion Research Social Psychology Studies. Propaganda analysis . The purpose of propaganda is to influence its audience.

gaston
Download Presentation

Media effects

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Media effects And research, too

  2. Four main research branches Propaganda Analysis Marketing Research Public Opinion Research Social Psychology Studies

  3. Propaganda analysis • The purpose of propaganda is to influence its audience. • Propaganda often presents half-truths or manipulates messages to produce an emotional rather than a rational response.

  4. Propaganda analysis • Grew out of the desire to measure the effectiveness of World War I propaganda

  5. Marketing research • Studies the flow of goods or services from producers to consumers • Analyzes people’s buying and media habits

  6. Public opinion research • Most common method: • Polling • Can provide insight as to how opinions differ across demographic groups • Gallup Poll - 1935

  7. Social Psychology • Most common method: • Experiment • Payne Fund studies (1929-32) looked at effects of movies on teens and children

  8. Research methods Content Analysis Experiments Polls or Surveys

  9. Content Analysis • systematic, quantitative coding of media content • doesn’t measure effects or reasons • often used in studying media violence, political coverage, demographics of media characters

  10. experiments • Control group and experimental group • One variable is manipulated • Can show cause and effect • Results can’t be generalized

  11. Polls and surveys • Can show correlation • Cannot prove causation • Results can be generalized • Many people: • misinterpret results • don’t know how to tell whether poll is reliable • Pseudo-polls

  12. Theories

  13. Powerful effects theory • Assumption: • Media have an immediate direct influence • Media are very powerful • Inject information, ideas, and propaganda into public consciousness

  14. Hypodermic needle (Magic bullet) model • Every media message has a strong and immediate effect. • Every audience member is affected in the same way. • Describes powerful effects theory

  15. Bullet Model • Discrediting factors: • Individuals read, hear, and see the same things differently • People are exposed to many different media all the time

  16. What about “War of the Worlds”? • Hadley Cantril found many who believed the story had certain traits in common.

  17. Third-person effect model • a person exposed to persuasive communication in the mass media sees it as having a greater effect on others than on himself or herself • Fears about the negative impact are often unwarranted • Blocking negative messages is often unwarranted

  18. Minimalist effects theory • Assumption: • The media affect us in limited ways

  19. Two-step flow model • Media effects can be indirect. • People are affected by media and then affect others who see them as opinion leaders. • Theory was renamed “multistep-flow” when researchers saw that the process could be more complex.

  20. Multi-step flow model • Media affects individuals through complex interpersonal connections • Status Conferral • Media attention enhances attention given to people, subjects, and issues

  21. Agenda-setting model • The media don’t tell us what to think • They tell us what to think about

  22. Agenda-setting theory • The media create awareness of a topic by focusing on it • They tell us how important the topic is by the amount of attention they give it • Media imitate other media, creating a “pack effect”

  23. Narcotizing dysfunction • The media provide such massive amounts of information that we get numb • Tend to withdraw from involvement in public issues • We confuse being informed with being active

  24. Cumulative effects theory • Assumption: • Media have effects over the long-term

  25. Spiral of silence model • People who believe their opinion is in the minority stay silent to avoid isolation • Others who agree are then more likely to believe that they also are in the minority • Media coverage of the majority opinion becomes accepted as fact

  26. Cultivation effect model • Over time, TV subtly shapes viewers’ attitudes and values • People who watch a lot of TV are influenced to a greater degree • They are especially vulnerable in areas where they have little first-hand experience

  27. Examples • Heavy viewers of soap operas overestimated • The number of married people who had affairs • The number of women who had abortion • Heavy TV viewers have overestimated • The number of people who work in law enforcement or in the professions • The percentage of people who commit violent crimes

  28. Uses and gratifications theory • Assumption: • Audience plays an active role and uses media to satisfy needs

  29. What uses are we gratifying? • Surveillance (Information) • Entertainment • Socialization

  30. Surveillance • Information for daily life: • News • Advice • Curiosity

  31. Entertainment • Relaxation • Escape • Cultural/Aesthetic Fulfillment • Time filler • Emotional release

  32. Socialization • Forming Identity • Reinforcement for values • Role models • Insight into self • Social Interaction • Insight into others • Basis for conversation/interaction • Substitute for real social interaction (parasocial)

  33. Stereotyping • Stereotypes act like codes that give audiences a quick, common understanding of a person or group of people—usually relating to their class, ethnicity or race, gender, sexual orientation, social role or occupation • Create impact for media messages

  34. Issues with stereotypes • Stereotypes can: • reduce a wide range of differences in people to simplistic categorizations • transform assumptions about particular groups of people into "realities" • perpetuate social prejudice and inequality

  35. stereotypes • Gender Roles • EXAMPLES?

  36. VIOLENCE

  37. Aggressive stimulation • We learn aggressive responses by watching others, including those in the media • Bobo Doll Studies

  38. Cathartic Effect • Watching violence in media relieves us of the need to act on violent tendencies.

  39. Catalytic Theory • Some media violence can trigger real violence by some people in some circumstances.

  40. Catalytic theory • Is the violence rewarded? • Is media exposure heavy? • Certain demographics – income level, parent-child relationships • Is the violence real and exciting? • Does it right an injustice? • Are situations or characters similar to the viewer’s own experiences?

  41. mean world syndrome • Heavy viewers see the world as ‘meaner’ than it really is and act accordingly • Feel more fearful and vulnerable • Believe violence is normal, an effective solution • Lose ability to empathize and understand consequences of violence

  42. Desensitization • Continued exposure to media violence causes people and society to become more tolerant of violence

More Related