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Titus, Andrea R.; Thrasher, James F.; Gamarel, Kristi E.; Emery, Sherry L.; Elliott, Michael R.; Fleischer, Nancy L. – Health Education & Behavior, 2023
Background: The prevalence of smoking is higher among sexual minority (SM) individuals compared with heterosexuals. The impact of televised anti-tobacco mass media campaigns on smoking outcomes among SMs is not known. Aims: We examined whether televised anti-tobacco advertising was differentially associated with current smoking and smoking…
Descriptors: Smoking, Health Behavior, Adults, Mass Media Effects
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Selim Çavus; Mükerrem Yilmaz – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2024
The field of advertising has a structure that shapes consumer preferences and behaviors. The field of advertising undertakes the tasks of reflecting cultural values and norms, reinforcing or changing gender roles, and supporting social responsibility and campaigns. In addition, advertising, whose main purpose is sales, has a structure that shapes…
Descriptors: College Students, Artificial Intelligence, Advertising, Influence of Technology
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Balci, Velittin; Özgen, Caner – Journal of Education and Training Studies, 2017
A very important parts of TV commercials are the messages and how they convinced people. In addition, the information given in commercials may contain messages that seem like a fact however, they may not be true. To understand these commercials it is more beneficial to observe how they say instead of what they say. In many studies (Ferreira, et…
Descriptors: Semiotics, Advertising, Mass Media Effects, Athletics
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Marietta-Brown, Ashley – Communication Teacher, 2011
As one of the foundations of persuasion, fallacies should be included in the teaching of persuasive speaking. It is important that speakers avoid misleading their audience as they have an ethical responsibility to tell the truth and avoid misleading information. If discovered, fallacies in messages can damage the credibility of the speaker and…
Descriptors: Television Commercials, Persuasive Discourse, Communication Skills, College Instruction
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Culp, Jennifer; Bell, Robert A.; Cassady, Diana – Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, 2010
Objective: To assess the content of food industry Web sites targeting children by describing strategies used to prolong their visits and foster brand loyalty; and to document health-promoting messages on these Web sites. Design: A content analysis was conducted of Web sites advertised on 2 children's networks, Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon. A…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Television Commercials, Industry, Cartoons
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Gainer, Jesse S.; Lapp, Diane – English Journal, 2010
Although not a new concept, remix has recently gained popularity in mainstream sources ranging from video games to newspaper columns and television commercials for airline tickets, fried chicken, and soft drinks. All these examples draw on a concept that originates from hip-hop culture and refers to the creative blending of materials from…
Descriptors: Creativity, Television Commercials, Popular Culture, Video Games
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Berson, Ilene R. – Social Education, 2008
The first campaign commercials were aired on television in 1952, and from their inception, children have played a critical role in the framing of political ads. Understanding these frames provides important insight into a powerful communication element that is used to influence opinions by connecting with deeply held beliefs about American…
Descriptors: Political Campaigns, Television Commercials, Children, Role
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Baiocco, Roberto; D'Alessio, Maria; Laghi, Fiorenzo – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 2009
The authors conducted a study with 500 parent-child dyads. The sample comprised 254 boys and 246 girls. The children were grouped into 5 age groups (1 group for each age from 7 to 11 years), with each group comprising 100 children. The survey regards discrepancies between children and their parents on attitudes toward TV advertising to determine…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Childhood Attitudes, Differences, Television Commercials
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Carter, Catherine – English Education, 2009
Teachers are never free from metaphor. Whether or not they consciously design and choose their own comparisons, teachers' work is continually constructed in metaphorical terms, perhaps more so than any other profession. Like Kristy, whose course of study was determined by a television ad lasting less than a minute, teachers and potential teachers…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Figurative Language, Clergy, Television Commercials
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Punyanunt-Carter, Narissra Maria; Carter, Stacy L. – Journal of the American Academy of Special Education Professionals, 2009
The paper discusses the importance of prosocial behavior from the media and its effects on children. The paper reviews several research studies on prosocial and media on children. The paper also offers implications and limitations dealings with prosocial behavior and media on children.
Descriptors: Children, Prosocial Behavior, Mass Media Effects, Literature Reviews
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Yoder, Janice D.; Christopher, Jessica; Holmes, Jeffrey D. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2008
Content analyses of television advertising document the ubiquity of traditional images of women, yet few studies have explored their impact. One noteworthy exception is the experiment by Geis, Brown, Jennings, and Porter (1984). These researchers found that the achievement aspirations of controls and women exposed to traditional images were lower…
Descriptors: Scripts, Television Commercials, Females, Gender Discrimination
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Angulo, A. J.; Green, Susan K. – Innovative Higher Education, 2007
This study examined perceptions of college of education students and their experiences with Channel One, a privately-owned news service used in public education. Given that about one-third of middle and high schoolers in the US view the broadcast every school day, the authors surveyed 172 freshmen to discern their views and attitudes toward…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Public Education, Student Teacher Attitudes
Wartella, Ellen – Phi Delta Kappan, 1995
Places Channel One controversy in broader context of commercialization of youth culture during past 20 years. Changes in child-oriented TV market since mid-1970s include rise of independent stations and cable networks, introduction of program-length commercials, and proliferation of new products aimed at children. Targeting marketing to child…
Descriptors: Commercial Television, Elementary Secondary Education, Marketing, Mass Media Effects
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Péter, Lilla; Balázs, Szilvia – Acta Didactica Napocensia, 2009
Our paper deals with the relationship between sustainability, media advertisements and their effect on children. This topic is highly actual today, as the children of today, who grow up in front of the TV will be the consumers of tomorrow. The perpetual growth of consuming and gathering material goods is not serving the sustainable development.…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Sustainability, Advertising, Childrens Television
Borchardt, Donald A. – 1988
The principles of synergy, particularly as described by Charles Hampden-Turner in "Maps of the Mind," can be applied to critical thinking in television broadcasting. Synergy is the process by which one need or person combines optimally with another. A metaphor for the idea of the concrete and the abstract working together while they are…
Descriptors: Commercial Television, Critical Thinking, Mass Media Effects, Media Research
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