Descriptor
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Communication Research | 42 |
Author
Lang, Annie | 5 |
Anderson, Daniel R. | 2 |
Babrow, Austin S. | 2 |
Basil, Michael D. | 2 |
Douglas, William | 2 |
Hawkins, Robert P. | 2 |
Perse, Elizabeth M. | 2 |
Reeves, Byron | 2 |
Rubin, Alan M. | 2 |
Shrum, L. J. | 2 |
Austin, Erica Weintraub | 1 |
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Journal Articles | 42 |
Reports - Research | 42 |
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Shrum, L. J.; O'Guinn, Thomas C. – Communication Research, 1993
Finds support for the general notion of construct accessibility and its effect on judgments can help account for the influence of television viewing on social reality estimates. Shows that subjects who watch comparatively more television not only overestimate frequency or probability but also give faster responses to various types of cultivation…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Television Research, Television Viewing

Douglas, William; Olson, Beth M. – Communication Research, 1996
Examines the portrayal of family relationships in television domestic comedy. States that subjects were randomly selected to evaluate samples of nine programs. Finds that on television both parent-child and sibling relationships have developed in relational frameworks defined by the changing levels of conflict, cohesiveness, and socializing, with…
Descriptors: Conflict, Family Relationship, Higher Education, Siblings

Burns, John J.; Anderson, Daniel R. – Communication Research, 1993
Finds that inertial engagement sustains looks across boundaries between programs and commercials; inertial engagement does not carry over from one look to the next; inertial engagement was associated with greater recognition memory for television content; and look length distributions are approximately lognormal, and hazard functions are…
Descriptors: Adults, Higher Education, Recognition (Psychology), Television Research

Basil, Michael D. – Communication Research, 1994
Examines psychological concepts and theories about people's restrictions in processing information, and relates the concepts and theories to multiple resource theory. Applies this approach to television viewing, and discusses four separate limiting factors. (SR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Models, Television Research

Basil, Michael D. – Communication Research, 1994
Investigates whether selective attention to a particular television modality resulted in different levels of attention to the visual and auditory modalities. Finds that subjects were able to focus on a particular message channel but that reactions to cues were faster when the audio channel contained the most information and when viewers focused on…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Television Research

Livingstone, Sonia M. – Communication Research, 1989
Investigates regular viewers' representations of soap opera characters to discover the nature of these representations, the extent to which they reflect the application of social knowledge, and the extent to which they reflect the structure of the program. (MS)
Descriptors: Characterization, Higher Education, Social Cognition, Television

Bordeaux, Barbara R.; Lange, Garrett – Communication Research, 1991
Surveys children and parents to examine children's active, conscious cognitive processing of television program information during home viewing. Finds that children's mental effort investment varies as a function of viewer age and the type of program being viewed. (SR)
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Surveys

d'Ydewalle, Gery; And Others – Communication Research, 1991
Investigates long-standing familiarity with subtitled movies and processing efficiency as variables of total time spent in the subtitled area. Rules out subtitle reading resulting from habit from long-term experience. Suggests that reading subtitles is preferred because of efficiency in following a movie. (SR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Reading Processes, Television Research

Shapiro, Michael A.; Lang, Annie – Communication Research, 1991
Examines psychophysiological and cognitive processing of television events to see what kinds of contextual information might be stored as a result of both real and fictional television events and mediated and unmediated television events. Examines decision processes that use this information. Suggests that television may result in contextual…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Television Research

Lang, Annie; And Others – Communication Research, 1993
Finds that, among college students, (1) both related and unrelated cuts resulted in cardiac orienting responses; (2) processing unrelated cuts required more capacity than processing related cuts; and (3) memory was better for information presented after related cuts, with this effect greater for visual memory than for audio memory. (SR)
Descriptors: Audience Response, Communication Research, Higher Education, Memory

Newhagen, John E. – Communication Research, 1994
Finds that, when a censorship disclaimer on a television news story is assessed for its narrative meaning, capacity is increased, and more thought elaboration about the news story takes place. Suggests that disclaimers may be an effective device in messages that are not complex or cognitively demanding but that their effects may be neutralized by…
Descriptors: Censorship, Cognitive Processes, Communication Research, Higher Education

Hawkins, Robert P.; And Others – Communication Research, 1995
Examines the visual attention of undergraduate students to the television screen. Finds that varying relatedness of episodes, for which strategic inertial processes should vary in strength, produces a corresponding difference in inertia of looks crossing boundaries. Suggests that results previously interpreted as reflecting nonstrategic processes…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Higher Education, Television Research, Television Viewing
Assessing the Social Influence of Television: A Social Cognition Perspective on Cultivation Effects.

Shrum, L. J. – Communication Research, 1995
Uses an information-processing perspective to illustrate how television viewing may affect social judgements. Posits heuristic processing as a mechanism that can explain why heavier television viewing results in higher first-order cultivation judgments (those requiring estimates of set size). (SR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communication Research, Higher Education, Social Influences

Mutz, Diana C.; And Others – Communication Research, 1993
Reexamines assumptions about the displacement mechanism, which states that television displaces other activities. Considers strengths and weaknesses of various methodologies used to test the displacement hypothesis. Examines data from an eight-year panel study of the introduction of television to South Africa. Uses a variety of methodologies to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Literature Reviews, Research Methodology

Lang, Annie; Friestad, Marian – Communication Research, 1993
Investigates whether memory for positive and negative television messages differs in the amount of verbal and visual-spatial information recognized and recalled by television viewers, as a function of differential activation of the brain hemispheres elicited by emotional messages. Suggests that message valence may be related to the amount of…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Communication Research, Higher Education, Memory