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Joseph R. Dominick University of Georgia--Athens
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Part I The Nature and History of Mass Communication
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Communication: Mass and Other Forms Chapter 1 Chapter Outline
Case Study - The Slammer The Communication Process Communication Settings Interpersonal Machine-Assisted Definition of Mass Communication Mass Communication Traditional Mass Media Organizations The Internet and Mass Communication Future of Mass Media Segmentation Chapter Outline
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Case Study – The Slammer
Worm exploited Microsoft SQL Server January 25, 2003 Spread by random IP address generation Forerunner of “Warhol Worm” Demonstrates fragility of modern communications
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The Communication Process
[Insert Figure 1-1 here] Figure 1-1: Elements of the Communication Process
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Eight Elements of the Communication Process
Source Message Encoding Channel Decoding Receiver Feedback Noise
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Communication Settings
Interpersonal Communication Machine-Assisted Communication Mass Communication Auto fade-in because slide performs a presentation outlining function
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Communication Settings
Interpersonal Communication Individual or groups Physical presence required Encoding is a one-step process Variety of channels Messages hard for receiver to terminate
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Communication Settings
Interpersonal Communication (cont) Little or no expense Messages generally private Message can pinpoint specific targets Immediate feedback
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Communication Settings
Machine-Assisted Communication SOURCE -- machine -- RECEIVER
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Communication Settings
Machine-Assisted Communication Source and receiver May be individuals or groups May be a machine such as ATM Feedback Immediate or delayed May be impossible Messages Customizability varies Private or public Inexpensive to send
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Communication Settings
Machine-Assisted Communication Encoding can be simple to complex Source: thoughts words or symbols Machines: encode message for transmission Channel options restricted Decoding similar to encoding Machines: electrical energy light patterns Receiver: words or symbols thoughts
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Communication Settings
Mass Communication . . . … occurs when a complex organization, with machine aid, produces and transmits public messages to large, heterogeneous and scattered audiences.
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Communication Settings
Mass Communication Pre-Internet: Source is a structured organization Internet: Source can be one person Sender gets little audience information Encoding a multi-stage process Channel involves machines Messages are public and impersonal Effective feedback difficult
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Communication Settings
Mass communication audiences Large Heterogeneous Geographically diversified Individually anonymous Self-defined
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Communication Settings
[Insert Table 1-1 here] Table 1-1: Differences in Communication Settings
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Traditional Mass Media Organizations
Complex, formal organizations Multiple gatekeepers Need lots of money to operate Exist to make a profit Highly competitive
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Traditional Mass Media Organizations
[Insert Table 1-2 here] Table 1-2: Global Media Giants
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The Internet and Mass Communication
Websites Affordable and producible by individual Bypass gatekeepers Creativity reigns Low start-up and maintenance costs May or may not exist for profit Audience competition not always factor
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The Internet and Mass Communication
[Insert Figure 1-2 here] Figure 1-2: Traditional Mass Communication Model
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The Internet and Mass Communication
[Insert Figure 1-3 here] Figure 1-3: Internet Mass Communication Model
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Future of Mass Media Segmentation
Audience lifestyles more fragmented Individual segments can be large Convergence: coming together Corporate Operational Device Disintermediation – eliminating the middleman
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