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Video Game Trailer Video Game Trailer Who’s played this game? What did you think?
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Chapter Outline History Theory and Research Controversies MEDIA IMPACT: Understanding Research and Effects
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Why would anyone care about or even do research on the effects media have on society?
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Early Studies Concerns about media are as old as media themselves. ▪ Church leaders thought bibles would corrupt society ▪ Parents felt the same about the first novels. ▪ Consistent research on media begin in the 1920s.
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Types of Media Research Payne Fund Studies conducted ▪ 13 separate investigations on the influence movies had on youth behavior Modeling (Payne Fund Study) ▪ The imitation of behavior from media examples ▪ Parents worry children may pick up antisocial habits from media consumption ▪ Video Clip Clip 2 Clip 3 Video ClipClip 2Clip 3 ▪ Do violent games Increase Violence in Society? ▪ Why/Why not
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Would these media influence negative behavior? How?
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Content analyses (Payne Fund Study) ▪ Observers analyze media subject matter ▪ (TV, Magazines, Radio, Web, Newspaper) Laboratory experiment (Payne Fund Study) ▪ Variables are isolated and observed in a controlled environment
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Survey methods (Payne Fund Study) ▪ Research that relies on questionnaires to collect data Payne Fund studies as a whole ▪ Instrumental in developing public support for the 1930 Motion Picture Production code
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Random sample ▪ When members of population have equal chance of being selected Selective exposure ▪ When people seek out messages that are consistent with their attitudes ▪ Where do you get your News, What is your favorite TV show, What type of movies do you like?
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Media Research People’s Choice study ▪ Selective perception ▪ When people with different attitudes interpret the same messages differently Selective retention ▪ When people with different views remember the same event differently
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▪ Opinion leaders ▪ Certain well-informed members of families and neighborhoods ▪ Two-step flow ▪ Process where media effects travel through opinion leaders ▪ From radio and print to the opinion leaders and from them to the less active sections of the population.
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Television and violence ▪ National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence ▪ Found that ▪ Desensitization Effect of long-term exposure to mass-media violence. Prevented onlookers from helping victims of crimes
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Powerful effects model, Media will have an immediate & potent influence on audiences. (Youth acting out scenes after violent movie) Minimal effects model Media will have little influence on behavior. ▪ People not changing voting behavior
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Researchers today accept ▪ Mixed effects model, ▪ Sometimes media will have Powerful effects, Minimal effects, ▪ Sometimes A mixture of both. The mixed-effects model makes the most sense.
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▪ Bullet theory ▪ Media effects flowed directly from media to individual. ▪ Multi-step flow, ▪ Effects travel from high to lower level opinion leaders then to us. Politicians to community leaders to clergy to public ▪ There is no simple answer to how media affects behavior. ▪ The best answer usually is “It depends.”
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Social Science Perspectives Social learning theory, aka modeling theory, Social modeling is an important part of socialization, ▪ Where expectations, norms, and values of society are learned ▪ What is an example of being “cool”? ▪ How did you learn what “cool is”?
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Diffusion of innovations theory ▪ Five types of people have different levels of willingness to accept new ideas from the media: 1.Innovators tend to be politically liberal extroverts who are venturesome and eager to try new ideas. 2.Early adopters make quick but informed choices.
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Understanding Today’s Theory and Research Diffusion of innovations theory Five types of people have different levels of willingness to accept new ideas from the media: 1.- 2.- 3.Early majority makes careful, deliberate decisions. 4.Late majority tends to be skeptical. 5.Laggards tend to be conservative, traditional & resistant to change.
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George Gerbner’s cultivation theory ▪ States media use will “cultivate” a particular view of the world within users. Agenda-setting, ▪ Not telling people what to think, but what to think about ▪ Is the main effect of media. Homicide report
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Understanding Today’s Theory and Research Cumulative effects theory ▪ Media messages are driven home through redundancy Uses and gratification theory ▪ Based on how consumers choose & use media to meet their own needs.
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