Mass Communication Notes
Mass Communication Notes
Mass Communication Notes
• More contemporary mass comm. = active audiences, media consumers having the power
to change messages, sharing perspectives on content
• Logic of the scientific method is quite simple, but its application in the real world is
rather complicated
• If applied to systems that are well-isolated, stationary and recurrent (= rare) o Problems
with trying to study repeated observations b/c no two audiences, individuals, new stories
are the same
o Can put them in a laboratory, but then the environment is not realistic (people
don’t grow up in laboratories)
Pioneers of mass communication – 1930s – said claims about bad effects of mass media should
not be accepted before making empirical observations
Empirical – capable of being verified or disapproved by observation
The implantation of the scientific method is difficult for those studying the social world for
four reasons:
1. Most of the significant and interesting forms of human behavior are quite difficult to
measure
2. Human behavior is exceedingly complex
a. Impossible to isolate single factors that serve as the exclusive cause of important
actions of human behavior
3. Humans have goals and are self-reflexive
a. We do not always behave in response to something that has happened, but in
response to something we hope or expect will happen
b. Constantly revise our goals
4. The simple notion of causality is sometimes troubling when it is applied to ourselves
a. Most of us are convinced that other people are much more likely to be influenced
by the media
b. Third-person effect → the idea that “media affect others, but not me”
DEFINING THEORY
Theory → any organized set of concepts, explanations, and principles of some aspect of human
experience
Many different definitions of theory
ii. Their view of nature of reality, what is knowable and worth knowing
(ontology)
iii. Their view of the methods used to create and expand knowledge
(epistemology) iv. Their view of the proper role of human values
in research and theory building (axiology)
POSTPOSITIVIST THEORY
• Those in the physical sciences (physics, chemistry, astronomy, etc.)
• Postpositivist theory → theory based on empirical observation guided by the scientific
method o But this theory recognizes that humans and human behavior are not as
constant as elements of the physical world
o Overview → postpositivist communication theory is theory developed through a
system of inquire that resembles as much as possible the rules and practices of
what we traditionally understand as science
o Goals → explanation, prediction, control
o Ontology → accepts that the world, even the socla world, exists apart from our
perceptions of it; human behavior is sufficiently predicable to be studied
systematically
o Epistemology → knowledge is advanced through the systematic, logical search
for regularities and causal relationships employing the scientific method
▪ Advances come from intersubjective agreement → when members of a
research community independently arrive at similar conclusions about a
given social phenomenon
o Axiology → the objectivity inherent in the application of the scientific method
keeps researchers’ and theorists’ values out of the search for knowledge
▪ Fear that values could bias the choice and application of methods so
researchers would be more likely to get the results they want
CULTURAL THEORY
• Cultural theory → theory seeking to understand contemporary cultures by analyzing the
structure and content of their communication o Origin from hermeneutic theory → the
study of understanding, especially by interpreting action and text (began as the study of
the Bible)
• Goal → to understand how and why that behavior occurs in the social world
• Different forms of cultural theory – o Social hermeneutics → theory seeking to
understand how those in an observed social situation interpret their own lot in that
situation
o Interpretive theory → looks for hidden or deep meaning in people’s interpretation
of different symbol systems
▪ Seeks to interpret the meaning of texts for the agents that produce them
and the audiences that consume them
▪ Text → any product of social interaction that serves as a source of
understanding or meaning
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
• Ontology → says that there is no truly “real,” measurable social reality o People
construct an image of reality based on their own preferences and prejudices and
interactions with others
• Epistemology (how knowledge is advanced) → relies on the subjective interaction
between the observer (researcher or theorist) and his or her community
• Axiology → embraces, rather than limits, the influence of researcher and theorist values
CRITICAL THEORY
• Start from the assumption that some aspects of the social world are deeply flawed and in
need of transformation
• Want to gain knwoeldge of that social world so they can change it
• Goal → inherently and intentionally political because it challenges existing ways of
organizing the social world and the people and instritutions that exercise power in it
• Critical theory → theory seeking transformation of a dominant social order in order to
achieve desired values o Assumes that by reorganizing society, we can give priority to
the most important human values
o Critical theorists study inequality and oppression o Theories
criticize
o Epistemology → argues that knowledge is advanced only when it
serves to free people and communities from the influence of those
more powerful than themselves
▪ Call this emancipatory knowledge o Ontology → there is a
‘reality’ that is apprehendable
▪ What is real and knowable in the social world is the product of
the interaction between structure and agency
• Structure → the social world’s rules, norms and beliefs
• Agency → how humans behave and interact within the structure
▪ Reality is constantly being shaped and reshaped by the dialectic (ongoing
struggle or debate) between the two
▪ When elites control the struggle they define reality
▪ When people are emancipated, they define reality through their behaviors
and interactions
• Social theorists see postpositivist and cultural theory as representational, meaning they
are articulations (word pictures) of other realities o Postpositivist = representations are
generalizable across similar realities o Interpretive theories = representations are local
and specific
NORMATIVE THEORY
• Normative Theory → theory explaining how a media system should be structured and
operate in order to conform to or realize a set of ideal social values
• Goal → set an ideal standard against which the operation of a given media system can be
judged
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
• Ontology → argues that what is known is situational (what is real or knowable about a
media system is real or knowable only for the specific social system in which that media
system exits
• Epistemology → based on comparative analysis – we can only judge and understand the
worth of a given media system in comparison to the ideal espoused by the particular
social system in which it operates.
• Axiology → value-laden
• Theorists interested in the press’s role in a democracy would use normative theory
▪ Essential argument → that media subvert and disrupt the existing social
order (but media can also be a solution to the chaos they create; can serve
as a powerful tool)
▪ Early mass society greatly exaggerated the ability of media to undermine
social order → because ultimately the media’s power resides in the freely
chosen use that audiences make of it
initially greeted with skepticism, but gradually established itself as a credit alternative to
limited effects
SUMMARY
• All social theory is a human construction and that it is dynamic, always changing as
society, technology, and people change
• Social science is sometimes controversial because it suggests causal relationships
between things in the social world and people’s attitudes, values and behaviors → causal
relationships difficult to quantify in human behavior
• Four general categories of communication theory
1. Postpositivist (representational) → theory based on empirical observation guided
by the scientific method
2. Cultural theory (representational) → the study of understanding, especially by
interpreting actions and texts
3. Critical theory → seeks emancipation and change in a dominant social order
4. Normative theory → states how media systems can be ideally structured to
achieve valued objectives
• Our contemporary understanding of mass communication theory is the product of four
trends in theory development
1. Mass society trend is characterized by fears of media’s influence on “average”
people and optimistic views of their ability to bring about social good
2. Started when early postpositivist media research produced findings that led to the
formulation of limited-effects notion
3. Led by critical and cultural scholars – British cultural studies focused on the use
of media by social groups and on mass media’s role as a public forum in which
understanding of the social world is negotiated
4. Emergence of meaning-making perspectives – acknowledge that mass
communication can be powerful, or somewhat powerful, or not powerful at all,
because active audience members can use media content to create meaningful
experiences for themselves
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
• Envy, discontent and fear often at the roots of mass society thinking → because afraid
that this new thinking would fundamentally change the social world o To counter act
this thinking = technology control
• Basic assumptions of mass society theories:
1) The media are a powerful force within society that can subvert essential norms and
values and thus undermine the social order. To deal with this threat media must be
brought under elite control
a. Ex: broadcast being put under control of the government
2) Media are able to directly influence the minds of average people, transforming their
views of the social world
a. Direct-effects assumption → the media, in and of themselves, can produce
direct effects
them, are their own o To do this, propagandists must change the way people conceive of
themselves and the social world, through media tools
o Propagandists rely on disinformation to discredit their opposition (false
information spread about the opposition to discredit it)
• Black, white and gray propaganda o Black propaganda – involving deliberate and
strategic transmission of lies o White propaganda – involving intentional suppression of
contradictory information and ideas, combined with deliberate promotion of highly
consistent information or ideas that support the objectives of the propagandist
o Gray propaganda – involved transmission of information or ideas that might or
might not be false; no effort to determine validity
• Propagandists hold elitist and paternalistic views about their audiences
• In WWI, beneficial use of propaganda became known as the engineering of consent
(office use of communication campaigns to reach “good” ends)
LIBERTARIANISM REBORN
• A normative theory that sees people as good and rational and able to judge good ideas
from bad
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
• Traced back to 16th century Europe – feudal aristocracies exercised arbitrary power
• Libertarian communication theory arose in opposition to authoritarian theory → a
normative theory that places all forms of communication under the control of a governing
elite or authorities
• Libertarians said that getting out from under authoritarian control, people would naturally
seek truth, engage in public debate and create a better life for themselves o Milton’s
self-righting principle → in a fair debate, good and truthful arguments will win out over
lies and deceit
• Three fundamental concepts underpinning the Founding Father’s belief in press freedom
(Keane, 1991)
1. Theology : media should serve as a form allowing people to deduce between good
and evil
2. Individual rights : press freedom is the strongest, if not the only, guarantee of
liberty from political elites
3. Attainment of truth : falsehoods must be countered; ideas must be challenged and
tested or they will become dogma
• US first nation to adopt Libertarian principles → Declaration and Bill of Rights o
Communication freedom: speech, press, assembly
▪ New limits however, still being placed on media and communication
LIBERTARIANISM
Strengths:
1. Values media freedom
2. Is consistent with U.S. media traditions
3. Values individuals
4. Precludes government control of media Weaknesses:
1. Is overly optimistic about media’s willingness to meet responsibilities
2. Is overly optimistic about individuals’’ ethics and rationality
3. Ignores need for reasonable control of media
4. Ignores dilemmas posed by conflicting freedoms (e.g. free press vs. personal privacy)
THE MARKETPLACE OF IDEAS: A NEW FORM OF RADICAL LIBERTARIANISM
Wanting to rekindle public support for Libertarian ideals, media practitioners developed a
cogent response to Progressive and Populist criticisms → argued that media should be
regarded as a self-regulating marketplace of ideas o Marketplace of ideas → the
notion that all ideas should be put before the public, and the public will choose the best
from that “marketplace”
o also called the Laissez-Faire Doctrine → the idea that government shall allow
business to operate freely and without official intrusion
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
▪ Applied to mass media – if ideas are traded freely among people, the
correct or best ideas should prevail
▪ Supposed to work like this in the American market: someone comes up
with a good idea and then transmits it through some form of mass
medium. If other people like it, they buy the message. When people buy
the message, they pay for its production and distribution costs. Once the
costs are covered, the message producer earns a profit. If people don’t like
the message, they don’t buy it, and the producer goes broke trying to
produce and distribute it.
MARKETPLACE-OF-IDEAS THEORY
Strengths:
1. Limits government control
2. Allows “natural” fluctuations in tastes, ideals, and discourse
3. Puts trust in the audience
4. Assumes “good” content will ultimately prevail Weaknesses:
1. Mistakenly equates media content with more tangible consumer products
2. Puts too much trust in profit-motivated media operators
3. Ignores the fact that content that is intentionally “bought” is often accompanied by other,
sometimes unwanted content
4. Has an overly optimistic view of audiences’ media consumption skills
5. Mistakenly assumes audience-not-advertiser-is consumer
6. Definition of “good” is not universal (e.g., what is “good” for the majority might be bad
for the minority)
PROFESSIONAIZATION OF JOURNALISM
• 1923 – the American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE) adopted a set of professional
standards called The Canons of Journalism (later replaced with ASNE Statement of
Principles, 1975)
• Industry code of ethics began to formalize around the role of media – as a watchdog
guarding the public welfare
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
LIMITATIONS OF PROFESSIONALIZATION
1. Professionals in every field, including journalism, are been reluctant to identify and
censure colleagues who violate professional standards
2. Professional standards can be overly abstract and ambiguous
a. Difficult to implement and enforce; codes of ethics vague on purpose
b. Video News Release (VNR) → report produced by an outside organization,
typically a public relations firm, that is distributed free of charge to television
stations
3. In contrast with medicine and law, media professionalization doesn’t include standards
for professional training and licensing
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
NONPROFIT JOURNALISM
• American foundations and individual contributors
• Community-funded (Crowd-funded) Journalism → journalists propose projects online
to people who then contribute to hose they deem worthy
OVERVIEW
• Media-Effects Trend → media effects on individuals, because of their importance,
should be the focus of research; postpositivist methods provide the best avenue of
inquiry o Paul Lazarsfeld – pioneer of survey research o Carl Hovland – pioneer of
experimental research
▪ Both found media lacked power to influence
• Functionalism → dominant in American social theory 1950s/1960s o Theoretical
approach that conceives of social systems as living organisms whose various parts
work, or function, together to maintain essential processes o Living organism
• Communication Systems Theory → theory that examines the mass communication
process as composed of interrelated parts that work together to meet some goal o
Understand media power in its larger role, macroscopic level
• Factors that combined to make development of the media effects trend possible:
1. The refinement and broad acceptance of empirical social research methods was
an essential factor in the emergence of media-effects trend
2. Empirical social researchers successfully branded people who advocated mass
society and propaganda notions as “unscientific”
3. Social researchers exploited the commercial potential of the new research
methods and gained the support of private industry
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
Attitude-Change Theory
Strengths:
o Pays deep attention to process in which messages can and can’t have effects o Provides
insight into influence of individual differences and group affiliations in shaping media
influence
o Attention to selective processes helps clarify how individuals process information
Weaknesses:
Phenomenistic Theory
Strengths:
o Combines impressive amount of research into a convincing theory o Highlights role
of mediating variables in the mass communication process o Persuasively refutes
lingering mass society and propaganda notions Weaknesses:
o Overstates influence of mediating factors o Is too accepting of status quo
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
→ theory that as news about an issue inundates people, they become apathetic to it,
substituting knowing about that issue for action on it
Functionalism
Strengths:
o Positions media and their influence in larger social system o Offers balanced view of
media’s role in society o Is based on and guides empirical research Weaknesses:
o Is overly accepting of status quo
o Asserts that dysfunctions are “balanced” by functions
o Asserts that negative latent functions are “balanced” by positive manifest functions o
Rarely permits definition conclusions about media’s role in society
Systems Theory
Strengths:
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
NEO-MARXISM
•deviate from classic Marxist theory in one important respect – focus concern on the
superstructure issues of ideology and culture rather than on the base
TEXTUAL ANALYSIS AND LITERARY CRITICISM
• humanists saw texts as a civilizing force in society
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
• literary canon part of what theorists referred to as high culture → set of cultural artifacts
including music, art, literature, and poetry that humanists judge to have the highest value
humanists attempt dot make them accessible to more people
• long-term goal: to preserve and gradually raise the level of culture – to enable even more
people to become humane and civilized
• Hermeneutic theory → a member of the social subjectivist paradigm where meaning is
inter-subjectively created, in contrast to the empirical universe of assumed scientific
realism
THE FRANKFURT SCHOOL → Group of neo-Marxist scholars who worked together in the
1930s at the University of Frankfurt
• the original source of what is known as Critical Theory
• celebrated high culture while denigrating mass culture
• culture industries → mass media that turn high culture and folk culture into
commodities sold for profit
DEVELOPMENT OF NEO-MARXIST THEORY IN BRITAIN
• 1960s/1970s – two schools of neo-Marxist theory emerged in Great Britain:
1. British cultural studies → combines neo-Marxist theory with ideas and research
methods derived from diverse sources (literary criticism, linguistics,
anthropology, history)
a. Attempted to trace elite domination over culture
b. Hermeneutic attention is shifted from the study of elite cultural artifacts to
the study of minority group “lived culture” and the way that media are
used by groups to enhance their lives
2. Political economy theory
3. Pluralistic public forum → in critical theory, the idea that media may provide a
place where the power of dominant elites can be challenged
4. Structuralist view → elite control over the superstructure through repressive and
ideological state apparatuses
5. Culturalist view → culture is the site of social struggle and a place where change
occurs
a. Repressive state apparatuses – when culture
becomes too free, elites enforce their ideology
through that part of the superstructure
b. Ideological state apparatuses British Cultural
Studies Strengths:
• Asserts value of popular culture
• Empowers “common” people
Empowers minorities and values their culture
• Stresses cultural pluralism and egalitarianism Weaknesses:
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
• All media from the phonetic alphabet to the computer, are extensions of man that cause
deep and lasting change in him and transforms his environment
• Changes in communication technology inevitably produce profound changes in both
culture and social order
• Technological determinist → a person who believes that all social, political, economic,
and cultural change is inevitably based on the development and diffusion of technology
Is comprehensive
• Is macroscopic
• Resonated with the general public in the 1960s and 1970s
• Elevates cultural value of popular media content
• Anticipates a future in which media play a central role in fostering community
• Enjoys longevity as a result of introduction of new electronic media Weaknesses:
• Can’t be verified by effects research
• Is overly optimistic about technology’s influence
• Ignores important effects issues
• Calls for nonlinear thinking, the value of which is questioned
• Is overly apologetic of electronic media
• Questions the value of literacy and argues for its inevitable decline
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
OVERVIEW
• Technological advance of television (growth from WWII) → economy could mass
produce items and people had leisure time/extra money to purchase o This lead to a need
to advertise
• Media research that media was having an effect on people (television effects) → young
people were increasingly being socialized away from parents’ influence (Bronfenbrenner,
1970)
• Social Cognitive Theory → theory of learning through interaction with the environment
that involves reciprocal causation of behavior, personal factors, and environmental factors
• Social scientists developed several different perspectives on the effects of television
violence: catharsis, social learning, social cognitive theory, aggressive cues, and priming
effects
• General Aggression Model (GAM) → model of human aggression that argues that
cognition, affect, and arousal mediate the effects of situational and individual personal
variables on aggression
• Critical cultural scholars have taken an interest in issues of young people’s development
→ their relationship between their increased media consumption and the
commercialization and adultification of childhood o Adultification of childhood →
when children’s values as consumers trumps their value as people, threatening their
physical, psychological, social, emotional, and spiritual development
CATHARSIS → also called sublimation; the idea that viewing mediated aggression sates, or
reduces, people’s natural aggressive drives
• The idea that viewing violence is sufficient to purse or at least satisfy a person’s
aggressive drive and therefore reduce the likelihood of aggressive behavior
• Weaknesses: common sense and your own media consumption
• Social scientists would learn → certain presentations of mediated violence and aggression
can reduce the likelihood of subsequent view aggression (but catharsis is not the reason
why)
▪ Viewers learn that violence might not be appropriate in a given situation
(cultural norms/expectations)
SOCIAL LEARNING → encompasses both imitation and identification to explain how people
learn through observation of others in their environments
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
THE DEVELOPMENTAL PERSPECTIVE → the view of learning from media that specifies
different intellectual and communication stages in a child’s life that influence the nature of
media interaction and impact
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
• Important aspect of people’s power to deal with television is their ability to comprehend
it at different stages in their intellectual development
• Empowered child model → television effects research that assumes that children
eventually become competent, self-aware users of television
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
Developmental Perspective
Strengths:
• Provides an age-based perspective on media effects
• Respects children as competent, self-ware media consumers able to moderate media
influence
• Offers evidence of the eventual reduction of harmful effects and increase in positive
media influence Weaknesses:
• Misused to justify arguments that as kids get older, likelihood of negative effects declines
• Overestimates children’s competence and self-awareness as media consumers in
moderating media influence
• Does not sufficiently appreciate role of media use in disrupting or otherwise influencing
development
• GAM → a model of human aggression that argues that cognition, affect, and arousal
mediate the effects of situational and individual personal variables on aggression
• Number and variety of elements and linkages make empirical investigation and validation
impossible
• Declines in real-world youth violence suggest model overstates media include on
aggression
• Does not explain research showing no link between media violence and subsequent
aggression
• Reliance primarily on laboratory research reinforces experiments’ built-in bias toward
strong effects
People weigh the level of reward (gratification) they expect from a given medium or
message against how much effort they must make to secure that reward
We all make decisions about which content we choose based on our expectations of
having some need met
Limitations
How could researchers keep this research object, as individuals could self-report
hundreds of different gratifications
Qualitative methods suggested, but postpositivist researchers didn’t see value in studying
subjective explanations and thought the only thing they needed to know about audiences
were its size and demographics
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
Thought studying this would only satisfy curiosity, not deliver measurable and definitive
answers
Things that advertisers wanted to know
Social scientists thought they must observe how people have been conditioned through
exposure to stimuli in past situations – to understand what really motivates people
(experiments, survey measurements, would be very costly)
Postpositivists criticized early active-audience research as too descriptive
Just took people’s reasons for using media and put them in arbitrary media categories (ex:
three categories, why not five?)
Baran & Davis – Chpt. 8: Theories of Media Cognition and Information Processing
Chapter focus: microscopic-level theories of how individuals gather, process, and evaluate the
flow of information, much of it from the media, that they continuously encounter
• Early research by cognitive psychologists → rejected behaviorist notions that people
simply react to stimuli in their environments and later use their cognitions to justify their
responses
Information-Processing Theory
• A means of understanding how people deal with sensory information; the theory is based
on the idea that humans process the information they receive, rather than merely
responding to stimuli
• Stemming from systems theory metaphors
• Theory assumes that individuals operate like complex bio-computers, with certain builtin
information-handling capacities and strategies
• Each day process numerous media, and only process a tiny fraction
• We are not information handlers, but information avoiders – screening out irrelevant or
useless information
• Cognitive processes : the performance of a cognitive activity or a processing and
movement that affects the mental contents of a person such as the process of thinking or
the cognitive operation of remembering something
• Consciousness : acts as a supreme overseer of this cognitive activity but has very limited
and typically indirect control over it o Theory recognizes the limitations of conscious
awareness o Provides an objective perspective on learning
• Recognizes that we have limited cognitive resources – idea that as more resources are
directed toward one task, another will suffer (ex: multi-tasking)
• Mistakes made in processing are routine outcomes from a particular cognitive process or
set of processes, not personal errors caused by personal failings Information Processing
Theory Strengths:
• Provides specificity for what is generally considered routine, unimportant behavior
• Provides objective perspective on learning; mistakes are routine and natural
• Permits exploration of a wide variety of media content
• Produces consistent results across a wide range of communication situations and settings
Weaknesses:
• Is too oriented toward the micro-level
• Overemphasizes routine media consumption
• Focuses too much on cognition, ignoring such factors as emotion
Processing Television News
• Information frequently presented in ways that inhibit rather than facilitate learning
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
Schema Theory
• Information-processing theory arguing that memories are new constructions constructed
from bits and pieces of connected experiences and applied to meaning making as
situations demand (Sir Frederic Bartlett, 1932)
• Schema – cognitive structures built up as people interaction with the environment in
order to organize their experience
• Scripts – form of schema, a standardized generalized episode; people understand what
they see and hear by matching those inputs to scripts
• Schemas serve four important functions for news consumers:
1. They determine what information will be noticed, processes, and stored so
that it becomes available for later retrieval from memory
2. They help people organize and evaluate new information, fitting it into
their already-established perceptions. People do not have to construct new
concepts when familiar information is presented in the news
3. They make it possible for people to go beyond the immediate information
presented in a news report, helping them fill in missing information
4. They help people solve problems because they contain information about
likely scenarios and ways to cope with them (they serve as scripts)
• Voters bring several well-formed schemas to their interpretation of political news
(Graber, 1988) o Simple Situation Sequences – people do not process news stories
to remember precise details; instead, they condense the account to their bare
essentials to
understand what they mean in specific contexts
o Cause-And-Effect Sequence – people link reported situations to their likely
causes o Person Judgements – people easily process news about individuals in
terms of their demographic groups because they have built schemas about human
nature, goals, and behaviors
o Institution Judgements – just as people have schemas for the behavior of
individuals, they have schemas for the way institutions are supposed to operate
o Cultural Norms and American Interests – people have a general “the American
way” schema that includes the construction that democracy is the best form of
government for the United States and for the world as a whole
o Human Interest and Empathy – people interpret reports in terms of self-perception
• Schema-Inconsistent Advertising – advertising that intentionally violates people’s
expectations of that form of content
Schema Theory
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
Strengths:
• Focuses attention on individual cognitive processing in the mass communication process
• Respects the information-processing ability of media consumers
• Provides specificity in describing the role of experience in information processing
• Provides exploration of a wide variety of media information
• Provides consistent results across a wide range of communication situations and settings
Weaknesses:
• Too oriented toward micro-level
• Suffers from label confusion
• Insufficiently accounts for neurological influences
• More research is needed to understand the processes involved in schema formation and
change
Hostile Media Effect (HME)
• Idea that partisans see media as less sympathetic to their side, more sympathetic to the
opposing side, and generally hostile to their point of view
• Is a perceptual theory of mass communication that refers to the tendency for individuals
with a strong preexisting attitude on an issue to perceive media coverage as biased
against their side and in favor of their antagonists’ point of view. Partisans from opposite
sides of an issue will tend to find the same coverage to be biased against them
Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM)
• Model of information processing that seeks to explain the level of elaboration, or effort,
brought to evaluating messages
• Devoted to how people interpret and react to persuasive messages
• Richard Petty and John Cacipppo (1986)
• Not everyone is willing or able to process information in a way that will get them to the
correct attitude, at least not all the time. Sometimes the easier, more automatic route to
their opinion.
• Peripheral Route – information processing that relies on cues unrelated to the issue at
hand
o Heuristics – simple decision rules that substitute for more careful analysis of
persuasive messages
• Central Route – information processing characterized by heightened scrutiny of
information related to the issue at hand
• Heuristic-Systematic Model - dual-process model of information processing that argues
for the parallel operation of systematic and heuristic processing o If the two processes
produce a judgement that is congruent or similar, the outcome is additive
▪ It produce more stable attitude change that is a better predictor of later
behavior
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
Weaknesses:
• Too oriented toward micro-level
• Can lack specificity, especially if the environment can refer to everything
• Can appear overly deterministic
• Usefulness for understanding important aspects of media influence needs to be
demonstrated
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
• Integrates a number of similar ideas, including priming, story positioning, and story
vividness Weaknesses:
• Has roots in mass society theory
• Is most applicable to (and often limited to) studies of news and political campaigns
Direction of agenda-setting effect is questioned by some
• Gayle Tuchman (1978) – found that reporters engage in objective rituals: have set
procedures for producing unbiased news stories that actually introduce bias o The term
for professional practices designed to ensure objectivity that are implicitly biases toward
support of the status quo Strengths:
• Provides recommendations for potentially useful changes in news production practices
• Raises important questions about routine news production practices
• Can be used to study production of many different types of news
• Can be combined with studies of news uses and effects to provide a comprehensive
understanding of news Weaknesses:
• Focuses on news production practices but has not empirically demonstrated their effect
• Has pessimistic view of journalists and their social role
• Has been ignored and rejected as impractical by practicing journalists
• Needs to be updated since journalistic practices are being radically altered by the Internet
and social media
Weaknesses:
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
Cultivation Analysis
• Theory that television “cultivates” or creates a worldview that, although possibly
inaccurate, becomes the reality because people believe it to be so
• George Gerbner
• Violence index – annual content analysis of a sample week of network television
primetime fare demonstrating how much violence is present
• Cultural Indicators Project – periodic examinations of television programming and the
conceptions of social reality cultivated by viewing
• Cultural indicators research made five assumptions:
1. Television is essentially and fundamentally different from other forms of mass
media
2. The medium is the “central cultural arm” of American society
3. The substance of the consciousness cultivated by TV is not so much specific
attitudes and opinions as more basic assumptions about the ‘facts’ of life and
standards of judgement on which conclusions are based
4. Television’s major cultural function is to stabilize social patterns, to cultivate
resistance to change
5. The observable, measurable, independent contributions of television to the culture
are relatively small
a. Ice-Age Analogy – idea that the degree of television’s influence is less
critical than the direction of its steady contribution
4. Comparing the social realities of light and heavy viewers What is television’s
contribution?
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
Media Literacy
The ability to access, analyze, evaluate, and communicate messages
Media literacy movement based on insights:
o Audience members are indeed active, but they are not necessarily very aware of
what they do with media (uses and grats)
o The audience’s needs, opportunities, and choices are constrained by access to
media and media content (critical cultural studies)
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
o Media content can implicitly and explicitly provide a guide for action (social
cognitive theory, schema theory, cultivation, social construction of reality,
symbolic interaction, framing)
o People must realistically assess how their interaction with media texts can
determine the purposes that interaction can serve for them in their environments
(cultural theory) o People have differing levels of cognitive processing ability,
and this can radically affect how they use media and what they are able to get from
media (informationprocessing theory and knowledge gap)
Two Views of Media Literacy
• Art Silverblatt (1995) – identified five elements of media literacy:
1. An awareness of the impact of the media on the individual and society
2. An understanding of the process of mass communication
3. The development of strategies with which to analyze and discuss media messages
4. An awareness of media content as a text that provides insight into our
contemporary culture and ourselves
5. The cultivation of an enhanced enjoyment, understanding, and appreciation of
media content
• Potter (1998) – describes several foundation ideas supporting media literacy:
1. Media literacy a continuum, not a category
2. Media literacy needs to be developed
3. Media literacy is multidimensional - we interact with media messages in four
ways, and do so with varying levels of awareness and skill
a. The cognitive domain refers to mental processes and thinking
b. The emotional domain is the dimension of feeling
c. The aesthetic domain refers to the ability to enjoy, understand, and
appreciate media content from an artistic point of view
d. The moral domain refers to the ability to infer the values underlying the
messages
4. The purpose of media literacy is to give us more control over interpretations
• Media literacy intervention – an effort to reduce harmful effects of the media by
informing the audience about one or more aspects of those media
Baran & Davis – Chpt. 10: Media and Culture Theories: Meaning-Making in the Social World
Chapter focus: media theory is changing; new media theories; theories here explain that as we
move through the many different situations that structure our everyday lives, our sense of
ourselves undergoes continual change, as does our understanding of others
• Micro-level cultural theories – examine the everyday use of media by individuals and
local communities
• Macro-level cultural theories – look at media’s role in the larger social order
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
Social Constructionism → school of social theory that argues that individuals’’ power to
oppose or reconstruct important social institutions is limited
• Questions the amount of control individuals have over culture
• Social Construction of Reality – theory that assumes an ongoing correspondence of
meaning because people share a common sense about its reality
• Assumes that audiences are active → actively process information, reshape it, and store
only what serves culturally defined needs
• Phenomenology – theory developed by European philosophers focusing on individual
experience of the physical and social world
• Typifications – “mental images” that enable people to quickly classify objects and
actions and then structure their own actions in response o Operate to some extent like
stereotypes
o Similar to Mead’s idea of symbols and the notion of schemas in
informationprocessing theory
▪ Differs from these in emphasizing that these elements of culture can be
beyond our conscious control
• Symbol – in social construction of reality, an object that represents some other object
• Signs – in social construction of reality, objects explicitly designed to serve as an index
of subjective meaning
• Berger and Luckmann (1966) – Typification Schemes – collections of meanings assigned
to some phenomenon, which come from a social stock of knowledge to pattern
interaction with the environment and things and people in it o Whoever has the
greatest influence over a culture’s definition of its symbols and signs has the greatest influence
over the construction of the typification schemes individuals use to pattern their interactions
Strengths:
• Rejects simple stimulus-response conceptualizations of human behavior
• Considers the social environment in which learning takes place
• Recognizes the complexity of human existence
• Foregrounds social institutions’ role in agency
• Provides basis for many methodologies and approaches to inquiry Weaknesses:
• Gives too little recognition to power of individuals and communities
• In some contemporary articulations, grants too much power to elites who control media
content
Framing and Frame Analysis
• Roots in symbolic interaction and social constructionism
• The expectations we form about ourselves, other people, and our social world are central
to social life
• Expectations are social constructed:
lOMoARcPSD|7302818
• Causal explanations are only possible when there is a narrow focus on framing effects
Assumes individuals make frequent framing errors; questions individuals’ abilities
1. Internet Addiction – spending 40 to 80 hours per week online, with individual sessions
as long as 20 hours
a. Brains rewire
2. Depression – depressed students were most intense Web users
a. Quickly switching between websites reflects anhedonia an inability to experience
emotions, as Web users desperately look for emotional stimulation
i. Anhedonia – inability to feel pleasure
b. Facebook Depression – depression that develops when a great deal of time is
spent on social media sites leading to exhibition of classic symptoms of
depression
c. FOMO (fear of missing out) – inability to disengage from social networking for
fear of missing something
3. Distraction – deals with more typical, everyday use
a. Issue of distraction deals with how our use of technology influences our
interaction with the larger world and the people in it when we do leave the screen
b. Time spent with digital devices deprives our brains of needed downtime
c. Transactive Memory – when the memory of the group benefits from each
individual’s contribution (nobody remembers everything)
d. Constant connection is rewiring our brains; our experience of the world is not
deficient, but different
lOMoARcPSD|7302818