Deck 15: Social Scientific and Cultural Approaches to Media Research
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Deck 15: Social Scientific and Cultural Approaches to Media Research
1
The results of this kind of research method are usually generalizable to a larger population.
A)Surveys
B)Experiments
C)Content analysis
D)Focus group interviews
E)Pseudo-polls
A)Surveys
B)Experiments
C)Content analysis
D)Focus group interviews
E)Pseudo-polls
A
2
The 1938 radio broadcast of War of the Worlds made millions of listeners believe that Martians were invading Earth; most listeners, however, did not believe that the story was real.Those outcomes ultimately helped support which research model?
A)Hypodermic-needle model
B)Minimal-effects model
C)Uses and gratifications model
D)Survey model
E)Textual-analysis model
A)Hypodermic-needle model
B)Minimal-effects model
C)Uses and gratifications model
D)Survey model
E)Textual-analysis model
B
3
Media effects research first emerged because of concerns about television violence.
False
4
For this kind of method, researchers systematically code and measure media content.
A)Experiments
B)Focus group interviews
C)Surveys
D)Content analysis
E)Political economy
A)Experiments
B)Focus group interviews
C)Surveys
D)Content analysis
E)Political economy
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5
One key difference between content analysis and textual analysis is the greater emphasis on counting, measurement, and reliability in content analysis.
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6
Social psychology studies measure the attitudes, behavior, and cognition of individuals.
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7
TV viewers who believe that crime is more prevalent than it really is provide evidence for which theory of media effects?
A)Bullet theory
B)Uses and gratifications
C)Cultivation effect
D)Agenda-setting
E)Spiral of silence Fill in the Blank
A)Bullet theory
B)Uses and gratifications
C)Cultivation effect
D)Agenda-setting
E)Spiral of silence Fill in the Blank
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8
Harold Lasswell's Crystallizing Public Opinion is considered by many academics to be the founding book in American media studies.
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9
Which kind of research method employs a control group for comparison?
A)Surveys
B)Experiments
C)Content analysis
D)Focus group interviews
E)Political economy
A)Surveys
B)Experiments
C)Content analysis
D)Focus group interviews
E)Political economy
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10
The notion that people engage in selective exposure and selective retention when experiencing various media is a component of which model of media research?
A)Uses and gratifications model
B)Minimal-effects model
C)Hypodermic-needle model
D)Marketing-research model
E)Propaganda-analysis model
A)Uses and gratifications model
B)Minimal-effects model
C)Hypodermic-needle model
D)Marketing-research model
E)Propaganda-analysis model
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11
Which of the following is characteristic of a cultural studies approach to mass media research?
A)The belief that audiences are primarily passive and easily persuaded
B)An attempt to understand how people use media to serve their own ends
C)The belief that media do not tell us what to think but what to think about
D)A focus on how people experience and interpret their lives through media
E)An interest in measuring and coding the content of particular media texts
A)The belief that audiences are primarily passive and easily persuaded
B)An attempt to understand how people use media to serve their own ends
C)The belief that media do not tell us what to think but what to think about
D)A focus on how people experience and interpret their lives through media
E)An interest in measuring and coding the content of particular media texts
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12
Between 1930 and 1960, "who says what to whom with what effect" became the key question "defining the scope and problems of American communications research."
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13
The minimal-effects model of mass media research holds that the media reinforce existing behaviors and attitudes rather than change them.
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14
The close reading and interpretation of the meaning of cultural forms is called
A)Content analysis
B)Agenda-setting
C)Textual analysis
D)The cultivation effect
E)Uses and gratifications
A)Content analysis
B)Agenda-setting
C)Textual analysis
D)The cultivation effect
E)Uses and gratifications
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15
Textual analysis is able to demonstrate the effects of the media on audiences.
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16
This line of research suggests that heavy viewers of television are more likely than light viewers to perceive reality in ways that are more consistent with "TV reality."
A)Cultivation effect
B)Agenda-setting
C)Political economy
D)Textual analysis
E)Audience studies
A)Cultivation effect
B)Agenda-setting
C)Political economy
D)Textual analysis
E)Audience studies
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17
Agenda-setting theory refers to the media's ability to change public opinion on controversial issues.
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18
The idea that the media tell us what to think about rather than what to think is key to which theory of media effects?
A)Agenda-setting
B)Cultivation effect
C)Content analysis
D)Uses and gratifications
E)Propaganda
A)Agenda-setting
B)Cultivation effect
C)Content analysis
D)Uses and gratifications
E)Propaganda
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