Deck 2: Media Technology
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Deck 2: Media Technology
1
A defining characteristic of mass communication is that it
A) can easily survive without technological assistance.
B) relies on technology.
C) preceded technology.
D) continues to exist despite technological advances.
A) can easily survive without technological assistance.
B) relies on technology.
C) preceded technology.
D) continues to exist despite technological advances.
relies on technology.
2
When people communicate face-to-face, we call it
A) individual communication.
B) non-applied media.
C) interpersonal communication.
D) basic pedagogy.
A) individual communication.
B) non-applied media.
C) interpersonal communication.
D) basic pedagogy.
interpersonal communication.
3
Traditional media products and new products are emerging from
A) analog technology.
B) landlines.
C) digital technology.
D) broadcasting.
A) analog technology.
B) landlines.
C) digital technology.
D) broadcasting.
digital technology.
4
Photography and movies have relied on this technology throughout most of their history.
A) chemical technology
B) print technology
C) electronic technology
D) digital technology
A) chemical technology
B) print technology
C) electronic technology
D) digital technology
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5
The first of the electronic media was
A) film.
B) sound recording.
C) television.
D) e-mail
A) film.
B) sound recording.
C) television.
D) e-mail
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6
In addition to printing technology, mass media have been based on all of the following EXCEPT
A) chemical technology.
B) digital technology.
C) electronic technology.
D) nanotechnology.
A) chemical technology.
B) digital technology.
C) electronic technology.
D) nanotechnology.
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7
This innovation made the printing press an agent for mass communication.
A) paper in rolls
B) lithographic film
C) printing ink
D) movable metal type
A) paper in rolls
B) lithographic film
C) printing ink
D) movable metal type
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8
The man who invented movable type and printed at least 200 Bibles with it was
A) Richard Hoe.
B) Frederick Ives.
C) Johannes Gutenberg.
D) Martin Luther.
A) Richard Hoe.
B) Frederick Ives.
C) Johannes Gutenberg.
D) Martin Luther.
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9
Although the Chinese invented paper and created the first print culture, their movement toward the mass production of printed works in China stalled because of
A) a lack of materials.
B) the Chinese language having more than 5,000 basic characters.
C) an internal civil war.
D) insufficient financial support.
A) a lack of materials.
B) the Chinese language having more than 5,000 basic characters.
C) an internal civil war.
D) insufficient financial support.
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10
This technological innovation of the 1440s allowed scientists to print their theories and experimental results for wide dissemination.
A) photography
B) printing paper
C) rotary press
D) movable metal type
A) photography
B) printing paper
C) rotary press
D) movable metal type
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11
In the years following Gutenberg's invention of movable metal type, society was transformed in all of the following ways EXCEPT
A) the oral tradition of story-telling was displaced by people reading stories for themselves.
B) national languages emerged and gradually replaced local dialects.
C) books and literacy became subject to tighter control and scrutiny by church authorities.
D) authors who were previously ignored began to be recognized and paid for their work.
A) the oral tradition of story-telling was displaced by people reading stories for themselves.
B) national languages emerged and gradually replaced local dialects.
C) books and literacy became subject to tighter control and scrutiny by church authorities.
D) authors who were previously ignored began to be recognized and paid for their work.
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12
Richard Hoe perfected the high-speed, rotary press during the __________, a period when the technology to mass produce paper on large rolls wasalso developed.
A) American Revolution
B) Industrial Revolution
C) French Revolution
D) Media Revolution
A) American Revolution
B) Industrial Revolution
C) French Revolution
D) Media Revolution
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13
Frederick Ives invented this process in 1876 that allowed visual images to be printed to accompany the words printed on a page.
A) photography
B) halftone
C) camera obscura
D) movable type
A) photography
B) halftone
C) camera obscura
D) movable type
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14
The process of reproducing black-and white images by printing variously sized dots of ink that will look like different tones of gray is
A) halftone printing.
B) ink dot process.
C) celluloid imagery.
D) digital photography.
A) halftone printing.
B) ink dot process.
C) celluloid imagery.
D) digital photography.
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15
In 1934, Time founder Henry Luce launched another visually-oriented magazine called
A) Harper's Bazaar.
B) Life.
C) Better Homes and Gardens.
D) Time.
A) Harper's Bazaar.
B) Life.
C) Better Homes and Gardens.
D) Time.
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16
By the time of the U.S. Civil War, this still-developing technology made it possible to capture a new kind of archival record.
A) photography
B) printing press
C) video recording
D) radio
A) photography
B) printing press
C) video recording
D) radio
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17
All of the following contributed to development of motion pictures as a mass medium EXCEPT
A) exposure to light making silver nitrate turn dark.
B) persistence of vision in the human eye.
C) projecting images on a wall instead of showing them in a personal viewing box.
D) television's ability to transmit visual images to another location.
A) exposure to light making silver nitrate turn dark.
B) persistence of vision in the human eye.
C) projecting images on a wall instead of showing them in a personal viewing box.
D) television's ability to transmit visual images to another location.
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18
The first sound recording and playback machine was the
A) telegraph.
B) microphone.
C) dictaphone
D) phonograph.
A) telegraph.
B) microphone.
C) dictaphone
D) phonograph.
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19
This inventor of the telegraph talked Congress into spending $30,000 to string electricity-conducting wire 41 miles from Washington to Baltimore.
A) Thomas Edison
B) Samuel Morse
C) Emile Berliner
D) William Dickson
A) Thomas Edison
B) Samuel Morse
C) Emile Berliner
D) William Dickson
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20
The first recording machine, the phonograph, was invented in 1877 by
A) Thomas Edison.
B) Emile Berliner.
C) Samuel Morse.
D) George Eastman.
A) Thomas Edison.
B) Emile Berliner.
C) Samuel Morse.
D) George Eastman.
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21
Guglielmo Marconi is well known for transmitting the first
A) photographic image.
B) wireless message.
C) television signal.
D) text message.
A) photographic image.
B) wireless message.
C) television signal.
D) text message.
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22
Hertzian waves, named for Heinrich Hertz who proved their existence in 1877 are now more commonly called
A) dopler waves.
B) electronic waves.
C) radio waves.
D) television waves.
A) dopler waves.
B) electronic waves.
C) radio waves.
D) television waves.
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23
Idaho farm boy Philo Farnsworth developed the first practical
A) talking pictures.
B) television receiver.
C) transmitting tower.
D) two-way radio.
A) talking pictures.
B) television receiver.
C) transmitting tower.
D) two-way radio.
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24
The first communication satellite was launched in 1960 and called
A) Westlink 1.
B) Startel.
C) CNN.
D) Telstar.
A) Westlink 1.
B) Startel.
C) CNN.
D) Telstar.
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25
A ground station that beams a signal to an orbiting communication satellite is called
A) an uplink.
B) a downlink.
C) an exciter
D) a router.
A) an uplink.
B) a downlink.
C) an exciter
D) a router.
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26
A ground station that receives a signal relayed from a communication satellite is called
A) an uplink.
B) a downlink.
C) a retriever.
D) a derouter.
A) an uplink.
B) a downlink.
C) a retriever.
D) a derouter.
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27
Any telecommunication connection using cable laid across the land, buried underground, or suspended from poles is called a
A) landline.
B) circuit.
C) downlink.
D) landlink.
A) landline.
B) circuit.
C) downlink.
D) landlink.
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28
Thin, flexible fibers of glass that transmit signals using bursts of light are called
A) fiber-optic cables.
B) coax cables.
C) jumper cables.
D) digital cables.
A) fiber-optic cables.
B) coax cables.
C) jumper cables.
D) digital cables.
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29
The silicon chips that provide the foundation for digital technology are
A) digital conductors.
B) Lays chips.
C) semiconductors.
D) Bell Labs chips.
A) digital conductors.
B) Lays chips.
C) semiconductors.
D) Bell Labs chips.
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30
The melding of print, electronic and photographic media into digitized form is called
A) media convergence.
B) a digital mash up.
C) digicommunication.
D) media integration.
A) media convergence.
B) a digital mash up.
C) digicommunication.
D) media integration.
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31
The early version of what became the Internet linked government contractors and universities so researchers could exchange information and was known as
A) Comp-U-Link.
B) Compuserve .
C) U.S.A. Net.
D) ARPAnet.
A) Comp-U-Link.
B) Compuserve .
C) U.S.A. Net.
D) ARPAnet.
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32
The type of technology through which media messages are coded into 1s and 0s for transmission and delivery then decoded into their original appearance for consumers is
A) digital.
B) analog.
C) mixed media.
D) convergent.
A) digital.
B) analog.
C) mixed media.
D) convergent.
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33
This high-capacity global telephone network links computers.
A) the Internet
B) cellular communication
C) satellite communication
D) Global Net
A) the Internet
B) cellular communication
C) satellite communication
D) Global Net
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34
Another name for the current digital revolution affecting communication all over the world is
A) media clash.
B) fragmentation.
C) democratization.
D) media convergence.
A) media clash.
B) fragmentation.
C) democratization.
D) media convergence.
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35
Tim Berners-Lee invented the
A) communication satellite.
B) fiber-optic cable.
C) Internet.
D) World Wide Web.
A) communication satellite.
B) fiber-optic cable.
C) Internet.
D) World Wide Web.
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36
The development of cloud computing has fueled all of the following trends EXCEPT
A) dramatic increases in the number of Apps available for mobile devices.
B) increasing prices for high-speed, game-ready laptops and smart phones.
C) decreasing the need for ever-larger-capacity hard-drives in laptop computers.
D) decreasing the weight of laptops, tablets, cell phones, and other mobile devices.
A) dramatic increases in the number of Apps available for mobile devices.
B) increasing prices for high-speed, game-ready laptops and smart phones.
C) decreasing the need for ever-larger-capacity hard-drives in laptop computers.
D) decreasing the weight of laptops, tablets, cell phones, and other mobile devices.
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37
"Apps," the software programs usually found on mobile devices,
A) are called "Apps" because the first ones were for Apple computers and phones.
B) must sell for $9.95 or less.
C) are simpler and more narrowly-focused programs than software suites.
D) use cloud computing technology and cannot work unless they're "in the cloud."
A) are called "Apps" because the first ones were for Apple computers and phones.
B) must sell for $9.95 or less.
C) are simpler and more narrowly-focused programs than software suites.
D) use cloud computing technology and cannot work unless they're "in the cloud."
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38
This Yale professor devised one of the most long-lived and elegantly simple narrative models of mass communication in the 1950s.
A) Guglielmo Marconi
B) Harold Lasswell
C) Johannes Gutenberg
D) Ed Parsons
A) Guglielmo Marconi
B) Harold Lasswell
C) Johannes Gutenberg
D) Ed Parsons
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39
In Lasswell's model the medium through which a message is sent to a mass audience is called a
A) channel.
B) system.
C) network.
D) path.
A) channel.
B) system.
C) network.
D) path.
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40
The narrative model of mass communication includes four key questions. Which of the following is NOT one of them?
A) Who says what?
B) In which channel?
C) To whom?
D) Under what circumstances?
A) Who says what?
B) In which channel?
C) To whom?
D) Under what circumstances?
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41
Hiebert, Ungurait and Bohn developed an excellent model that visually presents the process of mass communication as
A) boxes with directional arrows between them leading from the sender to the audience.
B) a staircase of operational steps that go upward from idea to understanding.
C) concentric circles representing the factors that affect the outcome of mass communication.
D) several sets of circles that are entwined and connected in different ways.
A) boxes with directional arrows between them leading from the sender to the audience.
B) a staircase of operational steps that go upward from idea to understanding.
C) concentric circles representing the factors that affect the outcome of mass communication.
D) several sets of circles that are entwined and connected in different ways.
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42
The center ring in the concentric circle model of mass communication represents
A) the media environment from which all of the other elements arise.
B) the audience being targeted by the mass media messages.
C) the messages that are shaped and affected by all the surrounding influences.
D) the communicators who originate the messages aimed at the audience.
A) the media environment from which all of the other elements arise.
B) the audience being targeted by the mass media messages.
C) the messages that are shaped and affected by all the surrounding influences.
D) the communicators who originate the messages aimed at the audience.
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43
Media people who make judgments about what to include in news broadcasts, newspapers, websites and other media products are called
A) regulators.
B) gatekeepers.
C) fact checkers.
D) subject matter experts.
A) regulators.
B) gatekeepers.
C) fact checkers.
D) subject matter experts.
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44
Amplification in relation to mass communication theory means
A) increasing the number of people delivering the message.
B) increasing the type size in printed messages or the volume of spoken messages..
C) increasing the potential audience size through channel selection.
D) increasing the action or emotional appeal of a message to attract more people.
A) increasing the number of people delivering the message.
B) increasing the type size in printed messages or the volume of spoken messages..
C) increasing the potential audience size through channel selection.
D) increasing the action or emotional appeal of a message to attract more people.
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45
A military censor who blocks a combat story from being released is acting as
A) an amplifier.
B) a gatekeeper.
C) a regulator.
D) a mediator.
A) an amplifier.
B) a gatekeeper.
C) a regulator.
D) a mediator.
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46
In communication theory, "noise" is an impediment to communication that occurs before a message reaches a receiver and includes all of the following EXCEPT
A) semantic noise.
B) digitization noise.
C) channel noise.
D) environmental noise.
A) semantic noise.
B) digitization noise.
C) channel noise.
D) environmental noise.
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47
A speaker who slurs his speech during a televised address is creating
A) channel noise.
B) environmental noise.
C) semantic noise.
D) articulated noise.
A) channel noise.
B) environmental noise.
C) semantic noise.
D) articulated noise.
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48
The biggest problem in trying to apply older models of mass communication to 21st century mass communication is that
A) message preparation and transmission technology are now decentralized.
B) computers weren't included in earlier models but are crucial for communication today.
C) the speed of communication today is faster than earlier theorists could have imagined.
D) audiences are much bigger today than they ever were in the past.
A) message preparation and transmission technology are now decentralized.
B) computers weren't included in earlier models but are crucial for communication today.
C) the speed of communication today is faster than earlier theorists could have imagined.
D) audiences are much bigger today than they ever were in the past.
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49
The World Wide Web has shifted much of the control of communication from the mass media to
A) Internet monitors.
B) message senders.
C) message recipients.
D) software designers.
A) Internet monitors.
B) message senders.
C) message recipients.
D) software designers.
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50
These types of mass communication can all be described with the same Points Model EXCEPT
A) book publishing.
B) motion pictures.
C) radio broadcasting .
D) web communication.
A) book publishing.
B) motion pictures.
C) radio broadcasting .
D) web communication.
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51
The Internet and other computerized communication systems are so important that computer sabotage committed by another country is considered an act of war that warrants a military response from U.S. armed forces.
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52
Mass communication is any technology-enabled process that permits long-distance messaging.
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53
The media landscape evolves with the rise of new technology.
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54
Mass production of the written word became possible with movable metal type.
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55
Johannes Gutenberg invented movable metal type in the mid-1800s.
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56
Movable metal type made the printing press an agent for mass communication.
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57
The growing quantity of printed materials fueled literacy and, slowly, a standardization in written languages.
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58
Books and other print publications immediately became plentiful after the printing press was created because of the plentiful supply of paper and ink.
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59
Originally only 2,000 Gutenberg Bibles were printed.
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60
Movable metal type allowed more effective exchanges of information among scientists and other scholars.
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61
Pulp fiction is a derisive term for cheap novels.
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62
Photography began to increase the communicative power of the written word in the mid-1900s.
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63
Halftones allow us to see shapes and images produced by variously sized dots of ink.
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64
With the launch of Sports Illustrated in 1934, photography moved the magazine industry into new visual ground.
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65
Henry Luce started Life magazine in 1964.
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66
The technology involved in early film and movies was electrical chemistry.
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67
Mathew Brady is known for his photographic coverage of the U.S. Civil War.
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68
The Kodak brothers opened the first motion picture exhibition hall.
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69
Television programming cannot be presented in 3-D because of the human eye's persistence of vision.
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70
The first sound recording and playback machine was called the phonograph.
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71
The telegraph allowed for long-distance communication between point A and point B.
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72
Samuel Morse invented the telephone in 1844.
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73
Granville Woods pioneered a wireless way to communicate with moving trains.
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74
In 1895, Guglielmo Marconi used Morse code, a telegraph key, and his knowledge of Hertzian waves to successfully send the first wireless messages.
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75
The concept of using geosynchronous satellites for worldwide communication was advocated by sci-fi author Arthur C. Clarke.
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76
Telstar was the first communication satellite to transmit telephone signals.
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77
An uplink is a ground station that beams a signal to an orbiting communication satellite.
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78
A downlink is a ground station that receives a signal relayed from a communication satellite.
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79
Copper wires are replacing fiber-optic cables as a more efficient way of carrying telephone messages.
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80
The first cable television systems were created to provide television to apartment complexes in metropolitan areas.
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