36 results
Search Results
2. Student attitudes and preferences towards communications from their university – a meta-analysis of student communications research within UK higher education institutions.
- Author
-
Gilani, David
- Subjects
- *
STUDENT attitudes , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *STUDENT research , *INTEGRATED marketing - Abstract
Whilst the practitioner field around current student communications has developed in recent years, most published research still focuses either on prospective students, theoretical benefits of student communications or usage of individual channels of communication. This paper contributes to policy and practice by providing the first UK-wide look at current students' communications preferences and behaviours through a meta-analysis of 17 student communications surveys (total students surveyed 20,134). Results show that students expect their universities to utilise a range of channels (including email, social media and student portals) – i.e. an integrated marketing theory approach. Most students feel that they receive the right level of information; however, overall satisfaction with communications has decreased in recent years. This paper provides recommendations for practice, as well as a template to improve consistency in future institutional student communications evaluations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Meta-theorizing framing in communication research (1992–2022): toward academic silos or professionalized specialization?
- Author
-
Walter, Dror and Ophir, Yotam
- Subjects
- *
FRAMES (Social sciences) , *SOCIAL science methodology , *COMMUNICATION methodology , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *METATHEORY , *THEORY (Philosophy) - Abstract
Framing, a prominent communication theory, is often lamented as a fractured paradigm, leading some to offer radical changes to its conceptualization, operationalization, and application. Using a meta-theoretical and computational approach, we analyze three decades of framing research to examine academic silos, specializations, the canon's formation, gender inequalities, authors' origins, countries studied, and methods used in framing research. Instead of silos, our analysis of 5,291 papers and over 170,000 citations identified specializations formed around a core of canonic texts. While framing research has become more diverse over the years, males affiliated with U.S. institutions still predominately author canonical works. Results reject the isolated-silos hypothesis in favor of a view of framing as a bridging networked paradigm, coalescing around core assumptions, definitions, and approaches. These findings contrast with the common fractured-paradigm narrative and challenge calls for radical solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Managing disruption(s) at work: A longitudinal study of communicative resilience and high-reliability organizing.
- Author
-
Roeder, Arden C. and Bisel, Ryan S.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *ORGANIZATIONAL resilience , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *STRESS management , *SELF-efficacy , *JOB performance , *TEAMS in the workplace , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
This paper used communication theory of resilience (CTR) and high-reliability organization (HRO) theory to investigate the influence of resilience processes on disruption management outcomes (DMOs) at both the individual and team levels and at two points in time. Perceptions of individual and team stress, efficacy, and performance were examined longitudinally in surveys with working adults (N = 192, 151). Results indicated (a) communicative resilience was significantly related to improvements in DMOs at time 1 (T1), (b) highly-reliable organizing was significantly related to improvements in DMOs for individuals and teams at both collection times, and that (c) high-reliability organizing practices were generally more predictive of positive DMOs than communicative resilience; however, the two forms of resilience are compatible and complementary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A Chinese academic tradition examined in the context of international academic communication: exploratory research into Shang Que articles.
- Author
-
Zheng, Weinan, Xiao, Peng, and Madden, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
SCHOLARLY communication , *INTERNATIONAL communication , *DATA modeling , *BIBLIOMETRICS , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *BIBLIOTHERAPY , *CHINESE literature - Abstract
Purpose: Academic contention occurs when research evidence is amenable to more than one interpretation. China has a long tradition of Shang Que (商榷), in which authors argue for their preferred interpretation. The modern form of this tradition is the Shang Que article, which often takes the form of research papers in Chinese-language journals and which tends to be question-oriented. Shang Que articles usually take the views of a particular author or article as the focus of independent and complete criticism by another, independent, academic. This paper explains the role of Shang Que articles in Chinese scholarship and their influence on international academia. Design/methodology/approach: A bibliometric analysis was used to explore the characteristics and evolution of Chinese Shang Que articles using 30,577 articles published between 1979 and 2018. Microsoft Excel and Gephi were used for data analysis and visualization. Findings: Findings suggest a decline in the number of Shang Que articles and an increase in the number of co-authors. Shang Que articles remained particularly prominent in Philosophy and Humanities and Social Sciences, where they focused on local issues such as classical Chinese, the Sinicization of Marxism and Chinese literature. This suggests that the number of Shang Que articles is related to the degree of internationalization of a research field. Originality/value: Shang Que articles, which have been influenced by academic paradigms in English, are a fusion of China's Shang Que tradition and of the modern academic system. Through considering Shang Que articles, this paper explores the benefits of local academic traditions in non-English-speaking cultures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Stancetaking in motion: stance triangle and double dialogicality.
- Author
-
Iwasaki, Shoichi
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNICATIONS research , *COMMUNICATION education , *COMMUNICATION methodology , *DIALOGIC theory (Communication) , *DIALOGICS , *ORAL communication , *DISCOURSE - Abstract
Revealing one's evaluation towards a shared target of stance will likely set off a chain of reactions among all participants in an interaction. This interactive activity widely recognized as stancetaking has attracted the attention of researchers in a variety of fields of inquiry. This paper intends to enrich this line of research by revealing details of stancetaking as an evolving process. It proposes to do so by recognizing two separate layers relevant for stance progression. The first is the external layer where participants physically exchange utterances in order to negotiate their stances. The second is the internal layer where each participant interacts with his/her own internalized and internalizing knowledge. To demonstrate these points, I will analyze excerpts of English conversations between unacquainted speakers who experienced a common major incident in their daily lives (an earthquake and a false missile alarm incident). I will also use a conversation in Thai to demonstrate how a speaker indexes her changing evaluation toward a third person by alternating different third person pronouns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. 基于OLSR协议的无人机自组网多径路由策略.
- Author
-
姚玉坤, 张本俊, and 任丽丹
- Subjects
- *
END-to-end delay , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *AWARENESS , *SCHOLARS , *TOPOLOGY , *ROUTING algorithms , *NETWORK routing protocols - Abstract
In recent years, the application of drones has become more and more common, and multiple drones can work together to complete tasks, which greatly improves work efficiency. Based on this phenomenon, many scholars devote themselves to the research on the communication mode of UAV swarms, and routing protocols are always the focus of network research. Aiming at the problem that the routing metric selected in the research of routing protocols in the existing literature fails to combine the performance level of the UAV self-organizing network at that time and results in unreasonable routing decisions, this paper proposed a multi-indicator and multi-path optimized link state routing protocol with load awareness and network topology change awareness(Optimized Link State Routing Protocol based on Multi-indicators and Multi-Path, MIMP-OLSR). Firstly, the proposed protocol considered the mobility characteristics of nodes and the lifetime of the network in the UAV scene, and defined three indicators for routing, namely the node’s MAC layer blocking degree, the node’s neighbor change rate and the number of MPR_S neighbors of the node; Secondly, combined with HELLO and TC control messages, this paper proposed an indicator notification mechanism to flood the indicator information to the whole nodes of the network; Finally, according to the indicator information, this paper proposed a multi-path routing scheme. The Simulation results show that compared with OLSR, SETT_MPOLSR and UAV-OLSR protocols, the proposed MIMP-OLSR protocol significantly improves success rate, end-to-end delay and throughput performance, which further proves the rationality of the proposed multipath routing scheme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Hear Here! The Case for Podcasting in Research.
- Author
-
DeMarco, Carla
- Subjects
- *
PODCASTING , *SCIENTIFIC communication , *UNIVERSITY research , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
Podcasting as a platform has broadly progressed into a popular resource for communication, including advancing knowledge, science, and medicine through research dissemination. First, there is evidence to indicate that podcasting has evolved into a "second wave" as an effective tool to be used in academia and that it can help disseminate research findings to reach other scholars in the field. However, there is also a growing body of literature to indicate it is being used more frequently to communicate, tapping into information that is primarily generated through scholarly work to reach a broader and more general audience. The purpose of this paper is to examine the following research question: How effective is the use of podcast technology for academic research dissemination, research communication, and promotion? This paper also took into account some podcasts representing research, notably VIEW to the U produced by the Office of the Vice-Principal, Research at University of Toronto Mississauga. This research also considered gaps in the current literature related to the effectiveness of audio outputs in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
9. Spanish research on Communication in WoS: thematic, methodological, and intellectual comparison between SSCI and ESCI.
- Author
-
Segado-Boj, Francisco, Piñeiro-Naval, Valeriano, and Antona-Jimeno, Tamara
- Subjects
- *
KEYWORDS , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *CITATION indexes , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *SOCIAL network analysis , *BIBLIOGRAPHY , *SCIENCE publishing , *BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations , *CITATION networks - Abstract
This study analyses the thematic and conceptual structure of the Spanish scientific production published in Emerging Sources Citation Index (Web of Science) journals. In this way, the aim is to identify the closest links between concepts and terms based on the co-occurrence of keywords used by the authors of the papers analysed, and also to point out the theoretical foundations that exist in the discipline through the co-citation relationships of articles in the bibliography of the documents in the sample. Finally, these results were compared with those obtained from the analysis of Spanish scientific production in Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI). To achieve these objectives, a network analysis of the co-occurrence of keywords and co-citation of references in articles published in Communication journals between 2015 and 2021 in ESCI (N = 3,559) and SSCI (N = 1,738) with at least one author linked to a Spanish institution was carried out. The results point to similar structural cohesion values and to a thematic and methodological similarity between both sets observed. There is a marked tendency towards quantitative studies on new technologies. While in SSCI there is an almost absolute dominance of Journalism studies, in ESCI there is a greater diversity of other disciplines such as Audiovisual Communication or Advertising. However, the intellectual structure of the production in SSCI reflects a more specialised character than in ESCI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. SCHOLARLY COMMUNICATIONS AND RESEARCH PRODUCTIVITY PATTERNS OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY INDEXED IN WEB OF SCIENCE BETWEEN 1990 AND 2021.
- Author
-
Samuel, Spurgeon Anandraj, Idhris, Mohamed, Devasagayam, Helan Petricia, Peter, Manuelraj, Rosalene, Thangam Sheela, and Christinal, Pon
- Subjects
- *
SCHOLARLY communication , *GYNECOLOGY , *OBSTETRICS , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *DOWNLOADING - Abstract
The paper analyses the growth pattern of Obstetrics and Gynaecology literature during 1900-2021. The data downloaded from web of science database, further interpreted, and analyzed for the study purpose. Total number of publications has been identified as 10,193 records. The distribution of publications based on document type of the publications, the year of production, source wise ranking, Language wise, country wise productivity, top ten affiliations wise, Web of Science Research areas contribution is in the maximum level were studied. The study reveals a progressive increase on Obstetrics and Gynecology research publications during 1900-2021. The period 2011-2021 contributed highest number of publications. United States is the top contributor during 1900-2021 study period. University of California is the leading University having 308 articles which is 3.02% of the total publications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
11. Mapping participation in ICT4D: A meta-analytic review of development communication research.
- Author
-
Kim, Michael Dokyum and Lee, Kyung Sun
- Subjects
- *
SELF-efficacy , *INFORMATION & communication technologies for development , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *PARTICIPATION , *SKEPTICISM - Abstract
We conducted a meta-analytic study of recent (2009 to 2020) information and communication technologies for development (ICT4D) research in the field of development communication. Our aim was to explore the conceptualization of participation in the context of ICTs and globalization in contemporary scholarly discourse. We found that most studies published during this period evinced a technological deterministic discourse regarding the process of social change, privileging modernization and neoliberal modes of development. In such contexts, participation has often been conceptualized in terms of invitations to 'access' (first-level of participation) and 'empowerment' (second-level of participation) at the local level. Despite increasing concern regarding global digital inequalities, research that approaches participation in terms of claims to 'social justice' (third-level of participation) associated with global forces has been limited. We found, however, that research emerging from the communication and media disciplines have shown skepticism regarding the dominant trends. The paper concludes with a discussion of future directions in ICT4D for scholars across disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. WhatsApp and transparency: an analysis on the effects of digital platforms’ opacity in political communication research agendas in Brazil.
- Author
-
Chagas, Viktor and Da-Costa, Gabriella
- Subjects
- *
DATA encryption , *POLITICAL communication , *DIGITAL technology , *INSTANT messaging , *DIGITAL communications , *COMMUNICATION policy , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *ETHICAL problems - Abstract
This article aims to discuss what we call environmental opacity, a condition of mobile instant messaging services (MIMS) that operates on the basis of end-to-end encryption systems. Utilizing WhatsApp as a specific example, the article presents two fundamental dilemmas around which some issues concerning transparency are mobilized when it comes to digital private communication. The first of them relates to how end-to-end encryption has simultaneously become an asset and a problem for democratic environments; on the one hand, protecting users’ privacy, and on the other, allowing for the circulation of misinformation and harmful content. The second dilemma deals with how this environment of opacity impacts the ethics and transparency of scholarly research focused on WhatsApp and other MIMSs. The paper also reviews an extensive body of studies that discuss the political uses of WhatsApp in different dimensions, and argues that emerging countries with large user bases, such as Brazil and India, have experienced a series of negative effects after the adoption of WhatsApp by politically oriented groups. Among the main proposals, the article suggests some measures to foster platform transparency and facilitate scientific research instead of hindering it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Towards efficient communications in federated learning: A contemporary survey.
- Author
-
Zhao, Zihao, Mao, Yuzhu, Liu, Yang, Song, Linqi, Ouyang, Ye, Chen, Xinlei, and Ding, Wenbo
- Subjects
- *
DATA privacy , *MACHINE learning , *COMMUNICATION barriers , *RESOURCE allocation , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
In the traditional distributed machine learning scenario, the user's private data is transmitted between clients and a central server, which results in significant potential privacy risks. In order to balance the issues of data privacy and joint training of models, federated learning (FL) is proposed as a particular distributed machine learning procedure with privacy protection mechanisms, which can achieve multi-party collaborative computing without revealing the original data. However, in practice, FL faces a variety of challenging communication problems. This review seeks to elucidate the relationship between these communication issues by methodically assessing the development of FL communication research from three perspectives: communication efficiency, communication environment , and communication resource allocation. Firstly, we sort out the current challenges existing in the communications of FL. Second, we have collated FL communications-related papers and described the overall development trend of the field based on their logical relationship. Ultimately, we discuss the future directions of research for communications in FL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Producción científica española en Comunicación indexada en Web of Science: contextualización y presencia en el Ranking de Shanghái.
- Author
-
Repiso, Rafael and Moreno-Delgado, Alicia
- Subjects
- *
BIBLIOMETRICS , *CITATION indexes , *DATABASES , *BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations , *UNIVERSITY rankings , *PERIODICAL publishing , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *COLLEGE teachers - Abstract
The field of Communication in Spain is analyzed, contextualizing Spanish output at a global and local level between the years 2000 and 2020. Based on a descriptive bibliometric analysis of the Communication category of the Social Sciences Citation Index database, part of Web of Science, the impact of the main countries is identified. The weight of the output in the Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) database between 2015 and 2020 is also studied. An analysis of the output by universities in Spain for the period 2010–2020 is also carried out, comparing it with the impact and the works in the first quartile. The results reveal that Spain has been the fourth country in terms of output in Communication in the last decade and that Austria stands out as the country whose works have the greatest impact. It is also observed that 67% of Spain’s works in Communication are published in journals that are indexed in ESCI. The impact of Spanish universities is very close to the world average. The Universitat Pompeu Fabra stands out, publishing the most articles and, furthermore, being the Spanish university with most papers in the first quartile of the JCR in Communication between 2010 and 2020. The study of the Shanghai Ranking by area includes eight Spanish universities, only three of which have output in Communication that comes mainly from professors in this area. The role of the Spanish journals Comunicar and Profesional de la información is notable, as they publish a large fraction of the output by Spanish universities in the Communication field. Finally, this paper presents the challenges of research in Communication, as well as those related to its bibliometric analysis, and a reflection on the problems that affect scientific production and research in this subject area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A functional BCI model by the P2731 working group: control interface.
- Author
-
Easttom, Chuck, Bianchi, Luigi, Valeriani, Davide, Nam, Chang S., Hossaini, Ali, Zapała, Dariusz, Roman-Gonzalez, Avid, Singh, Avinash K, Antonietti, Alberto, Sahonero-Alvarez, Guillermo, and Balachandran, Pradeep
- Subjects
- *
BRAIN-computer interfaces , *CONTROL groups , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *GROUP process - Abstract
In order to facilitate communication and collaboration between researchers, Brain–computer interfaces (BCI) require a generally applicable functional model as well as a common vocabulary. The IEEE P2731 working group is in the process of developing such a functional model and a lexicon of BCI terminology. Such a functional model has multiple aspects including the control interface, physiology, transducers, etc. This current paper focuses on the control interface aspects of that model. Having a generally applicable control interface model will facilitate interdisciplinar y research and communication. The control interface is a critical part of the functional model and is described in this current paper. The control interface presented intentionally is intentionally kept general in order to be widely applicable. Some details are specific to a particular application and are thus left to those applications. It does contain the encoder (which also contains a decoder), with a feedback submodule. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A Comprehensive Survey on MIMO Visible Light Communication: Current Research, Machine Learning and Future Trends.
- Author
-
Sejan, Mohammad Abrar Shakil, Rahman, Md Habibur, Aziz, Md Abdul, Kim, Dong-Sun, You, Young-Hwan, and Song, Hyoung-Kyu
- Subjects
- *
OPTICAL communications , *VISIBLE spectra , *MACHINE learning , *WIRELESS communications , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
Visible light communication (VLC) has contributed new unused spectrum in addition to the traditional radio frequency communication and can play a significant role in wireless communication. The adaptation of VLC technology enhances wireless connectivity both in indoor and outdoor environments. Multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication has been an efficient technique for increasing wireless communications system capacity and performance. With the advantages of MIMO techniques, VLC can achieve an additional degree of freedom. In this paper, we systematically perform a survey of the existing work based on MIMO VLC. We categorize the types of different MIMO techniques, and a brief description is given. Different problem-solving approaches are given in the subsequent sections. In addition, machine learning approaches are also discussed in sufficient detail. Finally, we identify the future study direction for MIMO-based communication in VLC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Tracing the Adoption and Effects of Open Science in Communication Research*.
- Author
-
Markowitz, David M, Song, Hyunjin, and Taylor, Samuel Hardman
- Subjects
- *
OPEN data movement , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *SCIENTIFIC communication , *SCIENTIFIC community , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation - Abstract
A significant paradigm shift is underway in communication research as open science practices (e.g. preregistration, open materials) are becoming more prevalent. The current work identified how much the field has embraced such practices and evaluated their impact on authors (e.g. citation rates). We collected 10,517 papers across 26 journals from 2010 to 2020, observing that 5.1% of papers used or mentioned open science practices. Communication research has seen the rate of nonsignificant p-values (p >.055) increasing with the adoption of open science over time, but p-values just below p <.05 have not reduced with open science adoption. Open science adoption was unrelated to citation rate at the article level; however, it was inversely related to the journals' h-index. Our results suggest communication organizations and scholars have important work ahead to make open science more mainstream. We close with suggestions to increase open science adoption for the field at large. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Sensoria: An exploratory interdisciplinary framework for researching multimodal & sensory experiences.
- Author
-
Jewitt, Carey, van der Vlugt, Marloeke, and Hübner, Falk
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL science research , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *SOCIAL impact assessment , *TACIT knowledge , *MULTIMODAL user interfaces - Abstract
This paper describes the development and salience of an original and innovative interdisciplinary approach, Sensoria, that combines methods and techniques from social science and performance to address the methodological challenges of researching sensory/multimodal experiences. It sets out the core components and methodological principles that underpin the approach and uses an illustrative example to show how it can facilitate research on hard to access sensorial experiences, to access, understand and analyse people's experiences and perspectives of touch, a highly tacit sensory mode. The paper discusses the methodological contribution and challenges of this approach to sensory research for social science and artistic practice and 'more-than-representational' research more generally. It concludes by making a case for more critical research spaces at the intersection of these disciplines to foster multi-dimensional research dialogues and to advance the exploration and understanding of the relationship between the sensory, social and the digital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Using cultural discourse analysis and storytelling to design an applied intervention for U.S. English language education.
- Author
-
Brownlee, Kellie
- Subjects
- *
ENGLISH language education , *DISCOURSE analysis , *ETHNOLOGY , *STORYTELLING , *LIMITED English-proficient students , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
Applied communication interventions call for detailed knowledge of the scene and the cultural assumptions that inform the communication taking place. This paper shows how Cultural Discourse Analysis (CuDA) was used to study the practice of 'conversation' in English language learners (ELLs) groups at a public library in the Western United States. The analysis demonstrated that 'conversation' is a culturally specific practice requiring elucidation. This led to the design of storytelling workshops that helped participants improve their language skills and cultural knowledge. Data were collected in a three-phase project: (1) a preliminary ethnography(2) a design phase to create a strategic plan for addressing concerns, and (3) an applied communication intervention consisting of storytelling workshops for ELLs. The paper provides a model for conducting applied communication research using an ethnographic, culture-centered approach, and demonstrates the value of storytelling as a practice for improving English language education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. El rol de la mujer en la ciencia y la docencia en comunicación: análisis a partir de los programas universitarios en España.
- Author
-
García-Jiménez, L., Torrado-Morales, S., and Díaz Tomás, J. M.
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN in communication , *COMMUNICATION education , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *HIGHER education , *RESEARCH personnel , *BIBLIOGRAPHY , *COLLEGE curriculum , *BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations , *UNIVERSITY faculty , *CITATION networks , *WOMEN scientists , *JOURNALISM , *MATILDA effect - Abstract
This article analyzes the role of women in communication research. It does so by studying their presence/absence in the bibliographies of the syllabus of 108 theoretical courses of journalism degrees taught in 36 colleges in Spain during the 2020-2021 academic year. The work investigates the roles and presences of women in the field of communication, measuring the degree of visibility of women scientists and their contributions in a statistical and comparative way to that of male researchers, quantifying the citation patterns according to the gender of the authors. The data were analyzed with the free statistical software R (version 4.0.3) and a descriptive and inferential analysis was performed. The main results regarding the citation patterns of the research are: 1) an under-citation of publications written by female scientists; 2) an over-citation of publications by male researchers; and 3) the nonexistence of gender homophily (researchers do not tend to cite more authors of their same gender), since female authors are little cited and this low visibility is due to both female and male faculty members. The most referenced author is Elizabeth Noelle-Neumann, one of the few "classics" present, indicating a Matilda effect regarding the historical erasure of female contributions. In conclusion, the paper argues for the need to transform not only citation practices, but an entire scientific culture that denies women as a source of reference and authority from the early stages of university education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Administrative data linkage in Canada: Implications for sociological research.
- Author
-
Yoshida, Yoko, Haan, Michael, and Schaffer, Scott
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGICAL research , *SOCIAL science research , *SOCIOLOGICAL imagination , *PARADIGMS (Social sciences) , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
This paper explores some of the implications that administrative data, defined as data initially collected for purposes other than research, will have for Sociology. Although administrative data are "found" rather than "made" and, in turn, pose several challenges, we argue that the potential of these data warrant the investment, and may lead to a new methodological imagination that can shed a light on time‐tested concepts and advance our understanding of society. We show that it is already possible to advance several sociological debates through the use of administrative data and demonstrate the potential of these data through some examples drawn from classical sociological theory. We conclude by arguing that administrative data's potential will likely ensure that it becomes an important component of sociological research agendas in the coming years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Brechas y concentración de la información: un estudio sobre agendas, encuadres y consumos de noticias sobre vacunas en el marco del Covid-19 en la Argentina.
- Author
-
Zunino, E.
- Subjects
- *
NEWS consumption , *COVID-19 pandemic , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *CONTENT analysis , *COVID-19 , *SOCIAL networks , *DIGITAL media , *ONLINE social networks , *VACCINATION - Abstract
This paper analyzes the media agendas on the vaccination process against Covid-19 in the main digital media in Argentina and the consumption of these news on Facebook, the main world´s social network. From a content analysis on the most relevant news in digital media on the subject and on those with the highest level of engagement, it was intended to determine: 1) the thematic composition of both agendas; 2) the differential presence of actors and points of view in the news; 3) the predominant affective attributes in the media treatment and in the public agenda; and 4) the frames that shaped the information in each of the platforms. The results show the existence of news gaps in terms of topics and frames, in a context of a heavily concentrated media environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Condiciones individuales de producción periodística en medios independientes cubanos.
- Author
-
Somohano Fernández, A.
- Subjects
- *
JOURNALISM , *MASS media , *PROFESSIONAL identity , *JOURNALISTS , *CENSORSHIP , *PARTISANSHIP , *VIOLENCE , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *ISLANDS , *DEBATE - Abstract
This paper analyzes the individual conditions of journalistic production in two independent medias of the media-partisan structure in Cuba. These can be considered among the most internationally recognized Cuban media. In the research, in-depth interviews with 40 journalists. It was found that these conditions are marked, fundamentally, by the confluence in the two media organizations of young graduates of journalism courses in the country with a multiple spatial location, and different referents and professional trajectories. A professional identification with the functions of journalism to inform, monitor power, participate in social debate and show society in its diversity, among others, was also detected. In addition, personal concerns were found about the violence against independent journalism on the island. It was concluded that these conditions materialize in terms of an anti-authoritarian professional discursiveness (and representation) shared by journalists. A comparison with the findings of inquiries located in other national spaces is proposed in the conclusions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Research on the Communication Strategy of History and Culture in Shaanxi Based on BP Neural Network Model.
- Author
-
Xie, Dan and Yin, Chao
- Subjects
- *
ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *AUDIENCE awareness , *COMMUNICATION strategies , *SMART cities , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
Shaanxi is one of China's most important cradles of civilization. The main vein of Chinese culture is rich history and culture, and brilliant red culture embodies the essence of socialist core values. It is still relatively weak to deeply analyze the related research of Shaanxi Province's cultural province construction on the basis of studying the achievements of cultural development in foreign countries and China and combining with the reality of Shaanxi Province. In this paper, a BPNN (BP neural network) model is selected to study the comprehensive evaluation of tourism competitiveness of smart tourism cities, and the software is used to realize the simulation of the comprehensive evaluation system of tourism competitiveness of smart tourism cities, which more comprehensively and objectively reflects the level of comprehensive competitiveness of each city. It is believed that there are some problems in Shaanxi regional cultural communication, such as insufficient exploration of content resources, insufficient communication channels, and low audience awareness, hoping to provide ideas and reference for further exploring the promotion of cultural communication power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Dynamics of Collaboration in Heritage Science.
- Author
-
Curran, Katherine and Zimmermann, Nici
- Subjects
- *
COOPERATIVE research , *SCIENTIFIC community , *INTERDISCIPLINARY research , *SCIENCE projects , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
Heritage science is an interdisciplinary field and successful heritage science research by necessity involves interdisciplinary collaboration between researchers with different disciplinary backgrounds and professional experience. Successful interdisciplinary research is challenging, and many issues have been identified both within and outside heritage science. However, within heritage science there has never been an attempt to do an in-depth study of how communication in interdisciplinary research works in practice. This paper aims to address this gap by providing an in-depth exploration of a case study. We present the analysis of the transcribed recording of a five-hour workshop and follow-up interviews with the workshop participants that took place within the framework of a collaborative heritage science research project. The analysis looks in detail at the dynamics of communication in the context of this meeting, identifying the main topics of conversation and the nature of the transitions between them. We discuss the way in which researchers use different physical scales when thinking about heritage material degradation. We identify key features of interdisciplinary research such as the sense of community and the use of language. Recommendations and insights for future practice are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Knowledge communication and knowledge dissemination in a digital world.
- Author
-
Bondi, Marina and Cacchiani, Silvia
- Subjects
- *
IDENTITY (Psychology) , *CHIEF information officers , *DIGITAL technology , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *COMMUNICATION strategies , *PARTICIPATION - Abstract
This introductory article to the special issue provides a brief theoretical introduction to pragmatic research on the communication and dissemination of domain-specific knowledge across new media, discussing some of the central problems, such as the impact of digital technologies on understanding and learning, the changes in the participation framework, their impact on the construction of credibility and identity. We also call attention to the need for multimodal and hypermodal analysis of the processes of recontextualisation in selected genres. In this context, the papers in the special issue converge in presenting a nuanced view of a broad range of phenomena. Our goal is to encourage research on digital discourse to keep up with the present technological developments and the increasing complexity emerging from the ensuing interaction of knowledge transmission and knowledge circulation practices. • Communication and dissemination of domain-specific knowledge in a digital world need attention in pragmatic research. • Digital technologies have an impact on understanding, knowing and learning. • Intersubjective positioning can be explored as a concomitant of relevant high-quality information. • Methods can be devised to address credibility construction. • Multiple perspectives can be combined to assess communication strategies in (hyper-)multimodal environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Artful Representations as Productive Resistance: Researcher Learnings in Expanding Boundaries of Critical Methodology in Speech-Language Pathology.
- Author
-
Abrahams, Kristen, Mallick, Rizwana, Pillay, Daisy, and Kathard, Harsha
- Subjects
- *
SPEECH-language pathology , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *ELECTRONIC data processing , *DATA analysis , *AMBIGUITY , *RESEARCH methodology , *MODAL logic - Abstract
In this paper, we engage in productive resistance through exploring the application of an arts-based method in expanding the critical research methodology repertoire in the profession of speech-language pathology. There is a specific focus on the value of painting in the data representation process. We explore how a playful, creative analysis deepened the critical interpretative meaning-making process. In particular, we explain how artful representations in the data analysis process can broaden communication in research beyond the written modality to generate alternative knowledges. We use the concepts of productive ambiguity and unknowing as key conceptual tools to reimagine the data analysis process with particular focus on the process of data representation. We conclude that embracing the uncertainty of creative ways of knowing create possibilities for new meanings and knowledges to emerge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Cuerpo(s), comunicación y cultura. Balance académico sobre el cuerpo y la corporalidad como objetos de estudio de la comunicación.
- Author
-
Rizo García, Marta
- Subjects
- *
NONVERBAL communication , *CONFIDENTIAL communications , *SCHOLARLY communication , *DIGITAL communications , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *INTERPERSONAL communication - Abstract
Communication has privileged the study of the so-called media and addressed interpersonal and intersubjective processes to a much lesser extent; perhaps, this is why there are not many reflections on the body and corporality in this field. Beyond studies on interpersonal communication or the categories referring to non-verbal communication, reflection on the corporeal nature of communication and bodies --understood as vehicles for communication or means of communication of individuals with the world-- is undoubtedly insufficient. These pages present a general assessment of the body as a subject matter of communication in the Ibero-American scholarly environment to pose some challenges to communication research --which is also cultural research--, whose subject matter continues to be questioned. As a theoretical essay, this paper uses a documentary method with a specific historiographic view since it is interested in providing an overview of the place that reflection on the body has occupied in communication research. Although the body and corporality have not been topics historically considered by communication research, their approach in our knowledge domain gives rise to suggestive research topics in the current communicative ecology, overshadowed somehow and in particular contexts by digital communication. Thus, incorporating the body and corporality as theme lines in the reflection on communication and culture can undoubtedly enrich the academic field concerned theoretically and empirically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Boundary work and normativity in research communication across time.
- Author
-
Andersson, Mette
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNICATIONS research , *GENDER , *RESEARCH institutes , *PUBLIC communication , *SOCIAL media - Abstract
This paper looks at how research communication in Norwegian migration and diversity research has changed over time. The main themes in the analysis are researchers' motivations to enter the field and their experiences of, and reactions to, critique from colleagues and other audiences. Theory about credibility contests and boundary work on the interface of the academia and media, along with ideas about explicit and implicit normativity, inform the analysis. A main conclusion is that, as the field has matured, contests over normativity have changed from internal contests over implicit normativity to external charges of explicit normativity. The empirical analysis builds on 31 interviews with Norwegian researchers about their experiences of, and views on, public research communication in newspapers, social media, radio, TV and face-to-face panel debates. The interviewed researchers are of different age, gender, and ethnicity and they work in 10 different universities and research institutes across Norway. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Defining cyberwar: towards a definitional framework.
- Author
-
Ashraf, Cameran
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNICATION policy , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *INTERDISCIPLINARY research , *CYBERTERRORISM - Abstract
For nearly thirty years scholars have offered changing definitions of cyberwar. The continued ambiguity demonstrates that efforts at establishing definitional clarity have not been successful. As a result, there are many different and contradictory definitions, ranging from cyberwar's non-existence to cyberwar as an imminent threat. Ongoing definitional ambiguity makes interdisciplinary research and policy communications challenging in this diverse field. Instead of offering a new definition, this paper proposes that cyberwar can be understood through a fluid framework anchored in three themes and five variables identified in a broad interdisciplinary survey of literature. This framework's applicability is demonstrated by constructing an example definition of cyberwar utilising these themes and variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. From Literary Illusions to Media Simulacra: Toward a Semiotic Imagology in the Era of Global Communication.
- Author
-
Hu, Yirong, Mei, Lin, and Zhuang, Peina
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL communication , *SEMIOTICS , *COMPARATIVE literature , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *FIFTEENTH century , *SIXTEENTH century - Abstract
In the pre-globalization era, when communication between nations was difficult and infrequent, and direct (experiential) or indirect (textual-descriptive) knowledge was scant, images of 'foreign countries' were frequently constructions based on inadequate information. As a result, fictional descriptions and images were the primary source for people to gain some knowledge of other nations. However, beginning with the great voyages of discovery of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, we began to step into an age of globalization, which generated the diversification of 'source texts' in this regard. Today, the emergence of new media has accelerated and proliferated such diversity. These new media texts now play a dominant role in forming the image of other countries, to some degree replacing traditional fictional texts. The basic presuppositions of comparative literature imagology have changed accordingly. Starting from the core concept of 'images', this paper discusses why it is necessary to integrate imagology, with 'semiotic images' as core concept, and 'communications research'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. O.2.1 Doctor-patient communication: An intercultural research agenda: Presenter(s): Mariana Lazzaro-Salazar, Universidad Catolica Del Maule, Chile.
- Author
-
Pujol-Cols, Lucas, Mendoza-Mendoza, Ilsa, and Gonzalez-Tapia, Grimanessa
- Subjects
- *
CROSS-cultural communication , *PHYSICIAN-patient relations , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *MEDICAL consultation , *QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
Communication in the doctor-patient relationship is vital to today's globalized world where health professionals and patients constitute a very diverse socio-demographic and socio-cultural composition, and, thus, have different expectations and assumptions of how such communication should develop. In this light, the aim of this paper was to conduct a systematic and critical review of studies that examine intercultural communication in the doctor-patient relationship, with the purpose of synthesizing its findings, assessing its limitations and proposing future lines of research that move this field of studies forward. To that end, a set of advanced searches was performed in the Web of Science, Scopus, PubMed, and Scielo. The use of the PRISMA methodology in the systematic review allowed the identification of 27 articles that 1) had the main purpose of investigating communication in the intercultural interaction between doctors and patients, 2) involved graduate doctors who were active medical professionals, and 3) collected empirical data regarding the role of intercultural communication in the doctor-patient relationship. We analyzed the articles' aims, variables, methodology, context of study, main findings, and publishing journals and their impact factors to draw conclusions from studies in international contexts, with a particular focus on studies conducted in Latin America. In general terms, our analysis showed that in most of the articles reviewed, interculturality is insufficiently theorized, variables or categories are not specified and communication is examined very superficially. Furthermore, interculturality is approached almost exclusively in terms of the national origin of the participants. Although a very balanced distribution between quantitative studies and qualitative studies is observed, only a few studies draw on natural data collected from video-recordings of medical consultations. To conclude, the paper offers an intercultural communication research agenda that includes recommendations on research topics and variables, theoretical perspectives and methodological contributions to conduct future investigations on the matter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Decision Theatre Triangle for societal challenges—An example case and research needs.
- Author
-
Wolf, Sarah, Fürst, Steffen, Geiges, Andreas, Laublichler, Manfred, Mielke, Jahel, Steudle, Gesine, Winter, Konstantin, and Jaeger, Carlo
- Subjects
- *
TRIANGLES , *SCIENTIFIC communication , *SUSTAINABILITY , *MATHEMATICAL models , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
Tackling societal challenges relating to sustainability requires both an understanding of the underlying complex socio-ecological systems and participation of scientists as well as relevant stakeholders, such as practice experts, decision makers, and citizens. This paper introduces the Decision Theatre Triangle, a method which combines empirical information, mathematical modelling and simulation, and a format for dialogue between scientists and stakeholders. While it builds on previous Decision Theatre work, the new structuring into these three elements emphasizes what is needed for setting up a Decision Theatre for a given challenge. Based on experience with a specific example – sustainable mobility in Germany – it is argued that agent-based models are particularly suitable for Decision Theatres and that the method is useful not only for decision support but also for science communication and co-creation of a deeper knowledge of the system under discussion. As a step towards facilitating a broader use of the Decision Theatre Triangle method, the paper then sketches research needs for each of its three elements, with a focus on mathematical modelling and simulation. [Display omitted] • The Decision Theatre Triangle combines data, models, and stakeholder dialogues. • It enables decision support, science communication and co-production of research. • Agent-based modelling shows benefits in the Decision Theatre Triangle method. • Setting up Decision Theatre Triangles for societal challenges needs model structures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Public relations and place branding: Friend, foe or just ignored? A systematic review.
- Author
-
Robson, Prue
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC relations , *PUBLIC spaces , *PLACE marketing , *BRANDING (Marketing) , *PERIODICAL articles , *COMMUNICATIONS research - Abstract
• Limited research applying public relations theories & concepts to places. • Place branding treats public relations as a practice rather than an academic field. • Public relations field has shown little interest in place branding. • But public relations & place branding have conceptual crossover & shared interests. Communication about places is typically termed place branding and is generally situated within the marketing discipline. However, in practice, place branding shares many commonalities with public relations. It involves relationships with a wide range of stakeholders, reputation management, and communication campaigns that involve no direct sale of a product. While some have noted the parallels between place branding and public relations, the intersection of these two fields has not been reviewed empirically. This study examines the relationship between public relations and place branding by exploring how scholars in each field have conceptualised and represented the other in their research publications. A systematic review of 378 journal articles, published from 1988 to 2018 in 18 selected journals from both fields, was conducted. This research shows that while there is a significant conceptual crossover between the two fields and they work together in practice, the place branding literature largely treats public relations as a promotional tactic rather than a disciplinary body of knowledge. Conversely, outside of public diplomacy research, public relations has shown little interest in places and place communication, and there is limited research applying public relations theories and concepts to places. This paper adds to current knowledge on the interdisciplinarity of public relations theories and concepts and how public relations is perceived outside its own field and suggests new possibilities for interdisciplinary research on place communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Discussion of "Accurate explicit analytical solution for Colebrook-White equation" by Zahreddine Hafsi, Mechanics Research Communications 111 (2021) 103646).
- Author
-
AREERACHAKUL, Nathaporn, GIRDWICHAI, Luedech, and AREERAKULKAN, Natapat
- Subjects
- *
ANALYTICAL solutions , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *EQUATIONS - Abstract
The discussed paper introduces the concept of approximating the Colebrook-White equation (CW) by Taylor series expansion and solving analytically the resulting polynomial equations. The proposed 3rd order expansion based approximation is overly accurate but shows rather poor computational performance. We show in this letter that lower-order approximations developed according to the concept provide sufficient accuracy and greatly improved computational speed for engineering and scientific applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Human adaptation to Holocene environments: Perspectives and promise from China.
- Author
-
Berger, Elizabeth, Brunson, Katherine, Kaufman, Brett, Lee, Gyoung-Ah, Liu, Xinyi, Sebillaud, Pauline, Storozum, Michael, Barton, Loukas, Eng, Jacqueline, Feinman, Gary, Flad, Rowan, Garvie-Lok, Sandra, Hrivnyak, Michelle, Lander, Brian, Merrett, Deborah C., and Ye, Wa
- Subjects
- *
HOLOCENE Epoch , *CLIMATE research , *CLIMATE change , *COMMUNICATIONS research , *SYSTEMS theory - Abstract
• We review the state of research on human-environment interaction in Holocene China. • We demonstrate the benefits of a multidisciplinary, regionally focused approach. • We conclude datasets must be local and specific, and integrate data on multiple scales. • China is large, well-documented, and critical for understanding social-natural systems. This paper reviews recent archaeological research on human-environment interaction in the Holocene, taking continental China as its geographic focus. As China is large, geographically diverse, and exceptionally archaeologically and historically well-documented, research here provides critical insight into the functioning of social-natural systems. Based on a broad review of the field as well as recent advances and discoveries, the authors reflect on research themes including climate change and adaptive systems theory, spatial and temporal scale, anthropogenic environmental change, risk management and resilience, and integration of subdisciplines. These converge on three overarching conclusions. First, datasets relevant to climate change and ancient human-environment interaction must be as local and specific as possible, as the timing of environmental change differs locally, and the human response is highly dependent on local social and technological conditions. Second, the field still needs more robust theoretical frameworks for analyzing complex social-natural systems, and especially for integrating data on multiple scales. Third, for this work to contribute meaningfully to contemporary climate change research, effective communication of research findings to the public and to scientists in other disciplines should be incorporated into publication plans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.