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Media effects. Laswell’s Model of Mass Communication. Who Says What In Which Channel To Whom With What Effect. Effects Theories. Walter Lippmann: Public Opinion (1922) We see the world as "pictures in our heads" Media shape perception of things we have not experienced personally.
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Laswell’s Model of Mass Communication • Who • Says What • In Which Channel • To Whom • With What Effect
Effects Theories • Walter Lippmann: Public Opinion (1922) • We see the world as "pictures in our heads" • Media shape perception of things we have not experienced personally
Powerful Effects Theory • Media have immediate, direct influence • Assumes people are passive and absorb media content uncritically & unconditionally • “Hypodermic Needle” model • “Magic Bullet” model
Minimalist Effects • Paul Lazarsfeld Erie County study (1940) • Mass media had hardly any direct effect • Personal contact more important than media contact • Media effects mostly indirect
Two-step Flow model • Media affect individuals through opinion leaders • Opinion leaders are those who influence others • Clergy, teachers, neighborhood leaders, etc.
Status Conferral • Media coverage can create prominence for issues & people Agenda Setting • Maxwell McCombs & Don Shaw • Media tell people what to think about – but not what to think
Media can: • Create awareness • Establish priorities • Perpetuate issues • Intramedia effect as well
Narcoticizing dysfunction • Media do not energize people into taking action • Media lull people into passivity by overwhelming them with information • People deceive selves into believing they’re involved when they’re actually only informed
Cumulative Effects Theory • Media influence is gradual over time • Effect is often powerful Spiral of Silence (Noelle-Neumann) • Vocal majority intimidates others into silence
Focus on the audience • 1940s challenge to audience passivity
Uses & Gratifications • People choose media that meet their needs & interests Needs such as: • Surveillance • Diversion • Socialization
Surveillance • Media provide info about what’s going on • Both news & entertainment
Diversion Media as entertainment • Stimulate • Relax • Release
Socialization • Mass media can help initiate people into society • And help them fit in • Demonstrate dominant behaviors and norms • “Observational learning”
Role modeling • Imitative behavior • Impact can be negative or positive ("prosocial”)
Socialization via eavesdropping • Children learn about adult topics by seeing them depicted in media
Parasocial interaction • False sense of participating in dialogue • Communication is actually one-way
Consistency theory • Individuals exercise control over media’s effects on them • People choose media & messages consistent with their existing views & values Selective: • Exposure • Perception • Retention & Recall
Selective Exposure • People choose some media messages over others • People ignore messages that contradict their beliefs
Selective Perception • People tend to hear what they want or expect to hear
Selective retention & recall • People retain & recollect some media messages and not others
Bottom line: • Individuals have a large degree of control over how the mass media affect them
War of the Worlds Revisited Why did the Orson Welles broadcast have such a powerful effect on its audience? EarthStation1.com's Radio Sounds Showcase: The 1938 "War of the Worlds" Radio Broadcast Wavs
“Reverence” for radio as a reliable medium • Predisposition to expect bad news • Selective perception • Gullibility fueled by awe of science • WWI memories – gas warfare • Failure of common sense
Determining Causality • Correlation means that 2 or more variables coexist • Causality means that one variable causes another • Beware of bad science (studies purporting causality)