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Since the debut of the iPhone in 2007, the mobile phone has become
a quick, convenient, and immensely popular gateway for accessing
and consuming news. With three billion mobile phone subscribers,
Asian countries have led this seismic shift in news consumption.
They provide a wide range of opportunities to study how, as mobile
technology matures and becomes routinized, mobile news is
increasingly subject to societal constraints and impositions of
political power that reduce the democratic benefits of such news
and call into question the application of these technological
innovations within governments and societies. News in Their Pockets
explores the societal, technological, and user-related factors
behind why and how digital-savvy college students seek news via the
mobile phone across Asia's most mobile cities-Shanghai, Hong Kong,
Singapore, and Taipei. Situating cross-societal comparative
analyses of mobile news consumption in Asia within a digital and
global context, this volume outlines the evolution of the mobile
phone to its prominence in disseminating news, offers predictors of
patterns in mobile news consumption, investigates user needs and
expectations, and illustrates future impacts on civic engagement
from mobile news consumption. By examining the interplay between
game-changing and empowering communication technology and
constraining social systems, News in Their Pockets provides the
framework necessary for constructive, continuing debates over the
promise and peril of digital news and exposes our underlying
reasoning behind the adoption of the mobile phone as the all-in-one
media of choice to stay socialized, entertained, and informed in
the modern digital age.
This book tackles the infodemic—the rapid, widespread diffusion
of false, misleading, or inaccurate information about the disease
and its ramifications—triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic. With a
focus on four Asian societies, the book compares and analyzes the
spread of COVID-19 misinformation and its broad impacts on the
public in Beijing, Hong Kong, Taipei, and Singapore. Providing both
a comprehensive overview of the phenomenon of misinformation and
cross-societal analyses of patterns, the book features in-depth
analyses of the prevalence of COVID-19 misinformation and
engagement and explores its consequences in an Asian context. The
book sheds lights on these key questions: What types of infodemic
messages circulate widely on popular social media platforms? What
factors account for exposure to and engagement with debunked yet
popular COVID-19 misinformation? How does exposure to widely
circulated COVID-19 misinformation affect people’s beliefs,
attitudes, and adoption of preventive measures to cope with the
pandemic? How do macro social differences condition the diffusion
and impacts of COVID-19 misinformation? What intervention
strategies can counter the misinformation? Presenting scientific
insights and empirical findings on the pressing issues about
infodemic, this book will be of great interest to students and
researchers of communication studies, political science, public
health, crisis communication, and Asian Studies, as well as
policymakers and practitioners who wish to acquire cutting-edge,
evidence-based knowledge about combating misinformation during a
global pandemic.
Providing leading-edge perspectives on the legacy theories of mass
media and society, this collection advances the foundational
theories of mass communications, which have sustained the field of
study over the past fifty years. Many of these contributions were
originally published as a Deutschmann Scholarly Essay in the Mass
Communication and Society journal, and together they comprise a
remarkable source of knowledge, equipped to lead mass
communications theory through the emergence of new technologies,
and the evolution of communications, in the 21st century. Moreover,
the contributions gathered in this volume contradict any critics
who may claim the theories of the 20th century have outlived their
usefulness, for these prove to guide contemporary research as
forcefully as ever in the digital era. Validating the classic media
theories across time and their various forms constitute the second
focal section of this volume. Finally, senior media scholars offer
their views on the future directions in which mass communication
theories can be advanced.
This book explores how personalized content and the inherent
networked nature of the mobile media could and do lead to positive
externalities in social progress in Asian societies. Empirical
studies that examine uses of the mobile phone and apps (voice
mailing, SMS, mobile social media, mobile Weibo, mobile WeChat,
etc.) are featured as a response to calls for theorization of the
mobile media's efficacy as a tool for citizen engagement and
participation in civic and political affairs, especially in the
search for collective solutions to widespread social problems of
food safety, pollution, government corruption, and public health
risks. Considering the vast cultural diversity of Asian societies
that are shaped by different levels of political, social, economic,
and religious development, the book offers nuanced studies that
provide in-depth analysis of the mobile media and political
communication in a variety of communities of leading Asian
countries. From the country-specific studies, broad themes and
enduring concepts emerge.
The 21st century has been called 'the Asian Century' by Eastern and
Western academics, largely due to the economic and cultural rise of
China and India. This volume explores both what this means for
communication research, and the implications of Asia's rising
global power for communication scholars in Asia and from around the
world. Hot topics and emerging trends are explored, encapsulating
the new opportunities as well as the challenges for Asian
communication scholars. Asia represents diverse cultural, economic,
social and political systems that shape different media systems in
various countries with fertile contexts for communication research.
The scope of the chapters in this book includes mass
communications, mobile technology, intercultural and political
communication, news and entertainment, health communication, public
relations, and comparative analyses of mainstream mass
communication theories. The articles in this book were originally
published in the Asian Journal of Communication.
Providing leading-edge perspectives on the legacy theories of mass
media and society, this collection advances the foundational
theories of mass communications, which have sustained the field of
study over the past fifty years. Many of these contributions were
originally published as a Deutschmann Scholarly Essay in the Mass
Communication and Society journal, and together they comprise a
remarkable source of knowledge, equipped to lead mass
communications theory through the emergence of new technologies,
and the evolution of communications, in the 21st century. Moreover,
the contributions gathered in this volume contradict any critics
who may claim the theories of the 20th century have outlived their
usefulness, for these prove to guide contemporary research as
forcefully as ever in the digital era. Validating the classic media
theories across time and their various forms constitute the second
focal section of this volume. Finally, senior media scholars offer
their views on the future directions in which mass communication
theories can be advanced.
The 21st century has been called 'the Asian Century' by Eastern and
Western academics, largely due to the economic and cultural rise of
China and India. This volume explores both what this means for
communication research, and the implications of Asia's rising
global power for communication scholars in Asia and from around the
world. Hot topics and emerging trends are explored, encapsulating
the new opportunities as well as the challenges for Asian
communication scholars. Asia represents diverse cultural, economic,
social and political systems that shape different media systems in
various countries with fertile contexts for communication research.
The scope of the chapters in this book includes mass
communications, mobile technology, intercultural and political
communication, news and entertainment, health communication, public
relations, and comparative analyses of mainstream mass
communication theories. The articles in this book were originally
published in the Asian Journal of Communication.
The 'Milestones' essays in Mass Communication and Society are
reflective and analytical articles by the most notable scholars in
the field. These classic essays address 21st century issues from
the pioneers of media and communication studies, including Elihu
Katz on new media and social movements, George Gerbner on
cultivation analysis, and Dietram Scheufele on political
communication. As technologies evolve and mass communication
becomes mobilized and democratized - more individual and also more
social - these landmark scholars provide ideas about how
established theories may be applied in new ways, and how future
research can expand our understanding of mass communication as its
reach and effects grow ever larger. This book will be essential
reading for both students and researchers of Mass Communications
Research.
The 'Milestones' essays in Mass Communication and Society are
reflective and analytical articles by the most notable scholars in
the field. These classic essays address 21st century issues from
the pioneers of media and communication studies, including Elihu
Katz on new media and social movements, George Gerbner on
cultivation analysis, and Dietram Scheufele on political
communication. As technologies evolve and mass communication
becomes mobilized and democratized - more individual and also more
social - these landmark scholars provide ideas about how
established theories may be applied in new ways, and how future
research can expand our understanding of mass communication as its
reach and effects grow ever larger. This book will be essential
reading for both students and researchers of Mass Communications
Research.
This book explores how personalized content and the inherent
networked nature of the mobile media could and do lead to positive
externalities in social progress in Asian societies. Empirical
studies that examine uses of the mobile phone and apps (voice
mailing, SMS, mobile social media, mobile Weibo, mobile WeChat,
etc.) are featured as a response to calls for theorization of the
mobile media's efficacy as a tool for citizen engagement and
participation in civic and political affairs, especially in the
search for collective solutions to widespread social problems of
food safety, pollution, government corruption, and public health
risks. Considering the vast cultural diversity of Asian societies
that are shaped by different levels of political, social, economic,
and religious development, the book offers nuanced studies that
provide in-depth analysis of the mobile media and political
communication in a variety of communities of leading Asian
countries. From the country-specific studies, broad themes and
enduring concepts emerge.
Since the debut of the iPhone in 2007, the mobile phone has become
a quick, convenient, and immensely popular gateway for accessing
and consuming news. With three billion mobile phone subscribers,
Asian countries have led this seismic shift in news consumption.
They provide a wide range of opportunities to study how, as mobile
technology matures and becomes routinized, mobile news is
increasingly subject to societal constraints and impositions of
political power that reduce the democratic benefits of such news
and call into question the application of these technological
innovations within governments and societies. News in Their Pockets
explores the societal, technological, and user-related factors
behind why and how digital-savvy college students seek news via the
mobile phone across Asia's most mobile cities-Shanghai, Hong Kong,
Singapore, and Taipei. Situating cross-societal comparative
analyses of mobile news consumption in Asia within a digital and
global context, this volume outlines the evolution of the mobile
phone to its prominence in disseminating news, offers predictors of
patterns in mobile news consumption, investigates user needs and
expectations, and illustrates future impacts on civic engagement
from mobile news consumption. By examining the interplay between
game-changing and empowering communication technology and
constraining social systems, News in Their Pockets provides the
framework necessary for constructive, continuing debates over the
promise and peril of digital news and exposes our underlying
reasoning behind the adoption of the mobile phone as the all-in-one
media of choice to stay socialized, entertained, and informed in
the modern digital age.
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