|
|
|
|
Journalists’ Perceptions of Source Credibility and the Media’s Source Use: A Study on Media Coverage of the Six-Party Nuclear Talks |
|
| Abstract | Word Stems | Keywords | Association | Citation | Get this Document | Similar Titles |
|
STOP! You can now view the document associated with this citation by clicking on the "View Document as HTML" link below. |
|
Click here to view the document
|
Abstract:
|
This study examines the relationship between journalists’ perceptions of source credibility and the media’s source use in terms of the aggregate and individual levels by focusing on media coverage of six-party talks on North Korea’s nuclear ambitions. Results of content analysis of U.S. and South Korean newspapers are compared with data from a survey of U.S. and South Korean journalists who covered the six-party nuclear talks. Because of a high level of accessibility and credibility, government officials are dominant sources in media coverage of the talks. Individual journalists’ perceptions of source credibility are more strongly correlated with their individual use of sources than the news media’s aggregate use of sources. These findings contribute to research on media choices of sources. |
Most Common Document Word Stems:
sourc (255), journalist (142), media (120), credibl (114), use (112), offici (105), korean (95), u.s (94), south (87), talk (81), govern (59), news (54), six (50), parti (44), percept (44), six-parti (41), expert (40), countri (37), studi (35), korea (34), newspap (33), |
|
|
 | Convention | | Convention is an application service for managing large or small academic conferences, annual meetings, and other types of events! |  | Submission - Custom fields, multiple submission types, tracks, audio visual, multiple upload formats, automatic conversion to pdf. |  | Review - Peer Review, Bulk reviewer assignment, bulk emails, ranking, z-score statistics, and multiple worksheets! |  | Reports - Many standard and custom reports generated while you wait. Print programs with participant indexes, event grids, and more! |  | Scheduling - Flexible and convenient grid scheduling within rooms and buildings. Conflict checking and advanced filtering. |  | Communication - Bulk email tools to help your administrators send reminders and responses. Use form letters, a message center, and much more! |  | Management - Search tools, duplicate people management, editing tools, submission transfers, many tools to manage a variety of conference management headaches! | | Click here for more information. |
|
|
Association:
Name: International Communication Association URL: http://www.icahdq.org
|
Citation:
|
MLA Citation:
| Seo, Hyunjin. and Lim, Jeongsub. "Journalists’ Perceptions of Source Credibility and the Media’s Source Use: A Study on Media Coverage of the Six-Party Nuclear Talks" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, TBA, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, May 21, 2008 <Not Available>. 2009-05-23 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p230556_index.html> |
APA Citation:
| Seo, H. and Lim, J. , 2008-05-21 "Journalists’ Perceptions of Source Credibility and the Media’s Source Use: A Study on Media Coverage of the Six-Party Nuclear Talks" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, TBA, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-05-23 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p230556_index.html |
Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: This study examines the relationship between journalists’ perceptions of source credibility and the media’s source use in terms of the aggregate and individual levels by focusing on media coverage of six-party talks on North Korea’s nuclear ambitions. Results of content analysis of U.S. and South Korean newspapers are compared with data from a survey of U.S. and South Korean journalists who covered the six-party nuclear talks. Because of a high level of accessibility and credibility, government officials are dominant sources in media coverage of the talks. Individual journalists’ perceptions of source credibility are more strongly correlated with their individual use of sources than the news media’s aggregate use of sources. These findings contribute to research on media choices of sources. |
Get this Document:
Find this citation or document at one or all of these locations below. The links below may have the citation or the entire document for free or you may purchase access to the document. Clicking on these links will change the site you're on and empty your shopping cart.
| Document Type: |
application/pdf |
| Page count: |
33 |
| Word count: |
7913 |
| Text sample: |
| SOURCE CREDIBILITY AND SOURCE USE 1 Running Head: SOURCE CREDIBILITY AND SOURCE USE Journalists’ perceptions of source credibility and the media’s source use: A study on media coverage of the six-party nuclear talks Hyunjin Seo Ph.D. Student S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications Syracuse University 215 University Place Syracuse NY 13244 hseo03@syr.edu hyunjin.seo@gmail.com Jeongsub Lim Assistant Professor Department of Communication Austin Peay State University 601 College Street P.O. Box 4446 Clarksville TN 37044 limj@apsu.edu Paper presented to the Journalism |
| 3.53 (1.36) 2.54 (1.25) Chinese officials 2.76 (1.19) 3.17 (1.27) Chinese experts 1.98 (.97) 2.21 (1.10) N. Korean officials 3.16 (1.41) 2.92 (1.32) Japanese officials 2.40 (1.18) 2.92 (1.14) Japanese experts 1.76 (.74) 1.75 (.85) Russian officials 1.98 (1.12) 1.67 (.82) Russian experts 1.42 (.72) 1.13 (.45) Entries are mean values with standard deviations in parentheses. Scale: 1->almost never 5->almost always |
Similar Titles:
*What Influences Media Coverage of North Korea?: A Study of Journalists and News Reports on the Six-Nation Nuclear Talks (Top 4 Paper)
Framing the Nuke: How News Media in Six-Party-Talk Countries Framed North Korea’s Nuclear Test
A Comparative Study on Journalists’ Perceptions of Press-Government Relations during Six-Party Talks
|
|