491,141 research outputs found
Liberate China’s Workers
This document is part of a digital collection provided by the Martin P. Catherwood Library, ILR School, Cornell University, pertaining to the effects of globalization on the workplace worldwide. Special emphasis is placed on labor rights, working conditions, labor market changes, and union organizing.CLW_2011_Report_China_liberate_chinas.pdf: 18 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
UA37/31 John Oldham Personal Papers Clipping
Recalling Forward Thinking, article by Pete Thamel, part of John Oldham\u27s personal papers
Supplier for Samsung and Lenovo Accused of Using Child Labor
This document is part of a digital collection provided by the Martin P. Catherwood Library, ILR School, Cornell University, pertaining to the effects of globalization on the workplace worldwide. Special emphasis is placed on labor rights, working conditions, labor market changes, and union organizing.CLW_2014_Report_China_supplier_for_samsung.pdf: 46 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
Sentiment Analysis on New York Times Articles Data
Sentiment Analysis on New York Times Coverage Data
Departmental Affiliation: Data Science/ Political Science
College of Arts and Sciences
The extant political science literature examines media coverage of immigration and assesses the effect of that coverage on partisanship in the United States. Immigration is believed to be a unique factor that induces large- scale changes in partisanship based on race and ethnicity. The negative tone of media coverage pushes non-Latino Whites into the Republican Party, while Latinos trend toward the Democratic Party. The aim for this project is to look at New York time data in order to identify how much immigration is covered in newspaper outlets, specifically Latino immigration, and to determine the overall tone of these stories.
In this research, we seek to determine individual articles take a positive, neutral or negative stance. We achieve this using a dictionary-based approach, meaning we look at individual words to assess if it has a positive, neutral or negative connotation. We train our data using publicly accessible sentiment dictionaries such as VADER (Valence Aware Dictionary and Sentiment Reasoner). However, this task can be difficult because certain words can be dynamic and may pertain to a positive or negative sentiment in context of the article. In order to resolve this issue, we use reliability measures to ensure that the words of high frequencies are in the correct sphere of negative, neutral, and positive light.
Information about the Author(s):
Faculty Sponsor(s): Professor Gregg B. Johnson and Professor Karl Schmitt
Student Contact: Gabriel Carvajal – [email protected]
MEDIA EFFECTS ON THE NEW YORK TIMES’ “THE WOMEN’S MARCH IN WASHINGTON” VIDEO NEWS COVERAGE ON FACEBOOK
The reliance towards Facebook in regard to obtaining information becomes a news habit among the society. Considerable number of news coverage from media is accessible to Facebook which creates effects on the audience on account of the media exposure. The study is conducted for the purposes of analyzing news elements which are embedded in The New York Times' “The Women's March in Wahsington”video news coverage on Facebook and discovering the effects of the coverage towards media audience. This study is constructed as a library research which utilizes textual and user-response analysis research methodology. The theory utilizes to support the study is Pan &Kosicki's Framing Analysis, and McComb& Shaw's Agenda-Setting theory is also applied in this study to support the framing analysis. The results of the study indicate that three salient elements of the coverage set public agenda to which the salient elements become prominent issues of the Women's March on Washington
Pulitzer Prize Winner C.J. Chivers Speaks at RWU on Nov. 13
New York Times reporter will talk about his new book, “The Fighters: Americans in Combat in Afghanistan and Iraq”
Fine-tuning Tasini: privileges of electronic distribution and reproduction
This article was cited by the U.S. Supreme Court in New York Times Company v. Tasini, 533 U.S. 483 at 497 (2001)
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