112 research outputs found

    Vermo-nos, vendo os outros: investigação comparativa de notícias televisivas

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    Acaba de passar várias horas num avião e, finalmente, deu entrada num hotel num país distante. Se agir como eu, uma das primeiras coisas que fará após pousar a bagagem será ligar a televisão e começar a percorrer os canais. Mais tarde ou mais cedo, começará a passar por um e outro noticiário. E, mesmo que não domine o idioma, ficará convicto de estar a ver as notícias. As notícias televisivas constituem, seguramente, um fenómeno global. De facto, desde o advento da televisão, em meados do século XX, que as notícias constituem um dos seus mais primitivos géneros de conteúdo. E, no entanto, o processo de produção, as tecnologias, os valores jornalísticos e a sofisticação das audiências por todo o mundo têm sofrido constantes avanços e alterações. Consideremos ou não as notícias televisivas como sendo um meio útil de providenciar informação sobre aquilo que se passa a nível local ou mundial, não há dúvida de que a TV constitui ainda a principal fonte de informação para a maioria das pessoas, mesmo com o crescente aumento do número de utilizadores da internet. Inúmeros formatos de noticiários televisivos evoluíram ao longo dos anos: serviços públicos e comerciais; locais e nacionais; gerais e centrados em tópicos específicos (ex: negócios, desporto, etc.); breves boletins informativos e transmissões non-stop de 24 horas diárias. No entanto, não obstante esta variedade, sempre existiram pontos em comum entre todos os formatos, sobretudo se procedermos a uma análise individual de peças noticiosas

    The Television News Interview

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    It is not a traditional textbook that tries to each interviewing in a “how to do it” sense. It is instead an insightful study of interviewing which provides essential background and understanding for students, researches and the press

    Does News Platform Matter? Comparing Online Journalistic Role Performance to Newspaper, Radio, and Television

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    The shifting role of journalism in a digital age has affected long-standing journalistic norms across media platforms. This has reinvigorated discussion on how work in online newsrooms compares to other platforms that differ in media affordances and forms. Still, more studies are needed on whether those differences translate into distinct practices, especially when examining cross-national studies. Based on a content analysis of 148,474 stories produced by 365 media organizations from 37 countries, this article compares the performance of journalistic roles in online newsrooms to three other types of media—TV, radio, and print. The paper analyzes if journalistic roles present themselves differently across platforms, and if these differences are constant or they vary across countries. Results show that there are measurable differences in role performance in online journalism compared to other platforms. Platform had a significant impact, particularly in terms of service and infotainment orientation, while the implementation of roles oriented toward public service was more similar. Additionally, country differences in the relationship between role performance and platforms mainly emerged for roles that enable political influence on news coverage, with differences in the relationship between online vs. traditional platforms appearing to be distinct features of the specific political system. © 2023 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

    Cavernous hemangioma in the thymus: a case report

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    IFNAR1-Signalling Obstructs ICOS-mediated Humoral Immunity during Non-lethal Blood-Stage Plasmodium Infection

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    Funding: This work was funded by a Career Development Fellowship (1028634) and a project grant (GRNT1028641) awarded to AHa by the Australian National Health & Medical Research Council (NHMRC). IS was supported by The University of Queensland Centennial and IPRS Scholarships. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Goldstone Bosons in the Appelquist-Terning ETC Model

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    It is demonstrated that the extended technicolor model proposed recently by Appelquist and Terning has pair of potentially light U(1)U(1) Goldstone bosons coupling to ordinary matter with strength 2mfFπ2m_f\over F_{\pi}, where mfm_f is the mass of the fermion and F_{\pi} \approx 125\,\GeV. These Goldstone bosons could get a mass if the spontaneously broken U(1)U(1) symmetries are also explicitly broken, by physics beyond that specified in the model. An attempt to break these symmetries by embedding the model into a larger gauge group seems to be inadequate. The problem is because there are too many representations and there is a mismatch between the number of condensates and the number of gauge symmetries broken.Comment: 14 pages, uses harvmac, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Sphaleron transitions in the Minimal Standard Model and the upper bound for the Higgs Mass

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    We calculate the dissipation of the baryon number after the electroweak phase transition due to thermal fluctuations above the sphaleron barrier. We consider not only the classical Boltzmann factor but also fermionic and bosonic one-loop contributions. We find that both bosonic and especially fermionic fluctuations can considerably suppress the transition rate. Assuming the Langer--Affleck formalism for this rate, the condition that an initial baryon asymmetry must not be washed out by sphaleron transitions leads, in the Minimal Standard Model (sinθW=0\sin\theta_W=0), to an upper bound for the Higgs mass in the range 60 to 75 GeV.Comment: 49 pages, 5 figures (uuencoded PostScript); fixing of the renormalization scale has been improved, numerics has been extende
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