31 research outputs found

    Back to reality: The complex relationship between patterns in immigration news coverage and real-world developments in Dutch and Flemish newspapers (1999–2015)

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    Although prior studies investigating immigration news typically documented a dominant focus on negativity and threats, only limited empirical research is available, which scrutinizes the way real-world developments affect these patterns in immigration news. This study aims to fill this void. First, we report results of a large-scale and longitudinal content analysis (N = 4,340,757) of trends in immigration news coverage in two Western European cases, Flanders (the northern, Dutch-speaking, largest region of Belgium) and the Netherlands, from 1999 to 2015. Both the salience of immigration as a news topic on itself and its linkages with three prominent issues (i.e., crime, terrorism, and socioeconomic issues) are explored. Second, this study builds on previous insights by comparing dynamics in immigration news to real-world events and developments. Overall, the results show that the linkage of immigration to issues of crime, terrorism, and the economy in Flemish and Dutch newspapers was considerable throughout the 17-year period under study. Yet there is limited evidence for a close relationship between news and real-life developments; hence, trends in immigration news seem largely unaffected by trends in society

    Lesion Extension and Neuronal Loss after Spinal Cord Injury Using X-Ray Phase-Contrast Tomography in Mice

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    Following spinal cord injury (SCI) the degree of functional (motor, autonomous, or sensory) loss correlates with the severity of nervous tissue damage. An imaging technique able to capture non-invasively and simultaneously the complex mechanisms of neuronal loss, vascular damage, and peri-lesional tissue reorganization is currently lacking in experimental SCI studies. Synchrotron X-ray phase-contrast tomography (SXPCT) has emerged as a non-destructive three-dimensional (3D) neuroimaging technique with high contrast and spatial resolution. In this framework, we developed a multi-modal approach combining SXPCT, histology and correlative methods to study neurovascular architecture in normal and spinal level C4-contused mouse spinal cords (C57BL/6J mice, age 2-3 months). The evolution of SCI lesion was imaged at the cell resolution level during the acute (30 min) and subacute (7 day) phases. Spared motor neurons (MNs) were segmented and quantified in different volumes localized at and away from the epicenter. SXPCT was able to capture neuronal loss and blood-brain barrier breakdown following SCI. Three-dimensional quantification based on SXPCT acquisitions showed no additional MN loss between 30 min and 7 days post-SCI. In addition, the analysis of hemorrhagic (at 30 min) and lesion (at 7 days) volumes revealed a high similarity in size, suggesting no extension of tissue degeneration between early and later time-points. Moreover, glial scar borders were unevenly distributed, with rostral edges being the most extended. In conclusion, SXPCT capability to image at high resolution cellular changes in 3D enables the understanding of the relationship between hemorrhagic events and nervous structure damage in SCI

    Less than Expected? How Media Cover Demonstration Turnout

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    Demonstration turnout is a crucial political resource for social movements. In this article, we investigate how mass media cover demonstration size. We develop a typology of turnout coverage and scrutinize the factors that drive turnout coverage. In addition, we test whether media coverage underestimates, reflects, or exaggerates “guesstimates” by organizers and police forces. Together, these analyses shed light on whether turnout coverage fits a logic of normalization or marginalization. We rely on a unique dataset of 428 demonstrations organized in Brussels (2003–2010). For these demonstrations, we have information on the turnout as reported in national television news, as counted by the police, and as expected by the organizers. We find that media present turnout most often as a fact, rarely as contentious (10 percent). Although few demonstrations pass the media gates, our study yields little to no evidence for a logic of turnout marginalization. Media coverage does not systematically underestimate demonstration size, nor does it blindly follow police counts. Rather, turnout coverage attests of a logic of normalization, following standard news-making practices. The more important the demonstration (size, lead item) and the larger the gap between police and organizer guesstimates, the more attention is paid to turnout in the news. Discussion centers on the generalizability and normative interpretation of the results
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