Francisco Rui Cádima e Ivone Ferreira (2021). Perspectivas multidisciplinares da Comunicação em contexto de Pandemia (Vol I). Coleção ICNOVA. DOI: https://doi.org/10.34619/tt2y-r684 . Este novo eBook do ICNOVA surge da necessidade de refletir sobre a crise global causada pela pandemia do coronavírus SARS-CoV-2 que interferiu nas vidas pública e privada, no consumo de media, na relação com as fontes de informação e aumentou a polarização política.
06/02/21
28/01/21
08/12/20
29/11/20
04/11/20
02/11/20
14/10/20
09/10/20
07/10/20
02/10/20
YouTube news consumers
About a quarter of American adults get news from YouTube (NiemanLab/Pew Research Center).
17/09/20
Perspectives on what's considered hateful online
International perspectives on what’s considered hateful or profane online: the study was funded by Facebook and conducted in partnership with researchers from Erasmus University in the Netherlands and NOVA University in Portugal.
14/08/20
31/07/20
28/07/20
03/07/20
Coronavirus Coverage by State-Backed English-Language News Sources
Coronavirus Coverage by State-Backed English-Language News Sources. Understanding Chinese, Iranian, Russian and Turkish Government Media (Jonathan Bright et al. The Computational Propaganda Project (COMPROP), Oxford Internet Institute)
04/06/20
03/06/20
Exposure to untrustworthy websites in the 2016 US election
Guess, A.M., Nyhan, B. & Reifler, J. Exposure to untrustworthy websites in the 2016 US election. Nat Hum Behav 4, 472–480 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-020-0833-x
Survey and web-traffic data from the 2016 US presidential campaign show that supporters of Donald Trump were most likely to visit these websites, which often spread through Facebook. However, these websites made up a small share of people’s information diets on average and were largely consumed by a subset of Americans with strong preferences for pro-attitudinal information. These results suggest that the widespread speculation about the prevalence of exposure to untrustworthy websites has been overstated.
Survey and web-traffic data from the 2016 US presidential campaign show that supporters of Donald Trump were most likely to visit these websites, which often spread through Facebook. However, these websites made up a small share of people’s information diets on average and were largely consumed by a subset of Americans with strong preferences for pro-attitudinal information. These results suggest that the widespread speculation about the prevalence of exposure to untrustworthy websites has been overstated.
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