Publicación ISIThis article considers whether 'sensational' news stories are intrinsically more likely to elicit emotional responses in audiences than other TV news stories. The research analyses a sample of British televised news in respect of empirically validated attributes, to identify the presence of particular content elements that audience research has shown to possess emotion-eliciting capabilities. The results show that news stories traditionally classified as,sensational' - a term that implies a dramatic and therefore emotion-arousing imperative - do not necessarily contain more emotionally arousing features than other types of news story. Only crime stories (among the most frequently occurring 'sensational' news categories) and, ...
In relation to journalism, the concept of ‘emotion’ is consistently undertheorized. Employed with co...
This article extends the definition of sensationalism to print media and argues that the use of inte...
This study investigates the truism that sensationalism in news is a guarantee for success in terms o...
Publicación ISIThis article considers whether 'sensational' news stories are intrinsically more like...
Contains fulltext : 73160.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This study inv...
This study investigates whether the decreased trust in news media can be explained by the increase i...
This study investigates whether the decreased trust in news media can be explained by the increase i...
This article will focus on a corpus of fifty-five British, Irish, American and Australian press arti...
Using a sample of 14 television systems and 29 television stations, we investigate the effect of two...
Contains fulltext : 175928.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This study in...
Television depictions of crime stories started dominating television news and entertainment in the 1...
This research aims to identify a correlation between emotions and fake news. Fake news is “fabricate...
This study investigates whether including sensationalist features in news stories is an appropriate ...
In relation to journalism, the concept of ‘emotion’ is consistently undertheorized. Employed with co...
The present research explored the implications of fear for the perceived importance of news stories....
In relation to journalism, the concept of ‘emotion’ is consistently undertheorized. Employed with co...
This article extends the definition of sensationalism to print media and argues that the use of inte...
This study investigates the truism that sensationalism in news is a guarantee for success in terms o...
Publicación ISIThis article considers whether 'sensational' news stories are intrinsically more like...
Contains fulltext : 73160.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This study inv...
This study investigates whether the decreased trust in news media can be explained by the increase i...
This study investigates whether the decreased trust in news media can be explained by the increase i...
This article will focus on a corpus of fifty-five British, Irish, American and Australian press arti...
Using a sample of 14 television systems and 29 television stations, we investigate the effect of two...
Contains fulltext : 175928.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This study in...
Television depictions of crime stories started dominating television news and entertainment in the 1...
This research aims to identify a correlation between emotions and fake news. Fake news is “fabricate...
This study investigates whether including sensationalist features in news stories is an appropriate ...
In relation to journalism, the concept of ‘emotion’ is consistently undertheorized. Employed with co...
The present research explored the implications of fear for the perceived importance of news stories....
In relation to journalism, the concept of ‘emotion’ is consistently undertheorized. Employed with co...
This article extends the definition of sensationalism to print media and argues that the use of inte...
This study investigates the truism that sensationalism in news is a guarantee for success in terms o...