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Why the Medium Shapes the Message in Marketing - Knowledge at Wharton
What is the best medium for communicating with consumers? It depends on the content, according to the latest research from Wharton marketing professor Jonah Berger.
Managing Misinformation in a Humanitarian Context: Internews Rumour Tracking Methodology
Tips for reporting on Covid-19 and slowing the spread of misinformation
Entertainment-Education and Health and Risk Messaging - Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Communication
Captions and Transcripts and Audio Descriptions, Oh My! | TPG – Digital Accessibility Solutions
Journalism In The Age of Populism and Polarisation: Insights from the Migration Debate in Italy
In 2018, LSE Arena, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice and the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera analysed the engagement of Corriere readers with content touching on the controversial and polarising topic of migration in Italy. The purpose was to address one of the most difficult problems in journalism today, which can be summed up in four related questions: • Which types of journalism intensify polarisation, and which reduce it? • How can one best communicate facts? • How can we foster constructive engagement? • Are there ways to avoid playing into the media strategies of “anti-establishment” politicians who make purposefully controversial statements in order to dominate the national debate, and then attack media who criticise them as “enemies of the people” or purveyors of “fake news”?
Outdoor advertising doesn't work - Jessica M.H. Smith
Viral Podcast - Public Health
The influence of weight-of-evidence strategies on audience perceptions of (un)certainty when media cover contested science. - PubMed - NCBI
Controversy in science news accounts attracts audiences and draws attention to important science issues. But sometimes covering multiple sides of a science issue does the audience a disservice. Counterbalancing a truth claim backed by strong scientific support with a poorly backed argument can unnecessarily heighten audience perceptions of uncertainty. At the same time, journalistic norms often constrain reporters to "get both sides of the story" even when there is little debate in the scientific community about which truth claim is most valid. In this study, we look at whether highlighting the way in which experts are arrayed across truth claims-a strategy we label "weight-of-evidence reporting"-can attenuate heightened perceptions of uncertainty that can result from coverage of conflicting claims. The results of our study suggest weight-of-evidence strategies can indeed play a role in reducing some of the uncertainty audiences may perceive when encountering lop-sided truth claims.
Practice briefing: Using media and communication to respond to public health emergencies - Media Action
BBC Media Action PDF
The Solutions Journalism Toolkit, at your service | Solutions Journalism Network
Public Health and Media Advocacy - Annual Review of Public Health, 35(1):293
Mass Media Health Communication Campaigns Combined with Health-Related Product Distribution: A Community Guide Systematic Review (pdf)
Proving the impact of media on behaviour change | Health Communication
Analyzing the Katie Couric effect on the vaccine conversation
How the News Media May Hurt – Not Help – Health Literacy Efforts « Engaging The Patient
Use of mass media campaigns to change health behaviour : The Lancet
Hollywood & Health: Health Content in Popular TV - Kaisernetwork.org
Evolution of an Epidemic: 25 Years of HIV/AIDS Media Campaigns in the U.S. - Kaiser Family Foundation
This report focuses on how national media campaigns on HIV/AIDS have evolved over the last 25 years in the U.S., reflecting the changing nature of the disease as awareness and treatment have progressed. It also provides insight on the approaches, historic
Communication Toolkit
A guide for nonprofits from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation
NARROWCAST CAMPAIGN GUIDE FOR COMMUNITY PROGRAMS: Creating health messages for targeted media campaigns (pdf)
UCLA Health and Media Research Group