Difference between revisions of "Public opinion" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Sociology]]
 
[[Category:Sociology]]
  
:''For the book by [[Walter Lippmann]], see [[Public Opinion]].''
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'''Public opinion''' is the aggregate of individual [[attitude]]s or [[belief]]s held by the adult population. It can be influenced by [[public relations]] and the [[politics|political]] media. Additionally, the [[mass media]] utilizes a wide variety of [[advertising]] techniques to change the minds of people. A continuously used technique is [[propaganda]]. Public opinion is frequently measured using opinion polls that use the [[statistics|statistical]] method of survey sampling, which can still run the risk of bias. The results of opinion polls have themselves been found to influence public opinion, particularly with regard to political elections during which time the tide of public opinion becomes increasingly crucial. The formation of public opinion is considered of great importance in a free society, since there is an implicit assumption that the actions of the public will be guided by their opinions. Those in positions of authority invest considerable resources in efforts to sway public opinion in their favor, with results that may or may not prove beneficial to society as a whole.  
  
'''Public opinion''' is the aggregate of individual attitudes or [[belief]]s held by the adult population.
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==Introduction==
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The English term '''public opinion''' dates from the eighteenth century and derives from the French ''l’opinion publique,'' first used by [[Michel de Montaigne|Montaigne]] two centuries earlier in 1588. "Public opinion" developed as a concept with the rise of a "public" in the eighteenth century. This came about through [[urbanization]] and other political and social forces.
  
Public opinion developed as a concept with the rise of a 'public' in the eighteenth century. The English term ‘public opinion’ dates from the eighteenth century and derives from the French ‘l’opinion publique’, first used by [[Montaigne]] two centuries earlier in 1588. This came about through [[urbanisation]] and other political and social forces. It became important what people thought as forms of political contention changed.
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[[Adam Smith]] referred to it in his ''Theory of Moral Sentiments,'' but [[Jeremy Bentham]] was the first British writer to fully develop theories of public opinion. He reasoned that public opinion had the power to ensure that rulers would rule for the greatest [[happiness]] of the greater number.
  
[[Adam Smith]] refers to it in his [[Theory of Moral Sentiments]], but [[Jeremy Bentham]] was the first British writer to fully develop theories of public opinion. He reasoned that public opinion had the power to ensure that rulers would rule for the greatest happiness of the greater number.
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Using the conceptional tools of his theory of [[Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft]], the German [[sociology|sociologist]] [[Ferdinand Tönnies]] argued that "public opinion" has the equivalent social functions in societies ''(Gesellschaften)'' that [[religion]] has in communities ''(Gemeinschaften)''.<ref>Ferdinand Tönnies. 1992. ''Kritik der öffentlichen Meinung.'' (Walter De Gruyter Inc. ISBN 3110153491)</ref>
  
Using the conceptional tools of his theory of [[Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft]], the German sociologist [[Ferdinand Tönnies]] argued (1922, "''Kritik der öffentlichen Meinung''"), that 'public opinion' has the [[equivalent]] [[social function]]s in societies (''Gesellschaften'') which [[religion]] has in communities (''Gemeinschaften'').   
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The German philosopher [[Jürgen Habermas]] contributed the idea of "Public Sphere" to the discussion of public opinion. Public Sphere, as he argued, is where “something approaching public opinion can be formed.”<ref>Jurgen Habermas. 1962. ''The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere.'' (Polity Press. ISBN 0745610773)</ref> This public sphere should have the attributes of universal access, rational debate, and disregard for rank. However, these three features that support the formation of public opinion have generally not been in place in western [[democracy]]. Thus, public opinion is highly susceptible to elite manipulation.   
  
The German philosopher [[Jürgen Habermas]] contributed the idea of "[[Public Sphere]]" to the discussion of public opinion. Public Sphere, as he argued, is where “something approaching public opinion can be formed”(2004, p.351). It is featured as universal access, rational debate, and disregard for rank. However, these three features for how public opinion SHOULD be formed are not in place in western democracy. Public opinion is highly susceptible to elite manipulation.
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American sociologist [[Herbert Blumer]] proposed a somewhat different conception of the "public," as a form of [[collective behavior]] which is made up of those who are discussing a given public issue at any one time. Given this definition, there are many publics; each of them comes into being when an issue arises and ceases to exist when the issue is resolved. Blumer claimed that since people participate in a public to different degrees, public opinion polling cannot measure the public: an archbishop's participation is more important than that of a homeless or unemployed person. The "mass," in which people independently make decisions about, for example, which brand of toothpaste to buy, is a form of collective behavior different from the public.
  
[[Herbert Blumer]], American sociolologist, has proposed a somewhat different conception of the "public," as a form of collective behavior (another specialized term) which is made up of those who are discussing a given public issue at any one time. Given this definition, there are many publics; each of them comes into being when an issue arises and ceases to exist when the issue is resolved.  Blumer claims that since people participate in a public to different degrees, public opinion polling cannot measure the public:  An archbishop's participation is more important than that of a bum. The "mass," in which people independently make decisions about, for example, which brand of toothpaste to buy, is a form of collective behavior different from the public.
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Public opinion is a strange, fickle creature. Many things influence the constitution of public thought, sometimes seemingly at random. The [[mass media]], word of mouth, economy, sense of [[community]], [[advertising]], and [[propaganda]] all have some effect on public opinion.
  
Public opinion can be influenced by [[public relations]] and the [[political media]]. Additionally, [[mass media]] utilizes a wide variety of [[advertising]] techniques to get their message out and change the minds of people. A continuously used technique is [[propaganda]].
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==Formation of public opinion==
  
The tide of public opinion becomes more and more crucial during political elections, most importantly elections determining the national [[executive branch|executive]].
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The [[mass media]] plays a crucial role in forming and reflecting public opinion: it communicates the world to individuals, and it reproduces modern society's self-image. Critiques in the early-to-mid-twentieth century suggested that the media destroys the individual's capacity to act autonomously - sometimes being ascribed an influence reminiscent of the telescreens of the dystopian novel by George Orwell ''1984.'' Later studies, however, suggested a more complex interaction between the media and [[society]], with individuals actively interpreting and evaluating the media and the information it provides.  
  
It is frequently measured using the method of [[survey sampling]].
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[[Advertising]] and [[propaganda]] are two forms of altering opinion through the mass media. Advertising is a more overt method of doing so by promoting the strengths of certain products or ideas (be it for retail products, services, or campaign ideas). Propaganda is covert in its actions but also serves to subtly influence opinion. Propaganda is traditionally used more for political purposes while advertising has been used for commercial purposes.
  
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People are not entirely immersed in mass media, however. Local communication still plays a large role in determining public opinion. People are affected by the opinions of those with whom they work, attend religious services, friends, family, and other smaller scale interpersonal interactions. Other factors of the formation of public opinion include the economy, the state of which has a great effect on people's happiness; popular culture, which can be dictated by the mass media, but can also develop as small [[social movement]]s; and massive global events such as the [[terrorism|terrorist]] attacks of September 11th, which shifted public opinion drastically.
  
== Bibliography ==
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[[Paul Lazarsfeld]] argued that the public forms its opinion in a two-stage process. He thought most people rely on opinion leaders. These opinion leaders are affected by world events and then pass opinions down to less active members of society. Lazarsfeld believed that the mass media was the main source of information for opinion leaders, but his theory may have missed the tremendous impact the mass media has over every citizen, not just a select few. Most people gather all of their information regarding current events from some outlet of the mass media be it large [[newspaper]]s, [[television]] news, or the [[internet]]. The information these people retain is largely colored by the opinions of those presenting them. As a result, many people take on the opinions of their news presenters (although one could also argue that they gravitate to those broadcast outlets because of similar shared opinions).
*"The Anatomy of Public Opinion" by Jacob Shamir and Michal Shamir. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2000. [http://www.jstor.org/view/00030554/sp030005/04x0525e/0]
 
*"[[Public Opinion]]" by [[Walter Lippmann]], 1921.
 
*"Anatomy of Public Opinion" by Norman John Powell, New York, Prentice-Hall, 1951.  
 
  
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===Ownership of media and the crafting of opinion===
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The long-term consequences of the relationship between the [[mass media]] and the crafting of public opinion are significant. Continuing concentration of ownership and control of the media have led to accusations of a "media elite" having a form of "cultural dictatorship." Thus the continuing debate about the influence of "media barons" such as [[Rupert Murdoch]]. For example, the ''Guardian'' reported the Murdoch-owned HarperCollins' refusal to publish Chris Patten's ''East and West,'' because of the former [[Hong Kong]] Governor's description of the [[China|Chinese leadership]] as "faceless Stalinists" possibly being damaging to Murdoch's Chinese [[broadcasting]] interests.<ref>Nicholas Clee. [http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,6109,904930,00.html The Bookseller].March 1, 2003, ''Guardian Unlimited''. Retrieved February 13, 2007.</ref> In this case, the author was able to have the book accepted by another publisher, but this kind of [[censorship]] may point the way to the future. A related, but more insidious, form is that of self-censorship by members of the media in the interests of the owner, in the interests of their careers.
  
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The agenda-setting process is partly one which is an almost unavoidable function of the [[bureaucracy|bureaucratic]] process involved in newsgathering by the large organizations which make up much of the mass media. (Just four main news agencies – [[AP]], [[UPI]], [[Reuters]] and [[Agence France-Presse]] – claim together to provide 90 percent of the total news output of the world’s press, [[radio]], and [[television]].) For example, in order to get into the news, events have to happen in places convenient for the newsgathering agencies, come from a reliable and predictable source, and fit into journalists’ framework of news values:
'''Mass media''' is a term used to denote, as a class, that section of the media specifically conceived and designed to reach a [[mainstream|very large audience]] such as the population of a [[nation state]]. It was coined in the 1920s with the advent of nationwide radio networks, mass-circulation [[newspaper]]s and [[magazine]]s, although mass media was present centuries before the term became common.
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<blockquote>[J]ournalists, who are better seen as bureaucrats than as buccaneers, begin their work from a stock of plausible, well-defined and largely unconscious assumptions. Part of their job is to translate untidy reality into neat stories with beginnings, middles and denouements. … The values which inform the selection of news items usually reinforce conventional opinions and established authority. At the same time, a process of simplification filters out the disturbing or the unexpected. The need of the media to secure instant attention creates a strong prejudice in favor of familiar stories and themes, and a slowness of response when reality breaks the conventions.<ref>James Curran, and Jean Seaton. 2005. ''Power Without Responsibility.'' (Taylor and Francis. ISBN 0415243890)</ref></blockquote>
  
The term '''public media''' has a similar meaning: it is the sum of the public mass distributors of news and entertainment across mediums such as newspapers, [[television]], [[radio]], [[broadcasting]] & [[publishers|text publishers]]. The concept of mass media is complicated in some Internet mediums as individuals potentially have a means of exposure on a scale comparable to what was previously restricted to select group of mass media producers. These internet mediums can include [[web sites]], [[podcasts]], [[blogs]].
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The effects of the mass media on public opinion relate not merely to the way newsworthy events are perceived (and which are reported at all), but also to a multitude of cultural influences which operate through the mass media. Thus Lang and Lang claimed that "The mass media force attention to certain issues. They build up public images of political figures. They are constantly presenting objects suggesting what individuals in the mass should think about, know about, have feelings about."<ref>K. Lang, and G.E. Lang. 1966. ''The Mass Media and Voting.''</ref>
  
The mass-media audience has been viewed by some commentators as forming a [[mass society]] with special characteristics, notably atomization or lack of social connections, which render it especially susceptible to the influence of modern mass-media techniques such as [[advertising]] and [[propaganda]]. The term "MSM" or "mainstream media" has been widely used in the [[blogosphere]] in discussion of the mass media and [[media bias]].
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[[Stuart Hall]] has pointed out that because some of the media produce material which often is good, impartial, and serious, they are accorded a high degree of respect and authority. But in practice the ethic of the press and television is closely related to that of the homogeneous establishment, providing a vital support for the existing order. But independence (such as of the [[BBC]]) is not “a mere cover, it is central to the way power and ideology are mediated in societies like ours.” Hall suggested that the public are bribed with good [[radio]], [[television]], and [[newspaper]]s into an acceptance of the biased, the misleading, and the status quo. The media are not, according to this approach, crude agents of [[propaganda]]. They organize public understanding. However, the overall interpretations they provide in the long run are those which are most preferred by, and least challenging to, those with economic power.
  
==Etymology and usage==
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===Mass media and political opinion===
Media (the plural of "medium") is a truncation of the term ''media of communication'', referring to those organized means of dissemination of fact, opinion, entertainment, and other information, such as [[newspaper]]s, [[magazine]]s,[[banners]] and [[billboard]]s,[[movies|cinema films]], [[radio]], [[television]], the [[World Wide Web]], [[Billboard (advertising)|billboards]], [[book]]s, [[CD]]s, [[DVD]]s, [[videocassette]]s, [[computer game]]s and other forms of [[publishing]]. Although writers currently differ in their preference for using ''media'' in the [[Grammatical number|singular]] ("the media is...") or the [[plural]] ("the media are..."), the former will still incur criticism in some situations.  (Please see [[data]] for a similar example.)  Academic programs for the study of mass media are usually referred to as [[mass communication]] programs.
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Political [[advertising]] targets people with existing beliefs formed over long periods of time, which they are correspondingly reluctant to change, not on blank-sheet individuals. Moreover, the people who are most exposed to the media are those who know from the outset whom they will vote for, and are therefore least likely to be influenced by [[propaganda]]. Thus it may be that the notion that the people who switch parties during the campaign are mainly the reasoned, thoughtful people convinced by the issues, is completely unfounded.  
  
An individual corporation within the mass media is referred to as a [[Media Institution]].
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Lazarsfeld claimed that the real influence on undecided voters is the "opinion leader," the individual whose own vote intention is secure, and who is well informed on the issues. Thus personal influence is primarily of greater importance than media influence, albeit using information initially acquired through the media. This may be related to trust and authority: both opinion leaders and the general public will select the evidence and information which supports their view, placing greater weight on more trustworthy sources. For the opinion-leader theory to be true, then, the general public would have to place greater trust in opinion leaders than in the media, so that the opinion leaders act as mediators between the public and the media, personalizing and making authoritative the information the media provides. Thus "… the person-to-person influence reaches the ones who are more susceptible to change and serves as a bridge over which formal media of communications extend their influence."<ref>Berelson Lazarsfeld, and Gaudet. 1944. ''The People’s Choice.'' (New York: Columbia University Press)</ref> From a psychological viewpoint, we may understand the personal influence of the opinion leaders in terms of group association: perceived as representing the group's desirable characteristics, other group members will aspire to the leaders’ viewpoints in order to maintain group cohesiveness and thus (indirectly) self-assurance. However, the separation of group leaders from the general public is arguably an over-simplification of the process of media influences.
  
The term "mass media" is mainly used by academics and media-professionals. When members of the general public refer to "the media" they are usually referring to the mass media, or to the [[news media]], which is a section of the mass media.
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Although such researchers did not ascribe significant direct influence over public opinion to the media, some findings indicate that it has such power over individuals. Lazarsfeld, Berelson and Gaudet noted in ''The People’s Choice'' that 58 percent of voting changes were made without any remembered personal contact and were very often dependent on the mass media, changes being widely distributed among those who changed their opinion. But this effect was ignored in their conclusion of little direct media influence. Other studies supporting the opinion leader theory failed to distinguish between opinion leading in consumer and political behavior. In political behavior opinion leading tends to correlate positively with status, whereas this is not the case in consumer behavior (choosing breakfast cereals and such items). So for political behavior, the general conclusion that the media merely fixes (confirms) people’s opinion is not supported.  
  
Sometimes mass media (and the news media in particular) are referred to as the "[[corporate media]]". Other references include the "mainstream media" (MSM). Technically, "''[[mainstream]] media''" includes outlets that are in harmony with the prevailing direction of influence in the [[culture]] at large. In the United States, usage of these terms often depends on the connotations the speaker wants to invoke. The term "corporate media" is often used by [[leftist]] media critics to imply that the mainstream media are themselves composed of large multinational corporations, and promote those interests (see e.g., [[Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting]]; [[Edward S. Herman|Herman]] and [[Noam Chomsky|Chomsky's]] "[[propaganda model|A Propaganda Model]]"). This is countered by the [[right-wing]] media critics with the term "MSM", the acronym implying that the majority of mass media sources are dominated by leftist powers which are furthering their own agenda.
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Carl Hovland, using techniques from [[experimental psychology]], found significant effects of information on longer-term behavior and [[attitude]]s, particularly in areas where most people have little direct experience (such as [[politics]]) and have a high degree of trust in the source (such as [[broadcasting]]). It should be noted that since [[social class]] has become an increasingly less good indicator of party (since the surveys of the 1940s and 1950s) the floating voter today is no longer the apathetic voter, but likely to be more well-informed than the consistent voter - and this mainly through the media.
  
The more recent term 'Drive-by Media' has been popularized by conservative talk-show host [[Rush Limbaugh]] in response to the proposed transfer of operations of several U.S. ports to Dubai Ports World.
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==Measurement of public opinion==
  
==History==
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Public opinion is measured by opinion polls—[[statistics|statistical]] surveys of public opinion using [[sampling]]. They are usually designed to represent the opinions of a population by asking a small number of people a series of questions and then extrapolating the answers to the larger group.
Types of [[drama]] in numerous cultures were probably the first mass-media, going back into the Ancient World. The first printed book known is the "Diamond Sutra", printed in China in 868 C.E., and it is often suspected that books were printed earlier. Movable clay type was invented in 1041 in China. However, due to the slow spread to the masses of literacy in China, and the relatively high cost of paper there, the earliest printed mass-medium was probably European [[popular prints]] from about 1400. Although these were produced in huge numbers, very few early examples survive, and even most known to be printed before about 1600 have not survived.  Johannes [[Gutenberg]] printed the first book on a [[printing press]] with [[movable type]] in 1453.  This invention transformed the way the world received printed materials, although books remained too expensive really to be called a mass-medium for at least a century after that.
 
  
Newspapers developed around from 1605, with the first example in English in 1620[http://www.bl.uk/collections/britnews.html] ; but they took until the nineteenth century to reach a mass-audience directly.
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===History of opinion polls===
  
During the 20th century, the growth of mass media was driven by [[technology]] that allowed the massive duplication of material. Physical duplication technologies such as [[printing]], [[record pressing]] and [[film duplication]] allowed the duplication of books, newspapers and movies at low prices to huge audiences. [[Radio]] and [[television]] allowed the electronic duplication of information for the first time.
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The first known example of an opinion poll was a local straw vote conducted by ''The Harrisburg Pennsylvanian'' in 1824, showing [[Andrew Jackson]] leading [[John Quincy Adams]] by 335 votes to 169 in the contest for the [[President of the United States|United States Presidency]]. Such straw votes&mdash;unweighted and unscientific&mdash;gradually became more popular; but they remained local, usually city-wide phenomena. In 1916, the ''Literary Digest'' embarked on a national survey (partly as a circulation-raising exercise) and correctly predicted [[Woodrow Wilson]]'s election as President. Mailing out millions of [[postcard]]s and simply counting the returns, the ''Digest'' correctly called the four following presidential elections.
  
Mass media had the economics of linear replication: a single work could make money [[Proportionality (mathematics)|proportional]] to the number of copies sold, and as volumes went up, units costs went down, increasing profit margins further. Vast fortunes were to be made in mass media.
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In 1936, however, the weakness in the ''Digest'' method was revealed. Its 2.3 million "voters" constituted a huge sample; however they were generally more affluent Americans who tended to have [[United States Republican Party|Republican]] sympathies. The ''Literary Digest'' did nothing to correct this bias. The week before election day, it reported that [[Alf Landon]] was far more popular than [[Franklin Delano Roosevelt|Franklin D. Roosevelt]]. At the same time, [[George Gallup]] conducted a far smaller, but more scientifically-based survey, in which he polled a demographically representative sample. Gallup correctly predicted Roosevelt's landslide victory. The ''Literary Digest'' went out of business soon afterwards, while the polling industry grew quickly.
In a democratic society, independent media serve to educate the public/electorate about issues regarding government and corporate entities (see [[Mass media and public opinion]]). Some consider the [[concentration of media ownership]] to be a grave threat to democracy.  
 
  
===Timeline===
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Gallup launched a subsidiary in the [[United Kingdom]], where it correctly predicted [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour's]] victory in the 1945 general election, in contrast with virtually all other commentators, who expected the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]], led by [[Winston Churchill]], to win easily. By the 1950s, polling had spread to most democracies. Nowadays they reach virtually every country, although in more autocratic societies they tend to avoid sensitive political topics. In [[Iraq]], surveys conducted soon after the 2003 war helped to measure the true feelings of Iraqi citizens to [[Saddam Hussein]], post-war conditions, and the presence of US forces.
*c1400: Appearance of European [[popular prints]].
 
*1453:  [[Johann Gutenberg|Johnannes Gutenberg]] prints [[the Bible]], using his printing press, ushering in the [[Renaissance]].
 
*1620:  First newspaper (or ''coranto'') in English.
 
*1825:  [[Nicéphore Niépce]] takes the first permanent [[photograph]].
 
*1830:  [[Telegraphy]] is independently developed in [[England]] and the [[United States]].
 
*1876:  First [[telephone]] call made by [[Alexander Graham Bell]].
 
*1878:  [[Thomas Alva Edison]] patents the [[phonograph]].
 
*1890:  First [[juke box]] in [[San Francisco|San Francisco's]] Palais Royal Saloon.
 
*1890:  Telephone wires are installed in [[Manhattan]].
 
*1895:  Cinematograph invented by [[Auguste and Louis Lumiere]].
 
*1896:  Hollerith founds the Tabulating Machine Co. It will become [[IBM]] in 1924.
 
*1897:  [[Guglielmo Marconi]] patents the [[wireless telegraph]].
 
*1898:  [[Loudspeaker]] is invented.
 
*1906:  [[The Story of the Kelly Gang]] from Australia is world's first feature length film.
 
*1909:  [[RMS Republic]], a palatial White Star passenger liner, uses the Marconi Wireless for a distress at sea.  She had been in a collision.  This is the first "breaking news" mass media event.
 
*1912:  [[Air mail]] begins.
 
*1913:  Edison transfers from cylinder recordings to more easily reproducible discs.
 
*1913:  The portable phonograph is manufactured.
 
*1915:  Radiotelephone carries voice from Virginia to the [[Eiffel Tower]].
 
*1916:  Tunable [[radio]]s invented.
 
*1919:  [[Short-wave]] radio is invented.
 
*1920:  [[KDKA]]-AM in [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania|Pittsburgh]], United States, becoming the world's first commercial radio station.
 
*1922:  [[BBC]] is formed and broadcasting to London.
 
*1924:  KDKA created a short-wave radio transmitter.
 
*1925:  [[BBC]] broadcasting to the majority of the [[United Kingdom|UK]].
 
*1926:  [[NBC]] is formed.
 
*1927:  [[The Jazz Singer (1927 film)|The Jazz Singer]]:  The first motion picture with sounds debuts.
 
*1927:  [[Philo Taylor Farnsworth]] debuts the first electronic [[television]] system.
 
*1928:  The Teletype was introduced. 
 
*1933:  [[Edwin Armstrong]] invents [[FM]] Radio.
 
*1934:  Half of the homes in the U.S. have radios.
 
*1935:  First telephone call made around the world.
 
*1936:  [[BBC]] opened world's first regular (then defined as at least 200 lines) high definition television service.
 
*1938:  ''[[The War of the Worlds (radio)|The War of the Worlds]]'' is broadcast on [[October 30]], causing mass hysteria.
 
*1939:  [[Western Union]] introduces coast-to-coast [[fax]] service.
 
*1939:  Regular electronic television broadcasts begin in the U.S.
 
*1939:  The wire recorder is invented in the U.S.
 
*1940:  The first commercial television station, WNBT (now [[WNBC-TV]])/New York signs on the air.
 
*1948:  [[Cable television]] becomes available in the U.S.
 
*1951:  The first color televisions go on sale.
 
*1957:  [[Sputnik]] is launched and sends back signals from [[near earth orbit]].
 
*1959:  Xerox makes the first copier.
 
*1960:  [[Echo I]], a U.S. balloon in orbit, reflects radio signals to Earth.  
 
*1962:  [[Telstar]] satellite transmits an image across the Atlantic.
 
*1963:  [[Audio cassette]] is invented in the [[Netherlands]].
 
*1963:  [[Martin Luther King]] gives "I have a dream" speech.
 
*1965:  [[Vietnam War]] becomes first war to be televised.
 
*1967:  Newspapers, magazines start to digitize production.
 
*1969:  Man's first [[landing on the moon]] is broadcast to 600 million people around the globe.
 
*1970s: [[ARPANET]], progenitor to the [[internet]] developed.
 
*1971:  [[Intel]] debuts the [[microprocessor]].
 
*1972:  [[Pong]] becomes the first video game to win widespread popularity.
 
*1975:  The [[MITS]] [[Altair 8800]] becomes the first pre-assembled [[desktop computer]] available on the market.
 
*1976:  [[JVC]] introduces [[VHS]] videotape - becomes the standard consumer format in the 1980s & 1990s.
 
*1980:  [[CNN]] launches.
 
*1980:  New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones put news database online.
 
*1981:  The [[laptop computer]] is introduced by Tandy.
 
*1982:  [[Philips]] and [[Sony]] put the [[Compact Disc]] on the Japanese market. It arrives on the U.S. market early the following year.
 
*1983:  [[Cellular]] phones begin to appear.
 
*1984:  Apple [[Macintosh]] is introduced.
 
*1985:  [[CD-ROM]]s begin to be sold.
 
*1985:  [[Pay-per-view]] channels open for business.
 
*1991:  [[World-Wide Web]] (WWW) publicly released by [[Tim Berners-Lee]] at [[CERN]].
 
*1993:  CERN announces that the WWW will be free for anyone to use.
 
*1995:  The [[internet]] grows exponentially.
 
*1996:  First [[DVD]] players and discs are available in Japan. [[Twister (film)|Twister]] is the first film on DVD.
 
*1999:  [[Napster]] contributes to the popularization of [[MP3]].
 
  
==Purposes==
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For many years, opinion polls were conducted mainly face-to-face, either in the street or in people's homes. This method remains widely used, but in some countries it has been overtaken by [[telephone]] polls, which can be conducted faster and more cheaply. However, due to the common practice of telemarketers to sell products under the guise of a telephone survey and the proliferation of residential call screening devices and use of cell phones, response rates for telephone surveys have been plummeting. Mailed surveys have become the data collection method of choice among local governments that conduct a citizen survey to track service quality and manage resource allocation. In recent years, [[Internet]] and short message service surveys have become increasingly popular, but most of these draw on whomever wishes to participate rather than a scientific sample of the population, and are therefore not generally considered accurate.
Mass media can be used for various purposes:
 
*[[Advocacy]], both for business and social concerns. This can include [[advertising]], [[marketing]], [[propaganda]], [[public relations]], and [[politics|political]] communication.
 
*[[Enrichment]] and [[education]].
 
*[[Entertainment]], traditionally through performances of [[acting]], [[music]], and [[sports]], along with light reading; since the late 20th century also through [[video and computer games]].
 
*[[Journalism]].
 
*[[Public service announcement]]s.
 
  
==Claimed Inherent Negative Characteristics of Mass Media==
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===Potential for inaccuracy===
Another description of Mass Media is [[central media]] meaning they emanate from a central point, the same identical message to numerous recipientsIt is claimed this forces certain intrinsic constraints on the kind of messages and information that can be conveyed such as:
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There exist a number of potential inaccuracies when relying on opinion polls. These include [[sampling]] errors, nonresponse bias, response bias, poor wording of questions, and coverage bias.   
  
an inability to transmit [[tacit knowledge]],
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Sampling error reflects the effects of chance in the sampling process. The uncertainty is often expressed as a [[margin of error]]. A poll with a random sample of 1,000 people has margin of sampling error of three percent for the estimated percentage of the whole population. A 3 percent margin of error means that 95 percent of the time the procedure used would give an estimate within three percent of the percentage to be estimated. The margin of error can be reduced by using a larger sample, however if a pollster wishes to reduce the margin of error to 1 percent they would need a sample of around 10,000 people. The margin of error does not reflect other sources of error, such as measurement error.
a focus on the unusual and sensational rather than a restatement of wisdom,  
 
the promotion of anxiety and fear to sell the newpaper / channeletc.
 
inability to deal with complex issues so a need to simplify
 
  
This view of central media can be contrasted with [[lateral media]] such as emails networks where messages are all slightly different a spread by a process of [[lateral diffusion]]
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Nonresponse bias occurs because some people do not answer calls from strangers, or refuse to answer the poll, so poll samples may not be representative samples from a population. Because of this selection bias, the characteristics of those who agree to be interviewed may be markedly different from those who decline. If the people who do not answer have different opinions then there is bias in the results. Response bias occurs when respondents deliberately try to manipulate the outcome of a poll, for example by advocating a more extreme position than they actually hold in order to boost their side of the argument or give rapid and ill-considered answers in order to hasten the end of their questioning. Respondents may also feel under social pressure not to give an unpopular answer.
  
==Journalism==
+
It is well established that the wording of the questions, the order in which they are asked, and the number and form of alternative answers offered can influence results of polls. On some issues, question wording can result in quite pronounced differences between surveys. One way in which pollsters attempt to minimize this effect is to ask the same set of questions over time, in order to track changes in opinion. Another common technique is to rotate the order in which questions are asked. Many pollsters also split-sample, a technique that involves having two different versions of a question, with each version presented to half the respondents.  
[[Journalism]] is a discipline of collecting, analyzing, verifying, and presenting [[information]] regarding [[current events]], [[trends]], issues and [[people]]. Those who practice journalism are known as [[journalist]]s.  
 
  
[[News]]-oriented journalism is sometimes described as the "first rough draft of history" (attributed to [[Phil Graham]]), because journalists often record important events, producing news articles on short deadlines. While under pressure to be first with their stories, [[news media]] organizations usually [[Editing|edit]] and [[Proofreading|proofread]] their reports prior to publication, adhering to each organization's standards of accuracy, quality and style. Many news organizations claim proud traditions of holding government officials and institutions accountable to the public, while media critics have raised questions about holding the press itself accountable.
+
Another source of error is the use of samples that are not representative of the population as a consequence of the methodology used, known as coverage bias. For example, telephone sampling has a built-in error because in many times and places, those with telephones have generally been richer than those without. Alternately, in some places, many people have only [[mobile telephone]]s. In areas where pollsters cannot call mobile phones (due to it being unlawful to make unsolicited calls to phones where the phone's owner may be charged simply for taking a call), such individuals are not included in the polling sample. If the subset of the population without cell phones differs markedly from the rest of the population, these differences can skew the results of the poll. Polling organizations have developed many weighting techniques to help overcome these deficiencies, to varying degrees of success. Several studies of mobile phone users by the Pew Research Center in the U.S. concluded that the absence of mobile users was not unduly skewing results, at least not at the time of their research.<ref>Scott Keeter,
 +
October 26, 2006 [http://pewresearch.org/obdeck/?ObDeckID=80 Cell-Only Voters Not Very Different] ''Pew Research Center''. Retrieved March 12, 2007.</ref>
  
===Public relations===
+
===The influence of opinion polls===
[[Public relations]] is the art and science of managing communication between an organization and its key publics to build, manage and sustain its positive image. Examples include:
+
By providing information about voting intentions, opinion polls can sometimes influence the behavior of electors. The various theories about how this happens can be split up into two groups: bandwagon/underdog effects, and strategic ("tactical") voting.
* Corporations use marketing public relations (MPR) to convey information about the products they manufacture or services they provide to potential customers to support their direct sales efforts.  Typically, they support sales in the short and long term, establishing and burnishing the corporation's branding for a strong, ongoing market.
 
* Corporations also use public-relations as a vehicle to reach legislators and other politicians, seeking favorable tax, regulatory, and other treatment, and they may use public relations to portray themselves as enlightened employers, in support of human-resources recruiting programs.
 
* Non-profit organizations, including schools and universities, hospitals, and human and social service agencies, use public relations in support of awareness programs, fund-raising programs, staff recruiting, and to increase patronage of their services.
 
* Politicians use public relations to attract votes and raise money, and, when successful at the ballot box, to promote and defend their service in office, with an eye to the next election or, at career’s end, to their legacy.
 
  
==Forms==
+
A "Bandwagon effect" occurs when the poll prompts voters to back the candidate shown to be winning in the poll. The idea that voters are susceptible to such effects is old, stemming at least from 1884 where it was first used in a British political [[cartoon]] in the magazine ''Puck.'' It has also remained persistent in spite of a lack of empirical corroboration until the late twentieth century. [[George Gallup, Jr.]] spent much effort in vain trying to discredit this theory in his time by presenting empirical research.<ref> The Surveyor ''Science & Spirit''. Interview with George Gallup, Jr. </ref>
Electronic media and print media include:
 
*[[Broadcasting]], in the narrow sense, for [[radio]] and [[television]].
 
*Various types of [[Data storage|disc]]s or [[tape]]. In the 20th century, these were mainly used for [[music]]. [[Video]] and [[computer]] uses followed.
 
*[[Film]], most often used for entertainment, but also for [[documentary film|documentaries]].
 
*[[Internet]], which has many uses and presents both opportunities and challenges. [[Blog]]s and [[podcast]]s, such as [[news]], [[music]], pre-recorded [[speech]] and [[video]])
 
*[[Publishing]], in the narrow sense, meaning on paper, mainly via [[book]]s, [[magazine]]s, and [[newspaper]]s.
 
*[[Computer games]], which have developed into a mass form of media since devices such as the [[PlayStation 2]] , [[Xbox]], and the [[Nintendo GameCube|GameCube]] broadened their use.
 
  
==Audio recording and reproduction==
+
The opposite of the bandwagon effect is the "Underdog effect." This occurs when people vote, out of sympathy, for the party perceived to be "losing" the elections. There is less empirical evidence for the existence of this effect than there is for the existence of the Bandwagon effect. Related to these effects is the "Boomerang effect" where the likely supporters of the candidate shown to be winning feel that he or she is safe and that their vote is not required, thus allowing another candidate to win.
[[Sound recording and reproduction]] is the [[electric]]al or mechanical re-creation and/or amplification of [[sound]], often as [[music]]. This involves the use of [[audio equipment]] such as microphones, recording devices and loudspeakers. From early beginnings with the invention of the [[phonograph]] using purely mechanical techniques, the field has advanced with the invention of electrical recording, the mass production of the [[Gramophone record|78 record]], the [[Wire recorder|magnetic wire recorder]] followed by the [[tape recorder]], the vinyl [[Gramophone record|LP record]]. The invention of the [[compact cassette]] in the 1960's, followed by Sony's [[Walkman]], gave a major boost to the mass distribution of music recordings, and the invention of [[digital recording]] and the [[compact disc]] in 1983 brought massive improvements in ruggedness and quality. The most recent developments have been in [[digital audio player]]s like the [[IPod|Apple iPod]].
 
  
An album is a collection of related [[audio]] tracks, released together to the public, usually commercially.
+
The second category of theories on how polls directly affect voting is called strategic or tactical voting. This theory is based on the idea that voters view the act of voting as a means of selecting a [[government]]. Thus they will sometimes not choose the candidate they prefer on ground of [[ideology]] or sympathy, but another, less-preferred, candidate from strategic considerations. An example can be found in the United Kingdom general election, 1997. Then Cabinet Minister, Michael Portillo's constituency of Enfield was believed to be a safe seat but opinion polls showed the [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour]] candidate Stephen Twigg steadily gaining support, which may have prompted undecided voters or supporters of other parties to support Twigg in order to remove Portillo.
  
The term [[album|record album]] originated from the fact that 78 [[Revolutions per minute|RPM]] [[Phonograph]] [[Gramophone record|disc records]] were kept together in a book resembling a photo album. The first collection of records to be called an "album" was [[Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky|Tchaikovsky's]] ''[[Nutcracker Suite]]'', release in April 1909 as a four-disc set by [[Odeon records]].<ref name="sandiego">{{cite web|url=http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/recording/notes.html|title=Recording Technology History}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.terramedia.co.uk/Chronomedia/years/1909.htm|title=Chronomedia}}</ref> It retailed for 16 [[shillings]] &mdash; about [[Pound sterling|£]]15 in modern currency.
+
==Public opinion and technology==
 +
Jerry Mander, a former advertising executive wrote ''Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television,'' in 1977 where he took a negative view on the current state of [[mass media]] affected public opinion. Mander argued that [[television]] has become the new transmission mechanism for [[culture|cultural]] influences, but that because of the nature and structure of the medium, it encourages a global homogeneity of culture based on [[United States|American]] cultural influences. He gave as an example the introduction of television to the Northwest of [[Canada]], populated mainly by Dene Indians and [[Inuit]]. Television led to the erosion of traditional values, pastimes, and occupations, and increased the desire of the young to learn English and acquire material possessions such as cars. The previous mode of cultural transmission - nightly story-telling - ended almost completely with the introduction of television, destroying “a bond of love and respect between the young and the old that was critical to the survival of native culture. Mander described television as “the instrument for re-shaping our internal environments – our feelings, our thoughts, our ideas and our nervous systems – to match the re-created artificial environment that increasingly surrounds us: Commodity life; Technological passivity; Acceleration; Homogenisation.” (emphasis in original).
  
A [[music video]] (also  promo) is a [[short film]] or [[video]] that accompanies a complete piece of music, most commonly a [[song]]. Modern music videos were  primarily made and used as a marketing device intended to promote the sale of music recordings. Although the origins of music videos go back much further, they came into their own in the [[1980s]], when [[Music Television]]'s format was based around them. In the 1980s, the term "rock video" was often used to describe this form of entertainment, although the term has fallen into disuse.
+
Mander’s theory is related to [[Jean Baudrillard]]’s concept of "hyperreality." We can take the 1994 [[O.J. Simpson]] [[trial]] as an example, where the reality reported on was merely the catalyst for the "simulacra" (defined by Baudrillard as a copy of a copy which has been so dissipated in its relation to the original that it can no longer be said to be a copy, and therefore stands on its existing as another reality) or images created, which defined the trial as a global event and made the trial more than it was. Essentially, hyperreality is the concept that the media is not merely a window on to the world (as if a visiting [[Extraterrestrial life|alien]] were watching television), but is itself part of the reality it describes. Hence, the media’s obsession with media-created events.
  
Music videos can accommodate all styles of filmmaking, including [[animation]], [[live action]] films, [[documentary film|documentaries]], and non-narrative, [[abstract film]].
+
For the future, the [[internet]] may play a role in reclaiming the public sphere for debate. The various means of [[communication]] available on the internet present the public with more outlets through which to express their opinions and for formerly marginalized groups of people to come together in central (virtual) locations, giving one voice to formerly disparate peoples. The internet offers newly focused discussion for these groups of people with the potential that their newfound single voices will be much louder in the public sphere. This could lead to the broaching of previously [[taboo]] or outlandish topics in mainstream culture and even the eventual shifting of that culture as a result.
  
== Broadcasting ==
+
==Notes==
[[Broadcasting]] is the [[distribution (business)|distribution]] of [[Sound|audio]] and/or [[video]] [[Signalling (telecommunication)|signal]]s (programs) to a number of recipients ("listeners" or "viewers") that belong to a large group.  This group may be the public in general, or a relatively large audience within the public.  Thus, an [[Internet]] channel may distribute text or music world-wide, while a [[public address]] system in (for example) a workplace may broadcast very limited ''[[ad hoc]]'' [[soundbite]]s to a small population within its range.
+
<references/>
  
The sequencing of content in a broadcast is called a [[scheduling (broadcasting)|schedule]]. With all technological endeavours a number of technical terms and slang are developed please see the [[list of broadcasting terms]] for a glossary of terms used.
+
==References==
  
[[Television]] and [[radio]] programs are distributed through radio broadcasting or [[cable television|cable]], often both simultaneouslyBy coding signals and having [[decoding]] equipment in [[home]]s, the latter also enables [[subscription]]-based channels and [[pay-per-view]] services.
+
* Asher, Herbert. [1998] 2004. ''Polling and the Public. What Every Citizen Should Know.'' Washington, DC: CQ Press. ISBN 1568028334
 +
* Baudrillard, Jean. 1995. ''Simulacra and Simulation (The Body, In Theory: Histories of Cultural Materialism).'' University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472065211
 +
* Blumer, Herbert. [1969] 1986. ''Symbolic Interactionism: Perspective and Method.'' Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 0520056760
 +
* Bourdieu, Pierre. 1995. "Public Opinion does not exist." ''Sociology in Question.'' London: Sage.
 +
* Bradburn, Norman M. and Seymour Sudman. 1988. ''Polls and Surveys: Understanding What They Tell Us.''  
 +
* Converse, Jean M. 1987. ''Survey Research in the United States: Roots and Emergence 1890-1960.'' University of California Press. ISBN 0520053990
 +
* Curran, J. & Gurevitch, M. (eds) 1991. ''Mass Media and Society.'' Hodder Arnold. ISBN 0340884991
 +
* Curran, J. & Seaton, J. 1988. ''Power without Responsibility.'' Taylor and Francis. ISBN 0415243890
 +
* Gallup, Alec M. 1999. ''The Gallup Poll Cumulative Index: Public Opinion, 1935-1997.'' SR Books. ISBN 0842025871
 +
* Habermas, J. 1962. ''The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere.'' Polity Press. ISBN 0745610773
 +
* Hall, Stuart. 1973. ''Encoding and decoding in the television discourse.'' Birmingham, England: Centre for Cultural Studies, University of Birmingham.
 +
* Hovland, Carl, Iver, Irving L. Janis, and Harold H. Kelley. [1953] 1982. ''Communication and Persuasion: Psychological Studies of Opinion Change.'' Greenwood Press Reprint. ISBN 0313233489
 +
* Irwin, Galen A. and Joop J. M. Van Holsteyn. 2000. ''Bandwagons, Underdogs, the Titanic and the Red Cross: The Influence of Public Opinion Polls on Voters.''
 +
* James G. Webster, Patricia F. Phalen and Lawrence W. Lichty. 2005. ''Ratings Analysis: The Theory and Practice of Audience Research.'' Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.  ISBN 978-0805854107
 +
* Lang K & Lang G.E. 1966. ''The Mass Media and Voting.''
 +
* Lazarsfeld, P., B. Berelson, and H. Gaudet. [1944] 1988. ''The People's Choice.'' New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0231085834
 +
* Lazarsfeld, Paul & Elihu Katz. [1955] 2005. ''Personal Influence: The Part Played by People in the Flow of Mass Communications.'' Transaction Publishers. ISBN 1412805074
 +
* Lippman, Walter. 1921. ''Public Opinion.'' Hard Press. ISBN 1406932949
 +
* Mander, Jerry. "The Tyranny of Television." ''Resurgence'' No. 165.
 +
* McCombs, M & Shaw, D.L. 1972. "The Agenda-setting Function of the Mass Media." ''Public Opinion Quarterly'' 73: 176-187.
 +
* Riesman, David. 1950. ''The Lonely Crowd.'' Yale University Press. ISBN 0300088655
 +
* Robinson, Claude E. 1932. ''Straw Votes: A study of political prediction.'' Columbia University Press.
 +
* Robinson, Matthew. 2002. ''Mobocracy: How the Media's Obsession with Polling Twists the News, Alters Elections, and Undermines Democracy.'' Prima Lifestyles. ISBN 0761535829
 +
* Shamir, J. and Michal Shamir. 2000. ''The Anatomy of Public Opinion.'' Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472110225
 +
* Thompson, J. 1995. ''The Media and Modernity.'' Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804726795
 +
* Tönnies, Ferdinand. 1922. ''Kritik der öffentlichen Meinung.'' Walter De Gruyter, Inc. ISBN 3110153491
 +
* Young, Michael L. 1990. ''The Classics of Polling.'' Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0810822806
  
A broadcasting [[organisation]] may broadcast several programs at the same time, through several channels ([[frequencies]]), for example [[BBC One]] and [[BBC Two|Two]]. On the other hand, two or more organisations may share a channel and each use it during a fixed part of the day. [[Digital radio]] and [[digital television]] may also transmit [[multiplexing|multiplexed]] programming, with several channels [[data compression|compressed]] into one [[ensemble]].
+
{{Credits|Public_opinion|101554247|Mass_media_and_public_opinion|98147613|Opinion_poll|111410759|}}
 
 
When broadcasting is done via the Internet the term [[webcasting]] is often used. In 2004 a new phenomenon occurred when a number of technologies combined to produce [[podcasting]]. Podcasting is an asynchronous broadcast/narrowcast medium, with one of the main proponents being [[Adam Curry]] and his associates the [[Podshow]].
 
 
 
Broadcasting forms a very large segment of the mass media.  Broadcasting to a very narrow range of audience is called [[narrowcast]]ing.  The term "broadcast" was coined by early radio engineers from the midwestern United States.
 
 
 
==Film==
 
[[Film]] is a term that encompasses motion pictures as individual projects, as well as the field in general.  The origin of the name comes from the fact that [[photographic film]] (also called [[film stock|filmstock]]) has historically been the primary [[Recording medium|medium]] for recording and displaying motion pictures.  Many other terms exist — ''motion pictures'' (or just ''pictures'' or "picture"), ''the silver screen'', ''photoplays'', ''the cinema'', ''picture shows'', ''flicks'' — and commonly ''movies''.
 
 
 
Films are produced by [[recording]] people and objects with [[camera]]s, or by creating them using [[animation]] techniques and/or [[special effect]]s.  They comprise a series of individual frames, but when these images are shown rapidly in succession, the illusion of motion is given to the viewer.  Flickering between frames is not seen due to an effect known as [[persistence of vision]] — whereby the eye retains a visual image for a fraction of a second after the source has been removed.  Also of relevance is what causes the perception of motion; a psychological effect identified as [[beta movement]].
 
 
 
Film is considered by many to be an important [[art]] form; films entertain, educate, enlighten and inspire audiences. The visual elements of cinema need no translation, giving the motion picture a universal power of communication.  Any film can become a worldwide attraction, especially with the addition of [[dubbing (filmmaking)|dubbing]] or [[subtitles]] that translate the dialogue.  Films are also artifacts created by specific cultures, which reflect those cultures, and, in turn, affect them.
 
 
 
==Internet==
 
The [[Internet]] (also known simply as "the Net" or "the Web") can be briefly understood as "a network of networks". Specifically, it is the worldwide, publicly accessible network of interconnected [[computer network]]s that transmit [[Data (computing)|data]] by [[packet switching]] using the standard [[Internet Protocol]] (IP). It consists of millions of smaller domestic, academic, business, and governmental networks, which together carry various [[information]] and services, such as [[electronic mail]], [[online chat]], [[Computer file|file]] transfer, and the interlinked [[Web page]]s and other documents of the [[World Wide Web]].
 
 
 
Contrary to some common usage, the Internet and the [[World Wide Web]] are not synonymous: the Internet is a collection of interconnected ''computer networks'', linked by [[copper]] wires, [[optical fiber|fiber-optic]] cables, [[wireless]] connections etc.; the Web is a collection of interconnected ''documents'', linked by [[hyperlink]]s and [[URL]]s.  The World Wide Web is accessible via the Internet, along with many other services including [[e-mail]], [[file sharing]] and others described below.
 
 
 
Toward the end of the 20th century, the advent of the [[World Wide Web]] marked the first era in which any individual could have a means of exposure on a scale comparable to that of mass media. For the first time, anyone with a [[web site]] can address a global audience, although serving to high levels of [[web traffic]] is still relatively expensive. It is possible that the rise of [[peer-to-peer]] technologies may have begun the process of making the cost of bandwidth manageable.  Although a vast amount of information, imagery, and commentary (i.e. "content") has been made available, it is often difficult to determine the authenticity and reliability of information contained in web pages (in many cases, self-published). The invention of the Internet has also allowed breaking news stories to reach around the globe within minutes.  This rapid growth of instantaneous, decentralized communication is often deemed likely to change mass media and its relationship to society.
 
"Cross-media" means the idea of distributing the same message through different media channels. A similar idea is expressed in the news industry as "convergence". Many authors understand cross-media publishing to be the ability to publish in both [[Printing|print]] and on the [[World Wide Web|web]] without manual conversion effort. An increasing number of [[wireless]] devices with mutually incompatible data and screen formats make it even more difficult to achieve the objective “create once, publish many”.
 
 
 
== Publishing ==
 
[[Publishing]] is the industry concerned with the production of [[literature]] or [[information]] &ndash; the activity of making information available for public view. In some cases, authors may be their own publishers.
 
 
 
Traditionally, the term refers to the distribution of printed works such as [[book]]s and [[newspaper]]s. With the advent of digital information systems and the [[Internet]], the scope of publishing has expanded to include [[website]]s, [[blog]]s, and the like.
 
 
 
As a [[business]], publishing includes the development, [[marketing]], [[Mass production|production]], and [[distribution (business)|distribution]] of newspapers, magazines, books, [[literary work]]s, [[musical composition|musical work]]s, [[software]], other works dealing with information.
 
 
 
Publication is also important as a [[law|legal concept]]; (1) as the process of giving formal notice to the world of a significant intention, for example, to marry or enter bankruptcy, and; (2) as the essential precondition of being able to claim [[defamation]]; that is, the alleged [[libel]] must have been published.
 
 
 
===Book===
 
[[Image:Brockhaus Lexikon.jpg|right|thumb|150px|Brockhaus Konversations-Lexikon, 1902.]]
 
A [[book]] is a collection of sheets of [[paper]], [[parchment]] or other material with a piece of text written on them, bound together along one edge within covers. A book is also a literary work or a main division of such a work. A book produced in electronic format is known as an [[e-book]].
 
 
 
In [[library and information science]], a book is called a [[monograph]] to distinguish it from serial [[publication]]s such as [[magazine]]s, [[journal]]s or [[newspaper]]s.
 
 
 
Publishers may produce low-cost, pre-proof editions known as [[Galley proof|galleys]] or 'bound proofs' for promotional purposes, such as generating reviews in advance of publication. Galleys are usually made as cheaply as possible, since they are not intended for sale.
 
 
 
A lover of books is usually referred to as a [[bibliophile]], a bibliophilist, or a philobiblist, or, more informally, a [[bookworm]].
 
 
 
A book may be studied by students in the form of a [[book report]]. It may also be covered by a professional writer as a [[book review]] to introduce a new book. Some belong to a [[book club]].
 
 
 
===Magazine===
 
A [[magazine]] is a periodical [[publication]] containing a variety of articles, generally financed by [[advertising]] and/or purchase by readers.
 
 
 
Magazines are typically published [[week]]ly, [[biweekly]], [[month]]ly, [[bimonthly]] or [[quarter]]ly, with a [[periodical cover date|date on the cover]] that is in advance of the date it is actually published.  They are often printed in color on coated paper, and are bound with a [[bookbinding|soft cover]].
 
 
 
Magazines fall into two broad categories: consumer magazines and business magazines.  In practice, magazines are a subset of [[:Category:serials, periodicals and journals|periodicals]], distinct from those periodicals produced by scientific, artistic, academic or special interest publishers which are subscription-only, more expensive, narrowly limited in circulation, and often have little or no advertising.
 
 
 
Magazines can be classified as:-
 
*General interest magazines (e.g. [[Frontline (magazine)|Frontline]], [[India Today]], [[The Week]], etc)
 
*Special interest magazines (women's, sports, business, [[scuba diving]], etc)
 
 
 
==Newspaper==
 
[[Image:Newspapers FT SvD IHT WSJ.jpg|thumb|250px|A selection of newspapers]]
 
A [[newspaper]] is a [[publication]] containing news and information and advertising, usually printed on low-cost paper called [[newsprint]]. It may be general or special interest, most often published daily or weekly. The first printed newspaper was published in [[1605]], and the form has thrived even in the face of competition from technologies such as radio and television. Recent developments on the Internet are posing major threats to its business model, however. Paid circulation is declining in most countries, and advertising revenue, which makes up the bulk of a newspaper's income, is shifting from print to online; some commentators, nevertheless, point out that historically new media such as radio and television did not entirely supplant existing media.
 
 
 
===Software publishing===
 
A [[software publisher]] is a [[publishing]] [[company (law)|company]] in the [[software industry]] between the [[software developer|developer]] and the [[distribution (business)|distributor]]. In some companies, two or all three of these roles may be combined (and indeed, may reside in a single person, especially in the case of [[shareware]]).
 
 
 
Software publishers often license software from developers with specific limitations, such as a time limit or geographical region. The terms of licensing vary enormously, and are typically secret.
 
 
 
Developers may use publishers to reach larger or foreign markets, or to avoid focussing on marketing. Or publishers may use developers to create software to meet a market need that the publisher has identified.
 
 
 
==Video and computer games==
 
[[Image:Pac-man.png|thumb|250px|[[Namco]]'s ''[[Pac-Man]]'' was a hit, and became a cultural phenomenon. The game spawned merchandise, a [[cartoon series]] and [[popular music|pop]] [[song]]s, and was one of the most heavily cloned video games of all-time.]]
 
 
 
A computer game is a [[computer]]-controlled game. A video game is a computer game where a video display such as a [[computer display|monitor]] or [[television]] is the primary feedback device. The term "computer game" also includes games which display only text (and which can therefore theoretically be played on a [[teletypewriter]]) or which use other methods, such as sound or vibration, as their primary feedback device, but there are very few new games in these categories. There always must also be some sort of [[input device]], usually in the form of [[Button (control)|button/joystick]] combinations (on arcade games), a [[Computer keyboard|keyboard]] & [[Computer mouse|mouse]]/[[trackball]] combination (computer games), or a [[Game controller|controller]] ([[Video game console|console]] games), or a combination of any of the above. Also, more esoteric devices have been used for input. Usually there are rules and goals, but in more open-ended games the player may be free to do whatever they like within the confines of the virtual universe.
 
 
 
The phrase interactive entertainment is the formal reference to computer and video games. To avoid ambiguity, this game software is referred to as "''computer and video games''" throughout this article, which explores properties common to both types of game.
 
 
 
In common usage, a "computer game" or a "[[personal computer game|PC game]]" refers to a game that is played on a [[personal computer]]. "[[Console game]]" refers to one that is played on a device specifically designed for the use of such, while interfacing with a standard [[television]] set. "Video game" (or "videogame") has evolved into a catchall phrase that encompasses the aforementioned along with any game made for any other device, including, but not limited to, [[mobile phone]]s, [[Personal digital assistant|PDAs]], advanced [[calculator]]s, etc.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Latest revision as of 18:05, 14 April 2023


Public opinion is the aggregate of individual attitudes or beliefs held by the adult population. It can be influenced by public relations and the political media. Additionally, the mass media utilizes a wide variety of advertising techniques to change the minds of people. A continuously used technique is propaganda. Public opinion is frequently measured using opinion polls that use the statistical method of survey sampling, which can still run the risk of bias. The results of opinion polls have themselves been found to influence public opinion, particularly with regard to political elections during which time the tide of public opinion becomes increasingly crucial. The formation of public opinion is considered of great importance in a free society, since there is an implicit assumption that the actions of the public will be guided by their opinions. Those in positions of authority invest considerable resources in efforts to sway public opinion in their favor, with results that may or may not prove beneficial to society as a whole.

Introduction

The English term public opinion dates from the eighteenth century and derives from the French l’opinion publique, first used by Montaigne two centuries earlier in 1588. "Public opinion" developed as a concept with the rise of a "public" in the eighteenth century. This came about through urbanization and other political and social forces.

Adam Smith referred to it in his Theory of Moral Sentiments, but Jeremy Bentham was the first British writer to fully develop theories of public opinion. He reasoned that public opinion had the power to ensure that rulers would rule for the greatest happiness of the greater number.

Using the conceptional tools of his theory of Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft, the German sociologist Ferdinand Tönnies argued that "public opinion" has the equivalent social functions in societies (Gesellschaften) that religion has in communities (Gemeinschaften).[1]

The German philosopher Jürgen Habermas contributed the idea of "Public Sphere" to the discussion of public opinion. Public Sphere, as he argued, is where “something approaching public opinion can be formed.”[2] This public sphere should have the attributes of universal access, rational debate, and disregard for rank. However, these three features that support the formation of public opinion have generally not been in place in western democracy. Thus, public opinion is highly susceptible to elite manipulation.

American sociologist Herbert Blumer proposed a somewhat different conception of the "public," as a form of collective behavior which is made up of those who are discussing a given public issue at any one time. Given this definition, there are many publics; each of them comes into being when an issue arises and ceases to exist when the issue is resolved. Blumer claimed that since people participate in a public to different degrees, public opinion polling cannot measure the public: an archbishop's participation is more important than that of a homeless or unemployed person. The "mass," in which people independently make decisions about, for example, which brand of toothpaste to buy, is a form of collective behavior different from the public.

Public opinion is a strange, fickle creature. Many things influence the constitution of public thought, sometimes seemingly at random. The mass media, word of mouth, economy, sense of community, advertising, and propaganda all have some effect on public opinion.

Formation of public opinion

The mass media plays a crucial role in forming and reflecting public opinion: it communicates the world to individuals, and it reproduces modern society's self-image. Critiques in the early-to-mid-twentieth century suggested that the media destroys the individual's capacity to act autonomously - sometimes being ascribed an influence reminiscent of the telescreens of the dystopian novel by George Orwell 1984. Later studies, however, suggested a more complex interaction between the media and society, with individuals actively interpreting and evaluating the media and the information it provides.

Advertising and propaganda are two forms of altering opinion through the mass media. Advertising is a more overt method of doing so by promoting the strengths of certain products or ideas (be it for retail products, services, or campaign ideas). Propaganda is covert in its actions but also serves to subtly influence opinion. Propaganda is traditionally used more for political purposes while advertising has been used for commercial purposes.

People are not entirely immersed in mass media, however. Local communication still plays a large role in determining public opinion. People are affected by the opinions of those with whom they work, attend religious services, friends, family, and other smaller scale interpersonal interactions. Other factors of the formation of public opinion include the economy, the state of which has a great effect on people's happiness; popular culture, which can be dictated by the mass media, but can also develop as small social movements; and massive global events such as the terrorist attacks of September 11th, which shifted public opinion drastically.

Paul Lazarsfeld argued that the public forms its opinion in a two-stage process. He thought most people rely on opinion leaders. These opinion leaders are affected by world events and then pass opinions down to less active members of society. Lazarsfeld believed that the mass media was the main source of information for opinion leaders, but his theory may have missed the tremendous impact the mass media has over every citizen, not just a select few. Most people gather all of their information regarding current events from some outlet of the mass media be it large newspapers, television news, or the internet. The information these people retain is largely colored by the opinions of those presenting them. As a result, many people take on the opinions of their news presenters (although one could also argue that they gravitate to those broadcast outlets because of similar shared opinions).

Ownership of media and the crafting of opinion

The long-term consequences of the relationship between the mass media and the crafting of public opinion are significant. Continuing concentration of ownership and control of the media have led to accusations of a "media elite" having a form of "cultural dictatorship." Thus the continuing debate about the influence of "media barons" such as Rupert Murdoch. For example, the Guardian reported the Murdoch-owned HarperCollins' refusal to publish Chris Patten's East and West, because of the former Hong Kong Governor's description of the Chinese leadership as "faceless Stalinists" possibly being damaging to Murdoch's Chinese broadcasting interests.[3] In this case, the author was able to have the book accepted by another publisher, but this kind of censorship may point the way to the future. A related, but more insidious, form is that of self-censorship by members of the media in the interests of the owner, in the interests of their careers.

The agenda-setting process is partly one which is an almost unavoidable function of the bureaucratic process involved in newsgathering by the large organizations which make up much of the mass media. (Just four main news agencies – AP, UPI, Reuters and Agence France-Presse – claim together to provide 90 percent of the total news output of the world’s press, radio, and television.) For example, in order to get into the news, events have to happen in places convenient for the newsgathering agencies, come from a reliable and predictable source, and fit into journalists’ framework of news values:

[J]ournalists, who are better seen as bureaucrats than as buccaneers, begin their work from a stock of plausible, well-defined and largely unconscious assumptions. Part of their job is to translate untidy reality into neat stories with beginnings, middles and denouements. … The values which inform the selection of news items usually reinforce conventional opinions and established authority. At the same time, a process of simplification filters out the disturbing or the unexpected. The need of the media to secure instant attention creates a strong prejudice in favor of familiar stories and themes, and a slowness of response when reality breaks the conventions.[4]

The effects of the mass media on public opinion relate not merely to the way newsworthy events are perceived (and which are reported at all), but also to a multitude of cultural influences which operate through the mass media. Thus Lang and Lang claimed that "The mass media force attention to certain issues. They build up public images of political figures. They are constantly presenting objects suggesting what individuals in the mass should think about, know about, have feelings about."[5]

Stuart Hall has pointed out that because some of the media produce material which often is good, impartial, and serious, they are accorded a high degree of respect and authority. But in practice the ethic of the press and television is closely related to that of the homogeneous establishment, providing a vital support for the existing order. But independence (such as of the BBC) is not “a mere cover, it is central to the way power and ideology are mediated in societies like ours.” Hall suggested that the public are bribed with good radio, television, and newspapers into an acceptance of the biased, the misleading, and the status quo. The media are not, according to this approach, crude agents of propaganda. They organize public understanding. However, the overall interpretations they provide in the long run are those which are most preferred by, and least challenging to, those with economic power.

Mass media and political opinion

Political advertising targets people with existing beliefs formed over long periods of time, which they are correspondingly reluctant to change, not on blank-sheet individuals. Moreover, the people who are most exposed to the media are those who know from the outset whom they will vote for, and are therefore least likely to be influenced by propaganda. Thus it may be that the notion that the people who switch parties during the campaign are mainly the reasoned, thoughtful people convinced by the issues, is completely unfounded.

Lazarsfeld claimed that the real influence on undecided voters is the "opinion leader," the individual whose own vote intention is secure, and who is well informed on the issues. Thus personal influence is primarily of greater importance than media influence, albeit using information initially acquired through the media. This may be related to trust and authority: both opinion leaders and the general public will select the evidence and information which supports their view, placing greater weight on more trustworthy sources. For the opinion-leader theory to be true, then, the general public would have to place greater trust in opinion leaders than in the media, so that the opinion leaders act as mediators between the public and the media, personalizing and making authoritative the information the media provides. Thus "… the person-to-person influence reaches the ones who are more susceptible to change and serves as a bridge over which formal media of communications extend their influence."[6] From a psychological viewpoint, we may understand the personal influence of the opinion leaders in terms of group association: perceived as representing the group's desirable characteristics, other group members will aspire to the leaders’ viewpoints in order to maintain group cohesiveness and thus (indirectly) self-assurance. However, the separation of group leaders from the general public is arguably an over-simplification of the process of media influences.

Although such researchers did not ascribe significant direct influence over public opinion to the media, some findings indicate that it has such power over individuals. Lazarsfeld, Berelson and Gaudet noted in The People’s Choice that 58 percent of voting changes were made without any remembered personal contact and were very often dependent on the mass media, changes being widely distributed among those who changed their opinion. But this effect was ignored in their conclusion of little direct media influence. Other studies supporting the opinion leader theory failed to distinguish between opinion leading in consumer and political behavior. In political behavior opinion leading tends to correlate positively with status, whereas this is not the case in consumer behavior (choosing breakfast cereals and such items). So for political behavior, the general conclusion that the media merely fixes (confirms) people’s opinion is not supported.

Carl Hovland, using techniques from experimental psychology, found significant effects of information on longer-term behavior and attitudes, particularly in areas where most people have little direct experience (such as politics) and have a high degree of trust in the source (such as broadcasting). It should be noted that since social class has become an increasingly less good indicator of party (since the surveys of the 1940s and 1950s) the floating voter today is no longer the apathetic voter, but likely to be more well-informed than the consistent voter - and this mainly through the media.

Measurement of public opinion

Public opinion is measured by opinion polls—statistical surveys of public opinion using sampling. They are usually designed to represent the opinions of a population by asking a small number of people a series of questions and then extrapolating the answers to the larger group.

History of opinion polls

The first known example of an opinion poll was a local straw vote conducted by The Harrisburg Pennsylvanian in 1824, showing Andrew Jackson leading John Quincy Adams by 335 votes to 169 in the contest for the United States Presidency. Such straw votes—unweighted and unscientific—gradually became more popular; but they remained local, usually city-wide phenomena. In 1916, the Literary Digest embarked on a national survey (partly as a circulation-raising exercise) and correctly predicted Woodrow Wilson's election as President. Mailing out millions of postcards and simply counting the returns, the Digest correctly called the four following presidential elections.

In 1936, however, the weakness in the Digest method was revealed. Its 2.3 million "voters" constituted a huge sample; however they were generally more affluent Americans who tended to have Republican sympathies. The Literary Digest did nothing to correct this bias. The week before election day, it reported that Alf Landon was far more popular than Franklin D. Roosevelt. At the same time, George Gallup conducted a far smaller, but more scientifically-based survey, in which he polled a demographically representative sample. Gallup correctly predicted Roosevelt's landslide victory. The Literary Digest went out of business soon afterwards, while the polling industry grew quickly.

Gallup launched a subsidiary in the United Kingdom, where it correctly predicted Labour's victory in the 1945 general election, in contrast with virtually all other commentators, who expected the Conservative Party, led by Winston Churchill, to win easily. By the 1950s, polling had spread to most democracies. Nowadays they reach virtually every country, although in more autocratic societies they tend to avoid sensitive political topics. In Iraq, surveys conducted soon after the 2003 war helped to measure the true feelings of Iraqi citizens to Saddam Hussein, post-war conditions, and the presence of US forces.

For many years, opinion polls were conducted mainly face-to-face, either in the street or in people's homes. This method remains widely used, but in some countries it has been overtaken by telephone polls, which can be conducted faster and more cheaply. However, due to the common practice of telemarketers to sell products under the guise of a telephone survey and the proliferation of residential call screening devices and use of cell phones, response rates for telephone surveys have been plummeting. Mailed surveys have become the data collection method of choice among local governments that conduct a citizen survey to track service quality and manage resource allocation. In recent years, Internet and short message service surveys have become increasingly popular, but most of these draw on whomever wishes to participate rather than a scientific sample of the population, and are therefore not generally considered accurate.

Potential for inaccuracy

There exist a number of potential inaccuracies when relying on opinion polls. These include sampling errors, nonresponse bias, response bias, poor wording of questions, and coverage bias.

Sampling error reflects the effects of chance in the sampling process. The uncertainty is often expressed as a margin of error. A poll with a random sample of 1,000 people has margin of sampling error of three percent for the estimated percentage of the whole population. A 3 percent margin of error means that 95 percent of the time the procedure used would give an estimate within three percent of the percentage to be estimated. The margin of error can be reduced by using a larger sample, however if a pollster wishes to reduce the margin of error to 1 percent they would need a sample of around 10,000 people. The margin of error does not reflect other sources of error, such as measurement error.

Nonresponse bias occurs because some people do not answer calls from strangers, or refuse to answer the poll, so poll samples may not be representative samples from a population. Because of this selection bias, the characteristics of those who agree to be interviewed may be markedly different from those who decline. If the people who do not answer have different opinions then there is bias in the results. Response bias occurs when respondents deliberately try to manipulate the outcome of a poll, for example by advocating a more extreme position than they actually hold in order to boost their side of the argument or give rapid and ill-considered answers in order to hasten the end of their questioning. Respondents may also feel under social pressure not to give an unpopular answer.

It is well established that the wording of the questions, the order in which they are asked, and the number and form of alternative answers offered can influence results of polls. On some issues, question wording can result in quite pronounced differences between surveys. One way in which pollsters attempt to minimize this effect is to ask the same set of questions over time, in order to track changes in opinion. Another common technique is to rotate the order in which questions are asked. Many pollsters also split-sample, a technique that involves having two different versions of a question, with each version presented to half the respondents.

Another source of error is the use of samples that are not representative of the population as a consequence of the methodology used, known as coverage bias. For example, telephone sampling has a built-in error because in many times and places, those with telephones have generally been richer than those without. Alternately, in some places, many people have only mobile telephones. In areas where pollsters cannot call mobile phones (due to it being unlawful to make unsolicited calls to phones where the phone's owner may be charged simply for taking a call), such individuals are not included in the polling sample. If the subset of the population without cell phones differs markedly from the rest of the population, these differences can skew the results of the poll. Polling organizations have developed many weighting techniques to help overcome these deficiencies, to varying degrees of success. Several studies of mobile phone users by the Pew Research Center in the U.S. concluded that the absence of mobile users was not unduly skewing results, at least not at the time of their research.[7]

The influence of opinion polls

By providing information about voting intentions, opinion polls can sometimes influence the behavior of electors. The various theories about how this happens can be split up into two groups: bandwagon/underdog effects, and strategic ("tactical") voting.

A "Bandwagon effect" occurs when the poll prompts voters to back the candidate shown to be winning in the poll. The idea that voters are susceptible to such effects is old, stemming at least from 1884 where it was first used in a British political cartoon in the magazine Puck. It has also remained persistent in spite of a lack of empirical corroboration until the late twentieth century. George Gallup, Jr. spent much effort in vain trying to discredit this theory in his time by presenting empirical research.[8]

The opposite of the bandwagon effect is the "Underdog effect." This occurs when people vote, out of sympathy, for the party perceived to be "losing" the elections. There is less empirical evidence for the existence of this effect than there is for the existence of the Bandwagon effect. Related to these effects is the "Boomerang effect" where the likely supporters of the candidate shown to be winning feel that he or she is safe and that their vote is not required, thus allowing another candidate to win.

The second category of theories on how polls directly affect voting is called strategic or tactical voting. This theory is based on the idea that voters view the act of voting as a means of selecting a government. Thus they will sometimes not choose the candidate they prefer on ground of ideology or sympathy, but another, less-preferred, candidate from strategic considerations. An example can be found in the United Kingdom general election, 1997. Then Cabinet Minister, Michael Portillo's constituency of Enfield was believed to be a safe seat but opinion polls showed the Labour candidate Stephen Twigg steadily gaining support, which may have prompted undecided voters or supporters of other parties to support Twigg in order to remove Portillo.

Public opinion and technology

Jerry Mander, a former advertising executive wrote Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television, in 1977 where he took a negative view on the current state of mass media affected public opinion. Mander argued that television has become the new transmission mechanism for cultural influences, but that because of the nature and structure of the medium, it encourages a global homogeneity of culture based on American cultural influences. He gave as an example the introduction of television to the Northwest of Canada, populated mainly by Dene Indians and Inuit. Television led to the erosion of traditional values, pastimes, and occupations, and increased the desire of the young to learn English and acquire material possessions such as cars. The previous mode of cultural transmission - nightly story-telling - ended almost completely with the introduction of television, destroying “a bond of love and respect between the young and the old that was critical to the survival of native culture. Mander described television as “the instrument for re-shaping our internal environments – our feelings, our thoughts, our ideas and our nervous systems – to match the re-created artificial environment that increasingly surrounds us: Commodity life; Technological passivity; Acceleration; Homogenisation.” (emphasis in original).

Mander’s theory is related to Jean Baudrillard’s concept of "hyperreality." We can take the 1994 O.J. Simpson trial as an example, where the reality reported on was merely the catalyst for the "simulacra" (defined by Baudrillard as a copy of a copy which has been so dissipated in its relation to the original that it can no longer be said to be a copy, and therefore stands on its existing as another reality) or images created, which defined the trial as a global event and made the trial more than it was. Essentially, hyperreality is the concept that the media is not merely a window on to the world (as if a visiting alien were watching television), but is itself part of the reality it describes. Hence, the media’s obsession with media-created events.

For the future, the internet may play a role in reclaiming the public sphere for debate. The various means of communication available on the internet present the public with more outlets through which to express their opinions and for formerly marginalized groups of people to come together in central (virtual) locations, giving one voice to formerly disparate peoples. The internet offers newly focused discussion for these groups of people with the potential that their newfound single voices will be much louder in the public sphere. This could lead to the broaching of previously taboo or outlandish topics in mainstream culture and even the eventual shifting of that culture as a result.

Notes

  1. Ferdinand Tönnies. 1992. Kritik der öffentlichen Meinung. (Walter De Gruyter Inc. ISBN 3110153491)
  2. Jurgen Habermas. 1962. The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere. (Polity Press. ISBN 0745610773)
  3. Nicholas Clee. The Bookseller.March 1, 2003, Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved February 13, 2007.
  4. James Curran, and Jean Seaton. 2005. Power Without Responsibility. (Taylor and Francis. ISBN 0415243890)
  5. K. Lang, and G.E. Lang. 1966. The Mass Media and Voting.
  6. Berelson Lazarsfeld, and Gaudet. 1944. The People’s Choice. (New York: Columbia University Press)
  7. Scott Keeter, October 26, 2006 Cell-Only Voters Not Very Different Pew Research Center. Retrieved March 12, 2007.
  8. The Surveyor Science & Spirit. Interview with George Gallup, Jr.

References
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