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Pagina xiv
... discussion of what happens psychologically when people watch TV, and
considers some of the possible biological underpinnings of the viewing experience. ...
Pagina 21
... beat his wife now has time to get drunk, beat his wife — and watch TV" (p. ... What is the subjective experience like? Are there short- and long-term ...
Pagina 38
"TV makes my kids walk around like they're in a dream. ... During a radio talk
program, social psychologist Milton Rosenberg (1978) recounted his experience ...
Pagina 58
For many mass communication research purposes, this approach is preferable to
ignoring people's ability to report on their own experience, ...
Pagina 67
But before we tackle more complex analyses, let us first describe in detail when
, where, and how people use and experience television. ...
Pagina 70
viewing differ from other experiences and how uniform is the experience (ie, ...
during the week, including TV viewing. HOW OFTEN DO PEOPLE VIEW TELEVISION? ...
Pagina 78
covered that the Africans, who were much less familiar with TV generally, ...
related to the amount of experience a person has had with the medium and thus, ...
Pagina 79
Only when reading, eating, or talking did people report "wanting to do" these
things more often than watching TV (Table 6).9 In short, television viewing ...
Pagina 80
HOW TELEVISION IS EXPERIENCED RELATIVE TO OTHER DAILY ACTIVITIES The pages ahead
describe how people experience viewing and how these states compare to ...
Pagina 81
... differences in what people bring to viewing substantially shape the experience. ... activity reports after subtracting those given while watching TV
. ...
Pagina 87
In short, the experience becomes somewhat more "TV like" but not so much that it
is ... DO DIFFERENT GROUPS OF PEOPLE EXPERIENCE TELEVISION DIFFERENTLY? ...
Pagina 89
Finally, people with more education are likely to be accustomed to processing
information more complex than what they experience during the typical TV...
Pagina 94
We suspect that the viewing experience would be reported in much the same way ... We divided TV content into 18 different program types but chose to look ...
Pagina 97
We also know that people feel better in virtually every activity ... New Video
Media Although the experience of most forms of traditional TV content did not ...
Pagina 98
... the very hallmark of TV viewing is relaxation without involvement or effort. ... Although it has been shown that people report viewing to be quite ...
Pagina 100
centrating much more during reading than during TV viewing. But the effort of
concentration required is also why we find that people report wishing to do ...
Pagina 101
In fact, some instances of TV viewing could be conceived of as special cases of ... one taps into other people's (TV writers) ideas and fantasies. ...
Pagina 103
This is one of the primary reasons that many people view the same television ...
to TV viewing was extended by the observations of Gerhardt Wiebe (1969), ...
Pagina 104
Evidence is presented in a later chapter that people who experience their ...
hours per day of primary and secondary TV viewing — 20% more than our figure. ...
Pagina 106
Freud was also aware that people could discharge or gratify repressed ... and
Pietranera (1946) have characterized the movie-going experience in terms of ...
Pagina 108
CHAPTER 6 Television and the Quality of Family Life TV has ruined American home
life. People no longer sit around and visit. Everywhere you go you have to ...
Pagina 109
Explicit in these concerns is the assumption that when people turn on the TV
they do little else but watch. We already know from the findings in the ...
Pagina 110
But how much do people talk with family members when watching TV? ... Television
The next question is whether experience is altered by the kind of people...
Pagina 111
... difficult to view.5 How people experience being with the family when reading
, ... with families who spend small proportions of their time watching TV. ...
Pagina 116
... may help provide order in experience while reinforcing mainline attitudes by ... time passively with one another and heavier viewers' non-TV family time ...
Pagina 117
... parallel or separate experience during television is quite functional. ...
Not a few people have to compete with TV shows and celebrities for the ...
Pagina 118
The TV viewing experience is also ... Family almost necessarily implies "family
of origin" for single people, whereas for married people, time spent with ...
Pagina 129
Difficulty of concentration rises for TV viewing from Time 1 to Time 2 and there
is a ... Much the same experience was reported at Time 2 and at Time 1, ...
Pagina 131
The question was whether people felt differently before a night of heavy ... A
number of subjects watched approximately the same amount of TV every night ...
Pagina 136
The Importance of Eye Movement and the Advent of High-Definition TV. ... to
understanding how people will experience high-definition television (HDTV). ...
Pagina 138
In any case, there is considerable anecdotal evidence that people experience
symptoms akin to withdrawal when television is removed. ...
Pagina 139
Once a television habit is formed and people become accustomed to using
television to structure a significant proportion of their experience, ...
Pagina 142
X en oz UJ < X o 5 o ANXIETY Work Sports & Hobbies ENJOYMENT TV Viewing ... The
flow state and daily activities. the person to experience high challenges ...
Pagina 148
Although western-style television predominates throughout the world, TV is not
so ... that some foreign visitors to the United States experience difficulty ...
Pagina 152
AMOUNT OF VIEWING AND THE EXPERIENCE OF EVERYDAY LIFE We turn now to the
question of whether people who watched more or less television reported a
different ...
Pagina 155
In short, the longer hours in front of the TV are less rewarding. ... and
possibly less aware and/or desensitized — heavy television viewing experience. ...
Pagina 163
... the data suggest that many of the same people for whom heavier viewing was ... heavier TV viewing is a means by which to order experience and cope with ...
Pagina 166
When they have nothing to do, they are more likely to turn on the TV to help
structure attention and to avoid the unpleasant experience of disorganization ...
Pagina 167
... alternatives for ordering experience and dealing with negative affect. ...
It may well be that some people watch a great deal of TV because they ...
Pagina 169
Low-income people have a much more restricted range of potential leisure ... The
number of TV sets per 1000 persons in the United States is 57 1 . ...
Pagina 172
It was also concluded that people use television to help structure their experience and modulate moods and that the medium may serve a therapeutic
function ...
Pagina 184
In fact, since the early 1950s the TV industry has titled a good many of its ...
I'm an old man and the TV brings people and music and talk into my life. ...
Pagina 188
These in turn affect how viewers will respond to what is on TV and what will be
on ... and the nature of television use and experience, are the results of ...
Pagina 189
Rather, television content, and how people use and experience the medium, ... Or
as Utley (1948) wrote, "TV appeals to the inherent laziness in all of us" ...
Pagina 191
Actually, many people might, but it takes effort and conviction for an ... every
one of the experiments involving voluntary abstention from TV has been how ...
Pagina 213
The important thing is that if the answer is "yes," the experience didn't just ... even if they do not consider each time whether to watch TV or not. ...
Pagina 217
The tokens can be used to operate the TV set and are earned by doing chores and ... "The making of the illusions which flood our experience has become the ...
Pagina 264
The Hague: Mouton. Tabloid TV. (1989, Spring). Skeptical Inquirer, 13, p. 248.
Tannenbaum, P. (1980). Entertainment as a vicarious emotional experience. ...
Pagina 283
... 97 subjective experience, 97, 98 VCR viewing, 97 video games, 97 O
Occupation and television viewing, 72 Older people and television viewing, ...
Big
World, Small Screen assesses the influence of television on the lives
of the most vulnerable and powerless in American society: children,
ethnic and sexual minorities, and ...
Television
corrupts our children, induces us to spend needlessly, and stimulates
hostility and violence. Or does it? Jib Fowles sees television as a
"grandly therapeutic force ...
Television,
Audiences and Cultural Studies presents a multi-faceted exploration of
audience research, in which David Morley draws on a rich body of
empirical work to examine ...