NobleBlocks

Institut für Medien- und Kommunikationspolitik

facilityBerlin, Germany

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from Institut für Medien- und Kommunikationspolitik (Germany). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
11.7K
Citations
41.5K
h-index
73
i10-index
563
Also known as
Institut für Medien- und Kommunikationspolitik

Top-cited papers from Institut für Medien- und Kommunikationspolitik

InterViews: Learning the Craft of Qualitative Research Interviewing
Steinar Kvale, Svend Brinkmann
19966.7K

List of Boxes, Figures, and Tables Preface to the Third Edition Acknowledgments About the Author Introduction 1. Introduction to Interview Research Conversation as Research Three Interview Sequences Interview Research in History and in the Social Sciences The Interview Society Methodological and Ethical Issues in Research Interviewing Overview of the Book Interviewing as a Craft Interviewing as a Social Production of Knowledge Interviewing as a Social Practice Part I: Conceptualizing the Research Interview Part II: Seven Stages of Research Interviewing Concluding Perspectives PART I. Conceptualizing the Research Interview 2. Characterizing Qualitative Research Interviews A Qualitative Research Interview on Learning Phenomenology and the Mode of Understanding in a Qualitative Research Interview Power Asymmetry in Qualitative Research Interviews Philosophical Dialogues, Therapeutic Conversations, and Research Interviews Therapeutic Interviews and Research Interviews Qualitative Interviews as Research Instruments and Social Practices 3. Epistemological Issues of Interviewing The Interviewer as a Miner or as a Traveler Interviews in a Postmodern Age Seven Features of Interview Knowledge Knowledge and Interviews in a Positivist Conception A Rehabilitation of Classical Positivism? Methodological Positivism Qualitative Interviewing Between Method and Craft Research Interviewing: Method or Personal Skills The Craft of Research Interviewing Learning the Craft of Research Interviewing 4. Ethical Issues of Interviewing Interviewing as a Moral Inquiry Ethical Issues Throughout an Interview Inquiry Ethical Positions: Rules and Procedures or Personal Virtues? Ethical Guidelines Informed Consent Confidentiality Consequences The Role of the Researcher Learning Ethical Research Behavior 5. The Qualitative Research Interview as Context Interviewers and Interviewees The Interviewer The Interviewee Bodies and Nonhumans Nonhumans and Surroundings PART II. Seven Stages of an Interview Investigation 6. Thematizing and Designing an Interview Study Seven Stages of an Interview Inquiry Thematizing an Interview Study Designing an Interview Study Mixed Methods 7. Conducting an Interview A Class Interview About Grades Setting the Interview Stage Scripting the Interview Interviewer Questions The Art of Second Questions 8. Interview Variations Interview Subjects Interviewing Subjects Across Cultures Interviews With Children Interviews With Elites Interview Forms Computer-Assisted Interviews Focus Group Interviews Factual Interviews Conceptual Interviews Narrative Interviews Discursive Interviews Confrontational Interviews 9. Interview Quality Hamlet's Interview Interview Quality The Interview Subject Interviewer Qualifications Standard Objections to the Quality of Interview Research Leading Questions 10. Transcribing Interviews Oral and Written Language Recording Interviews Transcribing Interviews Transcription Reliability, Validity, and Ethics 11. Preparing for Interview Analysis The 1,000-Page Question A Method of Analyzing the Question? Steps and Modes of Interview Analysis Computer Tools for Interview Analysis Coding 12. Interview Analyses Focusing on Condensation Interpretation The Issue of Multiple Interpretations Hermeneutical Interpretation of The Primacy of the Question in Interpretation Analytic Questions Posed to an Interview Text The Quest for the Real Meaning 13. Interview Analyses Focusing on Language Linguistic Analysis Conversation Analysis Narrative Analysis Discourse Analysis Deconstruction 14. Eclectic and Theoretical Analyses of Interviews Interview Analysis as Bricolage Interview Analysis as Theoretical Reading 15. The Social Construction of Validity Objectivity of Interview Knowledge Reliability and Validity of Interview Knowledge Validity as Quality of Craftsmanship Communicative Validity Pragmatic Validity Generalizing From Interview Studies 16. Reporting Interview Knowledge Contrasting Audiences for Interview Reports Boring Interview Reports Ethics of Reporting Investigating With the Final Report in Mind Standard Reports and Ways of Enhancing Them Method Results Enriching Interview Reports Journalistic Interviews Dialogues Therapeutic Case Histories Narratives Metaphors Visualizing Collage Publishing Qualitative Research 17. Conversations about Interviews Critiques of the Quality of Interview Knowledge Developing the Craft of Research Interviewing An Epistemology of Interview Knowledge The Object Determines the Method The Social Science Dogma of Quantification Research Interviewing as Social Practice Research Interviewing in a Social Context Interview Ethics in a Social Context Appendix: Learning Tasks Glossary References Index

Facebook and Online Privacy: Attitudes, Behaviors, and Unintended Consequences
Bernhard Debatin, Jennette Lovejoy, Ann-Kathrin Horn, Brittany N. Hughes
2009· Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication1.3Kdoi:10.1111/j.1083-6101.2009.01494.x

This article investigates Facebook users' awareness of privacy issues and perceived benefits and risks of utilizing Facebook. Research found that Facebook is deeply integrated in users' daily lives through specific routines and rituals. Users claimed to understand privacy issues, yet reported uploading large amounts of personal information. Risks to privacy invasion were ascribed more to others than to the self. However, users reporting privacy invasion were more likely to change privacy settings than those merely hearing about others' privacy invasions. Results suggest that this lax attitude may be based on a combination of high gratification, usage patterns, and a psychological mechanism similar to third-person effect. Safer use of social network services would thus require changes in user attitude.

PARTICIPATORY JOURNALISM PRACTICES IN THE MEDIA AND BEYOND
David Domingo, Thorsten Quandt, Ari Heinonen, Steve Paulussen +2 more
2008· Journalism Practice672doi:10.1080/17512780802281065

This article is a contribution to the debate on audience participation in online media with a twofold aim: (1) making conceptual sense of the phenomenon of participatory journalism in the framework of journalism research, and (2) determining the forms that it is taking in eight European countries and the United States. First, participatory journalism is considered in the context of the historical evolution of public communication. A methodological strategy for systematically analysing citizen participation opportunities in the media is then proposed and applied. A sample of 16 online newspapers offers preliminary data that suggest news organisations are interpreting online user participation mainly as an opportunity for their readers to debate current events, while other stages of the news production process are closed to citizen involvement or controlled by professional journalists when participation is allowed. However, different strategies exist among the studied sample, and contextual factors should be considered in further research.

Medienwirkungsforschung
Michael Schenk
2007· Mohr Siebeck eBooks415doi:10.1628/978-3-16-151656-6

Effects of the Media Research. 3rd edition.

The Development of Political Attitudes in Children
Inez L. Smith, Robert D. Hess, Judith V. Torney
1969· American Educational Research Journal401doi:10.2307/1162107

Based on a study of 12,000 elementary school children in eight large and medium-sized American cities, this book presents the first large-scale study of political attitude formation in children. The authors view political development from the perspective of a general theory of socialization, and compare the influences of social class, intelligence, teacher attitude, and religious membership on the growth of political attitudes. The book outlines the way in which the child's political awareness evolvesfrom identification with authority figures such as father, policeman, the president, to a grasp of more abstract political concepts and the rudiments of political participation. Illuminating a topic of great theoretical concern and practical educational importance, the book is a significant contribution to the fields of political sociology, child development and educational psychology, and an important reference work for all concerned with the processes of socialization and of attitude formation in general. The Development of Political Attitudes in Children was based on a major survey, the first of its kind, begun at the University of Chicago in 1960 to as certain information about the induction of children into the political life of the United States, to describe the nature of socialization into citizenship roles, and to examine pre-adult political learning and behavior in terms of other implications for the stability of the political system.

Dust measurements in the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko inbound to the Sun
A. Rotundi, H. Sierks, Vincenzo Della Corte, M. Fulle +4 more
2015· Science362doi:10.1126/science.aaa3905

Critical measurements for understanding accretion and the dust/gas ratio in the solar nebula, where planets were forming 4.5 billion years ago, are being obtained by the GIADA (Grain Impact Analyser and Dust Accumulator) experiment on the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft orbiting comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Between 3.6 and 3.4 astronomical units inbound, GIADA and OSIRIS (Optical, Spectroscopic, and Infrared Remote Imaging System) detected 35 outflowing grains of mass 10(-10) to 10(-7) kilograms, and 48 grains of mass 10(-5) to 10(-2) kilograms, respectively. Combined with gas data from the MIRO (Microwave Instrument for the Rosetta Orbiter) and ROSINA (Rosetta Orbiter Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis) instruments, we find a dust/gas mass ratio of 4 ± 2 averaged over the sunlit nucleus surface. A cloud of larger grains also encircles the nucleus in bound orbits from the previous perihelion. The largest orbiting clumps are meter-sized, confirming the dust/gas ratio of 3 inferred at perihelion from models of dust comae and trails.

Conceptual Roots of Internalization: From Transmission to Transformation
Jeanette A. Lawrence, Joan Valsiner
2010· Human Development232doi:10.1159/000277333

The concept of internalization is traced through two lines of theorizing that include Freudian and social-learning accounts of socialization and the sociogenetic theories of general mental functions and development held by Janet, Baldwin, and Vygotsky. An account of internalization as transformation is presented. An analysis of earlier theorists’ views is proposed as a foundation for regarding internalization as a process involving transformations of semiotic material imported from the social world into personally constructed subjective experience. It is argued that researchers who work within the increasingly popular sociogenetic tradition would benefit from making explicit the historical connections between their versions of the concept of internalization and the thinking of major figures in sociogenetic theorizing. Explicit analysis of internalization as constructive transformation makes it possible to understand the uniqueness of personal subjective worlds and their social (intersubjective) developmental roots.

Spectrophotometric properties of the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko from the OSIRIS instrument onboard the ROSETTA spacecraft
S. Fornasier, P. H. Hasselmann, M. A. Barucci, C. Feller +4 more
2015· Astronomy and Astrophysics222doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201525901

Context. The Rosetta mission of the European Space Agency has been orbiting the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P) since August 2014 and is now in its escort phase. A large complement of scientific experiments designed to complete the most detailed study of a comet ever attempted are onboard Rosetta. Aims. We present results for the photometric and spectrophotometric properties of the nucleus of 67P derived from the OSIRIS imaging system, which consists of a Wide Angle Camera (WAC) and a Narrow Angle Camera (NAC). The observations presented here were performed during July and the beginning of August 2014, during the approach phase, when OSIRIS was mapping the surface of the comet with several filters at different phase angles (1.3 -54 ). The resolution reached up to 2.1 m/px. Methods. The OSIRIS images were processed with the OSIRIS standard pipeline, then converted into I/F radiance factors and corrected for the illumination conditions at each pixel using the Lommel-Seeliger disk law. Color cubes of the surface were produced by stacking registered and illumination-corrected images. Furthermore, photometric analysis was performed both on disk-averaged photometry in several filters and on disk-resolved images acquired with the NAC orange filter, centered at 649 nm, using Hapke modeling. Results. The disk-averaged phase function of the nucleus of 67P shows a strong opposition surge with a G parameter value of -0.13 0.01 in the HG system formalism and an absolute magnitude H v (1, 1, 0) = 15.74 0.02 mag. The integrated spectrophotometry in 20 filters covering the 250-1000 nm wavelength range shows a red spectral behavior, without clear absorption bands except for a potential absorption centered at 290 nm that is possibly due to SO 2 ice. The nucleus shows strong phase reddening, with disk-averaged spectral slopes increasing from 11%/(100 nm) to 16%/(100 nm) in the 1.3 -54 phase angle range. The geometric albedo of the comet is 6.5 0.2% at 649 nm, with local variations of up to 16% in the Hapi region. From the disk-resolved images we computed the spectral slope together with local spectrophotometry and identified three distinct groups of regions (blue, moderately red, and red). The Hapi region is the brightest, the bluest in term of spectral slope, and the most active surface on the comet. Local spectrophotometry shows an enhancement of the flux in the 700-750 nm that is associated with coma emissions.

Insolation, erosion, and morphology of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
H. U. Keller, S. Mottola, B. Davidsson, Stefan Schröder +4 more
2015· Astronomy and Astrophysics221doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201525964

Context. The complex shape of comet 67P and its oblique rotation axis cause pronounced seasonal effects. Irradiation and hence activity vary strongly.

Images of Asteroid 21 Lutetia: A Remnant Planetesimal from the Early Solar System
H. Sierks, P. Lamy, C. Barbieri, D. Koschny +4 more
2011· Science213doi:10.1126/science.1207325

Images obtained by the Optical, Spectroscopic, and Infrared Remote Imaging System (OSIRIS) cameras onboard the Rosetta spacecraft reveal that asteroid 21 Lutetia has a complex geology and one of the highest asteroid densities measured so far, 3.4 ± 0.3 grams per cubic centimeter. The north pole region is covered by a thick layer of regolith, which is seen to flow in major landslides associated with albedo variation. Its geologically complex surface, ancient surface age, and high density suggest that Lutetia is most likely a primordial planetesimal. This contrasts with smaller asteroids visited by previous spacecraft, which are probably shattered bodies, fragments of larger parents, or reaccumulated rubble piles.

Culture and Internet Consumption: Contributions from Cross-Cultural Marketing and Advertising Research
Marc Hermeking
2005· Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication190doi:10.1111/j.1083-6101.2006.tb00310.x

Cross-cultural marketing and advertising research reveal important influences of culture on the global consumption of the Internet and its World Wide Web. The prevailing concepts of culture in this field of research-drawn mostly from the models of Geert Hofstede and Edward T. Hall-are discussed here with respect to their limitations and utility for the increasing number of Web-related contributions from marketing research. As a consequence, additional findings on cultural influences on Web site design, related structural design criteria, basic conditions, and complementary criteria for culturally appropriate websites are discussed that may impact the future of the Digital Divide.

mcp: An R Package for Regression With Multiple Change Points
Jonas Kristoffer Lindeløv
2020180doi:10.31219/osf.io/fzqxv

The R package mcp does flexible and informed Bayesian regression with change points. mcp can infer the location of changes between regression models on means, variances, autocorrelation structure, and any combination of these. Prior and posterior samples and summaries are returned for all parameters and a rich set of plotting options is available. Bayes Factors can be computed via Savage-Dickey density ratio and posterior contrasts. Cross-validation can be used for more general model comparison. mcp ships with sensible defaults, including priors, but the user can override them to get finer control of the models and outputs. The strengths and limitations of mcp are discussed in relation to existing change point packages in R.

Redistribution of particles across the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
N. Thomas, B. Davidsson, M. R. El‐Maarry, S. Fornasier +4 more
2015· Astronomy and Astrophysics175doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201526049

Context. We present an investigation of the surface properties of areas on the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

An Integrative Model of Mobile Phone Appropriation
Werner Wirth, Thilo von Pape, Veronika Karnowski
2008· Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication172doi:10.1111/j.1083-6101.2008.00412.x

The evolution of mobile communication devices and services has taken up a dynamic that makes any prognosis in the field almost impossible. Whereas part of this dynamic may remain inscrutable, we believe that a much higher degree of explanation can be achieved by systematically paying closer attention to the process of appropriation. To seize upon this potential, we present an integrative model to analyze mobile phone appropriation (the “MPA model”). The model is based on existing theoretical approaches of the quantitative “adoption” paradigm (namely, Innovation Diffusion Theory and Theory of Planned Behavior) as well as the mostly qualitative research paradigm devoted to “appropriation” (Cultural studies and Frame Analysis), with the Uses-and-Gratifications approach playing a role on both sides. The model has been developed, operationalized and empirically applied in the context of mobile phone appropriation; however, with certain modifications it can be adapted to other information and communications technology (ICT) innovations.

Spectrophotometric properties of the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko from the OSIRIS instrument onboard the ROSETTA spacecraft
S. Fornasier, P. H. Hasselmann, M. A. Barucci, C. Feller +4 more
2015· Springer Link (Chiba Institute of Technology)151doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201525901/pdf

<i>Context. </i>The Rosetta mission of the European Space Agency has been orbiting the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P) since August 2014 and is now in its escort phase. A large complement of scientific experiments designed to complete the most detailed study of a comet ever attempted are onboard Rosetta. <br></br>
\n<i>Aims. </i>We present results for the photometric and spectrophotometric properties of the nucleus of 67P derived from the OSIRIS imaging system, which consists of a Wide Angle Camera (WAC) and a Narrow Angle Camera (NAC). The observations presented here were performed during July and the beginning of August 2014, during the approach phase, when OSIRIS was mapping the surface of the comet with several filters at different phase angles (1.3°–54°). The resolution reached up to 2.1 m/px. <br></br>
\n<i>Methods. </i>The OSIRIS images were processed with the OSIRIS standard pipeline, then converted into <i>I</i>/<i>F</i> radiance factors and corrected for the illumination conditions at each pixel using the Lommel-Seeliger disk law. Color cubes of the surface were produced by stacking registered and illumination-corrected images. Furthermore, photometric analysis was performed both on disk-averaged photometry in several filters and on disk-resolved images acquired with the NAC orange filter, centered at 649 nm, using Hapke modeling. <br></br>
\n<i>Results. </i>The disk-averaged phase function of the nucleus of 67P shows a strong opposition surge with a G parameter value of −0.13 ± 0.01 in the HG system formalism and an absolute magnitude <i>H<sub>v</sub></i>(1,1,0) = 15.74 ± 0.02 mag. The integrated spectrophotometry in 20 filters covering the 250−1000 nm wavelength range shows a red spectral behavior, without clear absorption bands except for a potential absorption centered at ~290 nm that is possibly due to SO<sub>2</sub> ice. The nucleus shows strong phase reddening, with disk-averaged spectral slopes increasing from 11%/(100 nm) to 16%/(100 nm) in the 1.3°−54° phase angle range. The geometric albedo of the comet is 6.5 ± 0.2% at 649 nm, with local variations of up to ~16% in the Hapi region. From the disk-resolved images we computed the spectral slope together with local spectrophotometry and identified three distinct groups of regions (blue, moderately red, and red). The Hapi region is the brightest, the bluest in term of spectral slope, and the most active surface on the comet. Local spectrophotometry shows an enhancement of the flux in the 700−750 nm that is associated with coma emissions.

Unpopular, Overweight, and Socially Inept: Reconsidering the Stereotype of Online Gamers
Rachel Kowert, Ruth Festl, Thorsten Quandt
2013· Cyberpsychology Behavior and Social Networking137doi:10.1089/cyber.2013.0118

Online gaming has become an activity associated with a highly specific, caricatured, and often negative image. This "stereotype" has permeated the collective consciousness, as online gamers have become common caricatures in popular media. A lack of comprehensive demographic inquiries into the online gaming population has made it difficult to dispute these stereotypical characteristics and led to rising concerns about the validity of these stereotypes. The current study aims to clarify the basis of these negative characterizations, and determine whether online video game players display the social, physical, and psychological shortcomings stereotypically attributed them. Sampling and recruiting was conducted using a two-stage approach. First, a representative sample of 50,000 individuals aged 14 and older who were asked about their gaming behavior in an omnibus telephone survey. From this sample, 4,500 video game players were called for a second telephone interview, from which the current data were collected. Only those participants who completed all of the questions relating to video game play were retained for the current analysis (n=2,550). Between- and within-group analyses were enlisted to uncover differences between online, offline, and nongame playing communities across varying degrees of involvement. The results indicate that the stereotype of online gamers is not fully supported empirically. However, a majority of the stereotypical attributes was found to hold a stronger relationship with more involved online players than video game players as a whole, indicating an empirical foundation for the unique stereotypes that have emerged for this particular subgroup of video game players.

After Cosmopolitanism
Rosi Braidotti, Patrick Hanafin, Bolette Blaagaard
2012136doi:10.4324/9780203102121

At a time when social and political reality seems to move away from the practice of cosmopolitanism, whilst being in serious need of a new international framework to regulate global interaction, what are the new definitions and practices of cosmopolitanism? Including contributions from leading figures across the humanities and social sciences, After Cosmopolitanism takes up this question as its central challenge. Its core argument is the idea that our globalised condition forms the heart of contemporary cosmopolitan claims, which do not refer to a transcendental ideal, but are rather immanent to the material conditions of global interdependence. But to what extent do emerging definitions of cosmopolitanism contribute to new representative democratic models of governance? The present volume argues that a radical transformation of cosmopolitanism is already ongoing and that more effort is needed to take stock of transformations which are both necessary and possible. To this end, After Cosmopolitanism calls for an understanding of cosmopolitanism that is more attentive to the material reality of our social and political situation and less focused on linguistic analyses of its metaphorical implications. It is the call for a cosmopolitanism that is also a cosmopolitics.

Reconfiguring Civic Culture in the New Media Milieu
Peter Dahlgren
2003133doi:10.4135/9781446216804.n9

This chapter introduces the notion of civic culture as a frame for understanding political engagement and civic agency. In particular, the role of the media is underscored in shaping civic cultures; these include such dimensions as knowledge, values, practices and identities.

Reputation in der Mediengesellschaft - Konstitution, Issues Monitoring, Issues Management
Mark Eisenegger
2005· Zurich Open Repository and Archive (University of Zurich)132

Der Autor untersucht die deutlich gewachsene Verletzlichkeit der Reputation ökonomischer Organisationen. Die Ursachen werden soziologisch begründet, der Begriff der Reputation wird kommunikationswissenschaftlich hergeleitet und die Logik des Reputationsaufbaus und -verlusts in modernen Mediengesellschaften wird auf der Basis empirischer Untersuchungen beschrieben. Mit dem Issues Monitoring stellt der Autor zudem ein praxiserprobtes Verfahren vor, das der wissenschaftlich fundierten Analyse wirkmächtiger öffentlicher Kommunikations- und Reputationsdynamiken dient und welches das Niveau der Selbstreflexion und des Umgangs mit dem Phänomen Reputation auf der Seite prinzipiell beliebiger Organisationen erhöht.

Active and developing patterns:Remembering into the future
Valsiner, Jaan; id_orcid 0000-0001-8360-8860
2017· VBN Forskningsportal (Aalborg Universitet)120doi:10.1017/9780511920219

The Constructive Mind is an integrative study of the psychologist Frederic Bartlett's (1886–1969) life, work and legacy. Bartlett is most famous for the idea that remembering is constructive and for the concept of schema; for him, 'constructive' meant that human beings are future-oriented and flexibly adaptive to new circumstances. This book shows how his notion of construction is also central to understanding social psychology and cultural dynamics, as well as other psychological processes such as perceiving, imagining and thinking. Wagoner contextualises the development of Bartlett's key ideas in relation to his predecessors and contemporaries. Furthermore, he applies Bartlett's constructive analysis of cultural transmission in order to chart how his ideas were appropriated and transformed by others that followed. As such this book can also be read as a case study in the continuous reconstruction of ideas in science.