Through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet?

Science information professionals need to make choices through which media they want to communicate with the public. In reaching large audiences outside the domain of formal diffusion of knowledge, the choice may be between the old medium television and the new medium Internet. It seems that general...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cees M. Koolstra, Mark J.W. Bos, Ivar E. Vermeulen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sissa Medialab 2006-09-01
Series:JCOM: Journal of Science Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jcom.sissa.it/archive/05/03/Jcom0503%282006%29A01/Jcom0503%282006%29A01.pdf
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spelling doaj-b474e0e41e30464ba1fd5377d4cb4c632020-11-25T03:21:27ZengSissa MedialabJCOM: Journal of Science Communication1824-20492006-09-0153Through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet?Cees M. KoolstraMark J.W. BosIvar E. VermeulenScience information professionals need to make choices through which media they want to communicate with the public. In reaching large audiences outside the domain of formal diffusion of knowledge, the choice may be between the old medium television and the new medium Internet. It seems that general scientific research is focused more and more on the Internet as a favorite means for information exchange and that the old mass medium television plays only a minor role. But when we look at (1) how the public spends their leisure time on television and the Internet, (2) how effective these media are in transferring information, and (3) how much these media are trusted as reliable sources of information, the old medium television should still be regarded as the number one medium to be used for science communication, although there are some limitations for its use.http://jcom.sissa.it/archive/05/03/Jcom0503%282006%29A01/Jcom0503%282006%29A01.pdfScience and media
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cees M. Koolstra
Mark J.W. Bos
Ivar E. Vermeulen
spellingShingle Cees M. Koolstra
Mark J.W. Bos
Ivar E. Vermeulen
Through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet?
JCOM: Journal of Science Communication
Science and media
author_facet Cees M. Koolstra
Mark J.W. Bos
Ivar E. Vermeulen
author_sort Cees M. Koolstra
title Through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet?
title_short Through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet?
title_full Through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet?
title_fullStr Through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet?
title_full_unstemmed Through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet?
title_sort through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet?
publisher Sissa Medialab
series JCOM: Journal of Science Communication
issn 1824-2049
publishDate 2006-09-01
description Science information professionals need to make choices through which media they want to communicate with the public. In reaching large audiences outside the domain of formal diffusion of knowledge, the choice may be between the old medium television and the new medium Internet. It seems that general scientific research is focused more and more on the Internet as a favorite means for information exchange and that the old mass medium television plays only a minor role. But when we look at (1) how the public spends their leisure time on television and the Internet, (2) how effective these media are in transferring information, and (3) how much these media are trusted as reliable sources of information, the old medium television should still be regarded as the number one medium to be used for science communication, although there are some limitations for its use.
topic Science and media
url http://jcom.sissa.it/archive/05/03/Jcom0503%282006%29A01/Jcom0503%282006%29A01.pdf
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