Wednesday, April 19, 2006
Tuesday, April 18, 2006
Talk Stations for Women Unite
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| KUTR |
RADIO AL-MAHABA's original transmitter was destroyed by a bomb but the station returned to the air with an expensive leased transmitter; UTAH-based WOMENADE is raising money to help the IRAQ station buy a new transmitter. The UTAH station is publicizing three local appearances by RADIO AL-MAHABA's spokeswoman BUSHRA JAMIL this week; for more information, click here.
Great story!
Find out more about the Utah talk station targeting women EXCLUSIVELY by visiting Utah's New AM 820
Saturday, April 15, 2006
Even though I'm busy--it's a great profession
Sorry, but things have been so darn hectic--even with my 8-week course now behind me.
In T503 , the Telecommunications Theory course the grad students are starting to turn in drafts of their term papers and...of course I promised them feedback.
And I've got two students with Master's thesis proposals on my desk.
The deadline for submitting revised papers to ICA (The International Communication Association) is April 30th...and I've got to revise three of them by that time--including one for which the data analysis is not even complete!
That same weekend is the deadline for abstract submission to the Society for Psychophysiological Research...and although the abstracts are not as daunting to write as full papers, I still have to do it.
And between now and the April 30th/May 1st double-deadline, several of us from the ICR will be attending the Kentucky Conference on Health Communication to present some research.
And, on top of it all, this week begins the official journey through the maze that academics call "the tenure process." More on that later, I'm sure.
Whew! Lots to do!
But, amidst the headaches and the presures, I found this article last week from Money Magazine, saying that College Professors have the 2nd best job in America.
Too true. Headaches, pressure, tenure clock, all true and all present. But, I get to interact with graduate students who are really interested in pursuing questions of interest to them...and undergrads who are eager to figure out what they'll be doing with their lives. Right now I'm working (okay, right now I'm writing in my blog, but I'm soon to be working) while sitting on my couch...and I can work at home for most of the day---and it's entirely on stuff that interest me.
Wednesday, April 05, 2006
Good morning--Now quit kidding yourself
But wait...you say...don't people get up and leave the room during commercial breaks? I mean, that's why they call them, BREAKS right?
Well, for longer than I can believe possible, everyone in the industry has been complicit in mimicking the scene from the Wizard of Oz (pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!). That may be starting to change, as described in this recent posting by the Media Daily News.
Congratulations to Sam Bradley
Because I'm lazy this morning...I'm just going to copy from the nomination letter I wrote on his behalf. If you want "the long story" you should contact Sam himself:
The dissertation itself consists of two experiments and a neural network model. The two experiments utilize a motivational activation theory to explore the role of the orienting response in the cognitive processing of television. Orienting has long been conceptualized as a physiological mechanism offering a protection against interference for information encoding of novel or signal stimuli in the environment. Past work conducted in the Institute for Communication Research has established that structural features of a television message (i.e., cuts from one screen shot to another) provide sufficient novelty to elicit orienting. Sam’s overarching goal was to test the “zone of protection” conceptualization of the orienting response by selecting camera cuts occurring during real-time television processing in which the emotional context was positive, negative, or neutral. At varying time points following these cuts (133, 267, and 800 ms) subjects were given an auditory startle probe in order to determine whether orienting to the cut would provided protected processing of the information following it, or whether the startle probe would interrupt processing. Both startle magnitude and recognition memory data showed that, contrary to predictions derived from past work using simple stimuli, orienting to structural features in television messages only provided protected encoding of information when the emotional context was neutral, not when it was particularly positive or negative. In the discussion , Sam elegantly explains why these findings are understandable given the dynamic nature of the medium compared to the static emotional slide presentation in which pre-pulse inhibition has been found.


