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Presentation
The Effects of Video Formats in Online News: A Study of Recall and Stickiness
Broadcast Education Association (BEA) Annual Convention (2012)
  • August Grant, University of South Carolina
  • Diane Guerrazzi, San Jose State University
  • Jack Vincent Karlis, University of South Carolina
Abstract
News organizations putting content on their websites may better engage their audience by offering a choice of raw video rather than packages. A two-by-three experiment studied the relationships among video format, time spent, and recall for online news. Test subjects viewed a traditional, broadcast-type standard news “package,” a disassembled package, and raw video with text. Results showed users spent significantly more time with the raw video format than with the other two formats. Time spent was strongly correlated with post-test recall of elements of each story, but there was no direct relationship between format and recall. A model is proposed for further research in which format predicts time spent, and time spent predicts recall, with no direct relationship between format and recall.
Publication Date
April, 2012
Location
Las Vegas, NV
Comments
This paper was presented as part of the session: News Division Paper Competition #2.
Citation Information
August Grant, Diane Guerrazzi and Jack Vincent Karlis. "The Effects of Video Formats in Online News: A Study of Recall and Stickiness" Broadcast Education Association (BEA) Annual Convention (2012)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/diane_guerrazzi/6/