Skip to main content
Presentation
Impact of Format on Evaluations of Online News
World Journalism Education Conference (WJEC) (2013)
  • August Grant, University of South Carolina
  • Jeffrey S. Wilkinson, Houston Baptist University
  • Diane Guerrazzi, San Jose State University
Abstract
The emergence of online news offers journalists the opportunity to use a variety of formats to present news, including traditional text and video forms and emerging multimedia forms. This paper reports the results of a series of studies exploring these formats, two experiments and a survey. The first experiment compared three formats of video news delivery and found that format was related to time spent viewing a story, and time spent predicted recall of the story, but no direct relationship was observed between format and recall. The second
experiment compared three different formats (text, text with pictures, and text with videos), finding less difference in time spent by format, but finding that time spent predicted recall. The third study used a survey of experts to predict the changes in the delivery of news over the next 20 years, projecting that the tablet will emerge as the primary delivery tool, but that the content of news will be little changed.
Keywords
  • News,
  • Audience,
  • Internet,
  • Experiment,
  • Video,
  • Message,
  • Recall
Publication Date
July, 2013
Location
Mechelen, Belgium
Citation Information
August Grant, Jeffrey S. Wilkinson and Diane Guerrazzi. "Impact of Format on Evaluations of Online News" World Journalism Education Conference (WJEC) (2013)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/diane_guerrazzi/7/