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  2. Uses and gratifications theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uses_and_gratifications_theory

    In media studies, mass communication, media psychology, communication theory, and sociology, media influence and media effects are topics relating to mass media and media culture's effects on individual or an audience's thoughts, attitudes, and behavior [74]. Whether it is written, televised, or spoken, mass media reaches a large audience.

  3. Lasswell's model of communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lasswell's_model_of...

    It can include effects that were not intended by the sender. [ 1 ] [ 12 ] [ 11 ] In the case of a news paper headline, the sender is the reporter, the message is the content of the headline, the newspaper itself is the channel, the audience is the reader, and the effect is how the reader responds to the headline.

  4. Pro-innovation bias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pro-innovation_bias

    In diffusion of innovation theory, a pro-innovation bias is a belief that innovation should be adopted by the whole society without the need for its alteration. [1] [2] The innovation's "champion" has a such strong bias in favor of the innovation, that they may not see its limitations or weaknesses and continue to promote it nonetheless.

  5. AIDA (marketing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AIDA_(marketing)

    Generalised hierarchy of effects sequence. The AIDA marketing model is a model within the class known as hierarchy of effects models or hierarchical models, all of which imply that consumers move through a series of steps or stages when they make purchase decisions. These models are linear, sequential models built on an assumption that ...

  6. Tetrad of media effects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrad_of_media_effects

    A blank tetrad diagram. Marshall McLuhan's tetrad of media effects [1] uses a tetrad - a four-part construct - to examine the effects on society of any technology/medium (that is, a means of explaining the social processes underlying the adoption of a technology/medium) by dividing its effects into four categories and displaying them simultaneously.

  7. Sobel test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sobel_test

    The Sobel test is basically a specialized t test that provides a method to determine whether the reduction in the effect of the independent variable, after including the mediator in the model, is a significant reduction and therefore whether the mediation effect is statistically significant.

  8. Agenda-setting theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agenda-setting_theory

    Agenda-setting theory was formally developed by Maxwell McCombs and Donald Lewis Shaw in a study on the 1968 presidential election deemed "the Chapel Hill study". McCombs and Shaw demonstrated a strong correlation between one hundred Chapel Hill residents' thought on what was the most important election issue and what the local news media reported was the most important issue.

  9. Unified theory of acceptance and use of technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_theory_of...

    The unified theory of acceptance and use of technology (UTAUT) is a technology acceptance model formulated by Venkatesh and others in "User acceptance of information technology: Toward a unified view" in the organisational context. [1] [2] The UTAUT aims to explain user intentions to use an information system and subsequent