Exam 1, Chapter 14, Week 6: Hedy Lamarr, Mass Communication Korpi, Exam #1
One explanation for our relative ignorance or naivete regarding media's impact on us is due to how common and pervasive it is—we simply tend not to think about it.
True
What do we mean when we say that meanings are not in words or pictures, that meanings are in people?
Individuals do not receive meanings, they construct them.
Media research presents a convincing case that most of us are probably wrong in our estimates of how media affect other people and ourselves.
True
Most of us are convinced the mass media have tremendous impact on people, but when it comes to ourselves as individuals, we believe that we make free rational choices based on facts (and the media do not have much of an effect on us).
True
No two people go through their environments in precisely the same way; therefore, no two people encounter or attend to all of the same bits of information.
True
On almost any important issue, as time goes on you are exposed to a steadily increasing number and variety of bits of information, as well as encountering some of the same bits many times.
True
Our media technologies and environment are constantly changing.
True
The Source-Message-Channel-Receiver model of communication grossly distorts the great differences among individuals in patterns of exposure and ways of processing the information they receive.
True
The Source-Message-Channel-Receiver model of communication suggests that a source sends a message through some channel to a receiver who absorbs it in just the way in which it was sent. In other words, the source or sender is in control of what the receiver learns.
True
The Westley-MacLean model points up the fact that, in any form of mass communication, information goes through a series of gatekeepers.
True
The impact of the media does NOT depend solely on what media gatekeepers send through the pipeline.
True
The mosaic model can be seen as representing our second world, that is, our entire communication environment.
True
The world that you create in your head is a direct result of the actual content of the message; the medium itself is neutral.
True
We have a great deal of control over our exposure to bits of information, but we cannot control all of it.
True
We routinely fill information gaps without even being aware that we are doing so.
True
Whether you experience fear, anger, or excitement depends on your interpretation of your physical state.
True
Communication
the process of creating shared meaning
The mosaic model is based on the idea that:
the communication environment is like a vast mosaic of information bits
Fourth World
the world in your head
Third World
those available sights, sounds, and other experiences that you attend to or that, somehow, strike your senses
The third dimension of the communication mosaic is:
topics for which you have information
Culture
what we know about ourselves and our world
Oligopoly
with just a few companies controlling the industry
Competitive Market
with many companies vying for business (often referred to as a "free market,"
Monopoly
with one company clearly dominant in the industry.
The scientific study of communication is alone in its dependence on models.
False
Consistency theory:
Explains why people are uncomfortable if their beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors disagree.
Variety theory helps to explain why some people:
Seek new kinds of information.
History
a useful causal chronology
With the appropriate knowledge you can easily control media's uses and their effects on society as easily as you can your personal uses and their effects.
False
You must have complete information in order to have a complete idea about something.
False
Your understanding of war has a one-to-one relationship with all of the bits of information about war you have encountered in your lifetime, since these are the bits that make up your fourth world.
False
Each medium has unique traits (they are after all "different" media), but the media also share many important characteristics.
True
Except in extremely unusual cases, any one bit of information about a topic has only an imperceptible effect on the world in your head.
True
What are the "unintended bits of information" in the mosaic?
Bits of information from a source with which we construct a message not intended by the source.
On average, about what percentage of their leisure time do Americans spend with the mass media?
>50%
The First World is the world in your head.
False
Time is an important dimension in the communication mosaic because:
Both you and the mosaic are constantly changing.
The Source-Message-Channel-Receiver model and the Westley-MacLean model are essentially the same.
False
The creators of media messages—like journalists, producers, and advertisers—have far more control than you do over the information and meanings that you get from the media
False
In what sense do the sources to which you are exposed in your communication mosaic interact?
Each affects your interpretation of information from the others.
The differences between entertainment content in the media and news or information content is not nearly as important as most people believe in explaining how and why people construct the worlds in their heads.
False
The mass media often operate relatively independently of each other, and therefore your use of them and their influence on you operate independently as well.
False
The media industries do nothing without reason. Therefore, it is unlikely that you will find unintended bits of information in your communication mosaic.
False
The particular path you take through the mosaic is related to which bits of information you encounter, but it has little to nothing to do with the context for these bits.
False
A model can describe everything about communication.
False
According to technological determinism, society guides the media and its development.
False
Because most of us in America have had relatively similar experiences, we will tend to construct the same meanings from news stories we encounter in the media.
False
Even though most adults in our society spend a tremendous portion of their lives watching television, they can easily reduce this consumption dramatically or eliminate it altogether.
False
For the purpose of distinguishing between them, it is accurate to say that "communications" is a process that characterizes much of human interaction, and that "communication" is things, messages.
False
Having a complete idea requires complete information.
False
In order to control the impact of the media on us, we can ignore the media themselves and just focus on rhetorical strategies.
False
In recent years total daily media use has been decreasing slightly.
False
In the mosaic model, each row represents a bit of information.
False
Information is a resource just like coal, oil, iron ore, timber, and hydro-electric power are resources.
False
It takes less effort to perceive a message that is contrary to the way you see the world or that is different than what you expect.
False
Media technologies are converging (because of computers and digital), but media jobs and media businesses are not (because they are in the analog world).
False
Most people understand quite well the role media play in our lives and the lives of others.
False
Once you have constructed a meaning for something, it would be highly unusual for you to change it.
False
One important effect of time is its tendency to make our perceptions of issues, events, and people simpler and clearer.
False
Our interpretations of information are primarily topic dependent. That is, the meaning we construct for one topic is independent of our interpretations of other topics.
False
Scripts or schemata are the structures of the newspaper stories, television programs, or other media products to which you are exposed.
False
Since your fourth world is your mental representation of the real world, you build it almost exclusively from facts.
False
How many dimensions are there in the mosaic model?
Four
Variety-seeking and conflict-avoidance behaviors can interact. Considering high vs. low variety-seeking and high vs. low conflict-avoidance results in how many possible categories of behavior?
Four
Which one of the following worlds varies the most from one person to another?
Fourth World
Expectations generally help you process, comprehend, and remember the bits of information you sense from your communication mosaic.
True
The most important function of feedback is to:
Help sources adjust their communication to their audience.
What are "gaps" in the mosaic?
Important information about a topic that we did not notice or that was not in any of the messages we received.
Few, if any, of your meanings were constructed on the basis of information from a single message in isolation.
True
Why is ownership control probably more of a problem today than it was forty or fifty years ago?
More media have been taken over by giant, international corporations that have financial interests in many of the issues the media report on.
Which of the following is NOT considered by the authors of your textbook to be one of the four dominant institutions influencing people's lives?
NOT: Military IS: Government, Church, Business, Media
Which of the following is NOT true of models?
NOT: Tend to draw ones attention to specific instances. IS: Abstract descriptions of phenomena, All of the sciences use them, Judged by their utility
Economic determinists would take the position that:
Newspapers are organized the way they are because that form has been found to be most profitable.
According to the authors of your text, none of the traditional models of mass communication provides an adequate picture of the contemporary world of communication that you and others experience.
True
If one accepts the validity of the mosaic model of communication, which of the following best describes the role in the communication process of people who read newspapers, watch television, listen to the radio, and so forth?
Participants
In what sense is it valid to say that you cannot tell people anything they do not already know?
People cannot perceive or understand anything unless they can relate it in some way to prior experience.
By a combination of circumstance and choice, you are exposed to a highly selective sample of the bits of information about any particular topic.
True
In assessing scientific models, we are primarily concerned with simplicity.
True
The tendency to interpret or perceive information in a way that makes it consistent with one's prior knowledge, attitudes, and behavior is called:
Selective perception
Which of the following best describes "scripts" or "schemata"?
Stereotyped sequences of events in memory that are activated by observations or experiences in the present.
The authors of your textbook argue that understanding media as a ________, and from the vantage point of a _________, will help you understand individual media in different and more useful ways than you did before.
System || Receiver
An "uncertain analogy" is:
The most interesting property of a model because it leads to new predictions that can be tested.
If people are watching a television news story, set or expectation tends to have the greatest effect on their perception when:
They have a well-established script or schema for that type of situation.
Why do large media firms produce commodities in large volumes?
To pursue economics of scale
Theory
a set of related explanatory statements
Assuming you read with equal care, you are most likely to spot typographical errors when:
You have no expectations about the material.
Who or what is most responsible for the kinds of information to which you are exposed?
You.
Which of the four worlds has the greatest influence on the way you vote in national elections?
Your fourth world
Becker and Roberts describe four worlds in which each of us lives. Which of the following is NOT one of those worlds?
Your social world, the world made up of what the people with whom you associate know and believe.
Society
a large people group sharing the same geographical or social territory
Enabling technologies:
are the inventions or innovations that make a new communication medium possible
Communications
are things, messages, like articles, books, movies, and so on
The filled in squares in the mosaic model represent:
either our third or fourth world
Communication Media
employ mechanical, chemical, or electronic channels
Mass Communication
employs technology to produce and distribute symbols to large numbers of people; to whom it may concern
First World
every bit of information there is to know—for all time and throughout the entire universe
Second World
everything around that you could see, hear, or otherwise experience if you chose to do so
The authors of your textbook consider all of the following to be reasons to study media communication. Which do they argue is the most important?
media greatly influence you and your life
In the mosaic model, the mosaic represents:
one topic, and the bits of information and sources of information available for this topic