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1

Gagnebien, Anne, and Hélène Bailleul. "La ville durable imaginée : formes et modalités de la communication d’un projet de société." Études de communication, no. 37 (December 1, 2011): 115–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/edc.3239.

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2

Raviot, Jean-Robert. "Territoire et ethnicité au Tatarstan: une ancienne république autonome soviétique en quête d'une identité." European Journal of Sociology 34, no. 2 (November 1993): 169–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003975600006639.

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Le 21 mars 1992, la majorité des électeurs de la république du Tatarstan s'exprime en faveur de la constitution d'un État souverain, « sujet de droit international réglant ses relations avec la Russie et les autres républiques sur des traités fondés sur le principe de l'égalité entre les parties ». Le Tatarstan vient-il subitement de devenir un État digne de reconnaissance internationale ? D'une superficie de 68.000 km2, campée entre la Volga, voie de communication commerciale nord-sud de la Russie et le massif de l'Oural, frontière imaginée de l'Europe, la république du Tatarstan, territoire historique des Tatars dits « de la Volga », constitue, de manière paradoxale, le cœur géographique de la Russie. Au xixe siècle, Alexandre Dumas disait déjà de sa capitale, Kazan, qu'elle « est une de ces villes que l'on voit à travers le mirage de l'histoire. Ses souvenirs tatars sont encore si frais que l'on ne pent s'habituer à voir en elle une ville russe, bien qu'elle en partage le désordre ». Le Tatarstan doit-il être considéré comme une région russe ou bien comme une nation distincte ? Si le résultat du référendum nous incite à entrevoir l'émergence politique d'une nation, l'analyse de la structure de la société du Tatarstan, ainsi que l'examen des événements et des stratégies politiques dans la république et dans les relations de celles-ci avec le pouvoir central soviétique puis russe conduit à relativiser la portée de cette volonté d' « indépendance » et à s'interroger sur les objectifs réels de celle-ci.
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3

Kim, Chanjung, and Jake Harwood. "What Makes People Imagine Themselves in Contact with Outgroup Members: Exploring the Relationship between Vicarious Media Contact Experiences and Imagined Contact." Communication Studies 70, no. 5 (August 29, 2019): 545–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10510974.2019.1658612.

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4

Almeida, Maria Clotilde, and Rui Geirinhas. "Imagined worldviews in John Lennon’s “Imagine”: a multimodal re-performance / Visões de mundo imaginadas no “Imagine” de John Lennon: uma re-performance multimodal." REVISTA DE ESTUDOS DA LINGUAGEM 28, no. 2 (May 5, 2020): 845. http://dx.doi.org/10.17851/2237-2083.28.2.845-870.

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Abstract: This paper addresses the issue of multimodal re-performance, a concept developed by us, in view of the fact that the famous song “Imagine”, by John Lennon, was published in illustrated book format by Frances Lincoln Children’s books under the sponsorship of Amnesty International in 2017 and later in an English-Portuguese bilingual edition in 2018 by Edicare. From our point of view, the concept of multimodal re-performance builds on the “personal authorization” criterion, a prominent feature in the legitimization of discourse and communication (VAN LEEUWEN, 2007), which we address in the light of the Multimodal Metaphor approach (FORCEVILLE, 2009, 2017). In conformity, we advocate that multimodal metaphorical links of different kinds in this re-performed edition of “Imagine” are architectured by a relevantly harmonious set of three communication modes: J. Lennon’s original song lyrics in the multimodal mode, the book’s preface by Yoko Ono in close connection to the book’s epilogue by Amnesty International, also in the written mode, and Jean Jullien’s brilliant illustrations in the visual mode. Last but not least, it is highlighted that this appealing re-performed multimodal cultural product “Imagine” is crafted with the purpose of both foregrounding the updated message of Imagine’s PEACE quest protagonized by the brown PEACE dove. Furthermore, in the epilogue, the reader is encouraged to visit the webpage https://imaginepeacebook.com and leave a peace message behind, opening the possibility for extension of the written mode echoing the song’s message in the future.Keywords: multimodal re-performance; personal authorization; multimodal metaphor; Imagine by J. Lennon.Resumo: O presente incide sobre a questão da re-performance multimodal, um conceito desenvolvido por nós, tendo em vistaa publicação da famosa canção “Imagine” de John Lennon, em formato de livro ilustrado pela editora de livros infantis Frances Lincoln, com o patrocínio da Amnistia Internacional e posteriormente dado à estampa pela Edicare numa versão bilingue inglês-português. Na nossa perspetiva, o conceito de re-performance multimodal está ancorado no conceito de “autorização pessoal”, um parâmetro proeminente na legitimação do discurso e da comunicação (VAN LEEUWEN, 2007) que desenvolvemos à luz da abordagem da metáfora multimodal (FORCEVILLE, 2009, 2017). Em conformidade com a mesma, advogamos que as conexões metafóricas multimodais de diferentes tipos nesta edição re-performada do “Imagine” são arquitetadas na base da articulação harmoniosa de três modos de comunicação: a canção original da autoria de J. Lennon, já de si um produto multimodal, o prefácio do livro, elaborado por Yoko Ono, em estreita ligação com o epílogo da obra da autoria da Amnistia Internacional, sob a forma de modo escrito, e as brilhantes ilustrações de Jean Jullien, no modo visual. Por último, pretende-se sublinhar que este “Imagine” enquanto produto multimodal re-performado, muito apelativo, destina-se a pôr em destaque a atualidade da mensagem do “Imagine” , na sua versão original, enquanto apelo à PAZ, protagonizada por uma pomba castanha. Além do mais, no epílogo, o leitor é encorajado a visitar a página https://imaginepeacebook.com e a deixar escrita uma mensagem de paz, abrindo a possibilidade para uma extensão do modo escrito fazendo eco da mensagem da canção, no futuro. Palavras-chave: re-performance multimodal; autorização pessoal; metáfora multimodal e Imagine de J. Lennon.
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5

Waade, Anne Marit. "Imagine Paradise in Ads." Nordicom Review 31, no. 1 (June 1, 2010): 15–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/nor-2017-0118.

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Abstract Paradise has been a significant concept in tourism as well in consumer culture. The present article demonstrates how paradise is presented as visual, spatial and ideal concepts in ads, and how they illustrate imagination as a central communicative effect in marketing and consumer culture. Through an analysis of selected consumer and tourism ads for TV and cinema presented in Denmark, the author points out different ways of reflecting viewers’ imagination of paradise as a place and condition. The author outlines a theoretical framework for understanding imagination from a media-specific perspective as involving cognitive, emotional and sensuous processes, respectively, and looks at how paradise, as an active and present visual matrix in tourism and consumer communication, has a specific appeal to viewers’ imagination.
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6

Kiossev, Alexander. "Grand narratives and imagined communication." Neohelicon 31, no. 2 (October 2004): 9–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11059-004-0529-7.

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7

Honeycutt, James M., Charles W. Choi, and John R. DeBerry. "Communication Apprehension and Imagined Interactions." Communication Research Reports 26, no. 3 (August 19, 2009): 228–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08824090903074423.

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8

Honeycutt, James M., Kenneth S. Zagacki, and Renee Edwards. "Imagined interaction and interpersonal communication." Communication Reports 3, no. 1 (January 1990): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08934219009367494.

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9

Fitzsimmons, Kristin. "Imagine Other Worlds." Communication, Culture and Critique 14, no. 2 (April 21, 2021): 336–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ccc/tcab011.

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10

Honeycutt, James M., Kenneth S. Zagacki, and Renee Edwards. "Imagined Interaction, Conversational Sensitivity and Communication Competence." Imagination, Cognition and Personality 12, no. 2 (October 1992): 139–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/b9pc-51rj-1d7n-4m94.

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This research explores the relationship between imagined interaction dimensions [1], conversational sensitivity dimensions [2], and communication competence [3]. Results of a study reveal features of imagined interaction predicting both conversational sensitivity and self-reported communication competence. Mental experiences of communication (i.e., imagined interaction) are thought to activate sensitivity to conversations and to provide knowledge structures for competent interaction. A path analysis revealed the mediating role of overall conversational sensitivity leading to communication competence.
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Gordon, Tom. "CUMS Imagined." Canadian University Music Review 20, no. 1 (May 16, 2013): 5–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1015644ar.

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Encouraged by the engaging reflections of John Beckwith, the current President of the Canadian University Music Society, Tom Gordon, peers into the institutional crystal ball to imagine the challenges that lay ahead for the Society and the roles it might play in the future. Building on the organization's strengths of disciplined scholarship and the healthy diversity that characterizes our membership, a provocative role is envisaged for CUMS in communication around the many issues that unite the Canadian university music milieu.
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12

Gebauer, Fabian, Marius H. Raab, and Claus-Christian Carbon. "Imagine All the Forces." Journal of Media Psychology 29, no. 2 (April 2017): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/1864-1105/a000180.

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Abstract. A world divided into East versus West: The so-called Ukraine crisis has once more summoned outdated patterns of political thinking. Simultaneously, media discourses have flared up debating diplomatic and military solutions as possible policy responses. A majority of Germans, however, have remained hesitant to advocate any escalation of military conflict. We were interested in how far reputable journalism concerning the Ukraine crisis might activate a disposition toward military engagement. To evaluate the supposed impact of actual news coverage, we used explicit existential threats (mortality salience; MS) as a comparative measure. Typical effects of MS were derived from terror management theory (TMT), which predicts that the awareness of existential threats amplifies the efforts to defend one’s own culture, even by military means. We used a 2 × 2 factorial design (N = 112) with the factors article (original bellicose vs. neutral, nonmilitant depiction) and salience condition (MS vs. control). Results revealed a strong impact of the original, bellicose article, with increased willingness to deploy German forces at the Russian border, independently of the salience condition. Additional existential threats did not add further effects, as values for willingness were already very high. Classic effects regarding TMT were observed when people had read the Non-Militant article. Here, the willingness to deploy forces only increased after a confrontation with existential threats. We conclude that threatening news coverage on the Ukraine crisis has the ability to alter willingness for first-step military action at the Russian border by inducing effects that are – at least in their outcome – comparable to explicit existential threats.
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Iqbal, Sadaf, Muhammed Shanir P.P., Yusuf Uzzaman Khan, and Omar Farooq. "EEG Analysis of Imagined Speech." International Journal of Rough Sets and Data Analysis 3, no. 2 (April 2016): 32–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijrsda.2016040103.

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Scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) is one of the most commonly used methods to acquire EEG data for brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). Worldwide a large number of people suffer from disabilities which impair normal communication. Communication BCIs are an excellent tool which helps the affected patients communicate with others. In this paper scalp EEG data is analysed to discriminate between the imagined vowel sounds /a/, /u/ and no action or rest as control state. Mean absolute deviation (MAD) and Arithmetic mean are used as features to classify data into one of the classes /a/, /u/ or rest. With high classification accuracies of 87.5-100% for two class problem and 78.33-96.67% for three class problem that have been obtained in this work, this algorithm can be used in communication BCIs, to develop speech prosthesis and in synthetic telepathy systems.
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Jinguo Quan, Jinguo Quan, Bo Bai Bo Bai, Shuang Jin Shuang Jin, and Yan Zhang Yan Zhang. "Indoor positioning modeling by visible light communication and imaging." Chinese Optics Letters 12, no. 5 (2014): 052201–52204. http://dx.doi.org/10.3788/col201412.052201.

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15

Nagy, Peter, and Gina Neff. "Imagined Affordance: Reconstructing a Keyword for Communication Theory." Social Media + Society 1, no. 2 (September 22, 2015): 205630511560338. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2056305115603385.

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16

Kavoura, Androniki. "Social media, online imagined communities and communication research." Library Review 63, no. 6/7 (August 26, 2014): 490–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/lr-06-2014-0076.

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Purpose – This paper aims to examine social media communication that may consist of a database for online research and may create an online imagined community that follows special language symbols and shares common beliefs in a similar way to Anderson’s imagined communities. Design/methodology/approach – Well-known databases were searched in the available literature for specific keywords which were associated with the imagined community, and methodological tools such as online interviews, content analysis, archival analysis and social media. Findings – The paper discusses the use of multiple measures, such as document and archival analysis, online interviews and content analysis, which may derive from the online imagined community that social media create. Social media may in fact provide useful data that are available for research, yet are relatively understudied and not fully used in communication research, not to mention in archival services. Comparison takes place between online community’s characteristics and traditional communication research. Information and communication technologies (ICTs) and social media’s use of special language requirements may categorise discussion of these potential data, based on specific symbols, topical threads, purposeful samples and catering for longitudinal studies. Practical implications – Social media have not been fully implemented for online communication research yet. Online communication may offer significant implications for marketers, advertisers of a company or for an organisation to do research on or for their target groups. The role of libraries and information professionals can be significant in data gathering and the dissemination of such information using ICTs and renegotiating their role. Originality/value – The theoretical contribution of this paper is the examination of the creation of belonging in an online community, which may offer data that can be further examined and has all the credentials to do so, towards the enhancement of online communication research. The applications of social media to research and the use by and for information professionals and marketers may in fact contribute to the management of an online community with people sharing similar ideas. The connection of the online imagined community with social media for research has not been studied, and it would further enhance understanding from organisations or marketers.
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Lewis, Seth C. "NEWS, NATIONALISM, AND THE IMAGINED COMMUNITY." Journalism Studies 9, no. 3 (June 2008): 409–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616700801999212.

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Schneeweis, Adina. "The Imagined Backward and Downtrodden Other." Journalism Studies 19, no. 15 (June 13, 2017): 2187–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2017.1331708.

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19

Dannels, Deanna P. "Learning to Imagine." Journal of Business and Technical Communication 30, no. 3 (March 8, 2016): 279–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1050651916636359.

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Robins, Kevin. "Au-dela de la communaute imaginee ?" Réseaux 107, no. 3 (2001): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/res.107.0019.

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O’Sullivan, Carol. "Imagined spectators." Target. International Journal of Translation Studies 28, no. 2 (August 4, 2016): 261–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/target.28.2.07osu.

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Abstract This article considers theoretical and methodological questions of language and translation policy in the dissemination of audiovisual products across languages. This is an area where scholarly research is inevitably playing catch-up with rapid change both in the language industries and in film and television production. For example, we have a general sense of ‘dubbing territories’ and ‘subtitling territories’ but in reality the picture is more complex. Norms changed in the course of the home entertainment revolution, with the arrival of the DVD format in the late 1990s ostensibly increasing viewer choice and flexibility of translation provision. The relocation of much audiovisual material to an online environment has also generated fundamental changes in the way that works circulate, with volunteer translators and automated translation processes playing a larger role. Policy developments in access translation have meant that there have also been great changes relatively recently in the availability of SDH subtitling, audio description and other modes of access translation. This is a very broad field which raises many compelling research questions. At the same time, its very breadth does not lend itself to a comprehensive overview. The article will therefore aim to provide an orientation to, rather than a summary of, the theoretical and methodological challenges of research on this topic.
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Allen, Terre H. "An investigation of Machiavellianism and imagined interaction." Communication Research Reports 7, no. 2 (December 1990): 116–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08824099009359864.

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Inabinet, Brandon, and Christina Moss. "Complicit in Victimage: Imagined Marginality in Southern Communication Criticism." Rhetoric Review 38, no. 2 (April 3, 2019): 160–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07350198.2019.1582228.

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Wirth, Axel. "Cyberinsights: Imagine All the People." Biomedical Instrumentation & Technology 54, no. 2 (March 1, 2020): 140–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.2345/0899-8205-54.2.140.

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Alper, Meryl. "Portables, luggables, and transportables: Historicizing the imagined affordances of mobile computing." Mobile Media & Communication 7, no. 3 (December 24, 2018): 322–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2050157918813694.

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This article contributes to the history of “mobile media beyond mobile phones” by accounting for genres of portable computing (or “portables”) that emerged in the late 1980s. Though largely overlooked by historians of technology, these mobile, less-than-mobile, and relatively immobile devices helped shape the social and cultural uses of contemporary mobile communication. I argue that the technological capabilities of portables altered users’ expectations for how and where computers could be incorporated into daily life, be it near bodies, on hand, or at one’s fingertips. While the market for bulky portables dwindled by the late 1990s, as laptops and cell phones became more ubiquitous, these consumer electronics are nonetheless useful today for understanding the perpetual role of materiality and embodiment in how we conceive of the imagined affordances of mobile communication technologies.
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Van Kelegom, Martijn J., and Courtney N. Wright. "The Use of Imagined Interactions to Manage Relational Uncertainty." Southern Communication Journal 78, no. 2 (April 2013): 91–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1041794x.2012.726688.

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Carmont, Michael R., James E. Tomlinson, Chris Blundell, Mark B. Davies, and David J. Moore. "Variability of Joint Communications in the Foot and Ankle Demonstrated by Contrast-Enhanced Diagnostic Injections." Foot & Ankle International 30, no. 5 (May 2009): 439–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.3113/fai-2009-0439.

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Background: The history and physical examination will usually direct a surgeon to the correct site of joint pathology. Imaging with plain radiographs and diagnostic injections help localize joint pathology more precisely. The presence of accessory communications between adjacent joints may reduce the sensitivity of these investigations. Material and Methods: We report on the findings of 389 arthrograms of the midfoot, hindfoot and ankle that were performed by a single radiologist over a 7-year period. Fluoroscopic guidance with radioopaque dye was used to confirm needle position before local anesthetic was injected. Images were closely studied to identify any communication between adjacent joints. Results: The passage of contrast into adjacent joints confirmed the presence of an additional communication. In 13.9% of cases there was a communication between the ankle and subtalar joint. A communication between the talonavicular and the calcaneocuboid joint was observed in 42.3% of local injections. We identified previously unreported communications between the anterior subtalar and the naviculocunieform joints (8%), the anterior subtalar and the calcaneocuboid joints (9%) and the naviculocunieform and tarsometatarsal joints (1.1%). Conclusion: This study reinforces the typical incidence of known joint communications, describes previously unreported communications and highlights the importance of these communications particularly with the small joints of the midfoot. The possible presence of accessory communications must always be considered when performing isolated midfoot fusions relying upon diagnostic local anesthetic injections.
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Gotcher, J. Micheal, and Renee Edwards. "Coping Strategies of Cancer Patients: Actual Communication and Imagined Interactions." Health Communication 2, no. 4 (October 1990): 255–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15327027hc0204_4.

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Steeves, H. Leslie. "Creating Imagined Communities: Development Communication and the Challenge of Feminism." Journal of Communication 43, no. 3 (September 1, 1993): 218–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1460-2466.1993.tb01295.x.

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Cargile, Aaron Castelán, and Adam S. Kahn. "System justification in communication: a study of imagined dialogue receptivity." Communication Research Reports 38, no. 2 (February 20, 2021): 103–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08824096.2021.1891039.

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Herawati, Erni. "Komunikasi dalam Era Teknologi Komunikasi Informasi." Humaniora 2, no. 1 (April 30, 2011): 100. http://dx.doi.org/10.21512/humaniora.v2i1.2955.

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Globalization and the advancement of information and communication technology has helped people to communicate in ways we never imagined before. The computer technology advancement has been attached to communication tools, like radio, television, telephone, cellular phone, smart phone, or even tablets PC; has made people around the world, including Indonesia, is going to globalized communication changing. Human culture is always developed according to the existing technology advancement. Thus information technology is growing with many variants that made people keep looking for the latest invention in communicating. Communication that facilitated by new mediums has made communication theorists look back to the previous communication theories.
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Hobart, Mark. "Entertaining Illusions: How Indonesian Élites Imagine Reality TV Affects the Masses." Asian Journal of Communication 16, no. 4 (December 2006): 393–410. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01292980601012428.

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Honeycutt, James M. "Imagined Interaction Conflict-Linkage Theory: Explaining the Persistence and Resolution of Interpersonal Conflict in Everyday Life." Imagination, Cognition and Personality 23, no. 1 (September 2003): 3–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/240j-1vpk-k86d-1jl8.

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Conflict is a pervasive feature of human existence. There are anger management courses and popular books giving advice on dealing with unruly people. Imagined interaction (II) conflict-linkage theory explains how conflict persists in interpersonal communication through mental imagery and imagined interactions. Imagined interactions are covert dialogues that people have in which they relive prior conversations while anticipating new encounters. Conflict is kept alive in the human mind through recalling prior arguments while anticipating what may be said at future meetings. II conflict-linkage theory provides an explanatory mechanism for why conflict is enduring, maintained, may be constructive or destructive, and can erupt anytime in interpersonal relationships. The theory explains features of face-to-face conflict through understanding how people manage conflict during actual interaction by looking at how they think between such interactions. In order to understand conflict, cognitions about interaction episodes are examined in terms of the messages that people imagine communicating to others as well as those they recall from prior encounters. The theory contains three axioms and nine theorems that explain how interpersonal conflict endures and is managed. This report reviews the support for the theorems.
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Yuanquan Wang, Yuanquan Wang, and Nan Chi Nan Chi. "Indoor gigabit 2 × 2 imaging multiple-input–multiple-output visible light communication." Chinese Optics Letters 12, no. 10 (2014): 100603–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.3788/col201412.100603.

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Verger, Fernand. "Géographie de voyages cosmiques imaginaires et imaginés." Hermès 34, no. 2 (2002): 37. http://dx.doi.org/10.4267/2042/14439.

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Von Glahn, Denise Ruth. "Sounds Real and Imagined:." European Journal of Musicology 18, no. 1 (February 21, 2020): 99–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.5450/ejm.18.1.2019.99.

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In a career spanning more than four decades, American composer Libby Larsen has turned to the natural world for inspiration on dozens of occasions: her piece Up Where the Air Gets Thin is just one of the results. Unlike many of her nature-based works which provide primarily aesthetic responses to the sights, sounds, feel, and smells of the natural environment, this 1985 duet for contrabass and cello comments on the limits of non-verbal communication and the impact of climate change. It is simultaneously reflective and didactic. “Sounds Real and Imagined” considers the ways Larsen marshals minimal musical materials and a sonic vocabulary that she associates with stillness and cold, in combination with her commitment to environmental awareness and advocacy. It situates the historic 1953 ascent of Mt. Everest by Sir Edmund Hillary and Tensing Norgay within the context of late-twentieth-century artistic responses and an early twenty-first century musicologist-listener’s consciousness.
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Green, Lelia. "Imagining Rural Audiences in Remote Western Australia." Culture Unbound 2, no. 2 (June 11, 2010): 131–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/cu.2000.1525.1029131.

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In 1979, Australia’s then-Communication Minister Tony Staley commented that the introduction of satellite communications to the bush would “dispel the distance – mental as well as geographical – between urban and regional dwellers, between the haves and the have-nots in a communication society” (Staley 1979: 2225, 2228-9). In saying this, Staley imagined a marginalised and disadvantaged audience of “have-nots”, paying for their isolation in terms of their mental distance from the networked communications of the core. This paper uses ethnographic audience studies surveys and interviews (1986-9) to examine the validity of Staley’s imaginations in terms of four communication technologies: the telephone, broadcast radio, 2-way radio and the satellite. The notion of a mental difference is highly problematic for the remote audience. Inso-far as a perception of lack and of difference is accepted, it is taken to reflect the perspective and the product of the urban policy-maker. Far from accepting the “distance” promulgated from the core, remote audiences see such statements as indicating an ignorance of the complexity and sophistication of communications in an environment where the stakes are higher and the options fewer. This is not to say that remote people were not keen to acquire satellite services – they were – it is to say that when they imagined such services it was in terms of equity and interconnections, rather than the “dispelling of distance”.
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Ali, Rashid. "Imagined Community of Radio." Journal of South Asian Studies 7, no. 1 (February 28, 2019): 37–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.33687/jsas.007.01.2757.

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The research paper problematises the very idea of community Radio’ as ‘participatory communicative tool.’ It uses Michel Certeau’s concept of ‘Strategy’ to understand the very evolution of Community Media in India since the setting of communicative strategy by state body polity to ameliorate the socio-economic conditions of the society. This theoretical perspective posits ‘participatory communication’ as linear, hierarchic and sedentary which is self-aggregating and creates a community of spectacle. The paper focuses on the tripartite division of community in the mediatised realm. The first division exists in the relationship between ordinary life and a specialist (Mainly civil society and NGOs). The second division looks at community as a hoodwinked entity in the wake of proxy ownership (often by politicians, bureaucrats and Armed Forces) of CR stations. The third division exists in the semantics of the programme production and its receptivity by the ‘community.’ Through different case studies Community Radio Stations, the paper argues that ‘strategy’ is self-referential and poses a serious threat to everyday practice of life. However, it recommends that strategy as a statist tool should be replaced with tactics (Opposition of Strategy) which is in contradistinction with the idea of strategy.
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39

Ali, Rashid. "Imagined Community of Radio." Journal of South Asian Studies 7, no. 2 (August 28, 2019): 29–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.33687/jsas.007.02.2757.

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The research paper problematises the very idea of community Radio’ as ‘participatory communicative tool.’ It uses Michel Certeau’s concept of ‘Strategy’ to understand the very evolution of Community Media in India since the setting of communicative strategy by state body polity to ameliorate the socio-economic conditions of the society. This theoretical perspective posits ‘participatory communication’ as linear, hierarchic and sedentary which is self-aggregating and creates a community of spectacle. The paper focuses on the tripartite division of community in the mediatised realm. The first division exists in the relationship between ordinary life and a specialist (Mainly civil society and NGOs). The second division looks at community as a hoodwinked entity in the wake of proxy ownership (often by politicians, bureaucrats and Armed Forces) of CR stations. The third division exists in the semantics of the programme production and its receptivity by the ‘community.’ Through different case studies Community Radio Stations, the paper argues that ‘strategy’ is self-referential and poses a serious threat to everyday practice of life. However, it recommends that strategy as a statist tool should be replaced with tactics (Opposition of Strategy) which is in contradistinction with the idea of strategy.
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40

Bréhonnet, Rémi, and Joëlle Lagier. "Quand « l’instruction à imaginer » fait évoluer la communication sur les vins." Décisions Marketing 93 (April 5, 2019): 53–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.7193/dm.093.53.70.

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41

Rieder, Gernot, and Thomas Voelker. "Datafictions: or how measurements and predictive analytics rule imagined future worlds." Journal of Science Communication 19, no. 01 (January 27, 2020): A02. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/2.19010202.

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As the digital revolution continues and our lives become increasingly governed by smart technologies, there is a rising need for reflection and critical debate about where we are, where we are headed, and where we want to be. Against this background, the paper suggests that one way to foster such discussion is by engaging with the world of fiction, with imaginative stories that explore the spaces, places, and politics of alternative realities. Hence, after a concise discussion of the concept of speculative fiction, we introduce the notion of datafictions as an umbrella term for speculative stories that deal with the datafication of society in both imaginative and imaginable ways. We then outline and briefly discuss fifteen datafictions subdivided into five main categories: surveillance; social sorting; prediction; advertising and corporate power; hubris, breakdown, and the end of Big Data. In a concluding section, we argue for the increased use of speculative fiction in education, but also as a tool to examine how specific technologies are culturally imagined and what kind of futures are considered plausible given current implementations and trajectories.
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Wallenfelsz, Kelly P., and Dale Hample. "The Role of Taking Conflict Personally in Imagined Interactions about Conflict." Southern Communication Journal 75, no. 5 (November 9, 2010): 471–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10417940903006057.

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43

Witteborn, Saskia. "The digital force in forced migration: Imagined affordances and gendered practices." Popular Communication 16, no. 1 (January 2, 2018): 21–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15405702.2017.1412442.

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Frosh, Paul. "Telling Presences: Witnessing, Mass Media, and the Imagined Lives of Strangers." Critical Studies in Media Communication 23, no. 4 (October 2006): 265–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07393180600933097.

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45

Lin, Zhongxuan. "Re-imagined communities in Macau in cyberspace: resist, reclaim and restructure." Chinese Journal of Communication 10, no. 3 (May 11, 2017): 229–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17544750.2017.1325763.

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46

DeBenedectis, Carolynn M. "Teaching Communication Skills in Breast Imaging." Journal of Breast Imaging 1, no. 2 (May 3, 2019): 139–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbi/wbz008.

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Abstract Breast radiologists communicate life-changing results to patients every day. It is critical for breast radiologists to be effective communicators and to deliver difficult and good news effectively and empathetically. Communication skills can be just as important as image interpretation and procedural skills in breast imaging. Breast radiologists can learn effective communication through practice. In addition, simulation-based communication skills training can help our trainees practice their communication skills in a low-stakes environment and become more comfortable with communicating difficult results. This manuscript sets out to familiarize breast radiologists with what effective communication skills are, as well as how to learn and teach them.
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Grandinetti, Justin, and Charles Ecenbarger. "Imagine Pokémon in the “Real” world: a Deleuzian approach to Pokémon GO and augmented reality." Critical Studies in Media Communication 35, no. 5 (August 30, 2018): 440–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15295036.2018.1512751.

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Goswami, Manu. "Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities (1983)." Public Culture 32, no. 2 (May 1, 2020): 441–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/08992363-8090180.

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Benedict Anderson’s Imagined Communities is the single most cited English-language text in the human sciences. The article reconsiders its original argument, its astonishing multidisciplinary impact, and its more recent trajectory.
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Kissas, Angelos. "Three theses on the mediatization of politics: evolutionist, intended, or imagined transformation?" Communication Review 22, no. 3 (July 3, 2019): 222–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10714421.2019.1647726.

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Delporte, Christian. "Jules Verne et le journaliste. Imaginer l'information du xxe siècle." Le Temps des médias 4, no. 1 (2005): 201. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/tdm.004.0201.

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