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1

Shineha, Ryuma, Aiko Hibino, and Kazuto Kato. "Analysis of Japanese newspaper articles on genetic modification." Journal of Science Communication 07, no. 02 (June 20, 2008): A02. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/2.07020202.

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The rapid spread of technologies involving the application of “Genetic Modification (GM)” raised the need for science communication on this new technology in society. To consider the communication on GM in the society, an understanding of the current mass media is required. This paper shows the whole picture of newspaper discourses on GM in Japan. For the Japanese public, newspapers represent one of the major sources of information on GM. We subjected the two Japanese newspapers with the largest circulation, the Asahi Shimbun and Yomiuri Shimbun, to an analysis of the full text of approximately 4000 articles on GM published over the past to perform an assessment of the change of reportage on GM. As for the most important results, our analysis shows that there are two significant shifts with respect to the major topics addressed in articles on GM by Japanese newspapers.
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Na, Mi Su, and Jeong Hee Kang. "A Frame Analysis of Nurse-related Articles from Korean Daily Newspapers." Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education 24, no. 4 (November 30, 2018): 453–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.5977/jkasne.2018.24.4.453.

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Purpose: This study analyzed how the four nurse-related news items 'talent show,' 'neonatal death,' 'nurse's death,' and 'sexual harassment' were portrayed in Korean daily newspaper articles. Methods: A total of 392 newspaper articles published from November 2017 to May 2018 were retrieved through the internet homepages of three newspapers, the Chosun Ilbo, the Dong-a Ilbo, and the JoongAng Ilbo and through a database for 13 other newspapers. Articles were analyzed for their views on nurses and their structural and contextual frames. Results: Articles with the highest frequency of mentioning nurses' death appeared in the JoongAng Ilbo; these were written as straight news articles. In the analyzed articles, nurses were portrayed mostly as victims, troublemakers, passive, or selfish. Articles were written mostly in episodic, incident notice, or attribution of responsibility frames. Conclusion: It was not uncommon to read articles with negative views on nurses; most of these articles focused only the four major incidents as straight news type stories. Future efforts are needed to study the implications of newspaper articles with negative views on nurses and the frames most commonly used.
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Archakis, Argiris, and Villy Tsakona. "Parliamentary discourse in newspaper articles." Journal of Language and Politics 8, no. 3 (December 15, 2009): 359–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jlp.8.3.02arc.

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The present paper aims, first, at analysing how and why parliamentary debates are transformed into newspaper articles with a narrative-like format; and, second, at proposing a model for integrating this kind of material and analysis into a literacy-based language teaching programme. Our data consists of Greek parliamentary proceedings and newspaper articles on parliamentary debates. Based on the critical discourse analysis framework and the social constructionist paradigm, we support the claim that the linguistic construction of social events in the press aims at creating and/or maintaining a bond between the newspapers and the readers sharing the same political and ideological standpoints. In this context, we suggest that getting familiar with the linguistic resources and discourse practices used in parliamentary and media discourse is crucial for developing a critical awareness of these genres. Finally, specific tasks are proposed aiming at reinforcing students’ critical awareness of newspaper articles on parliamentary debates.
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Zhang, Xueying, Bijie Bie, and Andrew C. Billings. "Newspaper Ebola articles differ from Twitter updates." Newspaper Research Journal 38, no. 4 (November 14, 2017): 497–511. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532917739883.

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Social media have emerged as a vital tool of communication for reaching and engaging broader audiences; however, few studies discussed the differences of news norms and journalists’ practices defined by the news platforms. Using framing analysis, this study examined how U.S. media presented the 2014 Ebola outbreak both within newspaper stories and within each newspaper’s corresponding Twitter account. Twitter accounts deviated from traditional print platforms by having a more magnified voice following key Ebola events, using more updates and science frames and less conflicts, responsibility, consequence, and savior frames. Degrees of alarming or reassuring tones differed by platform as well. While newspapers fulfilled traditional media responsibilities, the Twitter accounts were geared toward public concern during the epidemic escalation, serving responsibilities more befitting a health organization.
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Ningsih, Lale Fatma Yulia. "DISCOURSE ANALYSIS ON TERRORISM-RELATED ARTICLES IN INDONESIAN ENGLISH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER EDITORIALS." Humanitatis : Journal of Language and Literature 6, no. 2 (June 30, 2020): 215–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.30812/humanitatis.v6i2.765.

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This paper examines the discursive construction of terrorism-related information conveyed on the Indonesian newspapers. The Jakarta Post, one of the most notable Indonesian English-language newspapers, have been covering terrorism related encounters in its editorial especially after the 2002 Bali bombing. This paper finds out the use of common definitions and terms as well as the discrepancies in the produced expression related to terrorism and extremism in the editorials the newspaper has published since 2014. It is found that the newspaper has symphatetically portrayed and supported the victims while it represented the perpetrators from their ideological perspectives and separating their ideologies from religious teaching practices in the country. Additionally, the newspaper identifies terrorism as threat to Indonesian democratic values and classifies terrorism as a serious issue endangering the country’s security and social stability. To the latter end, the newspaper suggested policy recommendation while at the same time criticizing the law enforcement for failures and in the end promoting secular values for the country in order to eradicate terrorism.
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SAKAMOTO, Keiko, and Noriko SUDO. "Analysis of Newspaper Articles about Food Stockpile." Japanese Journal of Health and Human Ecology 86, no. 6 (November 30, 2020): 282–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.3861/kenko.86.6_282.

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Li, Yan, Rosanna Hildersley, Grace W. K. Ho, Laura Potts, and Claire Henderson. "Relationships between types of UK national newspapers, illness classification, and stigmatising coverage of mental disorders." Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 56, no. 9 (January 22, 2021): 1527–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00127-021-02027-7.

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Abstract Background Media coverage on mental health problems has been found to vary by newspaper type, and stigma disproportionately affects people with mental illness by diagnosis. Objective This study investigated the relationships between types of UK national newspaper (tabloid vs. broadsheet), illness classification (SMI–severe mental illnesses vs. CMD–common mental disorders), and stigmatising coverage of mental disorders, and whether these relationships changed over the course of the Time to Change anti-stigma programmes in England and Wales. Methods Secondary analysis of data from a study of UK newspaper coverage of mental illness was performed. Relevant articles from nine UK national newspapers in 2008–11, 2013, 2016 and 2019 were retrieved. A structured coding framework was used for content analysis. The odds an article was stigmatising in a tabloid compared to a broadsheet, and about SMI compared to CMD, were calculated. Coverage of CMD and SMI by newspaper type was compared using the content elements categorised as stigmatising or anti-stigmatising. Results 2719 articles were included for analysis. Articles in tabloids had 1.32 times higher odds of being stigmatising than articles in broadsheet newspapers (OR 1.32, 95% CI 1.12–1.55). Odds of stigmatising coverage was 1.72 times higher for articles on SMI than CMD (OR 1.72, 95% CI 1.39–2.13). Different patterns in reporting were observed when results were stratified by years for all analyses. A few significant associations were observed for the portrays of stigmatising elements between tabloid and broadsheet newspapers regarding SMI or CMD. Conclusions Tailored interventions are needed for editors and journalists of different newspaper types, to include specific strategies for different diagnoses.
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Wan Shaharuddin, Wan Yusoff, and Soo Yin See. "A Semantical Interpretation of the Post-Electoral Newspaper Reporting in Gaining the Legitimacy from the Citizens: A Case Study of the Newspaper Articles Headlines during the Post-Electoral Period." International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences 58 (September 2015): 144–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.18052/www.scipress.com/ilshs.58.144.

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This qualitative study focuses on the semantical interpretation of the post-electoral newspaper reporting in gaining the legitimacy from the citizens. The study is being addressed through two research questions: 1) what are the semantical interpretation of the newspaper articles’ headlines in the mainstream and the oppositions’ newspapers? 2) What are the issues highlighted in the newspaper during the post-electoral period of the 13th General Election? The data for the entire research were obtained through the mainstream newspapers which are Utusan Malaysia, Kosmo and Harian Metro and also the opposition’s newspaper represented by Harakah. The data were also collected based on the newspapers that were published after the Election Day has ended. However, the newspapers were not collected daily as the researcher has chosen a few newspapers that contained the traits of having portrayed electoral campaign. The data were analysed using the thematic analysis by deriving themes from the content analysis of the newspapers. The findings were divided into two sections which are semantical interpretations of newspaper articles’ headlines during post-electoral period and issues highlighted in the political campaigns. The researcher has come to a conclusion that both mainstream and opposition based newspapers were portraying improper political headlines during the post-electoral period.
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Paterson, Laura Louise. "Electronic supplement analysis of multiple texts." International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 25, no. 1 (April 16, 2020): 62–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.19049.pat.

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Abstract This paper adapts O’Halloran’s (2010) electronic supplement analysis (ESA) to investigate debates about UK poverty in online newspaper articles and reader responses to those articles. While O’Halloran’s method was originally conceived to facilitate close reading, this paper modifies ESA for corpus-based discourse analysis by scaling it up to include multiple texts. I analyse (key-)keywords and concordances to compare seven articles from the Mail Online (2010–2015) with their 2354 reader responses generated using the newspapers’ Below the Line (BTL) comments feature. The analysis provides a snapshot of the discourses BTL commenters draw upon when writing about UK poverty. Unemployment, benefits receipt, and single parenthood were repeatedly referred to in the newspaper articles and their comments, but BTL commenters also drew on personal narratives and (fictional) anecdotes to index notions of flawed consumerism, scroungers, and the deserving and undeserving poor.
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Foster, Hamish, Sara Macdonald, Chris Patterson, and Catherine A. O’Donnell. "No such thing as bad publicity? A quantitative content analysis of print media representations of primary care out-of-hours services." BMJ Open 9, no. 3 (March 2019): e023192. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023192.

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ObjectiveTo explore how out-of-hours primary healthcare services (OOHS) are represented in UK national newspapers, focusing on content and tone of reporting and the use of personal narratives to frame stories.DesignA retrospective cross-sectional quantitative content analysis of articles published in 2005, 2010 and 2015.Data sourcesNexis database used to search 10 UK national newspapers covering quality, middle-market and tabloid publications.Inclusion/exclusion criteriaAll articles containing the terms ‘out-of-hours’ (≥3 mentions per article) or (‘NHS 24’ OR ‘NHS 111’ OR ‘NHS Direct’) AND ‘out-of-hours’ (≥1 mention per article) were included. Letters, duplicate news items, opinion pieces and articles without a substantial portion of the story (>50% of an article’s word count, as judged by researchers) concerning OOHS were excluded.Results332 newspaper articles were identified: 113 in 2005 (34.1%), 140 in 2010 (42.2%) and 79 in 2015 (23.8%). Of these, 195 (58.7%) were in quality newspapers, 99 (29.8%) in middle-market and 38 (11.3%) in tabloids. The most commonly reported themes were OOHS organisation, personal narratives and telephone triage. Stories about service-level crises and personal tragedy, including unsafe doctors and missed or delayed identification of rare conditions, predominated. The majority of articles (252, 75.9%) were negative in tone. This was observed for all included newspapers and by publication genre; middle-market newspapers had the highest percentage of negative articles (Pearson χ2=35.72, p<0.001). Articles presented little supporting contextual information, such as call rates per annum, or advice on how to access OOHS.ConclusionIn this first reported analysis of UK national newspaper coverage of OOHS, media representation is generally negative in tone, with frequent reports of ‘negative exemplars’ of OOHS crises and fatal individual patient cases with little or no contextualisation. We present recommendations for the future reporting of OOHS, which could apply to the reporting of healthcare services more generally.
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김지혜, 김경희, 정익중, and 이희연. "Analysis of Newspaper Articles on Child Abuse Deaths." Korean Journal of Social Welfare 65, no. 2 (May 2013): 131–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.20970/kasw.2013.65.2.006.

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Kim, Kyung-Sik, and Kyong-Sun Lee. "Keyword Network Analysis of Newspaper Articles on Leisure." Journal of Sport and Leisure Studies 64 (May 31, 2016): 353–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.51979/kssls.2016.05.64.353.

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Triwahyuni, Nurlin, Imranuddin ., and Zahrida . "AN ANALYSIS OF WORD FORMATION ENCOUNTERED IN MEDICAL TERMS IN THE JAKARTA POST’S ARTICLES." Journal of English Education and Teaching 2, no. 2 (September 10, 2018): 93–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.33369/jeet.2.2.93-102.

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The aim of this research was to find out the types of word formation in medical terms in The Jakarta Post’s health articles. This research was designed as a descriptive qualitative research. The population of this research was all medical terms in The Jakarta Post newspaper. The sample of this research was medical terms found in seven health articles in The Jakarta Post newspaper which published from June until December 2016. Documentation was used as main instrument in this research. There were 10 types of word formation by Yule (2010). The result of this study showed, there are 55 data of derivation, 20 data of compounding, 16 data of borrowing, 11 data of acronym, 2 data of clipping, and one data of backformation. It can be concluded, there are six types of word formation were found in seven health articles. Further, there is no coinage, blending, conversion, and multiple processes were found in medical terms in seven health articles in The Jakarta Post’s newspapers.
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Fitriani, Siti Sarah, Rizki Ananda, Andi Muhammad Irawan, Iskandar Abdul Samad, and Sukardi Weda. "Representation of 212 rallies in the Jakarta Post articles: A hybridity of CDA and SFL analysis." Studies in English Language and Education 8, no. 1 (January 3, 2021): 328–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.24815/siele.v8i1.16836.

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For decades, newspapers have become a daily need for people across the globe to update information. There is a tendency of the people to believe in the news published in newspapers, for media is considered neutral. In Indonesia, 212 rallies are the events that were widely reported as headlines for weeks by national and international newspapers. This study showcases the brief portrait of The Jakarta Post representations on the 212 rallies by its use of linguistic properties, to see whether The Jakarta Post is impartial in delivering the news. This study employs Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) strategies and applies the analytical tools drawn from Systemic Functional Grammar (SFG). The data were taken from sixteen 212 rallies related news, including seven headlines, collected from The Jakarta Post archives. The result of this study reveals that by using transitivity and conceptual metaphor, The Jakarta Post tends to stand on the side of the one being protested, and oppose the rallies. This finding suggests newspaper readers to read the information in newspapers more critically, to understand the use of lexicon as well as the structure of sentences to conclude the right interpretation of the news and to realize the representation. By doing so, newspaper readers will not simply accept the news they read.
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Zulkifli, Nur Wahida, Noorizan Abd Aziz, Yahaya Hassan, Mohamed Azmi Hassali, and Nur Liyana Zainal Bahrin. "The Unregistered Drugs Coverage in the Media in Malaysia: Content Analysis of the Public Newspapers." Research in Pharmacy and Health Sciences 2, no. 3 (August 15, 2016): 196–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.32463/rphs.2016.v02i03.38.

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Newspaper is the most common media that can be used as a reference to know the current issues that happened in the countries. Also, there are a lot of articles about unregistered drugs published in newspapers in Malaysia. The purpose of this research to explore the content of the unregistered drugs in Malaysia based on the interviewee statements in the articles or news in the selected newspapers. The two most popular newspapers online available chosen (Kosmo and Utusan Malaysia newspaper online). About 56 articles identified for the year 2000 until 2014. The selected data was analysed using content analysis method. The production of unregistered drugs articles are increasing trend since 2000 until 2014. The findings from the content analysis indicate that majority of the articles are finally sub-categorized to certain themes which are, contributing factors, the impact of unregistered drugs and management of the unregistered drugs. The limited of references in this scope made these findings as benchmark findings. This findings used as the problem statement in designing research for the future to combat unregistered drugs in order to achieve authorities’ aims which are to provide the quality, safety and effective pharmaceutical products to the public.
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Cheong, Jadeera Phaik Geok, Selina Khoo, and Rizal Razman. "Spotlight on Athletes with a Disability: Malaysian Newspaper Coverage of the 2012 London Paralympic Games." Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly 33, no. 1 (January 2016): 15–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/apaq.2015-0021.

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This study analyzed newspaper coverage of the 2012 London Paralympic Games by 8 Malaysian newspapers. Articles and photographs from 4 English-language and 4 Malay-language newspapers were examined from August 28 (1 day before the Games) to September 10, 2012 (1 day after the Games closing). Tables, graphs, letters, fact boxes, and lists of events were excluded from analysis. A total of 132 articles and 131 photographs were analyzed. Content analysis of the newspaper articles revealed that most (62.8%) of the articles contained positive reference to the athletes with a disability. There were equal numbers (39.1%) of action and static shots of athletes. More articles and photographs of Malaysian (58%) than non-Malaysian (42%) athletes with a disability were identified. Only 14.9% of the articles and photographs were related to female athletes with a disability.
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Sangho Kim. "A content analysis of newspaper articles on aggressive driving." Journal of Police Policies 32, no. 1 (May 2018): 235–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.35147/knpsi.2018.32.1.235.

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KimYoungjoo, 조인숙, 강 현 재, and JuHee Kim. "Analysis of Housing Product Development Trend through Newspaper Articles." A Journal of Brand Design Association of Korea 16, no. 4 (December 2018): 19–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.18852/bdak.2018.16.4.19.

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Jang, Hye Young. "2017 South Korean Presidential Debate Analysis by Newspaper articles." Korean Journal of Rhetoric 31 (April 30, 2018): 49–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.31325/kjr.2018.04.31.49.

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박소연, 채승범, 이상재, and 이상록. "Analysis of Newspaper Articles on Korean Style Medicinal Tea." Society of Preventive Korean Medicine 21, no. 2 (August 2017): 95–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.25153/spkom.2017.21.2.010.

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Woo, Kyung-Jin. "Content Analysis of Hotel PR Activities in Newspaper Articles." International Journal of Tourism Sciences 5, no. 1 (January 2005): 85–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15980634.2005.11434581.

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Xie, Jingzhen, and Lili Sun. "Public views on a new library project: a content analysis 2014–2019." Library Management 42, no. 6/7 (February 16, 2021): 395–408. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/lm-10-2020-0137.

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PurposeThis study aims to investigate how the local residents viewed a new public library project in Macao through the analysis of newspaper articles published in 2014–2019 and how these views have changed the decision-makers in selecting a different site for the new library.Design/methodology/approachContent analysis was used to analyze public views. 569 newspaper articles on the new library project published in local major newspapers from January 2014 to August 2019 were coded and analyzed. Percentage agreement for the two coders and Cohen's Kappa were used to calculate the inter-rater reliability.FindingsThe top 5 factors discussed in the newspaper articles were the general decision-making process (38.65%), location (18.20%), selection of the Old Court Building as the new library site (15.07%), budget (13.5%) and new library services (6.85%). The local residents tended to raise questions on the high cost, the appropriateness of the selected library site, the preservation of the local heritage buildings, and the role that the government should play in this project.Research limitations/implicationsThis study only collected and analyzed the data from the articles published in the major newspapers in Macao. Other types of media from sources such as Facebook were not included in this study. Articles containing similar information but from different newspapers were all counted as individual entries for data collection. The voices/options were not divided by groups. For further analysis, the articles could be separated by voices from politicians, librarians and other special interest groups. The chosen categories in this study were based on Voyant Tools and the authors' interpretation/focus of the research question. The categories could be subdivided for further study. For example, the overall support of the project could be broken into full support, support with some minor reservations, support with major reservations, etc. And some articles currently in the neutral category with some degrees of support might fit into one of the above new sub-categories.Originality/valueThe case carries new references for any communities embarking on similar projects.
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Hedrick, Jeffrey B. "Regional and source differences in midsize newspapers reporting New York Times v. Sullivan." Newspaper Research Journal 39, no. 3 (September 2018): 309–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532918796232.

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This study focuses on midsize newspaper coverage of the New York Times v. Sullivan case that strengthened press freedom. A content analysis of articles from 29 Northern, 25 Southern and six multistate major metropolitan newspapers identified differences in article frequency and placement related to source and coverage type. The hierarchy of influences model explains perceived regional bias. Midsize newspapers relied on wire news articles more often, with Northern papers publishing more editorials, including multiple editorials and original coverage.
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Pinelli, Erica. "Sanctions against Russia: Presentation of the first period of the sanctioning process in Russian media." Rhema, no. 4, 2019 (2019): 70–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.31862/2500-2953-2019-4-70-85.

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In this paper I analyze how sanctions against Russia are framed in Russian newspapers in the first period after the Ukrainian crisis. The analysis is based on data from the Newspaper subcorpus of the Russian National Corpus, which contains newspaper articles published from February to August 2014. Through concordance analysis of the word sankcii ‘sanctions’, we analyze the representation, also metaphorical, of sanctions in Russian media discourse.
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Davies, Graeme AM, Marcus Schulzke, and Thomas Almond. "Sheltering the president from blame: Drone strikes, media assessments and heterogeneous responsibility 2002–2014." British Journal of Politics and International Relations 20, no. 2 (March 28, 2018): 477–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1369148118762303.

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This article presents the first systematic analysis of how location of drone strikes and the identification of civilian or terrorist casualties in newspaper reporting affect media assessments of operational outcomes and elite responsibility. Conducting a content analysis of several hundred newspaper articles, we evaluate the likelihood of these newspapers identifying the civilian casualties, the role those casualties play in media assessments of operational outcomes, and who they blame for failure. We found that there were significant differences in the likelihood of the two newspapers reporting civilian casualties. We demonstrate that political elites including the US President tended to avoid blame for failure, with much of the focus of newspaper dissatisfaction being directed at the intelligence agencies. We believe these findings have serious ramifications for the democratic oversight for future warfare and have the potential to undermine the ability of public to constrain elites from launching military operations using drones.
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Shafqat, Asmara, Rafique Ahmed Memon, and Huma Akhtar. "Cross-Cultural Analysis of the Use of Hedges in European and Pakistani English Newspaper: A Corpus-Based Study." International Journal of English Linguistics 9, no. 5 (August 26, 2019): 126. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ijel.v9n5p126.

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Language, discourse and communication reveal social and cultural inclinations of human civilization (Van Dijk, 1997). Language behavior is exhibited through communication which is extracted from three main categories of language; &ldquo;ideational, interpersonal and textual&rdquo; (Halliday, 1978, 1985). Hedges are interpersonal metadiscourse markers (Hs), lexical devices that authors employ to arrange their discourse and communicate their standpoint about the substance for the reader. Cultural and linguistic background of the author may affect the employment of hedges in the discourse. The present study investigated the interpersonal metadiscourse marker-hedges- in the Culture section of European English Newspaper (CEEN) and Pakistani English Newspaper articles (CPEN) based on Hyland&rsquo;s classification (2004). The quantitative corpora-based study contained 32 articles from culture section of Pakistani English newspaper: Dawn News (DN) and 32 articles from culture section of European English Newspaper: BBC. The articles from each newspaper were extracted from online resources. Two corpora have equal representation of words, 40000 each. Data analysis was done using SPSS 22 to see the frequency of hedges used in the data. Moreover, an independent sample t-test was applied. It was found that there is a meaningful difference between the European and Pakistani English newspapers&rsquo; usage of hedges. This research would help not only ELT practitioners to teach how hedges change the genre of discourse, but would also shed light on cultural discourse. It would depict how the same hedges are used in two different cultural discourses revealing distinct culture and identity.
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Kim, Sang-Ho. "A content analysis of newspaper articles on Geographic Profiling System." Korean Association of Public Safety and Criminal Justice 26, no. 2 (June 30, 2017): 31–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.21181/kjpc.2017.26.2.31.

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KUBOTA, Yuto, Shintaro TERABE, and Makoto KASAI. "THE SHARE ANALYSIS OF THE INFRASTRUCTURE'S ARTICLES ON THE NEWSPAPER." Journal of Japan Society of Civil Engineers, Ser. D3 (Infrastructure Planning and Management) 72, no. 5 (2016): I_169—I_176. http://dx.doi.org/10.2208/jscejipm.72.i_169.

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Yoshida, Sayumi, and Miyuki Shimizu. "Analysis of Text in Newspaper Articles on Genetically Modified Foods." Agricultural Information Research 28, no. 2 (July 1, 2019): 72–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.3173/air.28.72.

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Kovach, E. "Analysis of newspaper articles on the siege of Przemysl fortress." Scientific visnyk V. O. Sukhomlynskyi Mykolaiv National University. Historical Sciences 47, no. 1 (2019): 83–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.33310/2519-2809-2019-47-1-83-87.

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Park, Eun-Jun, Dae Woong Ahn, and Chan Sook Park. "Text Network Analysis of Newspaper Articles on Life-sustaining Treatments." Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing 29, no. 2 (2018): 244. http://dx.doi.org/10.12799/jkachn.2018.29.2.244.

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Lee, Kwon-hyo. "An Analysis and Evaluation of Newspaper Articles on Li Zhi." YANG-MING STUDIES ll, no. 25 (April 2010): 77–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.17088/tksyms.2010..25.003.

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Fisher, Andrew, and Nicholas Castle. "Why Do Nursing Homes Close? An Analysis of Newspaper Articles." Social Work in Public Health 27, no. 5 (July 23, 2012): 409–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19371910903182823.

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Davis, Robert. "A Computer-Aided Affective Content Analysis of Nanotechnology Newspaper Articles." NanoEthics 5, no. 3 (September 10, 2011): 319–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11569-011-0129-8.

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Kim, Myungmin, and Okryun Jung. "Critical analysis of discourse on reading discussion in newspaper articles." JOURNAL OF READING RESEARCH 59 (May 31, 2021): 161–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.17095/jrr.2021.59.5.

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Wilbur, Kerry, Souad Berzou, and Robert Meeds. "Framing diabetes public health information during Ramadan – a newspaper content analysis." Journal of International Medical Research 45, no. 6 (April 28, 2017): 1750–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0300060516650983.

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Objective To evaluate health-related messages in printed media pertaining to diabetes care in Qatar during Ramadan. Methods Qatar national newspapers (Arabic and/or English) published 6 weeks prior to and 4 weeks during Ramadan 2012 were reviewed. Health-related content was identified and characterized according to four different categories including presence of messages pertaining to both diabetes and Ramadan. Articles describing diabetes and Ramadan combined were further evaluated according to specific features of prominence (surrogates for perceived reader importance). Newspapers were grouped by language, and volume and content of coverage were compared between groups. Results A total of 1 467 newspaper issues published during the 2012 review period (781 in Arabic and 686 in English) were analysed. Health-related articles appeared consistently throughout the study period, but few were specifically diabetes-related (66/1095 [6%] Arabic articles versus 34/1250 [2.7%] English articles; P = 0.008). Only 34/1095 (3.1%) Arabic and 23/1 250 (1.8%) English ( P = 0.05) articles pertaining specifically to diabetes management during Ramadan were published. Twenty/34 (59%, Arabic) and 6/23 (26%, English) were published in high prominence positions. Conclusions Opportunity exists to augment the relatively low coverage of diabetes health-related messages in print media during Ramadan.
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Patterson, Mr Chris, and Dr Shona Hilton. "Normalisation and Stigmatisation of Obesity in UK Newspapers: a Visual Content Analysis." Open Obesity Journal 5, no. 1 (November 13, 2013): 82–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1876823720131001011.

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Obesity represents a major and growing global public health concern. The mass media play an important role in shaping public understandings of health, and obesity attracts much media coverage. This study offers the first content analysis of photographs illustrating UK newspaper articles about obesity. The researchers studied 119 articles and images from five major national newspapers. Researchers coded the manifest content of each image and article and used a graphical scale to estimate the body size of each image subject. Data were analysed with regard to the concepts of the normalisation and stigmatisation of obesity. Articles’ descriptions of subjects’ body sizes were often found to differ from coders’ estimates, and subjects described as obese tended to represent the higher values of the obese BMI range, differing from the distribution of BMI values of obese adults in the UK. Researchers identified a tendency for image subjects described as overweight or obese to be depicted in stereotypical ways that could reinforce stigma. These findings are interpreted as illustrations of how newspaper portrayals of obesity may contribute to societal normalisation and the stigmatisation of obesity, two forces that threaten to harm obese individuals and undermine public health efforts to reverse trends in obesity.
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Ottewell, Namino. "Newspaper reporting of mental illness." Journal of Public Mental Health 16, no. 2 (June 19, 2017): 78–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jpmh-10-2016-0051.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine a time trend in newspaper reporting of mental illness in Japan between 1987 and 2014. Design/methodology/approach Four high-circulation national newspapers (the Yomiuri newspaper, the Asahi newspaper, the Mainichi newspaper and the Nikkei Newspaper) were selected for analysis. Articles were analysed using qualitative content analysis (n=448). Findings Whilst articles concerning the dangerousness of those with mental illness occupied a high proportion of coverage between 1987 and 2014, an overall shift is apparent whereby there is now more reporting of mental illness in relation to stress than in relation to dangerousness, particularly for depression. In contrast, schizophrenia was often reported in the context of violent crime. Information on the treatment, symptoms and prevalence of mental illness was rarely reported. Social implications While the nature of newspaper coverage of mental illness has been changing, there still is over-representation of dangerousness of mental illness, particularly of schizophrenia. For improving the public’s images of mental illness, it is hoped to reduce the proportion of reporting about dangerousness and to increase the proportion of reporting about treatment, symptoms and prevalence of mental illness and personal stories of those affected. Originality/value The present study is the first to examine changes in Japanese newspaper coverage over time and at the variation in reporting among diagnoses.
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Pak, Hyeong-Jun. "News Reporting on Comfort Women." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 93, no. 4 (July 10, 2016): 1006–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699016644560.

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This article explored South Korean and Japanese newspaper reports on the “comfort women” who were forced into sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army in the 1930s-1940s, to examine how print media have reproduced the reality of the issue. I conducted a quantitative frame analysis of the contents of news articles ( N = 384) on the comfort women in four South Korean and Japanese newspapers. The frames of comfort women articles in all papers can be considered to be very stereotyped, because they have changed little according to the newspaper’s political position (conservative/liberal), attitude (anti-Japan/anti–South Korea), and nationality (South Korean/Japanese). When the relationship of South Korea and Japan has been combative, conflict and morality frames have been abundant. In contrast, when the relationship has been favorable, human interest frames have been ample.
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Towner, Terri, and Caroline Lego Muñoz. "Instagramming Issues: Agenda Setting During the 2016 Presidential Campaign." Social Media + Society 6, no. 3 (July 2020): 205630512094080. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2056305120940803.

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Mass media can set the public’s agenda, particularly during political campaigns. In the social media era, the public can now also set the mass media’s agenda, resulting in intermedia agenda setting. This study’s purpose is to examine the intermedia agenda-setting effects between Instagram posts and mainstream newspapers during the 2016 presidential primary period. To test this relationship, a content analysis was conducted, recording the frequency of political issue mentions in newspaper articles and Instagram posts throughout the presidential primary period. Cross-correlations were then estimated to examine the direction of the influence of the frequency of issue mentions in newspaper articles and Instagram posts. Findings indicate differences between the salient issues in traditional newspapers and Instagram posts during the presidential primary. Additional results suggest a limited intermedia agenda-setting relationship between the issue agendas of mainstream newspapers and Instagram posts.
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Day, David M., and Stewart Page. "Portrayal of Mental Illness in Canadian Newspapers." Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 31, no. 9 (December 1986): 813–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/070674378603100904.

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The present article reports results from a content analysis of 103 newspaper reports taken from eight major Canadian newspapers, and selected at random from the Canadian Newspaper Index. The portrayal of mental illness and mentally ill persons in these reports was compared with that in samples of articles taken from two comparison mental health publications not receiving popular circulation. As compared with these latter publications, the content analysis indicated that the newspapers portrayed mental illness and the mentally ill in a manner which could be described as essentially pejorative, thus seeming to support frequent observations and complaints from the mental health establishment about inadequate or unfair coverage of mental illness in the popular print media. At the same time, the newspaper medium appeared to present more favourable images of nontraditional (example: community-based) mental health practices, than of traditional (example: hospital-based) practices. Implications of such results for the attitudes and beliefs of the general public vis-À-vis mental illness are offered, with special reference to the influence of the print media.
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Thornicroft, Amalia, Robert Goulden, Guy Shefer, Danielle Rhydderch, Diana Rose, Paul Williams, Graham Thornicroft, and Claire Henderson. "Newspaper coverage of mental illness in England 2008-2011." British Journal of Psychiatry 202, s55 (April 2013): s64—s69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.112.112920.

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BackgroundBetter newspaper coverage of mental health-related issues is a target for the Time to Change (TTC) anti-stigma programme in England, whose population impact may be influenced by how far concurrent media coverage perpetuates stigma and discrimination.AimsTo compare English newspaper coverage of mental health-related topics each year of the TTC social marketing campaign (2009-2011) with baseline coverage in 2008.MethodContent analysis was performed on articles in 27 local and national newspapers on two randomly chosen days each month.ResultsThere was a significant increase in the proportion of anti-stigmatising articles between 2008 and 2011. There was no concomitant proportional decrease in stigmatising articles, and the contribution of mixed or neutral elements decreased.ConclusionsThese findings provide promising results on improvements in press reporting of mental illness during the TTC programme in 2009-2011, and a basis for guidance to newspaper journalists and editors on reporting mental illness.
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Vujović, Marija, and Tatjana Đukić. "“NARODNE NOVINE”: GENRE, THEMATIC AND VISUAL TRANSFORMATION 1949-2019." MEDIA STUDIES AND APPLIED ETHICS 2, no. 1 (October 8, 2020): 51–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.46630/msae.2.2020.04.

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The importance of local media is indisputable for media theorists and media practitioners, despite the widespread globalization. Although electronic media has the largest audience, while online media is constantly expanding, the traditional print media is still surviving and they influence the political and social life of local communities. “Narodne novine” [English: The People’s Newspaper] are a daily news and political newspaper with the longest publication time in south-eastern Serbia. By using the quantitative and qualitative content analysis, as well as the comparative and synthetic research method, the authors investigate how this newspaper has transformed in relation to genre, and in thematic and visual terms during the two socially and historically different periods - in the socialist and transitional period. The research corpus consists of 63 articles from two editions of “Narodne novine” – the newspapers published on May 1st 1949 (28 articles) and 70 years later, on May 1st 2019 (35 articles).
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이승연, 신정하, and 심지연. "A Genre Analysis of Newspaper Articles for Korean Language Education -Based on the linguistic analysis of newspaper articles and reading materials in Korean language textbooks-." Journal of Korean Language Education 28, no. 3 (September 2017): 53–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.18209/iakle.2017.28.3.53.

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45

Mulaudzi, Rendani, and Joseph Kioko. "Content Analysis of South African Sunday Newspaper Coverage of the Durban and Copenhagen Climate Change Conferences." Studies in Media and Communication 8, no. 2 (July 16, 2020): 34. http://dx.doi.org/10.11114/smc.v8i2.4749.

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Since the first United Nations climate change conference in 1995, newspapers have been vital in increasing coverage of climate change. Amidst growing number of events around climate change, the influence of international climate change conferences in newspaper coverage of climate change has not been fully interrogated in post-apartheid South Africa. This study aims to discover how three major South African Sunday broadsheet newspapers represented the Copenhagen conference (COP15) in 2009 and the Durban conference (COP17) in 2011. It used a national sample for the years 2009 and 2011, covering the City Press, The Sunday Independent and Sunday Times. The study carried out quantitative analysis of 58 articles published in the three leading Sunday newspapers between 01 January and 31 December. The direct involvement of South Africa on the Copenhagen and Durban climate change negotiations had an influence in the level of newspaper coverage. The frequency of articles published per month increased in November and December for all the years of interest. The dominantly reported main topics associated with COP are greenhouse gas emissions and the Kyoto Protocol. Both COP15 and COP17 were discussed frequently at a local level - domestic geographical scope. Overall, the article identified that South African print media is not consistent in the representation of COP. In order to better the reporting of international climate talks, print media has to be actively involved in integrative and collaborative engagement with COP relevant stakeholders.
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Pedersen, Paul Mark. "Investigating Interscholastic Equity on the Sports Page: A Content Analysis of High School Athletics Newspaper Articles." Sociology of Sport Journal 19, no. 4 (December 2002): 419–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ssj.19.4.419.

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While research has documented the mass media’s biased coverage of sportswomen in most levels of athletic participation, no study has yet determined if under-representation and trivialization of females occur at the interscholastic level. This content analysis, in investigating the amount and type of newspaper coverage given to female and male high school athletics, sought to fill this void. Over a 1-year timeframe, 602 issues were randomly selected from 43 daily newspapers. This sample produced 1792 articles that fit the study’s codebook. The articles revealed that female athletics, even when compared to three independent standards (gender breakdowns of school enrollment, participation rates, and number of sports offered), was significantly under-represented in both number of articles and total column inches. Male athletics not only received significantly more written coverage, but its articles were also more likely to be better positioned and have photographic accompaniment than those about female athletics.
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Shen, Neil. "The Newspaper Industry in a Changing Landscape The Shift in News Content of Various Newspapers as a Response to the Rise of Social Media." Network and Communication Technologies 5, no. 1 (November 11, 2019): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/nct.v5n1p1.

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This paper examines the association between the rise of social media and the types of news content produced by newspaper outlets. Over the past two decades, the rise of social media has precipitated a decline in the role of traditional newspaper outlets. I present two hypotheses and their ensuing rationale &ndash; hypothesis one describes how newspapers may increase hard news content to further consolidate their reader base, while hypothesis two postulates that hard news content will decrease as papers try to regain the readers they lost to social media. Data was collected from two reputable and two less-reputable newspaper outlets to see how they reacted to increases in social media usage and whether their responses varied. For each newspaper outlet, the author identified the number of articles that included keywords drawn from hard news and soft news word banks. Using a ratio of hard to soft news, regression analysis was then performed. After running regression analysis with trend data from the Pew Research Center on the number of US adults with social media accounts, results indicate a moderate negative correlation amongst the two more reputable newspapers and no correlation amongst less reputable newspapers, meaning that the more reputable newspapers tended to decrease hard news content as social media became more popular.
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Armstrong, Gregory, Lakshmi Vijayakumar, Thomas Niederkrotenthaler, Mala Jayaseelan, Ramya Kannan, Jane Pirkis, and Anthony F. Jorm. "Assessing the quality of media reporting of suicide news in India against World Health Organization guidelines: A content analysis study of nine major newspapers in Tamil Nadu." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 52, no. 9 (May 4, 2018): 856–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0004867418772343.

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Objectives: Suicide rates in India are among the highest in the world, resulting in an estimated 250,000 suicide deaths annually. How the media communicates with the Indian public on the topic of suicide has thus far gone without sufficient scrutiny. The objective of our study was to assess the quality of newspaper reporting of suicide-related news in India against World Health Organization suicide reporting guidelines. Methods: We used content analysis to assess the quality of suicide reporting against World Health Organization guidelines in nine of the most highly read daily newspapers in the southern state of Tamil Nadu between June and December 2016. Five of the nine newspapers under review were in the top 20 most circulated daily newspapers in the country. Results: A total of 1681 suicide articles were retrieved. The mean number of suicide articles per day per newspaper was 0.9%, and 54.5% of articles were 10 sentences or less. The vast majority (95.9%) of articles primarily focused on reporting specific suicide incidents. Harmful reporting practices were very common (e.g. a detailed suicide method was reported in 43.3% of articles), while helpful reporting practices were rare (e.g. just 2.5% gave contact details for a suicide support service). Conclusions: We observed that a daily diet of short and explicit suicide-related news was served up to readers of newspapers. Attempts should be made to understand the perspectives of media professionals in relation to suicide reporting, and to devise strategies to boost the positive contribution that media can make to suicide prevention.
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Soosang Lee. "Analysis of Social Issues of the Newspaper Articles on Gyeongju Earthquakes." Journal of Korean Library and Information Science Society 48, no. 2 (June 2017): 53–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.16981/kliss.48.2.201706.53.

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Soosang Lee. "Analysis of Subject Category on Artificial Intelligence Discourse in Newspaper Articles." Journal of Korean Library and Information Science Society 48, no. 4 (December 2017): 21–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.16981/kliss.48.4.201712.21.

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