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Journal articles on the topic 'Topic coverage'

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1

Korencic, Damir, Strahil Ristov, Jelena Repar, and Jan Snajder. "A Topic Coverage Approach to Evaluation of Topic Models." IEEE Access 9 (2021): 123280–312. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/access.2021.3109425.

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Themistocleous, G., and S. H. Wearne. "Project management topic coverage in journals." International Journal of Project Management 18, no. 1 (February 2000): 7–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0263-7863(99)00030-7.

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Zobel, Anne M., and Stephen H. Wearne. "Project Management Topic Coverage in Recent Conferences." Project Management Journal 31, no. 2 (June 2000): 32–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/875697280003100204.

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The paper presents an analysis of the relative frequency of attention to project management body of knowledge topics in papers presented at recent Project Management Institute (PMI®) seminars/symposia and International Project Management Association congresses. The results show that some topics of importance in project management have had little or no attention at these conferences, and that sectors of industry are not represented to match their importance in national economies. Possible reasons for these results are discussed and some recommendations offered to the organizers of future conferences.
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Yun, Xiao Yan, and Wei Teng. "Sub-Topic Segmentation in Multi-Document." Advanced Materials Research 756-759 (September 2013): 2958–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.756-759.2958.

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The similar sentences in multi-document set are combined into one class, and each class is one sub-topic. Describing the sub-topics from the perspective of understanding makes the multi-document summarization become the one with greater coverage and less redundancy. This paper presents a sub-topic segmentation method based on maximum tree algorithm. And based on sentences similarity matrix, maximum tree is calculated, as well as the sub-topic segmentation is realized through the analysis of the different communities for the sub-topic. The experiment shows that the method achieves the desired result.
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Ramaprasad, Jyotika. "Pre-, during and Post-Censorship Coverage of India by the New York Times." Newspaper Research Journal 9, no. 1 (September 1987): 19–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073953298700900102.

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The New York Times' coverage of India was examined before, during and after the Indian press censorship of the mid-'70s. In view of Western concerns about censorship effects on the kind of news emerging from a country, it was expected that more favorable/positive topic news and less unfavorable/negative topic news would be found in the Times during than before and after the censorship. However no differences in coverage (in terms of slant and topics) were found over the three periods. Resourcefulness on the part of foreign correspondents and resistance from domestic sources may explain the findings.
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Russial, John T. "Topic-Team Performance: A Content Study." Newspaper Research Journal 18, no. 1-2 (January 1997): 126–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073953299701800110.

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Zimmermann, Bettina Maria, Steffen Kolb, Fabian Zimmermann, Bernice Simone Elger, and David Shaw. "Influence of content, events and culture on the public discourse about medical genetics in Switzerland – A quantitative media content analysis." Communication and Medicine 16, no. 1 (September 15, 2020): 92–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1558/cam.34832.

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Medical genetics is a broad and expanding field with many important implications for society, but knowledge about media coverage of this topic from recent years is lacking. This study aims to identify topics in medical genetics emerging in print media coverage in Switzerland by quantitatively analysing their occurrence in the public media discourse and assessing culturally conditioned differences between two Swiss language regions. We conducted a quantitative media content screening of print media and news agencies in the German- and French-speaking regions of Switzerland, and eight topics were identified. They demonstrate the large variety of topics in medical genetics present in public discourse. Coverage was dominated by legislative voting on genetics issues and by the preventive surgeries of the Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie. We found only small differences between the language regions, and coverage was strikingly similar for most variables.
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Ye, Meng, and Peter Thomas. "Paternalism in China Daily’s coverage of Chinese Muslims (2001–2015)." Discourse & Communication 14, no. 3 (December 11, 2019): 314–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1750481319893770.

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This article explores the media representation of Muslims using critical discourse analysis (CDA). It emphasises the discursive construction of governmental paternalism that forms the dominant ideological disposition of China Daily’s (CD) coverage. The results reveal how Chinese official English newspapers facilitate the government’s dissemination of paternalistic discourse in the news of a large population of Chinese Muslims over the period. The investigation combines topic modelling with topos analysis to identify topics and topoi and to exhibit the ideology through the corpus compiled with CD’s news about Chinese Muslims. Our findings both uncover the extent to which CD is used to promote paternalistic discourse by topic and reveal how paternalism is constructed by topoi. CD can be seen to strongly legitimise the paternalistic framework corresponding with the government’s promotion of social development and security in the region. Reciprocally, most Chinese Muslims are portrayed as obedient and dependent Chinese citizens who benefit from the government’s intervention.
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Xu, Xiao, Tao Jin, Zhijie Wei, and Jianmin Wang. "Incorporating Topic Assignment Constraint and Topic Correlation Limitation into Clinical Goal Discovering for Clinical Pathway Mining." Journal of Healthcare Engineering 2017 (2017): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/5208072.

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Clinical pathways are widely used around the world for providing quality medical treatment and controlling healthcare cost. However, the expert-designed clinical pathways can hardly deal with the variances among hospitals and patients. It calls for more dynamic and adaptive process, which is derived from various clinical data. Topic-based clinical pathway mining is an effective approach to discover a concise process model. Through this approach, the latent topics found by latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) represent the clinical goals. And process mining methods are used to extract the temporal relations between these topics. However, the topic quality is usually not desirable due to the low performance of the LDA in clinical data. In this paper, we incorporate topic assignment constraint and topic correlation limitation into the LDA to enhance the ability of discovering high-quality topics. Two real-world datasets are used to evaluate the proposed method. The results show that the topics discovered by our method are with higher coherence, informativeness, and coverage than the original LDA. These quality topics are suitable to represent the clinical goals. Also, we illustrate that our method is effective in generating a comprehensive topic-based clinical pathway model.
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Bull, James R. "Foreword." Pure and Applied Chemistry 77, no. 7 (January 1, 2005): iii. http://dx.doi.org/10.1351/pac20057707iii.

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Special topics have come to represent a familiar albeit irregular feature of Pure and Applied Chemistry (PAC) in recent years, and were originally conceived as a way of promoting occasional and sometimes extraordinary IUPAC projects. The concept has served to publicize new initiatives, and promote the role of chemistry in multidisciplinary activities and collaboration. For example, the proceedings of two successive Workshops on Advanced Materials featured prominently as special topic issues, and the series has now been assimilated into the program of established IUPAC events, whilst projects arising from close collaboration with fellow international bodies have enjoyed similar coverage, with special topic issues on "Natural and Anthropogenic Environmental Estrogens" and "Implications of Endocrine Active Substances for Humans and Wildlife".Publication policy has also been evolving to ensure that the Journal continues to occupy a unique and indispensable niche in the primary chemistry literature, and recent changes have been influenced by the distinctive features of special topic projects. Most notably, a prerequisite for publication coverage of IUPAC-sponsored events is prior editorial agreement on the desirability and scope of Journal coverage, as is acceptance of centrally coordinated peer review of all manuscripts. The policy recognizes that the core business of the Journal is to promote representative coverage of the established series of IUPAC-sponsored international conferences, for the good reason that they serve the topical mainstream of the subject with distinction.It is therefore logical to seek out and promote certain events in these established series as "special topics", and thus offer readers more in-depth coverage of the scientific proceedings. The recent history of special topics drawn from established series has vindicated this approach, and early citation statistics reveal an encouraging trend toward high recognition of such coverage. Conversely, above-average citation statistics provide valuable clues to established events that merit coverage as special topics. Organic synthesis is one such topic ó the series has a 30-year history of immensely popular and well-supported international conferences that have witnessed some of the epochal disclosures of the discipline. Although earlier proceedings were sometimes published as monographs, PAC now enjoys the privilege of featuring proceedings from this series regularly, thanks to the enthusiastic support of conference organizers and presenters alike. It is a pleasure to introduce this issue, devoted to a fine selection of works arising from the scientific proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Organic Synthesis, held in Nagoya, Japan on 1ñ6 August 2004. The papers capture the vitality and ongoing promise of organic synthesis, and offer readers an opportunity to participate vicariously in another milestone in its advancement.Special topic issues will feature more regularly in the future, as a deliberate initiative to showcase some of the most prominent and enduring disciplinary themes on offer in the calendar of established IUPAC-sponsored conferences.James R. BullScientific Editor*An issue of reviews and research papers based on lectures presented at the 15th International Conference on Organic Synthesis (ICOS-15), held in Nagoya, Japan, 1-6 August 2004, on the theme of organic synthesis. Other presentations are published in this issue, pp. 1087-1296.
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Maddux, Cleborne D., and Ann Candler. "Readability, Interest, and Coverage of 10 Textbooks on Educational Assessment." Psychological Reports 60, no. 2 (April 1987): 631–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1987.60.2.631.

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10 textbooks on educational assessment were analyzed with the Flesch formula for reading ease and interest. Reading levels were surprisingly low, with one book in the “standard, Grade 8 to 9” category, five in the “fairly difficult, Grade 10 to 12” category, and the other four in the “difficult, college level” category. Seven of the books were classified as “dull”, three as “mildly interesting”. Textbook coverage on 33 topics was also analyzed and charted. Good agreement was found for the topics treated by the various authors. Widest coverage was found for the topic of measurement, and sparse coverage was found for analysis of variance, hypotheses, inference and probability, prediction and regression, and selecting tests. Most texts contained adequate organizational aids.
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Kuang, Tao, and Shan Hong Zhu. "The Blog Topic Detection Research Based on Bursty Word." Advanced Materials Research 926-930 (May 2014): 3406–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.926-930.3406.

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The emergence of blog hot topic means that the user's interest ,participation behavior and various media report coverage reach to its climax,a detecting method of topics on blog based on blog bursty words is proposed. It includes the use of word similarity measure and text clustering analysis which is combined with design strategy in specific period, the use of the main idea of the sudden vocabulary hot topic detection algorithm has to be used and improved in order to generate the final clustering. The experimental results show that the algorithm can obtain an accurate blog topic detection results.
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Ye, Jintao, Zhao Yan Ming, and Tat Seng Chua. "Generating Incremental Length Summary Based on Hierarchical Topic Coverage Maximization." ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology 7, no. 3 (April 2016): 1–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2809433.

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Maddux, Cleborne D., and Ann Candler. "Readability, Interest, and Coverage of 28 Textbooks on Education of Children with Behavioral Disorders." Behavioral Disorders 11, no. 2 (February 1986): 124–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/019874298601100204.

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Analyzed with the Flesch formula for reading ease and interest were 28 textbooks on the education of children with behavioral disorders and/or emotional disturbance. Reading levels were surprisingly low with one book in the “standard, grade 8 to 9” category, 8 in the “fairly difficult, grade 10 to 12” category, and the other 19 in the “difficult, college level” category; 11 of the books were classifed as “dull”, 15 as “mildly interesting”, one as “interesting”, and one as “highly interesting”. Textbook coverage on 25 topics was also analyzed and charted. Great disparity was found in the topics treated by the various authors. Near-unanimous coverage of the topic of behavioral theory was found, while coverage was sparse on the topics of normal development, counter theory, and motivation. Some of the textbooks were found to have inadequate subject and author indices and only 7 of the books contain a glossary.
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Rhee, June Woong, and Sung-hee Kim. "News frames in the coverage of fine-dust disaster : Application of Structural Topic Modeling." Korean Journal of Journalism & Communication Studies 62, no. 4 (August 31, 2018): 125–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.20879/kjjcs.2018.62.4.004.

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16

Yan, Yan, and Wanjiang Zhang. "Gossip at one’s fingertips: Predictors of celebrity news on Twitter." Journalism 21, no. 5 (August 3, 2018): 707–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884918791349.

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The present study collected 2223 tweets of news about the Top 100 celebrities from People Magazine’s Twitter account during the year 2016. A combination of content analysis and social network analysis was used to examine celebrity attributes, news features, and the relationships between celebrities and news topics. Results indicated that news agendas and audiences’ responses were highly different. News coverage was primarily determined by news features, yet audiences cared only about big stars. Regular topics centered on the themes of celebrity news. The celebrity-by-topic network was topic-driven rather than human-driven, demonstrating the nature of the celebrity industry as an embodiment of capitalist society.
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Fengler, Susanne, Marcus Kreutler, Matilda Alku, Bojana Barlovac, Mariella Bastian, Svetlana S. Bodrunova, Janis Brinkmann, et al. "The Ukraine conflict and the European media: A comparative study of newspapers in 13 European countries." Journalism 21, no. 3 (May 15, 2018): 399–422. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884918774311.

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The crisis in Ukraine was one of the dominant topics in international news coverage of 2014 and the following years. Representing a conflict along the lines of an East-Western confrontation unprecedented since the end of the Cold War, the news reporting in different European countries with different historical backgrounds is an essential research topic. This article presents findings of a content analysis examining coverage of the conflict in the first half of 2014 in newspapers from a diverse set of 13 countries: Albania, Czech Republic, Germany, Latvia, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, as well as Ukraine and Russia. Drawing on prior literature on news values, key events, and news cycles in foreign coverage, this study maps the evolution of the conflict in the course of four key events and identifies specific characteristics of the coverage in different newspapers. The results show that attention for the conflict varies considerably across the countries, which might be traced back to different degrees of geographical and cultural proximity, domestication, and economic exchange, as well as lack of editorial resources especially in Eastern Europe. Russia dominated the news agenda in all newspapers under study with a constant stream of conflict news. Contradicting prior literature, media sought to contextualise the events, and meta-coverage of the media’s role in the crisis emerged as a relevant topic in many countries with a developed media system.
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18

Weiss, Dan. "Cost Behavior and Analysts’ Earnings Forecasts." Accounting Review 85, no. 4 (July 1, 2010): 1441–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/accr.2010.85.4.1441.

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ABSTRACT: This study examines how firms’ asymmetric cost behavior influences analysts’ earnings forecasts, primarily the accuracy of analysts’ consensus earnings forecasts. Results indicate that firms with stickier cost behavior have less accurate analysts’ earnings forecasts than firms with less sticky cost behavior. Furthermore, findings show that cost stickiness influences analysts’ coverage priorities and investors appear to consider sticky cost behavior in forming their beliefs about the value of firms. This study integrates a typical management accounting research topic, cost behavior, with three standard financial accounting topics (namely, accuracy of analysts’ earnings forecasts, analysts’ coverage, and market response to earnings surprises).
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Weston, Morley J., and Adrian Rauchfleisch. "Close to Beijing: Geographic Biases in People’s Daily." Media and Communication 9, no. 3 (July 23, 2021): 59–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/mac.v9i3.3966.

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Inequities in China are reflected within state-run media coverage due to its specific role “guiding public opinion,” and with our study we contribute to the geographic turn in the Chinese context with regard to media and journalism. As a subject of a spatial study, China is unique due to several factors: geographic diversity, authoritarian control, and centralized media. By analyzing text from 53,000 articles published in <em>People’s Daily</em> (rénmín rìbào, 人民日報) from January 2016 to August 2020, we examine how the amount of news coverage varies by region within China, how topics and sentiments manifest in different places, and how coverage varies with regard to foreign countries. Automated methods were used to detect place names from the articles and geoparse them to specific locations, combining spatial analysis, topic modeling and sentiment analysis to identify geographic biases in news coverage in an authoritarian context. We found remarkably uniform and positive coverage domestically, but substantial differences towards coverage of different foreign countries.
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Snow, Cason. "Bloomsbury Architecture Library." Charleston Advisor 22, no. 3 (January 1, 2021): 14–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.5260/chara.22.3.14.

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The Bloomsbury Architecture Library website provides an overview of architectural and interior design written primarily for secondary and undergraduate students. The content is divided into sections based on Place, Period, Subjects and Styles, Peoples, Cultures and Religions, Materials, and Architects, allowing users to explore the subject in a guided manner. The individual resources on the site are built around the newly revised Sir Banister Fletcher’s Global History of Architecture. This is supplemented by a collection of e-books providing deeper coverage on specific topics. An image collection of specific buildings, both plans and images, incorporates the important visual aspect of the topic. Within a specific topic, facets are provided to aid in further discovery. The sharp focus of this site provides an excellent starting point for research on architecture. The plans for additional resources will broaden coverage at a rate that should not overwhelm users and will keep the site relevant in the future.
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Pool, Richard F., Gregory D. Turner, and S. Anne Böttger. "Ecology Content in Introductory Biology Courses." American Biology Teacher 75, no. 8 (October 1, 2013): 544–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/abt.2013.75.8.5.

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In recent years the need for ecological literacy and problem solving has increased, but there is no evidence that this need is reflected by increased ecology coverage at institutions of higher education (IHE) across the United States. Because introductory biology courses may serve to direct student interest toward particular biological categories such as ecology, time devoted to topics in these categories within introductory biology courses may be crucial for captivating student interest. In a 2009 survey, members of the National Association of Biology Teachers (NABT) College and University Sections identified 20 topics they considered essential for inclusion in introductory biology courses. The NABT members, acknowledging the importance of ecological concepts, considered two ecological topics essential. The present study evaluated the actual coverage of ecology and other topic categories compared to recommendations and according to location. For this purpose, lecture and lab syllabi were collected from 26 rural, suburban, and urban IHEs from the Mid-Atlantic region. Course content was divided into eight categories, including ecology, and percentages of total lecture and lab time per category were calculated. This actual coverage was compared to the NABT recommendations. Actual coverage of ecology was not significantly different from coverage recommended by the NABT members, whereas cell/molecular/biochemistry and evolution were lower and genetics, development, and taxonomy were higher than recommended. Course content was also compared by location, with no significant effect of institutional location on ecology coverage. We conclude that although students taking introductory biology courses in Mid-Atlantic IHEs are likely to receive the NABT’s recommended coverage of ecology instruction regardless of institutional location, actual ecology coverage has not increased, regardless of the increased need for ecological literacy.
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Hankins, Sarah Russell. "Freedom and Constraint in Objective Local News Coverage." Newspaper Research Journal 9, no. 4 (June 1988): 85–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073953298800900408.

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This case study investigates how objective reporting in the 1983 Denver mayoral election may have been influenced by 1) reporters' creativity and advocacy freedom versus 2) ideological and economic constraints of the newspaper. The topic was investigated through content analysis and interviews with news professionals involved in campaign coverage.
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Daniel, Volker, Magnus Neubert, and Agnes Orban. "Fictional Expectations and the Global Media in the Greek Debt Crisis: A Topic Modeling Approach." Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte / Economic History Yearbook 59, no. 2 (November 27, 2018): 525–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jbwg-2018-0018.

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Abstract We study the role of global media during the Greek debt crisis and relate it to the transmission of events on financial actors’ expectations. To identify news coverage about the Greek debt crisis, we apply topic modeling to a newly compiled dataset of over 430,000 articles from The International New York Times and Financial Times from 2009 to 2015. We identify a Greek debt crisis topic and relate it to events concerning Greece during this time period. Our finding is that events are only relevant for financial markets when they are covered in the media, whereas events without media coverage have no effect. News coverage without immediate events is equally irrelevant for financial markets.
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Daniel, Volker, and Robert Peters. "Greece and the media – A qualitative assessment of the news impact on credit conditions in the Greek debt crisis." Journal of Sociocybernetics 15, no. 2 (December 26, 2018): 69–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.26754/ojs_jos/jos.201822656.

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We study the extent to which events transmitted by the media affect Greek bond interest rates by analyzing qualitatively articles in global newspapers during the Greek debt crisis. We focus on dates with strong changes in the yield to maturity of Greek government bonds in order to test whether news coverage matters for financial markets. We relate our results to a quantitative measure of media coverage using the novel method of topic models and examine days with a high level of a quantitative topic series. News coverage seems to matter on the majority of dates. However, we also find dates without crucial events and media coverage but that have strong changes in the bond yield and that seem affected by sources other than the media. The quantitative news measure regularly reveals relevant news articles on the days we analyzed.
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Fox, Rebekah, Kathleen Abrahamson, and James G. Anderson. "Exploring a Nursing Community Online." International Journal of Reliable and Quality E-Healthcare 2, no. 1 (January 2013): 51–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijrqeh.2013010105.

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Online forums offer researchers opportunities to investigate communities in unobtrusive ways to understand better the experiences, concerns, and stories of those who contribute. In this exploratory study, the authors analyze content from one online nursing community to highlight the breadth of topics being discussed outside of the nursing workplace but within the nursing community (e.g. topics, that when taken together, begin to structure a collective narrative for this on-line community). Then, the authors explore one specific topic being discussed by this nursing community, nurse bullying, in an effort to better understand how the current nursing literature’s coverage of the topic compares with the discussion emerging from this on-line community. Finally, suggestions for using on-line forums as research sites are discussed.
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Kim, Erin Hea-Jin, Yoo Kyung Jeong, Yuyoung Kim, Keun Young Kang, and Min Song. "Topic-based content and sentiment analysis of Ebola virus on Twitter and in the news." Journal of Information Science 42, no. 6 (July 11, 2016): 763–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0165551515608733.

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The present study investigates topic coverage and sentiment dynamics of two different media sources, Twitter and news publications, on the hot health issue of Ebola. We conduct content and sentiment analysis by: (1) applying vocabulary control to collected datasets; (2) employing the n-gram LDA topic modeling technique; (3) adopting entity extraction and entity network; and (4) introducing the concept of topic-based sentiment scores. With the query term ‘Ebola’ or ‘Ebola virus’, we collected 16,189 news articles from 1006 different publications and 7,106,297 tweets with the Twitter stream API. The experiments indicate that topic coverage of Twitter is narrower and more blurry than that of the news media. In terms of sentiment dynamics, the life span and variance of sentiment on Twitter is shorter and smaller than in the news. In addition, we observe that news articles focus more on event-related entities such as person, organization and location, whereas Twitter covers more time-oriented entities. Based on the results, we report on the characteristics of Twitter and news media as two distinct news outlets in terms of content coverage and sentiment dynamics.
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Johnson, Thomas J., Timothy Boudreau, and Chris Glowaki. "Turning the Spotlight Inward: How Five Leading News Organizations Covered the Media in the 1992 Presidential Election." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 73, no. 3 (September 1996): 657–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769909607300312.

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This study examined how two leading newspapers and three television networks covered the media in the 1992 presidential campaign. The main topic of media coverage was general media stories, although considerable attention was also given to candidates' use of media. Tone of coverage was different for different media themes with coverage of media performance being the most negative. How the press covered the media changed as the campaign progressed; coverage became more positive after the primaries. Newspapers tended to cover different media themes than the networks, and newspaper coverage was also more positive.
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Rønning, Helge. "Constitutional referendums and the media in Africa: Reporting the aborted referendum in Tanzania ‐ 2015." Journal of African Media Studies 12, no. 3 (September 1, 2020): 301–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jams_00026_1.

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The article involves three main topics. The first deals with the role of referendums in relation to constitutional processes, and how they have become increasingly common, with a focus on African developments. The second topic is a description of the referendums in relation to the media coverage of the rejected constitutional change in Zimbabwe in 2000 and in Kenya 2005, and with subsequent elections in both countries shortly after, and then the referendums that accepted constitutional change years later. The last part of the article is an analysis of coverage in the Tanzanian press of the constitutional debate before the aborted referendum in 2015, followed by some comparative reflections on the relationship between referendum and election reporting.
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Chawla, Gunjan, and Gordon B. Drummond. "Textbook coverage of a common topic: fluid management of patients after surgery." Medical Education 42, no. 6 (April 23, 2008): 613–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2923.2008.03009.x.

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Chandra Das, Dipok, Dipanita Saha, Tahrim Kabir, Prosanto Deb, and Joy Bhowmik. "ANALYSIS OF COVID-19 COVERAGE IN BANGLADESH NEWS MEDIA USING TOPIC MODELLING." International Journal of Engineering Applied Sciences and Technology 5, no. 7 (November 1, 2020): 27–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.33564/ijeast.2020.v05i07.006.

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Sagatov, Djumadulla. "IMPORTANT FEATURES OF EMERGENCY COVERAGE IN THE MEDIA." INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WORD ART 5, no. 3 (May 30, 2020): 60–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.26739/2181-9297-2020-5-10.

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The article describes the legal framework for the activities of mass media in the country, the processes associated with the coverage of emergencies in the media. The achievements and shortcomings in the coverage of emergencies by the media operating in the country today have been analyzed. At the same time, the mass media of our country described the achievements and ongoing activities related to the coverage ofthis topic during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Althaus, Scott L., May R. Berenbaum, Jenna Jordan, and Dan A. Shalmon. "No buzz for bees: Media coverage of pollinator decline." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118, no. 2 (January 11, 2021): e2002552117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2002552117.

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Although widespread declines in insect biomass and diversity are increasing concerns within the scientific community, it remains unclear whether attention to pollinator declines has also increased within information sources serving the general public. Examining patterns of journalistic attention to the pollinator population crisis can also inform efforts to raise awareness about the importance of declines of insect species providing ecosystem services beyond pollination. We used the Global News Index developed by the Cline Center for Advanced Social Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign to track news attention to pollinator topics in nearly 25 million news items published by two American national newspapers and four international wire services over the past four decades. We found vanishingly low levels of attention to pollinator population topics relative to coverage of climate change, which we use as a comparison topic. In the most recent subset of ∼10 million stories published from 2007 to 2019, 1.39% (137,086 stories) refer to climate change/global warming while only 0.02% (1,780) refer to pollinator populations in all contexts, and just 0.007% (679) refer to pollinator declines. Substantial increases in news attention were detectable only in US national newspapers. We also find that, while climate change stories appear primarily in newspaper “front sections,” pollinator population stories remain largely marginalized in “science” and “back section” reports. At the same time, news reports about pollinator populations increasingly link the issue to climate change, which might ultimately help raise public awareness to effect needed policy changes.
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Benoit, William L., Kevin A. Stein, and Glenn J. Hansen. "New York Times Coverage of Presidential Campaigns." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 82, no. 2 (June 2005): 356–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769900508200208.

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This study investigates New York Times coverage of the Democratic and Republican general presidential campaigns from 1952–2000. Content analysis reveals that the most common topic of campaign coverage was horse race. Discussion of the candidates' character was more common than discussion of their policy positions (even though candidates discuss policy more than character in campaign messages). The statements in these stories were more often negative than positive (despite the fact that candidates' messages are more positive than negative). Reporters are the most common sources for the statements in these articles, followed by candidates, supporters, and others.
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Coulson, David C., and Stephen Lacy. "Newspaper Economic Coverage of Motor Vehicle Emissions Standards." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 75, no. 1 (March 1998): 154–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769909807500115.

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This study analyzed six large newspapers' economic coverage of federal regulations intended to reduce motor vehicle emissions under the Clean Air Act. Examination of this topic involved evaluating costs and benefits of government controls. All but one paper explicitly referred to formal cost-benefit analysis as a method to evaluate the standards. They all included specific economic costs and benefits associated with regulating motor vehicle emissions. However, the reporting on costs was far more extensive than on benefits in five of the papers.
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Wackowski, Olivia A., Jennah M. Sontag, Binu Singh, Jessica King, M. Jane Lewis, Michael B. Steinberg, and Cristine D. Delnevo. "From the Deeming Rule to JUUL—US News Coverage of Electronic Cigarettes, 2015–2018." Nicotine & Tobacco Research 22, no. 10 (February 13, 2020): 1816–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ntr/ntaa025.

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Abstract Introduction News media may influence public perceptions and attitudes about electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes), which may influence product use and attitudes about their regulation. The purpose of this study is to describe trends in US news coverage of e-cigarettes during a period of evolving regulation, science, and trends in the use of e-cigarettes. Methods We conducted a content analysis of e-cigarette topics and themes covered in US news articles from 2015 to 2018. Online news databases (Access World News, Factiva) were used to obtain US news articles from the top 34 circulating newspapers, four national wire services, and five leading online news sources. Results The number of articles increased by 75.4% between 2015 and 2018 (n = 1609). Most articles focused on policy/regulation (43.5%) as a main topic, followed by health effects (22.3%) and prevalence/trends (17.9%). Discussion about flavor bans quadrupled (6.1% to 24.6%) and discussion of youth e-cigarette use was most prevalent (58.4%) in 2018, coinciding with an increase in coverage about JUUL. JUUL was mentioned in 50.8% of 2018 articles. Across years, articles more frequently mentioned e-cigarette risks (70%) than potential benefits (37.3%). Conclusions E-cigarettes continue to be a newsworthy topic, with coverage both reflecting numerous changes and events over time, and providing repeated opportunities for informing the public and policymakers about these novel products. Future research should continue to track how discourse changes over time and assess its potential influence on e-cigarette perceptions and policy changes. Implications E-cigarette news coverage in the United States increased between 2015 and 2018 and predominantly focused on policy and regulation. Notable spikes in volume were associated with some but not all major e-cigarette events, including the FDA’s deeming rule, Surgeon General’s report, and release of the National Youth Tobacco Survey data in 2018. Coverage of the 2018 National Academy of Medicine, Engineering, and Sciences report on the Public Health Consequences of E-cigarettes received minimal news coverage. The high volume in 2018 was driven in large part by coverage of the e-cigarette brand JUUL; over half of news articles in 2018 referenced JUUL specifically.
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Wang, Zhongjie, Dewayne E. Perry, and Xiaofei Xu. "Characterizing Individualized Coding Contributions of OSS Developers from Topic Perspective." International Journal of Software Engineering and Knowledge Engineering 27, no. 01 (February 2017): 91–124. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s021819401750005x.

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Developers participating in an open source software (OSS) project make contributions to the project at different levels and aspects. Their underlying technical interests, expertise, and working habits are indirectly delineated by their personal contributions. This paper is to discover the individualized contribution features of developers by latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) approach. Dominant latent topics of each developer and the corresponding topic coverage degree are extracted from the source codes committed to the project repository, and such topic model is validated to be feasible for representing the individualized contribution features by statistics tests. Four types of topic evolution patterns are observed from the commit history of a developer. Temporal locality is partially exhibited in the topic evolution but there usually exhibit drastic changes between time-adjacent contributions of a developer. Respective proportions of the four evolution patterns and the degree of temporal locality in the topic evolution delineate a developer’s individualized working habits in the time dimension. It is also proved that the correlation among the topic models of different developers is not equivalent to the real social collaborations among them. The outcome of this study would help OSS project coordinators get deep understanding on the work preferences and behavioral patterns of team members, thus facilitate project coordination activities such as task allocations.
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Bonafont, Laura Chaqués, and Frank R. Baumgartner. "Newspaper attention and policy activities in Spain." Journal of Public Policy 33, no. 1 (February 26, 2013): 65–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0143814x12000219.

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AbstractSpain's newspapers are characterised by strong partisan identities. We demonstrate that the two leading newspapers nonetheless show powerful similarities in the topics of their coverage over time. The media system is strongly related to the policy process and it shows similar levels of skew (attention focuses on just a few topics) and friction (attention lurches rapidly from topic to topic) as others have shown for policy processes more generally. Further, media attention is significantly related to parliamentary activities. Oral questions in parliament track closely with media attention over time. Our assessment is based on a comprehensive database of all front-page stories (over 95,000 stories) in El País and El Mundo, Spain's largest daily newspapers, and all 7,446 oral questions from 1996 to 2009. The paper shows that explanations of friction and skew in governmental activities should incorporate media dynamics as well. Political leaders are clearly sensitive to media salience.
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Wang, Xiao Long, Ming Liu, Qian Sheng Fang, and Yun Jian Ge. "Study on X-Voronoi for Heterogeneous Wireless Sensor Networks." Applied Mechanics and Materials 157-158 (February 2012): 1665–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.157-158.1665.

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Coverage has recently emerged as a premier research topic. More and more research focused on coverage in wireless sensor networks using Voronoi. While most existing research efforts in the area of wireless sensor networks have focused on networks with nodes which have the same capabilities. But for Heterogeneous Wireless Sensor Networks (HWSN), which is more universal, there is a lack of study for using Voronoi solves the problem of coverage. In this paper we address on X-Voronoi for solve coverage in heterogeneous networks. Simulations confirm that the X-Voronoi is able to solve the problem of analyzing coverage performance in heterogeneous networks. To our knowledge, this is the first study on Voronoi for Heterogeneous Wireless Sensor Networks.
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Wang, Weirui. "Exemplification and Stigmatization of the Depressed: Depression as the Main Topic versus an Incidental Topic in National US News Coverage." Health Communication 35, no. 8 (April 23, 2019): 1033–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10410236.2019.1606874.

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An, Yeji, and Dongil Kim. "Keyword and Topic Analysis of Online News Coverage on Students with Developmental Disabilities." Korean Journal of Special Education 54, no. 4 (March 31, 2020): 27–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.15861/kjse.2020.54.4.27.

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Eribo, Festus. "Cultural proximity, topic emphasis and sources of Nigerian media coverage of international news." Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies 18, no. 2 (January 1997): 264–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02560054.1997.9653207.

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Van Aelst, Peter, Rosa van Santen, Lotte Melenhorst, and Luzia Helfer. "From Newspaper to Parliament and Back? A Study of Media Attention as Source for and Result of the Dutch Question Hour." World Political Science 12, no. 2 (November 1, 2016): 261–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/wps-2016-0011.

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AbstractThis study on the role of media attention for the Dutch question hour answers three questions: to what extent is media attention a source of inspiration for oral parliamentary questions? What explains the newsworthiness of these questions? And what explains the extent of media coverage for the questions posed during the question hour? To address this, we present a content analysis of oral parliamentary questions and related press coverage in five recent years. The results show first that oral questions are usually based on media attention for a topic. Concerns about media influence should however be nuanced: it is not necessarily the coverage itself, but also regularly a political statement that is the actual source of a parliamentary question. The media are thus an important “channel” for the interaction between politicians. Second, our analysis shows that oral questions do not receive media attention naturally. Several news values help to explain the amount of news coverage that questions receive. “Surfing the wave” of news attention for a topic in the days previous to the question hour seems to be the best way to generate media attention.
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Hou, Jue, Xiaoxu Yang, and Elliot Panek. "How About Playing Games as a Career? The Evolution of E-Sports in the Eyes of Mainstream Media and Public Relations." International Journal of Sport Communication 13, no. 1 (March 1, 2020): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ijsc.2019-0060.

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This paper examined the media and public relations coverage of e-sport in China over a 17-yr period, focusing on how the representations of e-sport as a fast-growing industry have changed in China during that time. With the theoretical underpinning of media framing, the study used content analysis and examined 400 e-sport-related reports. Specifically, it investigated the tone of coverage, the topic emphasis of e-sport-related stories, and the use of jargon and statistics in the reports. In general, findings indicated that both mainstream media and public relations gradually covered e-sport issues in a more positive way as time went by. Similar to reporting on traditional sports, the topic emphasis changed from nongame issues to player and team performance in the contemporary climate. The findings highlight the importance of live-streaming platforms in e-sport development and suggest that more traditional-sport-styled media coverage of e-sport might benefit the industry. Finally, the study calls for an evaluation of media e-sport coverage in different cultural contexts and comparisons between e-sport’s and traditional sports’ representation in the contemporary media climate.
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Kilgo, Danielle K., and Summer Harlow. "Protests, Media Coverage, and a Hierarchy of Social Struggle." International Journal of Press/Politics 24, no. 4 (June 19, 2019): 508–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1940161219853517.

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News coverage is fundamental to a protest’s viability, but research suggests media negatively portray protests and protesters that challenge the status quo (a pattern known as the protest paradigm). This study questions the validity of those claims within the context of digital newspaper coverage, interrogating how topic and region shape coverage. Using a content analysis of coverage from sixteen newspapers in various U.S. market types and regions, this research examines framing and sourcing features in articles about protests. Results suggest media coverage of protests centered on racial issues (discrimination of Indigenous people and anti-Black racism) follows more of a delegitimizing pattern than stories about protests related to immigrants’ rights, health, and environment. A model to understand news coverage of protest based on a hierarchy of social struggle is proposed.
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Ellermann, Marissa. "Book Review: We Did What?!: Offensive and Inappropriate Behavior in American History." Reference & User Services Quarterly 57, no. 1 (October 9, 2017): 72. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/rusq.57.1.6464.

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We Did What?!: Offensive and Inappropriate Behavior in American History is a work that thoroughly covers topics in American history and culture that have at some point been a source of frustration or contention. Although there are only approximately 150 entries that are between 500 and 1,000 words, the entries are organized alphabetically, well researched, and provide balanced coverage of each topic. It is intended for use by a variety of researchers, but would be best suited as introduction for students in history or social sciences.
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Wang, Lei, Weihua Wu, Junyan Qi, and Zongpu Jia. "Wireless sensor network coverage optimization based on whale group algorithm." Computer Science and Information Systems 15, no. 3 (2018): 569–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/csis180103023w.

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For all of types of applications in wireless sensor networks (WSNs), coverage is a fundamental and hot topic research issue. To monitor the interest field and obtain the valid data, the paper proposes a wireless sensor network coverage optimization model based on improved whale algorithm. The mathematic model of node coverage in wireless sensor networks is developed to achieve full coverage for the interest area. For the model, the idea of reverse learning is introduced into the original whale swarm optimization algorithm to optimize the initial distribution of the population. This method enhances the node search capability and speeds up the global search. The experiment shows that this algorithm can effectively improve the coverage of nodes in wireless sensor networks and optimize the network performance.
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Kholikov, I. V. "Law and Transport: Continuing the Topic." World of Transport and Transportation 18, no. 4 (January 5, 2021): 246–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.30932/1992-3252-2020-18-246-253.

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The article provides a review of the textbook «Actual problems of legal support of professional activity» for students at transport universities enrolled in master’s programs, prepared by the team of the department of Transport Law of the Law Institute of Russian University of Transport under the general editorship of Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation, Doctor of Law, Professor Alexander I. Zemlin. The review notes the relevance of the topics included in the content of the textbook, the breadth of their coverage, which makes it possible to ensure complete and comprehensive mastering of didactic material, the depth of the scientific approach demonstrated by the authors in the process of working on the publication, the practical significance and potential relevance of the textbook. The sufficiency of the material presented in the textbook is especially emphasized regarding training of future specialists of the highest qualifications in the field of transport with legal competencies necessary for subsequent successful fulfillment by them of their professional duties in the context of digitalization of the economy and transport.
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Kholikov, I. V. "Law and Transport: Continuing the Topic." World of Transport and Transportation 18, no. 4 (January 5, 2021): 246–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.30932/1992-3252-2020-18-246-253.

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The article provides a review of the textbook «Actual problems of legal support of professional activity» for students at transport universities enrolled in master’s programs, prepared by the team of the department of Transport Law of the Law Institute of Russian University of Transport under the general editorship of Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation, Doctor of Law, Professor Alexander I. Zemlin. The review notes the relevance of the topics included in the content of the textbook, the breadth of their coverage, which makes it possible to ensure complete and comprehensive mastering of didactic material, the depth of the scientific approach demonstrated by the authors in the process of working on the publication, the practical significance and potential relevance of the textbook. The sufficiency of the material presented in the textbook is especially emphasized regarding training of future specialists of the highest qualifications in the field of transport with legal competencies necessary for subsequent successful fulfillment by them of their professional duties in the context of digitalization of the economy and transport.
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kizi Kosimova, Nargis Sunnat. "Typology Of Materials On The Environmental Topic In The Media Of Uzbekistan." American Journal of Social Science and Education Innovations 02, no. 12 (December 11, 2020): 27–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.37547/tajssei/volume02issue12-06.

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The article discusses the issues of classification of materials of the media in Uzbekistan on environmental topics, analyzes the state of environmental journalism in the republic and identifies shortcomings in the presentation of environmental information and its impact on the formation of environmental thinking of the population. The author of the study revealed and analyzed the shortcomings of the theoretical base on the problems of media coverage of environmental problems, highlight the typology of environmental journalism in Uzbekistan,consider the problems of forming the ecological culture of the population through the media.And also to determine the role of environmental journalism in Uzbekistan in the international information space. The main results of the research are the analysis of quantitative indicators of journalistic materials on environmental topics. As a result of the study, it was revealed that there is no consistency, genre and thematic diversity in the presentation of environmental information in the media. The expediency of ecological specialization in training journalists is recommended.
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Goertzen, Melissa. "Multidisciplinary Databases Outperform Specialized and Comprehensive Databases for Agricultural Literature Coverage." Evidence Based Library and Information Practice 14, no. 2 (June 13, 2019): 140–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.18438/eblip29561.

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A Review of: Ritchie, S. M., Young, L. M., & Sigman, J. (2018). A comparison of selected bibliographic database subject overlap for agricultural information. Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship, 89. http://doi.org/10.5062/F49Z9340 Abstract Objective – To determine the most comprehensive database(s) for agricultural literature searching. Design – Data collection and analysis was conducted using a modified version of the bibliography method, overlap analysis, chi square tests, and data visualization methods. Setting – An academic library in the U.S. Subjects – Eight commonly used bibliographic databases, including comprehensive agricultural indexes (AGRICOLA, AGRIS, and CAB Abstracts), specialized databases (BIOSIS Previews and FSTA), and multidisciplinary databases (Google Scholar, Scopus, and Web of Science). Methods – The researchers selected three review articles that represented sub-topics within the field of agriculture. Sources listed in the bibliographies of the three review articles were used to build a bibliographic citation set for analysis. Using a modified version of the bibliography method, 90 citations were randomly selected from the above-mentioned citation set. Researchers then turned to the 8 selected databases and searched for all 90 citations in each platform. Search queries were crafted in two ways: unique title strings in quotation marks and combinations of terms entered into the “title”, “keyword”, “journal source”, and “author” fields. Citations were considered to be covered in a database if the full bibliographic record was located using the above-mentioned search strategy. Next, chi square tests were used to evaluate if the expected number of citations from the sample group were found in each database or if the frequency differed between the eight databases. The overlap analysis method provided numerical representation of the degree of similarity and difference across the eight databases. Finally, data visualizations created in Excel and Gephi enhanced comparisons between the eight databases and highlighted differences that were not obvious based solely on the analysis of numerical data. Main Results – Researchers found that comprehensive databases (AGRICOLA, AGRIS, and CAB Abstracts) were not in fact comprehensive in their coverage of agricultural literature. However, the results suggested that CAB Abstracts was more comprehensive than AGRICOLA or AGRIS, particularly in regard to its coverage of the sub-topics “agronomy” and “meat sciences”. However, coverage of the sub-topic “sustainable diets” lagged behind multidisciplinary databases, which may be explained by the fact that the topic is interdisciplinary in nature. The superior coverage of CAB Abstracts over other comprehensive databases is consistent with findings reported by Kawasaki (2004). The analysis of specialized databases (BIOSIS Previews and FSTA) suggested that citations within the scope of the database were covered very well, while those out of scope were not. For instance, the sub-topics “sustainable diets” and “meat science” are out of scope of the biological sciences and thus, were not well covered in BIOSIS. The multidisciplinary databases (Google Scholar, Scopus and Web of Science) provided the most comprehensive coverage agricultural literature. All three databases covered most citations included in the data set. However, researchers noted that all three databases provided weak coverage of trade published items, books, or older journals. Conclusion – The study found that multidisciplinary databases provide close to full coverage of agricultural literature. In addition, they provide the best access to content that is interdisciplinary in nature. Specialized and comprehensive databases are recommended when research topics are within the scope of the database. Also, they best support in-depth projects such as bibliographies or comprehensive review articles.
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