Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

The Robotic Reporter

472

Citations

25

References

2014

Year

TLDR

Automated journalism uses algorithms to transform data into news stories with minimal human input, promising to produce far more content than human journalists can generate. The study investigates how automated news creation reshapes journalists’ workflows and alters broader conceptions of journalism’s purpose and operation. By conducting a case study of Narrative Science and analyzing journalists’ published reactions, the authors explore the competitive visions and emerging challenges of an automated news landscape. The analysis reveals a technological drama surrounding the future of journalistic labor, the rigid conformity of news forms, and the foundational authority of journalism.

Abstract

Among the emergent data-centric practices of journalism, none appear to be as potentially disruptive as "automated journalism." The term denotes algorithmic processes that convert data into narrative news texts with limited to no human intervention beyond the initial programming choices. The growing ability of machine-written news texts portends new possibilities for an expansive terrain of news content far exceeding the production capabilities of human journalists. A case study analysis of the pioneering automated journalism provider Narrative Science and journalists' published reactions to its services reveals intense competition both to imagine an emergent journalism landscape in which most news content is automated and to define how this situation creates new challenges for journalists. What emerges is a technological drama over the potentials of this emerging news technology concerning issues of the future of journalistic labor, the rigid conformity of news compositional forms, and the normative foundation of journalistic authority. In these ways, this study contends with the emergent practice of automated news content creation both in how it alters the working practices of journalists and how it affects larger understandings of what journalism is and how it ought to operate.

References

YearCitations

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