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The “Scary World” of the Nonviewer and Other Anomalies
264
Citations
18
References
1980
Year
Emerging MediaPublic OpinionCommunicationMedia IndustriesSeriality StudiesPopular CultureMedia StudiesJournalismIrrationalityMedia EffectsLanguage StudiesContent AnalysisMedia PsychologyMedia InstitutionsTelevision StudyDistorted PerceptionsEmpirical SupportCritical TheoryVisual CultureOther AnomaliesAdvertisingTelevisionSpeculative PhilosophyStatistical EvidenceHauntologyMass CommunicationArtsAudience Reception
This article critically examines the statistical evidence presented by Gerbner et al. to support their assertion that television-viewing “cultivates” distorted perceptions of the “real world.” In Part I, I point out discrepancies in the items, samples, and coding categories employed, and show that when controls are applied simultaneously (rather than singly) there is no linear relationship between amount of viewing and the provision of “television answers.” This reanalysis concludes that the “cultivation” hypothesis lacks empirical support and that the very data presented in its support argue strongly for rejecting the assertion that it has any scientific basis in fact.
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