SAGE Communication & Media Studies
Technology Podcasts
Welcome to the official free Podcast site from SAGE for Communication & Media Studies. SAGE is a leading international publisher of journals, books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets with principal offices in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, and Singapore.
Location:
United States
Description:
Welcome to the official free Podcast site from SAGE for Communication & Media Studies. SAGE is a leading international publisher of journals, books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets with principal offices in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, and Singapore.
Language:
English
Website:
http://www.sagepublications.com
Episodes
Deciding What’s News: News-ness As an Audience Concept for the Hybrid Media Environment
11/3/2022
Authors Emily K. Vraga and Stephanie Edgerly discuss their article “Deciding What’s News: News-ness As an Audience Concept for the Hybrid Media Environment.” Vraga and Edgerly elaborate on their work on the modern hybrid media environment and audience perceptions of “newsness.”
Duration:00:12:38
Spatial proximity as a behavioral marker of relationship dynamics in older adult couples
8/29/2022
Dr. Brian G. Ogolsky, University of Illinois, USA discusses relationship dynamics in older adults.
Duration:00:15:17
Relationship Matters Podcast 112
8/29/2022
Dr. Kathryn D. Coduto, South Dakota State University discusses importance of listenting and affection exchange in a marital relationship
Duration:00:15:29
JMQ - Can an Algorithm Reduce the Perceived Bias of News?
2/5/2021
Join us for a JMCQ podcast with author T. Franklin Waddell to discuss the article entitled "Can an Algorithm Reduce the Perceived Bias of News? Testing the Effect of Machine Attribution on News Readers’ Evaluations of Bias, Anthropomorphism, and Credibility."
You can find the article here: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1077699018815891
Duration:00:07:10
TVN - Data Colonialism: Rethinking Big Data’s Relation to the Contemporary Subject
12/14/2018
In this Television & New Media podcast, editor Jonathan Corpus Ong interviews author Nick Couldry on his and co-author Ulises A. Mejias article entitled "Data Colonialism: Rethinking Big Data’s Relation to the Contemporary Subject."
Duration:00:25:09
WCX - How Do Online News Genres Take Up Knowledge Claims
12/13/2018
Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Nancy Bray, author of “How do online news genres take up knowledge claims from a scientific research article on climate change?” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318804822
Duration:00:22:26
WCX - Writing and Conceptual Learning in Science
12/13/2018
Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Anne Ruggles Gere, Emily Wilson, and Naitnaphit Limlamai, co-authors of “Writing and conceptual learning in science: An analysis of assignments,” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318804820
Duration:00:22:42
WCX - Compressing, Expanding, and Attending to Scientific Meaning
12/13/2018
Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Gwendolynne Reid, author of “Compressing, expanding, and attending to scientific meaning: Writing the semiotic hybrid of science for professional and citizen scientists,” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318809361
Duration:00:25:47
WCX - Genre Evolution and the Research Article
12/13/2018
Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Ashley Rose Mehlenbacher, author of “Registered reports: Genre evolution and the research article,” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318804534
Duration:00:20:22
WCX - “I Think When I Speak, I Don’t Sound Like That”
12/13/2018
Written Communication Editor Chad Wickman speaks with Dr. Heather M. Falconer, author of “‘I think when I speak, I don’t sound like that’: The influence of social positioning on rhetorical skill development in science,” featured in the January 2019 special issue on Writing and Science.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0741088318804819
Duration:00:22:38
Justice, subalternism, and literary justice: Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger
8/29/2018
JCL – “Justice, subalternism, and literary justice: Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger": Manav Ratti discusses his recent article. Music by AShamaluevMusic. Song: Emotional Background Music/Cinematic Music Instrumental. Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tchRllLUxmg. Posted August 2018.
Duration:00:10:53
SCX: "Using Expert Sources to Correct Health Misinformation in Social Media"
6/8/2018
Kelsey Berish interviews author Emily Vraga about her and co-author Leticia Bode's 2017 Science Communication article, entitled, "Using Expert Sources to Correct Helth Misinformation in Scoial Media."
Duration:00:11:45
SCX: Citizen Science as a Mean for Increasing Public Engagement in Science: Presumption or Possibility?
5/9/2018
Kelsey Berish interviews Victoria Martin on her Science Communication article, Citizen Science as a Mean for Increasing Public Engagement in Science: Presumption or Possibility?, first published in February 2017.
Duration:00:14:33
TVN: "Classroom Instruments and Carpool Karaoke: Ritual and Collaboration in Late Night's YouTube Era"
4/10/2018
SAGE Editor, Martha Avtandilian, interviews Dr. Myles McNutt, assistant professor at Old Dominion University, on his Television & New Media article entitled "Classroom Instruments and Carpool Karaoke: Ritual and Collaboration in Late Night's YouTube Era."
Duration:00:36:36
Out in the Country
5/30/2017
Article: Out in the Country: not just somewhere in the Midwest
Category: Communication and Media Studies
Keywords: youth, media, queer visibility, rural America, America, LGBT, transgender, gay marriage, sexuality
Blurb on the Website: Lucy Martirosyan, Avalon Lustick and Alyson Durlin discuss Mary L. Gray’s book, Out in the Country: Youth, Media and Queer Visibility in Rural America (2009).
Podcast length: 8:59
Number of speakers: 4
Quality of podcast: Near broadcast quality
Any Accents: No
Labelling: SMS Podcast
Duration:00:08:58
WCX: Creating a Unique Transnational Place: Deterritorialized Discourse and the Blending of Time and Space in Online Social Media
4/14/2017
Written Communication Editor Christina Haas talks to M. Sidury Christiansen about her article from the April 2017 issue, 'Creating a Unique Transnational Place: Deterritorialized Discourse and the Blending of Time and Space in Online Social Media.'
Duration:00:21:14
BPCQ: March 2016 Special Issue: Flipped Classrooms
5/24/2016
BPCQ Editor, Melinda Knight, discusses the March 2016 special issue entitled, "Flipped Classrooms."
Duration:00:15:21
WCX: Variation in Citational Practice in a Corpus of Student Biology Papers: From Parenthetical Plonking to Intertextual Storytelling
5/24/2016
Written Communication Editorial Assistant Abigail Bakke talks to John Swales about his article from the January 2014 issue, 'Variation in Citational Practice in a Corpus of Student Biology Papers: From Parenthetical Plonking to Intertextual Storytelling'.
Duration:00:17:48
WCX: The Case of the Missing Childhoods: Methodological Notes for Composing Children in Writing Studies
5/24/2016
Author Anne Haas Dyson discusses her article for the October 2013 issue, "The Case of the Missing Childhoods: Methodological Notes for Composing Children in Writing Studies."
Duration:00:20:49
TVNM: A Conversation with danah boyd, Microsoft Research
5/24/2016
New media historian Fred Turner interviewed Microsoft Research Senior Researcher danah boyd to discuss her current work.
Duration:00:08:53