The Influence of Message and Audience Characteristics on TV News Grazing Behavior |
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Authors: | Rachel L. Bailey Julia R. Fox Maria Elizabeth Grabe |
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Affiliation: | 1. Indiana University;2. Indiana University-Bloomington;3. Department of Political Sciences , University of Pretoria , South Africa |
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Abstract: | This study examined television news channel changing (AKA grazing, zapping) behavior by focusing on the viewing duration and attention paid to stories that varied in sensational content and packaging. These two message-related factors had independent and interactive effects on how long grazers stayed tuned to a channel. Moreover, high sensation seekers, who were more avid news consumers in everyday life, exhibited different viewing and attentional patterns compared to low sensation seekers. While arousing television news was the most watched by all, high sensation seekers unexpectedly showed less preference for sensational tabloid packaging of arousing content than low sensation seekers. |
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