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  • The researchers found that the print folks “remember significantly more news stories than online news readers”; that print readers “remembered significantly more topics than online newsreaders”; and that print readers remembered “more main points of news stories.” When it came to recalling headlines, print and online readers finished in a draw. […] Online newspapers tend to give few cues about a story’s importance, and the “agenda-setting function” of newspapers gets lost in the process. “Online readers are apt to acquire less information about national, international and political events than print newsreaders because of the lack of salience cues; they generally are not being told what to read via story placement and prominence—an enduring feature of the print product,” the researchers write. The paper finds no evidence that the “dynamic online story forms” (you know, multimedia stuff) have made stories more memorable.

    Print vs. Online: How the print edition of the New York Times trumps the online version. - Slate Magazine (vía Arcadi Espada)

    Tagged: journalism Arcadi Espada

    Posted on October 10, 2011 with 6 notes

    Source: Slate

    1. calibea posted this

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