Audience Evolution: New Technologies and the Transformation of Media Audiences

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Columbia University Press, 2011 - 248 páginas

Today's consumers have unprecedented choice in terms of the technologies and platforms that access, produce, and distribute media content. The development and overlap of television, the internet, and other media technologies is fragmenting and empowering media audiences more than ever. Building on his award-winning book, Audience Economics, Philip M. Napoli maps the landscape of our current media environment and describes its challenge to traditional conceptions of the audience.

He examines the redefinition of the industry-audience relationship by technologies that have moved the audience marketplace beyond traditional metrics. Media providers, advertisers, and audience measurement firms now deploy more sophisticated tools to gather and analyze audience information, focusing on factors rarely considered before, such as appreciation, recall, engagement, and behavior. Napoli explores the interplay between political and economic interests in the audience marketplace and their effect on audience evolution. He recounts the battles waged between stakeholders over the assessment of media audiences and their efforts to restrict the functionality of new technologies. As Napoli makes clear, the very meaning of the media audience continues to evolve in response to changing technological, economic, and political conditions.

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Índice

Contextualizing Audience Evolution
25
The Transformation of Media Consumption
54
The Transformation of Audience Information Systems
88
Contesting Audiences
117
The Implications of Audience Evolution
149
Notes
175
References
193
Index
239
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Sobre el autor (2011)

Philip M. Napoli is professor and the James R. Shepley Professor of Public Policy at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University. His previous books include Audience Economics: Media Institutions and the Audience Marketplace (Columbia, 2003), and Audience Evolution: New Technologies and the Transformation of Media Audiences (Columbia, 2011). He is also the author of more than 90 articles in journals such as Communication Theory and Telecommunications Policy.

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