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Radio Evolution : Proceedings of the ECREA scientific conference on Radio Evolution, hosted by the Communication and Society Research Centre (CECS) of the University of Minho, in Braga, Portugal, from 14-16 September 2011 / Madalena Oliveira
Titre : Radio Evolution : Proceedings of the ECREA scientific conference on Radio Evolution, hosted by the Communication and Society Research Centre (CECS) of the University of Minho, in Braga, Portugal, from 14-16 September 2011 Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Madalena Oliveira, Editeur scientifique ; Pedro Portela, Editeur scientifique ; Luis Antonio Santos, Editeur scientifique Editeur : Braga [Portugal] : Centro de Estudos de Communicacao e Sociedade Année de publication : 2012 Format : Document électronique ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-989-97244-9-5 Prix : Gratuit Note générale : Proposé au téléchargement (accès libre) :
"This eBook is available on CECS’s website only:
http://www.comunicacao.uminho.pt/cecs/"Langues : Anglais Catégories : CONGRES, SYMPOSIUMS, JOURNEES D'ETUDES, COLLOQUES, MANIFESTATIONS DIVERSES, ....
MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL: RADIO
MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL:NUMERIQUETags : radio numérique congrès EPRA réseaux sociaux radio communautaire internet information journalisme publicité contenu public Index. décimale : 384.54 Radio Résumé : FOREWORD (by Guy Starkey (Chair, ECREA Radio Research Section)
"This edited volume is an enduring outcome of the scientific conference Radio Evolution, hosted by the Communication and Society Research Centre (CECS) of the University of Minho, in Braga, Portugal, from 14-16 September 2011. This was the second conference to be organised on behalf of the Radio Research Section of the European Communication Research and Education Association (ECREA) and it coincided exactly with the second anniversary of the section’s first conference, held at Cyprus University of Technology (CUT) in 2009. Radio Evolution, like its predecessor, was organised through one of the two Vice-Chairs of the Radio Research Section, Professor Stanisław Jędrzejewski of Kozminski University of Warsaw, who was on a two-year research attachment to the University of Minho, and who works closely with our other section Vice-Chair, Professor Angeliki Gazi of CUT, and me. These separate section conferences are held every two years, and in cyclical fashion the whole of ECREA joins together in full plenary conferences of all seventeen thematic sections in another single location in each of the intervening years. In 2012 this will be at the Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey.
The work of organising Radio Evolution in Braga was very ably undertaken by Doctor Madalena Oliveira and her colleagues on the organising committee – in particular Pedro Portela, also of the Communication and Society Research Centre. With the full cooperation of the University of Minho and CECS, and financial support from our sponsors, Rádio Renascença, the conference was another resounding success. Abstracts were received from scholars in many countries in Europe, and in keeping with the inclusive nature of ECREA, in other continents including the Americas, Asia and Australasia. Delegates were greeted by another early-Autumn heat wave, with temperatures again in the mid-thirties, and we were able to enjoy the warm hospitality of our hosts and the many other attractions of Braga and its environs to the full. Coincidentally, Rádio Renascença – Portugal’s most listenedto radio group - was celebrating 75 years of broadcasting. We would like to place on record here our sincere gratitude to them for their financial assistance and to Madalena and her team for their dedication, organisational skills, professionalism and obvious enthusiasm for radio.
The work of Radio Evolution did not end in September 2011. The publication of this very timely e-book will enable many of the papers given in Braga to live on as a testament to the dedication and commitment to scholarly research into radio of our hosts, our sponsors, the scientific committee who peer-reviewed the abstracts,and the many delegates. Radio is truly evolving, in ways that would have been inconceivable to our predecessors, and radio content is now available in many different forms and on many different platforms. This collection of papers, and the considerable work undertaken behind the scenes since September 2011 to prepare it for publication, represent a welcome addition to the growing body of informed literature about our subject."
Source : p.1 du documentNote de contenu : Foreword
Preface - Madalena Oliveira, Pedro Portela & Luís António Santos
PART I: TECHNOLOGIES
Chapter 1: Radio: The challenges of Web 2.0 and Social Networks
Sharing and retweeting sounds – the relation between radio journalism and social networks - Luís Bonixe
Doing radio in the age of Facebook - Tiziano Bonini
Radio 2.0 in Higher Education Communities. An approximation of Aveiro University members perceptions
- Teresa Piñero-Otero & Fernando Ramos
How ‘new technologies’ impact Community Radio - Lawrie Hallett
Spanish talk Radio Stations on Twitter: Still reluctant to embrace its potential - Susana Herrera Damas & José Luís Requejo Aléman
Synergies between broadcast music radio and online radio: how to apeal the youth audience.The Spanish
and Catalan case - Maria Gutiérrez; Xavi Ribes; Josep Maria Martí; Belén Monclús & Luisa Martínez
Listening to what people who don’t listen to radio - Pierre C. Bélanger
Chapter 2: Towards Industry Imperatives and Multimedia Contexts 93
Radio journalists and the Internet: a study on perceptions - Hélder Bastos; Helena Lima; Nuno Moutinho & Isabel Reis
Casting doubts on Web Media. Can Internet Radio make a difference in the Greek case? - Christos Barboutis & Alexandros Baltzis
The development of the news-information production model on general-interest radio in Spain: the case
of Cadenaser.com - Maria del Pilar Martínez-Costa; Elsa Moreno & Avelino Amoedo
Digital radio in Brazil: analysis of an unfinished debate - Carlos Eduardo Esch & Nélia R. del Bianco
From Radio to R@dio: broadcasting in the 21st century - Paula Cordeiro
Live and local no more? Listening communities and globalizing trends in the ownership and production of local radio - Guy Starkey
Local broadcasters in the convergent media house – the case of Norway - Ilona Biernacka-Ligieza
The Ways of Participation. The volunteers in the community radio stations of Grenoble (France) -
Maria Holubowicz
Influences of Political Economy on International Radio broadcasting: the case of radio E. - Ariane Demonget
Euranet: a Case of Study of Pan-European Radio - Manuel Fernández Sande & J. Ignacio Gallego Pérez
Part II: Content
Chapter 3: New Radio Genres and the Creative Power of the sound 219
Changes in Patterns of contemporary China’s radio programs – helping each other in Beijing: a case study - Cao Lu & Meng Wei
The French highway radio: a model for tomorrow’s digital informations and service radio? - Charles Dargent
Band FM of Journalism of São Paulo – Emergence and consolidation of a new segment and a new audience - Elisa Marconi
Radiographing an ‘Expatriate’ Space - Inês David
Radio today: the risks of the past and an uncertain future - Alejandro López Merayo & Mª de la Peña Mónica Perez Alaejo
Romeo in love: a community format in a community radio - Tiziana Cavallo
Creativity: the key to creating successful advertising messages in the digital sonosphere - Mª Luz Barbeito Veloso; Anna Fajula Payet & Ana Mª Enrique Jiménez
Advertising characteristics and strategies in the prime time sports broadcasts: the final of the Spanish
King’s Cup and two radio shows in play - Emma Rodero; Marina Vázquez ; Olatz Larrea; Toni Sellas & Eva Comas
Description and analysis of advertising used in Argentinean radio prime time - Maria José Muller & Maria del Pilar Martínez-Costa
Chapter 4: Non-Linear Discourse and New Language Practices
Radio – the forgotten medium or user’s creative mental interaction and co-production - Titti Forsslung
One Half of the Story: Radio Drama, Online Audio and Transmedia Storytelling - Lance Dann
Formal you or informal ‘you’? ‘Você’ or ‘Tu’? How the radio listener has been treated in the paste decade
in Portugal - Teresa Costa Alves
Democratic barricades: the presence of radio in the resistance to the 1964 military coup - Carla Reis Longhi
Part III: Audiences
Chapter 5: New Methods of radio Audience Research
Measuring Community Radio Audiences - Lawrie Hallett
‘I know exactly who they are’: getting inside radio presenters’ conceptions of audience - Helen Wolfenden
Chapter 6: Radio Glocalization and New Patterns of Social Participation
The Radio afterlife. Three spheres of communication and community - Grazyna Stachyra
Radio and the Web: BBC radio as a new model of radio communication - Nair Moreira da Silva
University radio stations in Brazil and Portugal – The integration between interactive proposals of Rádio
Universitária do Minho and Rádio Universitária de São Paulo - Luciano Victor Barros Maluly
Brazilian Auditorium Programs and Questions concerning listening today - Júlia Lúcia de Oliveira Albano da Silva
Breaking Radio Boundaries: a new environment for Government Advertising aimed at young people -
Susana Gimenez Cisneros; Esteve Crespo Haro & Blanca Perona Páez
Music as mass consume in the web radio: towards a change in model - Aurora García González & Álvaro Camacho García
Part IV: Identity
Chapter 7: Identity and community building
Internet radio as a mean to construct community - Agnete Suhr
Free, Pirate, Community – the representation of identities on FM radios in São Paulo/Brazil - Eduardo Vicente
Radio, Citizenship and Social Identity - Valquíria Guimarães da Silva
The German-speaking radio in Silesia (Poland) - Verena Molinor
Basque and Gael speaking radio journalists: background and work patterns - Irati Agirreazkuenaga Onaindia
The Brazilian culture through the radio waves - Antonio Adami
Source : p.iv-vii du document
En ligne : http://www.lasics.uminho.pt/ojs/index.php/radioevolution Radio Evolution : Proceedings of the ECREA scientific conference on Radio Evolution, hosted by the Communication and Society Research Centre (CECS) of the University of Minho, in Braga, Portugal, from 14-16 September 2011 [document électronique] / Madalena Oliveira, Editeur scientifique ; Pedro Portela, Editeur scientifique ; Luis Antonio Santos, Editeur scientifique . - Braga (Universidade de Minho, Campus de Gualtar, 4710-057, Portugal) : Centro de Estudos de Communicacao e Sociedade, 2012 . - ; Document électronique.
ISBN : 978-989-97244-9-5 : Gratuit
Proposé au téléchargement (accès libre) :
"This eBook is available on CECS’s website only:
http://www.comunicacao.uminho.pt/cecs/"
Langues : Anglais
Catégories : CONGRES, SYMPOSIUMS, JOURNEES D'ETUDES, COLLOQUES, MANIFESTATIONS DIVERSES, ....
MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL: RADIO
MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL:NUMERIQUETags : radio numérique congrès EPRA réseaux sociaux radio communautaire internet information journalisme publicité contenu public Index. décimale : 384.54 Radio Résumé : FOREWORD (by Guy Starkey (Chair, ECREA Radio Research Section)
"This edited volume is an enduring outcome of the scientific conference Radio Evolution, hosted by the Communication and Society Research Centre (CECS) of the University of Minho, in Braga, Portugal, from 14-16 September 2011. This was the second conference to be organised on behalf of the Radio Research Section of the European Communication Research and Education Association (ECREA) and it coincided exactly with the second anniversary of the section’s first conference, held at Cyprus University of Technology (CUT) in 2009. Radio Evolution, like its predecessor, was organised through one of the two Vice-Chairs of the Radio Research Section, Professor Stanisław Jędrzejewski of Kozminski University of Warsaw, who was on a two-year research attachment to the University of Minho, and who works closely with our other section Vice-Chair, Professor Angeliki Gazi of CUT, and me. These separate section conferences are held every two years, and in cyclical fashion the whole of ECREA joins together in full plenary conferences of all seventeen thematic sections in another single location in each of the intervening years. In 2012 this will be at the Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey.
The work of organising Radio Evolution in Braga was very ably undertaken by Doctor Madalena Oliveira and her colleagues on the organising committee – in particular Pedro Portela, also of the Communication and Society Research Centre. With the full cooperation of the University of Minho and CECS, and financial support from our sponsors, Rádio Renascença, the conference was another resounding success. Abstracts were received from scholars in many countries in Europe, and in keeping with the inclusive nature of ECREA, in other continents including the Americas, Asia and Australasia. Delegates were greeted by another early-Autumn heat wave, with temperatures again in the mid-thirties, and we were able to enjoy the warm hospitality of our hosts and the many other attractions of Braga and its environs to the full. Coincidentally, Rádio Renascença – Portugal’s most listenedto radio group - was celebrating 75 years of broadcasting. We would like to place on record here our sincere gratitude to them for their financial assistance and to Madalena and her team for their dedication, organisational skills, professionalism and obvious enthusiasm for radio.
The work of Radio Evolution did not end in September 2011. The publication of this very timely e-book will enable many of the papers given in Braga to live on as a testament to the dedication and commitment to scholarly research into radio of our hosts, our sponsors, the scientific committee who peer-reviewed the abstracts,and the many delegates. Radio is truly evolving, in ways that would have been inconceivable to our predecessors, and radio content is now available in many different forms and on many different platforms. This collection of papers, and the considerable work undertaken behind the scenes since September 2011 to prepare it for publication, represent a welcome addition to the growing body of informed literature about our subject."
Source : p.1 du documentNote de contenu : Foreword
Preface - Madalena Oliveira, Pedro Portela & Luís António Santos
PART I: TECHNOLOGIES
Chapter 1: Radio: The challenges of Web 2.0 and Social Networks
Sharing and retweeting sounds – the relation between radio journalism and social networks - Luís Bonixe
Doing radio in the age of Facebook - Tiziano Bonini
Radio 2.0 in Higher Education Communities. An approximation of Aveiro University members perceptions
- Teresa Piñero-Otero & Fernando Ramos
How ‘new technologies’ impact Community Radio - Lawrie Hallett
Spanish talk Radio Stations on Twitter: Still reluctant to embrace its potential - Susana Herrera Damas & José Luís Requejo Aléman
Synergies between broadcast music radio and online radio: how to apeal the youth audience.The Spanish
and Catalan case - Maria Gutiérrez; Xavi Ribes; Josep Maria Martí; Belén Monclús & Luisa Martínez
Listening to what people who don’t listen to radio - Pierre C. Bélanger
Chapter 2: Towards Industry Imperatives and Multimedia Contexts 93
Radio journalists and the Internet: a study on perceptions - Hélder Bastos; Helena Lima; Nuno Moutinho & Isabel Reis
Casting doubts on Web Media. Can Internet Radio make a difference in the Greek case? - Christos Barboutis & Alexandros Baltzis
The development of the news-information production model on general-interest radio in Spain: the case
of Cadenaser.com - Maria del Pilar Martínez-Costa; Elsa Moreno & Avelino Amoedo
Digital radio in Brazil: analysis of an unfinished debate - Carlos Eduardo Esch & Nélia R. del Bianco
From Radio to R@dio: broadcasting in the 21st century - Paula Cordeiro
Live and local no more? Listening communities and globalizing trends in the ownership and production of local radio - Guy Starkey
Local broadcasters in the convergent media house – the case of Norway - Ilona Biernacka-Ligieza
The Ways of Participation. The volunteers in the community radio stations of Grenoble (France) -
Maria Holubowicz
Influences of Political Economy on International Radio broadcasting: the case of radio E. - Ariane Demonget
Euranet: a Case of Study of Pan-European Radio - Manuel Fernández Sande & J. Ignacio Gallego Pérez
Part II: Content
Chapter 3: New Radio Genres and the Creative Power of the sound 219
Changes in Patterns of contemporary China’s radio programs – helping each other in Beijing: a case study - Cao Lu & Meng Wei
The French highway radio: a model for tomorrow’s digital informations and service radio? - Charles Dargent
Band FM of Journalism of São Paulo – Emergence and consolidation of a new segment and a new audience - Elisa Marconi
Radiographing an ‘Expatriate’ Space - Inês David
Radio today: the risks of the past and an uncertain future - Alejandro López Merayo & Mª de la Peña Mónica Perez Alaejo
Romeo in love: a community format in a community radio - Tiziana Cavallo
Creativity: the key to creating successful advertising messages in the digital sonosphere - Mª Luz Barbeito Veloso; Anna Fajula Payet & Ana Mª Enrique Jiménez
Advertising characteristics and strategies in the prime time sports broadcasts: the final of the Spanish
King’s Cup and two radio shows in play - Emma Rodero; Marina Vázquez ; Olatz Larrea; Toni Sellas & Eva Comas
Description and analysis of advertising used in Argentinean radio prime time - Maria José Muller & Maria del Pilar Martínez-Costa
Chapter 4: Non-Linear Discourse and New Language Practices
Radio – the forgotten medium or user’s creative mental interaction and co-production - Titti Forsslung
One Half of the Story: Radio Drama, Online Audio and Transmedia Storytelling - Lance Dann
Formal you or informal ‘you’? ‘Você’ or ‘Tu’? How the radio listener has been treated in the paste decade
in Portugal - Teresa Costa Alves
Democratic barricades: the presence of radio in the resistance to the 1964 military coup - Carla Reis Longhi
Part III: Audiences
Chapter 5: New Methods of radio Audience Research
Measuring Community Radio Audiences - Lawrie Hallett
‘I know exactly who they are’: getting inside radio presenters’ conceptions of audience - Helen Wolfenden
Chapter 6: Radio Glocalization and New Patterns of Social Participation
The Radio afterlife. Three spheres of communication and community - Grazyna Stachyra
Radio and the Web: BBC radio as a new model of radio communication - Nair Moreira da Silva
University radio stations in Brazil and Portugal – The integration between interactive proposals of Rádio
Universitária do Minho and Rádio Universitária de São Paulo - Luciano Victor Barros Maluly
Brazilian Auditorium Programs and Questions concerning listening today - Júlia Lúcia de Oliveira Albano da Silva
Breaking Radio Boundaries: a new environment for Government Advertising aimed at young people -
Susana Gimenez Cisneros; Esteve Crespo Haro & Blanca Perona Páez
Music as mass consume in the web radio: towards a change in model - Aurora García González & Álvaro Camacho García
Part IV: Identity
Chapter 7: Identity and community building
Internet radio as a mean to construct community - Agnete Suhr
Free, Pirate, Community – the representation of identities on FM radios in São Paulo/Brazil - Eduardo Vicente
Radio, Citizenship and Social Identity - Valquíria Guimarães da Silva
The German-speaking radio in Silesia (Poland) - Verena Molinor
Basque and Gael speaking radio journalists: background and work patterns - Irati Agirreazkuenaga Onaindia
The Brazilian culture through the radio waves - Antonio Adami
Source : p.iv-vii du document
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