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CULTIVATION OF PERCEPTIONS OF SOCIAL REALITY:History

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Theories of Communication ­ MCM 511
VU
LESSON 19
CULTIVATION OF PERCEPTIONS OF SOCIAL REALITY
Since the dawn of mass mediated entertainment, people have feared powerful and harmful media
effects, especially on the children. Through the years the research findings have varied, but a number of
studies have shown that the connection between viewing violence and committing violent acts is not
merely a public perception. Today research continues and many answers have been determined, but
many questions remain.
The cultivation hypothesis developed as one attempt to explain the influence of television on its
viewers. The cultivation tradition grew out of a media violence research project called the Cultural
Indicators Project, headed in the 1960s by George Gerbner, a University of Pennsylvania
communication scholar. Investigators explored the relationship of long-tem television viewing, to the
inculcation of various perceptions, values, and beliefs on the part of audiences.
Simply stated, the cultivation hypothesis proposes that over time, heavy viewers of television develop
views of the world similar to what they see on television. The basic assumption underlying the
cultivation or enculturation, approach is that repeated exposures to consistent media portrayal and
themes influence our perceptions of these items in the direction of the media portrayals.
In effect, learning from the media environment is generalized, sometimes incorrectly to the social
environment.
History
Some early research studies indicated that media portrayals of certain topic could have an impact on
audience perceptions, particularly if the media were the main information sources. DeFleur in 1967
found that television had a homogenizing effect on children's perceptions of occupations commonly
shown on television.
Then to study the viewer perceptions of social reality stems from the Cultural Indicators project of
George Gerbner and his associates. Since 1968 they have collected data on the content of television and
have analyzed the impact of heavy exposure on the audience. Some of the many variables that have
been content analyzed are the demographic portraits of perpetrators and victims of television violence,
the prevalence of violent acts, the types of violence portrayed, and the contexts of violence.
They found that long-term exposure to television, in which frequent violence is virtually inescapable,
tends to cultivate the image of relatively mean and dangerous world. The basic hypothesis of cultivation
analysis is that the more time one spends living in the world of television, the more likely one is to
report conceptions of social reality that can be traced to television portrayals. In their finding indicated
that the perceptions of reality were cultivated by television.
Conceptual roots
Cultivation adherents argue that television as a `whole sale distributor of images is different from other
mass media. It serves as the great storyteller of our age.
Programs are produced to appeal to the entire population. Even very young viewers find it easy to
become enthralled by an entertaining television show. According to these researchers the diverse publics
all tend to think more alike when watching television because they all receive similar messages.
All television program, from entertaining action program to news programs, possess
similar, repetitive patterns sometimes called myths, facts , or ideologies. These patterns are thought to
influence viewers' perception of the world.
Long-term exposure to these overall patterns of television programming is most likely to result in the
`steady entrenchment of mainstream orientations for most viewers.'
Mainstreaming and Resonance
Mainstreaming is one of the principal concepts that underlie cultivation analysis; another is resonance.
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Theories of Communication ­ MCM 511
VU
Mainstreaming
Mainstreaming assumes that dominant sets of attitudes, beliefs, values and practices exist within
cultures. Patterns also emerge across the spectrum of television programming-patterns regarding
outcomes to various situation, gender roles,, minority representation and so froth.
These patterns result in a "mainstream set of attitudes beliefs and values that are repetitively presented
on television. Heavy television viewers tend to cultivate similar mainstream views , cultivation
researcher Nancy Signorielli and Michael Morgan defined the concept in this way"
Mainstreaming means that heavy viewing may absorb or override differences in perspectives and
behavior which ordinarily stem from other factors and influences, in other words, differences found in
the responses of different groups of viewers, differences that usually are associated with the varied
cultural, social, and political characteristics of these groups, are diminished or even absent from the
responses of heavy viewers in these same groups. So mainstreaming is a leveling effect.
Heavy viewing resulting in a common viewpoint washes out differences in perceptions of reality usually
caused by demographic and social factors.
Resonance
Resonance occurs when real world support the distorted image of reality shown on television. Whenever
direct experience is in agreement with the messages from television, the messages are reinforced- they
resonate- the cultivation effect is amplified.
So resonance is when the media reinforce what is seen in real life, thus giving an audience member a
`double dose' the resulting increase in the cultivation effect is attributed to resonance. For example,
research has shown that the heavy television viewers who are most likely to fear crime are those who
live in inner-city areas where crime rates are high. Cultivation researcher stresses that the concept of
cultivation assumes that television and its publics interact in a dynamic process.
The extent to which person cultivates the messages seen on television depends upon a number of
factors. Some people are more susceptible to cultivation influence due to personality traits, social
background, cultural mores (education) and even their past television viewing experiences.
Gerbner and his associates explained the interactive process in this way:
Although a viewer's gender or age of class makes a difference in perspective, television viewing can
make a similar and interacting difference. Viewing may help define what it means, for example, to be an
adolescent female member of a given social class. The interaction is a continuous process as is
(cultivation) beginning with infancy and going on from cradle to grave.
Theoretical developments
After an extensive literature review scholars concluded that there was evidence for a link between
viewing and beliefs regardless of the kind of social reality in question.
However additional research has also shown that cultivation hypothesis may be more complicated than
first thought.
There is evidence that cultivation may be less dependent on the total amount of TV viewing than on the
specific types of programs viewed.
Research also indicates that cultivation effect is more pronounced among active viewers than among
low-involvement viewers and that personal experience with crime was an important mediating variable
that affected the impact of TV programs on cultivating an attitude of vulnerability toward crime.
Additionally it was found out that the perceived reality of the TV content had an impact on cultivation.
Similarly other variables such as identification with TV characters, IQ, and informational needs of the
viewer had differential effects .In other words, different people react indifferent ways to TV content,
and these different reactions determine the strength of the cultivation effect.
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Theories of Communication ­ MCM 511
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Apart from these there are other multivariate model of cultivation which are taken into account by
researchers like:-
·  Is viewing done to meet informational needs or as diversion
·  The number of information alternatives available.
Research has shown that maximum occurs among heavy viewers who watch for information, believe the
content to be real and have few alternative sources of information. Tapper in 1995 presents a possible
conceptual model of the cultivation process that is divided into two phases.
·  Phase one deals with content acquisition and takes into account such variables as motives
for viewing, selective viewing, the type of genre viewed, and perceptions of the reality of
the content.
·  Phase two is the storage phase and elaborates those constructs that might affect long-term
memory.
Researchers have presented a psychological model of the cultivation process based on the notion of
accessibility of information in a person's memory. They posit that human memory works much like a
storage bin. When new information is acquired, a copy of that new information is placed on top of the
appropriate bin. Later when information is being retrieved for decision making, the contents of the bin
are searched form the top down, thus information deposited most recently and most frequently stand a
better chance of being recalled.
Similarly researchers have also reported the results of their empirical test that the faster a person's able
to make a response, the more accessible is the information retrieved. Consequently, when confronted
with a social reality judgment, heavy TV viewers should be able to make judgments faster than light
viewers and their judgments should also demonstrate cultivation. (e.g. soap operas)
There are two discrete steps in performing a cultivation analysis.
·  First, descriptions of the media world are obtained from periodic content analyses of large
blocks of media content. The result of this content analysis is the identification of the
messages of the television world. These messages represent consistent patterns in the
portrayal of specific issues, policies, and topics that are often at odds with their occurrence
in real life. The identification of the consistent portrayals is followed by the construction of
a set of questions designed to detect a cultivation effect. Each question poses two or more
alternatives.
One alternative is more consistent with the world as seen ton television, while another is
more in line with the real world. (e.g. 60% homicide done by strangers in real life 16%.
The question base on this discrepancy was. Does fatal violence occur between strangers or
between relatives and acquaintances. The response `strangers' was considered to be the
television answer)
·
The second step involves surveying audiences about their television exposure , dividing
sample into heavy and light viewers(4 hours a day  is usually the dividing line) and
comparing their answers to the questions that differentiate the television world from the real
world. in addition, data are often collected on possible control variables such as gender, age
and socioeconomic status. A statistical procedure consists of correlation analysis between
the amount of television viewing and scores on an index reflecting the number of television
answers to the comparison questions.
In sum, cultivation has proven to be an evocative and heuristic notion. It is likely that future research
will concentrate on identifying key variables important to the process and on specifying the
psychological processes that underlie the process.
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Table of Contents:
  1. COMMUNICATION:Nature of communication, Transactional approach, Communication is symbolic:
  2. THEORY, PARADIGM AND MODEL (I):Positivistic Perspective, Critical Perspective
  3. THEORY, PARADIGM AND MODEL (II):Empirical problems, Conceptual problems
  4. FROM COMMUNICATION TO MASS COMMUNICATION MODELS:Channel
  5. NORMATIVE THEORIES:Authoritarian Theory, Libertarian Theory, Limitations
  6. HUTCHINS COMMISSION ON FREEDOM, CHICAGO SCHOOL & BASIC PRINCIPLES OF SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY THEORY
  7. CIVIC JOURNALISM, DEVELOPMENT MEDIA THEORY & DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPANT THEORY
  8. LIMITATIONS OF THE PRESS THEORY:Concentration and monopoly, Commercialism
  9. MCQUAIL’S FOUR KINDS OF THEORIES:Social scientific theory, Critical theory
  10. PROPAGANDA THEORIES:Origin of Propaganda, Engineering of Consent, Behaviorism
  11. PARADIGM SHIFT & TWO STEP FLOW OF INFORMATION
  12. MIDDLE RANGE THEORIES:Background, Functional Analysis Approach, Elite Pluralism
  13. KLAPPER’S PHENOMENSITIC THEORY:Klapper’s Generalizations, Criticism
  14. DIFFUSION OF INNOVATION THEORY:Innovators, Early adopters
  15. CHALLENGING THE DOMINANT PARADIGM:Catharsis Social learning Social cognitive theory
  16. SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEROY:Symbolizing Capacity, MODELLING
  17. MODELING FROM MASS MEDIA:Recent research, Summary, PRIMING EFFECTS
  18. PRIMING EFFECT:Conceptual Roots, Perceived meaning, Percieved justifiability
  19. CULTIVATION OF PERCEPTIONS OF SOCIAL REALITY:History
  20. SYSTEMS THEORIES OF COMMUNICATION PROCESSES:System
  21. EMERGENCE OF CRITICAL & CULTURAL THEORIES OF MASS COMMUNICATION
  22. REVISION:Positivistic perspective, Interpretive Perspective, Inductive approach
  23. CRITICAL THEORIES & ROLE OF MASS COMMUNICATION IN A SOCIETY -THE MEDIATION OF SOCIAL RELATIONS
  24. ROLE OF MASS MEDIA IN SOCIAL ORDER & MARXIST THEORY:Positive View
  25. KEY PRINCIPLES USED IN MARXISM:Materialism, Class Struggle, Superstructure
  26. CONSUMER SOCIETY:Role of mass media in alienation, Summary of Marxism
  27. COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE:Neo Marxism, Characteristics of Culture
  28. HEGEMONY:What exactly is the meaning of "hegemony"?
  29. CULTURE INDUSTRY:Gramscianism on Communications Matters
  30. POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY I:Internationalization, Vertical Integration
  31. POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY II:Diversification, Instrumental
  32. POLITICAL ECONOMIC THEORY III:Criticism, Power of Advertising
  33. AGENDA SETTING THEORY:A change in thinking, First empirical test
  34. FRAMING & SPIRAL OF SILENCE:Spiral of Silence, Assessing public opinion
  35. SPIRAL OF SILENCE:Fear of isolation, Assessing public opinion, Micro-level
  36. MARSHALL MCLUHAN: THE MEDIUM IS THE MESSAGE AND MASSAGE
  37. KNOWLEDGE GAP THEORY:Criticism on Marshal McLuhan
  38. MEDIA SYSTEM DEPENDENCY THEORY:Media System Dependency Theory
  39. USES AND GRATIFICATIONS THEORY:Methods
  40. RECEPTION THEORY
  41. FRAMING AND FRAME ANALYSIS:Information Processing Theory, Summing up
  42. TRENDS IN MASS COMMUNICATION I:Communication Science, Direct channels
  43. TRENDS IN MASS COMMUNICATION II:Communication Maxims, Emotions
  44. GLOBALIZATION AND MEDIA:Mediated Communication, Post Modernism
  45. REVISION:Microscopic Theories, Mediation of Social Relations