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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
VU
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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