Authors
Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Rasha Kamhawi, Narine Yegiyan
Publication date
2009/2/27
Journal
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media
Volume
53
Issue
1
Pages
90-111
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Description
This experiment tested the interaction of media channels (television, newspaper, and the Web), time delay, and the education level of audience members, using three memory measures. The lower education group encoded, stored, and retrieved television news information best while they showed less memory capacity for newspaper and Web news. For the higher education group, the opposite pattern emerged. They had better memory for newspaper and Web versions of news, compared to television. With time delay, these patterns persisted. They were also robust when controlling for participant evaluations of the news stories in terms of interest, informativeness, and understandability.
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Scholar articles