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Spero vi piaccia!!! Sono in ansia lol★ SOCIAL ★Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/4iexis/ Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/4lexis/ Email: chahaotic@gmail.comSe vuoi offrirmi un caffè e supportare il canale: https://ko-fi.com/4lexis Il canale lo trovi anche qui: https://www.youtube.com/@ChahaoticFONTI - La bibliografia purtroppo non entra tutta quindi se volete un articolo in particolare, scrivetemi e ve lo mando :)- Baym, N.K. (2015) ‘Social Media and the Struggle for Society', Social Media + Society, 1(1).- Boyle, S. (2024) ‘Is doom scrolling really rotting our brains? The evidence is getting harder to ignore', The Guardian.- Brown, A. (2009) ‘Google isn't making us dumb – or smart. That's the problem', The Guardian.- Cain, M.S. and Mitroff, S.R. (2011) ‘Distractor filtering in media multitaskers', Perception, 40(10), pp. 1183–1192.- Carr, N. (2008) ‘Is Google Making Us Stupid?', The Atlantic.- Cascio, J. (2009) ‘Get Smarter', The Atlantic- Cbkwgl (2022) ‘Bottomless Bowl Experiment and Attention Economy', Project Management and User Experience.- Chayka, K. (2024) ‘The Trump Assassination Attempt Meets the Internet's Brain-Rot Era', The New Yorker.- Clark, A. and Chalmers, D. (1998) ‘The Extended Mind', Analysis, 58(1), pp. 7–19.- Estes, A.C. (2011) ‘Google Is Making Us Stupid and Smart at the Same Time?', The Atlantic.- Firth, J. et al. (2019) ‘The “online brain”: how the Internet may be changing our cognition', World Psychiatry, 18(2), p. 119. - Fleming, A. (2025) ‘All in the mind? The surprising truth about brain rot', The Guardian, 29 January. - Francis, G. (2017) ‘Irresistible: Why We Can't Stop Checking, Scrolling, Clicking and Watching – review', The Guardian.- Greenfield, A. (2017) ‘Rise of the machines: who is the “internet of things” good for?', The Guardian.- Gurwinder (2024) The Intellectual Obesity Crisis. - Heaton, B. (2024) ‘Brain rot' named Oxford Word of the Year 2024, Oxford University Press. - Heller, N. (2024) ‘The Battle for Attention', The New Yorker.- Immerwahr, D. (2025) ‘What if the Attention Crisis Is All a Distraction?', The New Yorker.- ‘Intervista a Maryanne Wolf' (2019) DPU | Diritto Penale e Uomo. - Isaacson, W. (2013) ‘Brain Gain', The New York Times.- Kuss, D.J. and Griffiths, M.D. (2017) ‘Social Networking Sites and Addiction: Ten Lessons Learned', - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 14(3), p. 311.- Loh, K.K. and Kanai, R. (2014) ‘Higher Media Multi-Tasking Activity Is Associated with Smaller Gray-- Matter Density in the Anterior Cingulate Cortex', PLOS ONE, 9(9), p. e106698. - Media, C. (2010) ‘Our “Deep Reading” Brain: Its Digital Evolution Poses Questions', Nieman Reports.- Moshel, M.L. et al. (2024) ‘Neuropsychological Deficits in Disordered Screen Use Behaviours: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis', Neuropsychology Review, 34(3), pp. 791–822. - Ophir, E., Nass, C. and Wagner, A.D. (2009) ‘Cognitive control in media multitaskers', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 106(37), pp. 15583–15587. - Orben, A. (2019) ‘We're told that too much screen time hurts our kids. Where's the evidence?', The Observer.- Paul, A.M. (2013) ‘Reading Literature Makes Us Smarter and Nicer', Time.- Pinker, S. (2010) ‘Opinion | Mind Over Mass Media', The New York Times.- Prior, K.S. (2013) ‘How Reading Makes Us More Human', The Atlantic.- Rajaram, S. and Marsh, E.J. (2019) ‘Cognition in the Internet age: What are the important questions?', Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, 8(1), pp. 46–49. - Sparrow, B., Liu, J. and Wegner, D.M. (2011) ‘Google Effects on Memory: Cognitive Consequences of Having Information at Our Fingertips', Science, 333(6043), pp. 776–778.
It's the Friday edition of the "daily" on the podcast feed as host Mike Gill returns to go over several sports media subjects and has a special guest, as well.First he talks the Friday night College Football Playoff history making game as Notre Dame becomes the first team to ever host a CFP game. It also the first non-NBC Notre Dame home broadcast since Ron Franklin, Gary Danielson, and Neil Lomax (sideline) called a November 1990 game.Next, Mike has more on the Bucks-Thunder "NBA Cup Final" down big from last year's Pacers-Lakers final, still second-largest audience of season:Also, Netflix locks down media rights deal for the FIFA Women's World Cup in 2027 and 2031 1st time the rights to the event were sold separately from the men's World Cup in the U.S. market Fox held women's English-language rights since the 2015 World Cup.And, is Netflix ready for Christmas Day football?Temple University professor of media studies and production Geoffrey Baym recently discussed with Mike why it is difficult for streaming services to air live events, and what's at stake in Netflix's upcoming Christmas Day NFL broadcasts. Additionally, later in January what will happen when it becomes the home for WWE's live flagship program Monday Night Raw?It's all on the "Last Word on Sports Media Daily" and make sure to follow/subscribe to this feed on Apple/Spreaker/Spotify, etc.!
It's the Friday edition of the "daily" on the podcast feed as host Mike Gill returns to go over several sports media subjects and has a special guest, as well.First he talks the Friday night College Football Playoff history making game as Notre Dame becomes the first team to ever host a CFP game. It also the first non-NBC Notre Dame home broadcast since Ron Franklin, Gary Danielson, and Neil Lomax (sideline) called a November 1990 game.Next, Mike has more on the Bucks-Thunder "NBA Cup Final" down big from last year's Pacers-Lakers final, still second-largest audience of season:Also, Netflix locks down media rights deal for the FIFA Women's World Cup in 2027 and 2031 1st time the rights to the event were sold separately from the men's World Cup in the U.S. market Fox held women's English-language rights since the 2015 World Cup.And, is Netflix ready for Christmas Day football?Temple University professor of media studies and production Geoffrey Baym recently discussed with Mike why it is difficult for streaming services to air live events, and what's at stake in Netflix's upcoming Christmas Day NFL broadcasts. Additionally, later in January what will happen when it becomes the home for WWE's live flagship program Monday Night Raw?It's all on the "Last Word on Sports Media Daily" and make sure to follow/subscribe to this feed on Apple/Spreaker/Spotify, etc.!
Tim Baym. Работа в CLAN и самый широкий угол by matematic.xyz
The blurred lines between journalism, advertising, and entertainment have contributed to a lack of media literacy in today's audiences. So, how do we discern when we have all the facts, particularly as we gear up toward an election? In this interview, Dr. Geoffrey Baym explains the history of political content in media and how we can practice better media literacy in the lead-up to the 2024 election.Dr. Geoffrey Baym is a professor of media studies and directs the PhD program in Media and Communication at Temple University. A former TV news producer, Dr. Baym explores the shifting styles and standards of broadcast journalism, public affairs media, and political discourse. His work particularly examines the melding of news, entertainment, politics, and popular culture. His publications include the award-winning From Cronkite to Colbert: The Evolution of Broadcast News and the edited collection News Parody and Political Satire Across the Globe.Thank you to Starts with Us for their collaboration on this series. Starts with Us is an organization committed to overcoming extreme political and cultural division. Check them out at startswith.us.
As Twitter enters its own adolescence, both the users and the creators of this famous social media platform find themselves engaging with a tool that certainly could not have been imagined at its inception. In their engaging book Twitter: A Biography (NYU Press, 2020), Jean Burgess and Nancy K. Baym (@nancybaym) tell the fascinating and surprising story of how this platform developed from a quirky SMS tool for publicly sharing intimate details of personal life to a major source of late-breaking news, political activism, and even governmental communication. This story explores how many of Twitter's most ubiquitous and iconic conventions were not systematically rolled out from a centralized corporate strategy, but so often driven by users who continued to innovate within the limitations of the platform they had to democratically create the platform they desired. Yet this story highlights the tensions along the way as Twitter has adapted to new and unforeseen challenges, business models, and social consequences as the experiments of social media have become increasingly powerful, influential, and contested. This book is a must read for anyone interested in the wild and changing landscape of internet communication and communities. Ryan David Shelton (@ryoldfashioned) is a social historian of British and American Protestantism and a PhD researcher at Queen’s University Belfast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/technology
As Twitter enters its own adolescence, both the users and the creators of this famous social media platform find themselves engaging with a tool that certainly could not have been imagined at its inception. In their engaging book Twitter: A Biography (NYU Press, 2020), Jean Burgess and Nancy K. Baym (@nancybaym) tell the fascinating and surprising story of how this platform developed from a quirky SMS tool for publicly sharing intimate details of personal life to a major source of late-breaking news, political activism, and even governmental communication. This story explores how many of Twitter's most ubiquitous and iconic conventions were not systematically rolled out from a centralized corporate strategy, but so often driven by users who continued to innovate within the limitations of the platform they had to democratically create the platform they desired. Yet this story highlights the tensions along the way as Twitter has adapted to new and unforeseen challenges, business models, and social consequences as the experiments of social media have become increasingly powerful, influential, and contested. This book is a must read for anyone interested in the wild and changing landscape of internet communication and communities. Ryan David Shelton (@ryoldfashioned) is a social historian of British and American Protestantism and a PhD researcher at Queen's University Belfast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/book-of-the-day
As Twitter enters its own adolescence, both the users and the creators of this famous social media platform find themselves engaging with a tool that certainly could not have been imagined at its inception. In their engaging book Twitter: A Biography (NYU Press, 2020), Jean Burgess and Nancy K. Baym (@nancybaym) tell the fascinating and surprising story of how this platform developed from a quirky SMS tool for publicly sharing intimate details of personal life to a major source of late-breaking news, political activism, and even governmental communication. This story explores how many of Twitter's most ubiquitous and iconic conventions were not systematically rolled out from a centralized corporate strategy, but so often driven by users who continued to innovate within the limitations of the platform they had to democratically create the platform they desired. Yet this story highlights the tensions along the way as Twitter has adapted to new and unforeseen challenges, business models, and social consequences as the experiments of social media have become increasingly powerful, influential, and contested. This book is a must read for anyone interested in the wild and changing landscape of internet communication and communities. Ryan David Shelton (@ryoldfashioned) is a social historian of British and American Protestantism and a PhD researcher at Queen’s University Belfast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/science-technology-and-society
As Twitter enters its own adolescence, both the users and the creators of this famous social media platform find themselves engaging with a tool that certainly could not have been imagined at its inception. In their engaging book Twitter: A Biography (NYU Press, 2020), Jean Burgess and Nancy K. Baym (@nancybaym) tell the fascinating and surprising story of how this platform developed from a quirky SMS tool for publicly sharing intimate details of personal life to a major source of late-breaking news, political activism, and even governmental communication. This story explores how many of Twitter's most ubiquitous and iconic conventions were not systematically rolled out from a centralized corporate strategy, but so often driven by users who continued to innovate within the limitations of the platform they had to democratically create the platform they desired. Yet this story highlights the tensions along the way as Twitter has adapted to new and unforeseen challenges, business models, and social consequences as the experiments of social media have become increasingly powerful, influential, and contested. This book is a must read for anyone interested in the wild and changing landscape of internet communication and communities. Ryan David Shelton (@ryoldfashioned) is a social historian of British and American Protestantism and a PhD researcher at Queen’s University Belfast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/communications
As Twitter enters its own adolescence, both the users and the creators of this famous social media platform find themselves engaging with a tool that certainly could not have been imagined at its inception. In their engaging book Twitter: A Biography (NYU Press, 2020), Jean Burgess and Nancy K. Baym (@nancybaym) tell the fascinating and surprising story of how this platform developed from a quirky SMS tool for publicly sharing intimate details of personal life to a major source of late-breaking news, political activism, and even governmental communication. This story explores how many of Twitter's most ubiquitous and iconic conventions were not systematically rolled out from a centralized corporate strategy, but so often driven by users who continued to innovate within the limitations of the platform they had to democratically create the platform they desired. Yet this story highlights the tensions along the way as Twitter has adapted to new and unforeseen challenges, business models, and social consequences as the experiments of social media have become increasingly powerful, influential, and contested. This book is a must read for anyone interested in the wild and changing landscape of internet communication and communities. Ryan David Shelton (@ryoldfashioned) is a social historian of British and American Protestantism and a PhD researcher at Queen’s University Belfast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/popular-culture
As Twitter enters its own adolescence, both the users and the creators of this famous social media platform find themselves engaging with a tool that certainly could not have been imagined at its inception. In their engaging book Twitter: A Biography (NYU Press, 2020), Jean Burgess and Nancy K. Baym (@nancybaym) tell the fascinating and surprising story of how this platform developed from a quirky SMS tool for publicly sharing intimate details of personal life to a major source of late-breaking news, political activism, and even governmental communication. This story explores how many of Twitter's most ubiquitous and iconic conventions were not systematically rolled out from a centralized corporate strategy, but so often driven by users who continued to innovate within the limitations of the platform they had to democratically create the platform they desired. Yet this story highlights the tensions along the way as Twitter has adapted to new and unforeseen challenges, business models, and social consequences as the experiments of social media have become increasingly powerful, influential, and contested. This book is a must read for anyone interested in the wild and changing landscape of internet communication and communities. Ryan David Shelton (@ryoldfashioned) is a social historian of British and American Protestantism and a PhD researcher at Queen’s University Belfast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
As Twitter enters its own adolescence, both the users and the creators of this famous social media platform find themselves engaging with a tool that certainly could not have been imagined at its inception. In their engaging book Twitter: A Biography (NYU Press, 2020), Jean Burgess and Nancy K. Baym (@nancybaym) tell the fascinating and surprising story of how this platform developed from a quirky SMS tool for publicly sharing intimate details of personal life to a major source of late-breaking news, political activism, and even governmental communication. This story explores how many of Twitter's most ubiquitous and iconic conventions were not systematically rolled out from a centralized corporate strategy, but so often driven by users who continued to innovate within the limitations of the platform they had to democratically create the platform they desired. Yet this story highlights the tensions along the way as Twitter has adapted to new and unforeseen challenges, business models, and social consequences as the experiments of social media have become increasingly powerful, influential, and contested. This book is a must read for anyone interested in the wild and changing landscape of internet communication and communities. Ryan David Shelton (@ryoldfashioned) is a social historian of British and American Protestantism and a PhD researcher at Queen’s University Belfast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Michael Baym is an Assistant Professor of Biomedical Informatics at Harvard University. His research is centered around the problem of antibiotic resistance, at the intersection of experimental, theoretical and computational techniques. His work ranges from understanding the basic mechanisms of evolution to the development of algorithms for computation on massive biological datasets. Baym received his PhD in Mathematics from MIT and was a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard Medical School in Systems Biology. He has won several awards including a Packard Fellowship, a Pew Biomedical Scholarship, and a Sloan Research Fellowship. He is also a part-time inventor, holding over four dozen issued US patents.
In this podcast episode, Dr. Baym, Senior Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research Lab, New England, gives us a pre-view to her upcoming keynote address at the NVivo Virtual Conference on September 23, 2020. Register for the conference here NVivo Virtual Conference
Những tin nóng được cập nhật trong bản tin ngày 8/6 như:Hà Nội xem xét việc tổ chức giải đua xe F1 vào cuối tháng 11Tỉnh ủy Phú Yên thông tin chính thức về việc xe biển xanh vào sân bayMỹ sẽ xem xét cấm các ứng dụng mạng xã hội của Trung QuốcWHO xem xét thư ngỏ về việc virus SARS-CoV-2 lây truyền qua không khíTrọng tài lại sai sót ở vòng 8 V-League, VFF yêu cầu kiên quyết xử lý.Bộ Công an vừa ban hành Thông tư 58/2020 quy trình cấp, thu hồi đăng ký, biển số phương tiện giao thông cơ giới đường bộ. Cụ thể, tại điểm đ khoản 6 Điều 25 của Thông tư quy định biển số ôtô kinh doanh vận tải sẽ có nền màu vàng, chữ và số màu đen, seri biển số sử dụng lần lượt một trong 20 chữ cái sau: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, K, L, M, N, P, S, T, U, V, X, Y, Z.
Dr. Nancy Baym is a communication scholar, a Principal Researcher in MSR’s Cambridge, Massachusetts, lab, and something of a cyberculture maven. She’s spent nearly three decades studying how people use communication technologies in their everyday relationships and written several books on the subject. The big take away? Communication technologies may have changed drastically over the years, but human communication itself? Not so much. Today, Dr. Baym shares her insights on a host of topics ranging from the arduous maintenance requirements of social media, to the dialectic tension between connection and privacy, to the funhouse mirror nature of emerging technologies. She also talks about her new book, Playing to the Crowd: Musicians, Audiences and the Intimate Work of Connection, which explores how the internet transformed – for better and worse – the relationship between artists and their fans.
There is nothing like hitting the open road. Tunes (or podcasts) on the radio, an exciting destination ahead of you and some vintage wheels getting you there. For Hayley Cooke, aka Miss Vee Dub that set of wheels needs to be a vintage Volkswagen! She spoke about fixing up her 1965 Beetle Baymax, finding her own pinup style and how the two passions fit together.
During PSU's summer leadership program, Building A Youth Movement (BAYM), students hit the streets to ask people their opinions about public education in Philly. There were a lot of different thoughts about the problems and the solutions for our school district. Students took these answers and created this Vox Pop. Listen and see if you agree with what Philly residents had to say. Carina Flaherty, Tatiana Griffin and Dan Jones recorded and produced this piece.
Student Union's week-long leadership institute BAYM (Building A Youth Movement) is entering into its 7th year. The program includes political education, leadership development and media trainings. BAYM is youth developed, youth driven, and youth facilitated. The program is 100% free, and participants will be provided with breakfast, lunch and tokens. Building A Youth Movement Leadership Institute August 9th to August 13th 10am-4pmPhiladelphia Student Union office4205 Chestnut St. Philadelphia, PA 19104Pre-registration is recommended. Register now!