Presentación preparada con motivo de conferencia invitada en State University of San Diego (California, Estados Unidos), durante estancia académica en el marco del proyecto de investigación Audiencias Activas y Periodismo. Febrero de 2015. María Sánchez González. Más información en www.cibermarikiya.com/cronica-de-mi-estancia-academica-en-california-estados-unidos
This study compared three different thrombin generation assays in patients with hemophilia A. The assays were an in-house test, Thrombogram, and Ceveron Alpha. 46 male patients with hemophilia A and 25 healthy volunteers were tested. The results showed that all assays could distinguish patients from controls, but their sensitivities differed. The in-house assay had the highest sensitivity for peak height compared to the other tests. While harmonizing the results improved correlations between assays, differences still remained likely due to variations in tissue factor and phospholipid concentrations between tests.
Thelma Steidle has over 30 years of experience in project management, system design and development. She has a B.S. in Business Administration and is a certified Project Management Professional and in HIPAA compliance. Her experience includes managing a $367 million project and leading the modernization of legacy systems at Highmark. She has experience designing new systems from the ground up and transitioning old systems to newer technologies. She is skilled in project management, system design, data modeling, development and implementation.
Thrombin Generation Test (TGT) & Rotational Thromboelastography (ROTEM™) and ...Saman Aghighi DBMS
This study aimed to use global assays like thrombin generation tests (TGT) and rotational thromboelastography (ROTEMTM) to assess heterogeneity in patients with severe haemophilia A (HA). TGT and ROTEMTM parameters were measured on plasma and whole blood samples from 34 severe HA patients. The results showed wide variation between patients, with TGT peak height ranging from 6-47% of normal and ROTEMTM MaxVel ranging from 1.7-6.7 mm/min. Some patients also had prothrombotic factors like factor V Leiden mutation or low natural anticoagulants. The study suggests TGT and ROTEMTM may help predict clinical phenotype in severe HA
The document is about the Year 12 Valete Mass for 2015. It was a special mass held to celebrate the graduating class of 2015 as they completed their final year of high school. The mass included readings, prayers and music to mark the occasion and bless the students as they moved on to their future endeavors after finishing school.
This study compared three different thrombin generation assays in patients with hemophilia A. The assays were an in-house test, Thrombogram, and Ceveron Alpha. 46 male patients with hemophilia A and 25 healthy volunteers were tested. The results showed that all assays could distinguish patients from controls, but their sensitivities differed. The in-house assay had the highest sensitivity for peak height compared to the other tests. While harmonizing the results improved correlations between assays, differences still remained likely due to variations in tissue factor and phospholipid concentrations between tests.
Thelma Steidle has over 30 years of experience in project management, system design and development. She has a B.S. in Business Administration and is a certified Project Management Professional and in HIPAA compliance. Her experience includes managing a $367 million project and leading the modernization of legacy systems at Highmark. She has experience designing new systems from the ground up and transitioning old systems to newer technologies. She is skilled in project management, system design, data modeling, development and implementation.
Thrombin Generation Test (TGT) & Rotational Thromboelastography (ROTEM™) and ...Saman Aghighi DBMS
This study aimed to use global assays like thrombin generation tests (TGT) and rotational thromboelastography (ROTEMTM) to assess heterogeneity in patients with severe haemophilia A (HA). TGT and ROTEMTM parameters were measured on plasma and whole blood samples from 34 severe HA patients. The results showed wide variation between patients, with TGT peak height ranging from 6-47% of normal and ROTEMTM MaxVel ranging from 1.7-6.7 mm/min. Some patients also had prothrombotic factors like factor V Leiden mutation or low natural anticoagulants. The study suggests TGT and ROTEMTM may help predict clinical phenotype in severe HA
The document is about the Year 12 Valete Mass for 2015. It was a special mass held to celebrate the graduating class of 2015 as they completed their final year of high school. The mass included readings, prayers and music to mark the occasion and bless the students as they moved on to their future endeavors after finishing school.
The Saint Ignatius House Cross Country team had a successful 2016 season. They won several regional meets throughout the fall and qualified multiple runners for the state championship meet in November. At the state meet, senior John Smith led the team with a 5th place finish to help Saint Ignatius win the state title for the first time in school history.
The Saint Ignatius Swimming Carnival was held in 2016. Students from various year levels participated in swimming races like freestyle, backstroke and relays. The event helped promote physical fitness, team spirit and friendly competition among the students.
Póster presentado en las I Jornadas Internacionales de Innovación Docente Universitaria en entornos de aprendizaje enriquecidos. Universidad Nacional de Educación a distancia. Madrid, del 19 al 21 de septiembre de 2012. Resumen en actas de Jornadas y disponible en http://congresos.uned.es/w3433/actividad_ponencias/ponencia/100
news:rewired - Linked data and the semantic webMartin Belam
This document discusses the Guardian News & Media's use of linked data and the semantic web to tag and connect their content. It notes that their content is now tagged with identifiers like ISBNs and MusicBrainz IDs to link related entities. It also discusses the increasing availability of government linked open data and how this can be used to provide additional context for news stories. The document advocates for making the Guardian's content accessible through consistent and open APIs and linking to outside datasets to enrich content.
BarCamp London 8 - Can hackers save journalism?andreajezovit
This document discusses how technology and new media platforms may help save journalism by crowd funding reporting, empowering citizens to ask questions, developing news curation and automated reporting tools, and leveraging data and the semantic web. Key ideas mentioned include allowing the public to financially support reporting on stories they want covered, giving people the ability to propose questions for journalists to investigate, automating some reporting tasks using data analysis, and creating structured semantic metadata to better organize online news information.
New information for new journalists pt2: dataPaul Bradshaw
This document discusses data journalism and provides tips for finding, cleaning, visualizing, and combining data sources to tell stories. It begins with an introduction to data journalism and provides examples of successful data-driven journalism projects. It then offers guidance on finding both public and private data sources, cleaning data to reduce errors, visualizing data to identify patterns and stories, mashing or combining different data sets, and making data computer-readable to build applications. The overall message is that data journalism involves using data to drive the discovery of new stories and insights.
Contoh-contoh alat musik melodis, harmonis, dan ritmis.Mengenal notasi balok, membaca not dalam paranada serta mengenal kunci musik beserta letak nada urutannya
The document summarizes the BBC's transition from a static publishing system to a dynamic semantic publishing (DSP) system. Some key points:
1) The static system was inflexible and did not allow for automated or personalized content publishing for large events like the World Cup or Olympics with thousands of pages.
2) The DSP system uses semantic technologies like ontologies, triplestores, and SPARQL to dynamically generate personalized and aggregated pages from tagged content assets.
3) This allowed the BBC to dramatically increase the breadth of published content while reducing journalist headcount through automated publishing. Events like the 2014 World Cup were covered with hundreds of dynamically generated pages.
The document discusses using semantic web technologies like SIOC and FOAF to help journalists integrate user-generated social media content into news stories. It describes how these ontologies can connect disparate online communities and metadata to aid in navigating, verifying, and reusing social data. The project aims to explore customizing SIOC for journalism and extending vocabularies like Schema.org to semantically enrich social content for news gathering and reporting.
A presentation on the value and the risks of identifying, mining, and visualizing data. All this is described in a big-data-aware setting. The presentation is meant for a wide audience, not requiring deep technical background.
The original presentation was done within the KAS Seminar on Data Journalism in Dec 2017.
Application of Ontology in Semantic Information Retrieval by Prof Shahrul Azm...Khirulnizam Abd Rahman
Application of Ontology in Semantic Information Retrieval
by Prof Shahrul Azman from FSTM, UKM
Presentation for MyREN Seminar 2014
Berjaya Hotel, Kuala Lumpur
27 November 2014
This document discusses RAI's approach to data driven journalism. It involves creating news stories by analyzing data. A data team works with journalists to harvest, analyze and verify data from various sources. They use tools like CKAN for data storage and analysis and DataWrapper for data visualization. The goal is to increase trust in information and improve the user experience through visual presentation of data. Some initial data journalism products have been created, and future work includes tighter integration of semantic data and open data.
The document discusses potential futures for journalism, including utilizing real-time web technologies, big data, and intelligent devices. It outlines opportunities for journalism through these technologies, such as non-citizen reporting and faster/deeper reporting through verification and linking to sources. However, it also notes challenges like legal/political constraints, privacy concerns, and commercialization of the public sphere.
The document discusses innovations in audience participation and its importance for media survival. It addresses professional training, entrepreneurship, and innovations that engage audiences. Examples of innovative Spanish media that integrate audiences through content, funding, and distribution are provided. Research presented finds that media surviving the crisis listen to citizens. There is a need for improved training in participatory journalism and new skills like managing communities. The opinions of future journalists on these issues are sought.
This document discusses innovation journalism (InJo), which is defined as journalism that covers innovation processes and innovation ecosystems. It argues that InJo is important because innovation is a major driver of economic growth but is not well covered by traditional news media. However, InJo is not developing faster due to challenges like the traditional beat structure of journalism and lack of a common language for discussing innovation. The document proposes the development of an international community and fellowship program in InJo to help address these challenges.
The Impact Of Digital Media On The Cinema IndustryCarla Bennington
Social media has significantly impacted the news industry by allowing news to spread much more quickly as major events unfold, shortening the time it takes for stories to enter the market. However, this speed of information sharing has also introduced inaccuracies as opinions on social media can spread before facts are verified. Citizen journalism has also changed the role of audiences, who now act as constant content producers in addition to consumers of news.
The Saint Ignatius House Cross Country team had a successful 2016 season. They won several regional meets throughout the fall and qualified multiple runners for the state championship meet in November. At the state meet, senior John Smith led the team with a 5th place finish to help Saint Ignatius win the state title for the first time in school history.
The Saint Ignatius Swimming Carnival was held in 2016. Students from various year levels participated in swimming races like freestyle, backstroke and relays. The event helped promote physical fitness, team spirit and friendly competition among the students.
Póster presentado en las I Jornadas Internacionales de Innovación Docente Universitaria en entornos de aprendizaje enriquecidos. Universidad Nacional de Educación a distancia. Madrid, del 19 al 21 de septiembre de 2012. Resumen en actas de Jornadas y disponible en http://congresos.uned.es/w3433/actividad_ponencias/ponencia/100
news:rewired - Linked data and the semantic webMartin Belam
This document discusses the Guardian News & Media's use of linked data and the semantic web to tag and connect their content. It notes that their content is now tagged with identifiers like ISBNs and MusicBrainz IDs to link related entities. It also discusses the increasing availability of government linked open data and how this can be used to provide additional context for news stories. The document advocates for making the Guardian's content accessible through consistent and open APIs and linking to outside datasets to enrich content.
BarCamp London 8 - Can hackers save journalism?andreajezovit
This document discusses how technology and new media platforms may help save journalism by crowd funding reporting, empowering citizens to ask questions, developing news curation and automated reporting tools, and leveraging data and the semantic web. Key ideas mentioned include allowing the public to financially support reporting on stories they want covered, giving people the ability to propose questions for journalists to investigate, automating some reporting tasks using data analysis, and creating structured semantic metadata to better organize online news information.
New information for new journalists pt2: dataPaul Bradshaw
This document discusses data journalism and provides tips for finding, cleaning, visualizing, and combining data sources to tell stories. It begins with an introduction to data journalism and provides examples of successful data-driven journalism projects. It then offers guidance on finding both public and private data sources, cleaning data to reduce errors, visualizing data to identify patterns and stories, mashing or combining different data sets, and making data computer-readable to build applications. The overall message is that data journalism involves using data to drive the discovery of new stories and insights.
Contoh-contoh alat musik melodis, harmonis, dan ritmis.Mengenal notasi balok, membaca not dalam paranada serta mengenal kunci musik beserta letak nada urutannya
The document summarizes the BBC's transition from a static publishing system to a dynamic semantic publishing (DSP) system. Some key points:
1) The static system was inflexible and did not allow for automated or personalized content publishing for large events like the World Cup or Olympics with thousands of pages.
2) The DSP system uses semantic technologies like ontologies, triplestores, and SPARQL to dynamically generate personalized and aggregated pages from tagged content assets.
3) This allowed the BBC to dramatically increase the breadth of published content while reducing journalist headcount through automated publishing. Events like the 2014 World Cup were covered with hundreds of dynamically generated pages.
The document discusses using semantic web technologies like SIOC and FOAF to help journalists integrate user-generated social media content into news stories. It describes how these ontologies can connect disparate online communities and metadata to aid in navigating, verifying, and reusing social data. The project aims to explore customizing SIOC for journalism and extending vocabularies like Schema.org to semantically enrich social content for news gathering and reporting.
A presentation on the value and the risks of identifying, mining, and visualizing data. All this is described in a big-data-aware setting. The presentation is meant for a wide audience, not requiring deep technical background.
The original presentation was done within the KAS Seminar on Data Journalism in Dec 2017.
Application of Ontology in Semantic Information Retrieval by Prof Shahrul Azm...Khirulnizam Abd Rahman
Application of Ontology in Semantic Information Retrieval
by Prof Shahrul Azman from FSTM, UKM
Presentation for MyREN Seminar 2014
Berjaya Hotel, Kuala Lumpur
27 November 2014
This document discusses RAI's approach to data driven journalism. It involves creating news stories by analyzing data. A data team works with journalists to harvest, analyze and verify data from various sources. They use tools like CKAN for data storage and analysis and DataWrapper for data visualization. The goal is to increase trust in information and improve the user experience through visual presentation of data. Some initial data journalism products have been created, and future work includes tighter integration of semantic data and open data.
The document discusses potential futures for journalism, including utilizing real-time web technologies, big data, and intelligent devices. It outlines opportunities for journalism through these technologies, such as non-citizen reporting and faster/deeper reporting through verification and linking to sources. However, it also notes challenges like legal/political constraints, privacy concerns, and commercialization of the public sphere.
The document discusses innovations in audience participation and its importance for media survival. It addresses professional training, entrepreneurship, and innovations that engage audiences. Examples of innovative Spanish media that integrate audiences through content, funding, and distribution are provided. Research presented finds that media surviving the crisis listen to citizens. There is a need for improved training in participatory journalism and new skills like managing communities. The opinions of future journalists on these issues are sought.
This document discusses innovation journalism (InJo), which is defined as journalism that covers innovation processes and innovation ecosystems. It argues that InJo is important because innovation is a major driver of economic growth but is not well covered by traditional news media. However, InJo is not developing faster due to challenges like the traditional beat structure of journalism and lack of a common language for discussing innovation. The document proposes the development of an international community and fellowship program in InJo to help address these challenges.
The Impact Of Digital Media On The Cinema IndustryCarla Bennington
Social media has significantly impacted the news industry by allowing news to spread much more quickly as major events unfold, shortening the time it takes for stories to enter the market. However, this speed of information sharing has also introduced inaccuracies as opinions on social media can spread before facts are verified. Citizen journalism has also changed the role of audiences, who now act as constant content producers in addition to consumers of news.
This document provides an executive summary of a report on digital-born news media in Europe. It finds that these organizations:
1) Are generally launched by journalists focused on quality journalism rather than business or technology.
2) Tend to be more prominent in Spain and France where legacy media are weaker, rather than Germany and the UK with strong legacy media.
3) Face similar challenges to legacy media around funding from advertising and distribution through platforms like Google and Facebook.
It then analyzes the different funding models, distribution strategies, and editorial priorities of digital-born news media in more detail.
The document discusses the impact of social media and digital media on the music, fashion, and cinema industries. It addresses how social media has changed how consumers discover and engage with music. It has also influenced the marketing strategies of fashion companies and how the industry promotes brands. Digital media has transformed the production, distribution, and viewing of films, posing both threats and opportunities to the cinema industry. Social media and new technologies continue to significantly impact traditional media industries.
Trabalho apresentado na World Media Economics and Management Conference, em Nova York, sobre os modelos de receita e negócios adotados pela mídia brasileira.
This document is a minor dissertation submitted by Jorge Martín Mora to University College Cork on May 15, 2015 about the 15-M Revolution social movement in Spain. It discusses how the 15-M movement utilized social media to organize mass protests in 2011 against the political and economic establishment. Social media allowed the movement to coordinate demonstrations across Spain and bring attention to their demands for greater participatory democracy and response to the financial crisis. While the 15-M movement did not achieve major political reforms, it has had ongoing social and political impacts by challenging Spain's two-party system and inspiring new forms of civic engagement and protest.
eCommunication: The 10 Paradigms of Media in the Digital Age by Jose Luis Orihuela. II A20 COST Conference: Towards New Media Paradigms. Content, Producers, Organizations and Audiences (Pamplona, 27-28 de junio de 2003). Published in: Towards New Media Paradigms: Content, Producers, Organisations and Audiences, Ediciones Eunate, Pamplona, 2004, pp. 129-135.
Cultural Management Issues In The Tourism IndustryCindy Wooten
The document discusses cultural management issues in the tourism industry and how understanding different cultures can impact business success. It focuses on promoting a British travel agency, Beach Bum Ltd, in China by training employees to be culturally sensitive. Being aware of cultural differences in areas like business practices, communication styles, and values is important for building relationships and making sales. The briefing aims to help employees appreciate diverse cultures to improve profits.
Media and social media have transformed communication and information sharing in today's digital age. The presentation explores the significant role of media and social media in diverse fields such as journalism, entertainment, business, and social activism. Traditional media provides news and analysis while social media enables citizen journalism and real-time sharing. Media influences pop culture trends reflected in entertainment, and social media allows fan engagement. Media and social media have also revolutionized marketing and empowered social movements through platforms, hashtags, and online organizing.
The document summarizes an Economist report on the future of news media. It discusses six key trends: (1) Newspapers are declining in the West but growing in places like India; (2) News organizations are experimenting with new revenue models beyond advertising; (3) Social media has transformed news production and consumption; (4) Some question whether transparency organizations practice journalism or activism; (5) Transparency is replacing objectivity as the new standard for quality reporting; (6) News media is returning to a more conversational model as in pre-industrial times with the rise of social media. Successful organizations will embrace this new reality by prioritizing readers over advertisers and collaboration over barriers between producers and consumers.
Final Paper Trends&Strategies Sanne Jansen January2010 1sannejansen1982
This document proposes further research on how digital interactive media have influenced the traditional magazine format. It provides context on the rise of digital media and how it has challenged magazines' subscriptions and advertising revenue. The document reviews theories of new media, digitality, interactivity, and remediation. It finds that while digital media have pushed magazines online, the older print format still remains visible through remediation. The document recommends future research through economic analysis, technological developments, audience workshops, and risk management to fully understand the impact and define the future of magazines. The central question of whether digital media have reinvented magazines or if print will still have a place remains to be answered through more in-depth investigation.
Brands and engaging in the art of conversation finalhessiej.com
The document discusses the evolution of social media and its impact on marketing. It notes that with the rise of Web 2.0, consumers now have more control over media consumption and are participating in conversations rather than just passively receiving information. This has required brands to adapt their marketing strategies to focus more on engagement over interruption and to join conversations rather than just push messages. The document provides statistics on social media usage and outlines how Isobar can help brands navigate the complex social media landscape.
Collaborative Economy in Argentina: the meeting of two paradigmsMarcela Basch
Collaborative Economy in Argentina: the meeting of two paradigms. Between the startup model and the minga culture. Showed at Kultursymposium Weimar 2016, Weimar, June 2 2016.
This document discusses the potential for social media platforms to be used for social good. It provides two case studies as examples: the Kony 2012 campaign, which used high-quality video and social media like YouTube to raise awareness about Joseph Kony and was highly successful in reaching a global audience; and the Soita Mummolle campaign in Finland, which used grassroots techniques like street campaigns and knitting guerrillas along with social media like Facebook to address loneliness among seniors. The document also discusses challenges for social media campaigns, such as emerging from a crowded environment, monitoring the truthfulness of information, and accounting for cultural differences.
The document summarizes the 2010 Weekend Media Festival held in Rovinj, Croatia from January 11-15. It discusses several international speakers at the festival on topics like internet culture, reality television production, and digital media/Google. Panel discussions focused on the cost of websites, the future of business media, the relationship between media and PR, and the impact of the global economic crisis on media. The festival hosted over 200 student attendees and 275 accredited journalists from Croatia and the region.
This document summarizes a student paper about social media strategies for small businesses. It begins by providing background on social media history and its rise for business uses. It then examines case studies of 4 small businesses - 3 specialty food shops (Secolari olive oil, Jrink juicery, and Capital Teas) and 1 bar/restaurant (The Hay Merchant). Finally, it discusses strategies for creating engaging, shareable social media content including promotions, crowd-sourcing content, and participating in broader conversations. The overall paper aims to provide both analytical and experiential perspectives on effective social media integration for small companies.
From Where I Sit: The Media Entrepreneurship EcosystemMichelle Ferrier
Dr. Michelle Ferrier reviews the media entrepreneurship ecosystem and what we can do to fill in the gaps for content and technology startups. Includes ideas for higher education institutions and nonprofit organizations.
The document discusses the role of media in representing natural disasters. It notes that media coverage of disasters often overlooks many important aspects and focuses on highlighting or hiding certain causes and consequences. The article being discussed, "Cleanup From California Fires poses Environmental and Health Risks", takes an approach that focuses on environmental and economic costs of cleanup rather than on the human impacts of the fires, which included many deaths and thousands displaced. The document argues that media have biases in how they distribute information and that it is important for consumers to research sources to understand these biases, especially around coverage of sensitive topics like disasters.
STATE OF THE ART: RESEARCH ON CONVERGENCE AND SOCIAL MEDIA Research Agendas ...Oles Kulchytskyy
This document summarizes research from over 1,200 academic articles on convergence and social media between 2013-2017. It aims to increase awareness of recent discoveries among stakeholders. The research found the dominant issue was integrating legacy and new media, followed by private vs public roles regarding personal data and protecting minors. Individuals and tech companies have become important news curators, but legacy media still produces most shared news. The document outlines research agendas on convergence types and regulatory issues like personal data, protecting minors, hate speech, and democracy. It concludes with recommending further reading in its full report.
Similar a Active audiences and Journalism: Innovation in the media companies and new professional roles (SDSU, California, EE.UU., 16/02/15) (20)
MESA Cómo incentivar la participación y motivación del alumnado virtual a través del uso de metodologías de Innovación Docente. II XORNADAS DE DOCENCIA VIRTUAL UNIVERSITARIA A universidade presencial pública ante o reto da virtualización. Facultade de Dirección e Xestión Pública. Universida de Vigo. 5/6/2024
Ponente invitada: MARÍA SÁNCHEZ GONZÁLEZ
Área de Innovación. Universidad Internacional de Andalucía
@uniauniversidad | @cibermarikiya
MESA Qué competencias debe tener el profesorado ante lo digital. II XORNADAS DE DOCENCIA VIRTUAL UNIVERSITARIA A universidade presencial pública ante o reto da virtualización. Facultade de Dirección e Xestión Pública. Universida de Vigo. 5/6/2024
Ponente invitada: MARÍA SÁNCHEZ GONZÁLEZ
Área de Innovación. Universidad Internacional de Andalucía
@uniauniversidad | @cibermarikiya
Ponencia en I SEMINARIO SOBRE LA APLICABILIDAD DE LA INTELIGENCIA ARTIFICIAL EN LA EDUCACIÓN SUPERIOR UNIVERSITARIA. 3 de junio de 2024. Facultad de Estudios Sociales y Trabajo, Universidad de Málaga.
Artificial intelligence is being used by some fact-checking organizations to aid in their work, though implementation is uneven and still developing. Around half of the 17 organizations studied have created 1-3 AI tools, mainly chatbots, to help with tasks like verifying sources and statements. However, many lack dedicated research teams or funding. While AI offers opportunities to increase efficiency, fact-checkers also see challenges from advances like deepfakes requiring new verification methods. Ongoing collaboration and adapting to changing information threats will help fact-checkers continue leveraging AI responsibly.
Presentación base de ponencia invitada en Jornadas de Innovación Educativa en comunicación y alfabetización mediática organizadas por Departamento de Periodismo de la Universidad de País Vasco, 27 y 28 de abril de 2023.
Intervención como ponente invitada en Mesa redonda "El papel de las organizaciones verificadoras de la información durante la covid-19 en Iberoamérica". VII Workshop Internacional de Estudios Iberoamericanos y Transatlánticos “La dimensión social de la pandemia durante la Covid-19. Una mirada transatlántica”. Málaga, 25 de enero de 2023.
*Presentación de elaboración propia, con contenido adaptado de trabajos anteriores.
* Vectores tomados de Freepik/ Flaticon. Imágenes de Pixabay.
En este seminario virtual, enmarcado en el Plan de Formación de Profesorado de la UNIA de 2022-23, María Sánchez González (@cibermarikiya) repasa el potencial de la información visual y sus posibilidades en el ámbito de la enseñanza-aprendizaje y la difusión de la investigación y de la innovación y comparte claves del proceso de producción y herramientas digitales útiles para diseñar infografías y visualizaciones de datos, entre otras cuestiones.
Sánchez González, M.; Sánchez Gonzales, H..M.; Martos Moreno, J. (2021). Periodismo emprendedor sobre verificación: casos significativos de habla hispana. Presentación de comunicación para Congreso SEP 2021, online, 28 de mayo de 2021. Más información: https://www.sepsevilla2021.com/
Material empleado en taller sobre elevator pitch y presentaciones de proyectos impartido como voluntaria invitada en Club de Insipiring Girls de niñas gitanas en Málaga. Polo de Contenidos Digitales, Málaga, 27 de mayo de 2021.
Presentación del seminario virtual "Claves para el diseño e impartición de MOOCs y derivados" (#webinarsUNIA, Plan de Formación, apoyo y asesoramiento al profesorado 2020-21). Impartido el 03/02/2012, con más de 600 personas inscritas, por webconferencia.
Grabación y presentación también en repositorio institucional de UNIA: https://dspace.unia.es/handle/10334/5753
Este documento presenta una introducción al aprendizaje abierto en red y los MOOCs. Se describe la evolución de los MOOCs desde sus inicios hasta formatos derivados como los SPOCs y NOOCs. También incluye ejemplos de casos prácticos de MOOCs en universidades españolas e iberoamericanas y convocatorias para su creación.
Presentación utilizada en ponencia impartida en el marco del I Hackathon para docentes de FPI FormaT&T, 13 de noviembre de 2020. Evento online en el que han participado más de 250 docentes de formación profesional de toda España.
Ver vídeo de ponencia en Youtube vía: https://t.co/FwvuhkaBF8?amp=1
Presentación empleada para seminario sobre "Estrategias y herramientas de evaluación no presencial en Ciencias de la Comunicación".- Dentro del ciclo de seminarios virtuales de formación para el modelo de enseñanza bimodal (sept. 2020) impartidos el 16 y 17 de septiembre por webconferencia como parte de mi labor como Mentora de Competencias Digitales de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Comunicación de la Universidad de Málaga. Presentación de mi autoría. La segunda parte de este seminario, de carácter práctico, fue a cargo de mi compañero Antonio Castro.
Presentación empleada para seminario sobre "Planificación de asignaturas semipresenciales: aspectos clave, ideas, herramientas y casos prácticos aplicables a Ciencias de la Comunicación".- Dentro del ciclo de seminarios virtuales de formación para el modelo de enseñanza bimodal (sept. 2020) impartidos el 16 y 17 de septiembre por webconferencia como parte de mi labor como Mentora de Competencias Digitales de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Comunicación de la Universidad de Málaga.
Presentación del seminario virtual "Vídeos y podcasts para humanizar la experiencia de estudiantes en línea" (#webinarsUNIA, Plan de Formación, apoyo y asesoramiento al profesorado 2020-21). Impartido el 14/09/2020, con más de 600 personas inscritas, por webconferencia.
Presentación empleada para el seminario online impartido para profesorado de la Universidad Técnica Federico de Santa María, Chile, el 17 de agosto de 2020, con más de 120 inscripciones y conexiones en directo. Actividad arranque de Jornadas docentes "Nuevos tiempos exigen modelos docentes innovadores"
Presentación realizada por María Sánchez y Francisco Martín, profesores de Periodismo de la Universidad de Málaga, en Jornadas de reflexión sobre los estudios de Periodismo. Iniciativa organizada por Departamento de Periodismo. Febrero de 2020.
Presentación empleada como ponente invitada en seminario virtual "Universidad Next Normal: Innovación y Redes en Docencia". Organizado en el marco de proyecto de innovación educativa coordinado desde la Universidad de Sevilla y en el que participan también la Universidad de Cádiz y la Universidad de Valladolid.
Este documento presenta ideas y ejemplos sobre el uso de la webconferencia para actividades educativas. Explica posibles usos más allá de sesiones expositivas, como seminarios interactivos y tutorías. También ofrece consejos para planificar con éxito actividades por webconferencia, como elegir la herramienta adecuada, establecer roles, gestionar participantes e instruir a ponentes.
Más de María Sánchez González (@cibermarikiya) (20)
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
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This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
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This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
Active audiences and Journalism: Innovation in the media companies and new professional roles (SDSU, California, EE.UU., 16/02/15)
1. ACTIVE AUDIENCES ANDACTIVE AUDIENCES ANDACTIVE AUDIENCES AND
JOURNALISM
ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND
JOURNALISMJOURNALISM:JOURNALISM:
Innovation in the media companiesInnovation in the media companies
and new professional rolesand new professional roles
PROJECT CSO2012-39518-C04-04
FUNDED BY MINISTRY OF ECONOMY AND COMPETITIVITY IN SPAIN
PROJECT CSO2012-39518-C04-04
FUNDED BY MINISTRY OF ECONOMY AND COMPETITIVITY IN SPAIN
María Sánchez (@cibermarikiya)
University of Malaga / International University of Andalusia, Spain
María Sánchez (@cibermarikiya)
University of Malaga / International University of Andalusia, Spainy g y , py g y , p
Presentation, as scholar visitor, in JMS 492 Sec 1 “CREATIVE USES EMERG MEDIA”
COURSE | JOURNALISM AND MEDIA STUDIES.
SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY | CALIFORNIA, EEUU | FEBR16th 2015
2. Four focus of analysis
1. Innovation in the media companies
d f i l land new professional roles
(University of Malaga).(University of Malaga).
2. Audience motivations (Ramon Llull(
University).
3. Messages of the public and legal questions
(P tifi i U i it f V l i )(Pontificia University of Valencia).
4 Semantic Web (Pompeu Fabra University)4. Semantic Web (Pompeu Fabra University).
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
3. Fundaments/ starting points
On one hand, “Cultural” reasons
Open (access/data/gov/…) movements
Collaboration participation and transparency asCollaboration, participation and transparency as
principles
People as smart citizens
U f th di ti diUsers of the media as active audiences
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
4. Fundaments/ starting points
On the other hand, technology as an ally
From the web 2.0 to the squire web
Social media and mobile devices (tablets, smartphones…)
enable users to produce and share contents from
every place in real time
E ti l th f th li i f tiExponential growth of the online information
Journalists as filter (contents curators)( )
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
5. Fundaments/ starting points
The new power ofThe new power of
audiences in social
t k d b ki fnetworks and breaking of
monopoly of informationp y
A "digital tsunami"A digital tsunami
that creeps who is resistingp g
or unwilling to move
Source:
http://www.cuartopoder.es/enlazandoredes/el-tsunami-digital-se-lleva-
por-delante-a-todo-el-que-se-enfrenta-o-al-que-no-quiere-moverse/1259
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
6. Fundaments/ starting points
Society is not passive:
citizen want not only consum
but also produce give theirbut also produce, give their
opinion, discuss… by social
networks. In short, take part of, p
the journalism.
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
7. Fundaments/ starting points
The future of the
J li d dJournalism depends on
the audiences: specially on the
h “li ” li (“di it lyoung users who “live” online (“digital
residents”/ “millennials”).
Source: http://survey.telefonica.com/globalreports/
And media companies and professionals are tryingAnd media companies and professionals are trying
to adapt to this context…
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
8. Fundaments/ starting points
… not only promoving audience participation
Some trends on “open innovations” in media companies
for the users engagementg g
a) On content and production process
Crowdsourcing
Co-creation (Aitamurto, 2013: 243)
C l b ti j li (M hi i 2013)Colaborative journalism (Marchionni, 2013)
b) O di / d f dib) On media/products funding
Crowdfunding
C ti b iCooperative business
…
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
9. Fundaments/ starting points
but also producing digital contents or creating new
services and productsservices and products
As traditional
As new
S htt // t b / h l/UCFlFU7PSource: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFlFU7Px-
ez8S69KvOwzUvg
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
10. In short
Digital Culture and Social Web
&
N d d f bliNew demands of publics
&
Economic crisis and loss of credibilityEconomic crisis and loss of credibility
…
Innovation, as filosophy and strategy for a better
di ’ d danswer to audiences’ needs; and,
consecuently, as a form of increase of sales/users
In summary, Innovation as a key for the survey
of media companies (Pavlik, 2013: 190).
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
11. In short
And conversion of the figure of the
journalist to make it a reallity
New functions: proximity, transparency and
professionalization of interaction as keys for the:p y
“imposssible journalist”.
New profiles booming related with the digital content
and audiences participation management: social mediaand audiences participation management: social media
strategist, content curator, Mobile jornalist, Data Deliveri
Editor, (video)blogger…, ( ) gg
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
12. What happens? Precedents
We analized 4000 articles published during the last
seven years
new tools; products; services (Meier, 2007).
th th t / l t it f iti
seven years
the threat /complementarity of citizen
participation/collaboration (Wall, 2012; Negredo, 2013).
entrepreneurship as a viable and profitable careerentrepreneurship as a viable and profitable career
opportunity for journalists (Briggs, 2012; Casero & Culell,
2013).
i d kill i it t (B & C lli 2010) required new skills in recruitment (Brown & Collins, 2010)
editorial policies (Herrera, 2013)
disconnection between information interests of
audiences and professionals issuers (Boczkowski &
Mitchelstein, 2013)
only 5% of the contents are linked with our project
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
13. New issues to research
Who and how these social spaces are managed
New professional profiles
Monitoring contents in the web 2 0 for decision makingMonitoring contents in the web 2.0 for decision making
Influence of digital reputation of journalists
Interpersonal communication strategies
V ifi ti t h i / Ethi l iVerification techniques/ Ethical issues
Entrepreneurial initiatives
Concerns about participation
And above all, there are no prospective studies
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
14. Why this research? Objetives
Objetive 1:
A l i h h i i bAnalyzing how these open innovations become
a reallity in both traditional and new media
companies.
Objetive 2:
Fi di t h t t dFinding out what new competences and
fuctions must been assumed by all journalists in
the digital ecosystem; and define which are the
new profiles for the audience participationp p p
management.
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
15. Some questions and research work
About the big and traditional media
companies in Spaincompanies in Spain
Wh t b t ti di i th bi di i iWhat about active audiences in the big media companies in
Spain? Are they really producing a more transparent journalism
d d t d t th ’ d ?and adapted to the users’ needs?
How much quality have conversations between journalists and
iti ?citizens?
What new informative products/narratives are generated? Are
th ll i t ti t th i di ?they really interesting to their audiences?
…
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
16. Some questions and research work
About the new and small media: innovative
journalism from the view of audiences?
How are the new media, result of entrepreneurial journalism, settled in
journalism from the view of audiences?
Spain during the recent years? What profile and motivations have their
promoters? Are they really more innovative, near and social than the
lid t d di ? H d ti i ti t i li i thconsolidated media? How does participation materialize, in the
financing, content production and dialoguing with journalists?
Sánchez (2015). Small media and innovations on audiences
participation in Spain: analysis of relevant cases
XI Congreso Internacional sobre Tecnología Conocimiento yXI Congreso Internacional sobre Tecnología, Conocimiento y
Sociedad | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY
| CALIFORNIA, EEUU | 23-24 FEBR-2015
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
17. Some questions and research work
And what about youth and future journalists?
How do students and professional perceive forms based on audience
participation in the financing of the media such crowdfunding as aparticipation in the financing of the media, such crowdfunding, as a
possible way to launch of its own journalistic projects? What is their
knowledge and experience about it?
Sánchez y Palomo (2014) Knowledge and
knowledge and experience about it?
Sánchez y Palomo (2014). Knowledge and
Assessment of Crowdfunding in
Communication The View of JournalistsCommunication. The View of Journalists
and Future Journalists
REVISTA COMUNICAR NUM 43 2014REVISTA COMUNICAR, NUM. 43. 2014
http://dx.doi.org/10.3916/C43-2014-10
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
18. Some questions and research work
Are new graduates trained to manage communities and to
innovate concerning citizen participation?
Are the curricula of the Spanish university adapted? Where and
how can be studied subjects such as Participatory Journalism or
Citizen Journalism and Social Networks in Spain?
Palomo y Sánchez (2014) Teaching Participatory
http://dx doi org/10 5209/rev HICS 2014 v19 45042
Palomo y Sánchez (2014). Teaching Participatory
Journalism in the Universities: the Spanish Experience
HISTORIA Y COMUNICACIÓN SOCIAL, VOL. 19,
SPECIAL NUMBER, FEBR. 2014, PP. 465-478.
http://dx.doi.org/10.5209/rev_HICS.2014.v19.45042
SPECIAL NUMBER, FEBR. 2014, PP. 465 478.
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
19. And what’s about Spanish case?
A t f h d t i tA stage of change and uncertainty
A i f d dA review of advances and
challenges on acti e a diences andchallenges on active audiences and
innovation in Spain as a result ofinnovation in Spain as a result of
observation and our research workobservation and our research work
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
20. Spain is one of the countries whose citizens
1 p
are more active in social networks1.
Source: “VI Estudio Anual sobre Redes Sociales de la IAB” (dec. 2014)
http://www.iabspain.net/redes-sociales/
More than 14 million of
internautes (82%) use socialinternautes (82%) use social
networks.
Specially Facebook and Specially Facebook and
Twitter.
Increasing of visual Increasing of visual
contents (Instagram) and
t ki (Li k di )networking (Linkedin).
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
21. Journalists and media in the social networks,
2 ,
some of them with a big impact2.
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
22. Online labs as tools to innovate and experiment
3 p
with digital contents by conventional media3.
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
24. The new career opportunities for
4 pp
communicators4.
The most demanded profiles,
b no and in the forthcomingby now and in the forthcoming
years, in the digital contents
i d tindustry:
Community Managements and…Community Managements and
online marketing and SEO experts…
the most demanded in the next yearsthe most demanded in the next years,
according in a report
(FTI y AMETIC, 2012) Source:( y , )
http://www.fti.es/sites/default/files/pafet_vii_perfiles_professionale
s_cd_fti-rooter_1.pdf
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
25. However, young generations of spanishHowever, young generations of spanish
journalists prefer conventional jobs
Two unanimous answers according digital media Spanish
professors (Palomo y Sánchez, 2014):
1)Students make a naive and superficial use of1)Students make a naive and superficial use of
social networks, but experts believe these
environments is to have 500 followers /environments is to have 500 followers./
2) Although almost all are active in social networks2) Although almost all are active in social networks,
90% want to work in traditional media
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
26. Growth of crowfunding as source of funding
5 g g
for Communication in Spain5.
First projects: film El Cosmonauta (+/-400.000 euros)/ Diagonal
newspaper (90.086 euros). Verkami/Goteo platforms.
New platforms for Journalists: Información Sensible.
El E ñ l t j t
Source: http://www.elespanol.com/tag/javier-cremades/
El Español, a recent project
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
27. In fact, young
j li t djournalists and
students in
S iSpain are
familiar with
crowdfundingcrowdfunding
And their
perception of
its potential is
positive, except for
those issues related to
the financial
independence and
viability in the medium-
term of the projects
Source: Sánchez y
Palomo (2014)
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
28. Rise of entrepreneurial and innovative
6 p
journalism in Spain6.
About 500 new media since the beginning of the
economic crisis (2008-15) Source: APM 2014economic crisis (2008 15). Source: APM, 2014.
Between professional companies and amateurs projects,p p p j ,
which economic sustainability is not guaranteed in medium or
long term (a lot end up disappearing).
Motivations for the journalistsMotivations for the journalists
job loss after closing of media companies
illusion to perform a differentiated journalismp j
easy access to new technologies
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
29. Ways and trends on audiences participation
i thi S i h diin this Spanish new media
Source: Sánchez, 2015
On contents:
Social networks and other ways to interact on content (share,y ( ,
comment…). However, low visibility and participation.
Users as drivers of the agenda (spaces for gathering input).
Users and content creators In some cases they obtain monetaryUsers and content creators. In some cases, they obtain monetary
reward (collaborative economy, “freecash”).
On funding/ financing:
Cooperative journalism with investment partners and collaborators.
Crowdfunding to create media and (specially) products.
On distribution of media:On distribution of media:
Citizen nodes.
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
30. These innovations reside, rather than on strategy from the businessgy
point of view, in its editorial and participatory vision
Source: Sánchez, 2015
What are the keys of engagement users in
these media? Some clues
1. 2.0 mentality of their promoters: they are aware thaty p y
they must integrate to audiences.
2. House brand content: analysis/ positive vision ofy p
reallity/ humor
3. Partnerships and collaboration with citizens and
media organizations.
4. Social commitment and recognition of active
audiences.
5. Proximity between journalists and citizens.
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
31. dibl iMaking a close, credible, creative,
cooperative and quality journalism (Keysp q y j ( y
according to its promoters) in the middle of the
crisis is possible not just onlinecrisis is possible, not just online
Anyway this kind of journalism needs humanAnyway, this kind of journalism needs human
and economic resources
Which of these new media will survive?
Media that, in short, integrate and listen to
citizens in their practices.p
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
32. The future: training and experience of the
7 g p
Spanish young about digital culture7.
Regarding crowdfunding, Spanish students and young
professionals are training gaps and few of them have direct
experience as initiators or funders of projects (Source: Sánchez y
Palomo, 2014)
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
33. The challenge of participatory training and
t j li t
T d i ti li t hi d th
entrepreneur journalists
Today, innovation, online entrepreneurship and the
rational use of social media tools depend largely on
self-taught journalists.
Furthermore, only half of the degrees of journalism
in Spain offered in its curriculum a subject directly
related to the practice of participative journalism.
These matters still needs to be addressed
Source: Palomo y Sánchez (2014)Source: Palomo y Sánchez (2014)
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
34. The role of universities, professional
8 associations and colleges becomes crucial8.
id i f tiNot only they must provide information,
but they must also work as laboratories to enable young and
t j li t t i th d l t fnot so young journalists to experience the development of
creative projects first-hand
Source: Palomo y Sánchez (2014)
Basic Skills for journalists in a context in whichBasic Skills for journalists in a context in which
they must be trained and convinced that
t h l i d di llitechnologies and audiences can be allies
no enemies
Source: http://www.cuartopoder.es/enlazandoredes/agustin-valladolid-los-periodistas-
tenemos-que-recuperar-la-confianza-de-los-lectores/1042
SÁNCHEZ, M. (2015). ACTIVE AUDIENCES AND JOURNALISM: Innovation in the media companies
and new professional roles. SDSU, 16th Feb. 2015
36. Many thanks
Personal blog with links to my social networks profiles:Personal blog, with links to my social networks profiles:
www.cibermarikiya.com