People are large breasted pregnant women sex videosreading news online, but they don't always remember where the news came from — unless it was on Facebook.
Digital news readers between 18 and 29 years old remembered what news organization the stories they read came from 47 percent of the time. Thirty- to 49-year-olds remembered where their news came from more often — 57 percent of the time. Both groups — and other age demographics — read news online at about the same rate.
That's not even compared to how much print news consumers remember about the stories they read or their sources. A 2014 study from the University of Houston found that print readers retained a lot more of what they read. Print readers could recall 4.24 stories compared to the 3.35 stories digital readers remembered after 20 minutes of catching up on the news.
The Pew Research Center in its new study surveyed 2,000 U.S. adults who read at least some news online every week. Twice a day over a week during February and March 2016, survey respondents told Pew whether they had read any news online in the past two hours and how they responded afterward.
When they read an article through an email or push notification from a news organization itself, consumers could remember where the article came from. But if they saw the article on Twitter or Facebook or even in an email or text from a friend, readers were less likely to remember which news organization published an article.
Ten percent of digital news consumers named Facebook as the "news outlet" that an article came from. Of actual news sources, CNN was remembered by the most online readers — 14 percent of them. Next came Fox News at 12 percent. The New York Times, the Huffington Post, MSNBC, Yahoo, ESPN, the Washington Postand CBS were all named by 3 to 6 percent of readers.
While getting news from friends meant readers would be less likely to remember which publication produced a story, that method of consumption did mean that readers would be more likely to engage with an article. Readers followed up on a story by sharing it, talking about it with others or looking for more information about a topic 73 percent of the time when it came from a friend, versus 49 percent of the time when the story came from a news site or app.
SEE ALSO: You hate data journalism because you're reading it wrongReaders "followed up" most often about local, community news and health news — so yep, your mom really is emailing a lot of articles from the New York Times "Well" section — and least often about business, sports and entertainment news. Politics news landed right in the middle, with readers sharing or talking about a story 56 percent of the time — even if they read more politics news than news about any other topic.
“The unique approach used in this research provides a deeper and more tangible window into how Americans learn about current events in the digital age, and speaks to some of the challenges news organizations have in establishing a relationship with digital audiences,” Amy Mitchell, Pew Research Center director of journalism research, said in a press release.
Topics Facebook
Apple's secret 'Marzipan' project could combine iOS and Mac appsHulu study finds viewers coped with 2017 by watching comedy16 gifts that will make shaving a little bit easier for your significant otherA 'diabolical' failed cheese event has become the UK's Fyre FestivalMicrosoft surprises a thoughtful 9Augmented reality and your phone: The camera is the new keyboard'Portal' is back (sort of) with a fun new puzzle gameEdward Snowden and human rights groups slam NSA bill that's rushing through CongressGiant roadside Milo tin to be built at the popular drink's birthplaceHow running a fake 'Last Jedi' porg fan account taught me to let go of my angerEven Dogecoin is rallying in this cryptocurrency boomThis is how the 'Simpsons' house would fare on 'House Hunters'The bitcoin craze has people going a little overboardEtheremon is the latest cryptoGet ready for a frigid Christmas in the central U.S.BlackBerry plans to kill its app store, ceding to Apple and GoogleThis student's story about her first college exam is so hilariously cringyFacebook is the biggest social network. Now, it's trying to become the best.Passengers stranded at Atlanta airport detail their experiences online'A Christmas Prince' vs 'Christmas Inheritance': Which to watch? Netflix's 'Kaleidoscope' episode orders aren't actually that random It's not just you, Trump really is tweeting a lot more in 2019 Trump has started a meme fight with Nickelback and the band is winning SAG nominations 2023: Full list 'Archive zombies' will crawl back into your messages long after your interest has died Sam Bankman Photo Essay: What happened in the day of a photographer covering CES 2023. Gwyneth Paltrow's weird walk at the Emmys is now a wonderful meme How to focus better: 3 strategies for reclaiming your attention Can of dry shampoo explodes in hot car, breaking sunroof Samsung Galaxy Unpacked kicks off Feb. 1 Watch this man's emotional reunion with his dog who was lost for 3 years 'The Last of Us' opening scene wasn't in the game. Here's why it works so well. HBO Max just hiked its price, effective immediately 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for January 11 Scientists used James Webb telescope to find an Earth Tesla cars have gotten a lot cheaper overnight Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for January 14 Michelle Williams elaborates on Emmys equal pay comments Tim Cook might get huge pay cut in 2023
1.9508s , 10518.8359375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【large breasted pregnant women sex videos】,Co-creation Information Network