tailieunhanh - Films and TV: Viewing patterns and influence on behaviours of college students

Online and digital news consumption, meanwhile, continues to increase, with many more people now getting news on cell phones, tablets or other mobile platforms. And perhaps the most dramatic change in the news environment has been the rise of social networking sites. The percentage of Americans saying they saw news or news headlines on a social networking site yesterday has doubled – from 9% to 19% – since 2010. Among adults younger than age 30, as many saw news on a social networking site the previous day (33%) as saw any television news (34%), with just 13% having read. | Films and TV Viewing patterns and influence on behaviours of college students Akhila Vasan Health and Population Innovation Fellowship Programme Working Paper No. 13 This report is the result of a project entitled Film and TV Viewing patterns and influence on behaviours of college students undertaken as part of the Health and Population Innovation Fellowship HPIF awarded to the author in 2005. The HPIF programme is administered by the Population Council New Delhi and is a continuation of the MacArthur Foundation s Fund for Leadership Development FLD fellowship programme that continued over the period 1995 to 2004. The Council is grateful to the MacArthur Foundation for its support to this programme. The HPIF programme aims to support mid-career individuals who have innovative ideas leadership potential and the capacity to help shape policy and public debate in the field of population reproductive health and rights in general with a focus on two priority themes maternal mortality and morbidity and the sexual and reproductive health and rights of young people. Since the transfer of the programme to the Population Council through 2006 a total ofl7 individuals have been supported under the HPIF programme. For additional copies of this report please contact Akhila Vasan 53 54 3rf Cross Doctors Colony Konankunte Bangalore-560062 India Email Population Council Zone 5A Ground Floor India Habitat Centre Lodi Road New Delhi 110003 Phone 011-24642901 02 Email Web site http asia The Population Council is an international non-profit non-govemmental organisation that seeks to improve the well-being and reproductive health of current and future generations around the world and to help achieve a humane equitable and sustainable balance between people and resources. The Council conducts biomedical social science and public health research and helps build research capacities in developing countries. .