Publications

Special Issue of Molecular Nutrition & Food Research: Selected Bioactive Plant Compounds in Human Nutrition

2009 | Action 926

Forestry in the Context of Rural Development - Proceedings

1997 | Action E3

Thermochemical Database for Light Metal Alloys Vol 2

1998 | Action 507

Audience Evolution and the Future of Audience Research

2012 | Action null

COST Directory 1999

1998 | Action null

Vaccines Against Animal Coccidioses - Activity Report 1996

1998 | Action 820

WIM, ENTWURF - Draft - Project

1996 | Action 323

Audience Interaction & Participation. Special section of Particip@tions

2013 | Action IS0906

A1

1975 | Action 50

Audience Evolution and the Future of Audience Research

2012 | Action null
  • Author(s): B. Mierzejewska, D. Shaver, P. Napoli
  • Publisher(s): http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14241277.2012.675753

This article considers how changes in audience behaviors and in audience information systems are affecting the future of academic audience research. This article first illustrates how changes in the media environment are undermining traditional approaches to audience research while also giving rise to alternative analytical approaches. This article then outlines the contours of a next-generation audience research agenda that reflects these ongoing conceptual and methodological developments. Reflecting these developments, this article next argues for a definition of ratings analysis that focuses not on a particular aspect of audience behavior (i.e., exposure), but on whatever forms of currency are employed in the audience marketplace. From this standpoint, the new media environment provides new forms of “ratings” that exist alongside—and integrate with—the old, and that can renew and revitalize the field of ratings analysis.