The content analysis reader /
Klaus Krippendorff, Mary Angela Bock [editors].
- ix, 481 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Introduction Section One: History and Conception of Content Analysis Introduction Quantitative Semantics in 18th Century Sweden Karin Dovring Towards a Sociology of the Press and Content Analysis Max Weber A Study of a New York Daily Bryon C. Mathews The Scientific Analysis of the Press Alvan A. Tenney Propaganda Analysis: A Case Study from World War II Alexander L. George Letters from Jenny Gordon W. Allport Impressionistic Content Analysis: Word Counting in Popular Media Mary Angela Bock Section Two: Unitizing and Sampling Introduction ?Good? Organizational Reasons for ?Bad? Clinic Records Harold Garfinkel Effectiveness of Random, Consecutive Day and Constructed Week Sampling Daniel Riffe, Charles F. Faust and Stephen R. Lacy The Challenge of Applying Content Analysis to the World Wide Web Sally J. McMillan Airplane Fatalities After Newspaper Stories About Murder and Suicide David P. Phillips Interaction Process Analysis Robert F. Bales Structural Analysis of Film Siegfried Kracauer The Agenda-Setting Function of Mass Media Maxwell E. McCombs and Donald L. Shaw Section Three: Inferences and Analytical Constructs Introduction Contingency Analysis: Validating Evidence and Process Charles E. Osgood Four Types of Inference from Documents to Events Vernon K. Dibble Politburo Images of Stalin Nathan Leites, Elsa Bernaut and Raymond L. Garthoff Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches to Content Analysis Alexander L. George Evaluative Assertion Analysis Ole R. Holsti An Ecology of Text: Memes, Competition and Niche Behavior Michael L. Best Identifying the Unknown Communicator in Painting, Literature and Music William J. Paisley Wheels of Time and the Interdependence of Value Change in America J. Zvi Namenwirth Inferring the Readability of Text Klaus Krippendorff Section Four: Coders and Coding Introduction Codebook Development for Team-Based Qualitative Analysis Kathleen M. MacQueen Coder Training: Explicit Instruction and Implicit Socialization Tony Hak and Ton Bernts The Future of Coders: Human Judgments in a World of Sophisticated Software Gilbert Shapiro Comparing Human Coding and a Computer-Assisted Method Brigitte L. Nacos, Robert Y. Shapiro, John T. Young, David P. Fan, Torsten Kjellstrand and Craig McCaa Coding Instructions: An Example Joseph N. Cappella, Danielle J. Mittermaier, Judith Weiner, Lee Humphreys, and Tiara Falcone Section Five: Categories and Data Languages in Diverse Applications Introduction Petitions and Prayers: An Analysis of Persuasive Appeals Elihu Katz; Michael Gurevitch; Brenda Danet and Tsiyona Peled Changing National Forest Values David N. Bengston and Zhi Xu The World Attention Survey Harold D. Lasswell Constructing Content Analysis Scales in Counseling Research Linda L. Viney and Peter Caputi How Often Is Often? Milton Hakel Relative Risk in the News Media: A Quantification of Misrepresentation Karen Frost, Erica Frank and Edward Maibach Television Violence: A Coding Scheme Anu Mustonen and Lea Pulkkinen The Opinions of Little Orphan Annie and Her Friends Lyle W. Shannon Gender Equity in Management Education: Inferences from Test Bank Questions Randi L. Sims Mathematics Computer Software Characteristics and Gender Kelly K. Chappell A Content Analysis of Music Videos Richard L. Baxter, Cynthia De Riemer, Ann Landini, Larry Leslie and Michael W. Singletary Section Six: Reliability and Validity Introduction Scott?s ã (Pi): Reliability for Nominal Scale Coding William A. Scott Testing the Reliability of Content Analysis Data; What is Involved and Why Klaus Krippendorff The Problem of Validating Content Analysis Irving Janis Modes of Observation and the Validation of Interaction Analysis Schemes M. Scott Poole and Joseph P. Folger Importance in Content Analysis: A Validity Problem Milton Stewart The Gerbner Violence Profile: A Public Debate David M. Blank, George Gerbner, Larry Gross, Marilyn Jackson-Beeck, Suzanne Jeffries-Fox and Nancy Signorielli Section Seven: Computer Aided Content Analysis Introduction Some Characteristics of Genuine Versus Simulated Suicide Notes Daniel M. Ogilvie, Philip J. Stone and Edwin S. Shneidman Analyzing Literary and Non-Literary Texts Michael E. Palmquist, Kathleen Carley and Thomas A. Dale CATPAC for Text Analysis: Presidential Debates Marya L. Doerfel and George A. Barnett Inferences from Word Networks in Messages James A. Danowski Reasoning in Economic Discourse: A Network Approach to the Dutch Press Jan Kleinnijenhuis, Jan A. de Ridder and Ewald M. Rietberg Predictions of Public Opinion on the Spread of Aids David P. Fan and Gregory McAvoy Computerized Text Analysis of Al-Qaeda Transcripts James W. Pennebaker and Cindy K. Chung Index About the Editors