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Eugenia Mitchelstein

Researcher at University of San Andrés

Publications -  27
Citations -  1592

Eugenia Mitchelstein is an academic researcher from University of San Andrés. The author has contributed to research in topics: News media & Scholarship. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 23 publications receiving 1341 citations. Previous affiliations of Eugenia Mitchelstein include Northwestern University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Between tradition and change: A review of recent research on online news production

TL;DR: A review of online news production can be found in this paper, where the authors examine research on fikey topics: historical context and market environment, the process of innovation, alterations in journalistic practices, challenges to established professional dynamics, and the role of user-generated content.
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“News comes across when I’m in a moment of leisure”: Understanding the practices of incidental news consumption on social media:

TL;DR: The findings show the existence of strong connections between technology and content, “anywhere and anytime” coordinates, derivative information routines, and increasingly mediated sociability and fragmentary reading patterns, loss of hierarchy of the news, and coexistence of editorial, algorithmic, and social filtering.
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Online News Consumption Research: An Assessment of Past Work and an Agenda for the Future

TL;DR: An integrative research agenda is proposed that builds on recent scholarship on online news consumption but also contributes to solve some of its main limitations.
Book

The News Gap: When the Information Preferences of the Media and the Public Diverge

TL;DR: Boczkowski and Mitchelstein this article analyzed more than 50,000 stories posted on twenty news sites in seven countries in North and South America and Western Europe and found that the gap in news preferences exists regardless of ideological orientation or national media culture.
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How Users Take Advantage of Different Forms of Interactivity on Online News Sites: Clicking, E-Mailing, and Commenting.

TL;DR: The authors examined the usage of multiple interactive features on news sites during periods of heightened and routine political activity and found that during the former period, the most commented stories were more likely to be focused on political, economic, and international topics (or “public affairs” news) than the most clicked and most e-mailed articles.