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Rodrigo Zamith

Researcher at University of Massachusetts Amherst

Publications -  28
Citations -  1219

Rodrigo Zamith is an academic researcher from University of Massachusetts Amherst. The author has contributed to research in topics: Journalism & Analytics. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 25 publications receiving 967 citations. Previous affiliations of Rodrigo Zamith include University of Minnesota & Florida International University.

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Content Analysis in an Era of Big Data: A Hybrid Approach to Computational and Manual Methods

TL;DR: It is argued that an approach blending computational and manual methods throughout the content analysis process may yield more fruitful results, and a case study of news sourcing on Twitter is drawn to illustrate this hybrid approach in action.
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Sourcing the Arab Spring: A Case Study of Andy Carvin's Sources on Twitter During the Tunisian and Egyptian Revolutions

TL;DR: The authors evaluated whether social media platforms expand the range of actors involved in the news through a quantitative content analysis of the sources cited by NPR's Andy Carvin on Twitter during the Arab Spring and found that non-elite sources had a greater representation in the content than elite sources.
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Quantified Audiences in News Production

TL;DR: A number of social, technological, and economic shifts over the past two decades have led to the proliferation of audience analytics and metrics in journalism as discussed by the authors, and it is argued that we are wit...
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Constructing Climate Change in the Americas: An Analysis of News Coverage in U.S. and South American Newspapers

TL;DR: This paper examined the portrayal of climate change in four national newspapers from Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, and the United States, and found that leading media in Brazil and the U.S. reported that climate change was portrayed as a hoax.
Journal ArticleDOI

Online Harassment and Its Implications for the Journalist–Audience Relationship

TL;DR: This article examined the nature of online harassment, the types of journalists most likely to experience it, and the most common forms of respon- ture. But they focused on the most frequent forms of harassment.