Summary information

Study title

Dutch Journalism in the Digital Age

Creator

MJ Kemman (Erasmus University Rotterdam)
M Kleppe (Erasmus University Rotterdam)
B Nieman (Erasmus University Rotterdam)
HJG Beunders (Erasmus Unversity Rotterdam)

Study number / PID

doi:10.17026/dans-2z7-eqnv (DOI)

easy-dataset:54666 (DANS-KNAW)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

With an ever-growing supply of online sources, information to produce news stories seems to be one mouse click away. But in what way do Dutch journalists actually use computer-aided research tools? This article provides an inventory of the ways journalists use digital (re)sources and explores the differences between experts and novices. We applied a combined methodological approach by conducting an ethnographic study as well as a survey. Results show that Dutch journalists use relatively few digital tools to find online information. However, journalists who can be considered experts in the field of information retrieval use a wider range of search engines and techniques, arrive quicker at the angle to their story, and are better at finding information related to this angle. This allows them to spend more time on writing their news story. Novices are more dependent on the information provided by others.

This dataset contains the quantitative survey data used in this research

Topics

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Methodology

Data collection period

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Country

Time dimension

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Analysis unit

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Universe

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Sampling procedure

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Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

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Access

Publisher

DANS Data Station Social Sciences and Humanities

Publication year

2013

Terms of data access

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Related publications

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