2023
DOI: 10.1080/13501763.2022.2160784
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Next slide please: the politics of visualization during COVID-19 press briefings

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Cited by 9 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Those same qualities extend to visualizations that promote predictive narratives (Allen et al, 2023;Amit-Danhi, 2022a;Pentzold and Fechner, 2019). They are especially prominent in the temporal mediation work expected from journalists (Tenenboim-Weinblatt, 2013), but can also be found in candidates' campaign materials (Amit-Danhi, 2022a), government officials' pandemic visualizations (e.g., Allen et al, 2023), and social media content related to future-oriented topics such as climate change (e.g., Wang et al, 2018). The use of visuals in future-oriented communication may tap into a basic cognitive use of eyesight to illustrate problematic scenarios and prepare for dangers (Arp, 2008), making the response to future-oriented visual stimuli less reliant on logical thinking rather than instinct.…”
Section: Predictive Visual Rhetoricmentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…Those same qualities extend to visualizations that promote predictive narratives (Allen et al, 2023;Amit-Danhi, 2022a;Pentzold and Fechner, 2019). They are especially prominent in the temporal mediation work expected from journalists (Tenenboim-Weinblatt, 2013), but can also be found in candidates' campaign materials (Amit-Danhi, 2022a), government officials' pandemic visualizations (e.g., Allen et al, 2023), and social media content related to future-oriented topics such as climate change (e.g., Wang et al, 2018). The use of visuals in future-oriented communication may tap into a basic cognitive use of eyesight to illustrate problematic scenarios and prepare for dangers (Arp, 2008), making the response to future-oriented visual stimuli less reliant on logical thinking rather than instinct.…”
Section: Predictive Visual Rhetoricmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Those same qualities extend to visualizations that promote predictive narratives (Allen et al, 2023;Amit-Danhi, 2022a;Pentzold and Fechner, 2019). They are especially prominent in the temporal mediation work expected from journalists (Tenenboim-Weinblatt, 2013), but can also be found in candidates' campaign materials (Amit-Danhi, 2022a), government officials' pandemic visualizations (e.g., Allen et al, 2023), and social media content related to future-oriented topics such as climate change (e.g., Wang et al, 2018).…”
Section: Predictive Visual Rhetoricmentioning
confidence: 87%
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“…The frequency of press conferences given political leaders increased significantly during the early stages of the COVID-19 crisis; in some nations, leaders appeared daily for periods of time (Allen et al 2023). These events usually followed a particular choreography with leaders and experts arriving together, standing at strategically positioned and sociallydistanced podiums in front of national flags.…”
Section: Press Conferencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These events usually followed a particular choreography with leaders and experts arriving together, standing at strategically positioned and sociallydistanced podiums in front of national flags. The press conferences often included the presentation of visual information tracking the spread of the virus and gave details about various actions that governments had taken or planned to implement (Allen et al 2023). The use of press conferences during the health crisis has been explored from a variety of perspectives, including crisis communication (He et al 2023), genre analysis (Wang and Ge 2022), collective intentionality (Kirgil and Voyer 2022) and speech acts (Schueler and Marx 2023).…”
Section: Press Conferencesmentioning
confidence: 99%