2016
DOI: 10.17645/mac.v4i3.538
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Taming Distraction: The Second Screen Assemblage, Television and the Classroom

Abstract: This article argues that television's resilience in the current media landscape can best be understood by analyzing its role in a broader quest to organize attention across different media. For quite a while, the mobile phone was considered to be a disturbance both for watching television and for classroom teaching. In recent years, however, strategies have been developed to turn the second screen's distractive potential into a source for intensified, personalized and social attention. This has consequences fo… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Repeatedly giving in to digital distractions likely leads to negative consequences, such as avoiding important tasks (e.g., Hong et al, 2021) or shifts in attention (e.g. media multitasking, Stauff, 2016). Additionally, digital technologies are often perceived as intrusive, demanding, or prone to overuse (e.g., Büchi et al, 2019;Halfmann & Rieger, 2019;Schneider et al, 2022).…”
Section: Avoiding Distractionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Repeatedly giving in to digital distractions likely leads to negative consequences, such as avoiding important tasks (e.g., Hong et al, 2021) or shifts in attention (e.g. media multitasking, Stauff, 2016). Additionally, digital technologies are often perceived as intrusive, demanding, or prone to overuse (e.g., Büchi et al, 2019;Halfmann & Rieger, 2019;Schneider et al, 2022).…”
Section: Avoiding Distractionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Li [49] suggests that viewer attention afects the pacing experience because it is not evenly distributed across live streams; simultaneous use of diferent media scatters attention, and intensifes distraction [75]. In games, there also exists a duality between playtime (the time the player takes to play) and event time (the time taken in the game world) [43].…”
Section: Pacingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While Nielsen media reports that linear TV still outpaces non-linear streaming engagement for U.S. TV homes, 1 it is clear that the study of and teaching about television must think through the “televisual” as an interconnected web of industry, text, context, and publics across platforms. Television studies scholarship most productively thinks about the “televisual” as “a densely interrelated assemblage of devices and practices” (Stauff 2016, 189) that, based on “technological capabilities . .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%