Across
- 5. Describes a set of shared concepts, methods, and assumptions that make up scientific reality at any point in time.
- 6. The gap between those with access to new technologies and those without.
- 9. Community in which the exchange of information is the main social and economic activity
- 10. The term meant to refer to the tendency of people to remain silent when they feel that their views are in opposition to the majority view on a subject.
- 11. Holds that scientific research should be judged solely on the basis of quality.
- 12. States that as new info enters society, wealthy and better-educated members acquire it at a faster rate that poor and less educated people.
- 13. Media executives, editors, or reporters who can open and close the "gate" on a particular news story.
- 16. Sociological investigation of how scientific knowledge develops.
- 17. The pursuit of knowledge through systematic methods.
- 18. The phenomenon where "the rich get richer and the poor get poorer".
- 19. Respected individuals in the community.
Down
- 1. Social networks and the reciprocal norms associated with these networks that encourage people to do things for each other.
- 2. Belief that all scientific knowledge should be made available to everyone in the scientific community.
- 3. " Mass Media, Mass Culture" is the process whereby the mass media determine what we think and worry about. Walter Lippmann, a journalist first observed this function, in the 1920's.
- 4. No scientific finding or theory is exempt from questioning.
- 7. Instruments of communication that reach large audiences with no personal contact between those sending the information and those receiving it.
- 8. Scientists should seek truth, not personal gain.
- 14. The merging of mass communication outlets - print, television, radio, the Internet along with portable and interactive technologies through various digital media platforms
- 15. An objective and systematic way of collecting information and arriving at conclusions.
