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said the following: "The tie between information and action has been severed. Information is now a commodity that can be bought and sold, or used as a form of entertainment, or worn like a garment to enhance one's status. It comes indiscriminately, directed at no one in particular, disconnected from
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Postman frames the information-action ratio in the context of the telegraph's invention. Prior to the telegraph, Postman says people received information relevant to their lives, creating a high correlation between information and action: "The information-action ratio was sufficiently close so that
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A high information-action ratio, therefore, refers to the helplessness people confront when faced with decontextualized information. Someone may know
Adelaide has the whooping cough, but what could anyone do about it? Postman said that this kind of access to decontextualized information "made the
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The telegraph allowed bits of information to travel long distances, and so
Postman claims "the local and the timeless ... lost their central position in newspapers, eclipsed by the dazzle of distance and speed ... Wars, crimes, crashes, fires, floods—much of it the social and political
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103:. In short, Postman meant to indicate the relationship between a piece of information and what action, if any, a consumer of that information might reasonably be expected to take once learning it.
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relationship between information and action both abstract and remote." Information consumers were "faced with the problem of a diminished social and political potency."
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usefulness; we are glutted with information, drowning in information, have no control over it, don't know what to do with it."
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most people had a sense of being able to control some of the contingencies in their lives” (p. 69).
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212:"Arctic Monkeys' Alex Turner Decodes Every Song on Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino"
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135:—became the content of what people called 'the news of the day'" (pp. 66–67).
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196:. Gesellschaft fuer Informatik. October 11, 1990. Archived from
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110:) on October 11, 1990 in Stuttgart, sponsored by
106:In a speech to the German Informatics Society (
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194:"Neil Postman: Informing Ourselves to Death"
759:Political polarization in the United States
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812:Facebook–Cambridge Analytica data scandal
77:Learn how and when to remove this message
40:This article includes a list of general
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93:is a concept coined by cultural critic
854:Psychological effects of Internet use
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829:Digital media use and mental health
158:Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino
46:it lacks sufficient corresponding
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834:Effects of violence in mass media
538:Smartphones and pedestrian safety
241:The Neil Postman Information Page
807:2021 Facebook company files leak
533:Mobile phones and driving safety
165:on the hotel based on the Moon.
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779:2020 U.S. presidential election
774:2016 U.S. presidential election
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350:Betteridge's law of headlines
864:Social aspects of television
764:Social media use in politics
414:Missing white woman syndrome
375:Least objectionable program
155:" of the band's 2018 album
147:The term was referenced in
108:Gesellschaft für Informatik
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710:Algorithmic radicalization
124:Amusing Ourselves to Death
100:Amusing Ourselves to Death
824:Cultural impact of TikTok
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131:equivalent of Adelaide's
896:Violence and video games
874:Social impact of YouTube
754:Knowledge gap hypothesis
677:Social-desirability bias
575:Information–action ratio
91:information–action ratio
18:Information-action ratio
849:Mass shooting contagion
302:Evolutionary psychology
61:more precise citations.
839:Fascination with death
702:Political polarization
630:Availability heuristic
595:Television consumption
802:Criticism of Facebook
682:Social influence bias
570:Information pollution
560:Information explosion
543:Texting while driving
499:Low information voter
397:Pink-slime journalism
819:Criticism of Netflix
625:Availability cascade
565:Information overload
474:Attention management
469:Attention inequality
365:Human-interest story
307:Behavioral modernity
292:Cognitive psychology
200:on January 15, 2003.
175:Information overload
732:Post-truth politics
662:Mean world syndrome
143:Cultural references
922:1990 introductions
917:Information theory
550:Influence-for-hire
528:Media multitasking
523:Human multitasking
441:Tabloid television
392:Media manipulation
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727:Fake news website
687:Spiral of silence
640:Confirmation bias
464:Attention economy
446:Yellow journalism
334:Social psychology
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16:(Redirected from
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749:Knowledge divide
645:Crowd psychology
635:Bandwagon effect
407:Public relations
324:Media psychology
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220:. 11 May 2018
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891:Technophobia
879:Technophilia
722:Echo chamber
580:Rage farming
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360:Infotainment
222:. Retrieved
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198:the original
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116:Neil Postman
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97:in his work
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655:Moral panic
585:Screen time
419:News values
355:Gatekeeping
297:Externality
59:introducing
911:Categories
869:Social bot
859:Sealioning
617:Conformity
402:Propaganda
387:Media bias
380:Soft media
224:2019-05-09
181:References
114:-Germany,
42:references
555:Infodemic
489:Clickbait
456:Attention
312:Cognition
217:Pitchfork
884:Neophile
511:Phubbing
429:Hot take
317:Mismatch
169:See also
163:taqueria
151:' song "
844:Griefer
650:Mobbing
484:Chumbox
436:Spiking
55:improve
44:, but
715:Youth
277:Media
279:and
89:The
122:In
112:IBM
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