5 resultados para Hunt-Lawrence pouch
em Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa - Portugal
Resumo:
Dissertação apresentada à Escola Superior de Comunicação Social como parte dos requisitos para obtenção de grau de mestre em Audiovisual e Multimédia.
Resumo:
Nos dias de hoje, ferramentas como o Facebook, o Twitter e o YouTube fazem parte do quotidiano. Desde o recente virar do século até ao presente, a sociedade transformou-se. Usamos cada vez mais a Internet. Nela pesquisamos informação e partilhamos conteúdos, sejam eles textos, fotos ou vídeos. As novas ferramentas de comunicação online trouxeram uma maior interatividade entre aquele que emite uma mensagem e aquele que a recebe. Nesta investigação procura-se analisar quais e como é que as novas ferramentas de comunicação online são utilizadas pelas organizações culturais, nomeadamente, pelas companhias de teatro de Lisboa e Vale do Tejo, entre 2000 e 2013. Ao longo do enquadramento teórico são abordadas questões como a comunicação das organizações, a comunicação online das mesmas, a utilização das novas ferramentas online por parte de companhias de teatro e o que são considerados sites, media sociais e redes sociais. Entre várias referências, serão citados Grunig e Hunt (1984) que apresentam o modelo de comunicação de dois sentidos simétricos, assim como Phillips e Young (2009) que abordam as diferentes ferramentas de comunicação online. São ainda apresentados estudos relativos à utilização destas ferramentas por parte das organizações artísticas, elaborados pela MTM London (2009) e pelo Australia Council for the Arts (2011). A presente investigação tem por base a observação e acompanhamento das ferramentas de comunicação online utilizadas pelas companhias de teatro, inquéritos aos produtores dessas companhias e entrevistas a alguns dos seus diretores. Com este trabalho pretende-se verificar que ferramentas estão a ser utilizadas pelas companhias, com que regularidade, quem nas companhias gere essas ferramentas, quais as vantagens percecionadas, entre outros aspetos.
Resumo:
We live in a changing world. At an impressive speed, every day new technological resources appear. We increasingly use the Internet to obtain and share information, and new online communication tools are emerging. Each of them encompasses new potential and creates new audiences. In recent years, we witnessed the emergence of Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other media platforms. They have provided us with an even greater interactivity between sender and receiver, as well as generated a new sense of community. At the same time we also see the availability of content like it never happened before. We are increasingly sharing texts, videos, photos, etc. This poster intends to explore the potential of using these new online communication tools in the cultural sphere to create new audiences, to develop of a new kind of community, to provide information as well as different ways of building organizations’ memory. The transience of performing arts is accompanied by the need to counter that transience by means of documentation. This desire to ‘save’ events reaches its expression with the information archive of the different production moments as well as the opportunity to record the event and present it through, for instance, digital platforms. In this poster we intend to answer the following questions: which online communication tools are being used to engage audiences in the cultural sphere (specifically between theater companies in Lisbon)? Is there a new relationship with the public? Are online communication tools creating a new kind of community? What changes are these tools introducing in the creative process? In what way the availability of content and its archive contribute to the organization memory? Among several references, we will approach the two-way communication model that James E. Grunig & Todd T. Hunt (1984) already presented and the concept of mass self-communication of Manuel Castells (2010). Castells also tells us that we have moved from traditional media to a system of communication networks. For Scott Kirsner (2010), we have entered an era of digital creativity, where artists have the tools to do what they imagined and the public no longer wants to just consume cultural goods, but instead to have a voice and participate. The creativity process is now depending on the public choice as they wander through the screen. It is the receiver who owns an object which can be exchanged. Virtual reality has encouraged the receiver to abandon its position of passive observer and to become a participant agent, which implies a challenge to organizations: inventing new forms of interfaces. Therefore, we intend to find new and effective online tools that can be used by cultural organizations; the best way to manage them; to show how organizations can create a community with the public and how the availability of online content and its archive can contribute to the organizations’ memory.
Resumo:
Artigo baseado na comunicação proferida no 8º Congresso SOPCOM: Comunicação Global, Cultura e Tecnologia, realizado na Escola Superior de Comunicação Social (ESCS-IPL), Lisboa, Portugal, 17-19 de outubro de 2013
Resumo:
Patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) have an excess risk of certain gastrointestinal cancers. Much work has focused on colon cancer in IBD patients, but comparatively less is known about other more rare cancers. The European Crohn's and Colitis Organization established a pathogenesis workshop to review what is known about these cancers and formulate proposals for future studies to address the most important knowledge gaps. This article reviews the current state of knowledge about small bowel adenocarcinoma, ileo-anal pouch and rectal cuff cancer, and anal/perianal fistula cancers in IBD patients.