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Part 1: Video
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Introduction: Media And Science Fiction
- Media exemplifies mass communication with dissolving abundance into inquiry
- The report represents the research project effectively and clearly
- Science fiction reflects on experiences and represents hope and fear
The presentation begins with the evaluation of media and science fiction by answering the different questions that keep on arising while using them. It is confirmed that the influence of mass media has changed over time but media exemplifies mass communication with dissolving abundance into inquiry. However, science fiction reflects on experiences and represents hope and fear.
What is media?
- A communication tool for delivering information (Chun, 2016)
- It is categorized as shared media, owned media, and earned media
- Mass communication gets exemplified by the media application
Media is a certain communication tool that helps in delivering information and is also categorized into different types. These are shared media, owned media, and earned media and it exemplifies mass communication for dissolving abundance.
Media changing over time
- Invention of printing press led to sharing of information
- The invention of the radio led news to being heard
- Department of Homeland Security collected social media data of immigrants (Chun, 2016)
Media has changed over time and has shown a dramatic change over time. The changes can be staged as the first invention of printing press and the invention of radio led to sharing of information and led the people to read and hear it. Till now it is used for different advertising and even for security reasons like the Department of Homeland Security collecting data from immigrants in the U.S.
Theory of human relationship to Media
- Humans seek predigested news as a diet from media (Grossman, 2006)
- World-wide-web is a tool that is contributed the people
- Media acts as an “open-source software” in relation to human
The relation of media to human beings has become very specific and acts as predigested news over time. However, media gets enacted with the help of World-wide-web and acts as a tool that is contributed to the people. Thus, media acts as an “open-source software” in relation to humans.
Fiction reflecting on experiences of technology
- Fiction stubbornly resists displacement with accurate speculations
- Digital technologies treat journalists as a repository concept (Vint, 2014)
- Technology gets showcased by combining scientific achievement
It gets confirmed that fiction does reflect on experiences of technology. However, it can be said that fiction stubbornly resists displacement with accurate speculations. In most cases, digital technology has been treating journalists as a repository concept by combining scientific achievement with technology.
Fiction representing hope and fear
- Each element from reality is drawn into fiction
- Literature on cognitive estrangement adds nuance to hopes and feelings (Vint, 2014)
- Hopes advocate tradition with hard SF into ideas and genre
Yes, Science Fiction represents hope and fear also as it gets directly drawn from the human mind and behaviour. However, each element from reality gets drawn into fiction, so it develops a connection between hopes and feelings. Thus, with fiction, human hope and fear get advocated into different ideas and genres.
Shaping the continuous development and use of AI
- AI can be portrayed as a recurrent theme
- Fiction emphasizes the potential benefits of AI usage
- Isaac Asimov's Multi-Vac is the evolving AI in the human race (Shur-Ofry, 2023)
It might be too distinct to decide if fiction shapes the usage and development of AI. AI can be eventually portrayed as a recurrent theme that gets presented in Fiction. However, the concept of fiction emphasizes a potential benefit to the usage of AI with Isaac Asimov's Multi-Vac as the smartest AI in the human race.
Part 2: Transcript
Here in this overall presentation, I will say that media and science fiction can be very much autonomous, independent, constantly liberated, and self-sustaining also. This is because AI has been playing a major role and is responsible for most of the interactions and approaches occurring in the real world. As per the view of Sanborn (2022), the concept of media demonstrates mass communication and works on sharing information. As a matter of fact, I entitled this in the video that attributed as a concept to the transition or a gradual shift to the aspect. So, it gets confirmed that media exemplifies mass communication with dissolving abundance into inquiry. But the changing of media left me skimmed on how humans really theorize media with themselves. As a matter of fact, humans seek predigested news as media in the form of a diet.
Moreover, the inclusion of Science fiction has represented a popular culture. According to Shur-Ofr (2023), Isaac Asimov's Multi-Vac is the evolving AI in the human race and is the smartest one. I will comment that Science Fiction has been successful in shaping the conceptual understanding of technology. However, the author Vint (2014), stated that each element from reality is drawn into fiction and gets categorized as our fear or hope. As a result, it reflects then reflects on our experiences and deals on how we can develop and use AI.
References
Part 1
- Chun, W. H. K. (2016). Big Data as Drama ELH, Volume 83, Number 2, Summer 2016, pp. 363-382.
- De Cooman, J. and Petit, N., 2023. Asimov for Lawyers. Journal of Business & Technology Law, 18(1).
- Grossman, L. (2006). You — Yes, You — Are TIME's Person of the Year. NYT. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1570810,00.html#ixzz1oFYNZAf7https://web.archive.org/web/20120305133252/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1570810,00.html
- Shur-Ofry, M., 2023. Multiplicity as an AI Governance Principle. Available at SSRN 4444354.
- Vint. (2014). The Culture of Science. In The Oxford Handbook of Science Fiction. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199838844.013.0024
Part B
- Sanborn, F.W., 2022. A cognitive psychology of mass communication. Taylor & Francis.
Bibliography
- Feenberg, A., & Friesen, N. (2012). (Re)Inventing The Internet: Critical Case Studies. SensePublishers. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6091-734-9
- Hall, S. (2010). Encoding—Decoding (1980). In Crime and Media (1st ed., pp. 44–55). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780367809195-6
- John Thompson. The Media and Modernity. In: Mackay H, O’Sullivan T, eds. The Media Reader?: Continuity and Transformation . Sage Publications; 1999:13-27.