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The effects of natural sound breaks in news stories on ORIENTING and arousal
by MARY BETH BRADFORD Doctoral Student The University of Alabama College of Communication and Information Sciences P.O. Box 870172 Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0172 Phone: (205) 366-9768 E-mail: [log in to unmask] AV Needs: Overhead projector
The Effects of Natural Sound Breaks in Television News Stories on Orienting and Arousal
Television news operations convey information to the public through both the video and audio channels of their stories. Both channels work together to communicate a particular message. Although the television news industry often covers a story because it has good video, the importance of the audio channel to supplement the video should not be ignored. If someone has the television on while cooking dinner, it would more likely be the audio channel that causes the person to look up at the television. But beyond that, Hesketh and York (1993) emphasize that "pictures without good sound lose their impact" (p. 60). If a story on a building implosion is shown on television, the sound of the crash with the video is important. News photographers and editors use this natural sound to enhance the production quality of news packages (Shook, 1989). Different ambient sounds from the scene of the story, such as the shouting protestors at an event or the tapping of a computer keyboard in an office, give the television news viewer more of a sense of "being there." Sound adds interest to the pictures of a news story (Shook, 1989). Livingston (1997) writes, "Sound is the punctuation of visual storytelling. It also helps give the story pace that will hopefully keep the viewer involved in your story" (p. 66). Video editors also use natural sound to provide a means of transition from one scene to another (Speake, 1996). An editor will either fade up the sound from the news scene or "pop" a second or two of sound between reporter tracks or interviews. These natural sound breaks consist of any ambient audio from the news story's original environment that "breaks up" the interview or reporter narration and briefly becomes the dominant audio. For instance, if a news story starts at a press conference and moves to video of violence in the Middle East, the editor will use a natural sound break of a building falling or guns firing to aid in the transition between visuals. Because of the perceived benefits to both the news producer and consumer, some trade organizations have tried to maximize the use of good sound to accompany good video. The National Press Photographers Association has advocated the heavy use of natural sound breaks in news packages (Murray, 1996). However, natural sound breaks interrupt the reporter or interview track. It is possible that this interruption may affect how the viewers cognitively process the news story. Although researchers are interested in how structural features affect a viewer's cognitive processing of media (Lang, 1990), the effect of natural sound breaks in television news has not been researched. In addition, no content analyses have looked at the use of natural sound breaks in news packages. The closest analysis has been the use of sound effects in television news magazine programs (Grabe, Zhou, & Barnett, 2001). Sound effects were differentiated from natural sound in that they were created or manipulated in post-production. After analyzing "Hard Copy" and "60 Minutes," the researchers found that "Hard Copy" used sound effects rather frequently (one effect every 60.02 seconds). This study intends to explore how natural sound breaks affect cognitive processing. A limited capacity, information processing model of television viewing will be employed to test these effects.
Literature Review and Hypotheses Information Processing and Capacity Models Information processing in psychology developed out of Shannon's information theory of communication, importing ideas such as encoding, channel capacity, and efficiency (Lachman, Lachman, & Butterfield, 1979). Like a computer, humans are information processors. Information processing paradigms state that information from the environment is encoded into symbols that are compared to other symbols in memory. Human processors then may store those symbols in memory for later retrieval. According to Shiffrin and Schnieder (1977), there are two types of encoding—automatic detection and controlled search. Controlled search is the traditional idea of "paying" attention to a stimulus. This requires more cognitive effort and involves more of a person's intentions. Automatic detection, on the other hand, can involve processing that is well learned and occurs often without a person's knowledge. Automatic detection can sometimes interrupt controlled search (Shiffrin & Schnieder, 1977), such as when an orienting response occurs. An orienting response is a signal that the processing system has noticed a change in the stimulus (Sokolov, 1963). It can occur when the expectations of a stimulus are violated, or when a participant is required to assess something new in his or her environment (Kahneman, 1973; Graham, 1979; Lang, 1994)1. Any information processing may be interrupted by an orienting response (Reeves, Thorson, & Schleuder, 1986). The orienting response is a key concept in information processing since it has the ability to control to which stimuli we attend (Ohman, 1979). When an orienting response occurs, the processing system calls for encoding resources to attend to the eliciting stimulus (Lang, 2000). This call for resources is indicated through, among other measures, physiological methods such as alpha blocking in the EEG pattern, a momentary decrease in heart rate, or an increase in skin conductance (Thorson & Lang, 1992; Lang, 2000). Broadbent (1958) studied information processing of audio and found that when someone hears a separate audio message in each ear, the participant can effectively process only one message at a time if the messages contain a lot of information. His filter theory suggests that the cognitive system can only handle a certain amount of information at a particular moment. Attention can shift from one ear to another depending upon certain factors, such as familiarity or some change in the stimulus that would elicit an orienting response. Kahneman (1973) described shifts in attention as partially a function of selectivity, where an individual determines which message to which they "pay" attention. However, there may be other mechanisms that affect our attention. Kahneman's model suggests that how we allocate our attention depends upon orienting responses (automatic detection), momentary intentions (controlled search), evaluation of demands (i.e.- when two activities require more attentional resources than we have available, we only attend to one), and how much arousal is involved in the stimulus (which Kahneman, 1973, argues may increase information processing capacity). Our ability to attend to several stimuli in our environment depends upon the cognitive effort required. Easier tasks require less cognitive effort than complex ones. As the complexity of a stimulus increases, more encoding resources are needed to process the message. If there aren't enough encoding resources to process the message, the processing system will borrow more resources from the storage and retrieval subprocess in order to encode the message. This call for more processing resources will breakdown the ability to store and retrieve information (Kahneman, 1973; Lang, 2000). Limited Capacity Processing of Electronic Media The limited capacity model indicated by Kahneman (1973) has been adopted to study how people process television messages (Lang, 2000). Similar to the traditional information processing paradigms in psychology, the limited capacity model of television viewing studies how different attributes of television messages affect encoding, storage, and retrieval—three subprocesses of information processing. A viewer must first encode the message into understood representations, then store these representations into a working memory. The viewer then retrieves a related representation from long-term memory in order for the message to be fully processed. Because television involves two modalities—audio and video—it is psychologically complex. Television messages vary in complexity in both structure and content (Lang, 2000). A program could have complex content in that the verbal message may be intellectually or conceptually difficult for the viewer. A television program may also be structurally complex if it uses a lot of graphics, edits, or sound effects. If a message is complex in both content and structure, the demand for resources is high. Each subsequent orienting response may cause an automatic call for resources to encoding. This may cause the storage and retrieval subprocesses to suffer (Lang, 1995). Orienting to Media Messages The orienting response calls for more encoding resources to be automatically allocated. This places more demand on the cognitive load. Because the total amount of information an individual can process at a given moment is limited (Kahneman, 1973), processing of television can break down if too many resources are used for encoding. Geiger and Reeves (1993) studied attention following cuts. Video that was presented after the cut was either semantically related or unrelated to the preceding video. Using secondary task reaction time, the researchers found that more encoding resources were required for unrelated cuts than related cuts. However, when measuring two seconds after the cut, the amount of encoding resources required for unrelated and related cuts appeared to be the same. Related cuts only resulted in an increase in demand for cognitive resources between the onset of the cut and one second following the cut. In other words, as the viewer sees a new frame of video, he or she determines whether or not it is related to the last scene. If it is related, resources required for encoding decreases since there is less additional information to process. Some structural features of television have been found to elicit orienting responses (Shapiro & Lang, 1991), such as person movement (Lang, 1990), graphics in televised lectures (Thorson & Lang, 1992), and cuts (Geiger & Reeves, 1993; Lang, Geiger, Strickwerda, & Sumner, 1993). Voice changes in radio have also been found to elicit orienting responses (Potter, 2000). All of these structural features introduce novelty into the mediated environment. A natural sound break is a segment of audio from a story's original news environment that briefly interrupts the audio track. Because natural sound breaks introduce a change in the mediated environment, it is hypothesized that viewers will orient to it in the same way they do to other structural features of media. H1: A natural sound break in a television news package will elicit an orienting response in viewers.
Recognition The limited capacity model suggests that if an orienting response occurs, it will affect cognitive processing of a message. If a viewer is not using a lot of cognitive resources to process the message, he or she has the ability to encode more information as a result of an orienting response. However, if the viewer is using all of his or her resources while processing the message, an orienting response will result in a capacity overload, and the ability to store and retrieve information will suffer (Thorson & Lang, 1992; Lang, 2000; Lang et al., 1993). Lang et al. (1993) found that related cuts in television messages required less processing than unrelated cuts, and that recognition memory improved for video and audio information surrounding the related cuts. Recognition memory for audio and video information after the unrelated cut was worse than memory following related cuts. Visual memory after the unrelated cut suffered more than audio memory. In Potter's (2000) study of voice changes in radio, two-minute messages with a medium number of voice changes (10-15 voice changes) were compared to those with a high number of voice changes (more than 20 voice changes). Because a voice change elicited an orienting response, a recognition test showed that memory for information immediately after the voice change was less than memory for information 3 seconds preceding and 3 seconds proceeding the voice change. The study found that listeners appeared to have "borrowed" information-processing resources from storage and retrieval in order to respond to a voice change. Lang et al. (1999) found a non-linear relationship with structural complexity in a study of television messages. Recognition for messages with a moderate number of cuts (4-6 cuts in 30 seconds) was higher than messages with a slow pace (0-1 cut) and a fast pace of cuts (11 or more in 30 seconds). Viewers were unable to keep up in the fast-paced condition because more resources were required to encode the information, causing the processing system to become overloaded and resulting in a breakdown of storage. However, when calm and arousing content were compared, recognition increased for calm messages as pace increased. With arousing messages, recognition decreased as pace increased. This study found that structural pacing and arousing content increased storage ability to a certain point, then suffered as the demand for encoding resources overloaded. With calm messages, there was not as much demand for resources, so the viewer was able to process the faster-paced messages (Lang et al., 1999). Although Lang, Potter, and Bolls (1999) found that encoding visual information can be more of an automatic process than encoding audio, studies have found that visual recognition also can suffer due to complex structure (Geiger & Reeves, 1993) or negatively arousing content (Lang, Newhagen, & Reeves, 1996). If a natural sound break has an effect on recognition similar to other structural features, it is predicted that the recognition data will produce a similar pattern. H2: Viewers will have significantly less visual recognition memory for information during a natural sound break compared to information before and after the natural sound break.
The Role of Arousal Arousal causes more resources to be allocated to encoding and storage (Bradley, Greenwald, Petry, & Lang, 1992). Structural complexity has been found to increase viewer arousal. Lang et al. (1999) varied the pacing of cuts in arousing and calm messages to see the effect on the processing system. Cuts were defined as a shift from one scene to a completely different scene (defined as "unrelated" in Lang et al., 1993; and Geiger & Reeves, 1993). As the pace of the cuts increased, skin conductance levels increased, indicating that arousal increased. A related study differentiated cuts from edits (Lang, Zhou, Schwartz, Bolls, & Potter, 2000). Edits were different shots within the same scene and cuts were defined as different shots that were semantically related (defined as "related cuts" in Geiger & Reeves, 1993), but outside of the same visual scene. Edits were determined to be different than cuts in that edits do not introduce as much new information. The study found that even with edits, faster-paced messages elicited more arousal (self-reported and physiological) than the slow and medium-paced messages (Lang et al., 2000)2. Grabe, Zhou, Lang, and Bolls (2000) looked at how viewers processed and evaluated tabloid and standard versions of news stories. Tabloid stories were created by using various effects such as flash frames, sound effects, and slow motion. Viewers that saw the tabloid version of news stories reported feeling more aroused and exhibited higher physiological arousal than those who saw the standard versions. Potter and Callison's (2000) study of simple and complex promotions found that the complex messages increased listener's self-reported arousal. Because the complex messages had significantly more structural features, it was suggested that more processing resources were allocated to encoding and storage. The researchers hypothesized that multiple, repeated orienting led to higher arousal. This has since been replicated using both self-report and physiological data (Potter, Choi, Yu, Kim, & Carpentier, 2002). If natural sound breaks add to the structural complexity of a news story, it is posited: H3: Participants will experience higher levels of skin conductance for packages with natural sound breaks.
Method This experiment was a 2 (version) x 4 (news stories) x 4 (order) mixed design. Version was within subjects with two levels, natural sound breaks or no breaks. A natural sound break is defined to be a short audio segment from a story's original news environment that is either faded up or edited into the news package to briefly interrupt the audio track. For example, a natural sound break in a hot air balloon story could be the hiss of a propane tank between reporter tracks. Each participant viewed four feature news stories—two with natural sound breaks and two with the breaks edited out. Order was the only between subjects factor. Across four orders, each story appeared twice with natural sound breaks and twice without breaks. When analyzing version, the two stories a participant saw with natural sound breaks were compared with the two seen without natural sound breaks. Materials The stimulus stories were features originally broadcast in a major television market outside of the participants' viewing area. The stories were general features on a hot-air balloon launch, a local gymnast, a cruise on a tall ship, and an agricultural contest. Each story had one or two sentences edited out in order to create recognition test foils. Each feature had between 5-15 natural sound breaks in the original version of the story and ran no longer than two and a half minutes in length. The natural sound breaks were edited out of each story to produce two different versions of the features—the original and the no natural sound version. A recognition tape was produced in order to measure encoding. Six frames of video (1/5 of a second) were chosen from the feature stories at certain points of interest. One snippet of video was taken 3 seconds before a natural sound break. Another snippet was the video occurring at the onset of the natural sound break. A third represented video 3 seconds after the natural sound break. Other snippets that acted as foils were taken from similar news stories or from the original news package, where a sentence had been edited out. There were 50 total recognition items—30 from the stimulus material and 20 foils. Each snippet was followed by three seconds of video black. In order to control for fatigue effects, two recognition orders were produced. Dependent Variables For this study, the orienting response (OR) was indicated through heart rate analysis. All participants in the experiment had their cardiac activity monitored and the time between heartbeats recorded (called the inter-beat interval, or IBI). There are two types of orienting responses—monophasic and biphasic. A monophasic OR will produce a decrease in heart rate for about 6 seconds, then returns to baseline levels after 10 seconds. A biphasic OR will show a dip in heart rate for 2-3 seconds after the onset, an increase in heart rate until about 7 seconds, then a leveling off to baseline levels (Graham, 1979; Velden & Schumacher, 1979; Lang, 1990; Lang, 1994). Arousal was measured through skin conductance. Skin conductance measures the activity of the autonomic nervous system and has been used as a valid physiological measure of sympathetic nervous system activation, which indicates arousal (Hopkins & Fletcher, 1994; Grabe, Lang, Zhou, & Bolls, 2000; Lang et al., 1999; Lang et al., 2000). Skin conductance levels were collected from participants 50 times per second during the media presentation. Recognition was assessed using paper and pencil methods. Participants watched the recognition tape and recorded whether or not they had seen the frames of video in the stimulus material. Participants Forty-one participants from an undergraduate university communication course volunteered for this study. Each participant either received extra credit for participation in the study or fulfilled a course requirement. Participants were randomly assigned to one of the four orders of presentation.
Apparatus The stimulus and recognition tapes were shown on a Sharp 26" television and a Panasonic AG1980 VCR. Volume levels were standard. Physiology was collected using a Compaq Prolinea Net 1/25S computer with a Labmaster A/D D/A board. Heart rate was measured by placing two Beckman standard AG/AGCL electrodes on the participant's forearms. A ground electrode was also placed on the participant's non-dominant forearm. Heart rate was recorded in milliseconds between beats using a Coulbourn bio-amplifier with bandpass filter. Skin conductance was measured by placing two Beckman standard AG/AGCL electrodes on the participant's non-dominant hand. In order to control hydration, the participant's hand was washed with distilled water prior to electrode application. The signal was passed to a Coulbourn SC module, which provides a constant measurement voltage of .5v. Procedure Each participant took part in the experiment individually. After each participant signed an informed consent, the participant was taken into the lab and seated approximately 6 feet from the television and VCR. The participant removed any jewelry from his or her hands and wrists. The researcher acquainted the participant with the physiology electrodes and the necessary preparation for physiological recording, then cleaned the participant's non-dominant hand and both forearms with distilled water. Two electrodes were placed on the participant's non-dominant hand, and three electrodes were placed on the non-dominant forearm. The participants were told that they would be watching four different news stories. After each story played, the tape would stop in order for them to fill out an attitude scale that is not reported here. Each participant was told to sit comfortably, but to stay as still as possible during the stimulus portion of the experiment. Before the start of each news story, at least 15 seconds of baseline physiology data were collected. After the participant viewed all four stories, the participant took part in an unrelated study of radio messages. This distraction task took approximately 45 minutes. After the distraction task, the sensors were removed from the participants. The researcher then gave the participant a recognition packet. The participants were instructed to view the recognition tape and answer on the packet whether or not they had seen the snippet of video. The participants were told to answer as quickly as possible since the time between snippets was short. After the recognition test was completed, the participants took part in the recall of the radio experiment. During the cued recall portion of the radio experiment, the participants were asked if they knew the nature of the television study. None of the participants knew the manipulation of the independent variable. The participants were debriefed, thanked, and dismissed. Data Editing and Reduction Four points of interest were analyzed in each story. The points were those where a natural sound break occurred in the natural sound version of the story. For the stories that did not have natural sound breaks, the data were taken from the video point where the natural sound break would have occurred. Order did not have a significant effect on any analysis, and the results are not reported here. Cardiac data were cleaned and edited using VPM Event (Cook, 1999). Because the inter-beat interval of an average individual ranges between 500-1200 milliseconds (Lang, 1990), any inter-beat interval that was less than 15 milliseconds was automatically added to the previous interval using VPM Event. All other data that fell outside the average range was edited manually. For instance, if the data read two consecutive inter-beat intervals of 350 milliseconds, the two intervals were added together. If an interval read 1300 milliseconds, the interval was split. Heart rate data were then converted from milliseconds to beats per minute per second. One participant's data were removed from all physiology analyses due to excessive noise in the data. During data collection, there were five cases where the onset of a particular story was unclear due to researcher error. For the orienting response analysis, these cases were replaced by the means for that data point in the same point of interest in the same story and order. A total of 40 participants were used in the orienting response analysis. For skin conductance, one participant's data were removed from the analysis for a total of 39 participants. Of these 156 data segments, four were replaced with the mean skin conductance levels for that story and order. Because the amount of baseline data collection varied, the baseline levels were standardized to be the last 10 seconds of data prior to the story onset. Skin conductance levels were converted to change scores based on the final second of baseline before each story (similar to the analysis of Lang et al., 1999). The scores were averaged into five-second intervals for analysis. Recognition data were converted from simple percent-correct to non-parametric measures (a') (Grier, 1971). Recognition data were analyzed using signal detection by converting the data into percentages of hits (items the participant has seen and participant reports to have seen), misses (items the participant has seen and participant has not reported to have seen), correct rejections (items the participant has not seen and reports not having seen), and false alarms (items the participant has not seen and participant reports to have seen). Sensitivity, or the accuracy of memory, was then calculated with a formula using the percentage of hits and false alarms (Grier, 1971; Shapiro, 1994)3. The greater the a', the more accurate (or sensitive) the participant is to the recognition items (Grabe, Lang, Zhou, & Bolls, 2000). Two participants did not keep up with the recognition tape and therefore missed items, and one participant could not complete the test because the recognition tape was not properly cued. A total of 38 participants' recognition data were therefore used for analysis.
Results Hypothesis 1—Orienting to Natural Sound Breaks Hypothesis 1 predicted that natural sound breaks would elicit an orienting response in viewers. An OR was operationally defined as a significant decrease in heart rate over time that also significantly followed a cubic trend (Graham, 1979). The test of H1 began by constructing a cardiac response curve (CRC) that graphed participants' heart rate level for each of 10 seconds following the onset of the natural sound in both the first and second natural sound stories. That CRC is shown in Figure 1.
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A 2 (Story) x 10 (Time) mixed design analysis of variance (ANOVA) showed a main effect for Time with a cubic trend, F(1,36)=38.054, p<.001. However, the Story x Time cubic interaction approached significance, F(1,36)=2.511, p=.122. Because the news stories also contained visual changes at the moment natural sound was used, the possibility existed that the ORs in Figure 1 were not due to natural sound breaks, but to the change in picture. To examine that possibility, two other CRCs were constructed showing the exact time points where the natural sound break would have occurred in the no-natural sound versions of the stories. All four CRCs are shown in Figure 2.
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As can be seen in the figure, the deceleration was greater for the natural sound versions than the no natural sound versions. A repeated measures 2(Story) X 2(Natural Sound) X 10(Time) mixed design analysis of variance (ANOVA) showed a significant Nat Sound X Time interaction in the cubic trend analysis, F(1,36)=15.742, p<.001. Because cardiac activity significantly decreased following natural sound breaks and because that decrease was significantly greater than in response to visuals alone, H1 is confirmed. Hypotheses 2—Recognition and Natural Sound Hypothesis 2 predicted that the recognition would be worse for information during the natural sound break than the information before and after the natural sound break. A 3 (Position) x 2 (Natural Sound) mixed design analysis of variance (ANOVA) showed a main effect for Position, F(2,68)=11.173, p<.001. Participants recognized less of the video items that occurred during the natural sound break than those before or after the break. In addition, the stories with natural sound breaks appeared to have a higher overall recognition than the ones without breaks. However, the Position x Natural Sound analysis was not significant, F(2,68)=.117, p<.890. Therefore, the analysis showed that there was an interaction in the recognition data, but natural sound breaks did not cause this interaction. The results are shown in Figure 3. H2 is not supported.
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Hypotheses 3—Natural Sound Breaks and Arousal In analyzing the skin conductance levels, a repeated measures 2 (Natural Sound) x 2 (Story) x 10 (Time) mixed design analysis of variance (ANOVA) was conducted. Although the main effect for natural sound breaks was not significant, F(1,35)=1.561, p=.220, the Natural Sound x Time interaction was significant, F(9,315)=3.945, p<.001. This interaction can be seen in Figure 4. Because the skin conductance levels in the first natural sound package increased within the first 10 seconds of the story, the levels remained much higher and resulted in a less pronounced decrease in arousal through the duration of the news story. Hypothesis 3 is supported.
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Discussion Members of the National Press Photographers Association have been pleading to their news directors and reporters about the importance of using natural sound breaks in news stories (Murray, 1996). However, there has not been much academic research investigating how natural sound breaks can affect storytelling. This study intended to take the first step in investigating the importance of natural sound by looking at how it affects viewer attention and arousal. The limited capacity model has been implemented to test the effects of various structural features (Lang, 1990; Lang, 1991; Lang et al., 2000; Potter, 2000; Potter & Callison, 2000) and arousing content (Lang et al., 1999; Lang et al., 1996; Grabe, Lang, et al., 2000; Grabe, Zhou, et al., 2000) on the processing of mass-mediated messages. This study tested this model using natural sound breaks in news stories and found that natural sound is another feature that can affect how viewers process television news. The results of the orienting response data show that natural sound breaks do produce an orienting response in viewers. However, participants did orient to the video that appeared at the natural sound break, whether a natural sound break was present or not. What is important to note is that the OR was significantly more pronounced when the natural sound break was added. Participants also seemed to have a greater, though not significant, orienting response to natural sound breaks during the first natural sound story than the second natural sound story. It is possible that participants may have habituated to the natural sound breaks by the time the second natural sound story was shown. This suggests that during a typical newscast with various types of stories, stories with natural sound breaks airing later in a broadcast may not have as much of an effect on cognitive processing as those stories airing earlier in the broadcast. It is possible that if more participants were included in this experiment, the difference in the recognition data could have reached significance. In addition, further research should add more than 50 recognition items, since those recognition items had to be assigned to a particular story and limited the power of the analysis. Some stories had more available recognition items and therefore had a more robust recognition analysis. It would be better to balance the recognition items equally, so each story would have the same number of recognition items. Further research could also analyze memory through the use of free or cued recall to see if natural sound breaks caused participants to remember the stories more. Further research should also test audio recognition. This study measured natural sound's effect on video recognition, but it would be interesting to see if participants' audio recognition would follow the same pattern. Whereas we've seen effects of arousing video content on verbal memory (Lang et al., 1999), further research should see if arousing audio could have the same effect. Because the data collection of the physiology was not precise, the onset of the orienting response may not have been precise. Data collection may have started after the onset of a particular story, which would cause the data not to be synchronized with the stimulus. Time code in the stimulus and data collection would correct this problem. Because the research had a limited number of available packages that used natural sound in its storytelling, the stories varied in length. The shortest package used was 54 seconds in length, so the tonic heart rate analysis could only analyze the first 54 seconds of all the stories, even though some stories ran well over two minutes. In the future, stories that are similar in length should be used, and more stories should be used. Further research should also look into varying the number of natural sound breaks. Natural sound breaks are encouraged by the NPPA, but too many are discouraged (Murray, 2001). Therefore, stimulus material could have a high, medium, and low number of natural sound breaks to see the effect on arousal, tonic attention, and recognition (similar to Lang et al., 2000). In addition, further research could use other cognitive models to investigate if natural sound "proves" a reporter's words and enhances comprehension of the news story (Murray, 1998). The results of this study could be of interest to the television news industry. Regardless of story content, participants were somewhat affected by the use of natural sound breaks in news stories. General managers and news directors who are interested in setting their station apart from others may benefit from using natural sound breaks. As the competition for audiences continues to increase, news organizations would benefit from learning what viewers find to be more engaging without sacrificing the audience's capacity to obtain information. Notes: 1. A novel stimulus is not the only condition in which an orienting response can occur (Kahneman, 1973). It can also occur when a stimulus matches something that has been previously primed as significant to the person, such as a person's name (Ohman, 1979).
2. Self-reported arousal and physiological arousal for slow and medium edits were lower than fast and very fast-paced edits. However, the relationship is not linear between medium and fast-paced messages. The levels of arousal appear to "step up" during the fast-paced messages.
3. The researcher used the following formula for calculating a' (Grier, 1971):
A'=1/2 + (hits-false alarms)(1 + hits –false alarms)/4(hits)(1-false alarms)
Another formula for a' was also calculated in a post hoc analysis, but the results were similar. The following formula was used in the post-hoc analysis:
A'=1 – ¼((false alarms/hits + (1-hits)/(1-false alarms))
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