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Agenda-Setting and Spanish Cable News By Salma I. Ghanem Journalism Division Communication Department University of Texas-Pan American Edinburg, TX 78539-2999 (210) 381-3583 [log in to unmask] and Wayne Wanta School of Journalism and Communication 1275 University of Oregon Eugene, OR 97403-1275 (541) 346-3752 [log in to unmask] **Ghanem is an assistant professor at the University of Texas-Pan American and Wanta is an associate professor at the University of Oregon. **Paper submitted to the Mass Communication & Society Division for consideration of presentation at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication annual convention, Baltimore, August 1998. Agenda-Setting and Spanish Cable News Abstract A survey conducted in a highly Hispanic area examined whether exposure to Spanish-language cable news had an agenda-setting effect. Results show that level of exposure was associated with agenda-setting effects for Spanish cable news, but perceived media credibility and media reliance were not related to the strength of agenda-setting effects. Exposure, credibility and reliance were not associated with agenda-setting effects for English-language newscasts -- perhaps because English-speakers had more news options in our survey area. Agenda-Setting and Spanish Cable News With approximately 30 million people, the Hispanic population in the United States is the fifth largest in the world (Avila, 1997). Hispanics represent approximately 12 percent of the total U.S. population (Turner & Allen, 1997). Currently, according to Nielsen's Hispanic People Meter, there are 7.51 million Hispanic households in the U.S. (Avila, 1997). Since 1980, the Hispanic population has increased by 39 percent, a rate five times greater than the rate of increase of the general population (Goodson & Shaver, 1994). The diverse Hispanic population, in fact, will become the largest minority group in the U.S. by the turn of the century (Knopper, 1996, Roslow & Nicholls, 1996). Yet despite this booming growth in population, relatively few mass communication researchers have examined Hispanics and their media use patterns -- especially investigations of possible media effects on the Hispanic population. This study attempts to fill this important void in mass communication research. Specifically, the present study will explore the agenda-setting effects of Spanish-language media and possible differences between agenda-setting effects for Hispanics and non-Hispanics. Through a telephone survey conducted in a community with a high Hispanic population, we will examine whether issue coverage in Spanish cable news broadcasts influenced the perceived importance of issues held by Spanish-speaking individuals -- in other words, whether Spanish cable news set the issue agenda for Spanish-speakers. While mass communication researchers have been slow to investigate the Latino population, the $178 billion buying power of the U.S. Hispanic market (Kerwin, 1993) has not gone unnoticed by advertisers. Hispanic advertising budgets are estimated at $640 million, and $1.2 billion are spent annually on all Hispanic media outlets. Spanish-language television consumes half of the Hispanic advertising budget with Univision controlling 77 percent of the U.S. Spanish TV market and Telemundo 23 percent (Avila, 1997). According to Mendosa (1996), the advertising revenues for Univision grew from $316.5 million to $345.2 million and Telemundo's advertising revenues increased by 21% between 1995 and 1996. About 19 million American Hispanics tune into Spanish-language media on a daily basis (Roslow & Nicholls, 1996). Some researchers like to point out that Spanish-language media serve as a niche for recent immigrants and do not reach all Hispanics because 22 percent of Hispanics do not speak any Spanish (Avila, 1997). According to Frase-Blunt (1991), the audience for Spanish-language television is predominantly younger immigrants who prefer Spanish to English. In some specific areas, Spanish-language media are dominant. In Miami, for instance, Univision has surpassed ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox (Avila, 1997). A Spanish-language radio station (KVLE) reached the number one spot in Los Angeles, and another Spanish station (WSKQ) went up to number two in New York (Knopper, 1996). Given the increasing importance of Spanish media, an examination of the processing of Spanish news media content is timely and warranted. The main research question examined here, then, is: Do Spanish news broadcasts perform the same agenda-setting function that has been found consistently in studies of the U.S. English-speaking networks? Hispanics and the media Several researchers have examined Hispanics and the media through content analyses. Differences in news coverage, for example, were observed by Turner and Allen (1997) in their comparison of the daily Latino and mainstream newspapers in Los Angeles. They examined the coverage for three days following the 1996 presidential election and found that the Los Angeles Times took a global perspective while La Opinion concentrated on the election only as it related to challenges facing the president. La Opinion stressed the size of the Latino vote more than the Los Angeles Times. In terms of media behavior, Dunn (1975) conducted a study to determine if clusters of relevant subgroups of social characteristics, media habits, and preferences might be identified within the Mexican-American community. He found differences between traditional and nontraditional clusters and between housewives and out-of-home workers. Lewels (1981), on the other hand, examined the differences in attitudes toward the media between Mexican-Americans with no media experience, those with some exposure and those who are employed as media professionals and found some distinct differences between the groups. The alienated minority seems to harbor the deepest resentment and antipathy toward the media. He also found a deep-seated distrust of the media and a suspicion that minority interests are not a prime concern of the media. Several other examinations of differences between racial groups in mass communication research have produced a mixed bag of results. The question of potential differences in mass media consumption, for instance, is not clear cut. While Fielder and Tipton (1986) found that minority populations tend to use newspapers less than whites, Cranberg and Rodriguez (1994) note that the percentages of adult minority readership mirror the overall U.S. population. Cranberg and Rodriguez (1994) argue that little difference exists in the newspaper readership between African-Americans and whites. They compared the distribution of adult population by race (white, 85.48%, African-American, 11.36%) and the distribution of newspaper readers by race (white 86.35%, African-American 11.25%) and found little difference. While percentages on Latino readership differed, the authors credited that difference to language barriers. Language provides no such barrier in the present study. In fact, because of the Spanish cable network, Spanish-speaking individuals potentially could be highly influenced by this network's news coverage for a number of reasons. First, since this network provides information in Spanish, individuals with Spanish as their first language may attend to the Univision messages more closely. Attention has been found to correlate highly with mass media effects. Semetko, Brzinski, Weaver and Willnat (1992), for example, found that attention to international news more strongly influenced opinions about foreign countries than did simple exposure. Similarly, Drew and Weaver (1990), Chaffee and Schleuder (1986) and McLeod and McDonald (1985) all found that attention to news more strongly predicted opinion formation than mere exposure to news. Second, Spanish-speakers may use the Spanish network news to learn what is happening in the world around them. With only one Spanish channel from which to learn about important issues, Spanish-speakers have fewer options for their news than English-speakers, who can chose from the newscasts of the three national networks, as well as CNN, CNN Headline News, Fox News and other cable news channels. Thus, English-speakers may receive conflicting salience cues for the various media in our survey area. Finally, Spanish-speakers may use the Spanish cable news programs to acculturate themselves to the U.S. As Kim (1979) notes, individuals identified in some fashion as minorities tend to become acquainted with and adopt "the norms and values of a salient reference group." In this case, Hispanics may use the Spanish cable newscasts as a tool to learn the relative importance of issues of the general U.S. population. Thus, strong agenda-setting effects may be found among viewers of these newscasts. Agenda-setting Since the seminal study by McCombs and Shaw (1972), the vast majority of agenda-setting studies have found support for the notion that members of the public learn the relative importance of issues from the amount of coverage these issues receive in the mass media. Recent studies have made several refinements to the original agenda-setting hypothesis. Early studies used aggregated data, employing the issue, rather than the individual respondent, as the unit of analysis (for example, McCombs and Shaw, 1972; Funkhouser, 1973). While these studies were able to examine several issue variables -- for instance, the obtrusiveness of issues (Zucker, 1978) -- investigations of factors within individuals that could play a role in the agenda-setting process were difficult. A consistent problem with many previous agenda-setting studies has been how to examine individuals as the unit of measurement. Indeed, individuals should be the focus of more research in agenda-setting. It is the individual who consumes and processes issue information contained in the news media. And it is the individual who ultimately displays the agenda-setting effect. While agenda-setting may be a societal effect, the process of agenda-setting takes place within individuals. Hill (1985) provided a crucial first step in research in this area. Hill uncovered only one demographic variable that appeared to influence the media agenda-setting effect. He found that if respondents had some college education, they were more susceptible to agenda-setting effects than individuals with lower levels of education. According to Hill's study, then, education played a role in media agenda-setting. It should be noted, however, that Hill's methodology had a significant shortcoming. Hill used a five-point Likert-type scale to examine individuals' issue agendas. The responses to questions dealing with the perceived importance of issues were used to rank the issues. Thus, there were several "ties" among the issue ranks for each respondent. Since computations of Spearman rank-order correlations are hampered by tied categories, the results could have been less rigorous as they may have been with a different methodology. Recently, Wanta (1997) employed an "agenda-setting susceptibility" score to examine individual variables. This measure, essentially an index of issue concern responses weighted by media coverage, is used in the present study. Utilizing this agenda-setting effects index, Wanta (1997) employed a path analysis model of agenda-setting effects. According to his results, individuals first form opinions regarding the perceived credibility of the mass media. Based on these perceptions, individuals form a level of reliance on the mass media for information. Individuals then expose themselves to media content based on this level of reliance. Finally, exposure to the media leads to agenda-setting effects. Thus, the results showed agenda-setting effects were strongest for active processors of media messages. Miller and Wanta (1996) also used this agenda-setting susceptibility measure to examine agenda-setting differences between different racial groups -- one of the first studies to investigate race as a variable in media effects research. Their survey found whites and non-whites were extremely similar in the two sites of their study. The lone exception was that minorities in a city with a high minority population (Tampa, Florida) demonstrated concern with more issues than either whites in the same city or minorities and whites in a city with a low minority population (Eugene, Oregon). They speculate that this difference may have been due to the availability of minority-based newspapers in the Tampa area. Researchers have found several psychological factors may affect the magnitude of agenda-setting effects. Two such variables -- media credibility and media reliance -- seem especially pertinent to an examination of Hispanics and their uses of the news media. Meyer (1989) developed a media credibility index consisting of two factors. From his factor analysis, Meyer found two useful scales: one dealing with the believability of the news media, the other with community affiliation. Believability is based on the notion that news media need to offer accurate and unbiased information. Community affiliation is based on newspaper editors' concerns that media need to maintain harmony and a leadership status in a community. Both factors are used in the present study. Indeed, if individuals view the news media in a positive way on these two factors, they likely will display strong agenda-setting effects. Agenda-setting influences, in other words, should be stronger if the receiver of a media message views the sender of the message in a highly positive light. Wanta and Hu (1994) found some support for this relationship. Reliance on the media for information likewise should influence the agenda-setting power of the news media. DeFleur and Ball-Rokeach note that individuals develop dependencies on the mass media because people tend to be goal oriented and often require resources controlled by the media to achieve their goals. If individuals have a goal of gaining information on the important issues of the day, they will become highly dependent on the media, since the media control access to a variety of information. High reliance on the media, then, should lead to powerful media influences. Thus, if individuals become highly reliant on the news media for information, they will display strong agenda-setting effects. Again, Wanta and Hu (1994) found support for this relationship. Hypotheses Two hypotheses will be tested here examining the relationship between exposure to news media and agenda-setting effects: H1: The more individuals are exposed to Spanish cable news broadcasts, the more they will perceive issues covered on the newscasts to be highly important. H2: The more individuals are exposed to U.S. news broadcasts, the more they will perceive issues covered on the newscasts to be highly important. These two hypotheses are based on previous research showing that the more individuals are exposed to mass media news coverage, the more they will believe the issues covered by the media are important -- the basic logic behind the agenda-setting hypothesis. Furthermore, if minorities were influenced by the minority press in Tampa, as Miller and Wanta (1996) argue, perhaps a similar case will be found in the present study. In other words, Spanish-speakers may learn the relative importance of issues from their exposure to Spanish cable news. And if exposure is a key variable influencing the magnitude of agenda-setting effects (Wanta, 1997), high levels of exposure to Spanish cable news should lead to strong agenda-setting effects for Spanish-speakers. Similarly, high levels of exposure to U.S. newscasts should lead to strong agenda-setting effects for English-speakers. In addition to testing for the above hypotheses, we will also examine the potential role of two other factors: the perceived credibility of the news media and the level of media reliance within individuals. Both have been found to play important roles in the agenda-setting process (Wanta and Hu, 1994). Thus, two additional hypotheses will be tested: H3: The more credible that individuals view the news media to be, the stronger the agenda-setting effects they will display. H4: The higher the level of reliance that individuals feel toward the news media, the stronger the agenda-setting effects they will display. If individuals view the news media in a positive way and form a reliance on the media for information, they likely will expose themselves often to media messages and thus become highly susceptible to agenda-setting influences. Method A telephone survey was conducted spring of 1997 in the border city of McAllen, Texas. McAllen's population is approximately 110,000 of which 91 percent is Hispanic. The median household income is $30,544 and the median age is 26.7 (McAllen, 1997). The response rate for working numbers was approximately 72 percent. The telephone numbers were selected by random digit dialing and yielded 297 completed questionnaires. Each questionnaire took approximately 10 minutes to complete and included mostly closed-ended questions. Respondents were asked what they thought was the number one problem facing the country and were asked to determine their level of concern on 15 issues (extremely concerned, very concerned, somewhat concerned, a little concerned or not concerned at all). This series of questions dealing with issue concerns formed the basis for the present study. The survey also included sections on media habits, media credibility, perceptions of advertising and demographics. To determine the relative strength of agenda-setting effects displayed by respondents, a methodology was utilized that was nearly identical to that used previously by Miller and Wanta (1996) and Wanta (1997). First, the national newscasts in Spanish and English which aired in the McAllen area for two weeks prior to conducting the survey were videotaped and coded for issue rankings. According to Eaton (1989) and Winter and Eyal (1981), the optimum time to test for agenda setting effects is the two weeks immediately preceding the test of public opinion. Thus, for the two weeks before the survey period, the news reports of Univision, ABC and CBS were content analyzed for issue coverage. Since the Univision news programs are one hour long, and since NBC does not air in the McAllen market, the method provided a relatively equal amount of content for the Spanish and English news programs that would be available to McAllen residents. Two agenda-setting effects scores were then computed, one for the Spanish network news broadcasts and one for the English network news broadcasts, both based on responses to the level of concern respondents reported for the 15 issues included in our study. First, responses to three of these issue concern questions were weighted based on the number of stories the issues received on either the Spanish or English news programs. For example, 28% of the stories on Univision dealt with International Problems, 19% dealt with Drugs, and 13% dealt with Immigration. These were the three issues that topped the Spanish news agenda. Responses to these issues were weighted by .28, .19, and .13, then summed. Next, responses to three issues that received no media coverage were used to guard against potential problems of individuals responding that they were concerned with all issues. Indeed, if respondents were highly concerned with all issues, even those that received little media attention, this would not show media influence but a psychological factor inherent in the individual. Thus, responses for the issues Gangs, Teen Pregnancy and Job Security were weighted by the average of the three highest coverage issues, then subtracted from the total for the highly covered issues. This final score, then, gave an indication of the magnitude of the Spanish network news' agenda-setting influence that an individual displayed. Similarly, for the English news agenda, responses to International Problems were weighted by .22, Crime by .21 and Economy by .11. These were the top three issues on the U.S. network news agenda. These scores were then summed, and the score for the non-covered issues used in the Spanish news agenda-setting effects score was subtracted from the total. This final score formed the English news agenda-setting effects score. The two agenda-setting scores were relatively similar across the respondents sampled here. The English news agenda-setting effects scores were slighly larger than the Spanish effects scores (mean = .803, standard deviation = .617 for the English news; mean = .512, standard deviation = .557 for the Spanish news). These two agenda-setting effects scores were then used as dependent variables in a series of regression analyses. Used as independent variables were exposure to Spanish cable news or exposure to U.S. network news; the two media credibility measures involving believability and community affiliation; and media reliance. Two exposure questions asked respondents how many days in a typical week they watched the Spanish cable news and the U.S. network news. The believability measure asked respondents if they strongly agreed, agreed, were neutral, disagreed or strongly disagreed with the following statements: News organizations like newspapers and television news try to manipulate public opinion, news organizations often fail to get all of the facts straight, news organizations don't deal fairly with all sides of a political or social issue, news organizations do a poor job of separating facts from opinions. The community affiliation measure asked respondents if they strongly agreed to strongly disagreed with the following: News organizations are concerned with the community's well-being, news organizations watch out for your interests, and news organizations are concerned mainly about the public welfare. These two credibility measures are a subset of the indexes developed by Meyer (1989). Finally, reliance was measure by the respondents' level of agreement with the following: I rely on TV news and special reports for information about politics and important issues. Results In the survey, 58 percent of the respondents reported they were Hispanic, 13 percent reported they were partially Hispanic and 29 percent reported they were not Hispanic. The mean income of respondents was between $30,000 and $50,000, and the mean age of respondents was 41, understandably higher than the average age of the McAllen general population, given the fact that we interviewed only individuals who were older than 18 years of age. As would be expected, Hispanic individuals were more likely to display agenda-setting effects from Spanish cable news (mean = .5495) than non-Hispanics (mean = .4308). Similarly, non-Hispanics displayed stronger agenda-setting effects from the English-language network news (mean = .8031) than Hispanics (mean = .7935) Table 1 shows Pearson correlations for the variables in our study. As the table details, exposure to Spanish cable news was positively associated with the Spanish agenda-setting effects score (r=.1259, p < .05). However, exposure to the English-language network news was not related to the English agenda-setting effects score (r=.0518, p > .05). In other words, exposure to the news was associated with agenda-setting effects only for the Spanish cable news. The more individuals watched the Spanish cable news, the stronger the agenda-setting effects they displayed. The results of the regression analyses are listed in Table 2 and 3. According to Table 2, only exposure to Spanish cable news was associated with the agenda-setting effects score. The two credibility measures -- believability and community affiliation -- narrowly fell short of statistical significance. Media reliance also was not associated with media effects for the Spanish cable news. According to Table 3, none of the independent variables was associated with the agenda-setting effects score for the U.S. English-language newscasts. Discussion The purpose of the present study was to examine whether exposure to the Spanish cable news had an agenda-setting influence on a highly Hispanic population. The results of our survey conducted in the Texas border town of McAllen support the agenda-setting hypothesis for the Spanish cable newscasts. The level of agenda-setting effects shown by respondents in McAllen was associated with their level of exposure to the Spanish-language newscasts, supporting our first hypothesis. On the other hand, however, we did not find support for an agenda-setting influence of the U.S. national network newscasts. Individuals' exposure levels to English-language network news were not associated with the magnitude of effects they displayed, as our second hypothesis predicted. The lack of an agenda-setting effect here could be explained by a number of factors. First, the lack of agenda-setting influence could be due to the fact that English-speakers have more news options than Spanish-speakers. Beyond ABC and CBS, the two media included in our content analysis, McAllen residents had several other news sources available to them: CNN, CNN Network news and Fox News, as well as several English-language newspapers. Thus, ABC and CBS, the sources for the media agenda used here, had competition from several other English-language media for individuals' attention. The issues covered by these two networks were in fact only a small portion of the overall issue agenda that English-speakers in McAllen potentially could be exposed to through the available English-language media in the area. Univision, on the other hand, has a near monopoly for Spanish-speakers in McAllen. There were no other cable channels or local television stations providing news in Spanish in the area. In addition, relatively few other Spanish-language sources were available, all from across the border in Mexico. Moreover, reported levels of exposure to other Spanish media, beyond exposure to Univision, were extremely low. While Hispanic respondents showed a mean score of 2.57 on the question dealing with the number of days in a typical week they watched Spanish cable news, the mean score dropped to .93 -- or less than once a week on average -- for days in a typical week in which they read a Spanish newspaper. This is in sharp contrast to the media usage patterns for Non-Hispanics in McAllen. Non-Hispanics reported watching English-language network newscasts an average of 4.68 times a week, but also reported reading English-language newspapers 5.54 times a week and watching English-language local news programs 5.32 times a week. In other words, Non-Hispanics were more likely to read English-language newspapers and watch local news programs than they were to watch the national network news. These other media could have given McAllen residents messages about the relative importance of issues that conflicted with the national network issue agenda. Clearly, English-speakers in McAllen were using a wide variety of news media while Spanish-speakers, because of limited news options, demonstrated a much more narrow pattern of news usage, focusing almost entirely on Spanish cable news. Second, the results here may have been due to differences in the information processing of individuals. Spanish-speakers may have been more attentive when watching the Spanish cable newscasts than English-speakers were when watching the national network news. With the news broadcast in a more accessible language, Spanish-speakers may have been more active in their processing of information and thus may have been more influenced by its content. They may have watched the Spanish newscasts with a strong intention of learning about important issues, while English-speakers may not have been as purposive in their viewing of national network newscasts. The Spanish cable newscasts, meanwhile, also may have been providing its Spanish-speaking viewers with coverage of issues the cable network felt its viewers were concerned with -- a reverse agenda-setting process. In other words, the Spanish network may have covered issues it thought its viewers wanted to see. The data here provide some support for this notion. The third highest issue on the Spanish cable news agenda was immigration, likely an important issue for Spanish-speakers in the U.S. This issue received minimal coverage on the U.S. English-speaking networks. Immigration clearly was a more important issue for the audiences of the Spanish cable news, and thus received a great deal more coverage here than on the national network news. One other difference should be noted dealing with issue coverage of the Spanish and English language newscasts. The national networks provided a significantly higher number of stories dealing with crime than did the Spanish cable news. Crime, however, was an important issue on the Spanish news agenda as well -- ranking fifth. Finally, the differences found here may be due to intra-media agenda-setting. It is possible that the Spanish cable network had its agenda set by U.S. networks. If this were the case, the two-week time-lag utilized in our methodology may have been sensitive enough for the Spanish newscasts but not sensitive enough for the national networks. If issue coverage begins with the U.S. networks and filters its way to the Spanish cable news, perhaps a longer time-lag would have produced a different issue agenda for the U.S. networks, and thus different agenda-setting effects results. Future research, then, might examine the relationship between coverage of U.S. and Spanish newscasts. The lack of influence dealing with the credibility and reliance measures used here is puzzling. Possibly, these variables do not directly impact the magnitude of agenda-setting effects, but instead have an indirect influence. Indeed, Wanta and Hu (1994) found that credibility is associated with reliance, reliance is associated with exposure, and exposure is associated with agenda-setting effects. Thus, these variables interact with each other before eventually having an indirect influence on agenda-setting effects. A similar process could be occurring here. The data here again offer some support for this explanation. Statistically significant correlations were found for the community affiliation index and several other variables, including our reliance measure (r=.3724, p<.001), exposure to network news (r=.1246, p=.035) and exposure to Spanish cable news (r=.1271, p=.032). Thus, these variables may be part of a broad agenda-setting process. Another plausible explanation is that our questions dealing with reliance and credibility were not medium specific. Our reliance question, for example, asked respondents about their reliance on "TV news and special reports" in general. Perhaps if the question asked specifically about reliance on Spanish cable news, we may have found a stronger link between reliance, agenda-setting effects and/or Spanish cable news exposure. The same could be the case with the believability and community affiliation measures, both of which dealt with "news organizations" in general. Overall, the findings here suggest that the respondents in our study did indeed learn the relative importance of issues from the coverage these issues received on the Spanish cable news. The agenda-setting function of the Spanish-language news media, then, was at work in the present study. Perhaps, as was mentioned earlier, Spanish-speakers were attempting to become more enculturated into U.S. by learning about the issues of importance as covered on Spanish cable news. Or perhaps, Spanish-speakers were merely attempting to be entertained by a medium that catered to their needs through its use of the Spanish language. Thus, the agenda-setting effects found here may have been an inadvertent by-product of Spanish-speakers' need for gratifications that could be met only by the Spanish-language network. Regardless, the motivation behind the uses of the Spanish cable news appears to be another area that deserves future attention. The present study demonstrates the potential fruitfulness of future studies of Hispanics and their media usage patterns. As the Hispanic population continues to grow, investigations of this crucial segment of our society will grow in importance as well. References Avila, A. (1997, Jan-Feb). 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McAllen Demographics (1997). http://www.McAllen.Org/economy/ demo.html. McCombs, M.E. & Shaw, D.L. (1972). The Agenda-Setting Function of Mass Media, Public Opinion Quarterly, 36, pp. 176-187. McLeod, J. & McDonald, D. (1985). Beyond Simple Exposure: Media Orientations and Their Impact on Political Processes. Communication Research, 12, pp. 3-34. Mendosa, R. (1996, December). A clear (TV) picture: Univision and Telemundo generate $511 million in ad revenue, a 15 percent up over the previous year. Hispanic Business, 18(12), p. 50. Meyer, P. (1989). Defining and Measuring Credibility of Newspapers: Developing and Index, Journalism Quarterly, 66, pp. 567-574, 588. Miller, R. & Wanta, W. (1996). Race as a Variable in Agenda-Setting, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 73, pp. 913-925 Roslow, P. & Nicholls, J. A. (1996, May/June). Targeting the Hispanic market: Comparative persuasion of TV commercials in Spanish and English. Journal of Advertising Research, pp. 67-76. Semetko, H.A., Brzinski, J.B., Weaver, D., & Willnat, L. (1992) TV News and U.S. Public Opinion About Foreign Countries: The Impact of Exposure and Attention. International Journal of Public Opinion Research, 4, pp. 18-36. Turner, L. J. & Allen, C. W. (1997). Mexican and Latino media behavior in Los Angeles: The 1996 election example. American Behavioral Scientist, 40(7), pp. 884-901. Wanta, W. (1997). The Public and the National Agenda: How People Learn About Important Issues, Mahwah, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Wanta, W. & Hu, Y.W. (1994), The Effects of Credibility, Reliance and Exposure on Media Agenda-Setting: A Path Analysis Model, Journalism Quarterly, 71, pp.90-98. Winter, J. & Eyal, C. (1981). Agenda-setting for the civil rights issue. Public Opinion Quarterly, 67, pp. 72-78. Zucker, H.G. (1978). The Variable Nature of News Media Influence. In B.D. Ruben (ed.), Communication Yearbook 2, pp. 225-240, New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction. Table 1. Correlations comparing media exposure and agenda-setting effects scores. Spanish news U.S. Network Agenda-Setting Agenda-Setting Effect Effect Spanish .1259 .0462 News Exposure p=.033 p=.436 U.S. Network .0324 .0518 News Exposure p=.585 p=.383 Media .0866 .0403 Believability p=.144 p=.497 Perceived .0786 .0184 Community p=.188 p=.757 Affiliation TV News -.0285 .0455 Reliance p=.632 p=.444 Table 2. Regression results for media variables and agenda-setting effects score for Spanish cable news. Variable Beta Standard. T- Sign. Beta Value News Exposure .135 .140 2.360 .02 Media Believability .029 .100 1.681 .09 Perceived Community .041 .114 1.782 .08 Affiliation TV Reliance -.006 -006 -0.101 .92 Multiple R: .188; R-Square: .035; Adjusted R-Square: .022. Table 3. Regression results for media variables and agenda-setting effects score for U.S. network news. Variable Beta Standard. T- Sign. Beta Value News Exposure .007 .043 0.720 .47 Media Believability .004 .040 0.676 .50 Perceived Community .005 .040 0.613 .54 Affiliation TV Reliance .018 .055 0.854 .39 Multiple R: .084; R-Square: .007; Adjusted R-Square: .007.
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