Psychology of Media & Technology
15.0K views | +0 today
Follow
Psychology of Media & Technology
The science behind media behaviors
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Dr. Pamela Rutledge
Scoop.it!

The Movie Club Sees 'Contagion'

The  Movie Club Sees 'Contagion' | Psychology of Media & Technology | Scoop.it
Although the movie was released in 2011, it's become much more popular during the pandemic.
Dr. Pamela Rutledge's insight:

Why go see "Contagion"? I joined NPR's A1 Movie Club along with

@SamuelAAdams and Movie Club Vice President @JGHorn.to talk about how fiction helps us cope with emotions, gives us a way to think about difficult and complex topics and reinforces our hope, even in the face of a pandemic. Why does "Contagion" hold up 9 yrs later? It was well-researched, eerily accurate and restores faith in science in the face of politicizing and misinformation.  #coronavirus #mediapsychology #contagion #movieclub

No comment yet.
Scooped by Dr. Pamela Rutledge
Scoop.it!

Stories From Experts About the Impact of Digital Life | Pew Research Center

Stories From Experts About the Impact of Digital Life | Pew Research Center | Psychology of Media & Technology | Scoop.it
While technology experts and scholars have concerns about the current and future impact of the internet, they also tend to report their own experience of digital life as positive.
Dr. Pamela Rutledge's insight:

I'm generally a 'glass-half-full' person when it comes to technology.  I recognize that, like any tool, the impact is related to how you use it (good or bad).  There is so much potential in digital connectivity that we overlook, from economic development and social access to exposing the bad guys (how long would it have taken to find out that the government was keeping immigrant children in tents in the desert without social media or to generate enough attention to give enough voice to #BlackLivesMatter or #MeToo to change the conversation of a nation?).  Besides, there are so many technophobes frantically trying to prove how awful technology is (phones, games, social media, if it electronic, it's bad), that I figure the topic is more than well-covered.  

 

The recent report from Pew was fun in that it includes anecdotes from people's experience, rather than just "expert opinions."  Now all my students will know that personal experience is not generalizable (!!!), however, this particular report warmed my heart because it included my anecdote about my Dad, who passed away at age 91, used ALL CAPS in every email message he sent (he did not get the  yelling concept), loved to share jokes and used Facebook regularly to stay "in the know" of what the family was up to.  I would have loved to see him take on Snap and Instagram.  He would have been out taking pictures of flowers and leaves and posting his unique if not occasionally snarky commentary on the world.  He wondered about a lot of things and saw beauty everywhere.  I hope that I wonder about a lot of things and see beauty until I'm 91 (and longer!) too.

No comment yet.