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Featured researches published by Dimitrinka Atanasova.


Public Understanding of Science | 2017

Climate change on Twitter: Content, media ecology and information sharing behaviour.

Giuseppe Alessandro Veltri; Dimitrinka Atanasova

This article presents a study of the content, use of sources and information sharing about climate change analysing over 60,000 tweets collected using a random week sample. We discuss the potential for studying Twitter as a communicative space that is rich in different types of information and presents both new challenges and opportunities. Our analysis combines automatic thematic analysis, semantic network analysis and text classification according to psychological process categories. We also consider the media ecology of tweets and the external web links that users shared. In terms of content, the network of topics uncovered presents a multidimensional discourse that accounts for complex causal links between climate change and its consequences. The media ecology analysis revealed a narrow set of sources with a major role played by traditional media and that emotionally arousing text was more likely to be shared.


Health | 2017

Obesity frames and counter-frames in British and German online newspapers.

Dimitrinka Atanasova; Nelya Koteyko

By featuring news articles highlighting certain aspects of obesity and backgrounding others, the media can frame these aspects as especially applicable to how obesity should be understood and addressed. Despite the highest rates in Europe, news reports from Britain and Germany have come under little scholarly scrutiny. In this article, we explore frames and their frequency of use in British and German online newspapers. Our findings reveal a dominant cross-national framing of obesity in terms of ‘self-control’, which places a more pronounced emphasis on individual responsibility than demonstrated by earlier studies and may contribute to a culture of weight bias and stigma. The results also reveal evidence for cross-national efforts to challenge this individualising framing with counter-frames of ‘acceptance’ and ‘coming out’. We argue that this is a positive development, which demonstrates the potential of media frames to function not only as possible contributors to weight bias and stigma but also as mechanisms for countering entrenched social conceptions of obesity.


Environmental Communication-a Journal of Nature and Culture | 2017

Metaphors in Guardian Online and Mail Online Opinion-page Content on Climate Change: War, Religion, and Politics

Dimitrinka Atanasova; Nelya Koteyko

In climate change-related media discourses metaphors are used to (re-)conceptualize climate change science as well as climate change mitigation/adaptation efforts. Using critical metaphor analysis, we study linguistic and conceptual metaphors in opinion-page content from the British online newspapers Guardian Online and Mail Online, while paying attention to the arguments they advance. We find that Guardian Online employed war metaphors to advance pro-climate change arguments. War metaphors were used to (1) communicate the urgency to act on climate change and (2) conceptualize climate change politics. Mail Online employed religion metaphors to furnish skeptic/contrarian arguments. Religion metaphors were used to (1) downplay the urgency to act on climate change and (2) conceptualize transitions from climate change belief to skepticism. These findings raise concerns about sustained policy gridlock and refute expectations about novelty in climate change-related media discourses (as both war and religion have a history of use).


Archive | 2016

Discourse Analysis in Climate Change Communication

Nelya Koteyko; Dimitrinka Atanasova

Discourse analysis is an interdisciplinary field of inquiry that has been increasingly used by climate change communication scholars since the late 1990s. In its broadest sense, discourse analysis is the study of the social through analysis of language, including face-to-face talk, written media texts, and documents, as well as images and symbols. Studies in this field encompass a broad range of theories and analytic approaches for investigating meaning. Due to its focus on the sociocultural and political context in which text and talk occur, discourse analysis is pertinent to the concerns of climate change communication scholars as it has the potential to reveal the ideological dimensions of stakeholder beliefs and the dissemination of climate change-related information in the media. In contrast to studies under the rubric of frame analysis and survey-based analyses of public perceptions, this research places emphasis on the situated study of different stakeholders involved in climate change communication. Here attention is paid not only to the content being communicated (e.g., themes) but also to the linguistic forms and contexts that shape language and interaction. Both of these require an understanding of audiences’ cultural, political, and socioeconomic conditions. From the participatory perspective, discourse analysis can therefore illuminate the moral, ethical, and cultural dimensions of the climate change issue.


Health | 2017

Representations of mental health and arts participation in the national and local British press, 2007-2015.

Dimitrinka Atanasova; Nelya Koteyko; Brian J. Brown; Paul Crawford

We analysed news articles published in national and local British newspapers between 2007 and 2015 to understand (1) how mental health and arts participation were framed and (2) how the relationships between participants in arts initiatives were conceptualised. Using corpus-assisted qualitative frame analysis, we identified frames of recovery, stigma and economy. The recovery frame, which emphasised that mental illness can be treated similarly to physical illness, positioned arts participation as a form of therapy that can complement or substitute medication. The stigma frame presented arts participation as a mechanism for challenging social conceptions that mentally ill individuals are incapable of productive work. The economy frame discussed the economic burden of mentally ill individuals and portrayed arts participation as facilitating their return to employment. Using thematic analysis, which paid attention to the representation of social actors, we found that service users were identified as the prime beneficiaries of arts initiatives, and arts participation was conceptualised as a way to bring people with mental health issues together. We discuss these findings against existing research on media representations of mental health and the concept of ‘mutual recovery’ and suggest what wider concurrent developments in the areas of mental health and the media may account for the uncovered frames and themes.


Obesity Reviews | 2012

Obesity in the news: directions for future research

Dimitrinka Atanasova; Nelya Koteyko; Barrie Gunter


International Journal of Market Research | 2014

Sentiment analysis: A market-relevant and reliable measure of public feeling?

Barrie Gunter; Nelya Koteyko; Dimitrinka Atanasova


The Routledge handbook of metaphor and language, 2017, ISBN 9781138775367, págs. 296-308 | 2017

Metaphor and the representation of scientific issues:climate change in online and print media

Nelya Koteyko; Dimitrinka Atanasova


Archive | 2015

A strategy for communication between key agencies and members of the public during crisis situations

Paul Reilly; Dimitrinka Atanasova; Xavier Criel


Discourse, Context and Media | 2018

Mental health advocacy on Twitter : Positioning in Depression Awareness Week tweets

Nelya Koteyko; Dimitrinka Atanasova

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Paul Reilly

University of Sheffield

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Paul Crawford

University of Nottingham

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