Mostrando 2,001 - 2,020 Resultados de 4,106 Para Buscar '"televisión"', tiempo de consulta: 0.16s Limitar resultados
  1. 2001
    “…Participants most commonly obtained COVID-19 information from local television news (n=1118, 61%) followed by social media (n=938, 51%), national or international television news (n=888, 49%), and friends and family (n=835, 46%). …”
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  2. 2002
    “…Regression analyses with continuous exposures indicated that reading (β = 0.1, p < 0.001) and watching television (β = 0.04, p < 0.01) were positively associated with objectively-measured sedentary time, whilst playing board games (β = -0.12, p < 0.05) was negatively associated. …”
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  3. 2003
    “…Health professionals, pharmacists, and the Internet were the most commonly used and trusted sources of health information. Leaflets, television, newspapers, and health magazines were also important sources. …”
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  4. 2004
    “…BACKGROUND: New (mobile phones, smartphones, tablets, and social media) and traditional media (television) have come to dominate the lives of many children and adolescents. …”
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  5. 2005
    “…CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that board certification, being “well-known” for a specific area of expertise, and in-network health insurance plans may be the most important factors influencing patients’ criteria for sports medicine physician selection. Radio, television, and internet advertisements were the least important criteria considered by patients. …”
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    Online Artículo Texto
  6. 2006
    “…Education level differences in screen time were often age dependent, with leisure computer use greater in higher education groups in adults only and leisure television watching generally higher in lower education groups in children and adults, but not youth. …”
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  7. 2007
    “…The likelihood of timely initiation of breastfeeding was lower among married women, compared to never married women (aOR 0.91; 95% CI 0.85, 0.98); working women compared to non-working women (aOR 0.90; 95% CI 0.87, 0.93); women who watched television at least once a week, compared to those who never watched television (aOR 0.74; 95% CI 0.70, 0.78); women who delivered through caesarean section, compared to vaginal birth (aOR 0.30; 95% CI 0.27, 0.32); and those with multiple births, compared to those with single births (aOR 0.67; 95% CI 0.59, 0.76). …”
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  8. 2008
    “…LIMITATIONS: Three limitations are the relatively small sample size, assessment across only two videos (from the same television series), and the absence of other dependent measures (e.g., neuroimaging or genetics) that might have revealed individual-level variability that was not evident with eye tracking. …”
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  9. 2009
    “…Moreover, women with primary education (AOR = 1.27; 95% CI:1.11–1.46) and those who watch television once a week (AOR = 1.29; 95% CI: 1.11–1.49) were more likely to terminate a pregnancy. …”
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  10. 2010
    Publicado 1998
    Video VHS
  11. 2011
    Publicado 1998
    Video VHS
  12. 2012
    Publicado 1991
    Video VHS
  13. 2013
    Publicado 2002
    Video DVD
  14. 2014
    Publicado 2008
    Video DVD
  15. 2015
    Publicado 2008
    Video DVD
  16. 2016
    Publicado 2009
    Video DVD
  17. 2017
    Publicado 2012
    Tabla de Contenidos: “…Lotz and Horace Newcomb -- The study of news production / Stig Hjarvard -- Discursive realities / Kim Christian Schroøder -- Mediated fictions / Peter Larsen -- Media effects: quantitative traditions / Klaus Bruhn Jensen -- Media reception: qualitative traditions / Klaus Bruhn Jensen -- Communication in contexts: beyond mass-interpersonal and online-offline divides / Klaus Bruhn Jensen -- The cultural contexts of media and communication / Klaus Bruhn Jensen -- History, media, and communication / Paddy Scannell -- The quantitative research process / Barrie Gunter -- The qualitative research process / Klaus Bruhn Jensen -- The complementarity of qualitative and quantitative methodologies in media and communication research / Klaus Bruhn Jensen -- Audiences in the round: multi-method research in factual and reality television / Annette Hill -- A multi-grounded theory of parental mediation: exploring the complementarity of qualitative and quantitative communication research / Lynn Schofield Clark -- Personal media in everyday life: a baseline study / Rasmus Helles -- The social origins and uses of media and communication research / Klaus Bruhn Jensen.…”
    Libro
  18. 2018
    Publicado 2009
    Electrónico Software eBook
  19. 2019
    Publicado 2006
    Video DVD
  20. 2020
    Publicado 2014
    Libro
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