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Communicating science in the 'digital age'

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These are exciting times to be communicating science as developments in technology, increasing de-regulation and the legacy of previous high-profile science-based issues combine to produce new opportunities for dialogue, engagement and deliberation. In this article - orginally published in 2005 - we explore how the ‘digital age’ is changing the relationship between science and society.

The role of new technologies
New media, such as those you can access through home computers, mobile phones and PDAs (Personal Digital Assistants), are providing opportunities for a wide range of citizens to engage with new developments in science. These media also provide opportunities for citizens to learn about science-based issues, such as near-Earth objects, for example by accessing the Internet. Indeed, anyone who has checked the Internet before visiting their GP, or bought therapeutic treatments over the web is an example of someone who is motivated to engage with biomedical knowledge that is relevant to their lives. This has given rise to the term ‘expert patients’; those who choose to learn about illness and diseases, often through searching the Internet.

It is not surprising that these new media are of particular interest to young people as they are more likely to become ‘early adopters’, those who enthusiastically embrace new technologies as they enter the marketplace. For example, a recent Guardian/ICM survey showed that of those people between 14 and 21 who were online, over a third had produced their own web site or web log (or blog as it is more commonly known).

A blog is a form of online interactive diary. Produced and updated regularly by anyone who has access to a PC and the skills necessary to use blogging software, this form of communication allows, indeed encourages, feedback and comments from its audience. In this sense, blog postings move from being strictly linear – the audience receiving information, as is the case when you read a book - to being more interactive and dynamic. In effect, the communication becomes a dialogue between users, as they exchange information that is relevant and useful to the activity/phenomena they are discussing. To be successful, of course, requires commitment by the users (the producer of the blog and the readership). Indeed, most blogs fail either because the producer of the blog fails to provide sufficient, interesting material and/or the readers stop posting sufficient, interesting comments.

There are numerous examples of blogs currently online – you may even have your own blog or one that you regularly visit and send comments to – and they are produced for a range of purposes. For example, they can be produced by large organisations as a way of engaging their audience, as was the case with the recent BBC series of Rough Science. Alternatively, they can be used to enhance teaching and extend the boundaries of the classroom or seminar, as seen in this blog about medical humanities. More commonly, however, they are produced to promote and discuss the interests of an individual, who, in effect, creates a small online community, as seen in this blog discussing astronomy.

It could be argued that blogs have blurred the boundaries of expertise, in these cases about who is defined as a scientist, a medical humanities specialist, or a professional astronomer. It is just as likely, however, that blogs have made this already blurred distinction more visible. Indeed, amateur ‘citizen experts’, so-called ‘pro-ams’, have been enthusing about their particular interests for many years, just not on the Internet. Now new technologies allow them to communicate more effectively and visibly, for example through online conferences, discussion lists and email, debating and consulting about useful knowledge and creating new networks of information exchange, potentially across the globe.

The influence of de-regulation
Technology then has an important role to play in developing the ways in which we communicate. But it would be wrong to assume that technology is the only factor in providing new opportunities for dialogue, engagement and deliberation about science.

De-regulation, increasing the influence of free market economics in the broadcast media marketplace, has also played an important role. In practice de-regulation is likely to have two key effects on traditional broadcast media such as television and radio:

  1. as we move into the multi-channel on-demand ‘digital age’, audiences are likely to fragment;
  2. the influence of public sector broadcasting may diminish.

Taken together this means that science will have to compete to maintain its current position in broadcast schedules and in viewers’ minds.

At the same time, the increasing take-up of digital TV offers opportunities for real-time audience engagement and deliberation as you watch programmes – you may have even pressed that red button yourself – providing viewers with chances to engage with complex science-based issues. A recent example of this was the joint venture between two popular BBC TV medical dramas, resulting in Casualty @ Holby City. Introduced by Professor Robert Winston, this programme offered viewers the chance to vote by phone on which of two endings of the episode they wished to view. Viewers could also access further information about organ donation at the end of the programme by pressing the red button, via the BBC web site or by phoning an information helpline. With ethical issues revisited throughout the programme, the storyline featured two patients who were desperately ill and in need of organ transplants, but there was only one donor. In effect, viewers were invited to choose which patient received the organs of another patient who had recently died. Of course, one of the key aims of the programme was to highlight the difficult decisions that medical professionals make due to the lack of suitable organ donors. Hence, viewers were asked not only to deliberate by choosing who should receive the donated organs in this fictional scenario, but also to be part of the solution by volunteering to become organ donors themselves through the associated online DoNation campaign; an example of citizen engagement that could save people’s lives.

National newspapers too are responding to the competitive media marketplace and developments in technology, undergoing significant changes in recent years, not least in terms of the move by The Times and The Independent to compact formats and, more recently, the introduction of the Berliner Guardian. More prosaically, you may have noticed the introduction of email addresses of journalists and links to web sites at the bottom of newspaper articles in recent years. These changes coincided with the expansion of the Internet and the introduction of online versions of newspapers. For example, initially introduced for the 1997 general election, the online edition of the Guardian proved so popular that it was retained and expanded. Now one of the most popular online newspapers in the world Guardian Unlimited regularly includes science coverage. The site also runs online chats, again in real-time where readers get to ask questions of experts, for example with well-known scientists such as Professor Robert Winston. In this way, media professionals and the invited experts have an opportunity to see what is important to those willing and motivated enough to post a question; an example of engagement that provides feedback to scientists and media professionals.

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Content last updated: 31/08/2005

Dr Richard Holliman

About our expert

Dr Richard Holliman is a sociologist and member of the Science in Context course team. His PhD looked at how the media report newly published science.

Rick is currently working on ‘Invisible Witnesses?’ a research project investigating the way women and girls are represented in television programmes that feature science, engineering and technology.

 

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