The Worthwhileness of Immersive Journalism - Taking on an Audience Perspective

Author(s)
Hannah Greber, Loes Aaldering, Sophie Lecheler
Abstract

A growing number of studies in journalism research are concerned with the effects of immersive journalism (IJ) on audience perceptions and behaviors. This interest in IJ is logical, because IJ has the potential to become an impactful innovation for the industry. However, we have largely neglected the question of whether audiences want this form of emotional journalism. This study fills this gap and investigates whether people consider IJ worth their while. Using a factorial survey design, we presented a sample of 2000 German citizens with descriptions of an immersive production about protests in Belarus, in which we manipulate the use of inclusive technology (VR vs. AR vs. video), immersive narratives (first person vs. third person), agency (choice of perspective vs. no choice of perspective and control of location vs. no control), and emotionality (positive vs. negative vs. neutral tone). The analyzes reveal that an immersive narrative perspective, control and emotionality do not predict worthwhileness perceptions. However, productions that present people with inclusion and technological agency render this production more worthwhile in the eye of the individual user.

Organisation(s)
Department of Communication
External organisation(s)
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Journal
Journalism Practice
Pages
1
No. of pages
19
ISSN
1751-2786
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2023.2177711
Publication date
02-2023
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
508018 Reception research, 508005 Journalism
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Communication
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/the-worthwhileness-of-immersive-journalism--taking-on-an-audience-perspective(0504b2f7-b9c9-43a9-8db7-70dffb93c8cc).html