Scientific information from the moment it is produced by the scientific community until it reaches the non- expert audience through the newspapers is submitted to a complex process of adaptation. In this paper, we investigate the process of accommodating the scientific information provided by a primary scientific source (a peer-review journal) into journalistic discourse (a newspaper). As case studies we analyzed four scientific papers published by the peer-reviewed scientific journals Nature and Science, which were simultaneously used as primary scientific sources by Latin American newspapers. We observed that the process of accommodation into a new space, journalistic space, represents a significant shift in the content of the texts, including information that appears, disappears and is transformed in the process; transformations in the lexica, the style and the argumentation; a change in the hierarchy of the information; a shift in the information emphasized and in the social impact it might have.
CITATION STYLE
Veneu, F., Amorim, L. H., & Massarani, L. (2018). Science journalism in Latin America: how the scientific information from a scientific source is accommodated when it is transformed into a journalistic story. Journal of Science Communication, 07(01), A03. https://doi.org/10.22323/2.07010203
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.