Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.21256/zhaw-18407
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dc.contributor.authorBorghoff, Birgitta-
dc.date.accessioned2019-10-16T13:39:49Z-
dc.date.available2019-10-16T13:39:49Z-
dc.date.issued2019-10-03-
dc.identifier.urihttps://digitalcollection.zhaw.ch/handle/11475/18407-
dc.description.abstractPatterns of Language Use in Public Stories about Antibiotics and Resistances in Digital Discourses In the domain of public health communication (Baumann; Lampert & Grimm; Camerini, Ludolph & Rothenfl-uh; Hurrelmann & Baumann; Rossmann & Hastall), the communicative areas of tension to which governance practices are inevitably exposed in the modern public sphere manifest themselves to a particular degree. These include different perspectives on the perception and evaluation of problem situations, different patterns of interpretation with regard to the validity of knowledge and procedures of problem solving (e.g. Stirling, p. 269). In addition, there is a change in the framework conditions for doctor-patient communication, in particular due to the increase in the significance of digital communication environments (Hannawa & Rothenfluh; Altendorfer). The poster illuminates questions of public health prevention from the point of view and with the methods of linguistic, corpus-driven discourse analysis (Spitzmüller & Warnke; Bubenhofer b). It is based on two research projects commissioned by the Swiss health authorities which were carried out between 2017 and 2019 and were based on an extensive digital text corpus (Stücheli-Herlach et al., pp. 8-9). The focus was on the question of the linguistically formed "common sense" on the subject of antibiotic resistance. In public dis-courses the research team examined manifest controversies (e.g. Dascal) as well as possible discourse coalitions among relevant actors of health communication (e.g. Hajer) on the basis of significant recursive patterns of language use (Bubenhofer a). Specifically, the "Strategy Antibiotic Resistance StAR" of the Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH) was discussed. The research team examined corresponding antibiotic and antibiotic resistance discourses in German and French, using a German-language corpus of 133 web sources with 1.9 million individual texts and 839 million words as well as a French-language corpus of 149 web sources with 16,000 individual texts and 21.9 million words. The results concern indications for thematic discourse clusters, frequencies of context markers, keyword analyses, the mutual relation of discourse actors in networks as well as references to "public stories" (Arnold et al.) on the relevant topics. All results (were determined in multi-stage quantitative and qualitative analysis processes and triangulated in an interdisciplinary research team (Dreesen & Stücheli-Herlach). The poster presents the most important methods and results and presents practical conclusions for discussion. Special attention will be given to the transfer of discourse-linguistic insights to actors of professional practice by means of interactive, digital data visualizations. The results were used for the further implementation and optimisation of the "StAR" project of public health promotion.de_CH
dc.language.isoende_CH
dc.publisherZHAW Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaftende_CH
dc.rightsLicence according to publishing contractde_CH
dc.subjectDiscoursede_CH
dc.subjectDiscourse analysisde_CH
dc.subjectComputer linguisticsde_CH
dc.subjectCorpus analysisde_CH
dc.subjectAntibiotic resistancede_CH
dc.subjectPublic healthde_CH
dc.subjectOrganizational communicationde_CH
dc.subjectHealth communicationde_CH
dc.subjectPublic storytellingde_CH
dc.subjectTopic modelingde_CH
dc.subject.ddc401.4: Terminologie, Diskursanalyse, Pragmatikde_CH
dc.titleDigital public discourses on antibiotic resistance in Switzerlandde_CH
dc.typeKonferenz: Posterde_CH
dcterms.typeTextde_CH
zhaw.departementAngewandte Linguistikde_CH
zhaw.organisationalunitInstitut für Angewandte Medienwissenschaft (IAM)de_CH
dc.identifier.doi10.21256/zhaw-18407-
zhaw.conference.details1. Digital Health Lab Day, Winterthur, 3. Oktober 2019de_CH
zhaw.funding.euNode_CH
zhaw.originated.zhawYesde_CH
zhaw.publication.statuspublishedVersionde_CH
zhaw.publication.reviewOpen peer reviewde_CH
zhaw.webfeedDigital Health Labde_CH
zhaw.webfeedDigital Linguisticsde_CH
zhaw.webfeedOrganisationskommunikation Öffentlichkeitde_CH
zhaw.funding.zhawDiskursanalyse Antibiotikaresistenzen (Deutscher Sprachgebrauch)de_CH
zhaw.funding.zhawDiskursanalyse Antibiotikaresistenzen (Französischer Sprachgebrauch)de_CH
zhaw.author.additionalNode_CH
Appears in collections:Publikationen Angewandte Linguistik

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Borghoff, B. (2019, October 3). Digital public discourses on antibiotic resistance in Switzerland. 1. Digital Health Lab Day, Winterthur, 3. Oktober 2019. https://doi.org/10.21256/zhaw-18407
Borghoff, B. (2019) ‘Digital public discourses on antibiotic resistance in Switzerland’, in 1. Digital Health Lab Day, Winterthur, 3. Oktober 2019. ZHAW Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften. Available at: https://doi.org/10.21256/zhaw-18407.
B. Borghoff, “Digital public discourses on antibiotic resistance in Switzerland,” in 1. Digital Health Lab Day, Winterthur, 3. Oktober 2019, Oct. 2019. doi: 10.21256/zhaw-18407.
BORGHOFF, Birgitta, 2019. Digital public discourses on antibiotic resistance in Switzerland. In: 1. Digital Health Lab Day, Winterthur, 3. Oktober 2019. Conference poster. ZHAW Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften. 3 Oktober 2019
Borghoff, Birgitta. 2019. “Digital Public Discourses on Antibiotic Resistance in Switzerland.” Conference poster. In 1. Digital Health Lab Day, Winterthur, 3. Oktober 2019. ZHAW Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften. https://doi.org/10.21256/zhaw-18407.
Borghoff, Birgitta. “Digital Public Discourses on Antibiotic Resistance in Switzerland.” 1. Digital Health Lab Day, Winterthur, 3. Oktober 2019, ZHAW Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften, 2019, https://doi.org/10.21256/zhaw-18407.


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