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Sharing the viewing experience through Second Screens

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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Sharing the viewing experience through Second Screens. / Lochrie, Mark; Coulton, Paul.
Proceedings of EuroITV 2012 10th European Interactive TV Conference. 2012.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Lochrie, M & Coulton, P 2012, Sharing the viewing experience through Second Screens. in Proceedings of EuroITV 2012 10th European Interactive TV Conference.

APA

Lochrie, M., & Coulton, P. (2012). Sharing the viewing experience through Second Screens. In Proceedings of EuroITV 2012 10th European Interactive TV Conference

Vancouver

Lochrie M, Coulton P. Sharing the viewing experience through Second Screens. In Proceedings of EuroITV 2012 10th European Interactive TV Conference. 2012

Author

Lochrie, Mark ; Coulton, Paul. / Sharing the viewing experience through Second Screens. Proceedings of EuroITV 2012 10th European Interactive TV Conference. 2012.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{c61c6ce8367b40d5a59ce6398350a0cd,
title = "Sharing the viewing experience through Second Screens",
abstract = "Despite the ever expanding forms of digital entertainment and the emergence of consumer recording facilities, allowing viewers to time shift their TV viewing habits, there are still certain TV shows and events that create an audience desire to be part of a mass shared experience. In the past direct inter-audience interaction of such events has been restricted to either a shared location at the time of broadcast or later discussions amongst friends and colleagues often described as {\textquoteleft}water cooler moments{\textquoteright}. With the advent of online social networks that facilitate status updates these moments can be instantly shared in real-time using mobile phone creating a second screen for interaction with TV. In this paper we investigate the emerging role of mobile phones as the facilitator of second screen for TV. This is achieved through the analysis of tweets for a highly popular UK TV show the X Factor and comparing tweets from this show with other shows from a different format. The results highlight the rich source of information that can be extracted in real-time and how audiences are creating their own parallel narrative of the show through Twitter. This interaction has enormous potential for broadcasters and producers both in terms of reinvigorating live TV viewing and creating new forms of audience interaction.",
keywords = "Mobile, second screen, television, Twitter",
author = "Mark Lochrie and Paul Coulton",
year = "2012",
month = jun,
day = "6",
language = "English",
booktitle = "Proceedings of EuroITV 2012 10th European Interactive TV Conference",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Sharing the viewing experience through Second Screens

AU - Lochrie, Mark

AU - Coulton, Paul

PY - 2012/6/6

Y1 - 2012/6/6

N2 - Despite the ever expanding forms of digital entertainment and the emergence of consumer recording facilities, allowing viewers to time shift their TV viewing habits, there are still certain TV shows and events that create an audience desire to be part of a mass shared experience. In the past direct inter-audience interaction of such events has been restricted to either a shared location at the time of broadcast or later discussions amongst friends and colleagues often described as ‘water cooler moments’. With the advent of online social networks that facilitate status updates these moments can be instantly shared in real-time using mobile phone creating a second screen for interaction with TV. In this paper we investigate the emerging role of mobile phones as the facilitator of second screen for TV. This is achieved through the analysis of tweets for a highly popular UK TV show the X Factor and comparing tweets from this show with other shows from a different format. The results highlight the rich source of information that can be extracted in real-time and how audiences are creating their own parallel narrative of the show through Twitter. This interaction has enormous potential for broadcasters and producers both in terms of reinvigorating live TV viewing and creating new forms of audience interaction.

AB - Despite the ever expanding forms of digital entertainment and the emergence of consumer recording facilities, allowing viewers to time shift their TV viewing habits, there are still certain TV shows and events that create an audience desire to be part of a mass shared experience. In the past direct inter-audience interaction of such events has been restricted to either a shared location at the time of broadcast or later discussions amongst friends and colleagues often described as ‘water cooler moments’. With the advent of online social networks that facilitate status updates these moments can be instantly shared in real-time using mobile phone creating a second screen for interaction with TV. In this paper we investigate the emerging role of mobile phones as the facilitator of second screen for TV. This is achieved through the analysis of tweets for a highly popular UK TV show the X Factor and comparing tweets from this show with other shows from a different format. The results highlight the rich source of information that can be extracted in real-time and how audiences are creating their own parallel narrative of the show through Twitter. This interaction has enormous potential for broadcasters and producers both in terms of reinvigorating live TV viewing and creating new forms of audience interaction.

KW - Mobile

KW - second screen

KW - television

KW - Twitter

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - Proceedings of EuroITV 2012 10th European Interactive TV Conference

ER -