Public Sphere or Echo Chamber

Published: Feb. 24, 2011, midnight

b'The digital age has been heralded but also pilloried for its impact on journalism. As newspapers continue their mutation into digital formats and as news and information are available from a seeming infinity of websites, what do we actually know about the dynamics of news-consumption online? What does the public do with online news? How influential are traditional news outlets in framing the news we get online?\\n\\nPablo Boczkowski is a Professor of Communications Studies at Northwestern Univeresity where he leads a research program that studies the transition from print to digital media. He is the author of Digitizing the News: Innovation in Online Newspapers (2004) and News at Work: Imitation in an Age of Information Abundance (2010).\\n\\nJoshua Benton is the founding director of the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard University \\u2014 an effort to help the news business make the radical changes required by the Internet age. Before that, he was an investigative reporter, columnist, foreign correspondent and rock critic for two newspapers, The Dallas Morning News and The Toledo Blade.\\n\\nModerator: Jason Spingarn-Koff, a 2010-11 Knight Journalism Fellow at MIT, is a documentary filmmaker specializing in the intersection of science, technology, and society. His feature documentary Life 2.0, about a group of people whose lives are transformed by the virtual world \\u201cSecond Life,\\u201d premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival and will be featured on Oprah Winfrey\\u2019s documentary film club in 2011. He served as producer of NOVA\\u2019s The Great Robot Race, and the development producer for PBS\\u2019s Emmy-winning Rx for Survival, as well as documentaries for Frontline and Time magazine. He is a graduate of Brown University and the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.'