Your search - McCombs, Maxwell - did not match any resources.
Maxwell McCombs
Maxwell E. McCombs (December 3, 1938 - September 8, 2024) was an American
journalism scholar known for his work on
political communication. He was the
Jesse H. Jones Centennial Chair in Communication Emeritus at the
University of Texas at Austin. He is particularly known for developing the
agenda setting theory of
mass media with
Donald Lewis Shaw. In a 1972 paper, McCombs and Shaw described the results of a study they conducted testing the hypothesis that the news media have a large influence on the issues that the American public considers important. They conducted the study while they were both working at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The resulting paper, "The Agenda-Setting Function of Mass Media", has since been described as "a classic and perhaps the most cited article in the field of mass communication research in the past 35 years." McCombs has been described as, along with Shaw, "one of the two founding fathers of empirical research on the agenda-setting function of the press."
Provided by Wikipedia