Cole Simon A
University of California, Irvine, USA
Public Underst Sci. 2015 Feb;24(2):130-46. doi: 10.1177/0963662513481294. Epub 2013 Apr 11.
Over the past decade, popular media has promulgated claims that the television program CSI and its spinoffs and imitators have had a pernicious effect on the public understanding of forensic science, the so-called "CSI effect." This paper analyzes those media claims by documenting the ways in which the media claims that CSI "distorts" an imagined "reality." It shows that the media appropriated the analytic stance usually adopted by science advocates, portraying the CSI effect as a social problem in science communication. This appropriation was idiosyncratic in that it posited, as a social problem, a "surfeit" of knowledge and positive imagery about science, rather than the more familiar "deficits." In addition, the media simultaneously appropriated both "traditional" and "critical" PUS discourses. Despite this apparent contradiction, the paper concludes that, in both discourses, the media and its expert informants insist upon their hegemony over "the public" to articulate the "reality" of forensic science.
在过去十年里,大众媒体宣称电视节目《犯罪现场调查》及其衍生剧和模仿剧对公众对法医学的理解产生了有害影响,即所谓的“CSI效应”。本文通过记录媒体声称《犯罪现场调查》“扭曲”想象中的“现实”的方式来分析这些媒体说法。研究表明,媒体采用了科学倡导者通常采取的分析立场,将CSI效应描绘成科学传播中的一个社会问题。这种挪用是独特的,因为它将关于科学的知识和正面形象的“过剩”视为一个社会问题,而不是更常见的“不足”。此外,媒体同时挪用了“传统”和“批判性”公众理解科学(PUS)话语。尽管存在这种明显的矛盾,但本文得出结论,在这两种话语中,媒体及其专家信息提供者都坚持他们对“公众”的霸权,以阐明法医学的“现实”。