Paper ID: 2406.10316
Gender Representation in TV and Radio: Automatic Information Extraction methods versus Manual Analyses
David Doukhan, Lena Dodson, Manon Conan, Valentin Pelloin, Aurélien Clamouse, Mélina Lepape, Géraldine Van Hille, Cécile Méadel, Marlène Coulomb-Gully
This study investigates the relationship between automatic information extraction descriptors and manual analyses to describe gender representation disparities in TV and Radio. Automatic descriptors, including speech time, facial categorization and speech transcriptions are compared with channel reports on a vast 32,000-hour corpus of French broadcasts from 2023. Findings reveal systemic gender imbalances, with women underrepresented compared to men across all descriptors. Notably, manual channel reports show higher women's presence than automatic estimates and references to women are lower than their speech time. Descriptors share common dynamics during high and low audiences, war coverage, or private versus public channels. While women are more visible than audible in French TV, this trend is inverted in news with unseen journalists depicting male protagonists. A statistical test shows 3 main effects influencing references to women: program category, channel and speaker gender.
Submitted: Jun 14, 2024