Ecstasy use discussion in Dutch current affairs TV programs. A methodological exploration of Automatic Speech Recognition metadata

The Netherlands is known for a lenient party drug policy climate and for high ecstasy (MDMA) use prevalence. In 2020, ecstasy use prevalence in The Netherlands was higher than in any other European country. This topic deserves investigation, as recently the question whether the illegal yet widely used party drug should be regulated instead of banned is recurring in political, public and scientific contexts. In this paper, recent Dutch current affairs television programs are analyzed to untangle the reputation of ecstasy in The Netherlands. Research about ecstasy in historical media debates has... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van der Molen, Berrie Jens
Dokumenttyp: lecture
Erscheinungsdatum: 2023
Schlagwörter: Automatic Speech Recognition / Digital Humanities / Ecstasy / Public Debate Analysis / Television Studies
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26689600
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://zenodo.org/record/8154281

The Netherlands is known for a lenient party drug policy climate and for high ecstasy (MDMA) use prevalence. In 2020, ecstasy use prevalence in The Netherlands was higher than in any other European country. This topic deserves investigation, as recently the question whether the illegal yet widely used party drug should be regulated instead of banned is recurring in political, public and scientific contexts. In this paper, recent Dutch current affairs television programs are analyzed to untangle the reputation of ecstasy in The Netherlands. Research about ecstasy in historical media debates has shown that Automatic Speech Recognition or ASR (speech-to-text) enrichment can be used to explore radio debates in a way that is comparable to how newspaper debates can be researched using Optical Character Recognition metadata, offering great potential for cross-media public debate research: topics can be researched in their socio-historical context across print news and radio news. Now, the CLARIAH Media Suite is unlocking the Dutch digitized public television archive for similar research with searchable ASR metadata. The television programs can be analyzed using techniques such as keyword search, timeline visualization and word frequency lists. This raises a methodological question to go with the question about ecstasy’s reputation: how can the coverage of ecstasy use in a fundamentally visual data archive be effectively explored with search techniques that are based exclusively on the spoken word? Answers are sought by comparing the results of close analysis of relevant television programs with the findings based on ASR metadata analysis. ; Research fellowship 'Exploring ASR-enriched Television Debates' is funded by CLARIAH (www.clariah.nl)