Chapter 6: Result and Evaluation
1. INTRODUCTION
System testing is the process of performing a variety of tests on the system to explore a job or to identify problems. Hence, this chapter displays the experiments to check the validity of the suggest architectural design in chapter 4. This chapter describes the experiments to study the effectiveness to detect the provenance of news articles. Is applied the experiments in the application mentioned in Chapter 5, it is divided the experiment into two parts: the first experiment provides detect the provenance of news articles in all the news websites in English and Arabic language. The second experiment was applied Google Custom Search service to detect the provenance of news articles to
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Task Completed successfully Completed with difficulties Failed Not used
The user enters the news article to be searched
Click the search button
Shows the results
Click compares button if the user wishes to compare the news article published with the first news article published
Efficiency Consumed time:
What amount of time it took to achievement this tasks?
Task Very little time Medium time Too much time Not used
The user enters the news article to be searched
Click the search button
Shows the results
Click compares button if the user wishes to compare the news article published with the first news article published
Satisfaction Questions:
How satisfied while using this application for the detection the provenance of news articles?
Questions Very satisfied Normal satisfied Unsatisfied
Table 1: Usability standards for the task.
3. Experiment Design
Design and apply this experience to answer the research question: How can we develop a model to identify the requirements of the tool supports detect the source of the news articles? to confirm and validate this experience to answer the research question, it should be measured through using software metric factors, particularly factors that mean “how well does the tool run”, factors of the product is Effectiveness, Efficiency and Satisfaction [3-4].
4. Experiment
The experiment will be explained in two
Would you like chocolate chip cookies or Snickerdoodles? A point by point comparison and contrast blends the similarities and differences equivalent to the snickerdoodle. The block distinctly shows the similarities and then the differences similar to the chocolate chip cookie. Whichever method a writer chooses to use, the results conclude in the same outcome: comparing and contrasting.
For this segment, you will compare and contrast two different pieces of writing in preparation for eventually writing a compare-contrast essay. You will complete the Compare and Contrast Organizer to help you organize your thoughts.
reader a side-by-side comparison of a winner and loser, which in turn forces the reader
The LOZ evaluation process is through a collaboration with Lighthouse Institute, an outcomes-based organization. Lighthouse uses evidence informed models of practice and care, drawing on service users’ experiences and therapeutic outcomes as a framework for ensuring that our programs are effective, and provide long-term, desired results.
The Articles had been
a comparison between two unlike things in which one thing being compared isn’t explicitly stated
The articles
The case is important because it belongs in a very new category of journalism. Online journalism, which has been established with vast technological advancements, poses many different advantages and disadvantages
Comparing two newspaper articles, one from a tabloid and one from a broadsheet will convey the different techniques that tabloids and broadsheets use to present stories. Media in general, aim to inform and interest the audience which consist of many different types. Diverse emotions and ideas are created by the media; foremost tabloids. Tabloids are papers like ‘The Sun’, ‘The Mirror’, ‘The Daily Mail’, ‘The Express’ and ‘The Star’. In contrast to these are broadsheets like ‘The Times’, ‘The Guardian’ and ‘The Daily Telegraph’. Broadsheets are often known as the ‘quality press’ being more informing and formal in the manner they convey information and news stories.
As “journalism is built on credibility,” (Cassidy, 2007, p. 478) one of the main comparisons between print and online is the ability that online media provides for following up sources. Cassidy states that “online journalists …. Make allowances for interactivity, and asses ways of connecting related stories to each other via hyperlinks,” (Cassidy, 2007, p. 482) which can be shown in the Guardian as stories related to the article can be seen hyperlinked to the left. Similarly by using the Guardian’s online archive, the reader is able to search for previous articles on the subject, as well as look up the credibility alongside the article. As the Australian is print, the only way to be able to see previous editions and articles would be to find a collection of the papers. Similarly, the availability of linking similar texts is constrained to only the stories already mentioned in the current edition, meaning that if the reader is interested in finding out more on the topic they will have to find another source. The format of each differs significantly, as the Guardian has each article linked from a quote and sometimes a picture, and despite the Australian having continued stories on later pages, the format is constrained to small text boxes. Having articles online allows for large amounts of space and easy to read text along with a colourful format to
Today I will be talking about comparing and contrasting. The two stories I will be talking about is “A Simple Act” and“An Invisible Thread”. The first story we will look at is “A Simple Act”. The second story we will be looking at is “An Invisible Thread”. Here is the background to the stories.“A Simple Act”In a big city like New York, thousands of strangers from many different backgrounds cross paths every day. But they rarely stop on the street to get to know each other. When people from very different places make to effort to connect, unexpected friendships can form, and “A Simple Act” is Laura and Maurice had been friends for 15 years when he gave the final toast t the celebration of her 50th birthday. Maurice's words, and Laura's
A Comparison of Two Newspaper Articles In this coursework 'B' I would be comparing two news articles from two different sources. This coursework will be divided into three parts. The background and context, the view of both articles i.e. use of languages, headlines, quotes used e.t.c the last part will be my opinion and the conclusion.
Pressgrade is a community-supported platform that provides accurate news in the most efficient way possible. Simply search any news topic you are interested in, and Pressgrade will use an algorithm to determine which news stories are displayed along with their rankings. Unlike other news aggregates, Pressgrade factors in your input by allowing you to vote on articles based on the following criteria:
A Comparison of Two Newspaper Articles In this essay I will be comparing two articles taken from local
A Comparison of Two Different Newspapers In the following essay, I intend to compare the differences and similarities in which two different newspapers - a tabloid (The Mirror) and a broadsheet (The Times) report the same story. I will be looking at the presentation and the use of language as well as the basics of how the story is put forward and told. Both papers are reporting the same story in which Prince Philip made a statement along the lines that 'guns are no more dangerous than cricket bats' following a shooting at a school in Dunblane in Scotland. In general there are many differences between tabloids and broadsheets.