Frame Analysis

Citation:

David, C. C., & Baden, C. . (2017). Frame Analysis. In J. Matthes, Davis, C. S., & Potter, R. F. (Eds.), The International Encyclopedia of Communication Research Methods. Wiley. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118901731.iecrm0109
Frame Analysis

Abstract:

Frames are “central organizing ideas” that provide context, structure, and meaning to information, facilitating a specific interpretation of an issue. Counting among the most popular ideas in communication study in recent years, variants of frame analysis have developed within a variety of disciplines inside and outside of communication. Methodologically, qualitative as well as quantitative approaches to frame analysis can be organized along three dimensions: their capture of latent versus manifest meanings, their adherence to inductive versus deductive processes, and their focus on generic or issue-specific frames. Increasing numbers of studies using frame analytic techniques have resulted in a contested and fragmented set of methods, the most influential of which are discussed in this entry.

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 05/16/2026