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・ Reaction quotient
・ Reaction rate
・ Reaction rate constant
・ Reaction Records
・ Reaction Research Society
・ Reaction shot
・ Reaction step
・ Reaction Time
・ Reaction to a radial load (tensioned wire spoked wheel)
・ Reaction to Action
・ Reaction to the 1963 South Vietnamese coup
・ Reaction to the 2005–06 Fijian political crisis
・ Reaction to the 2010 Copiapó mining accident
・ Reaction to the Tobin Tax
・ Reaction Unit (South African Police Service)
Reaction video
・ Reaction wheel
・ Reaction wood
・ ReAction! Chemistry in the Movies
・ Reactional keratosis
・ Reactionary
・ Reactionary (album)
・ Reactionary modernism
・ Reactionless drive
・ Reactions from India and the Indian diaspora to Slumdog Millionaire
・ Reactions of alkenyl- and alkynylaluminium compounds
・ Reactions of nitrile anions
・ Reactions of organoborates and boranes
・ Reactions of organocopper reagents
・ Reactions on surfaces


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Reaction video : ウィキペディア英語版
Reaction video
Reaction videos are videos in which persons react to events. In particular, videos showing the emotional reactions of people viewing television series episodes or film trailers are numerous and popular on video hosting services. The depicted persons may or may not be aware that they are being recorded, and the video being reacted to may or may not be reproduced within the reaction video, allowing the reaction video's viewers to see directly what is being reacted to.
One of the first viral reaction videos was that of a child reacting to the "Scary Maze Game" prank in 2006. Beginning in 2007, reaction videos began to proliferate on the Internet. Among their first topics were reactions to the fetish pornography trailer ''2 Girls 1 Cup''. By 2011, videos of people recording themselves reacting to film trailers had become a staple of services such as YouTube.〔 The numerous reaction videos for particularly popular or shocking television events, such as the 2013 ''Game of Thrones'' episode "The Rains of Castamere", have themselves become the subject of commentary.
Sam Anderson, commenting on the phenomenon for the ''New York Times Magazine'', described it as encapsulating the "fundamental experience of the Internet" in that it involved watching screens on which people watched screens, in a potentially infinite regression.〔 The first reaction videos for the gross-out "2 Girls 1 Cup" allowed people, according to Anderson, to "experience its dangerous thrill without having to encounter it directly — like Perseus looking at Medusa in the reflection of his shield". But much like the later videos featuring reactions to items of popular culture, Anderson wrote, such videos provide the appeal of experiencing, "at a time of increasing cultural difference, the comforting universality of human nature" in showing people of all backgrounds reacting similarly to a shared cultural experience.〔 In ''CraveOnline'', Witney Seibold derided reaction videos as "graceless" and "narcissistic", because they merely reflected immediate emotional reactions, and doubted that the reactions of a person aware of being filmed could in fact reflect the honest emotional response promised by the format.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Reaction video」の詳細全文を読む



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