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Communications

In rural America, religious attendance reduces compassion regarding opioids
empty street of a small town Main Street with a church on one side of the street.

In rural America, religious attendance reduces compassion regarding opioids

Rural areas—particularly those in Appalachian and Midwestern states—are hard hit by the opioid epidemic. However, many individuals in those same states do not support policies scientifically proven to help, like medically aided treatment and syringe exchanges.

From Annenberg School for Communication

Women are undercited and men are overcited in communication
Person making marginalia in a journal in front of a laptop with graphs on paper on the desk.

Women are undercited and men are overcited in communication

An analysis of citations in 14 communication journals found that men are overcited and women are undercited, especially in papers authored by men.

From Annenberg School for Communication

How racial bias can limit internet access for people of color
Glass door entrance of a cafe with signs indicating free Wifi, Open 24 hours, no dogs allowed.

How racial bias can limit internet access for people of color

A new study finds that the quality-of-life policing is used by powerful institutions and privileged people to keep those with less privilege, including people of color, from accessing resources like the internet.

From Annenberg School for Communication

Vaccine misinformation spreads to every kind of media

Vaccine misinformation spreads to every kind of media

Kathleen Hall Jamieson of the Annenberg Public Policy Center said the spread of online misinformation has less to do with a particular platform’s features than distrust in key institutions like the CDC. “The credibility around some of these institutions has been called into questions in ways that's not helpful when we need to trust those institutions to give us information," she said.

How to turn the tide on vaccine hesitancy: Apply an algorithm that actually works

How to turn the tide on vaccine hesitancy: Apply an algorithm that actually works

Damon Centola of the Annenberg School for Communication wrote an opinion piece about the best strategies for promoting COVID-19 vaccination. “It takes time to digest an idea with substance to it; it takes repeatedly seeing an idea successfully adopted by others for it to be accepted, take hold and become a norm, and that kind of messaging is most effective when an idea works its way from the outside in,” he said.

Want to go viral? Influencers won’t be much help if you’re trying to spread a complex idea

Want to go viral? Influencers won’t be much help if you’re trying to spread a complex idea

Damon Centola of the Annenberg School for Communication spoke about findings from his recent study showing that social influencers may be ineffective when it comes to changing people’s beliefs and behaviors. Rather, he said, “every network has a hidden social cluster in the outer edges that is perfectly poised to increase the spread of a new idea by several hundred percent.”

The intonation Black/biracial men use to speak about race
A black-and-white drawing of a head with lines signifying the person is speaking.

The intonation Black/biracial men use to speak about race

In a study of college-educated biracial men, ages 18 to 32, sociolinguist Nicole Holliday found that, when asked about race, this group frequently brought up law enforcement unprompted and discussed the subject using vocal tone more generally associated with white speakers.

Michele W. Berger

Study finds surprising source of social influence
cartoon social media influencer headshot against background of social media icons.

Study finds surprising source of social influence

A new study co-authored by ASC’s Damon Centola finds that as prominent and revered as social influencers seem to be, they are unlikely to change a person’s behavior by example, and might actually be detrimental to the cause.

From Annenberg School for Communication

The Panoptic Sort: Surveillance Q&A with Oscar Gandy
graphic profile of a human overlaid with images of the modern tech world

The Panoptic Sort: Surveillance Q&A with Oscar Gandy

With the second edition of his classic 1993 book “The Panoptic Sort” recently published, Gandy discusses the past, present, and future of surveillance.

From Annenberg School for Communication