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Science communication for the Deaf in the pandemic period: absences and pursuit of information Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Alexandre G. Silva, Tiago Batista, Felipe Giraud, Andrea Giraud, Flavio Eduardo Pinto-Silva, Julia Barral, Juan Nascimento Guimarães, Vívian rumjanek
COVID-19 pandemic hit Brazil in February 2020 Controversial information, minimization of the problem, and difficulties resulting from extreme social inequality, led to the intensification of the disease and number of deaths During this period, the government failed to provide information to the Deaf minority that uses Brazilian Sign Language to communicate This study analyzes information provided by
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Pharmaceutical influencers on Instagram and their communication during the Covid-19 pandemic crisis Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Zahaira Fabiola González Romo, Sofia Iriarte Aguirre, Irene Garcia Medina
Today, thanks to the consolidation of Internet, users have access to many sources of information on health issues On social networks, there are profiles of health professionals who share content that generates credibility when published by specialists who are knowledgeable in the sector These profiles include pharmaceutical professionals who disseminate and create content based on scientific knowledge
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Exit only: harms from silencing employee voice Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Karen Adkins
The nationwide shortage of PPE for health care workers has been well documented. Reporting on this issue has been complicated by hospitals’ imposition of gag orders on physicians and health care workers. There are harms that result from imposing these gag orders that go beyond the obvious harms to public and employee health and safety. Using Hirschman’s Exit, Voice, and Loyalty (1970) as a framework
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Complexity, transparency and time pressure: practical insights into science communication in times of crisis Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Jana Lasser, Verena Ahne, Georg Heiler, Peter Klimek, Hannah Metzler, Tobias Reisch, Martin Sprenger, Stefan Thurner, Johannes Sorger
A global crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic that started in early 2020 poses significant challenges for how research is conducted and communicated. We present four case studies from the perspective of an interdisciplinary research institution that switched to “corona-mode” during the first two months of the crisis, focussing all its capacities on COVID-19-related issues, communicating to the public
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COVID-19 and science communication: a JCOM special issue Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Luisa Massarani, Padraig Murphy, Rod Lamberts
The devastating effects of COVID-19 and the speed of both the scientific and medical response and the public information requirements about frontline healthcare work, medical advances and policy and compliance measures has necessitated an intensity of science communication never seen before This JCOM special issue - the first of two parts - looks at the challenges of communicating COVID-19 and coronavirus
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Rapid reaction: ethnographic insights into the Science Media Center and its response to the COVID-19 outbreak Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Irene Broer
This paper offers an ethnographic account of the editorial response to the COVID-19 outbreak by the Science Media Center Germany Ethnographic research data was gathered during a 4-week fieldstay in January 2020 which coincided with the first weeks of the COVID-19 outbreak The findings offer insights into how the editorial staff grappled with the scientific non-knowledge and uncertainty that marked
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How public perceptions of social distancing evolved over a critical time period: communication lessons learnt from the American state of Wisconsin Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Kaiping Chen, Luye Bao, Anqi Shao, Pauline Ho, Shiyu Yang, Christopher Wirz, Dominique Brossard, Markus Brauer, Lori Diprete Brown
Understanding how individuals perceive the barriers and benefits of precautionary actions is key for effective communication about public health crises, such as the COVID-19 outbreak This study used innovative computational methods to analyze 30,000 open-ended responses from a large-scale survey to track how Wisconsin (U S A ) residents' perceptions of the benefits of and barriers to performing social
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COVID-19: a metaphor-based neologism and its translation into Arabic Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Amal Haddad Haddad, Silvia Montero-Martinez
'Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)' is the neologism coined in reference to the pandemic disease currently affecting countries worldwide The World Health Organization (WHO) was the international entity that coined this neologism in all its official languages, Arabic amongst them However, in mass media, the most commonly used term is 'coronavirus', which is a meronymic denomination This corpus-based
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Liberalists and data-solutionists: redefining expertise in Twitter debates on coronavirus in Finland Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Esa Valiverronen, Salla-Maaria Laaksonen, Mikko Jauho, Piia Jallinoja
Based on recent accounts of the sociology of expertise, we analyse the public contestation and expansion of expertise in the context of COVID-19 During the epidemic, the expertise of the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), became increasingly contested By exploring Twitter discussions concerning the actions of THL during the first months of the epidemic from January to mid-June 2020, we
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The landscape of disinformation on health crisis communication during the COVID-19 pandemic in Ukraine: hybrid warfare tactics, fake media news and review of evidence Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Sonny Patel, Omar Moncayo, Kristina Conroy, Doug Jordan, Timothy Erickson
Please add Sonny's ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9810-0055. Also, Timothy B. Erickson is with Harvard Medical School and Kristina M. Conroy is with Harvard Faculty of Arts and Science.
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COVID-19 in the South Pacific: science communication, Facebook and ‘coconut wireless’ Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-30 Vipul Khosla, Prashanth Pillay
The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the criticality of science communication Utilising a mixed-methods approach, this article takes an audience-focused perspective to analysing COVID-19 related social media posts on 23 popular South Pacific community Facebook pages over a four-month period across eight South Pacific countries We analyse how audiences co-opt scientific terms, address
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Addressing diversity in science communication through citizen social science Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-21 Lissette Lorenz
This article seeks to address the lack of sociocultural diversity in the field of science communication by broadening conceptions of citizen science to include citizen social science. Developing citizen social science as a concept and set of practices can increase the diversity of publics who engage in science communication endeavors if citizen social science explicitly aims at addressing social justice
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Operationalizing science literacy: an experimental analysis of measurement Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-07 Meaghan McKasy, Michael Cacciatore, Leona Yi-Fan Su, Sara K. Yeo, Liane Oneill
Inequalities in scientific knowledge are the subject of increasing attention, so how factual science knowledge is measured, and any inconsistencies in said measurement, is extremely relevant to the field of science communication. Different operationalizations of factual science knowledge are used interchangeably in research, potentially resulting in artificially comparable knowledge levels among respondents
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From actors to space, through processes: reflections from co-production and commoning Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Paola Alfaro - d'Alençon, Horacio Torrent
Under new state-led governance models, a new generation of city entrepreneurs seeks to define work and living environments to meet their needs and aspirations in a collaborative way. In this field, international discourses are debating private investors as key players in urban development and the simultaneous withdrawal/absence of the state. This has led to more complex networks of participating actors
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Collective creativity: strategies for catalyzing interdisciplinary research Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Elizabeth LaPensee, Aalap Doshi
Fostering interdisciplinary collaboration is critical for addressing complex research problems. At the earliest stages of research ideation and mobilization, we need to create environments that cultivate collective creativity, curiosity and decision making among those with diverse expertise. The fields of design and design thinking offer excellent tools and approaches for promoting rich conversations
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Should science communication become part of a discipline of integration and implementation sciences (i2S)? Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Gabriele Bammer
Science communication is essential for interand trans-disciplinary research on complex societal and environmental problems. Two aspects are explored as examples: 1) helping teams understand the systemic nature of such problems and 2) helping collaborations run effectively. Integration and implementation sciences (i2S) is a new discipline that addresses such aspects of dealing with complex problems
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Disentangling the different layers of interdisciplinarity Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Renate Klaassen
Interdisciplinarity for complex problem solving is a rising phenomenon. Each self-respecting university is trying to realise different programmes and approaches to interdisciplinary teaching and research. The debate on what interdisciplinarity is, how it may work as a substantial part of a university, which barriers are encountered to realising interdisciplinary teaching and research and what the added
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Power in science communication collaborations Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Megan Halpern, Michael O'Rourke
In this comment, we focus on the ways power impacts science communication collaborations. Following Fischhoff’s suggestion of focusing on internal consultation within science communication activities, we examine the ways such consultation is complicated by existing power structures, which tend to prioritize scientific knowledge over other knowledge forms. This prioritization works in concert with funding
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Science Communication as a design challenge in transdisciplinary collaborations Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-09-01 Éva Kalmár, Hanneke Stenfert
In this series of comments, we argue for Science Communication as an enabler of transdisciplinary, integrative collaboration in the context of today’s complex, multi-stakeholder issues. Participatory design, as a collaborative method, is effective in achieving mutual learning, shared understandings, integrating disciplines and creating solutions that make sense in the multi-layered reality of today’s
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Listen to the audience(s)! Expectations and characteristics of expert debate attendants Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-08-17 Nina Wicke, Monika Taddicken
Expert debates have become a popular form to inform the public about scientific issues. To deepen our knowledge about individuals who attend such formats and to investigate what they expect of the dissemination of science, this study analyzes the attendants of scientific expert debates and their expectations. Cluster analysis is applied to survey data (n=358) to explore whether distinct segments may
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Free Bright Conversations — meaningful participatory activities for the communication of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-08-03 Manuel Ballatore, Marie Bartsch
Political, economic and social actors have begun to implement the 17 SDGs (UN 2030 Agenda) to build a desirable future for everyone. To reach this goal, a mix of systemic alteration and individual change is needed. “Free Bright Conversations” is a dialogue-based science communication event developed at MUSE-Science Museum in Trento that focuses on people’s engagement with sustainable development. The
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Engaging migrant and refugee communities in non-formal science learning spaces Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-07-20 Autumn Brown, Joseph Roche, Mairéad Hurley
In this era of pandemics, economic crises and civil unrest, science centres and museums have an opportunity to become truly relevant resources to society. This paper summarises a number of critical lessons from the PISEA International Symposium, a conference held the at the Austrian Museum of Folk Life and Folk Art in Vienna from the 17th–18th of October 2019. The purpose of this event was to share
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Expertise and communicating about infectious disease: a case study of uncertainty and rejection of local knowledge in discourse of experts and decision makers Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-07-08 Jennifer Manyweathers, Mel Taylor, Nancy Longnecker
Despite Australian horse owners being encouraged to vaccinate their horses against Hendra virus to reduce the risk of this potentially fatal virus to horses and humans, vaccine uptake has been slow. Discourse around the vaccine has been characterised by polarisation and dissenting voices. In this study we interviewed horse owners (N=15) and veterinarians (N=10), revealing how expert knowledge, disqualification
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Mission Mosquito: building and expanding an international network for innovation in health communication Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-06-22 Tanya Maslak, Kia Henry, Natasha Sadoff, David Maurice Jones, Joshua Glasser, Amy Leibrand
The Mission Mosquito Information Sharing Program (ISP), a collaboration between the U.S. Department of State and Battelle Memorial Institute, is a public diplomacy effort to build and expand an international network of health communicators to increase engagement on mosquito-borne disease. Nineteen professionals from countries experiencing mosquito-borne diseases engaged in a two-week multi-directional
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The Australian Science Communicators conference 2020 Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-06-16 Linden Ashcroft, Mia Cobb, Lisa Bailey, Jenny Martin, Scott Daniel
This special issue of JCOM features six commentary articles from the research stream of the Australian Science Communicators conference, held in February 2020. These opportunistic assessments and deliberate analyses explore important themes of trust, engagement, and communication strategy across a diverse range of scientific contexts. Together, they demonstrate the importance of opportunities to come
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Health vs. hedonism: public communication of nutrition science Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-06-16 Catherine Lockley
Do differences in narrative approach; hedonic language vs. scientific language, influence public perception and opinion of Nutrition and food consumption? Our study investigated this question using qualitative research via Focus Group (FG). The stimulus films and subsequent meals exemplified hedonic language and biomedical language respectively. The FG was chosen to elucidate alternative narrative
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Post-normal science communication: exploring the blurring boundaries of science and journalism Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-06-01 Michael Brüggemann, Ines Lörcher, Stefanie Walter
This article provides a framework for analysing changes and continuities in science communication. The field is challenged by three contexts: (1) ‘post-normal situations’ of coping with uncertainties, value questions, an urgency to take action, and associated political pressures; (2) a dramatically changing media environment, and (3) a polarizing discourse culture. We refine the concept of post-normal
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Organizationally based citizen science: considerations for implementation Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-05-18 Ashley A. Anderson, Elizabeth Williams, Marilee Long, Ellison Carter, John Volckens
This theoretical paper proposes a framework for how citizen science can be adapted to organizational contexts. Using an “input, process, output” approach, this model proposes organizational factors (e.g., communication channels and styles, and organizational structure) that should be considered when choosing among citizen science approaches (e.g., contributory, collaborative, co-created). The essay
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Pseudoscience as media effect Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-05-04 Alexandre Schiele
The popularity of the anti-vax movement in the United States and elsewhere is the cause of new lethal epidemics of diseases that are fully preventable by modern medicine [Benecke and DeYoung, 2019]. Creationism creeps into science classrooms with the aim of undermining the teaching of evolution through legal obligations or school boards’ decisions to present both sides of a debate largely foreign to
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Communicating cosmology with multisensory metaphorical experiences Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-04-27 Roberto Trotta, Daniel Hajas, José Eliel Camargo-Molina, Robert Cobden, Emanuela Maggioni, Marianna Obrist
We present a novel approach to communicating abstract concepts in cosmology and astrophysics in a more accessible and inclusive manner. We describe an exhibit aiming at creating an immersive, multisensory metaphorical experience of an otherwise imperceptible physical phenomenon — dark matter. Human-Computer Interaction experts and physicists co-created a multisensory journey through dark matter by
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On social change, agency, and public interest: what can science communication learn from public relations? Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-04-20 Tara Roberson
This essay explores the relationship of science communication and public relations and contends that science communication has something to learn from public relations research. I provide an alternate history of public relations, drawn from the history of social movements (activism). I outline two areas from public relations theory: first, notions of human agency and equity in communication and, second
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Chanting to the choir: the dialogical failure of antithetical climate change blogs Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-04-14 Jennifer Metcalfe
Blogs provide potential for publics to engage more deliberatively through dialogue in controversial science than one-way dissemination methods. This study investigated who was commenting on two antithetical climate change blogsites; how they were commenting; and the quality of their dialogue. Most research into science blogs has focused on bloggers rather than commenters. This study found that both
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Variability in the interpretation of probability phrases used in Dutch news articles — a risk for miscommunication Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-04-06 Sanne Willems, Casper Albers, Ionica Smeets
Verbal probability phrases are often used in science communication to express estimated risks in words instead of numbers. In this study we look at how laypeople and statisticians interpret Dutch probability phrases that are regularly used in news articles. We found that there is a large variability in interpretations, even if the phrases are given in a neutral context. Also, statisticians do not agree
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Strategies for including communication of non-Western and indigenous knowledges in science communication histories Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-03-30 Lindy Orthia
How a discipline’s history is written shapes its identity. Accordingly, science communicators opposed to cultural exclusion may seek cross-cultural conceptualizations of science communication’s past, beyond familiar narratives centred on the recent West. Here I make a case for thinking about science communication history in these broader geotemporal terms. I discuss works by historians and knowledge
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Report — 2nd meeting of mediation of knowledge and scientific culture Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-03-23 Diogo Santos
On 3rd and 4th February, at Pavilhão do Conhecimento (Lisbon, Portugal), Ciência Viva organized the 2nd meeting of Mediation of Knowledge and Scientific Culture. This edition reunited politicians, teachers, science communicators and researchers to discuss culture, science communication and museums. The organization promoted workshops and invited three keynote speakers: Abdulaziz Alhegelan, Brian Trench
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Gender-biased public perception of STEM fields, focusing on the influence of egalitarian attitudes toward gender roles Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-03-09 Yuko Ikkatai, Azusa Minamizaki, Kei Kano, Atsushi Inoue, Euan McKay, Hiromi M. Yokoyama
Many studies have examined the impression that the general public has of science and how this can prevent girls from choosing science fields. Using an online questionnaire, we investigated whether the public perception of several academic fields was gender-biased in Japan. First, we found the gender-bias gap in public perceptions was largest in nursing and mechanical engineering. Second, people who
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Are science festivals a good place to discuss heated topics? Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-03-02 Sacha Altay, Camille Lakhlifi
Public acceptance of vaccination and Genetically Modified (GM) food is low and opposition is stiff. During two science festivals in France, we discussed in small groups the scientific evidence and current consensus on the benefits of vaccination and GM food safety. Our interventions reinforced people’s positive opinions on vaccination and produced a drastic positive shift of GM food opinions. Despite
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One size does not fit all: gender implications for the design of outcomes, evaluation and assessment of science communication programs Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-02-24 Christine O'Connell, Merryn McKinnon, Jordan LaBouff
As science communication programs grow worldwide, effective evaluation and assessment metrics lag. While there is no consensus on evaluation protocols specifically for science communication training, there is agreement on elements of effective training: listening, empathy, and knowing your audience — core tenets of improvisation. We designed an evaluation protocol, tested over three years, based on
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Science on tap: effective public engagement or preaching to the choir? Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-02-10 Cara Ocobock, Patricia Hawley
The goal of Science Cafés and Science on Taps is to encourage open discourse between scientists and the public in a casual setting (e.g., a bar) in order to improve the public understanding of, and trust in, science. These events have existed for over two decades, but there is no research studying their efficacy. Data presented here demonstrate that a yearlong Science on Tap series induced little change
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Datafictions: or how measurements and predictive analytics rule imagined future worlds Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-01-27 Gernot Rieder, Thomas Voelker
As the digital revolution continues and our lives become increasingly governed by smart technologies, there is a rising need for reflection and critical debate about where we are, where we are headed, and where we want to be. Against this background, the paper suggests that one way to foster such discussion is by engaging with the world of fiction, with imaginative stories that explore the spaces,
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Credibility aspects of research-based gaming in science communication — the case of The Maladaptation Game Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2020-01-13 Therese Asplund
While previous studies have found games and gaming to be a new and innovative communication strategy to inform the public and citizens about scientific research and engage them with it, this article addresses the under-researched question of credibility aspects in research-based gaming. The study analyses agricultural stakeholders’ discussions on the credibility of scientific descriptions in The Maladaptation
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Invisible brokers: “citizen science” on Twitter Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-12-16 Elise Tancoigne
Who speaks for “citizen science” on Twitter? Which territory of citizen science have they made visible so far? This paper offers the first description of the community of users who dedicate their online social media identity to citizen science. It shows that Twitter users who identify with the term “citizen science” are mostly U.S. science professionals in environmental sciences, and rarely projects'
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Naming is framing: the effects of a technological name on the interpretation of a technology Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-12-09 Reginald Boersma, P. Marijn Poortvliet, Bart Gremmen
In this article, we follow up on food scientists' findings that people judge new food technologies and related products (un)favourably immediately after just hearing the name of the technology. From the reactions, it appears that people use their attitudes to technologies they know to evaluate new technologies. Using categorization theory, in this study we have found that, by triggering associations
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Voices in health communication — experts and expert-roles in the German news coverage of multi resistant pathogens Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-12-02 Matthias Wagner, Gwendolin Gurr, Miriam Siemon
When it comes to complex topics in the field of health and risk communication, experts are of high importance for the credibility of a news media report. This paper examines the use of experts and their roles in the news media coverage of multi-resistant pathogens by means of a quantitative content analysis of German print and online news. A cluster analysis of the expert statements identifies three
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Storytelling for narrative approaches in citizen science: towards a generalized model Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-11-12 Anett Richter, Andrea Sieber, Julia Siebert, Victoria Miczajka-Rußmann, Jörg Zabel, David Ziegler, Susanne Hecker, Didone Frigerio
Storytelling essentials are stories that direct attention, trigger emotions, and prompt understanding. Citizen science has recently promoted the narrative approach of storytelling as a means of engagement of people of all ages and backgrounds in scientific research processes. We seek understanding about the typology of storytelling in citizen science projects and explore to what extent the tool of
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Meat as a matter of fact(s): the role of science in everyday representations of livestock production on social media Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-10-29 Ulrika Olausson
In recent times we have allegedly witnessed a “post-truth” turn in society. Nonetheless, surveys show that science holds a relatively strong position among lay publics, and case studies suggest tha ...
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The power of storytelling and video: a visual rhetoric for science communication Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-10-14 Wiebke Finkler, Bienvenido Leon
This research develops a conceptual framework for telling visual stories about science using short-format videos, termed SciCommercial videos, that draw upon marketing communication. The framework is illustrated by an exemplar, the Good Whale Watching video, which is explained using a visual rhetoric keyframe analysis. Finally, the effectiveness of the video is evaluated as a science communication
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Telling stories in science communication: case studies of scholar-practitioner collaboration Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-10-14 Michelle Riedlinger, Luisa Massarani, Marina Joubert, Ayelet Baram-Tsabari, Marta Entradas, Jennifer Metcalfe
Reflecting on the practice of storytelling, this practice insight explores how collaborations between scholars and practitioners can improve storytelling for science communication outcomes with publics. The case studies presented demonstrate the benefits of collaborative storytelling for inspiring publics, promoting understanding of science, and engaging publics more deliberatively in science. The
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Science stories as culture: experience, identity, narrative and emotion in public communication of science Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-10-14 Sarah Rachael Davies, Megan Halpern, Maja Horst, David Kirby, Bruce Lewenstein
The last three decades have seen extensive reflection concerning how science communication should be modelled and understood. In this essay we propose the value of a cultural approach to science communication — one that frames it primarily as a process of meaning-making. We outline the conceptual basis for this view of culture, drawing on cultural theory to suggest that it is valuable to see science
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Who doesn't love a good story? — What neuroscience tells about how we respond to narratives Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-10-14 Craig Cormick
Can we really say what type of story has impact on us, and what type of story does not? Evidence suggests that we can. But we need to better understand the way that stories work on us, at a neural and empathetic level, and better understand the ways that the elements of stories, such as structure and metaphor work. By combining scientific research with the deeper wisdom of traditional storytelling
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Telling it straight — a focus group study on narratives affecting public confidence in science Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-10-14 Fredrik Brounéus, Maria Lindholm, Gustav Bohlin
Public confidence in research is important for scientific results to achieve societal impact. Swedish surveys suggest consistent but differing levels of confidence in different research areas. Thus, certain research-related factors can be assumed to have a decisive influence on confidence levels. This focus-group study explores the role of different narratives in shaping public confidence in research
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Storytelling: the soul of science communication Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-10-14 Marina Joubert, Lloyd Davis, Jennifer Metcalfe
There is a renewed interest amongst science communication practitioners and scholars to explore the potential of storytelling in public communication of science, including to understand how science storytelling functions (or could fail) in different contexts. Drawing from storytelling as the core theme of the 2018 conference of the Public Communication of Science and Technology (PCST) Network, we present
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What role can Athena SWAN play in gender equality and science communication? Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-09-30 Clare Wilkinson
This essay discusses how gender-focused culture change initiatives developed for science (like Athena SWAN) might offer models for science communication. Such initiatives can seek to mobilise change amongst university departments and practices, but there are also potential pitfalls in such approaches. Using experiences in a department at UWE Bristol as a basis, the article will consider whether such
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Feminist standpoint theory and science communication Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-09-30 Megan Halpern
This commentary introduces feminist standpoint theory and discusses its potential value in science communication. It offers two ways in which feminist standpoints can help in both research and practice. First, science communicators should aim to understand the perspective from which they understand and share scientific knowledge. Second, practitioners and researchers alike should seek insights from
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Technoscience in the era of #MeToo and the science march Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-09-30 Stephanie Steinhardt
Science communication is inside a hard but important moment. When scientific controversies make the news, they are more often spawned by industry elites and celebrities who refute scientific work than by scientists. When the current U.S. president came into power, his administration scrubbed all mentions of climate from the White House website. Earth Day is now a March for Science. As scholars develop
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Catch 22 — improving visibility of women in science and engineering for both recruitment and retention Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-09-30 Laura Fogg-Rogers, Laura Hobbs
There is a significant under-representation of women in STEM which is damaging societal progress for democratic, utilitarian, and equity reasons. However, changing stereotypes in STEM requires a solution denied by the problem — more visible female role models. Science communicators are critical to curate the conditions to bypass this Catch 22. We propose that enhancing self-efficacy for female scientists
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Questioning the feminization in science communication Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-09-30 Tania Pérez-Bustos
This comment discusses feminization of science communication as a process that is related to the professionalization of the field, but also with the subordination of its practices to certain ideas of science that have described as androcentric. It argues that science communication can play an important role in questioning this subordination and contributing to democratizing science bringing gender
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The need for feminist approaches to science communication Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-09-30 Bruce Lewenstein
As science communication develops as a field of both practice and research, it needs to address issues of equity, diversity, and inclusion across a wide range, including race, power, class, gender. Doing so will require deeper understanding of conceptual work and practical activities that address those issues. This brief comment introduces a series of commentaries that provide one approach: feminist
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The seeming paradox of the need for a feminist agenda for science communication and the notion of science communication as a ‘ghetto’ of women's over-representation: perspectives, interrogations and nuances from the global south Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-09-30 Elizabeth RASEKOALA
The challenge to the science communication field put forward by Bruce Lewenstein, of the sector becoming a ‘ghetto’ of women’s over-representation (see the commentary by Lewenstein in this issue), is a very timely wake-up call. This Commentary however, elaborates and frames the pivotal and constructivist premises on which this phenomenon should be interrogated and understood on many levels. It is critical
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EPCOT theme park as a science communication space: the Test Track case Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2019-09-23 Daniela Martin
Science and technology have become tools to legitimize messages that affect the world in terms of society, politics and economy. This paper presents part of the results of a study that analyzed the symbolic construction of the future in the scientific-technological discourse at EPCOT theme park in Orlando, Florida. The sociohistorical conditions and narrative strategies are analyzed based on the theoretical
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