Why journalists are losing their jobs in record numbers Danny Hayes - October 23, 2023 The Trump bump was fated to fade.
Conspiracy theories are spreading wildly. Why now? Margaret Appleby - May 18, 2022 The Buffalo shooting shows how deadly such theories can be.
The U.S. has been promoting vaccines through fear. Research on political anxiety suggests that’s a mistake. Christopher Ray - August 3, 2021 Many Americans worry more about the vaccines’ side effects than about covid-19. What messaging will reach them?
Allegations of fraud weakened voter confidence in the 2016 election. That could happen again. Bethany Albertson - October 7, 2020 Fraud allegations make people less likely to say that the loser should concede. That varies by party.
This is who Americans trust about coronavirus information. Shana Kushner Gadarian and Bethany Albertson - March 19, 2020 Here’s what our research finds
What could make Americans — and Congress — care about Zika? Joshua Busby - August 17, 2016 [caption id="attachment_45386" align="aligncenter" width="960"] The Aedes aegypti mosquito is thought
Will anxiety about terrorism affect the 2016 election? Clinton has the advantage for now. Shana Gadarian, Joshua Busby, and Bethany Albertson - March 28, 2016 [caption id="attachment_37791" align="aligncenter" width="908"] A mourner places a candle next
Will foreign policy be a major issue in the 2016 election? Here’s what we know. Elizabeth N. Saunders - January 26, 2016 At the last two Republican debates, the looming center-stage presence
How anxiety about terrorist attacks could change our politics Shana Gadarian and Bethany Albertson - November 20, 2015 [caption id="attachment_32476" align="aligncenter" width="908"] U.S. Capitol Police officers keep watch
Persuading Americans to act on climate change Joshua Busby and Bethany Albertson - April 8, 2015 [caption id="attachment_23487" align="aligncenter" width="800"] A worker installs solar panels atop
Ebola will make Americans more likely to give up civil liberties Shana Gadarian and Bethany Albertson - October 24, 2014 The emerging reaction to America’s newest case of Ebola shows
Was the Facebook emotion experiment unethical? Shana Gadarian and Bethany Albertson - July 1, 2014 [caption id="attachment_12164" align="aligncenter" width="908"] ( Karen Bleir/AFP/Getty Images)[/caption] There has been
An Anxious August for Immigration Reform John Sides - July 26, 2013 This is a guest post by political scientists Bethany Albertson
Registration Open for 5th Annual NYU-CESS Conference on Experimental Political Science Joshua Tucker - January 23, 2012 Registration is now open for the 5th Annual NYU-CESS Experimental
Experimental Research in Political Science Awards Joshua Tucker - December 9, 2010 The American Political Science Association's newest section, the Organized Section
The “long-term” effects and non-effects of watching politically-oriented TV shows - June 22, 2009 Here’s a familiar research scenario: A research team conducts an