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?
Who can convince Americans to follow the science on coronavirus? Religious leaders. Sam Winter-Levy and Bryan Schonfeld - May 7, 2020 They can get people to look beyond partisanship.
Should U.S. states be free to close their borders to other U.S. citizens? Wallace Goodman - April 3, 2020 Without federal leadership, governors and mayors are handling the pandemic very differently.
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
How sensationalist TV stories on terrorism make Americans more hawkish Shana Gadarian - October 9, 2014 Television news in the last several weeks has seemed eerily
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