A1 Vertaisarvioitu alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä lehdessä
Public Communication about Science in 68 Countries: Global Evidence on How People Encounter and Engage with Information about Science
Tekijät: Mede Niels G.; Cologna Viktoria; Berger Sebastian; C. Besley John; Brick Cameron; Joubert Marina; W. Maibach Edward; Mihelj Sabina; Oreskes Naomi; S. Schäfer Mike; van der Linden Sander; Abdul Aziz Nor Izzatina; Abdulsalam Suleiman; Abu Shamsi Nurulaini; Aczel Balazs; Adinugroho Indro; Alabrese Eleonora; Aldoh Alaa; Alfano Mark; Mbulli Ali Innocent; Alsobay Mohammed; Altenmüller Marlene; Alvarez R. Michael; Ansah Patrick; Apriliawati Denisa; Azevedo Flavio; Bajrami Ani; Bardhan Ronita; Bati Keagile; Bertsou Eri; Bhui Rahul; Białobrzeska Olga; Bilewicz Michal; Bouguettaya Ayoub; Breeden Katherine; Bret Amélie; Buchel Ondrej; Cabrera Alvarez Pablo; Cagnoli Federica; Calero Valdez André; Callaghan Timothy; Kaye Cases Rizza; Czarnek Gabriela; Debnath Ramit; Delouvée Sylvain; Di Stefano Lucia; Diaz-Catalàn Celia; C. Doell Kimberly; Dohle Simone; M. Douglas Karen; Dubrov Dmitrii; Dzimińska Malgorzata; K. H. Ecker Ullrich; T. Elbaek Christian; Elsherif Mahmoud; Enke Benjamin; Facciani Matthew; Fage-Butler Antoinette; Faisal Md. Zaki; Fan Xiaoli; Farhart Christina; Feldhaus Christoph; Ferreira Marinus; Feuerriegel Stefan; Fischer Helen; Freundt Jana; Friese Malte; Gallyamova Albina; E. Garrido Vásquez Mauricio; Garrido-Vásquez Patricia; Genschow Oliver; Ghasemi Omid; Gkinopoulos Theofilos; L. Gloor Jamie; Goddard Ellen; González Brambila Claudia; Gordon Hazel; Grigoryev Dmitry; Guenther Lars; Harari Dana; Hensel Przemysław; Hernández-Mondragón Alma Cristal; Herziger Atar; Huang Guanxiong; Huff Markus; Hurley Mairéad; Ibadildin Nygmet; Tarikul Islam Mohammad; Jeddi Younes; Jin Tao; A. Jones Charlotte; Jungkunz Sebastian; Jurgiel Dominika; Kavassalis Sarah; R. Kerr John; Kitsa Mariana; Klabíková Rábová Tereza; Klein Olivier; Koh Hoyoun; Koivula Aki; Kojan Lilian; Komyaginskaya Elizaveta; König Laura; Koppel Lina; Koren Kochav; Kosachenko Alexandra; Kotcher John; S. Kranz Laura; Krishnan Pradeep; Kristiansen Silje; Krouwel André; Kuppens Toon; Lamm Claus; Lantian Anthony; Lazić Aleksandra; Légal Jean-Baptiste; Leviston Zoe; Levy Neil; M. Lindkvist Amanda; López Ortega Alberto; Lopez-Villavicencio Carlos; Löschel Andreas; Mantou Lou Nigel; H. Lucas Chloe; Lunz-Trujillo Kristin; D. Marques Mathew; J. Mayer Sabrina; McKay Ryan; Metag Julia; L. Milfont Taciano; M. Miller Joanne; Mitkidis Panagiotis; Monge-Rodríguez Fredy; Motta Matt; Muršič Zarja; Namutebi Jennifer; J. Newman Eryn; P. Nitschke Jonas; Ntui-Njock Vincent Ntui; Nwogwugwu Daniel; Ostermann Thomas; Otterbring Tobias; Palmer-Hague Jaime; Pantazi Myrto; Pärnamets Philip; Parra Saiani Paolo; Paruzel-Czachura Mariola; Parzuchowski Michal; G. Pavlov Yuri; R. Pearson Adam; Penner Myron A.; R. Pennington Charlotte; Petkanopoulou Katerina; B. Petrović Marija; Pisareva Dinara; Ploszaj Adam; Pronizius Ekaterina; Pštross Karolína; Pypno-Blajda Katarzyna; A. Quiñones Diwa Malaya; Räsänen Pekka; Rauchfleisch Adrian; G. Rebitschek Felix; Refojo Seronero Cintia; Rêgo Gabriel; Reynolds James P.; Roche Joseph; Philipp Röer Jan; M. Ross Robert; Ruin Isabelle; Santos Osvaldo; R. Santos Ricardo; Schulreich Stefan; Scoggins Bermond; Shuckburgh Emily; Six Johan; Solak Nevin; Späth Leonhard; Spruyt Bram; Standaert Olivier; K. Stanley Samantha; Strahm Noel; Syropoulos Stylianos; Szaszi Barnabas; Szumowska Ewa; Tanaka Mikihito; Teran-Escobar Claudia; Todorova Boryana; Kafid Toko Abdoul; Tokrri Renata; Toribio-Florez Daniel; Tsakiris Manos; Tyrala Michael; Melis Uluğ Özden; Chinwe Uzoma Ijeoma; van Noord Jochem; Verheyen Steven; Vilares Iris; Vlasceanu Madalina; von Bubnoff Andreas; Warwas Izabela; Walker Iain; Weber Marcel; Weninger Tim; Westfal Mareike; Dominik Wojcik Adrian; Xia Ziqian; Xie Jinliang; Zegler-Poleska Ewa; Zwaan Rolf A.; {name=TISP Consortium, sequence=additional, affiliation=[]}
Kustantaja: SAGE Publications
Julkaisuvuosi: 2025
Lehti: Science Communication
Artikkelin numero: 10755470251376615
ISSN: 1075-5470
eISSN: 1552-8545
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/10755470251376615
Julkaisun avoimuus kirjaamishetkellä: Avoimesti saatavilla
Julkaisukanavan avoimuus : Osittain avoin julkaisukanava
Verkko-osoite: https://doi.org/10.1177/10755470251376615
Rinnakkaistallenteen osoite: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/505693893
This 68-country survey (n = 71,922) examines science information diets and communication behavior, identifies cross-country differences, and tests how such differences are associated with sociopolitical and economic conditions. We find that social media are the most used sources of science information in most countries, except those with democratic-corporatist media systems where news media tend to be used more widely. People in collectivist societies are less outspoken about science in daily life, whereas lower education is associated with higher outspokenness. Limited access to digital media is correlated with participation in public protests on science matters. We discuss implications for future research, policy, and practice.
Ladattava julkaisu This is an electronic reprint of the original article. |
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The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: I.R. and C.T.-E. were supported by ANR PICS; A.F.-B. was supported by Aarhus University Research Foundation grant AUFF-E-2019-9-13; P.M. was supported by Aarhus University Research Foundation grant AUFF-E-2019-9-2; R. Bardhan was supported by Africa Albarado Fund; Cambridge Africa ESRC GCRF; UKRI ODA International Partnership Fund; J.P. Reynolds was supported by Aston University; UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) under the U.K. government’s Horizon Europe funding guarantee EP/X042758/1; N.L. and R.M.R. were supported by Australian Research Council grant DP180102384; John Templeton Foundation grant #62631; O. Ghasemi was supported by Australian Research Council grant DP190101675; U.K.H.E. was supported by Australian Research Council grant FT190100708; D.D., A.G., D.G., and E.K. were supported by Basic Research Program at the National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE University); R.D. was supported by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation grant OPP1144; Cambridge Humanities Research Grant; CRASSH grant fund for climaTRACES lab; Keynes Fund; UKRI ODA International Partnership Fund; Quadrature Climate Foundation; T.C. and M.M. were supported by Boston University (Startup Funds); F.A. was supported by CNPq—INCT (National Institute of Science and Technology on Social and Affective Neuroscience, grant n. 406463/2022-0); K.C.D. was supported by COVID-19 Rapid Response grant from the University of Vienna; Austrian Science Fund grant FWF, I3381; C.L., J.P.N., E.P., and B.T. were supported by COVID-19 Rapid Response grant from the University of Vienna; Austrian Science Fund grant FWF, I3381; The Austrian Science Fund FWF: W1262-B29; R.M.A. was supported by Caltech RSI; C. Farhart was supported by Carleton College; C.L.-V. was supported by Cayetano Heredia University; S. Kristiansen was supported by Center for Climate and Energy Transformation, University of Bergen, Norway; C.G.B. and A.C.H.-M. were supported by Conacyt grant A1S9013; O.K. was supported by Concerted Research Action grant from the Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles (Belgium) (“The Socio-Cognitive Impact of Literacy”) (OK); J.S. was supported by Core ETHZ funding & Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) grant 7F09521; E.A. was supported by Department of Economics, University of Warwick; H.G. was supported by Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield; F.G.R. was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgesellschaft grant RE 4752/1-1; David and Claudia Harding Foundation; I.M.A. was supported by EDCTP2 Programme (TMA2020CDF-3171); BMGF (INV075699); K.M.D. was supported by European Research Council Advanced Grant “Consequences of conspiracy theories—CONSPIRACY_FX” grant 101018262; J.R. was supported by European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under Grant Agreement No. 101006436 (GlobalSCAPE); G.H. was supported by Faculty Research Grant of City University of Hong Kong grant PJ9618021; O. Santos and R.R.S. were supported by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, UIDB/04295/2020 and UIDP/04295/2020; E.G. was supported by Government of Alberta Major Innovation Fund grant RES0049213; J.N. was supported by HELTS Foundation (USA); K. Breeden was supported by Harvey Mudd College; T.K.R. and K. Pštross were supported by Institute of Communication Studies and Journalism, Charles University; H.F. was supported by Internal project costs IWM; M. Tanaka was supported by JST-RISTEX ELSI grant #JPMJRX20J3; Hitachi Fund Support for Research Related to Infectious Diseases; G.C. and E. Szumowska were supported by Jagiellonian University; M. Alfano was supported by John Templeton Foundation #61378; John Templeton Foundation grant #62631; Australian Research Council DP190101507; M. Ferreira was supported by John Templeton Foundation #61378; John Templeton Foundation grant #62631; Australian Research Council DP190101507; M.A.P. was supported by John Templeton Foundation Academic Cross-Training Fellowship grant #61580; A. Krouwel was supported by Kieskompas.nl; M. Tsakiris was supported by NOMIS Foundation; R.M. was supported by NOMIS Foundation/Leverhulme International Professorship Grant (LIP-2022-001) (RM); T.K. was supported by NORFACE Joint Research Programme on Democratic Governance in a Turbulent Age; NOW; European Commission through Horizon 2020 grant 822166; K. Petkanopoulou and J.v.N. were supported by NORFACE Joint Research Programme on Democratic Governance in a Turbulent Age; NWO; European Commission through Horizon 2020 grant 822166; A.R. was supported by National Science and Technology Council, Taiwan (ROC) grant 112-2628-H-002-002 and 113-2628-H-002-018-; D.J. and A.D.W. were supported by Nicolaus Copernicus University; O. Standaert was supported by Observatory for Research on Media and Journalism, University of Louvain; N.I. was supported by Research grant from the College of Social Sciences, Kimep University; E.B. and P.K. were supported by SNSF (VAR-EXP); O. Białobrzeska and M. Parzuchowski were supported by SWPS University; M.E. was supported by School of Economics Interdisciplinary funding at University of Birmingham; C.A.J. and C.H.L. were supported by School of Geography, Planning, and Spatial Sciences, University of Tasmania; Centre for Marine Socioecology, University of Tasmania; E.J.N. and S.K.S. were supported by School of Medicine and Psychology, Australian National University; I. Walker was supported by School of Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne; M.D.M. was supported by School of Psychology and Public Health Internal Grant Scheme 2022; I.A. was supported by School of Psychology, University of Sheffield; Beasiswa Pendidikan Indonesia Kemendikbudristek—LPDP provided by Balai Pembiayaan Pendidikan Tinggi (BPPT) Kemdikbudristek and LPDP Indonesia; R. Bhui was supported by Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; O. Buchel was supported by Slovak Research and Development Agency (APVV), contract no. APVV-22-0242; N.M.L. was supported by Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council grant #430-2022-00711; C.R.S. was supported by Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology (FECYT); M.P.-C. was supported by Statutory Funds from University of Silesia in Katowice; A.C.V. and L. Kojan were supported by Supported by OptimAgent (German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Funding Code: 031L0299D) and University of Lübeck; P.P. was supported by Swedish Research Council grant 2020-02584; L.S. was supported by Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) grant 7F09521; S.B. was supported by Swiss Federal Office of Energy (SI/502093–01); J.L.G. was supported by Swiss National Science Foundation PRIMA Grant (PR00P1_193128); V.C. was supported by Swiss National Science Foundation Postdoc Mobility Fellowship (P500PS_202935); Harvard University Faculty Development Fund; SPEED2ZERO Joint Initiative that received support from the ETH-Board under the Joint Initiatives scheme; E.W.M. was supported by The HELTS Foundation; G.R. was supported by The São Paulo Research Foundation—FAPESP grant 2019/26665-5; CNPq—INCT (National Institute of Science and Technology on Social and Affective Neuroscience, grant n. 406463/2022-0); J.P.-H. was supported by Trinity Western University; M. Facciani and T.W. were supported by USAID; F.M.-R. was supported by Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia; D.A. was supported by Universitas Islam Negeri Sunan Kalijaga; S.J. and S.J.M. were supported by University of Bamberg; J.M.M. was supported by University of Delaware; M.D. and I. Warwas were supported by University of Lodz; A. Koivula and P.R. were supported by University of Turku; M.B. and P.H. were supported by University of Warsaw; A.P. and E.Z.-P. were supported by University of Warsaw under the Priority Research Area V of the “Excellence Initiative—Research University” program; M.S.S. was supported by University of Zurich/IMKZ; T. Ostermann and J.P. Röer were supported by University research budget; A. Bajrami and R.T. were supported by University “Aleksandër Moisiu,” Durrës; S. Schulreich was supported by Universität Hamburg; L.S.K. was supported by Victoria University of Wellington; H.K. and B. Scoggins were supported by Zhangir Kabdulkair.