Tag: CSSLab

How Cable News Has Diverged From Broadcast News

News / June 11, 2025

Walter Cronkite was often cited as “the most trusted man in America” as he delivered the news on CBS in the 1960s and ’70s — a time when fewer news options created a “shared reality” that scholars argue fostered civic engagement, empathy, and shared national identity. The situation looks quite...

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News On Climate Change Is More Persuasive Than Expected, Study Finds

News / April 18, 2025

Climate change is one of the most pressing challenges of our time, demanding urgent and effective action to mitigate its severe impacts. One barrier to effective climate change action is its polarizing nature largely driven by the media, as people prefer to consume news that aligns with their political beliefs....

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From Cracks to Gardens: Creating a Thriving Social Media Through Research

News / April 10, 2025

Early advocates of social media believed that the creation of these platforms would lead to positive outcomes. When Facebook was launched in 2004, it was praised for its ability to “connect the entire world.” In hindsight, many of these ideals were optimistic at their time as social media platforms are...

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How the Media Distorts Perceptions on Chronic Disease Risks

News / February 28, 2025

Silent illnesses, or chronic diseases, contribute to 70% of deaths in the US annually and six in ten Americans suffer from at least one chronic condition. Despite this, coverage of this public health crisis is disproportionately overshadowed by sensational risks, including terrorism, homicide, and traffic accidents- incidents that are far...

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Violent Language in Films Has Increased Since the 1970s: A New Study

News / January 21, 2025

Violent entertainment has made it into the public discourse due to rising concerns about the graphic nature of highly popular video game franchises including Grand Theft Auto (GTA) and Call of Duty. But what about violence in films which are enjoyed by a much larger and more diverse audience? After...

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Overcoming the Challenges of GPS Mobility Data in Epidemic Modeling

News / October 3, 2024

Epidemic modeling is a framework for evaluating the location and timing of disease transmission events, and is a part of the larger field of human mobility science. The COVID-19 pandemic put existing epidemic models to the test, with many institutions and corporations employing models that utilized smartphone location data to...

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The Team Communication Toolkit: Emily Hu’s Award-Winning Project

News / August 22, 2024

Emily Hu, a fourth-year doctoral student in the Computational Social Science Lab (CSSLab), recently launched her award-winning Team Communication Toolkit at the Academy of Management Conference on August 12 in Chicago. This toolkit allows researchers to analyze text-based communication data among groups and teams by providing over a hundred research-backed...

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Misunderstanding the Harms of Online Misinformation

News / July 31, 2024

In 2006, Facebook launched its News Feed feature, sparking seemingly endless contentious public discourse on the power of the “social media algorithm” in shaping what people see online. Nearly two decades and many recommendation algorithm tweaks later, this discourse continues, now laser-focused on whether social media recommendation algorithms are primarily...

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