Results 281 to 290 of about 174,721 (379)
Abstract Meta‐analyses have demonstrated how inoculation interventions increase the detection of misinformation, but their scalability has remained elusive. To address this, Study 1 (pre‐registered; N = 1,583) tested the efficacy of three short inoculation videos (prebunks) against three common manipulation tactics used in misinformation: (1 ...
Mikey Biddlestone+4 more
wiley +1 more source
CIBMTR Registry Data on Inotuzumab Ozogamicin Treatment in Patients with ALL Who Proceeded to Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant-A Podcast. [PDF]
de Lima M, Marks DI.
europepmc +1 more source
Brug af podcasts i undervisningen - muligheder og begrænsninger
Helle Mathiasen
openalex +2 more sources
Abstract Over the last years, infectious diseases have been traveling across international borders faster than ever before, resulting in major public health crises such as the Covid‐19 pandemic. Given the rapid changes and unknown risks that mark such events, risk communication faces the challenge to raise awareness and concern among the public without
Annemarie Wiedicke+2 more
wiley +1 more source
Structuring wicked problems in science communication
Abstract Public policy scholars increasingly deal with wicked problems and how diverse actors structure these problems in policy processes. However, the role of actors at the interface of science and society such as science communicators in structuring wicked problems remains widely unclear.
Sabrina Kirschke, Hannah Kosow
wiley +1 more source
Meaning, anti‐alienation, and fulfillment
Abstract One intuition that motivates subjectivist theories about meaning in life is the anti‐alienation intuition, that is, for a life to be meaningful it must engage with the person whose life it is. This article contends that the anti‐alienation and subjectivist theories it motivates are best understood as tracking fulfillment in life; this is an ...
Chad Mason Stevenson
wiley +1 more source