PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Delivering the news with humor makes young adults more likely to remember and share

When compared to non-humorous news clips, viewers are not only more likely to share humorously presented news, but also more likely to remember content from these segments

2021-01-07
(Press-News.org) In the early decades of televised news, Americans turned to the stern faces of newsmen like Walter Cronkite, Tom Brokaw, and Dan Rather as trusted sources for news of the important events in America and around the world, delivered with gravitas and measured voices. The rise of comedy-news programs, helmed by the likes of Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert, John Oliver, Trevor Noah, and Samantha Bee, raised concerns over the blending of entertainment and news. But could the merging of humor and news actually help inform the public?

In fact, new research suggests that humor may help keep people informed about politics. A study from the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania and the School of Communication at Ohio State University found that, when compared to non-humorous news clips, viewers are not only more likely to share humorously presented news but are also more likely to remember the content from these segments.

"For democracy to work, it is really important for people to engage with news and politics and to be informed about public affairs," says senior author Emily Falk, Professor of Communication, Psychology, and Marketing at Annenberg. "We wanted to test whether humor might make news more socially relevant, and therefore motivate people to remember it and share it."

The researchers recruited young adults (18-34 years old) to watch a variety of news clips, which they designed to vary, so that some ended with jokes and others did not. In addition to collecting data on participants' brain activity using fMRI technology, the researchers administered a memory test to determine how much information participants retained from watching the clips. The researchers also asked participants to answer questions about how likely they would be to share the news clips with others.

Participants were more likely to remember information about politics and government policy when it was conveyed in a humorous rather than non-humorous manner and were more willing to share the information online. The findings also show that humorous news clips elicited greater activity in brain regions associated with thinking about what other people think and feel, which highlights the social nature of comedy.

"Our findings show that humor stimulates activity in brain regions associated with social engagement, improves memory for political facts, and increases the tendency to share political information with others," says lead author Jason Coronel, Assistant Professor of Communication at OSU. "This is significant because entertainment-based media has become an important source of political news, especially for young adults. Our results suggest that humor can increase knowledge about politics."

INFORMATION:

The study, published online in the Journal of Communication, is entitled "Political Humor, Sharing, and Remembering: Insights from Neuroimaging." In addition to Coronel and Falk, authors include Matthew Brook O'Donnell, Prateekshit Pandey, and Michael X. Delli Carpini of the Annenberg School.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study examines attitudes toward long-acting injectable HIV therapy among women

2021-01-07
A study led by Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health researchers examines attitudes toward long-acting injectable (LAI) HIV therapies, among women with a history of injection--including medical purposes and substance use. The findings appear in the journal AIDS Patient Care and STDs. Currently, most HIV therapies for treatment and prevention (pre-exposure prophylaxis, PrEP) necessitate daily pills, which pose barriers to adherence. Recently, however, LAI for HIV has emerged as an alternative with the potential to boost adherence, although little research has been done on how people with a history of injection feel about these new forms of injectable HIV therapy. There 258,000 women in the United States living with HIV. The study involved interviews with 89 women across ...

Simple bioreactor makes 'gut check' more practical

Simple bioreactor makes gut check more practical
2021-01-07
HOUSTON - (Jan. 7, 2021) - Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine researchers have found a way to mimic conditions in intestines, giving them a mechanical model for the real-time growth of bacterial infections. In a new study, they demonstrate a lab tool that simplifies simulations of the human intestine, making it more practical to find treatments for diseases like infectious diarrhea. The team led by bioengineer Jane Grande-Allen of Rice's Brown School of Engineering developed transparent millifluidic perfusion cassettes (mPCs) that are easy to fabricate and operate and compatible with common microscopic and biochemical analysis. The cassettes allow even non-bioengineers to perform the kind of studies ...

Researchers question fundamental study on the Kondo effect

Researchers question fundamental study on the Kondo effect
2021-01-07
Jülich, Germany, 7 January 2021. The Kondo effect influences the electrical resistance of metals at low temperatures and generates complex electronic and magnetic orders. Novel concepts for data storage and processing, such as using quantum dots, are based on this. In 1998, researchers from the United States published spectroscopic studies on the Kondo effect using scanning tunnelling microscopy, which are considered ground-breaking and have triggered countless others of a similar kind. Many of these studies may have to be re-examined now that Jülich researchers have shown that the Kondo effect cannot be proven beyond doubt ...

Experts tap into behavioral research to promote COVID-19 vaccination in the US

2021-01-07
As the first doses of COVID-19 vaccines are being rolled out, it is still unclear whether enough Americans are willing to be vaccinated to allow the nation to return to normalcy. Many believe a key part of the equation lies in how effective vaccine communication teams are at convincing the public to get vaccinated. And the key to effective communication tactics in promoting the vaccines may lie in demonstrated behavioral economics and consumer behavior theory, experts say. "The country has made an incredible investment in fast-tracking SARS-CoV-2 vaccines from conception to market, which would make it even more tragic if we fail to curtail the virus simply because Americans ...

School nutrition professionals' employee safety experiences during onset of the COVID-19 pandemic

2021-01-07
Philadelphia, January 7, 2021 - A new study in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, published by Elsevier, explores real-time personal and employee safety experiences and perspectives of school nutrition professionals ranging from frontline staff to state leadership across the United States during the early weeks of the coronavirus pandemic. A survey with both closed- and open-ended items was developed to explore the experiences of school nutrition staff, managers, directors, and state agency personnel. Descriptive statistics from the responses of 47 states ...

Tech giant technology is 'open source' for the pandemic, so why does it feel so closed?

2021-01-07
The COVID-19 pandemic has seen hardware developers clamouring to make 'open source' technology to support our frontline services. Their intentions have been honourable - an invitation to teams across the world to collaborate in developing essential equipment such as ventilators, thereby making the process of producing critical instruments more effective, both in time and cost. In practice, however, most developers of hardware have shown little 'openness' in their sharing of designs, a fact lamented by a group of physicists from the University of Bath in the UK, in a paper published this week in The Design Journal. According to the group, the pandemic has ...

Patterns in primordial germ cell migration

2021-01-07
Whenever an organism develops and forms organs, a tumour creates metastases or the immune system becomes active in inflammation, cells migrate within the body. As they do, they interact with surrounding tissues which influence their function. The migrating cells react to biochemical signals, as well as to biophysical properties of their environment, for example whether a tissue is soft or stiff. Gaining detailed knowledge about such processes provides scientists with a basis for understanding medical conditions and developing treatment approaches. A team of biologists and mathematicians at the Universities of Münster and Erlangen-Nürnberg has now developed a new method for analysing cell migration ...

Nanodroplets and ultrasound 'drills' prove effective at tackling tough blood clots

Nanodroplets and ultrasound drills prove effective at tackling tough blood clots
2021-01-07
Engineering researchers have developed a new technique for eliminating particularly tough blood clots, using engineered nanodroplets and an ultrasound "drill" to break up the clots from the inside out. The technique has not yet gone through clinical testing. In vitro testing has shown promising results. Specifically, the new approach is designed to treat retracted blood clots, which form over extended periods of time and are especially dense. These clots are particularly difficult to treat because they are less porous than other clots, making it hard for drugs ...

How medical schools can transform curriculums to undo racial biases

2021-01-07
PHILADELPHIA - Medical school curriculums may misuse race and play a role in perpetuating physician bias, a team led by Penn Medicine researchers found in an analysis of curriculum from the preclinical phase of medical education. In a perspective piece published Tuesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, the researchers identified five key categories in which curriculum misrepresented race in class discussions, presentations, and assessments. The authors recommend that rather than oversimplifying conversations about how race affects diseases' prevalence, diagnosis, and treatment, medical school faculty must widen the lens to "impart an adequate and accurate understanding of the complexity ...

Researchers create comprehensive database of head and neck cancers

2021-01-07
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE In what is believed to be the most comprehensive molecular characterization to date of the most common type of head and neck cancer, researchers from the Johns Hopkins departments of END ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Revolutionizing heat management with high-performance cerium oxide thermal switches

University of Iowa study traces Ebola's route to the skin surface

Study finds smoking linked to increased risk of chronic kidney disease in later stages

System to auto-detect new variants will inform better response to future infectious disease outbreaks

Key players in brain aging: New research identifies age-related damage on a cellular level

Pupil size in sleep reveals how memories are sorted, preserved

Revealing a key mechanism of rapid centromere evolution

A tour de force: Columbia engineers discover new “all-optical” nanoscale sensors of force

Ancient DNA unlocks new understanding of migrations in the first millennium AD

MIT scientists pin down the origins of a fast radio burst

Researchers reveal why the lung is a frequent site of cancer metastasis

Aging may change some brain cells more than others

Special issue of APA’s official journal focuses on psychedelic medication

Geneticist unlocks mysteries of childhood psychiatric disorders through innovative research

New study uncovers key insights into protein interactions in Duchenne muscular dystrophy, paving way for more targeted therapies

Revolutionizing fragrance design using deep neural networks (DNNs) scent profiles from chemical data

Custom-fit bone grafts: the future of craniomaxillofacial surgery

A new ‘molecular lantern’ detects brain metastasis in mice by inserting a probe thinner than a hair into the brain

McGill scientist reveals how early life experiences reshape our genes and brain health

Renowned scientist reveals vital link between inflammation and depression through groundbreaking research

Medical researcher explores economic impact of psychedelic therapy implementation

Improving immunotherapies for kidney cancer

Billing patients for portal messages could decrease message volume and ease physician workload

Study of Sherpas highlights key role of kidneys in acclimatization to high altitudes

Smartphone app can help reduce opioid use and keep patients in treatment, UT Health San Antonio study shows

Improved health care value cannot be achieved by hospital mergers and acquisitions alone

People who are immunocompromised may not produce enough protective antibodies against RSV after vaccination

Does coffee prevent head and neck cancer?

AI replaces humans in identifying causes of fuel cell malfunctions

Pitfalls of FDA-approved germline cancer predisposition tests

[Press-News.org] Delivering the news with humor makes young adults more likely to remember and share
When compared to non-humorous news clips, viewers are not only more likely to share humorously presented news, but also more likely to remember content from these segments