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

In police recruitment efforts, humanizing officers can boost interest

2025-03-20
(Press-News.org) Many U.S. police departments face a serious recruiting and staffing crisis, which has spurred a re-examination of recruitment methods. In a new study, researchers drew on the field of intergroup communication to analyze how police are portrayed in recruitment materials to determine whether humanizing efforts make a difference. The study found that presenting officers in human terms boosted participants’ interest in policing as a career.

The study was conducted by researchers at the University of California Santa Barbara (UCSB), Texas State University (TXST), Arizona State University, and the University of Texas at Austin. It appears in Criminology & Public Policy, a publication of the American Society of Criminology.

“Applying principles from intergroup communication can help law enforcement agencies develop recruiting materials that humanize the police and promote a shared identity with police officers, thereby attracting a larger and more potentially diverse pool of candidates,” says Shawn L. Hill, a graduate student in communications at UCSB, who led the study.

Prior studies have suggested that how an organization portrays itself influences how people see themselves fitting into the organization and their intent to apply for jobs with that organization. Therefore, it is thought that one way to reach groups that may not readily identify with police officers is to introduce a more human side of policing into recruitment efforts.

Using a randomized survey experiment and the social identity approach, in this study, researchers tested the effects of humanizing how officers are portrayed in a recruiting video against a more traditional, action-oriented portrayal.

In March and April 2024, researchers showed police recruiting videos to more than 300 undergraduate students in criminal justice and psychology classes at a large public university in the southwest United States; participants were mostly female and represented a range of races and ethnicities, The videos varied in how a female police officer described her career and her personal life. Researchers then measured the extent to which each approach influenced participants’ general attitudes toward police and specific attitudes toward working in policing.

Exposure to the humanizing video had a significant positive effect on respondents’ shared identity with police, but not on their institutional trust in police, the study found. Shared identity and institutional trust both had significant positive effects on respondents’ interest in a policing career.

These findings suggest that when police recruiting materials humanize police officers, portraying them not only as crime fighters, but as people interested in serving their community and with rewarding and balanced personal lives, they increase the extent to which potential candidates perceive a sense of shared identity with police officers. That sense of shared identity, in turn, promotes greater interest in a policing career.

“Focusing on shared identities with community members can make police officers appear more personal and relatable, which may help counter the negative effects of conventional stereotypes,” notes Laure Brimbal, assistant professor of criminal justice and criminology at TXST, who coauthored the study.

Among the study’s limitations, the authors note that criminal justice students may have a pre-existing interest in policing or related professions, which could affect their responses to the recruiting materials used in the study. In addition, the approach tested involved a video that featured one officer and one agency, so the authors were unable to infer how their results might differ in research involving other officers or agencies.

Portions of the study were supported by the National Institute of Justice’s Law Enforcement Advancing Data and Science (LEADS) Scholars Program.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fully AI driven weather prediction system could start revolution in forecasting

2025-03-20
A new AI weather prediction system, Aardvark Weather, can deliver accurate forecasts tens of times faster and using thousands of times less computing power than current AI and physics-based forecasting systems, according to research published today (Thursday 20 March) in Nature.  Aardvark has been developed by researchers from the University of Cambridge supported by the Alan Turing Institute, Microsoft Research and the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting, providing a blueprint for a completely new approach to weather forecasting with the potential to transform current practices.  The ...

Tuberculosis in children and adolescents: EU/EEA observes a rise in 2023

Tuberculosis in children and adolescents: EU/EEA observes a rise in 2023
2025-03-20
As young children have an increased risk of developing tuberculosis (TB) disease during the first year after infection, childhood TB serves as an indicator of ongoing transmission within a community.  In 2023, 1,689 children and young adolescents below the age of 15 years were diagnosed with tuberculosis in the European Union/European Economic Area (EU/EEA) countries. This particular age group usually represents a relatively small proportion among the overall reported TB cases in the region, with a range from 3.4% in 2021 for example to 6.4% in 2016. However, the data for children and young ...

How family background can help lead to athletic success

2025-03-20
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Americans have long believed that sports are one area in society that offers kids from all backgrounds the chance to succeed to the best of their abilities.   But new research suggests that this belief is largely a myth, and that success in high school and college athletics often is influenced by race and gender, as well as socioeconomic status, including family wealth and education.   “We often think about sports as level playing fields that reward people who earn their success, but that’s not the whole ...

Peatlands' potential to capture carbon upgraded as temperatures rise

2025-03-20
According to a predictive model developed by a CNRS researcher1 and his European colleagues, the microalgae present in peat bogs could offset up to 14% of future CO2 emissions, thanks to their photosynthetic activity2. This conclusion was reached by basing the work on in situ experiments and the various predictive scenarios established by the IPCC. It is the first model to quantify the potential compensation of future CO2 emissions by peatlands on a global scale. This result lifts the veil on a currently ambiguous section of the terrestrial carbon cycle3 and its alterations by anthropogenic climate change. The associated study is published in Nature Climate Change. Representing ...

New AI tool generates high-quality images faster than state-of-the-art approaches

New AI tool generates high-quality images faster than state-of-the-art approaches
2025-03-20
CAMBRIDGE, MA – The ability to generate high-quality images quickly is crucial for producing realistic simulated environments that can be used to train self-driving cars to avoid unpredictable hazards, making them safer on real streets. But the generative AI techniques increasingly being used to produce such images have drawbacks. One popular type of model, called a diffusion model, can create stunningly realistic images but is too slow and computationally intensive for many applications. On the other hand, the autoregressive models that power LLMs like ChatGPT are much faster, but they ...

Xylazine detected in U.S.-Mexico border drug supply, study finds

2025-03-20
Researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine, in collaboration with the Prevencasa free clinic in Tijuana, Mexico, have confirmed the presence of xylazine in the illicit drug supply at the U.S.-Mexico border. While xylazine remains less common in the Western U.S., border cities serve as key trafficking hubs and may have higher rates of emerging substances. The findings, published on March 20, 2025 in the Journal of Addiction Medicine, highlight the urgent need for public health intervention. “Xylazine is a veterinary anesthetic that is not approved for human use and is increasingly detected alongside illicit fentanyl in parts of the United States ...

Producing nuclear fusion fuel is banned in the US for being too toxic, but these researchers found an alternative

Producing nuclear fusion fuel is banned in the US for being too toxic, but these researchers found an alternative
2025-03-20
Lithium-6 is essential for producing nuclear fusion fuel, but isolating it from the much more common isotope, lithium-7, usually requires liquid mercury, which is extremely toxic. Now, researchers have developed a mercury-free method to isolate lithium-6 that is as effective as the conventional method. The new method is presented March 20 in the Cell Press journal Chem. “This is a step towards addressing a major roadblock to nuclear energy,” says chemist and senior author Sarbajit Banerjee of ETH Zürich and Texas A&M University. “Lithium-6 is a critical material for the renaissance of nuclear energy, ...

Adaptive defenses against malicious jumping genes

Adaptive defenses against malicious jumping genes
2025-03-20
Adverse genetic mutations can cause harm and are due to various circumstances. “Jumping genes” are one cause of mutations, but cells try and combat them with a specialized RNA called piRNA. For the first time, researchers from the University of Tokyo and their collaborators have identified how the sites responsible for piRNA production evolve effective behaviors against jumping genes. This research could lead to downstream diagnostic or therapeutic applications. The word mutation can mean different things in different situations. ...

Cancer antigen 125 levels at time of ovarian cancer diagnosis by race and ethnicity

2025-03-20
About The Study: In this cohort study of patients with ovarian cancer, American Indian and Black patients were 23% less likely to have an elevated cancer antigen (CA)-125 level at diagnosis. Current CA-125 thresholds may miss racially and ethnically diverse patients with ovarian cancer. International guidelines use CA-125 thresholds to recommend which patients with pelvic masses should undergo evaluation by gynecologic oncologists for ovarian cancer. However, CA-125 thresholds were developed from white populations. Work is needed to develop inclusive CA-125 thresholds and ...

Prevalence and severity of astigmatism in children after COVID-19

2025-03-20
About The Study: In this study, lifestyle changes after the pandemic were associated with an increase in the prevalence and severity of child astigmatisms, likely associated with changes in the developing cornea. The potential impact of higher degrees of astigmatism may warrant dedicated efforts to elucidate the relationship between environmental and/or lifestyle factors, as well as the pathophysiology of astigmatism. Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Jason C. Yam, MD (yamcheuksing@cuhk.edu.hk) and Li ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Nanotech-induced cooling improves crop yields in arid climates

Home sweet home: some great hammerhead sharks stick to the perfect neighborhood in the Bahamas instead of migrating

Bubbly idea: Ultrafine bubble showers suppress atopic dermatitis

Aotearoa once home to elephant seals

Green recipe: Engineered yeast boosts D-lactic acid production

Computational drug discovery: Exploring natural products targeting SARS-CoV-2

Almost half of children with complicated appendicitis can recover from surgery at home

Sensory t-shirt collects patient data and enables shorter postoperative hospital stay

Worse outcomes for men who avoid prostate cancer screening

Shrinking Andean glaciers threaten water supply of 90 million people, global policy makers warne

Women’s earnings fall 10% four years after menopause diagnosis

Researchers capture first laser-driven, high-resolution CT scans of dense objects 

Cambridge team uses powerful new MRI scans to enable life-changing surgery in first for adults with epilepsy

NRL's narrow field imager launches on NASA's PUNCH mission

Galapagos birds exhibit ‘road rage’ due to noise

Groundbreaking study finds AI-driven interviews with children may boost accuracy in witness accounts

New framework to measure economic well-being considers new and free goods and services; addition of digital goods boosts growth

Augmented reality guidance for placing intracranial drains now clinically validated

How feathers develop in chickens

Insomniac fruit fly mutants show enhanced memory despite severe sleep loss

Seals can sense their own circulating blood oxygen and it keeps them from drowning

Infants encode short-lived hippocampal memories

Mountain uplift and dynamic topography shapes biodiversity over deep time

Majority of carbon sequestered on land is locked in nonliving carbon reservoirs

From dinosaurs to birds: the origins of feather formation

Why don’t we remember being a baby? New study provides clues

The cell’s powerhouses: Molecular machines enable efficient energy production

Most of the carbon sequestered on land is stored in soil and water

New US Academic Alliance for the IPCC opens critical nomination access

Breakthrough molecular movie reveals DNA’s unzipping mechanism with implications for viral and cancer treatments

[Press-News.org] In police recruitment efforts, humanizing officers can boost interest