(Press-News.org) What types of photos make people reach for their wallets? New Stanford University-led research suggests that brain activity can help forecast which wildlife images will inspire people to engage online and donate to conservation causes. The insights could help environmental organizations design more effective communications campaigns. The findings suggest that socioemotional features, such as visible faces or cues that encourage viewers to infer an animal’s mental state, played a key role in driving engagement.
The study, published Feb. 17 in PNAS Nexus, combines behavioral experiments, functional MRI (fMRI) brain imaging, and social media data to explore how people respond to wildlife imagery. Researchers found that neural responses not only predicted individuals’ choices to like images and donate money, but also forecast broader public engagement with similar images on social media platforms.
“If you want to encourage people to protect an animal, you might depict it in a way that evokes a social or emotional connection,” said study coauthor Brian Knutson, a professor of psychology at the Stanford School of Humanities and Sciences and an affiliate of the Woods Institute. “For instance, emphasizing facelike features or attention to the viewer."
The work grew out of earlier interdisciplinary research supported by the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment’s Environmental Venture Projects grant program.
Participants in the study viewed wildlife images while undergoing fMRI scanning and made decisions about liking images of animals and donating money to preserve them. Researchers then compared brain activity and participant behavior with engagement metrics from a major environmental organization’s social media platform.
Activity in brain regions linked to anticipation and value integration predicted both individual engagement and large-scale online responses.
The researchers say the findings could inform future work using advanced tools — including generative AI — to test whether modifying image features can increase engagement and charitable giving.
“Social media is a powerful tool for shaping public opinion and encouraging environmental behavior,” “Neuroscience tools could offer insights into what motivates people to support wildlife conservation efforts.”
Knutson is also an affiliate of the Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence; and a member of Bio-X, the Wu Tsai Human Performance Alliance and the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute. This study was also funded by National Geographic, the Center for Cognitive and Neurobiological Imaging, and the Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources in the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability.
END
Study shows brain responses to wildlife images can forecast online engagement — and could help conservation messaging
Findings reveal what makes wildlife photos go viral
2026-02-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Extreme heat and drought at flowering could put future wheat harvests at risk
2026-02-17
New research shows that short periods of extreme heat and drought during flowering could become one of the biggest threats to global wheat production in the coming decades.
As the climate changes, farmers around the world are facing more frequent and intense weather extremes. While drought has long been seen as the main danger to wheat crops, this new study suggests that heatwaves at a key moment in the plant’s life cycle may soon pose an even greater risk.
Flowering: a critical moment:
Dr Mikhail Semenov, ...
Harlequin ichthyosis: a comprehensive review of pathogenesis, diagnosis, and management
2026-02-17
Harlequin ichthyosis (HI) is a rare, severe genetic skin disorder caused by ABCA12 mutations, leading to defective lipid transport and loss of skin barrier function. Infants present with thick, armor-like plates, deep fissures, ectropion, and eclabium, with high risks of dehydration, infection, and respiratory failure. Historically fatal, survival has improved with neonatal intensive care and systemic retinoids. This review covers pathophysiology, clinical features, diagnosis, management, genetic counseling, and emerging gene-based therapies.
Introduction
HI is the most severe form of congenital ichthyosis. Newborns are encased in rigid hyperkeratotic ...
Smithsonian planetary scientists discover recent tectonic activity on the Moon
2026-02-17
Scientists have produced the first global map and analysis of small mare ridges (SMRs) on the moon, a characteristic geological feature of tectonic activity. Published in The Planetary Science Journal Dec. 24, 2025, the analysis performed by scientists at the National Air and Space Museum’s Center for Earth and Planetary Studies and colleagues reveals for the first time that SMRs are geologically young and are widespread across the lunar maria—the vast, dark plains on the moon’s surface. ...
Government censorship of Chinese chatbots
2026-02-17
Chinese chatbots may be censored by the state, according to a study. China has a robust program of censorship and all China-originating LLMs must be approved by the Chinese government before release. Jennifer Pan and Xu Xu compared the responses of foundation LLMs developed in China (BaiChuan, ChatGLM, Ernie Bot, and DeepSeek) to those developed outside of China (Llama2, Llama2-uncensored, GPT3.5, GPT4, and GPT4o) to 145 questions related to Chinese politics. The questions were sourced from events censored by the Chinese government on social media, events covered in Human Rights Watch China reports, and Chinese-language Wikipedia pages that were individually blocked ...
Incorporating a robotic leg into one’s body image
2026-02-17
An important goal of any prosthesis is for the device to become incorporated into the user’s body image, their subjective, conscious cognition of their own body’s form and movement. He (Helen) Huang and colleagues studied how people’s body image changed over a multi-day training session with a new robotic leg. The authors recruited 9 non-disabled participants to train with a robotic leg prothesis, with their own legs kept in a bent position. The participants were chosen because they were totally naive to the experience of walking with a prothesis. The authors measured participants’ ambulatory ...
Brain imaging reveals how wildlife photos open donor wallets
2026-02-17
Brain imaging identifies the social and emotional features of wildlife photos that drive engagement on social media. Tara Srirangarajan and colleagues scanned the brains of 34 adults while the participants viewed 56 wildlife images from National Geographic’s Instagram feed and made decisions in a matter of seconds about whether to “like” posts and/or donate to depicted species. Activity in the nucleus accumbens and medial prefrontal cortex predicted individual choices to like and donate. Medial prefrontal ...
Wiley to expand Advanced Portfolio
2026-02-17
HOBOKEN, NJ—Wiley (NYSE: WLY), a global leader in authoritative content and research intelligence for the advancement of scientific discovery, innovation and learning, today announced it will significantly expand the Advanced Portfolio into life, health, and social sciences disciplines, with plans to launch eight new journals by the end of 2026 and more to follow over the next several years.
This expansion of the Advanced Portfolio—a collection of scientific journals currently encompassing more than 25 high-impact titles—is designed to empower scientists, making publishing easier for researchers through ...
Invisible battery parts finally seen with pioneering technique
2026-02-17
UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 10 AM GMT / 5 AM ET TUESDAY 17 FEBRUARY 2026
Invisible battery parts finally seen with pioneering technique
More images available via the link in the notes section
Researchers at the University of Oxford have developed a powerful new method to visualise an essential lithium-ion battery electrode component that had been extremely difficult to trace before. The discovery, published today (17 February) in Nature Communications, could lead to increased manufacturing efficiency of battery electrodes and ultimately help improve the charging rate and lifetime of Li-ion ...
Tropical forests generate rainfall worth billions, study finds
2026-02-17
University of Leeds news
Embargoed: Tuesday 17 February 10:00 GMT (05:00 EST)
Tropical forests help to generate vast amounts of rainfall each year, adding weight to arguments for protecting them as water and climate pressures increase, say researchers.
A new study led by the University of Leeds has put a monetary value on one of forests’ least recognised services as a source of rainfall to surrounding regions, finding that each hectare generates 2.4 million litres of rain each year - enough to fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool.
Satellite observations were combined with simulations from the latest generation of climate models, to reduce long‑standing uncertainty ...
A yeast enzyme helps human cells overcome mitochondrial defects
2026-02-17
Nucleotide synthesis—the production of the basic components of DNA and RNA—is essential for cell growth and division. In most animal cells, this process depends closely on properly functioning mitochondria, the organelles responsible for respiration and energy production. When mitochondrial respiration fails—a common feature of mitochondrial diseases and several forms of cancer—cells lose the ability to proliferate normally. A new study published in Nature Metabolism now shows that this dependence is not irreversible.
An ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Race against time to save Alpine ice cores recording medieval mining, fires, and volcanoes
Inside the light: How invisible electric fields drive device luminescence
A folding magnetic soft sheet robot: Enabling precise targeted drug delivery via real-time reconfigurable magnetization
Sylvester Cancer Tip Sheet for March 2026
New tools and techniques accelerate gallium oxide as next-generation power semiconductor
Researchers discover seven different types of tension
Report calls for AI toy safety standards to protect young children
VR could reduce anxiety for people undergoing medical procedures
Scan that makes prostate cancer cells glow could cut need for biopsies
Mechanochemically modified biochar creates sustainable water repellent coating and powerful oil adsorbent
New study reveals hidden role of larger pores in biochar carbon capture
Specialist resource centres linked to stronger sense of belonging and attainment for autistic pupils – but relationships matter most
Marshall University, Intermed Labs announce new neurosurgical innovation to advance deep brain stimulation technology
Preclinical study reveals new cream may prevent or slow growth of some common skin cancers
Stanley Family Foundation renews commitment to accelerate psychiatric research at Broad Institute
What happens when patients stop taking GLP-1 drugs? New Cleveland Clinic study reveals real world insights
American Meteorological Society responds to NSF regarding the future of NCAR
Beneath Great Salt Lake playa: Scientists uncover patchwork of fresh and salty groundwater
Fall prevention clinics for older adults provide a strong return on investment
People's opinions can shape how negative experiences feel
USC study reveals differences in early Alzheimer’s brain markers across diverse populations
300 million years of hidden genetic instructions shaping plant evolution revealed
High-fat diets cause gut bacteria to enter brain, Emory study finds
Teens and young adults with ADHD and substance use disorder face treatment gap
Instead of tracking wolves to prey, ravens remember — and revisit — common kill sites
Ravens don’t follow wolves to dinner – they remember where the food is
Mapping the lifelong behavior of killifish reveals an architecture of vertebrate aging
Designing for hard and brittle lithium needles may lead to safer batteries
Inside the brains of seals and sea lions with complex vocal behavior learning
Watching a lifetime in motion reveals the architecture of aging
[Press-News.org] Study shows brain responses to wildlife images can forecast online engagement — and could help conservation messagingFindings reveal what makes wildlife photos go viral