Prevailing wisdom ’scientists are press shy’ debunked
September 10th, 2009 - 5:30 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Sept 10 (ANI): It is often said that scientists are press shy, and those who aren’t, are mavericks. Now, University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers have debunked the theory.
A survey of 1,200 researchers in the areas of epidemiology and stem cell research has revealed that the interplay between scientists and journalists has been remarkably stable since the 1980s.
“By and large, scientists speak to journalists, they know it is important and they’re willing to do it again,” said principle investigator and journalism professor Sharon Dunwoody.
“The frequency with which scientists and journalists interact has been pretty stable over time,” Dunwoody added.
The findings contradict the widespread view in science that scientists are out of touch.
“We found relatively frequent interactions,” said life sciences communication professor Dominique Brossard and co-researcher on the study.
The study showed that about one-third of the respondents claimed to have had up to five contacts with journalists during a three-year period, while another third of the sample said they experienced more than six contacts with reporters over three years.
Only one-third of respondents reported having no contacts with journalists.
“The frequencies are definitely encouraging,” added Brossard.
The proportion of scientists in the sample who interact with journalists is intriguingly similar to studies from the 1980s, as well as patterns identified in the 1990s.
The new data imply that journalistic engagement of scientists over time is greater and more stable than “persistent, anecdotal cautionary tales would suggest,” said the researchers.
“We don’t know if the interactions are, in fact, better,” said Dunwoody.
“But scientists are eager participants. It reflects a more active role by one of the major players in the process,” the expert added.
The study appears in current issue of Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly. (ANI)
- Child-mother interactions study to pave for robots with social skills - Oct 29, 2010
- Scientists ''enjoying media interaction'' - Jul 11, 2008
- Communicating science: India, China exchange notes - Oct 14, 2011
- Mum's phone call as comforting as a hug during stressful times - May 12, 2010
- Scientists peer into real time brain cell activity - May 31, 2011
- City architecture makes birds' songs shriller - Feb 23, 2012
- Greenland ice melted more than Antartica's - Aug 01, 2011
- Girls are equally good in maths - Dec 14, 2011
- Stressed employees avoid communicating with supervisors - Jan 05, 2012
- 13 genes linked to human body mass found - Sep 16, 2010
- Arctic sea ice loss driving snowy winters - Feb 28, 2012
- Plasma knocks out deadly viruses - Dec 18, 2011
- Water on moon 'originated from comets' - Jan 12, 2011
- TB-drugome may pave way for anti-TB drug discovery - Nov 09, 2010
- One out of 30 babies born in US is a twin - Apr 03, 2012
Tags: 1980s, brossard, cautionary tales, communication professor, current issue, dominique, epidemiology, frequent interactions, interplay, journalism professor, journalists, life sciences communication, mass communication, mavericks, principle investigator, respondents, scientists, stem cell research, university of wisconsin, university of wisconsin madison