Category Archives: Research

        
 
 
 
 

Knight Center graduate student and faculty present their research at the 2016 AEJMC conference

Ran Duan

Ran Duan


Knight Center doctoral student  Ran Duan  presented a study at the Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication examining climate change images in U.S. newspapers.
The study,  titled “A construal-level perspective of climate change images in U.S. print newspapers,”  was co-authored with Knight Center research director  Bruno Takahashi  and Knight Center affiliated faculty member Adam Zwickle.
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Knight Center faculty, students present research at Japan conference

Bruno Takahashi, awards a top student paper award.

Bruno Takahashi, awards a top student paper award.


Faculty and doctoral students affiliated with the Knight Center presented environmental research recently at the International Communication Association’s (ICA) 66th Annual Conference in Fukuoka, Japan.
The theme of the June 9-13 conference was “Communicating with Power.”
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MSU researchers publish study on how scientists communicate

Perry Parks
Perry Parks

Scientists are increasingly encouraged to communicate their work to the general public in ways that engage audiences respectfully rather than talking down to them.
One way scientists can connect with everyday citizens is to write op-ed commentaries in major newspapers like The New York Times. MSU Media and Information Studies doctoral student Perry Parks and Knight Center Research Director Bruno Takahashi have published a study examining how scientists communicate about science.

It is called “From Apes to Whistleblowers: How Scientists Inform, Defend, and Excite in Newspaper Op-Eds.”

The study, in the journal Science Communication, used a rhetorical frame called speech act theory to consider how scientists commit ethically to certain communication roles as they seek to inform people about science, defend science from misinformation, excite people about science and tailor messages to

Bruno Takahashi

Bruno Takahashi


specific groups. Parks and Takahashi found that most scientist op-ed writers use research-based information to make policy arguments in their commentaries, drawing on personal experiences, anecdotes and descriptive passages that are often excluded from academic writing.

In this way, the scientist-authors assumed personal and professional vulnerability for their stories and arguments, acknowledging readers as active evaluators of both the message and messenger.
The study’s framework and findings can help explain the ethical commitments scientists make when they reach out to the public in this way, in addition to helping science communicators think more strategically and systematically about how to craft scientific messages that inform while also inviting critical reflection in readers.

Knight Center researcher wins top poster award for study on El Niño

Jack Nissen with research poster.

Jack Nissen with research poster.


Knight Center researcher Jack Nissen received top honors at the University Undergraduate Research and Arts Festival  (UURAF) at MSU.
Nissen’s poster titled  “Tackling uncertainty: How do journalists report the ‘what ifs’ of el Niño” placed first in section one of the Communication Arts and Sciences competition.
Nissen, a journalism junior at MSU, conducted this research project under the guidance of Knight Center Research Director Bruno Takahashi. Nissen analyzed the concept of scientific uncertainty used in news articles that talked about El Niño in three publications in California from October 2015 to January 2016.
The research was presented on April 8, 2016 in the MSU Union ballroom. This was the first time Nissen presented a scholarly project. Discussions with the judges of the event centered around the challenges of analyzing news articles, as well as gaining a better understanding of what ambiguity and uncertainty mean in the media.
Nissen will next work on an academic article based on this study that will be submitted for publication later in the summer of 2016.