CPG: Je Hoon Chae (UCLA, Communication)

Comm Conference Room - Rolfe 2303

Title:Robust Persuasive Effect of Political Fact-Checking and Remaining Challenges Abstract:The proliferation of misinformation and the persistent gap in factual information among partisans represent significant concerns in contemporary U.S. politics. Fact-checking, […]

CPG: Marlon Twyman (USC, Communication & Computer Science)

Comm Conference Room - Rolfe 2303

Title: Metawisdom of the Crowd: How Choice Within Aided Decision Making Can Make Crowd Wisdom Robust   Abstract: Quality information can improve individual judgments but make group decisions less accurate; if individuals […]

Department Speaker Series: Carolyn Parkinson (UCLA, Psychology)

Comm Conference Room - Rolfe 2303

Title: The brain in the social world: Integrating approaches from psychology, neuroscience, and social network analysis   Abstract: This talk will cover work integrating theory and methods from psychology, neuroscience, and social […]

CPG: Davin Phoenix (UCI, Political Science)

Comm Conference Room - Rolfe 2303

Title: Emotional Representation: Identifying the Characteristics and Consequences of Elected Officials Mirroring the Emotions of Their Constituents (with Christopher Stout, Gregory Leslie, and Elizabeth Schroeder)   Abstract: In this study, […]

Dan Costanzo (NORC at the University of Chicago)

Comm Conference Room - Rolfe 2303

ABSTRACT: Researchers who conduct population surveys face escalating costs and declining response rates, as they aim to collect data that is representative, trustworthy, and publishable. Sample recruitment is often prohibitively […]

Department Speaker Series: Dana Mastro (UCSB, Communication)

Comm Conference Room - Rolfe 2303

Title: Threat in the form of News: Examining the ways that news coverage of immigration constrains systemically marginalized groups   Abstract: Although U.S. media portrayals of racial, ethnic, and other historically excluded identities […]

CPG: Nikki Usher (USD)

Comm Project Room - 2310 Rolfe

Title: How and why American journalism (accidentally) amplifies anti-democratic actors: Small town extremists, media storms, and a broken news industry   Abstract: Within a week, a no-name Republican state representative from […]

© Copyright 2019 - UCLA Social Sciences Computing
UCLA Communication