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Communications

The CONCISE project presents the results of a research on the perception of science among European citizens

Event

Investigation

Seminar

The CONCISE project presents the results of a research on the perception of science among European citizens

Concise

The CONCISE project, coordinated by the ScienceFlows research group of the University of Valencia, presents this Friday, 22 January, between 5 and 7 p.m. and electronically, the conclusions of an investigation on the perception of science carried out from the data obtained in five citizen consultations. These took place at the end of 2019 in five cities in as many European countries: Valencia, Lodz (Poland), Vicenza (Italy), Lisbon (Portugal) and Trnava (Slovakia).

In the online seminar titled Path of trust for better science communication, and which can be followed at this link upon registration, CONCISE partners will offer the results of an investigation into how citizens perceive what a reliable source is, how much they trust scientific communication and how they use social networks as a source of science news.

The main ones will also be detailed. conclusions of the qualitative study that has been carried out with in-depth interviews on the barriers and incentives that researchers, disseminators and science journalists encounter when communicating scientific knowledge. In addition, the seminar will feature the participation of Dominique Brossard, professor in the Department of Life Sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

This session will serve to close the CONCISE project, funded with 1.2 million euros by the European Union within the framework of the Horizon 2020 program. However, and as the members of the project have already explained, the data obtained in the consultations will allow the team to continue researching beyond the end of the project. project.

The CONCISE citizen consultations took place in Valencia, Lodz (Poland), Vicenza (Italy), Lisbon (Portugal) and Trnava (Slovakia). A total of 497 people participated in them. In fact, one of the first challenges the team faced was gathering a sample of participants that reflected social diversity. The four fundamental criteria that were established were gender, age, educational level and origin (rural environment or urban environment). Likewise, we sought to involve people with disabilities and people from ethnic minorities.

The people who were selected were integrated into debate tables in which there were between 8 and 10 participants. At each of the tables, four topics that generate some social controversy were debated: climate change, vaccines, genetically modified organisms, and complementary and alternative medicine. The debates of the 58 tables were recorded in their entirety.

Once the five consultations were completed, the citizen speeches were transcribed, which resulted in more than 3,500 pages of transcriptions. The quantitative and qualitative analysis of the speeches of the participants in the consultations has allowed the members of CONCISE to develop, among others, a series of recommendations aimed at proposing actions that improve science communication. These recommendations are aimed at communication, science and health professionals, as well as staff from public and private institutions.

Improve science communication

The recommendations of the Policy Brief are now available on the project website, that is, the documents that the team of research has been carried out with proposals aimed at improving science communication. In addition to the recommendations at European level, a series of recommendations has been prepared for each of the countries in which the consultation took place. These recommendations are aimed at legislators, research and health personnel and scientific communication professionals, as well as public and private scientific institutions.

Program of the day here

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