Posts by Daniel O'Keefe
Federal agents in Minneapolis wrestled Alex Pretti to the ground and secured the handgun he was carrying moments before shooting him multiple times, according to a Washington Post analysis of video footage.
Read more: https://wapo.st/4qGOx8M
The University at Buffalo is hiring a Department Chair for our new Department of AI and Society. This is a very interdisciplinary department; social scientists are welcome and encouraged to apply. Please feel free to share widely! www.ubjobs.buffalo.edu/postings/58816
Please apply to postdoc with us at Northwestern/Kellogg. This position in the Dispute Resolution Research Center is a terrific opportunity.
📢POSTDOC POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT📢
@nourkteily.bsky.social & I are recruiting a postdoc in the #LitowitzCenter for Enlightened Disagreement. We seek research excellence regarding navigating conflict.
Application deadline: Nov. 17.
Salary: ~$80k.
facultyrecruiting.northwestern.edu/apply/MjQzNw==
No worries. You play big :-)
📣New Preprint Alert!
Esther Maassen meticulously simulated the effect of p-hacking and publication bias on effect size & heterogeneity estimates.
💡bad: selective outcome reporting & optional dropping
💡bad: publication bias
💡not so bad: optional stopping/outlier removal
osf.io/preprints/ps...
🧵 Why do facts often change beliefs but not attitudes?
In a new WP with @yamilrvelez.bsky.social and @scottclifford.bsky.social, we caution against interpreting this as rigidity or motivated reasoning. Often, the beliefs *relevant* to people’s attitudes are not what researchers expect.
I am really pleased to see our meta-analysis of media literacy interventions (160 studies!) has been published in HCR. Unsurprisingly, there is a lot of nuance. One piece of good news is that the interventions work longitudinally.
Free download here:
academic.oup.com/hcr/advance-...
Prior beliefs
results
Just read this lovely experiment on the (null) persuasive effects of "listening" by Erik Santoro, @dbroockman.bsky.social @jkalla.bsky.social and @ronip.bsky.social
www.pnas.org/doi/epub/10....
Left: survey of prior beliefs
Right: Results
It's the persuasive appeal that does the work.
So far persuasion work in polisci has mostly centered on
message -> opinion
(main result imo: messages have small fx in the right direction that don't differ too much by message or person or issue)
with less work on
message -> attention
need to figure out experimental paradigm for attention
I've updated the marketing replication tracker through 2024. So far, 5 out of 45 (11%) of all direct replications of marketing studies (studies published in scientific marketing journals such as Journal of Consumer Research and Journal of Marketing Research). openmkt.org/research/rep...
Please add me--thanks!
Perhaps of interest:
doi.org/10.1080/1058...
doi.org/10.1093/poq/...
doi.org/10.1207/s153...
doi.org/10.1073/pnas...
doi.org/10.1007/s105...
doi.org/10.1080/2374...
🚨New publication out today🚨 led by my former advisee, Emily Andrews, this meta-analysis highlights the importance of trust and conspiracy theories in vaccine hesitancy, and the nuanced role each plays. Read here: www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
Please add me--thanks!
Now in print (Open Access):
doi.org/10.1080/1931...
Explains a common reasoning mistake in communication research, identifies multiple examples of the mistake, and discusses implications of and remedies for this problem.
New Pub:
Mike Kotowski and I wanted to move forward the technology of employing opinion leaders for vaccine promotion campaigns. So we developed a new method of identifying their self-schema and matching campaign recruiting messages to it. Free copies here:
www.tandfonline.com/eprint/SA3AT...
NEW📚Our *free* #openaccess book "Measuring Exposure and Attention to Media and Communication: Solutions to Wicked Problems" is out🚀
A privilege to work w/Peter Neijens, @judith-moeller.bsky.social @theoaraujo.bsky.social.
🙏@ascor.bsky.social for support.
📢Share #CommSky
www.aup.nl/en/book/9789...
Congratulations to @aecoppock.bsky.social whose book, “Persuasion in Parallel,” has won the Robert E. Lane Best Book Award from the APSA Political Psychology Section! Thanks to Margit Tavits and Josh Gubler for serving on the committee.
BlueSky June!
Many people who have a BlueSky account still prioritize posting, reading, and asking questions on Twitter.
So for the rest of June, I ask you to commit to using BlueSky before the mess called X.
Please retweet and tag people!
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