scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Courtney L Scherr | Q57018752 |
P2093 | author name string | Christina Jones | |
Andy J King | |||
Jakob D Jensen | |||
Manusheela Pokharel | |||
Natasha Brown | |||
P2860 | cites work | Communicating cancer risk in print journalism | Q73897391 |
Variability and uncertainty meet risk management and risk communication | Q74377625 | ||
The media matter: a call for straightforward medical reporting | Q75391880 | ||
Effect of news media coverage of cancer risk on clinical oncology practice | Q77137520 | ||
Including limitations in news coverage of cancer research: effects of news hedging on fatalism, medical skepticism, patient trust, and backlash | Q83469395 | ||
Visualizing uncertainty about the future | Q28247559 | ||
Effects of Communication Expectancies, Actual Communication, and Expectancy Disconfirmation on Evaluations of Communicators and Their Communication Behavior | Q29306691 | ||
Communication and Uncertainty Management | Q29398244 | ||
Characteristics of medical research news reported on front pages of newspapers. | Q33476829 | ||
Newspaper Coverage of Cancer Prevention: Multilevel Evidence for Knowledge Gap Effects | Q33641925 | ||
Against conventional wisdom: when the public, the media, and medical practice collide | Q33645368 | ||
Does Local Television News Coverage Cultivate Fatalistic Beliefs about Cancer Prevention? | Q33913352 | ||
The impact of a celebrity promotional campaign on the use of colon cancer screening: the Katie Couric effect. | Q34214275 | ||
Conceptual, methodological, and ethical problems in communicating uncertainty in clinical evidence. | Q34547506 | ||
News coverage of cancer in the United States: a national sample of newspapers, television, and magazines | Q34569120 | ||
Lost in Translation? A Comparison of Cancer-Genetics Reporting in the Press Release and its Subsequent Coverage in Lay Press | Q34820913 | ||
Communication of uncertainty regarding individualized cancer risk estimates: effects and influential factors | Q34910890 | ||
Cancer Internet search activity on a major search engine, United States 2001-2003. | Q34998500 | ||
Cancer fatalism: the state of the science | Q35691864 | ||
Communicating the uncertainty of harms and benefits of medical interventions | Q36943296 | ||
Laypersons' responses to the communication of uncertainty regarding cancer risk estimates. | Q37314726 | ||
Fatalistic beliefs about cancer prevention and three prevention behaviors | Q40212342 | ||
Study of the media's potential influence on prospective research participants' understanding of and motivations for participation in a high-profile phase I trial | Q43509355 | ||
Is there a consumer backlash against the diet and health message? | Q44445949 | ||
Cancer coverage in general-audience and Black newspapers. | Q46262588 | ||
Effects of newspaper coverage on public knowledge about modifiable cancer risks | Q46430665 | ||
Effect of Nancy Reagan's mastectomy on choice of surgery for breast cancer by US women | Q48812616 | ||
News headlines feed on fear of cancer risk, experts say. | Q51071591 | ||
Making sense of cancer news coverage trends: a comparison of three comprehensive content analyses. | Q51704467 | ||
The impact of media coverage of Nancy Reagan's experience on breast cancer screening. | Q52395789 | ||
The cancer information overload (CIO) scale: establishing predictive and discriminant validity. | Q54546271 | ||
SOME EXPLORATIONS IN INITIAL INTERACTION AND BEYOND: TOWARD A DEVELOPMENTAL THEORY OF INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION | Q56031990 | ||
Scientific Uncertainty in News Coverage of Cancer Research: Effects of Hedging on Scientists and Journalists Credibility | Q56447607 | ||
The Impacts of Precautionary Measures and the Disclosure of Scientific Uncertainty on EMF Risk Perception and Trust | Q56484462 | ||
News Source Perceptions of Accuracy of Science Coverage | Q56608770 | ||
Conflicting stories about public scientific controversies: Effects of news convergence and divergence on scientists’ credibility | Q57430968 | ||
Public perceptions and behaviors regarding cancer control | Q68122768 | ||
Importance of fatalism in understanding mammography screening in rural elderly women | Q73536856 | ||
Living can be hazardous to your health: how the news media cover cancer risks | Q73897388 | ||
P433 | issue | 1 | |
P304 | page(s) | 40-51 | |
P577 | publication date | 2016-03-12 | |
P1433 | published in | Risk Analysis | Q7336230 |
P1476 | title | Communicating Uncertain Science to the Public: How Amount and Source of Uncertainty Impact Fatalism, Backlash, and Overload | |
P478 | volume | 37 |
Q64921863 | Communicating uncertainty about facts, numbers and science. |
Q41926181 | Effects of Acknowledging Uncertainty about Earthquake Risk Estimates on San Francisco Bay Area Residents' Beliefs, Attitudes, and Intentions. |
Q97072045 | Guidance on Communication of Uncertainty in Scientific Assessments |
Q95577110 | The impact of cancer information online on cancer fatalism: education and eHealth literacy as moderators |
Search more.