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American University School of Communication on The Conversation
By:   ['Aram Sinnreich', 'Bill Gentile', 'Caty Borum Chattoo', 'Charles Lewis', 'Chris Palmer', 'Emily L. Blout', 'Ericka Menchen-Trevino', 'Filippo Trevisan', 'Joseph Graf', 'Kurt Braddock']
Date: Date:2021-07-20 12:14:55+00:00

Tom Pennington/Getty Images July 20, 2021 Election polls in 2020 produced ‘error of unusual magnitude,’ expert panel finds, without pinpointing cause A task force of polling experts found surveys notably understated support for Donald Trump, both nationally and at the state level. Here’s what may have gone wrong, according to a polling historian.

Chris McGrath/Getty Images May 20, 2021 Survey experts have yet to figure out what caused the most significant polling error in 40 years in Trump-Biden race Stung by their failure to accurately predict the outcome of the 2020 presidential election, pollsters collectively went off to figure out what went wrong. They have yet to figure out what or why.

Bettmann via Getty Images April 2, 2021 60 years after Bay of Pigs, New York Times role – and myth – made clear The New York Times gave in to White House pressure and did not publish crucial information about an impending US-backed invasion of Cuba. It’s an old story, much repeated – but it’s wrong.

Xinhua/Liu Jie via Getty Images February 5, 2021 Impeachment trial: Research spanning decades shows language can incite violence Language affects behavior. When words champion aggression, make violence acceptable and embolden audiences to action, incidents like the insurrection at the Capitol are the result.

Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images January 15, 2021 Kata-kata dari mulut Trump adalah amunisi yang mempersenjatai serangan di Capitol Setiap kata punya konsekuensi. Penelitian beberapa dekade mendukung argumen bahwa pidato Trump kemungkinan besar mendorong massa pendukungnya sehingga terjadi pemberontakan di gedung Capitol AS.

Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images January 13, 2021 At impeachment hearing, lawmakers will deliberate over a deadly weapon used in the attack on Capitol Hill – President Trump’s words Words have consequences. And decades of research supports the contention that Donald Trump’s words could in fact incite people to mount an insurrection at the US Capitol.

Octavio Jones/Getty Images November 11, 2020 In its troubled hour, polling could use an irreverent figure to reset expectations Pollster Bud Roper once said of his field that “a good deal more than half is art and … less than half is science.” After the 2020 polls got a lot wrong, is it time for more candor from pollsters?

Ricardo Arduengo/AFP via Getty Images November 6, 2020 Élections américaines : un échec embarrassant pour les sondeurs Les sondages prédisaient une « vague bleue » qui ne s’est pas concrétisée.

Ricardo Arduengo/AFP via Getty Images November 4, 2020 An embarrassing failure for election pollsters Polls predicted a 'blue wave' that didn't materialize.

Jeff Swensen/Getty Images November 4, 2020 A Q&A with a historian of presidential polls An expert on the history of polling has a first take on how pollsters did this year.

Toni L. Sandys/The Washington Post via Getty Images October 29, 2020 Why Americans are so enamored with election polls Polling is an imperfect attempt at providing insight and explanation. But the public’s desire for insight and explanation about elections never ends, so polls endure despite their flaws and failures.

Olivier Touron/AFP/Getty Images October 21, 2020 How might the campaign’s endgame be disrupted? Here are five scenarios, drawn from the history of election polling Polling shows Joe Biden with a large lead over Donald Trump nationally in the presidential race. But there are many ways that presidential race polling has gone wrong in the past, and could do so now.

Underwood Archives/Getty Images October 14, 2020 Epic miscalls and landslides unforeseen: The exceptional catalog of polling failure Presidential pollsters in the US have had some embarrassing failures. Here’s a catalog of those miscalls, from the scholar who literally wrote the book on them.

Michael Brennan/Getty Images September 23, 2020 When noted journalists bashed political polls as nothing more than ‘a fragmentary snapshot’ of a moment in time There was a time when well-known journalists resented preelection polls and didn’t mind saying so. One even said he felt “secret glee and relief when the polls go wrong.” Why did they feel this way?

NurPhoto via Getty Images July 17, 2020 Twitter hack exposes broader threat to democracy and society Hackers demonstrated they can take over Twitter’s technology infrastructure, a brazen move that hints at how such an attack could destabilize society.

AP Photo/William J. Smith June 10, 2020 How the US government sold the Peace Corps to the American public The agency’s earliest ad campaigns emphasized youthful idealism, patriotism and travel opportunities. That was an easier sell than urging Americans to enlist in an anti-communist operation.

Facebook April 1, 2020 Take it from Pluto the Schnauzer: Comedy will help us through the coronavirus crisis It isn’t wrong to laugh at coronavirus comedy. Rather a chortle here and there will help us through the crisis, and it may even help spread vital information and give comfort to those in need.

MR.Cole_Photographer/Moment via Getty Images March 27, 2020 Society’s dependence on the internet: 5 cyber issues the coronavirus lays bare Much of the world is moving online in response to the coronavirus pandemic. Society’s newly increased dependence on the internet is bringing the need for good cyber policy into sharp relief.

Ann Hermes/The Christian Science Monitor via Getty Images March 6, 2020 ‘Internet of things’ could be an unseen threat to elections Co-opting internet-connected devices could disrupt transportation systems on Election Day, stymie political campaigns, or help make information warfare more credible.
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