Quality Matters: Science Translation from Press Release to News
Paige Brown
Ph.D. Student, Manship School of Mass Communication
Problem Statement• Poor quality and irresponsible reporting in
areas of science, medicine and environmental news.– Bad science? Over-claiming press releases?
Journalistic norms? Lack of science education?
Goals
• What makes a potential science story newsworthy?
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The Role of the Press Release
• Press releases have been found to serve as a point of distortion and hype in the process of translating peer-reviewed research into news media
• (Brechman et al., 2011; Brown, 2012).
How can press releases promote quality science journalism?
Principles for Health & Science Journalists
1. Don’t report preliminary findings.
2. Communicate the absolute magnitude of (significant) differences.
3. Include caveats, major study limitations and conflicts of interest.
Lisa M Schwartz & Woloshin, 2004
Methods
• Online survey experience of science communicators (recruited via Twitter, Listserv, E-mail).
• Participants were randomly assigned to one of four contrived, written 1-2 page press release conditions* within Qualtrics.– (1) a control press release– (2) a press release containing confirming evidence– (3) a press release containing disconfirming evidence – (4) a press release mentioning important study limitations.
Methods
• After reading the 1-2 page written press release, participants were asked to answer a series of questions related to:– likelihood to pursue a story based on the press
release [adapted from (Schmierbach, 2005)] – perceived newsworthiness of the information
according to a variety of traditional news factors – Importance attributed to variety of news factors in
general
Key Results: News Factors
Key Results
• Participants who attributed high importance to conflict/controversy as a criteria of newsworthiness: – Indicated that the news outlet(s) they worked
for would be significantly more likely to write a story based on the disconfirming press release than on the control press release
(Conditional Effect = -1.78, S.E. = .69, p = .01.)
Figure 1. Graphical representation of Hayes’ Process Analysis, with Mean±1SD Pick-a-Point conditioning, for importance of conflict/controversy moderation of stimulus effect on Likelihood2.
Key Results
• Participants who attributed only moderate importance to facts/reliability of facts as a criteria of newsworthiness:– indicated that the news outlet(s) they worked
for would be significantly more likely to write a story based on the disconfirming press release than on the confirming press release
(Conditional Effect = -1.0, S.E. = .48, p < .05)
Figure 2. Graphical representation of Hayes’ Process Analysis, with Mean±1SD Pick-a-Point conditioning, for importance of facts/reliability of facts moderation of stimulus effect on Likelihood2.
Conclusion
• This study fills a gap in research on the direct impact of scientific press release quality on self-reported news decisions of journalists, and the moderating influence of traditional news factors on these decisions.
Questions & Acknowledgements
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Thanks To:• Matt Shipman (*All stimulus articles were originally
written by and created in collaboration with Matt Shipman, an experienced science communicator and public communication specialist at NC State in Raleigh, North Carolina.)
• Manship School of Mass Communication• NASW-talk, Karl Bates & SCONC Listservs