Pergi ke kandungan

Fail:Causes-of-death-in-USA-vs.-media-coverage.png

Kandungan laman tidak disokong dalam bahasa lain.
Daripada Wikipedia, ensiklopedia bebas.

Fail asli (4,080 × 3,133 piksel, saiz fail: 532 KB, jenis MIME: image/png)

Fail ini dari Wikimedia Commons dan mungkin digunakan oleh projek lain. Penerangan pada laman penerangan failnya di sana ditunjukkan di bawah.

Ringkasan

Keterangan
English: So, what do the results look like? In the chart below I present the comparison.

The first column represents each cause’s share of US deaths; the second the share of Google searches each receives; third, the relative article mentions in the New York Times; and finally article mentions in The Guardian.

The coverage in both newspapers here is strikingly similar. And the discrepancy between what we actually die from and what we get informed of in the media is what stands out:

around one-third of the considered causes of deaths resulted from heart disease, yet this cause of death receives only 2-3 percent of Google searches and media coverage; just under one-third of the deaths came from cancer; we actually Google cancer a lot (37 percent of searches) and it is a popular entry here on our site; but it receives only 13-14 percent of media coverage; we searched for road incidents more frequently than their share of deaths; however, they receive much less attention in the news; when it comes to deaths from strokes, Google searches and media coverage are surprisingly balanced; the largest discrepancies concern violent forms of death: suicide, homicide and terrorism. All three receive much more relative attention in Google searches and media coverage than their relative share of deaths. When it comes to the media coverage on causes of death, violent deaths account for more than two-thirds of coverage in the New York Times and The Guardian but account for less than 3 percent of the total deaths in the US.

What’s interesting is that what Americans search on Google is a much closer reflection of what kills us than what is presented in the media. One way to think about it is that media outlets may produce content that they think readers are most interested in, but this is not necessarily reflected in our preferences when we look for information ourselves.
Tarikh
Sumber https://ourworldindata.org/terrorism#terrorism-is-over-represented-relative-to-its-share-of-deaths-in-media-coverage
Pengarang Our World In Data

Perlesenan

w:ms:Creative Commons
pengiktirafan perkongsian serupa
Anda bebas:
  • untuk berkongsi – untuk menyalin, mengedar dan memindah hasil kerja
  • untuk mencampur semula – untuk menyesuaikan karya
Di bawah syarat berikut:
  • pengiktirafan – Anda mesti memberi penghargaan yang berpatutan, bekalkan pautan ke lesen, dan tunjukkan jika perubahan telah dibuat. Anda boleh lakukannya dalam sebarang cara yang munasabah, tetapi bukan dalam sebarang cara yang mencadangkan pemberi lesen mengendors anda atau penggunaan anda.
  • perkongsian serupa – Jika anda mengubah, adun semula, atau menokok tambah bahan, anda mesti menyebarkan sumbangan anda di bawah lesen yang sama atau serasi dengan yang asal.

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

menggambarkan

media type Inggeris

image/png

953dcec8850a8170be197667ba1aa31b6c7ff514

544,509 bait

3,133 piksel

4,080 piksel

Sejarah fail

Klik pada tarikh/waktu untuk melihat rupa fail tersebut pada waktu itu.

Tarikh/WaktuGambar kenitUkuranPenggunaKomen
semasa14:29, 1 Jun 2021Gambar kenit bagi versi pada 14:29, 1 Jun 20214,080 × 3,133 (532 KB)PJ GeestUploaded a work by Our World In Data from https://ourworldindata.org/terrorism#terrorism-is-over-represented-relative-to-its-share-of-deaths-in-media-coverage with UploadWizard

Laman berikut menggunakan fail ini:

Penggunaan fail sejagat

Fail ini digunakan oleh wiki-wiki lain yang berikut:

Metadata