aaas2015 brossard
TRANSCRIPT
Dominique Brossard, Professor and Chair
@brossarddDepartment of Life Sciences Communication
University of Wisconsin-Madison
UW-Madison Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC)
Holtz Center for Science and Technology Studies
Center for Global Studies
AAAA 2015 Annual Meeting, San Jose, CA, February 15, 2015
Scientists and Social Media:
Challenges and Opportunities
This Talk: An Overview
• Who are AAAS members ?
• Who uses social media for public engagement?
Surveying R1 university researchers
• Does it pay off to engage? A study among highly
cited nanotech-related scientists
AAAS members
• 39% are 64+ years old; 71% male
• Compared to NSF (2013) “Characteristics of
Scientists and Engineers in the USA”
– Over representation of biological sciences
– Under representation of social sciences
• Membership open to a broad range of professions
sharing an interest in science
Another Approach: Surveying an R1 University
(2) Number of scientists with doctorates in Biological, Physical, and Social Sciences (from NSF (2013) "Characteristics of Scientists and
Engineers in the United States: 2008")
(1) AAAS members demographics (from Pew Research Center/AAAS (2015) "How Scientists Engage the Public")
This Talk: An Overview
• Who are AAAS members ?
• Who uses social media for public engagement?
Surveying R1 university researchers
• Does it pay off to engage? A study among highly
cited nanotech-related scientists
This Talk: An Overview
• Who are AAAS members ?
• Who uses social media for public engagement?
Surveying R1 university researchers
• Does it pay off to engage? A study among highly
cited nanotech-related scientists
Are Online Buzz and Academic Impact Related?Liang, X., Su, L. Y.-F., Yeo, S. K., Scheufele, D. A., Brossard, D., Xenos, M., Nealey, P., & Corley,
E.A. Building buzz: (Scientists) communicating science in new media environments. Journalism and Mass
Communication Quarterly
PREDICTING h-INDEX
30
35
40
45
50
55
Less More
h-ind
ex
Interaction with reporters
not mentioned on Twitter
mentioned on Twitter
Engaging in communication activities pays off
academically
• Change in the cultural outlook toward public communication
among researchers
• From an academic visibility standpoint, it is not whether
scientists should engage with (social) media to communicate
their research, but how to do so
• There are many scientific communities, that can be very
diverse in their uses and attitudes toward social media
• There is no “Scientists versus The Public”
Take-home points