Immigrants are more likely to be seen as unique individuals with their own thoughts and intentions, rather than assuming they all share the same group beliefs, when the media describes them with language about their mental states, according to new research from the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King’s College London.
Language in UK media shapes public views of immigrants’ individuality
Tech News
-
Highlights
Free Dark Web Monitoring Stamps the $17 Million Credentials Markets
-
Highlights
Smart buildings: What happens to our free will when tech makes choices for us?
-
Apps
Screenshots have generated new forms of storytelling, from Twitter fan fiction to desktop film
-
Highlights
Darknet markets generate millions in revenue selling stolen personal data, supply chain study finds
-
Security
Privacy violations undermine the trustworthiness of the Tim Hortons brand
-
Featured Headlines
Why Tesla’s Autopilot crashes spurred the feds to investigate driver-assist technologies – and what that means for the future of self-driving cars