0 Votes

Changes for page Research at a Glance

Last modified by Ryan C on 2025/06/26 03:09

From version 111.1
edited by Ryan C
on 2025/06/19 03:15
Change comment: There is no comment for this version
To version 94.1
edited by Ryan C
on 2025/04/16 00:43
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

Summary

Details

Page properties
Parent
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@
1 -Main Categories.Science & Research.WebHome
1 +Main.Studies.WebHome
Content
... ... @@ -1,17 +4,99 @@
1 -{{toc/}}
2 -
3 -
4 4  = Research at a Glance =
5 5  
6 6  
7 7  
8 - Welcome to the **Research at a Glance** repository. This section serves as a **centralized reference hub** for key academic studies related to various important Racial themes. Each study is categorized for easy navigation and presented in a **collapsible format** to maintain a clean layout. I wanted to make this for a couple of reasons. Number one is organization. There are a ton of useful studies out there that expose the truth, sometimes inadvertently. You'll notice that in this initial draft the summaries are often woke and reflect the bias of the AI writing them as well as the researchers politically correct conclusion in most cases. That's because I haven't gotten to going through and pointing out the reasons I put all of them in here.
5 + Welcome to the **Research at a Glance** repository. This section serves as a **centralized reference hub** for key academic studies related to various important Racial themes. Each study is categorized for easy navigation and presented in a **collapsible format** to maintain a clean layout. I wanted to make this for a couple of reasons. Number one is organization. There are a ton of useful studies out there that expose the truth, sometimes inadvertently. You'll notice that in this initial draft the summaries are often woke and reflect the bias of the AI writing them as well as the researchers politically correct conclusion in most cases. That's because I haven't gotten to going through and pointing out the reasons I put all of them in here.
9 9  
10 10  
11 11   There is often an underlying hypocrisy or double standard, saying the quiet part out loud, or conclusions that are so much of an antithesis to what the data shows that made me want to include it. At least, thats the idea for once its polished. I have about 150 more studies to upload, so it will be a few weeks before I get through it all. Until such time, feel free to search for them yourself and edit in what you find, or add your own studies. If you like you can do it manually, or if you'd rather go the route I did, just rename the study to its doi number and feed the study into an AI and tell them to summarize the study using the following format:
12 12  
10 +{{example}}
11 +~= Study: [Study Title] =
13 13  
13 +~{~{expand title="Study: [Study Title] (Click to Expand)" expanded="false"}}
14 +~*~*Source:~*~* *[Journal/Institution Name]*
15 +~*~*Date of Publication:~*~* *[Publication Date]*
16 +~*~*Author(s):~*~* *[Author(s) Name(s)]*
17 +~*~*Title:~*~* *"[Study Title]"*
18 +~*~*DOI:~*~* [DOI or Link]
19 +~*~*Subject Matter:~*~* *[Broad Research Area, e.g., Social Psychology, Public Policy, Behavioral Economics]* 
14 14  
21 +~-~--
22 +
23 +~#~# ~*~*Key Statistics~*~*
24 +~1. ~*~*General Observations:~*~*
25 + - [Statistical finding or observation]
26 + - [Statistical finding or observation]
27 +
28 +2. ~*~*Subgroup Analysis:~*~*
29 + - [Breakdown of findings by gender, race, or other subgroups]
30 +
31 +3. ~*~*Other Significant Data Points:~*~*
32 + - [Any additional findings or significant statistics]
33 +
34 +~-~--
35 +
36 +~#~# ~*~*Findings~*~*
37 +~1. ~*~*Primary Observations:~*~*
38 + - [High-level findings or trends in the study]
39 +
40 +2. ~*~*Subgroup Trends:~*~*
41 + - [Disparities or differences highlighted in the study]
42 +
43 +3. ~*~*Specific Case Analysis:~*~*
44 + - [Detailed explanation of any notable specific findings]
45 +
46 +~-~--
47 +
48 +~#~# ~*~*Critique and Observations~*~*
49 +~1. ~*~*Strengths of the Study:~*~*
50 + - [Examples: strong methodology, large dataset, etc.]
51 +
52 +2. ~*~*Limitations of the Study:~*~*
53 + - [Examples: data gaps, lack of upstream analysis, etc.]
54 +
55 +3. ~*~*Suggestions for Improvement:~*~*
56 + - [Ideas for further research or addressing limitations]
57 +
58 +~-~--
59 +
60 +~#~# ~*~*Relevance to Subproject~*~*
61 +- [Explanation of how this study contributes to your subproject goals.]
62 +- [Any key arguments or findings that support or challenge your views.]
63 +
64 +~-~--
65 +
66 +~#~# ~*~*Suggestions for Further Exploration~*~*
67 +~1. [Research questions or areas to investigate further.]
68 +2. [Potential studies or sources to complement this analysis.]
69 +
70 +~-~--
71 +
72 +~#~# ~*~*Summary of Research Study~*~*
73 +This study examines ~*~*[core research question or focus]~*~*, providing insights into ~*~*[main subject area]~*~*. The research utilized ~*~*[sample size and methodology]~*~* to assess ~*~*[key variables or measured outcomes]~*~*. 
74 +
75 +This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
76 +
77 +~-~--
78 +
79 +~#~# ~*~*📄 Download Full Study~*~*
80 +~{~{velocity}}
81 +#set($doi = "[Insert DOI Here]")
82 +#set($filename = "${doi}.pdf")
83 +#if($xwiki.exists("attach~:$filename"))
84 +~[~[Download Full Study>>attach~:$filename]]
85 +#else
86 +~{~{html}}<span style="color:red; font-weight:bold;">🚨 PDF Not Available 🚨</span>~{~{/html}}
87 +#end
88 +~{~{/velocity}}
89 +
90 +~{~{/expand}}
91 +
92 +
93 +{{/example}}
94 +
95 +
96 +
15 15  - Click on a **category** in the **Table of Contents** to browse studies related to that topic.
16 16  - Click on a **study title** to expand its details, including **key findings, critique, and relevance**.
17 17  - Use the **search function** (Ctrl + F or XWiki's built-in search) to quickly find specific topics or authors.
... ... @@ -19,12 +19,16 @@
19 19  - You'll also find a download link to the original full study in pdf form at the bottom of the collapsible block.
20 20  
21 21  
104 +{{toc/}}
22 22  
106 +
107 +
108 +
109 +
23 23  = Genetics =
24 24  
25 -{{expandable summary="
26 26  
27 -Study: Reconstructing Indian Population History"}}
113 +{{expandable summary="Study: Reconstructing Indian Population History"}}
28 28  **Source:** *Nature*
29 29  **Date of Publication:** *2009*
30 30  **Author(s):** *David Reich, Kumarasamy Thangaraj, Nick Patterson, Alkes L. Price, Lalji Singh*
... ... @@ -88,17 +88,22 @@
88 88  
89 89  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
90 90  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_nature08365.pdf]]
177 +##
178 + ##
91 91  {{/expandable}}
92 92  {{/expandable}}
93 93  
94 -{{expandable summary="Study: The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 Genomes from 142 Diverse Populations"}}
95 -**Source:** *Nature*
96 -**Date of Publication:** *2016*
97 -**Author(s):** *David Reich, Swapan Mallick, Heng Li, Mark Lipson, and others*
98 -**Title:** *"The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 Genomes from 142 Diverse Populations"*
99 -**DOI:** [10.1038/nature18964](https://doi.org/10.1038/nature18964)
100 -**Subject Matter:** *Human Genetic Diversity, Population History, Evolutionary Genomics*
182 +{{expandable summary="
101 101  
184 +
185 +Study: The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 Genomes from 142 Diverse Populations"}}
186 +**Source:** *Nature*
187 +**Date of Publication:** *2016*
188 +**Author(s):** *David Reich, Swapan Mallick, Heng Li, Mark Lipson, and others*
189 +**Title:** *"The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 Genomes from 142 Diverse Populations"*
190 +**DOI:** [10.1038/nature18964](https://doi.org/10.1038/nature18964)
191 +**Subject Matter:** *Human Genetic Diversity, Population History, Evolutionary Genomics* 
192 +
102 102  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
103 103  1. **General Observations:**
104 104   - Analyzed **high-coverage genome sequences of 300 individuals from 142 populations**.
... ... @@ -155,18 +155,21 @@
155 155  
156 156  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
157 157  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_nature18964.pdf]]
249 +##
250 + ##
158 158  {{/expandable}}
159 159  {{/expandable}}
160 160  
161 -{{expandable summary="
254 +{{expandable summary="
162 162  
256 +
163 163  Study: Meta-analysis of the heritability of human traits based on fifty years of twin studies"}}
164 -**Source:** *Nature Genetics*
165 -**Date of Publication:** *2015*
166 -**Author(s):** *Tinca J. C. Polderman, Beben Benyamin, Christiaan A. de Leeuw, Patrick F. Sullivan, Arjen van Bochoven, Peter M. Visscher, Danielle Posthuma*
167 -**Title:** *"Meta-analysis of the heritability of human traits based on fifty years of twin studies"*
168 -**DOI:** [10.1038/ng.328](https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.328)
169 -**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Heritability, Twin Studies, Behavioral Science*
258 +**Source:** *Nature Genetics*
259 +**Date of Publication:** *2015*
260 +**Author(s):** *Tinca J. C. Polderman, Beben Benyamin, Christiaan A. de Leeuw, Patrick F. Sullivan, Arjen van Bochoven, Peter M. Visscher, Danielle Posthuma*
261 +**Title:** *"Meta-analysis of the heritability of human traits based on fifty years of twin studies"*
262 +**DOI:** [10.1038/ng.328](https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.328)
263 +**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Heritability, Twin Studies, Behavioral Science* 
170 170  
171 171  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
172 172  1. **General Observations:**
... ... @@ -227,8 +227,9 @@
227 227  {{/expandable}}
228 228  {{/expandable}}
229 229  
230 -{{expandable summary="
324 +{{expandable summary="
231 231  
326 +
232 232  Study: Genetic Analysis of African Populations: Human Evolution and Complex Disease"}}
233 233  **Source:** *Nature Reviews Genetics*
234 234  **Date of Publication:** *2002*
... ... @@ -296,15 +296,16 @@
296 296  {{/expandable}}
297 297  {{/expandable}}
298 298  
299 -{{expandable summary="
394 +{{expandable summary="
300 300  
396 +
301 301  Study: Pervasive Findings of Directional Selection in Ancient DNA"}}
302 -**Source:** *bioRxiv Preprint*
303 -**Date of Publication:** *September 15, 2024*
304 -**Author(s):** *Ali Akbari, Alison R. Barton, Steven Gazal, Zheng Li, Mohammadreza Kariminejad, et al.*
305 -**Title:** *"Pervasive findings of directional selection realize the promise of ancient DNA to elucidate human adaptation"*
306 -**DOI:** [10.1101/2024.09.14.613021](https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.14.613021)
307 -**Subject Matter:** *Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Natural Selection*
398 +**Source:** *bioRxiv Preprint*
399 +**Date of Publication:** *September 15, 2024*
400 +**Author(s):** *Ali Akbari, Alison R. Barton, Steven Gazal, Zheng Li, Mohammadreza Kariminejad, et al.*
401 +**Title:** *"Pervasive findings of directional selection realize the promise of ancient DNA to elucidate human adaptation"*
402 +**DOI:** [10.1101/2024.09.14.613021](https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.14.613021)
403 +**Subject Matter:** *Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Natural Selection* 
308 308  
309 309  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
310 310  1. **General Observations:**
... ... @@ -366,14 +366,17 @@
366 366  {{/expandable}}
367 367  {{/expandable}}
368 368  
369 -{{expandable summary="Study: The Wilson Effect: The Increase in Heritability of IQ With Age"}}
370 -**Source:** *Twin Research and Human Genetics (Cambridge University Press)*
371 -**Date of Publication:** *2013*
372 -**Author(s):** *Thomas J. Bouchard Jr.*
373 -**Title:** *"The Wilson Effect: The Increase in Heritability of IQ With Age"*
374 -**DOI:** [10.1017/thg.2013.54](https://doi.org/10.1017/thg.2013.54)
375 -**Subject Matter:** *Intelligence, Heritability, Developmental Psychology*
465 +{{expandable summary="
376 376  
467 +
468 +Study: The Wilson Effect: The Increase in Heritability of IQ With Age"}}
469 +**Source:** *Twin Research and Human Genetics (Cambridge University Press)*
470 +**Date of Publication:** *2013*
471 +**Author(s):** *Thomas J. Bouchard Jr.*
472 +**Title:** *"The Wilson Effect: The Increase in Heritability of IQ With Age"*
473 +**DOI:** [10.1017/thg.2013.54](https://doi.org/10.1017/thg.2013.54)
474 +**Subject Matter:** *Intelligence, Heritability, Developmental Psychology* 
475 +
377 377  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
378 378  1. **General Observations:**
379 379   - The study documents how the **heritability of IQ increases with age**, reaching an asymptote at **0.80 by adulthood**.
... ... @@ -433,14 +433,17 @@
433 433  {{/expandable}}
434 434  {{/expandable}}
435 435  
436 -{{expandable summary="Study: Is Homo sapiens polytypic? Human taxonomic diversity and its implications"}}
437 -**Source:** *Medical Hypotheses (Elsevier)*
438 -**Date of Publication:** *2010*
439 -**Author(s):** *Michael A. Woodley*
440 -**Title:** *"Is Homo sapiens polytypic? Human taxonomic diversity and its implications"*
441 -**DOI:** [10.1016/j.mehy.2009.07.046](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mehy.2009.07.046)
442 -**Subject Matter:** *Human Taxonomy, Evolutionary Biology, Anthropology*
535 +{{expandable summary="
443 443  
537 +
538 +Study: Is Homo sapiens polytypic? Human taxonomic diversity and its implications"}}
539 +**Source:** *Medical Hypotheses (Elsevier)*
540 +**Date of Publication:** *2010*
541 +**Author(s):** *Michael A. Woodley*
542 +**Title:** *"Is Homo sapiens polytypic? Human taxonomic diversity and its implications"*
543 +**DOI:** [10.1016/j.mehy.2009.07.046](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mehy.2009.07.046)
544 +**Subject Matter:** *Human Taxonomy, Evolutionary Biology, Anthropology* 
545 +
444 444  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
445 445  1. **General Observations:**
446 446   - The study argues that **Homo sapiens is polytypic**, meaning it consists of multiple subspecies rather than a single monotypic species.
... ... @@ -500,16 +500,17 @@
500 500  {{/expandable}}
501 501  {{/expandable}}
502 502  
503 -= IQ =
605 +{{expandable summary="
504 504  
505 -{{expandable summary="Study: Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence: Intelligence Research, Experts' Background, Controversial Issues, and the Media"}}
506 -**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
507 -**Date of Publication:** *2019*
508 -**Author(s):** *Heiner Rindermann, David Becker, Thomas R. Coyle*
509 -**Title:** *"Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence: Intelligence Research, Experts' Background, Controversial Issues, and the Media"*
510 -**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2019.101406](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2019.101406)
511 -**Subject Matter:** *Psychology, Intelligence Research, Expert Analysis*
512 512  
608 +Study: Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence: Intelligence Research, Experts' Background, Controversial Issues, and the Media"}}
609 +**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
610 +**Date of Publication:** *2019*
611 +**Author(s):** *Heiner Rindermann, David Becker, Thomas R. Coyle*
612 +**Title:** *"Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence: Intelligence Research, Experts' Background, Controversial Issues, and the Media"*
613 +**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2019.101406](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2019.101406)
614 +**Subject Matter:** *Psychology, Intelligence Research, Expert Analysis* 
615 +
513 513  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
514 514  1. **General Observations:**
515 515   - Survey of **102 experts** on intelligence research and public discourse.
... ... @@ -569,14 +569,17 @@
569 569  {{/expandable}}
570 570  {{/expandable}}
571 571  
572 -{{expandable summary="Study: A Review of Intelligence GWAS Hits: Their Relationship to Country IQ and the Issue of Spatial Autocorrelation"}}
573 -**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
574 -**Date of Publication:** *2015*
575 -**Author(s):** *Davide Piffer*
576 -**Title:** *"A Review of Intelligence GWAS Hits: Their Relationship to Country IQ and the Issue of Spatial Autocorrelation"*
577 -**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2015.08.008](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2015.08.008)
578 -**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Intelligence, GWAS, Population Differences*
675 +{{expandable summary="
579 579  
677 +
678 +Study: A Review of Intelligence GWAS Hits: Their Relationship to Country IQ and the Issue of Spatial Autocorrelation"}}
679 +**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
680 +**Date of Publication:** *2015*
681 +**Author(s):** *Davide Piffer*
682 +**Title:** *"A Review of Intelligence GWAS Hits: Their Relationship to Country IQ and the Issue of Spatial Autocorrelation"*
683 +**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2015.08.008](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2015.08.008)
684 +**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Intelligence, GWAS, Population Differences* 
685 +
580 580  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
581 581  1. **General Observations:**
582 582   - Study analyzed **genome-wide association studies (GWAS) hits** linked to intelligence.
... ... @@ -636,17 +636,18 @@
636 636  {{/expandable}}
637 637  {{/expandable}}
638 638  
639 -{{expandable summary="Study: Genetic Structure, Self-Identified Race/Ethnicity, and Confounding"}}
640 -**Source:** Journal of Genetic Epidemiology
641 -**Date of Publication:** 2024-01-15
642 -**Author(s):** Smith et al.
643 -**Title:** "Genetic Structure, Self-Identified Race/Ethnicity, and Confounding in Case-Control Association Studies"
644 -**DOI:** [https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-8971.11.2.235](https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-8971.11.2.235)
645 -**Subject Matter:** Genetics, Social Science
646 -{{/expandable}}
745 +{{expandable summary="
647 647  
648 -= Dating =
649 649  
748 +Study: Genetic Structure, Self-Identified Race/Ethnicity, and Confounding"}}
749 +**Source:** Journal of Genetic Epidemiology
750 +**Date of Publication:** 2024-01-15
751 +**Author(s):** Smith et al.
752 +**Title:** "Genetic Structure, Self-Identified Race/Ethnicity, and Confounding in Case-Control Association Studies"
753 +**DOI:** [https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-8971.11.2.235](https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-8971.11.2.235)
754 +**Subject Matter:** Genetics, Social Science 
755 +{{/expandable}}
756 +
650 650  {{expandable summary="Study: Trends in Frequency of Sexual Activity and Number of Sexual Partners Among Adults Aged 18 to 44 Years in the US, 2000-2018"}}
651 651  **Source:** *JAMA Network Open*
652 652  **Date of Publication:** *2020*
... ... @@ -708,18 +708,30 @@
708 708  {{/expandable}}
709 709  
710 710  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
711 -
818 +{{velocity}}
819 +
820 +#set($doi = "10.1001_jamanetworkopen.2020.3833")
821 +#set($filename = "${doi}.pdf")
822 +#if($xwiki.exists("attach:$filename"))
823 +[[Download>>attach:$filename]]
824 +#else
825 +{{html}}<span style="color: red; font-weight: bold;">🚨 PDF Not Available 🚨</span>{{/html}}
826 +#end
827 +{{/velocity}}
712 712  {{/expandable}}
713 713  {{/expandable}}
714 714  
715 -{{expandable summary="Study: Biracial Couples and Adverse Birth Outcomes – A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis"}}
716 -**Source:** *Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica*
717 -**Date of Publication:** *2012*
718 -**Author(s):** *Ravisha M. Srinivasjois, Shreya Shah, Prakesh S. Shah, Knowledge Synthesis Group on Determinants of Preterm/LBW Births*
719 -**Title:** *"Biracial Couples and Adverse Birth Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis"*
720 -**DOI:** [10.1111/j.1600-0412.2012.01501.x](https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0412.2012.01501.x)
721 -**Subject Matter:** *Neonatal Health, Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Racial Disparities*
831 +{{expandable summary="
722 722  
833 +
834 +Study: Biracial Couples and Adverse Birth Outcomes – A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis"}}
835 +**Source:** *Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica*
836 +**Date of Publication:** *2012*
837 +**Author(s):** *Ravisha M. Srinivasjois, Shreya Shah, Prakesh S. Shah, Knowledge Synthesis Group on Determinants of Preterm/LBW Births*
838 +**Title:** *"Biracial Couples and Adverse Birth Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis"*
839 +**DOI:** [10.1111/j.1600-0412.2012.01501.x](https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0412.2012.01501.x)
840 +**Subject Matter:** *Neonatal Health, Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Racial Disparities* 
841 +
723 723  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
724 724  1. **General Observations:**
725 725   - Meta-analysis of **26,335,596 singleton births** from eight studies.
... ... @@ -781,14 +781,17 @@
781 781  {{/expandable}}
782 782  {{/expandable}}
783 783  
784 -{{expandable summary="Study: One is the Loneliest Number: Involuntary Celibacy (Incel), Mental Health, and Loneliness"}}
785 -**Source:** *Current Psychology*
786 -**Date of Publication:** *2024*
787 -**Author(s):** *Brandon Sparks, Alexandra M. Zidenberg, Mark E. Olver*
788 -**Title:** *"One is the Loneliest Number: Involuntary Celibacy (Incel), Mental Health, and Loneliness"*
789 -**DOI:** [10.1007/s12144-023-04275-z](https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-023-04275-z)
790 -**Subject Matter:** *Psychology, Mental Health, Social Isolation*
903 +{{expandable summary="
791 791  
905 +
906 +Study: One is the Loneliest Number: Involuntary Celibacy (Incel), Mental Health, and Loneliness"}}
907 +**Source:** *Current Psychology*
908 +**Date of Publication:** *2024*
909 +**Author(s):** *Brandon Sparks, Alexandra M. Zidenberg, Mark E. Olver*
910 +**Title:** *"One is the Loneliest Number: Involuntary Celibacy (Incel), Mental Health, and Loneliness"*
911 +**DOI:** [10.1007/s12144-023-04275-z](https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-023-04275-z)
912 +**Subject Matter:** *Psychology, Mental Health, Social Isolation* 
913 +
792 792  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
793 793  1. **General Observations:**
794 794   - Study analyzed **67 self-identified incels** and **103 non-incel men**.
... ... @@ -846,18 +846,21 @@
846 846  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
847 847  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1007_s12144-023-04275-z.pdf]]
848 848  {{/expandable}}
849 -{{/expandable}}
850 850  
851 851  = Crime and Substance Abuse =
973 +{{/expandable}}
852 852  
853 -{{expandable summary="Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"}}
854 -**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
855 -**Date of Publication:** *2002*
856 -**Author(s):** *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
857 -**Title:** *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
858 -**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
859 -**Subject Matter:** *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts*
975 +{{expandable summary="
860 860  
977 +
978 +Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"}}
979 +**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
980 +**Date of Publication:** *2002*
981 +**Author(s):** *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
982 +**Title:** *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
983 +**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
984 +**Subject Matter:** *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts* 
985 +
861 861  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
862 862  1. **General Observations:**
863 863   - Study examined **drug treatment court success rates** among first-time offenders.
... ... @@ -917,14 +917,17 @@
917 917  {{/expandable}}
918 918  {{/expandable}}
919 919  
920 -{{expandable summary="Study: Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys"}}
921 -**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
922 -**Date of Publication:** *2003*
923 -**Author(s):** *Timothy P. Johnson, Phillip J. Bowman*
924 -**Title:** *"Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys"*
925 -**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120023394](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120023394)
926 -**Subject Matter:** *Survey Methodology, Racial Disparities, Substance Use Research*
1045 +{{expandable summary="
927 927  
1047 +
1048 +Study: Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys"}}
1049 +**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
1050 +**Date of Publication:** *2003*
1051 +**Author(s):** *Timothy P. Johnson, Phillip J. Bowman*
1052 +**Title:** *"Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys"*
1053 +**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120023394](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120023394)
1054 +**Subject Matter:** *Survey Methodology, Racial Disparities, Substance Use Research* 
1055 +
928 928  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
929 929  1. **General Observations:**
930 930   - Study examined **how racial and cultural factors influence self-reported substance use data**.
... ... @@ -944,25 +944,25 @@
944 944   - Racial/ethnic disparities in **substance use reporting bias survey-based research**.
945 945   - **Social desirability and cultural norms impact data reliability**.
946 946  
947 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1075 +2. **Subgroup Trends:**
948 948   - White respondents were **more likely to overreport** substance use.
949 949   - Black and Latino respondents **had higher recantation rates**, particularly in face-to-face interviews.
950 950  
951 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1079 +3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
952 952   - Mode of survey administration **significantly influenced reporting accuracy**.
953 953   - **Self-administered surveys produced more reliable data than interviewer-administered surveys**.
954 954  {{/expandable}}
955 955  
956 956  {{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
957 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1085 +1. **Strengths of the Study:**
958 958   - **Comprehensive review of 36 studies** on measurement error in substance use reporting.
959 959   - Identifies **systemic biases affecting racial/ethnic survey reliability**.
960 960  
961 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1089 +2. **Limitations of the Study:**
962 962   - Relies on **secondary data analysis**, limiting direct experimental control.
963 963   - Does not explore **how measurement error impacts policy decisions**.
964 964  
965 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1093 +3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
966 966   - Future research should **incorporate mixed-method approaches** (qualitative & quantitative).
967 967   - Investigate **how survey design can reduce racial reporting disparities**.
968 968  {{/expandable}}
... ... @@ -984,14 +984,17 @@
984 984  {{/expandable}}
985 985  {{/expandable}}
986 986  
987 -{{expandable summary="Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"}}
988 -**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
989 -**Date of Publication:** *2002*
990 -**Author(s):** *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
991 -**Title:** *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
992 -**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
993 -**Subject Matter:** *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts*
1115 +{{expandable summary="
994 994  
1117 +
1118 +Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"}}
1119 +**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
1120 +**Date of Publication:** *2002*
1121 +**Author(s):** *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
1122 +**Title:** *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
1123 +**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
1124 +**Subject Matter:** *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts* 
1125 +
995 995  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
996 996  1. **General Observations:**
997 997   - Study examined **drug treatment court success rates** among first-time offenders.
... ... @@ -1051,16 +1051,21 @@
1051 1051  {{/expandable}}
1052 1052  {{/expandable}}
1053 1053  
1054 -{{expandable summary="
1185 +{{expandable summary="
1055 1055  
1056 -Study: Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?"}}
1057 -**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
1058 -**Date of Publication:** *2014*
1059 -**Author(s):** *Michael A. Woodley, Jan te Nijenhuis, Raegan Murphy*
1060 -**Title:** *"Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?"*
1061 -**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2014.05.012](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2014.05.012)
1062 -**Subject Matter:** *Cognitive Decline, Intelligence, Dysgenics*
1063 1063  
1188 +Study: Associations Between Cannabis Use and Mental Health Symptoms in Young Adults"}}
1189 +
1190 +{{/expandable}}
1191 +
1192 +{{expandable summary="Study: Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?"}}
1193 +**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
1194 +**Date of Publication:** *2014*
1195 +**Author(s):** *Michael A. Woodley, Jan te Nijenhuis, Raegan Murphy*
1196 +**Title:** *"Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?"*
1197 +**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2014.05.012](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2014.05.012)
1198 +**Subject Matter:** *Cognitive Decline, Intelligence, Dysgenics* 
1199 +
1064 1064  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1065 1065  1. **General Observations:**
1066 1066   - The study examines reaction time data from **13 age-matched studies** spanning **1884–2004**.
... ... @@ -1118,72 +1118,73 @@
1118 1118  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1119 1119  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.intell.2014.05.012.pdf]]
1120 1120  {{/expandable}}
1121 -{{/expandable}}
1122 1122  
1123 1123  = Whiteness & White Guilt =
1259 +{{/expandable}}
1124 1124  
1125 -{{expandable summary="Study: Segregation, Innocence, and Protection: The Institutional Conditions That Maintain Whiteness in College Sports"}}
1261 +{{expandable summary="
1262 +
1263 +
1264 +Study: Segregation, Innocence, and Protection: The Institutional Conditions That Maintain Whiteness in College Sports"}}
1126 1126  **Source:** *Journal of Diversity in Higher Education*
1127 1127  **Date of Publication:** *2019*
1128 1128  **Author(s):** *Kirsten Hextrum*
1129 1129  **Title:** *"Segregation, Innocence, and Protection: The Institutional Conditions That Maintain Whiteness in College Sports"*
1130 1130  **DOI:** [10.1037/dhe0000140](https://doi.org/10.1037/dhe0000140)
1131 -**Subject Matter:** *Critical Race Theory, Sports Sociology, Anti-White Institutional Framing*
1270 +**Subject Matter:** *Race and Sports, Higher Education, Institutional Racism* 
1132 1132  
1133 1133  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1134 1134  1. **General Observations:**
1135 - - Based on **47 athlete interviews**, cherry-picked from non-revenue Division I sports.
1136 - - The study claims **segregation”**, but presents no evidence of actual exclusion or policy bias — just demographic imbalance.
1274 + - Analyzed **47 college athlete narratives** to explore racial disparities in non-revenue sports.
1275 + - Found three interrelated themes: **racial segregation, racial innocence, and racial protection**.
1137 1137  
1138 1138  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1139 - - Attributes **White participation** in certain sports to "systemic racism", ignoring **self-selection, geography, and cultural affinity**.
1140 - - Claims White athletes are “protected” from race discussions — but never engages with **Black overrepresentation in revenue sports**.
1278 + - **Predominantly white sports programs** reinforce racial hierarchies in college athletics.
1279 + - **Recruitment policies favor white athletes** from affluent, suburban backgrounds.
1141 1141  
1142 1142  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1143 - - White athletes are portrayed as **ignorant of their privilege**, a claim drawn entirely from CRT frameworks rather than behavior or outcome.
1144 - - **No empirical data** is offered on policy, scholarship distribution, or team selection criteria.
1282 + - White athletes are **socialized to remain unaware of racial privilege** in their athletic careers.
1283 + - Media and institutional narratives protect white athletes from discussions on race and systemic inequities.
1145 1145  {{/expandable}}
1146 1146  
1147 1147  {{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1148 1148  1. **Primary Observations:**
1149 - - Frames **normal demographic patterns** (e.g., majority-White rosters in tennis or rowing) as "institutional whiteness".
1150 - - **Ignores the structural dominance** of Black athletes in high-profile revenue sports like football and basketball.
1288 + - Colleges **actively recruit white athletes** from majority-white communities.
1289 + - Institutional policies **uphold whiteness** by failing to challenge racial biases in recruitment and team culture.
1151 1151  
1152 1152  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1153 - - White athletes are criticized for **lacking racial awareness**, reinforcing the moral framing of **Whiteness as inherently problematic**.
1154 - - **Cultural preference, individual merit, and athletic subculture** are all excluded from consideration.
1292 + - **White athletes show limited awareness** of their racial advantage in sports.
1293 + - **Black athletes are overrepresented** in revenue-generating sports but underrepresented in non-revenue teams.
1155 1155  
1156 1156  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1157 - - Argues that college sports **reinforce racial hierarchy** without ever showing how White athletes benefit more than Black athletes.
1158 - - Offers **no comparative analysis** of scholarships, graduation rates, or media portrayal by race.
1296 + - Examines **how sports serve as a mechanism for maintaining racial privilege** in higher education.
1297 + - Discusses the **role of athletics in reinforcing systemic segregation and exclusion**.
1159 1159  {{/expandable}}
1160 1160  
1161 1161  {{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1162 1162  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1163 - - Useful as a clear example of **how CRT ideologues weaponize demography** to frame White majority spaces as inherently suspect.
1164 - - Shows how **academic literature systematically avoids symmetrical analysis** when outcomes favor White participants.
1302 + - **Comprehensive qualitative analysis** of race in college sports.
1303 + - Examines **institutional conditions** that sustain racial disparities in athletics.
1165 1165  
1166 1166  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1167 - - **Excludes revenue sports**, where Black athletes dominate by numbers, prestige, and compensation.
1168 - - **Fails to explain** how team composition emerges from voluntary participation, geography, or subcultural identity.
1169 - - Treats **racial imbalance as proof of racism**, bypassing merit, interest, or socioeconomic context.
1306 + - Focuses primarily on **Division I non-revenue sports**, limiting generalizability to other divisions.
1307 + - Lacks extensive **quantitative data on racial demographics** in college athletics.
1170 1170  
1171 1171  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1172 - - Include **White athlete perspectives** without pre-framing them as racially naive or complicit.
1173 - - **Compare all sports**, including those where Black athletes thrive and lead.
1174 - - Remove CRT framing and **evaluate outcomes empirically**, not ideologically.
1310 + - Future research should **compare recruitment policies across different sports and divisions**.
1311 + - Investigate **how athletic scholarships contribute to racial inequities in higher education**.
1175 1175  {{/expandable}}
1176 1176  
1177 1177  {{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1178 -- Demonstrates how **DEI-aligned research reframes benign patterns** as oppressive when White majorities are involved.
1179 -- Illustrates **anti-White academic framing** in environments where no institutional barrier exists.
1180 -- Provides a concrete example of how **CRT avoids acknowledging Black dominance in elite spaces** (revenue athletics).
1315 +- Provides evidence of **systemic racial biases** in college sports recruitment.
1316 +- Highlights **how institutional policies protect whiteness** in non-revenue athletics.
1317 +- Supports research on **diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts in sports and education**.
1181 1181  {{/expandable}}
1182 1182  
1183 1183  {{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1184 -1. Investigate **racial self-sorting and cultural affiliation** in athletic participation.
1185 -2. Compare **media framing of White-majority vs. Black-majority sports**.
1186 -3. Study **how CRT narratives distort athletic merit and demographic outcomes**.
1321 +1. Investigate how **racial stereotypes influence college athlete recruitment**.
1322 +2. Examine **the role of media in shaping public perceptions of race in sports**.
1323 +3. Explore **policy reforms to increase racial diversity in non-revenue sports**.
1187 1187  {{/expandable}}
1188 1188  
1189 1189  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
... ... @@ -1191,14 +1191,16 @@
1191 1191  {{/expandable}}
1192 1192  {{/expandable}}
1193 1193  
1331 +{{expandable summary="
1194 1194  
1195 -{{expandable summary="Study: Racial Bias in Pain Assessment and Treatment Recommendations"}}
1196 -**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1197 -**Date of Publication:** *2016*
1198 -**Author(s):** *Kelly M. Hoffman, Sophie Trawalter, Jordan R. Axta, M. Norman Oliver*
1333 +
1334 +Study: Racial Bias in Pain Assessment and Treatment Recommendations"}}
1335 +**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1336 +**Date of Publication:** *2016*
1337 +**Author(s):** *Kelly M. Hoffman, Sophie Trawalter, Jordan R. Axta, M. Norman Oliver*
1199 1199  **Title:** *"Racial Bias in Pain Assessment and Treatment Recommendations, and False Beliefs About Biological Differences Between Blacks and Whites"*
1200 -**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1516047113](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1516047113)
1201 -**Subject Matter:** *Health Disparities, Racial Bias, Medical Treatment*
1339 +**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1516047113](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1516047113)
1340 +**Subject Matter:** *Health Disparities, Racial Bias, Medical Treatment* 
1202 1202  
1203 1203  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1204 1204  1. **General Observations:**
... ... @@ -1259,14 +1259,17 @@
1259 1259  {{/expandable}}
1260 1260  {{/expandable}}
1261 1261  
1262 -{{expandable summary="Study: Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans"}}
1263 -**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1264 -**Date of Publication:** *2015*
1265 -**Author(s):** *Anne Case, Angus Deaton*
1266 -**Title:** *"Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans in the 21st Century"*
1267 -**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1518393112](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1518393112)
1268 -**Subject Matter:** *Public Health, Mortality, Socioeconomic Factors*
1401 +{{expandable summary="
1269 1269  
1403 +
1404 +Study: Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans"}}
1405 +**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1406 +**Date of Publication:** *2015*
1407 +**Author(s):** *Anne Case, Angus Deaton*
1408 +**Title:** *"Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans in the 21st Century"*
1409 +**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1518393112](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1518393112)
1410 +**Subject Matter:** *Public Health, Mortality, Socioeconomic Factors* 
1411 +
1270 1270  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1271 1271  1. **General Observations:**
1272 1272   - Mortality rates among **middle-aged white non-Hispanic Americans (ages 45–54)** increased from 1999 to 2013.
... ... @@ -1326,14 +1326,17 @@
1326 1326  {{/expandable}}
1327 1327  {{/expandable}}
1328 1328  
1329 -{{expandable summary="Study: How Do People Without Migration Background Experience and Impact Today’s Superdiverse Cities?"}}
1330 -**Source:** *Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies*
1331 -**Date of Publication:** *2023*
1332 -**Author(s):** *Maurice Crul, Frans Lelie, Elif Keskiner, Laure Michon, Ismintha Waldring*
1333 -**Title:** *"How Do People Without Migration Background Experience and Impact Today’s Superdiverse Cities?"*
1334 -**DOI:** [10.1080/1369183X.2023.2182548](https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2023.2182548)
1335 -**Subject Matter:** *Urban Sociology, Migration Studies, Integration*
1471 +{{expandable summary="
1336 1336  
1473 +
1474 +Study: How Do People Without Migration Background Experience and Impact Today’s Superdiverse Cities?"}}
1475 +**Source:** *Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies*
1476 +**Date of Publication:** *2023*
1477 +**Author(s):** *Maurice Crul, Frans Lelie, Elif Keskiner, Laure Michon, Ismintha Waldring*
1478 +**Title:** *"How Do People Without Migration Background Experience and Impact Today’s Superdiverse Cities?"*
1479 +**DOI:** [10.1080/1369183X.2023.2182548](https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2023.2182548)
1480 +**Subject Matter:** *Urban Sociology, Migration Studies, Integration* 
1481 +
1337 1337  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1338 1338  1. **General Observations:**
1339 1339   - Study examines the role of **people without migration background** in majority-minority cities.
... ... @@ -1391,18 +1391,21 @@
1391 1391  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1392 1392  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1080_1369183X.2023.2182548.pdf]]
1393 1393  {{/expandable}}
1394 -{{/expandable}}
1395 1395  
1396 1396  = Media =
1541 +{{/expandable}}
1397 1397  
1398 -{{expandable summary="Study: The Role of Computer-Mediated Communication in Intergroup Conflic"}}
1399 -**Source:** *Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication*
1400 -**Date of Publication:** *2021*
1401 -**Author(s):** *Zeynep Tufekci, Jesse Fox, Andrew Chadwick*
1402 -**Title:** *"The Role of Computer-Mediated Communication in Intergroup Conflict"*
1403 -**DOI:** [10.1093/jcmc/zmab003](https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmab003)
1404 -**Subject Matter:** *Online Communication, Social Media, Conflict Studies*
1543 +{{expandable summary="
1405 1405  
1545 +
1546 +Study: The Role of Computer-Mediated Communication in Intergroup Conflic"}}
1547 +**Source:** *Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication*
1548 +**Date of Publication:** *2021*
1549 +**Author(s):** *Zeynep Tufekci, Jesse Fox, Andrew Chadwick*
1550 +**Title:** *"The Role of Computer-Mediated Communication in Intergroup Conflict"*
1551 +**DOI:** [10.1093/jcmc/zmab003](https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmab003)
1552 +**Subject Matter:** *Online Communication, Social Media, Conflict Studies* 
1553 +
1406 1406  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1407 1407  1. **General Observations:**
1408 1408   - Analyzed **over 500,000 social media interactions** related to intergroup conflict.
... ... @@ -1462,14 +1462,17 @@
1462 1462  {{/expandable}}
1463 1463  {{/expandable}}
1464 1464  
1465 -{{expandable summary="Study: Equality, Morality, and the Impact of Media Framing on Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions"}}
1466 -**Source:** *Politics & Policy*
1467 -**Date of Publication:** *2007*
1468 -**Author(s):** *Tyler Johnson*
1469 -**Title:** *"Equality, Morality, and the Impact of Media Framing: Explaining Opposition to Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions"*
1470 -**DOI:** [10.1111/j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x](https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x)
1471 -**Subject Matter:** *LGBTQ+ Rights, Public Opinion, Media Influence*
1613 +{{expandable summary="
1472 1472  
1615 +
1616 +Study: Equality, Morality, and the Impact of Media Framing on Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions"}}
1617 +**Source:** *Politics & Policy*
1618 +**Date of Publication:** *2007*
1619 +**Author(s):** *Tyler Johnson*
1620 +**Title:** *"Equality, Morality, and the Impact of Media Framing: Explaining Opposition to Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions"*
1621 +**DOI:** [10.1111/j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x](https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x)
1622 +**Subject Matter:** *LGBTQ+ Rights, Public Opinion, Media Influence* 
1623 +
1473 1473  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1474 1474  1. **General Observations:**
1475 1475   - Examines **media coverage of same-sex marriage and civil unions from 2004 to 2011**.
... ... @@ -1529,14 +1529,17 @@
1529 1529  {{/expandable}}
1530 1530  {{/expandable}}
1531 1531  
1532 -{{expandable summary="Study: The Effects of Digital Media on Political Persuasion"}}
1533 -**Source:** *Journal of Communication*
1534 -**Date of Publication:** *2019*
1535 -**Author(s):** *Natalie Stroud, Matthew Barnidge, Shannon McGregor*
1536 -**Title:** *"The Effects of Digital Media on Political Persuasion: Evidence from Experimental Studies"*
1537 -**DOI:** [10.1093/joc/jqx021](https://doi.org/10.1093/joc/jqx021)
1538 -**Subject Matter:** *Media Influence, Political Communication, Persuasion*
1683 +{{expandable summary="
1539 1539  
1685 +
1686 +Study: The Effects of Digital Media on Political Persuasion"}}
1687 +**Source:** *Journal of Communication*
1688 +**Date of Publication:** *2019*
1689 +**Author(s):** *Natalie Stroud, Matthew Barnidge, Shannon McGregor*
1690 +**Title:** *"The Effects of Digital Media on Political Persuasion: Evidence from Experimental Studies"*
1691 +**DOI:** [10.1093/joc/jqx021](https://doi.org/10.1093/joc/jqx021)
1692 +**Subject Matter:** *Media Influence, Political Communication, Persuasion* 
1693 +
1540 1540  {{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1541 1541  1. **General Observations:**
1542 1542   - Conducted **12 experimental studies** on **digital media's impact on political beliefs**.
... ... @@ -1593,111 +1593,6 @@
1593 1593  
1594 1594  {{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1595 1595  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1093_joc_jqx021.pdf]]
1750 +##~{~{/expand}}##
1596 1596  {{/expandable}}
1597 1597  {{/expandable}}
1598 -
1599 -{{expandable summary="Study: White Americans’ Preference for Black People in Advertising Has Increased in the Past 66 Years"}}
1600 -Source: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
1601 -Date of Publication: February 20, 2024
1602 -Author(s): Julia Diana Lenk, Jochen Hartmann, Henrik Sattler
1603 -Title: "White Americans’ Preference for Black People in Advertising Has Increased in the Past 66 Years: A Meta-Analysis"
1604 -DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2307505121
1605 -Subject Matter: Advertising, Race, Consumer Behavior, Meta-Analysis
1606 -
1607 -{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1608 -
1609 -Study Scale:
1610 -
1611 -62 studies, 332 effect sizes, 10,186 participants (Black and White Americans).
1612 -
1613 -Covers the period 1956–2022.
1614 -
1615 -Cohen’s d Effect Sizes (Model-Free):
1616 -
1617 -Black viewers: d = 0.50 → strong, consistent ingroup preference for Black models.
1618 -
1619 -White viewers: d = –0.08 overall; pre-2000: d = –0.16 (ingroup); post-2000: d = +0.02 (outgroup leaning).
1620 -
1621 -Regression Findings:
1622 -
1623 -White viewers’ preference for Black models increases by ~0.0128 d/year since 1956 (p < 0.05).
1624 -
1625 -By 2022, White viewers showed positive directional preference for Black endorsers.
1626 -
1627 -Black viewer preferences remained stable across the 66 years.
1628 -{{/expandable}}
1629 -
1630 -{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1631 -
1632 -Primary Observations:
1633 -
1634 -Ingroup favoritism is evident: Black viewers consistently prefer Black endorsers.
1635 -
1636 -White viewers’ preferences have shifted significantly over time toward favoring Black endorsers.
1637 -
1638 -Temporal Trends:
1639 -
1640 -Turning point: Around 2002–2003, White viewers began showing a positive (though small) preference for Black endorsers.
1641 -
1642 -Moderator Effects:
1643 -
1644 -Low anti-Black prejudice and low White ethnic identification correlate with greater White preference for Black endorsers.
1645 -
1646 -Economic hardship (e.g., high unemployment) slightly reduces White preference for Black endorsers.
1647 -
1648 -Identification Model:
1649 -
1650 -Preference changes are stronger when outcomes measure identification with endorsers (e.g., similarity, attractiveness).
1651 -{{/expandable}}
1652 -
1653 -{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1654 -
1655 -Strengths of the Study:
1656 -
1657 -Longest-running meta-analysis on interracial preferences in advertising.
1658 -
1659 -Includes multilevel modeling and 21 meta-analytic covariates.
1660 -
1661 -Accounts for both perceiver and societal context, and controls for publication bias.
1662 -
1663 -Limitations:
1664 -
1665 -Only examines Black and White racial dynamics—doesn’t cover Hispanic, Asian, or multiracial groups.
1666 -
1667 -72% of effect sizes are from student samples (not fully generalizable).
1668 -
1669 -Social desirability bias may affect lab-based responses.
1670 -
1671 -Suggestions for Improvement:
1672 -
1673 -Include field experiments and more representative samples (age, class, ideology).
1674 -
1675 -Examine how Black models are portrayed, not just if they are shown.
1676 -
1677 -Extend research to other racial groups and multiracial representations.
1678 -{{/expandable}}
1679 -
1680 -{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1681 -
1682 -Provides empirical support for the dynamic shift in White American attitudes over time.
1683 -
1684 -Directly informs discussions about media representation, consumer behavior, and racial identity.
1685 -
1686 -Supports policy and commercial arguments for including more diverse models in advertising.
1687 -{{/expandable}}
1688 -
1689 -{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1690 -
1691 -Expand analysis to Latino, Asian, and multiracial models in media.
1692 -
1693 -Study real-world (non-lab) consumer reactions to racial diversity in advertising.
1694 -
1695 -Investigate how economic anxiety influences racial preferences in other domains (e.g., hiring, education).
1696 -
1697 -Explore how virtual influencers or AI-generated models affect racial perceptions.
1698 -{{/expandable}}
1699 -
1700 -{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1701 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:lenk-et-al-white-americans-preference-for-black-people-in-advertising-has-increased-in-the-past-66-years-a-meta-analysis.pdf]]
1702 -{{/expandable}}
1703 -{{/expandable}}
lenk-et-al-white-americans-preference-for-black-people-in-advertising-has-increased-in-the-past-66-years-a-meta-analysis.pdf
Author
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -XWiki.AdminAngriff
Size
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@
1 -2.1 MB
Content