Science Communication
Introduction
What is scientific communication? Science communication describes the process of distilling complex scientific topics into key points which are then communicated to a non-expert audience. This is not a simple process and often scientists are left worrying that information will be lost in the process. Over the course of the summer, we continuously sought to improve our own abilities as science communicator. The more we practised, the more stronger analogies we developed to discuss complex ideas and methodologies. Science communication is important as it enables the general public to understand the relevance of research and support continued exploration. Scienctific Literacy There are issues, however, that arise with the incorporation of “science” into our daily lives. We might believe that every headline that presents itself as science on Facebook is “real science”. However, do we know where it comes from? Who published the article? Was the scientific methods used to generate credible results? Is it biased? Has it been altered or misinterpreted by the person who transcribes scientific data into writing? These are the questions that we should ask ourselves before we blindly believe in a claim. Because if we don’t, we might just be supporting pseudoscience, and this is extremely dangerous in an era where we can just click a button and share the “fake news” to millions across the globe.Our Project
The Human Practices Team is focusing on scientific communication this year. We broke this theme up into two parts:- Examining scientific literacy among the public.
- Reaching out to the community and various institutions to promote science
- About a quarter of the population with university education is not very comfortable interpreting scientific news publications.
- Most people with a university education trust scientific reports with dramatic and opinionated language to some extent.
- More than half of the people with a university education would not verify new scientific claims with credible source half of the time.
- A small portion of people with a university education share scientific news articles on social media solely based on the title.
- Similar to the group with some post-secondary education, the group without a university degree shows similar trends in terms of trusting skeptical scientific claims and blindly distributing articles without assessments.
- Science Sam: PhD at University of Toronto studying Cell Biology and Neuroscience who blogs about lab science on Instagram
- Bob McDonald: Canadian author and science journalist, currently hosing the CBC radio program - Quirks and Quarks
- Dan Falk: Canadian science journalist, broadcaster and author (published The Universe on a T-Shirt in 2002)
- Dr. Catherine Reeve: Dalhousie Psychology and Neuroscience professor
- University of Toronto iGEM team: one of the iGEM teams that we are collaborating with
- Olivia Roberts: member of the general public, with a post-secondary degree in music
- Journalists and scientists who write articles are sometimes biased or exaggerated the result to a certain extent to grab the attention of the public to read the paper. And just being humans, sometimes we click into articles just because the titles are interesting, although they might be biased or exaggerated.
- People often assume that the articles that are published are credible, because they are “science” and most people do not believe science is false.
- Having a post-secondary education does not mean the person has all the skills required to assess and interpret a scientific article properly. Depending on the degree, quality of education, the person might view science in distinct ways.
- Our sample size isn’t big enough to represent the entire global community
- Most of our respondents are university students or member of iGEM teams
- We did not analyze our results based on the type of post-secondary degrees