loader from loading.io

Risk Communication on Social Media: Making Your Messages Go Further

Let's Talk Risk

Release Date: 10/01/2018

A Yardstick for Danger: Developing a Flexible and Sensitive Measure of Risk Perception show art A Yardstick for Danger: Developing a Flexible and Sensitive Measure of Risk Perception

Let's Talk Risk

On this episode of Let's Talk Risk, Robyn Wilson, Professor of Risk Analysis and Decision Science and Acting Associate Director of Research and Graduate Education, joins us to talk about the risks of developing a flexible and sensitive measure of risk perception. 

info_outline
Risk of Mass Shooting in Public Settings show art Risk of Mass Shooting in Public Settings

Let's Talk Risk

On this episode of Let's Talk Risk, Cameron MacKenzie, Associate Professor at the IMSE Department at Iowa State University, joins us to talk about the risks of mass shootings in schools, malls, churches, and other public venues. 

info_outline
Misinformation on Social Media: How to Debunk and Stop the Spread show art Misinformation on Social Media: How to Debunk and Stop the Spread

Let's Talk Risk

On this episode of Let’s Talk Risk, Professor Jun Zhuang, the Morton C. Frank Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering at the University of Buffalo, joins to talk misinformation on social media. Zhuang breaks down what misinformation on social media is and why it’s important for us to think about.

info_outline
Explore a Low-Carbon Future & the Tradeoffs in Climate Geoengineering show art Explore a Low-Carbon Future & the Tradeoffs in Climate Geoengineering

Let's Talk Risk

Benjamin K. Sovacool, professor at Boston University, University of Sussex, and Aarhus University, joins the podcast to discuss his new research on climate geoengineering. Sovacool dives into the risk tradeoffs of carbon removal and solar radiation management. His research highlights different risks in the climate system, and the institutional, political, behavioral, social and cultural risks that accompany deployment of new technology. To close out the podcast, Sovacool shares the three policy implications from the study. 

info_outline
A New Metric to Fight Inequity in Home Evaluations show art A New Metric to Fight Inequity in Home Evaluations

Let's Talk Risk

Dr. David Johnson, professor of industrial engineering with a joint appointment of political science at Purdue University, joins Let’s Talk Risk to discuss his most recent work on the inequities and health impacts of flooding. States and communities struggle when thinking about how to better incorporate equity consideration into their planning process. To combat this, Johnson explains a new metric to evaluate projects that normalize the value of homes: treating all households the same. Instead of trying to prioritize projects based on protecting value, Johnson and his fellow researchers...

info_outline
The Importance of Consumer Willingness to Pay for Sustainable Products show art The Importance of Consumer Willingness to Pay for Sustainable Products

Let's Talk Risk

There are plenty of environmental issues plaguing the world today. Whether it’s climate change, water shortage or waste, it always boils down to one thing: consumption patterns. Prerna Shah, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Communication at the State University of New York at Buffalo, joins the podcast to share her and Dr. Janet Yang's research where they analyze whether communication can help dispel inaccurate beliefs on sustainable products and if it can drive people toward more positive behavior. 

info_outline
All Things Extreme Weather Events: Outages, Patterns, Restoration, & More show art All Things Extreme Weather Events: Outages, Patterns, Restoration, & More

Let's Talk Risk

Nicole Jackson, Ph.D., of Sandia National Labs, joins the Let’s Talk Risk podcast to talk about her work analyzing how extreme weather events and climate hazards impact physical infrastructures. Jackson shares her experiences on researching how long outages are and how many people were affected to get a sense of the duration of the event and the kind of magnitude of the event from a human perspective. This conversation covers how communities are equipped for extreme weather events, energy equity, resiliency of different countries, socio-economic factors, and more. 

info_outline
A Closer Look at the Risk of Mail-In Ballots show art A Closer Look at the Risk of Mail-In Ballots

Let's Talk Risk

Natalie Scala, associate professor at Towson University, joins the podcast to discuss her recent research on evaluating mail-based security for electoral processes. Since the 2020 Presidential Election took a dramatic shift, it was time to look at what was happening on the ground. When you strip the politics out, a fundamental question of the dramatic scale up of mail voting remains: Did mail-in voting introduce additional risks to the election process?

info_outline
COVID-19 is a Risk Communication Failure. How Do We Avoid This in the Future? show art COVID-19 is a Risk Communication Failure. How Do We Avoid This in the Future?

Let's Talk Risk

Jose Palma-Oliverira, professor at the University of Lisbon, joins the podcast to talk all things risk communication regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. Oliverira discusses the importance of having a trusted communicator and understanding the audience's belief systems, the population's perception of the communicator, the contradiction between individual rationality and global rationality, and much more. Without this understanding, Oliverira notes that the communicator will lose their audience and explains how to avoid this.

info_outline
The COVID-19 Pandemic: Where is it Headed Next? show art The COVID-19 Pandemic: Where is it Headed Next?

Let's Talk Risk

Let’s Talk Risk Podcast is happy to welcome back Ben Trump, a research social scientist at the US Army Engineer Research and Development Center to talk about vaccine and booster shot rollout. Ben discusses the everchanging COVID climate including the vaccine for kids from ages 5-eleven, where the pandemic may be headed next, closing the equity gap, improving communication, and everything in between. Disclaimer: Opinions are the speakers' alone, and not representative of the US Government or any state government.

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Sarah Vos, PhD, a research analyst at the University of Kentucky, and Jeannette Sutton, PhD, an associate professor at the University of Kentucky, discuss risk communication on social media and the factors that increase the likelihood of a message being shared and re-tweeted.