| Literature DB >> 26934595 |
Nina Singh1, Matthew T Sit1, Deanna M Chung1, Ana A Lopez1, Ranil Weerackoon2, Pamela J Yeh1.
Abstract
Media plays an important role in informing the general public about scientific ideas. We examine whether the word "evolve," sometimes considered controversial by the general public, is frequently used in the popular press. Specifically, we ask how often articles discussing antibiotic resistance use the word "evolve" (or its lexemes) as opposed to alternative terms such as "emerge" or "develop." We chose the topic of antibiotic resistance because it is a medically important issue; bacterial evolution is a central player in human morbidity and mortality. We focused on the most widely-distributed newspapers written in English in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, India, and Australia. We examined all articles that focused primarily on the evolution of antibiotic resistance, were published in 2014 or earlier, and were accessible in online archives, for a total of 1639 articles. The total years examined per newspaper ranged from 5 to 37 years with a median of 27 years, and the overall range was 1978-2014. We quantified how many articles included the term "evolve" and analyzed how this varied with newspaper, country, and time. We found that an overall rate of 18% of articles used the term "evolve" but with significant variation among countries. Newspapers in the United Kingdom had the highest rate (24%), more than double of those in India (9%), the country with the lowest rate. These frequencies were lower than those found in scientific papers from both evolutionary journals and biomedical journals. There were no statistically significant changes in frequency and no trends when "evolve" usage was compared against variables such as newspaper circulation, liberal/conservative bias, time, and state evolution acceptance in U.S. newspapers. This study highlights the globally low usage of the word "evolve" in the popular press. We suggest this low usage may affect public understanding and acceptance of evolutionary concepts.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26934595 PMCID: PMC4775048 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150396
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Number of Relevant Articles Examined for Each Newspaper.
| Newspaper | Number of Relevant Articles on Antibiotic Resistance |
|---|---|
| Chicago Sun Times (Illinois, United States) | 26 |
| Cleveland Plain Dealer (Ohio, United States) | 34 |
| Dallas Morning News (Texas, United States) | 45 |
| Denver Post (Colorado, United States) | 36 |
| Honolulu Star Advertiser (Hawaii, United States) | 2 |
| Houston Chronicle (Texas, United States) | 71 |
| Los Angeles Investor's Business Daily (California, United States) | 3 |
| Los Angeles Times (California, United States) | 186 |
| Miami Herald (Florida, United States) | 41 |
| Minneapolis Star Tribune (Minnesota, United States) | 18 |
| New York Daily News (New York, United States) | 7 |
| New York Post (New York, United States) | 2 |
| New York Times (New York, United States) | 122 |
| Newark Star Ledger (New Jersey, United States) | 59 |
| Newsday (New York, United States) | 1 |
| Philadelphia Inquirer (Pennsylvania, United States) | 51 |
| Riverside County Press Enterprise (California, United States) | 10 |
| Salt Lake City Deseret News (Utah, United States) | 68 |
| San Francisco Chronicle (California, United States) | 34 |
| St. Paul Pioneer Press (Minnesota, United States) | 53 |
| USA Today (Virginia, United States) | 78 |
| Wall Street Journal (New York, United States) | 96 |
| Daily Mail (United Kingdom) | 144 |
| The Guardian (United Kingdom) | 58 |
| The Globe and Mail (Canada) | 136 |
| Toronto Star (Canada) | 79 |
| The Hindustan Times (India) | 24 |
| The Times of India (India) | 86 |
| The Age (Australia) | 24 |
| The Australian (Australia) | 45 |
An article was considered relevant if there was a direct focus on and discussion of antibiotic resistance. Letters to the editor, articles with multiple disconnected topics unrelated to antibiotic resistance, articles that were less than 100 words, and repeated articles were excluded.
Fig 1Percentage of US Newspapers Using “Evolve.”
Parenthetical bar labels indicate: (number of relevant articles using “evolve” / number of relevant articles examined).
Fig 2Percentage of Newspapers Using “Evolve” by Country and by Year.
(a) Frequencies that the word “evolve” is used for the top two newspapers by circulation in each country, and (b) Frequencies that the word “evolve” is used each year for all relevant articles examined. Parenthetical data labels indicate: (number of relevant articles using “evolve” / number of relevant articles examined). Years without data points indicate that no relevant articles were examined from that year.
Fig 3Substitute Words for “Evolve.”
Frequencies that the word “evolve” or substitute words for “evolve” are used for all relevant newspapers examined. Parenthetical bar labels indicate: (number of relevant articles using the indicated word / number of relevant articles examined).