Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Communication" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Exosome Innovations in Ophthalmology and Sjögren s Syndrome Wu KY; Dave A; Nirwal GK; Giunta M; Nguyen VDH; Tran SD; 40360847
CONCORDIA
2 A synthetic model of bioinspired liposomes to study cancer-cell derived extracellular vesicles and their uptake by recipient cells López RR; Ben El Khyat CZ; Chen Y; Tsering T; Dickinson K; Bustamante P; Erzingatzian A; Bartolomucci A; Ferrier ST; Douanne N; Mounier C; Stiharu I; Nerguizian V; Burnier JV; 40069225
ENCS
3 "How do we do that?" An analysis of TikToks by lesbians over age 30 representing sexual identity, lived experience over time, and solidarity Jamet-Lange H; Duguay S; 38907626
CONCORDIA
4 Assessing pragmatics in early childhood with the Language Use Inventory across seven languages Pesco D; O' Neill DK; 37408974
EDUCATION
5 How to present work productivity loss results from clinical trials for patients and caregivers? A mixed methods approach L' Heureux J; McTaggart-Cowan H; Johns G; Chen L; Steiner T; Tocher P; Sun H; Zhang W; 37276772
JMSB
6 The association between information and communication technologies, loneliness and social connectedness: A scoping review Petersen B; Khalili-Mahani N; Murphy C; Sawchuk K; Phillips N; Li KZH; Hebblethwaite S; 37034933
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Double-Bind of Recruitment of Older Adults Into Studies of Successful Aging via Assistive Information and Communication Technologies: Mapping Review Khalili-Mahani N; Sawchuk K; 36563033
CONCORDIA
8 Assessing Physician's Motivational Communication Skills: 5-Step Mixed Methods Development Study of the Motivational Communication Competency Assessment Test Gosselin Boucher V; Bacon S; Voisard B; Dragomir AI; Gemme C; Larue F; Labbé S; Szczepanik G; Corace K; Campbell T; Vallis M; Garber G; Rouleau C; Diodati JG; Rabi D; Sultan S; Lavoie K; 35749167
HKAP
9 Persuasive Features of Scientific Explanations: Explanatory Schemata of Physical and Psychosocial Phenomena Jordan Richard Schoenherr 34552522
PSYCHOLOGY
10 COVID-19 Experiences and Social Distancing: Insights From the Theory of Planned Behavior Frounfelker RL; Santavicca T; Li ZY; Miconi D; Venkatesh V; Rousseau C; 34074154
CONCORDIA
11 Socio-demographic, social, cognitive, and emotional correlates of adherence to physical distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic: a cross-sectional study. Gouin JP, MacNeil S, Switzer A, Carrese-Chacra E, Durif F, Knäuper B 33464556
CONCORDIA
12 Pantomime (Not Silent Gesture) in Multimodal Communication: Evidence From Children's Narratives. Marentette P, Furman R, Suvanto ME, Nicoladis E 33329222
PSYCHOLOGY
13 What Media Helps, What Media Hurts: A Mixed Methods Survey Study of Coping with COVID-19 Using the Media Repertoire Framework and the Appraisal Theory of Stress Pahayahay A; Khalili-Mahani N; 32701459
PERFORM
14 The Value in Science-Art Partnerships for Science Education and Science Communication. Zaelzer C 32616625
CONCORDIA
15 High-risk environments promote chemical disturbance signalling among socially familiar Trinidadian guppies. Crane AL, Feyten LEA, Ramnarine IW, Brown GE 32296954
BIOLOGY
16 An international Delphi consensus study to define motivational communication in the context of developing a training program for physicians. Dragomir AI, Boucher VG, Bacon SL, Gemme C, Szczepanik G, Corace K, Campbell TS, Vallis MT, Garber G, Rouleau C, Rabi D, Diodati JG, Ghali W, Lavoie KL 32145022
HKAP
17 Exploring the use of smartphones and tablets among people with visual impairments: Are mainstream devices replacing the use of traditional visual aids? Martiniello N, Eisenbarth W, Lehane C, Johnson A, Wittich W 31697612
PSYCHOLOGY
18 Some Metabolites Act as Second Messengers in Yeast Chronological Aging. Mohammad K, Dakik P, Medkour Y, McAuley M, Mitrofanova D, Titorenko VI 29543708
BIOLOGY
19 To Each Stress Its Own Screen: A Cross-Sectional Survey of the Patterns of Stress and Various Screen Uses in Relation to Self-Admitted Screen Addiction Khalili-Mahani N; Smyrnova A; Kakinami L; 30938685
PERFORM

 

Title:The Value in Science-Art Partnerships for Science Education and Science Communication.
Authors:Zaelzer C
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32616625?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1523/ENEURO.0238-20.2020
Publication:eNeuro
Keywords:collaborationsemotionalityfine artsgraphic designscience communicationscience education
PMID:32616625 Category:eNeuro Date Added:2020-07-04
Dept Affiliation: CONCORDIA
1 Centre for Research in Neuroscience, Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Montreal H3G 1A4, Quebec, Canada cristian.zaelzer@gmail.com.
2 Department of Design and Computation Arts, Faculty of Fine Arts, Concordia University, Montreal H3G 1M8, Quebec, Canada.
3 The Convergence Initiative, Longueuil J4G 2S1, Quebec, Canada.

Description:

The Value in Science-Art Partnerships for Science Education and Science Communication.

eNeuro. 2020 Jul 02;:

Authors: Zaelzer C

Abstract

Just a fraction of the scientific knowledge produced in laboratories reaches a lay audience. Most of our communication with the public gets lost in translation because of the difficulties that science communication poses to scientists. Among other obstacles, differential exposure to scientific and critical thinking, discrepancies with social narratives, and communication training based in the deficit model add on top of a practice established on avoiding emotionality. In this context, effective communication requires the use of emotions, which are crucial to establishing trust. This commentary provides a rationale for collaboration with graphic design and fine arts to use emotions in science communication and education. It starts by proposing the two-way engagement model as a replacement for the deficit model Next, it offers a neuroscientific basis for the use of emotions in establishing trust. Finally, it finishes profiling the Convergence Initiative's efforts to establish bridges across disciplines and communicating science with the public through art.Significance statement Collaborations between neuroscience, graphic design, and fine arts can help scientists to make their findings accessible to the general public through emotionality.

PMID: 32616625 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]





BookR developed by Sriram Narayanan
for the Concordia University School of Health
Copyright © 2011-2026
Cookie settings
Concordia University