戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1  that produce blatantly false content ("fake news").
2  radiation on materials often reduce to "bad news".
3 us content, which is often described as fake news.
4 s from the emotional distress of hearing bad news.
5 stinct narratives: scientific and conspiracy news.
6 Facebook users interact with socially shared news.
7  professionals in delivering less optimistic news.
8 etween financial markets and finance-related news.
9 ancial markets and developments in financial news.
10 e tend to discount bad news but embrace good news.
11                         This is very welcome news.
12 eal cancer is increasing and that is welcome news.
13 e that developmental signals carry only good news.
14 cal distribution of stories appearing in the news.
15 ells is a popular topic that is often in the news.
16 actions with the physician who delivered the news.
17 he physician did while communicating the bad news.
18 d news tends to receive more weight than bad news.
19 y needed advertising dollars away from local news.
20 ng, older, and highly engaged with political news.
21 icting narratives: scientific and conspiracy news.
22 ly now, that a name for it has emerged: fake news.
23                                     The good news about anthrax is that several decisive discoveries
24 egarding the way in which physicians deliver news about their cancer diagnosis and management.
25 ding what is important to patients when told news about their cancer provides valuable information th
26 ceptive claims surround us, embedded in fake news, advertisements, political propaganda, and rumors.
27  industry using data from the Event Registry news aggregator-over 32M articles on selected topics pub
28               The Tree model identified age, NEWS, albumin, sodium, white cell count and urea as sign
29 has taken a prime role in disseminating fake news, alternate facts, and pseudoscience, but is often i
30  must compete for public attention with fake news, alternate facts, and pseudoscience.
31 ary, editorials about new research advances, news and an events calendar to present a broader view of
32 y adopt inappropriate ways of delivering bad news and coping with the emotional fall-out.
33 riculum embraces CST modules in breaking bad news and discussing unanticipated adverse events, discus
34 wn about how science is presented in various news and entertainment media forms; (ii) describe how in
35 research papers, impede the communication of news and events to scientific society members and journa
36 nts or surrogates to derive unwarranted good news and false encouragement to pursue treatment, even w
37 ccurate in this patient population than both NEWS and MEWS.
38  have a full set of index blood tests and/or NEWS and so were not included in our analysis.
39 nfluential spreaders of fake and traditional news and use causal modeling to uncover how fake news in
40                                              News and World Report rankings.
41  influential list published annually by U.S. News and World Report, assesses the quality of hospitals
42 25 US colleges and universities listed in US News and World Report.
43  Score (MEWS), National Early Warning Score (NEWS), and the electronic cardiac arrest risk triage (eC
44 itter, the impact it has in disseminating ID news, and its educational value.
45 rrent communication environment, exposure to news, and ongoing attempts to limit the effects of misin
46                        Although information, news, and opinions continuously circulate in the worldwi
47  among respondents who prefer watching local news, and there are no differences in media usage or con
48 financial markets and movements in financial news are intrinsically interlinked.
49 on for in-hospital mortality was highest for NEWS (area under the curve [AUC], 0.77; 95% confidence i
50 ccount for the tendency for audience-seeking news around the world to be predominantly negative.
51                                This research news article briefly reviews the key findings of these s
52                                This Research News article highlights the exciting materials design in
53                        Herein, this research news article presents the recent developments in the syn
54                                This research news article reviews the current state of this field by
55                             In this Research News article the surface activity of GO and how it can b
56                             In this Research News article we describe recent advances on structural c
57                             In this Research News article we highlight current activities towards the
58                             In this Research News article, we highlight some recent progress on solut
59                                   Of the 306 news articles about medication research identified,130 (
60 aled that harmful elements were prevalent in news articles about suicide shared on social media while
61 N, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We reviewed US news articles from newspaper and online sources about al
62 l topic models to transform large corpora of news articles into temporal topic trends.
63         Little is known about how frequently news articles report when medication research has receiv
64                                              News articles reporting on medication studies often fail
65 m pharmaceutical companies or how frequently news articles use generic vs brand medication names.
66 lternative explanation for the rise of "fake news" as a societal phenomenon.
67  [AUC 0.79 (95% CI: 0.78-0.81)], followed by NEWS [AUC 0.76 (95% CI: 0.75-0.78)], and MEWS [AUC 0.75
68 orporating good news into beliefs (the "good news-bad news effect"), an effect that may help explain
69 ion, thereby eliminating the engrained "good news/bad news effect." Our results provide an instance o
70            Towards the end of November 2018, news broke that the Chinese researcher He Jiankui had cr
71 iefs asymmetrically; we tend to discount bad news but embrace good news.
72 Neuroanatomical studies are rarely frontline news, but the citation rate of this paper underscores th
73                          The delivery of bad news by oncologists to their patients is a key moment in
74  We examined exposure to and sharing of fake news by registered voters on Twitter and found that enga
75 k concerning the impact of 'soft' and 'hard' news, (c) the observed temporal emergence of extremes in
76 searches, LexisNexis archival databases, and news clipping services) and USA Triathlon (USAT) records
77 ing immigration attitudes while they watched news clips, campaign ads, and public speeches related to
78 iour based on financial news on the Web, the News Cohesiveness Index (NCI), and we demonstrate that t
79 ologist encounter during the breaking of bad news, comprising essential aspects of the communication,
80 o interpret the word "treatable": 1) a "good news" concept, in which the word "treatable" conveys a p
81  majority of nonphysicians adopted the "good news" concept, whereas physicians almost exclusively ado
82                           Our dataset traces news consumption across different devices and unveils im
83 book by characterizing on a global scale the news consumption patterns of 376 million users over a ti
84 tlets and demographics associated with local news consumption, are not related to the likelihood of f
85 ividual-level variation in responsiveness to news content.
86  psychophysiological reactions to real video news content.
87 What accounts for the prevalence of negative news content?
88                Four scripted videos of a bad news conversation were created that differed only in the
89 re somewhat more likely to receive prominent news coverage (35% covered on front page vs 23%, P =.14)
90 ewborns by parents has increased due to wide news coverage and efforts by states to provide Safe Have
91 r television networks to obtain all relevant news coverage in the 2 weeks following each event.
92      Whose voices are most likely to receive news coverage in the US debate about climate change?
93     Our observations also suggest that, when news coverage is uniform, efficient modeling of temporal
94                        We sought to describe news coverage of abstracts, characterize the research, a
95                    They also examine whether news coverage of proposals to prevent persons with serio
96         Can "urban-centric" local television news coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic affect the behavi
97 echnical services are less likely to receive news coverage than are other press releases in my sample
98  identify to differences in local television news coverage-self-reported differences only exist among
99  experiences so different from their "local" news coverage?
100 ntent that users are exposed to by tailoring news diets toward the users' preferences.
101 devices and unveils important differences in news diets when multiplatform or desktop-only access is
102 hat intermediaries foster more varied online news diets.
103 tation and a steady increase of women in the news during the 20th century and the change of geographi
104 g good news into beliefs (the "good news-bad news effect"), an effect that may help explain seemingly
105 eby eliminating the engrained "good news/bad news effect." Our results provide an instance of how sel
106                                       On the news event test, the H group exhibited temporally limite
107 ographical Memory Interview (AMI) and with a news events test in six patients with damage limited pri
108 ants recalled answers to 160 questions about news events that had occurred during the past 30 years.
109 about the vanishing potential for incidental news exposure in digital media environments.
110 cross the political spectrum, most political news exposure still came from mainstream media outlets.
111  of social media and other intermediaries on news exposure.
112 acting via Facebook's algorithmically ranked News Feed and further studied users' choices to click th
113 ucing the amount of emotional content in the News Feed.
114 content from academic publishers and science news feeds, and then uses a taxonomic Named Entity Recog
115                        This is not only good news for asthma sufferers, suggesting new directions for
116                                       I have news for the older generation who regale us with tales o
117 ns is extremely remote, providing reassuring news for the public.
118                                          Bad news for thermoelectricians, but the climate crisis requ
119                              This is welcome news for those patients in whom such therapy is indicate
120              Stem cells are currently in the news for two reasons: the successful cultivation of huma
121 World Health Organization's Disease Outbreak News from 1996 to 2008.
122         As you will read, there is much good news from the front lines of cancer research.
123 ts crucial media (The New York Times and ABC News) from topics that are potentially harmful to him.
124 % and 70% for MEWS >/=5, and 67% and 66% for NEWS >/=8, respectively.
125 e impact that giving sad, bad, and difficult news has on doctors and patients, and assess whether int
126             The skills required to break bad news have been written about extensively and are taught
127 the climate crisis requires that we face bad news head on.
128 ved discernment between mainstream and false news headlines among both a nationally representative sa
129                                       Recent news headlines claimed that corpses thrown into Syrian s
130 ceived accuracy of both mainstream and false news headlines, but effects on the latter were significa
131 uccessful training workshops on breaking bad news in a large British district hospital.
132 and social media exposure to protest-related news (incidence rate ratio (IRR) = 1.28, 95% confidence
133 amework for all US states, we show that such news increases collective attention to the crisis right
134  and use causal modeling to uncover how fake news influenced the presidential election.
135 collections about what transpired during bad news interactions between physicians and themselves.
136 o discount bad news while incorporating good news into beliefs (the "good news-bad news effect"), an
137 mproved people's tendency to incorporate bad news into their beliefs by disrupting the function of th
138                                 Breaking bad news is a balancing act that requires oncologists to ada
139  may fear, discussing this kind of difficult news is almost always emotionally distressing.
140                           Whether a piece of news is good or bad is critical in determining whether i
141 ults indicate that cohesiveness in financial news is highly correlated with and driven by volatility
142                                  Some of the news is not good: new foodborne and swimming pool outbre
143 se to demonstrate that coexposure to diverse news is on the rise, and that ideological self-selection
144 a company's stock both on the day before the news is released, and on the same day as the news is rel
145 news is released, and on the same day as the news is released.
146  focus on studies that explore how political news is shaped to attract public attention and how citiz
147                                   The better news is that a mechanistic framework has emerged, wherei
148                                     The good news is that a wide range of options suggest a roadmap f
149                                     The good news is that sensory experiences, beginning early in lif
150                                     The good news is that the decades-old acid growth theory invoking
151                                     The good news is that the global research community could provide
152 Although this might seem confusing, the good news is that the newly recognized complexity fits better
153                                     The good news is that we are closer to finding one or more method
154                                     The good news is these findings open the door to a new strategy f
155 ed the discovery of X-rays, relating various news items about the use of X-rays and literature about
156     Finally, we had people read real science news items and found that the research was judged to be
157 preading traditional center and left leaning news largely influence the activity of Clinton supporter
158  increases the distress of recipients of bad news, may exert a lasting impact on their ability to ada
159 ess journals (Business Source Ultimate), and news media (Lexis Nexis) for articles about expenditures
160  counter overly positive messaging, found in news media and on the Internet, with optimism tempered b
161 es of information, including overly positive news media and the Internet.
162                                          The news media are an important source of information about
163                                          The news media are an important source of information about
164                                          The news media are often criticized for exaggerated coverage
165 prisingly, questionable results and alarmist news media articles have filled the void.
166          We demonstrate that exposure to the news media causes Americans to take public stands on spe
167 rious mental illness have received extensive news media coverage.
168                  Since the announcement, the news media have devoted a large portion of their coverag
169                  We studied coverage by U.S. news media of the benefits and risks of three medication
170 th authorities have published guidelines for news media reporting on suicide to help prevent contagio
171  law-enforcement-related deaths by compiling news media reports and provide an opportunity to assess
172 porting by the NVSS would exceed that by the news media sources, and that underreporting rates would
173  response to reports about an adverse event, news media stories about vaccines can change abruptly fr
174  34 about tamoxifen appeared in high-profile news media within 2 weeks of each event.
175 stry of Sudden Death in Athletes (which uses news media, Internet searches, LexisNexis archival datab
176 tings may receive prominent attention in the news media.
177 development in the scientific literature and news media.
178 on received considerable attention in the US news media: a National Institutes of Health (NIH) consen
179                                              News-media stories about medications may include inadequ
180 atching cases reported in a nongovernmental, news-media-based dataset produced by the newspaper The G
181  was poor in all site types but was worse in news/media reports and personal commentary (blog) sites
182 ing less compassionate when they deliver bad news might be a contributor to physicians' reluctance in
183 erior motives increasingly to circulate fake news, misinformation, and disinformation with the help o
184                                          CNN news: N-doped carbon nanoneedles (CNNs) are synthesized
185 ay 9 May 1991, the world awoke to front-page news of a breakthrough in biological research.
186 ocking, consequential events such as hearing news of a presidential assassination.
187 ith colleagues at all levels, delivering the news of an unexpected death, interdisciplinary challenge
188 he form of specialty journals to disseminate news of surgical research and technical innovations in a
189 en said regarding the influence of financial news on financial markets.
190                           The spread of fake news on social media became a public concern in the Unit
191 ese and other challenges, there is much good news on the front lines of cancer research.
192 e of collective behaviour based on financial news on the Web, the News Cohesiveness Index (NCI), and
193           The dynamics and influence of fake news on Twitter during the 2016 US presidential election
194                                  Exposure to news, opinion, and civic information increasingly occurs
195 P = .042] and surgeon providing good/hopeful news [OR, 1.62/log unit; 95% CI, 1.01 to 2.60/log unit;
196 Our approach distinguishes between different news outlet reporting styles: high reactivity points to
197 related to the likelihood of finding a local news outlet.
198 h digital platforms direct attention to some news outlets and not others.
199                                        Local news outlets have struggled to stay open in the more com
200  0.9% had expert recommendations, and online news outlets picked up eight articles.
201  to be the least reactive while conservative news outlets were the most reactive.
202                     The results suggest that news outlets with a liberal bias tended to be the least
203 piled from 6 financial databases, 4 industry news outlets, and publicly available press releases from
204  producing a sharp community structure among news outlets.
205 es on selected topics published by over 8000 news outlets.
206 m 2.2 million users, which contain a link to news outlets.
207 al activity while subjects listened to radio news played faster and faster until becoming unintelligi
208 nd examining their geolocation, we find that news providers are more geographically confined than use
209  also find that the preferences of users and news providers differ.
210 rticipants who responded to local television news publicizing, 49 did not appear for a scheduled inta
211 ypothesise that strong cohesion in financial news reflects movements in the financial markets.
212 eferences for how they would like to be told news regarding their cancer can be grouped into the foll
213                                  In a recent news release, DOE announced that photos taken of the was
214        Reference lists of relevant articles, news releases, and product information from manufacturer
215 ood tests and national early warning scores (NEWS) reported within +/-24 hours of admission to predic
216               Overall, our findings based on news reports are in close agreement with those derived f
217 entire WHO public record of Disease Outbreak News reports from 1996 to 2009 to characterize spatial-t
218       In retrospective assessments, internet news reports have been shown to capture early reports of
219  topic trends extracted from disease-related news reports successfully capture the dynamics of multip
220 lidate the systematic collection of Internet news reports to characterize epidemiological patterns of
221 se of real-time information from trustworthy news reports to provide timely estimates of key epidemio
222                                  Based on 58 news reports, we analyzed 79 EVD clusters (286 cases) ra
223  social media and web portals that aggregate news restrict the diversity of content that users are ex
224                            A study of online news revealed that identification of the donor is signif
225             Rankings based on the total U.S. News score and on a subjective reputation score.
226  collected 12.29 million responses to Google News searches within all US counties for a set of keywor
227 n be used in situations such as breaking bad news, setting treatment goals, advance care planning, wi
228 adherence to suicide-reporting guidelines on news shared on social media and to assess how adherence
229                          Using the data of a news sharing website, we construct clickstream networks
230 munication that physicians use in other "bad news" situations.
231 trustworthy than every hyperpartisan or fake news source across both studies when equally weighting r
232 ticipants who were not familiar with a given news source dramatically reduced the effectiveness of th
233  1% of individuals accounted for 80% of fake news source exposures, and 0.1% accounted for nearly 80%
234 to misleadingly selective data in a partisan news source.
235 creasingly popular mechanism for publishers, news sources and blogs to disseminate regularly updated
236 als rated familiarity with, and trust in, 60 news sources from three categories: (i) mainstream media
237 NCI using financial documents from large Web news sources on a daily basis from October 2011 to July
238                            A cluster of fake news sources shared overlapping audiences on the extreme
239 s, and 0.1% accounted for nearly 80% of fake news sources shared.
240 gorithms preferentially display content from news sources that users rate as trustworthy.
241  Twitter and found that engagement with fake news sources was extremely concentrated.
242  Individuals most likely to engage with fake news sources were conservative leaning, older, and highl
243 ough social channels rather than traditional news sources.
244 rustworthy than either hyperpartisan or fake news sources.
245 ters influences the dynamics of the top fake news spreaders.
246              The authors test the effects of news stories about mass shootings on public attitudes to
247                           The mean number of news stories about suicidal individuals published after
248 ruct clickstream networks in which nodes are news stories and edges represent the consecutive clicks
249 d that Li is related with the clicks (Ci) to news stories and the age (Ti) of stories.
250                                          The news stories described, respectively, a mass shooting by
251                                         Most news stories favored routine use of screening mammograph
252 her help us understand the rise and decay of news stories from a network perspective.
253      We used Lexis-Nexis to search for print news stories in the 10 highest-circulation US newspapers
254 ed to groups instructed to read one of three news stories or to a no-exposure control group.
255          We searched Lexis-Nexis to identify news stories printed in the 2 months following 5 scienti
256                               A total of 252 news stories reported on 147 research abstracts (average
257 ad members of the public choose real science news stories to read or watch and found that people were
258 ite, digg.com, devoted to thousands of novel news stories.
259  interviews supports the conclusion that the news supply is adequate for citizens' civic needs and th
260 k adjustment Tree model using blood test and NEWS taken within +/-24 hours of admission provides good
261 on influences learning rates in humans: good news tends to receive more weight than bad news.
262 n this trial in healthy women, which is good news that also needs to be communicated.
263 enging and has been heightened by the recent news that drug-resistant parasites are developing in som
264 ers, this causality is reversed for the fake news: the activity of Trump supporters influences the dy
265 rowing participation, disseminating data and news through a website and newsletter with increasing re
266  for showing the ability of local television news to affect behavior despite urban-rural differences,
267 while delivering either positive or negative news to camera, but were not instructed to deliberately
268                        Participants gave bad news to patients an average of 35 times per month.
269 ts of view of oncologists about breaking bad news to patients.
270 , which provided "tips" on how to spot false news to people in 14 countries.
271 es: HCAHPS (39.2%), STS-CABG (62.7%), and US News Top Hospital (85.2%).
272 mmonly: HCAHPS (23.7%), STS-CABG (36.7%), US News Top Hospitals (81.8%).Significant travel burden is
273 CAHPS (n = 4656), STS-CABG (n = 470), and US News Top Hospitals (n = 15).
274 blicly available data from the US Census, US News Top Hospitals, Society of Thoracic Surgeons composi
275                    Satisfaction with the bad news transaction was high.
276 rformed professional-agency English-to-Czech news translation in preserving text meaning (translation
277  the US online population consumes no online news, underlining the risk of increased information ineq
278  sodium, urea, white cell count and an index NEWS undertaken within +/-24 hours of admission).
279 nts, often based on analysis of desktop-only news use, suggest that this increased choice leads to au
280 uman subjects (12 females) listened to radio news uttered at different comprehensible rates, at a mos
281 erson National Accelerator Facility (Newport News, Va).
282 icle should have been marked as a Historical News & Views and the supertitle was incorrect.
283                                         This News & Views article should have been marked as a Histor
284                       In the version of this News & Views originally published, owing to production e
285 ithdrawing life support was discussed or bad news was delivered.
286 level consumption of conservative media (Fox News) was related to reduced physical distancing.
287 l sample and one field experiment on the BBC News website (total n = 5,780)-to examine whether commun
288  withdrawing life support or delivery of bad news were likely to occur.
289 MEWS), and the National Early Warning Score (NEWS) were compared for predicting death and ICU transfe
290 mans show a natural tendency to discount bad news while incorporating good news into beliefs (the "go
291 dmissions with a full set of blood tests and NEWS with an in-hospital mortality of 5.69%.
292 ely on more popular resources such as the US News & World Report annual publication of "America's Bes
293 edicare's Hospital Compare website, the U.S. News & World Report hospital rankings, and several state
294     Individually, however, only 23 of the US News & World Report hospitals achieved statistically bet
295                           As a group, the US News & World Report hospitals performed statistically be
296 valuated how well hospitals ranked on the US News & World Report list of top heart and heart surgery
297 tified 774 hospitals, including 41 of the US News & World Report top 50 heart and heart surgery hospi
298                           A number of the US News & World Report top hospitals fell short in regularl
299                                         U.S. News & World Report's annual rankings of the top 50 Amer
300 d on reputation score alone agreed with U.S. News & World Report's overall rankings 100% of the time

 
Page Top