Dein Suchergebnis zum Thema: emotion

Meintest du emotions?

The 2021 Ig Nobel Prize in Chemistry for scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry and University of Mainz

https://www.mpg.de/17470205/ig-nobel-prize-2021-cinema-air

The Ig Nobel Prizes honour scientific achievements that “should first make people laugh and then make them think”. The spoof prizes, first awarded by the US journal Annals of Improbable Research in 1991, have long since acquired cult status among scientists. This year’s chemistry award recognizes a study that proves the connection between the air in cinemas and different age ratings. The study was carried out in cooperation between the Max Planck the connection between the air in cinemas and the age rating. The study was carried out in cooperation between the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry and the University of Mainz.
“Whether we are scared or laughing, our emotions are in the air”, says Williams.

MPI for Chemistry

https://www.mpg.de/153030/chemistry

Researching how ozone or organic substances produced by plants affect the climate. Studying the role played by aerosols, tiny airborne particles, in the formation of clouds and rainfall.
years, for example, another new topic has awoken his curiosity – the trace that our emotions

Journalism: Online headlines shift from concise to click-worthy

https://www.mpg.de/24742557/0519-bild-journalism-online-headlines-shift-from-concise-to-click-worthy-149835-x?c=12641463

Over the past 20 years, online news headlines have become longer, more negative, and increasingly focused on click-through rates—regardless of journalistic quality. This is the conclusion reached by researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, who analyzed around 40 million headlines from English-language news outlets across the last two decades. Their study has been published in Humanities and Social Sciences Communications.
dynamic and emotional, often narrative in structure, and appeal more strongly to the emotions

Journalism: Online headlines shift from concise to click-worthy

https://www.mpg.de/24742557/0519-bild-journalism-online-headlines-shift-from-concise-to-click-worthy-149835-x

Over the past 20 years, online news headlines have become longer, more negative, and increasingly focused on click-through rates—regardless of journalistic quality. This is the conclusion reached by researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, who analyzed around 40 million headlines from English-language news outlets across the last two decades. Their study has been published in Humanities and Social Sciences Communications.
dynamic and emotional, often narrative in structure, and appeal more strongly to the emotions