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Peer-reviewed article

Surveying the Landscape of Numbers in U.S. News

January 1, 2022 | Media and Technology

The news arguably serves to inform the quantitative reasoning (QR) of news audiences. Before one can contemplate how well the news serves this function, we first need to determine how much QR typical news stories require from readers. This paper assesses the amount of quantitative content present in a wide array of media sources, and the types of QR required for audiences to make sense of the information presented. We build a corpus of 230 US news reports across four topic areas (health, science, economy, and politics) in February 2020. After classifying reports for QR required at both the conceptual and phrase levels, we find that the news stories in our sample can largely be classified along a single dimension: The amount of quantitative information they contain. There were two main types of quantitative clauses: those reporting on magnitude and those reporting on comparisons. While economy and health reporting required significantly more QR than science or politics reporting, we could not reliably differentiate the topic area based on story-level requirements for quantitative knowledge and clause-level quantitative content. Instead, we find three reliable clusters of stories based on the amounts and types of quantitative information in the news stories.

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  • John Voiklis
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    Knology
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    Knology
  • Elizabeth Attaway
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    Knology
  • Uduak G. Thomas
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    Knology
  • Shivani Ishwar
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    Knology
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    PBS NewsHour
  • Laura Santhanam
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    PBS NewsHour
  • Isabella Isaacs-Thomas
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    PBS NewsHour
  • Citation

    DOI : 10.5038/1936-4660.15.1.1406
    Publication Name: Numeracy
    Volume: 15
    Number: 1
    Page Number: Article 2

    Funders

    NSF
    Funding Program: Advancing Informal STEM Learning (AISL)
    Award Number: 1906802
    Resource Type: Research Products
    Discipline: Health and medicine | History/policy/law | Mathematics | Social science and psychology
    Audience: General Public | Museum/ISE Professionals
    Environment Type: Media and Technology | Broadcast Media | Websites, Mobile Apps, and Online Media

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