Journal of Science Communication, Vol. 24, Issue 02, Science Communication in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (Science Communication & AI), 2025
Articles
1. Negotiating AI(s) futures: competing imaginaries of AI by stakeholders in the US, China, and Germany. --Vanessa Richter, Christian Katzenbach and Jing Zeng
2. “Away from this duty of chronicler and towards the unicorn”: How German science journalists assess their future with (generative) Artificial Intelligence. --Lars Guenther, Jessica Kunert and Bernhard Goodwin
3. The new normal: The increasing adoption of generative AI in university communication. --Justus Henke
4. Exploring temporal and cross-national patterns: The use of generative AI in science-related information retrieval across seven countries. --Esther Greussing, Lars Guenther, Ayelet Baram-Tsabari, Shakked Dabran-Zivan, Evelyn Jonas, Inbal Klein-Avraham, Monika Taddicken, Torben Agergaard, Becca Beets, Dominique Brossard, Anwesha Chakraborty, Antoinette Fage-Butler, Chun-Ju Huang, Siddharth Kankaria, Yin-Yueh Lo, Lindsey Middleton, Kristian H. Nielsen, Michelle Riedlinger and Hyunjin Song
5. “ChatGPT, is the influenza vaccination useful?” Comparing perceived argument strength and correctness of pro-vaccination-arguments from AI and medical experts. --Selina A. Beckmann, Elena Link and Marko Bachl
6. More than humanoid robots and cyborgs? How German print media visualize articles on artificial intelligence. --Melanie Leidecker-Sandmann, Tabea Lüders, Carolin Moser, Vincent Robert Boger and Markus Lehmkuhl
7. Contesting dominant AI narratives on an industry-shaped ground: public discourse and actors around AI in the french press and social media (2012-2022). --Panos Tsimpoukis
8. ChatGPT’s Potential for Quantitative Content Analysis: Categorizing Actors in German News Articles. --Clarissa Hohenwalde, Melanie Leidecker-Sandmann, Nikolai Promies and Markus Lehmkuhl
9. Behind the Screens: How Algorithmic Imaginaries Shape Science Content on Social Media. --Clarissa Elisa Walter and Sascha Friesike
10. Balancing realism and trust: AI avatars In science communication. --Jasmin Baake, Josephine Schmitt and Julia Metag
Essays
11. All Eyez on AI: A Roadmap for Science Communication Research in the Age of Artificial Intelligence. --Sabrina Heike Kessler, Daniela Mahl, Mike S. Schäfer and Sophia C. Volk
1. Negotiating AI(s) futures: competing imaginaries of AI by stakeholders in the US, China, and Germany. --Vanessa Richter, Christian Katzenbach and Jing Zeng
2. “Away from this duty of chronicler and towards the unicorn”: How German science journalists assess their future with (generative) Artificial Intelligence. --Lars Guenther, Jessica Kunert and Bernhard Goodwin
3. The new normal: The increasing adoption of generative AI in university communication. --Justus Henke
4. Exploring temporal and cross-national patterns: The use of generative AI in science-related information retrieval across seven countries. --Esther Greussing, Lars Guenther, Ayelet Baram-Tsabari, Shakked Dabran-Zivan, Evelyn Jonas, Inbal Klein-Avraham, Monika Taddicken, Torben Agergaard, Becca Beets, Dominique Brossard, Anwesha Chakraborty, Antoinette Fage-Butler, Chun-Ju Huang, Siddharth Kankaria, Yin-Yueh Lo, Lindsey Middleton, Kristian H. Nielsen, Michelle Riedlinger and Hyunjin Song
5. “ChatGPT, is the influenza vaccination useful?” Comparing perceived argument strength and correctness of pro-vaccination-arguments from AI and medical experts. --Selina A. Beckmann, Elena Link and Marko Bachl
6. More than humanoid robots and cyborgs? How German print media visualize articles on artificial intelligence. --Melanie Leidecker-Sandmann, Tabea Lüders, Carolin Moser, Vincent Robert Boger and Markus Lehmkuhl
7. Contesting dominant AI narratives on an industry-shaped ground: public discourse and actors around AI in the french press and social media (2012-2022). --Panos Tsimpoukis
8. ChatGPT’s Potential for Quantitative Content Analysis: Categorizing Actors in German News Articles. --Clarissa Hohenwalde, Melanie Leidecker-Sandmann, Nikolai Promies and Markus Lehmkuhl
9. Behind the Screens: How Algorithmic Imaginaries Shape Science Content on Social Media. --Clarissa Elisa Walter and Sascha Friesike
10. Balancing realism and trust: AI avatars In science communication. --Jasmin Baake, Josephine Schmitt and Julia Metag
Essays
11. All Eyez on AI: A Roadmap for Science Communication Research in the Age of Artificial Intelligence. --Sabrina Heike Kessler, Daniela Mahl, Mike S. Schäfer and Sophia C. Volk
Guenther, Lars - Personal Name
Baake, Jasmin - Personal Name
Walter, Clarissa Elisa - Personal Name
Hohenwalde, Clarissa - Personal Name
Tsimpoukis, Panos - Personal Name
Leidecker-Sandmann, Melanie - Personal Name
Beckmann, Selina A. - Personal Name
Greussing, Esther - Personal Name
Richter, Vanessa - Personal Name
Henke, Justus - Personal Name
Kessler, Sabrina Heike - Personal Name
Baake, Jasmin - Personal Name
Walter, Clarissa Elisa - Personal Name
Hohenwalde, Clarissa - Personal Name
Tsimpoukis, Panos - Personal Name
Leidecker-Sandmann, Melanie - Personal Name
Beckmann, Selina A. - Personal Name
Greussing, Esther - Personal Name
Richter, Vanessa - Personal Name
Henke, Justus - Personal Name
Kessler, Sabrina Heike - Personal Name
Vol. 24, Issue 02, Science Communication in the Ag
1824-2049
e-Journal PIK
Inggris
SISSA Medialab
2025
Italy
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