Asheley Landrum
@asheley.bsky.social
3.2K followers 310 following 69 posts
Assoc Professor of Media Psychology & Science Communication @ Walter Cronkite School @ Arizona State University #scicomm #mediaLiteracy #mediapsych #trust www.asheleylandrum.com
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asheley.bsky.social
“Conspiracy theories…can be understood as the political equivalent of dark-matter theories. They emerge in situations where some movement or action seems unlikely or bizarre unless you can posit some unseen element in the story, some hidden force exerting influence.”

www.nytimes.com/2025/08/02/o...
Opinion | Conspiracies Are Real. The Theories Can Be Traps.
www.nytimes.com
asheley.bsky.social
Vaccines: because “community immunity” sounds way cuter than “preventable outbreak.”

Vaccines aren’t just personal protection—they’re community care.

They stop preventable diseases, protect the vulnerable, and keep our healthcare system from getting overwhelmed.

Immunity is a team sport.
asheley.bsky.social
I used to love using em-dashes. Now, they are seen as a signature of AI-generated text. So, I’m embarrassed to use them. The end.
asheley.bsky.social
Hot takes belong on social media, not in scientific journals.
Science thrives on rigor, nuance, and evidence—not speed, speculation, or snark. #scicomm
tlinksvayer.bsky.social
my "hot take": carefully thought out and carefully written perspectives that "create new discussions, inspire future research, and maybe stir things up a bit" ...that's all great and I'm definitely looking forward to these new articles. But actual hot takes don't belong in a leading journal.
definition of "hot take": "...strong opinions that have not been carefully thought about..."
asheley.bsky.social
In 2017, I was unbelievably lucky to be one of the first science of science communication postdocs at @appc.upenn.edu . Our main project covered #popefrancis and #climatechange. I was recently invited to speak about this work with @npr.org to honor Pope Francis www.npr.org/2025/04/21/n...
Pope Francis focused on climate change as the planet continued to get hotter
Pope Francis called on the world and 1.4 billion Catholics to confront climate change. He brought attention to the issue but it's not clear he changed many minds.
www.npr.org
asheley.bsky.social
Fun at ASU+GSV with Mi-Ai Parrish!
Reposted by Asheley Landrum
carlbergstrom.com
I've already had two federal grants terminated and face a 33% pay cut due to future terminations. It's painful, but not as painful as the conversations I'm having every day with brilliant trainees in graduate school and postdoctoral positions who see little future for themselves in US science.
prasad.bsky.social
www.nytimes.com/2025/04/03/o...

Really important piece to share widely. Too many Americans don’t know how severe a threat this Administration poses to our scientific infrastructure, global leadership, and health security
Opinion | The Uncertain Fate of the Young American Scientist (Gift Article)
Young researchers are choosing between staying in science and staying in the United States.
www.nytimes.com
Reposted by Asheley Landrum
katestarbird.bsky.social
Scientists and journalists need to figure out right quick how to explain to the average person how a massive change in research indirects will impact the medical care they and their children get (eg at the local children’s hospital), the education their children will get, the price of tuition, etc.
asheley.bsky.social
“People largely learn of what the government is doing through the media — be it mainstream media or social media. If you overwhelm the media — if you give it too many places it needs to look, all at once, if you keep it moving from one thing to the next — no coherent opposition can emerge.”
kakape.bsky.social
“Trump is acting like a king because he is too weak to govern like a president. He is trying to substitute perception for reality. He is hoping that perception then becomes reality. That can only happen if we believe him.”
This by Ezra Klein struck me as a really important perspective.
Opinion | Don’t Believe Him (Gift Article)
Look closely at the first two weeks of Donald Trump’s second term and you’ll see something very different than what he wants you to see.
www.nytimes.com
asheley.bsky.social
Our building had an emotional support donkey visit. How was your week?
asheley.bsky.social
Does no one check these things? Could it be the case that the doi was mistyped and the wrong article was pulled by an editorial assistant?
asheley.bsky.social
That reference #9 is our paper, which clearly does not talk about this at all… i mean, it couldn’t even be confused with a paper that did…
asheley.bsky.social
In “Engineered hypoxia-responsive albumin nanoparticles mediating mitophagy regulation for cancer therapy” the authors say:
asheley.bsky.social
So… an article we published on science curiosity and political information processing was inappropriately cited in a @naturecomms.bsky.social article 👇🧵
asheley.bsky.social
As the pandemic collided with a US presidential election, I felt like I was watching a slow-motion car crash. COVID-19 vaccine attitudes polarized (as we expected)—and then that polarization spread to childhood vaccinations. The fallout is still unfolding. #scicomm #science&politics
beyerstein.bsky.social
This chart showing changes in the measles vaccination rates of the states from today’s NYT is bleak.