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Global attitudes to housing and house prices
The Ipsos Housing Monitor is a new 30-country study looking at how people perceive their own and their country’s housing situation, and the challenges facing both.
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Inflation rates may be falling, but people expect further price rises
In the seventh edition of the Ipsos Cost of Living Monitor we find, despite falling inflation rates, people are still feeling the pressure.
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Ipsos Health Service Report 2024: Mental Health seen as the biggest Health issue
Across 31 countries 44% rate the quality of the healthcare they receive as good, but access to treatment and not enough staff are seen as major systemic challenges
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Earth Day 2024: Changing Attitudes and Actions Towards Climate Change
After the tenth consecutive monthly heat record, apathy reins in the fight against climate change, especially among young men.
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Humanizing AI: Real human data to generate and predict real innovation success
Unlock the secrets of innovation success with AI by infusing models with real human data, as 'Humanizing AI' reveals the pivotal role authentic interactions play in predicting the next big thing.
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Mental health is now the number one health problem, ahead of cancer and coronavirus
48% across 31 countries say the quality of the healthcare in their country is good – but the picture is inconsistent.
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Ipsos Update – September 2023
Barbiecore, artificial intelligence, ESG… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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What Worries the World – July 2023
Inflation has now been the top global concern in our What Worries the World survey for the last 16 months.
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Launch of Vision Pro and Meta Quest 3, not an "Iphone moment" (yet)?
Just days after the global introduction of Apple’s Vision Pro and Meta Quest 3, Belgian consumer interest in purchasing and using VR/AR-devices remains lukewarm.
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Ipsos releases Global Trends 2023: A new world disorder
As 2023 opens, we’re entering a new world disorder filled with crises on multiple fronts. The largest Global Trends survey ever, from leading insights firm Ipsos, shows that, globally, 74% agree that their government and public services will do too little to help people in the years ahead.