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Ipsos Update - May 2019
May’s edition presents Ipsos’ latest research and thinking on topics including climate change, our ‘vices’ – or morally questionable behaviours, driverless cars, shopper technology, creative advertising and trends in MENA.
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Climate change increases in importance to citizens around the world
Most are more willing to take personal actions to cut down waste, but are skeptical of policy actions.
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Connected Health: A roadmap to success
Connected Health is moving into the mainstream – how will this change the traditional structure of healthcare?
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Ipsos Update – March 2019
March’s Ipsos Update presents our latest research on the future of the global population, ageing and attitudes towards automation. We also introduce new white papers on mothers in Asia, Japanese society and brand-building advertising campaigns.
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How Automation Has Transformed the Way We Work
Worker Preparedness and Consumer Attitudes toward Automation Vary Widely Across Countries
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Ipsos Update – February 2019
February’s Ipsos Update presents our latest research on global predictions for 2019, personal data and childhood obesity. We also showcase new white papers on sustainable packaging, ‘lead users’ and China’s affluent consumers.
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Ignorance and Distrust Prevail about What Companies and Governments Do with Personal Data
Ipsos and the World Economic Forum are launching a research program to track and decode public understanding and acceptance of new technologies across the globe
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First Global Affluent Study Data Set
Survey Spotlights “Global Affluencers” – First to try. First to buy. The Powerful Global Target Group Driving Purchases and Early Adoption Across Category.
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Ipsos Update - January 2019
The first Ipsos Update of 2019 highlights recent reports on people’s (mis)perceptions of reality, global security and food. It also features new white papers on trust in media, human curation in an AI world and how technology is disrupting the customer experience.
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In media we trust? How our views of the media are changing
While chants of “fake news” ring out around the world, this paper asks is there really a crisis of trust in the media?