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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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Corporate Reputation: The key questions answered
How to unlock the value of reputation for businesses.
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The Future of ageing
Global study finds high levels of concern about ageing and paints a negative picture for later life.
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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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UN Women Reports: Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq
Ipsos and UN Women report on Gender and Displacement caused by the Syria crisis.
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Global Consumer Confidence Is Declining
Turkey, France, India, China Show Largest Drops; Brazil, Saudi Arabia Largest Increases. More Countries See Decreases than Gains in Jobs, Expectations and Investment Indices.
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Global Consumer Confidence Is Declining
Turkey, France, India, China Show Largest Drops; Brazil, Saudi Arabia Largest Increases. More Countries See Decreases than Gains in Jobs, Expectations and Investment Indices.
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Our misperceptions about crime and violence, sex, climate change, the economy and other key issues
Ipsos’ latest Perils of Perception study shows which key facts the online public across 37 countries get right about their society – and which they get wrong. Now in its fifth year, the survey aims to highlight how we’re wired to think in certain ways and how our environment influences our (mis)perceptions.
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Our misperceptions about crime and violence, sex, climate change, the economy and other key issues
Ipsos’ latest Perils of Perception study shows which key facts the online public across 37 countries get right about their society – and which they get wrong. Now in its fifth year, the survey aims to highlight how we’re wired to think in certain ways and how our environment influences our (mis)perceptions.
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YouthView: Understanding risk behaviours for meningitis among young people
While meningococcal meningitis is relatively uncommon, it is unpredictable, may progress very rapidly and can lead to death in as little as 24 hours of first symptoms.<sup>1,2</sup>
According to one study, the bacteria that can cause the disease are carried asymptomatically in the nasopharynx of up to almost one in four (24%) 19-year-olds; although for most it will not cause the disease.<sup>3</sup>