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What do the World Cup and Scottish Referendum have in common?
Oliver Sweet, head of Ethnography, watched behavioural economics intervention in action during two of the major events of 2014.
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Sainsbury's Christmas ad 'not offensive' says facial coding study
Despite complaints to ASA, facial coding data from Ipsos ASI shows no sign that the Sainsbury's ad is provoking high levels of ‘disgust’.
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Diet and climate change
Chatham House commissioned Ipsos to carry out a survey in 12 countries to investigate attitudes to meat and dairy consumption in regards to climate change.
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What has the recession done to the British workplace?
As we climb out of one of the deepest recessions the country has seen, Jonathan Nicholls, head of Employee Research, has been looking at how the recession has changed the workplace.
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Britain's banks are starting to mend their reputations
Chris O'Brien looks at personal finance journalists' rising expectations for the retail banking sector.
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What are people eating? 10 Food Trends of 2014
Ipsos rounds up the 10 most important trends to impact food and consumer behaviour.
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Show me the E-money: Technology makes controlling money a pleasure not a chore
The rise of Bank of Me: Ipsos Marketing pan-European research for MasterCard reveals that, far from being a chore, people like monitoring their money - and women have power over the purse strings.
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Financial control demand creates prepaid opportunity to replace `jam-jarring'
A new pan European study conducted by Ipsos for MasterCard highlights the `Power of Prepaid' to meet consumers' increasing desire to monitor their own finances.
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Why interest rate rises won't push voters into Ed Miliband's arms
With the general election only seven months away, could the impact of coming interest rate hikes on mortgage holders be important electorally as well as economically? Ben Marshall, research director, writes in City AM.
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New research finds data trust deficit with lessons for policymakers
New research for the Royal Statistical Society carried out by Ipsos reveals that the media, internet companies, telecommunications companies and insurance companies all come at the bottom of a "trust in data" league table.