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Mind, Society and Behaviour... oh, and research!
Chris Perry blogs on how the World Bank's World Development Report 2015: Mind, Society, and Behavior has generated a great deal of excitement.
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The Ipsos Almanac 2014
The Ipsos Almanac is our review of life, society and business in Britain in 2014.
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2014 on course to have lowest ever combined voting shares for Conservative and Labour
New polling and analysis from Ipsos shows that after 11 months of the year, 2014 is on course to have the lowest combined voting share for the Conservative and Labour parties since we started regular polling in 1978.
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What can Twitter's reaction to the UK autumn statement tell us?
Steve Ginnis of Ipsos and Carl Miller of Demos write in the Guardian on our analysis of tweets during Chancellor George Osborne's autumn statement.
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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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Perceptions and Reality: Public attitudes to immigration in Germany and Britain
A report by Ipsos and Ipsos Germany compares public attitudes to immigration in Germany and Britain, showing them on very different paths.
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Can't change? Won't change? - The UK's housing issue
Some 60% or more of renters believe they will NEVER be able to afford to buy a home (they nearly all want to) writes Ben Page in the Municipal Journal.
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Hard Evidence: are Gen Y really Thatcher's children?
Generation Y, the youngest adult generation, have recently been called Dave’s No 1 Fans, but as he speaks to Tory conference, it seems this may not be entirely true. Bobby Duffy blogs for The Conversation.
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The slow death of political parties
New analysis by Ipsos suggests that by 2024 under a quarter of the voting public will feel connected to one particular political party, compared with over half the population in the 1990s.
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Neuroscience and marketing: what you need to know
Marketing Week's feature on neuroscience research includes an interview with Ipsos ASI, predicting that neuroscience research business will generate more than five times as much income this year as it did just two years ago.