Search
-
How to fill gaps in teen mental health and social media research
Growing up has never been easy — but the digital age makes it more complicated. Barb Solish, national director in the Office of Innovation at NAMI, thinks that when it comes to teen mental health, research is needed to get the full picture.
-
Most Americans say Congress should highly prioritize funding mental health programs
Vast majority agree mental health is just as important as physical health
-
Most Americans would be happy to receive investments as holiday gifts
A new Yahoo Finance/Ipsos survey finds that Americans want investments as holiday gifts as a way to save for the future and build wealth
-
November 2023: Consumer confidence declines sharply in the Middle East and Africa
Sentiment is down significantly in both Israel and South Africa
-
Global citizens achieve near consensus: The world is becoming more dangerous
Ipsos survey for Halifax International Security Forum finds 70% of people, on average, across 30 countries expect in the next 25 years we could see another world conflict involving superpowers similar to World Wars I & II
-
Attack of the drones: six in ten perceive threat from AI-based defense systems
Yet, only 43% of respondents are confident in their government’s ability to respond to such a threat.
-
Canada, Germany most likely to be viewed as positive leaders on world stage
Ipsos survey for Halifax International Security Forum finds Iran, Pakistan and Russia are considered the least likely to have a positive impact on world affairs over the next decade
-
There’s strong bipartisan support for Biden’s executive order on AI
More than 70% of Democrats and Republicans support developing standards to test that AI systems are safe, according to new polling from the Ipsos Consumer Tracker
-
Republican debate watchers see Haley as the best performer, Ramaswamy as the worst
The 538/Washington Post/Ipsos post-debate poll also finds that only about a quarter of likely Republican primary voters tuned into the debate
-
Registered voters are feeling pessimistic about the state of the U.S economy
A new Yahoo Finance/Ipsos survey finds that over one in four voters blame the Biden administration policies for increasing inflation rates