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   XPost: alt.health   
   From: john.h.gohde@gmail.com   
      
   On Apr 29, 6:51 am, 23x wrote:   
   > Article:   
   > Trolls' Online Comments Skew Perception of Science   
   > Tanya Lewis, LiveScience Staff WriterDate: 19 February 2013 Time:   
   > 03:42 PM ET   
   > inShare   
   > 3   
   >   
   > The rude comments that appear in online science news stories can   
   > actively shape perceptions of the science.   
   > CREDIT: pzAxe | Shutterstock.com   
   > View full size image   
   > When people read a science news story online, chances are they'll find   
   > a string of comments below, and the comments aren't always civil. But   
   > these comments actually influence people's perception of the science,   
   > a new study suggests.   
   >   
   > The Internet provides a forum for discussing issues in a way that   
   > traditional media did not. "You used to use media by yourself. Now,   
   > it's almost like reading the newspaper in middle of a busy street with   
   > people yelling in your ear what you should and shouldn’t believe,"   
   > study co-author Dietram Scheufele, a communication scholar at the   
   > University of Wisconsin-Madison, told LiveScience.   
   >   
   > Read More:http://www.livescience.com/27239-online-comments-ske   
   -science-percept...   
      
      
      
   Hint: Communication takes work!   
      
   It takes more than dumping articles on these ngs.   
      
   YOU inept performance record to date has my condolences.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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