This linguistics article, which draws additionally on interdisciplinary insights, discusses whether and to what extent more empathy could facilitate and promote the exchange of knowledge between science and society. The existence of the Internet as a knowledge resource has made it necessary, especially in online communication, to renegotiate (scientific) expertise and roles such as ‘expert’ and ‘layperson.’ A discourse linguistics case study of a science blog shows that these negotiations quickly take on the character of an emotionally charged relationship between writer and respondent and are by no means limited to the level of fact or disinterested scholarly debate. The reason for this—so this article argues—is that reciprocal expectation...
The word empathy enters the English language in 1909, translated incompletely from German by a Briti...
Scientists’ communication outside academia—science communication—has been researched extensively in ...
Laypeople’s trust in science might be obstructed by their stereotypical views of researchers as high...
This linguistics article, which draws additionally on interdisciplinary insights, discusses whether ...
STS scholarship has long emphasised that science is emotional as well as cognitive and social. A 201...
Awe appears often in the communication of science. This emotion is commonly described as a universa...
This article investigates the communicative aspects of empathy. Pointing out that the predominant ne...
In this thesis I use online settings to explore how descriptive and emotional forms of meaning-makin...
Interest in human emotion no longer equates to unscientific speculation. 21st-century humanities sch...
In the field of science communication, there is currently a great deal of discussion on how individu...
Whether in the form of song lyrics, literature, poetry, art, or scholarly activity, over time and ac...
Emotion and scientific discourse are, by tradition, considered to be incompatible due to the subject...
Stories have long been discussed as a tool to make science accessible to the public. The potential o...
Emotion scientists often take an ambivalent stance concerning the role of language in a science of e...
Stories have long been discussed as a tool to make science accessible to the public. The potential o...
The word empathy enters the English language in 1909, translated incompletely from German by a Briti...
Scientists’ communication outside academia—science communication—has been researched extensively in ...
Laypeople’s trust in science might be obstructed by their stereotypical views of researchers as high...
This linguistics article, which draws additionally on interdisciplinary insights, discusses whether ...
STS scholarship has long emphasised that science is emotional as well as cognitive and social. A 201...
Awe appears often in the communication of science. This emotion is commonly described as a universa...
This article investigates the communicative aspects of empathy. Pointing out that the predominant ne...
In this thesis I use online settings to explore how descriptive and emotional forms of meaning-makin...
Interest in human emotion no longer equates to unscientific speculation. 21st-century humanities sch...
In the field of science communication, there is currently a great deal of discussion on how individu...
Whether in the form of song lyrics, literature, poetry, art, or scholarly activity, over time and ac...
Emotion and scientific discourse are, by tradition, considered to be incompatible due to the subject...
Stories have long been discussed as a tool to make science accessible to the public. The potential o...
Emotion scientists often take an ambivalent stance concerning the role of language in a science of e...
Stories have long been discussed as a tool to make science accessible to the public. The potential o...
The word empathy enters the English language in 1909, translated incompletely from German by a Briti...
Scientists’ communication outside academia—science communication—has been researched extensively in ...
Laypeople’s trust in science might be obstructed by their stereotypical views of researchers as high...