J
Joanna Sterling
Researcher at Princeton University
Publications - 21
Citations - 1085
Joanna Sterling is an academic researcher from Princeton University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Politics & Ideology. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 21 publications receiving 685 citations. Previous affiliations of Joanna Sterling include University of Queensland & New York University.
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How social media facilitates political protest: information, motivation and social networks
John T. Jost,Pablo Barberá,Richard Bonneau,Melanie Langer,Megan MacDuffee Metzger,Jonathan Nagler,Joanna Sterling,Joshua A. Tucker +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarize evidence from studies of protest movements in the United States, Spain, Turkey, and Ukraine demonstrating that social media platforms facilitate the exchange of information that is vital to the coordination of protest activities, such as news about transportation, turnout, police presence, violence, medical services, and legal support.
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Mediterranean diet and 3-year Alzheimer brain biomarker changes in middle-aged adults.
Valentina Berti,Michelle Walters,Joanna Sterling,Crystal Quinn,Michelle Logue,Randolph D. Andrews,Dawn C. Matthews,Ricardo S. Osorio,Alberto Pupi,Shankar Vallabhajosula,Richard S. Isaacson,Mony J. de Leon,Lisa Mosconi +12 more
TL;DR: Lower MeDi adherence was associated with progressive AD biomarker abnormalities in middle-aged adults, and data support further investigation of dietary interventions for protection against brain aging and AD.
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The Politics of Fear: Is There an Ideological Asymmetry in Existential Motivation?
TL;DR: This paper found that exposure to objectively threatening circumstances, such as terrorist attacks, was associated with a “conservative shift at individual (r =.07 −.14) and aggregate level of analysis.
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Neoliberal Ideology and the Justification of Inequality in Capitalist Societies: Why Social and Economic Dimensions of Ideology Are Intertwined
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Examining long-term trends in politics and culture through language of political leaders and cultural institutions
TL;DR: Analysis of large corpora of political texts suggests that certain aspects of the language style of Donald Trump and other recent leaders reflect long-evolving political trends, and implications of the changing nature of popular elections and the role of media are discussed.