This document provides a summary of the October 2017 edition of the Ipsos Update, which highlights recent research and insights from Ipsos teams around the world. The update includes summaries of reports on topics such as Australian perceptions of artificial intelligence, global views on immigration and refugees, Chinese international travel trends, British public attitudes on generational living standards, improved perceptions of women in South Africa, characteristics of a "real American", and passive measurement techniques. Contact information is provided to access full reports or future editions of the Ipsos Update.
International women's day global advisor 2021Ipsos France
A l’occasion de la Journée internationale des Droits des femmes, Ipsos dévoile les résultats de sa nouvelle étude Global Advisor, réalisée en France et dans 28 pays à travers le monde. La pandémie a eu un impact social, sanitaire et économique aussi inattendu qu’inégal sur la vie des Françaises et des Français. Peu optimistes sur la progression de l’égalité femme/homme au terme de cette crise, plus d’un Français sur dix (11%) pense même que celle-ci va encore reculer. Alors que l’égalité salariale reste une priorité sur laquelle agir pour un Français sur deux (51%), les métiers dits « essentiels » pendant la crise restent porteurs d’inégalités, et sont quasi-exclusivement associés par les Français à des métiers féminins et jugés sous-payés.
As the impact of Women’s Marches is discussed around the world, a new global Ipsos survey across 23 countries finds that most men and women do not think that their governments are doing enough to promote equal opportunities for women. There are wide disparities between countries, but almost always men are more positive about gender inequality than women.
Ipsos asked the online population in 23 countries whether women have equal opportunities to men in their country and the data suggests that less than half of women surveyed (45%) think they have equal opportunities to men, while six in ten (60%) men think they do. In Great Britain we are above the global average, with 67% of men and 51% of women agreeing that women have equality with men.
En partenariat avec le Policy Institute du Kings College de Londres, Ipsos a voulu identifier quelles inégalités étaient jugées les plus insupportables à l’échelle mondiale. Réalisée dans vingt-huit pays du 23 Décembre 2020 au 8 Janvier 2021, l’enquête montre que pour 60% des citoyens du monde, les écarts de richesse représente la forme la plus grave d'inégalité dans leur pays.
International women's day global advisor 2021Ipsos France
A l’occasion de la Journée internationale des Droits des femmes, Ipsos dévoile les résultats de sa nouvelle étude Global Advisor, réalisée en France et dans 28 pays à travers le monde. La pandémie a eu un impact social, sanitaire et économique aussi inattendu qu’inégal sur la vie des Françaises et des Français. Peu optimistes sur la progression de l’égalité femme/homme au terme de cette crise, plus d’un Français sur dix (11%) pense même que celle-ci va encore reculer. Alors que l’égalité salariale reste une priorité sur laquelle agir pour un Français sur deux (51%), les métiers dits « essentiels » pendant la crise restent porteurs d’inégalités, et sont quasi-exclusivement associés par les Français à des métiers féminins et jugés sous-payés.
As the impact of Women’s Marches is discussed around the world, a new global Ipsos survey across 23 countries finds that most men and women do not think that their governments are doing enough to promote equal opportunities for women. There are wide disparities between countries, but almost always men are more positive about gender inequality than women.
Ipsos asked the online population in 23 countries whether women have equal opportunities to men in their country and the data suggests that less than half of women surveyed (45%) think they have equal opportunities to men, while six in ten (60%) men think they do. In Great Britain we are above the global average, with 67% of men and 51% of women agreeing that women have equality with men.
En partenariat avec le Policy Institute du Kings College de Londres, Ipsos a voulu identifier quelles inégalités étaient jugées les plus insupportables à l’échelle mondiale. Réalisée dans vingt-huit pays du 23 Décembre 2020 au 8 Janvier 2021, l’enquête montre que pour 60% des citoyens du monde, les écarts de richesse représente la forme la plus grave d'inégalité dans leur pays.
On 31 January 2017, Ipsos held a major debate where we dissected the momentous political events of 2016 and looked forward to key elections in 2017. Our high profile pollsters from around the world examined political discontent and uncertainty, the key forces that are driving it and where in the world it is most prevalent and why. The panel included experts on the political context and public opinion in Britain, France, Italy, the US, Canada and South Africa, providing a wide range of perspectives on the key political challenges of our time.
Only one in three (34%) Global Citizens express confidence that waste water in their country does not pose a threat to their clean water supply.
Looking ahead one in two (48%) are worried that residential and industrial growth in their country over the next 5 to 10 years will put their clean water supply at risk.
The Perils of Perception in 2015: Ipsos MORIIpsos UK
Ipsos MORI have compared perceptions of the likes of immigration levels, access to the Internet, the proportion of a country's wealth owned by the wealthiest 1%, obesity levels, religious affiliation, women in politics and in general employment, average wage levels and rural populations with the actual figures across thirty-three countries. How does your country fare?
How would you have fared with our questions? Take the quiz: https://www.ipsos-mori.com//perilsofperception
Welcome to our latest Global Trends report. While we live in a world of uncertainty, some trends ARE certain – we have covered these in our Megatrends section. Beyond known technology, demographic and environmental changes, we have found eight global master trends looking across our 18,000 interviews in 23 major countries.
In the West, we see the self-explanatory Crisis of the Elites and Generation Strains – the growing gulf between the young and older generations in terms of opportunity.
Everywhere we can see the Battle for Attention. With only so many hours in a day, consumers face being bombarded across more and more channels and are reacting by blocking and switching off. The Search for Simplicity and Control is in part a reaction to feeling overwhelmed, but is a global phenomenon – how business and public services provide this seems as big a challenge as ever. Another area in which we want to take control is in regard to our own health – a theme we explore in A Healthier World.
A decline in growth in living standards in the West, and pessimism about the future are now triggering two related trends: Uncertainty is the New Normal and the Rise and Rise of Tradition.
Much of this depends on where you are sitting as you read this. The Optimism Divide shows how living in Shanghai, Mumbai or Jakarta will give you a completely different perspective than if you are reading this in London, Chicago or Rome. This is an important corrective for international businesses – while the world is more connected than ever, it is not the same everywhere, and consumers remain dramatically different in their outlook.
The underlying sense is of increasing fragmentation across many spheres of life. Differences are growing, complexity increasing, positions embedding.
What this latest in-depth global study should remind us is that despite increasing longevity, rising incomes in emerging markets, more connectivity, computing power and storage than we could ever have imagined, the human condition is one of anxiety and striving for more – at least if you read the media. Understanding the manifestations of that seems ever more vital for politicians and business.
In this report, we outline an overall structure for organisations to use to frame their analysis about key trends in consumer and citizen opinion globally. You can find the full set of charts, data and more at https://www.ipsosglobaltrends.com
We’re delighted to share with you the findings from our Global Trends survey - the largest study of its kind, looking at the attitudes and behaviours of consumers and citizens in 20 key countries around the world. We reveal the complex, and sometimes contradictory, findings covering everything from marriage to migration, from ambition to advertising and from society to social media. Visit http://www.ipsosglobaltrends.com for more.
The Perils of Perception in 2016: Ipsos MORIIpsos UK
Ipsos MORI have compared perceptions of the likes of portion of Muslim population, perceptions of happiness, homosexuality, sex before marriage, abortion, wealth, health spending, current and future population and whether Donald Trump would become US President with the actual figures across forty countries.
How do people in your country fare? How would you have fared with our questions? Take the quiz for your contry: https://perils.ipsos.com
New data from Ipsos Global @dvisor shows that many across 23 countries around the world think that their society is broken, while feeling a lack of confidence in establishment institutions - especially political parties, governments and the media.
A majority of people in 25 countries around the world think things in their country are off on the wrong track, according to this new global poll from Ipsos.
Hearts and Minds: Misperceptions of the militaryIpsos UK
Ipsos MORI and King’s College London are releasing a new international survey that highlights what the public in Britain, the US, France, Australia and Canada get right and wrong about the military and the armed forces.
Given the global elite’s self-flagellation every year over declining trust in business and society, we have now reviewed all the global long-term trends on the subject from the 1960’s onwards, to look at the extent to which the media’s obsession with declining trust is actually valid, and how much it matters.
We find that trust in experts and science is actually rising in many countries, that “trust” on its own is pretty nebulous - heavily driven by things leaders cannot directly affect, and that it is most meaningful to look at “trust to do what” – in short, there is a problem, but it is not a new crisis, nor is it particularly acute.
Our panel:
Kelly Beaver – Managing Director, Social Research Institute, Ipsos MORI
Ben Page - Chief Executive, Ipsos MORI
Kenneth Cukier – Senior Editor, Economist
Alex Edmans – Professor of Finance, London Business School
Mark Easton – BBC Home Editor
Demographic analysis, the statistical description of human populations, is a tool used by government agencies, political parties, and manufacturers of consumer goods. Polls conducted on every topic imaginable, from age to toothpaste preference, give the government and corporations an idea of who the public is and what it needs and wants.
Ecco lo studio di Ipsos Mori "Global Trends 2014". Uno studio sulle tendenze attuali in tema di comportamenti e preferenze dei cittadini e dei consumatori, ma anche un tentativo di capire cosa accadrà in futuro. 16mila interviste, 20 paesi in tutto il mondo. Brand, salute e benessere, società, attivismo politico, comportamenti dei consumatori, annunci pubblicitari e advertising e molto altro.
I need help with 1 questionYou are working for the NSA and they ha.pdffathimafancy
I need help with 1 question
You are working for the NSA and they have decided that they want to keep records on every
human being on the planet who is now alive or will be in the next 100 years. If the NSA wants to
use the smallest amount of data possible, and that data can cross bytes, how much storage should
you plan for? Assumptions:
World population is 7.5 billion
It is projected that 15 billion people will be born in the next 100 years
The NSA wants to maintain 10,000 data points per person
Each data point can have a maximum of 50 possible values
The NSA wants to allow for a possible 50% expansion of data points and possible values. They
also want to allow for the possibility that the up to 50% more people than anticipated will be
born in the next 100 years.
Solution
the UN reports that their estimate of World population has 1-2% error. An evaluation of a series
of United Nations population projections between the 1950s and 1990s found that all but one had
a margin of error of less than 4%. Most factors indicate an undercount. World population could
be 7.4 billion or even 7.5 billion now.
High population growth in Nigeria and other African countries but they have the oldest and most
inaccurate Census
* China hiding many second and third children
* Various scientific studies show that assumed decreased fertility in Africa is not happening or
happening more slowly which means a lot more children, so a census with missing people from
ten years ago assumes smaller families but there were more
Countries like Eritrea, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo did not conduct
population censuses between 2005 and 2014, as required by the UN for their 2010 round of
projections. This year Angola conducted its first national census in 30 years, Dr Mady Biaye,
Technical Advisor for East and Southern Africa at the United Nations Population Fund told
Africa Check. Nigeria for example has far less accurate population recording systems. Other
countries have not held censuses for decades.
In Nigeria the country’s census figures have been the subject of controversy for decades.
Accusations of rigging date back to the 1950s and have continued unabated under military and
civilian regimes.
These numbers, along with most of what we think of as facts in development, are actually
estimates. We have actual numbers on maternal mortality for just 16% of all births, and on
malaria for about 15% of all deaths. For six countries in Africa, there is basically no information
at all.
The world of development has had an odd double-think about data for decades now. On the one
hand, researchers and others will freely admit to the huge gaps and problems with development
data (indeed, it\'s sometimes hard to get people to stop talking about it). But on the other hand,
these same individuals and institutions have quite big vested interests in downplaying the
unreliability of data.
An academic who has just carried out a complex piece of econometrics based on househo.
On 31 January 2017, Ipsos held a major debate where we dissected the momentous political events of 2016 and looked forward to key elections in 2017. Our high profile pollsters from around the world examined political discontent and uncertainty, the key forces that are driving it and where in the world it is most prevalent and why. The panel included experts on the political context and public opinion in Britain, France, Italy, the US, Canada and South Africa, providing a wide range of perspectives on the key political challenges of our time.
Only one in three (34%) Global Citizens express confidence that waste water in their country does not pose a threat to their clean water supply.
Looking ahead one in two (48%) are worried that residential and industrial growth in their country over the next 5 to 10 years will put their clean water supply at risk.
The Perils of Perception in 2015: Ipsos MORIIpsos UK
Ipsos MORI have compared perceptions of the likes of immigration levels, access to the Internet, the proportion of a country's wealth owned by the wealthiest 1%, obesity levels, religious affiliation, women in politics and in general employment, average wage levels and rural populations with the actual figures across thirty-three countries. How does your country fare?
How would you have fared with our questions? Take the quiz: https://www.ipsos-mori.com//perilsofperception
Welcome to our latest Global Trends report. While we live in a world of uncertainty, some trends ARE certain – we have covered these in our Megatrends section. Beyond known technology, demographic and environmental changes, we have found eight global master trends looking across our 18,000 interviews in 23 major countries.
In the West, we see the self-explanatory Crisis of the Elites and Generation Strains – the growing gulf between the young and older generations in terms of opportunity.
Everywhere we can see the Battle for Attention. With only so many hours in a day, consumers face being bombarded across more and more channels and are reacting by blocking and switching off. The Search for Simplicity and Control is in part a reaction to feeling overwhelmed, but is a global phenomenon – how business and public services provide this seems as big a challenge as ever. Another area in which we want to take control is in regard to our own health – a theme we explore in A Healthier World.
A decline in growth in living standards in the West, and pessimism about the future are now triggering two related trends: Uncertainty is the New Normal and the Rise and Rise of Tradition.
Much of this depends on where you are sitting as you read this. The Optimism Divide shows how living in Shanghai, Mumbai or Jakarta will give you a completely different perspective than if you are reading this in London, Chicago or Rome. This is an important corrective for international businesses – while the world is more connected than ever, it is not the same everywhere, and consumers remain dramatically different in their outlook.
The underlying sense is of increasing fragmentation across many spheres of life. Differences are growing, complexity increasing, positions embedding.
What this latest in-depth global study should remind us is that despite increasing longevity, rising incomes in emerging markets, more connectivity, computing power and storage than we could ever have imagined, the human condition is one of anxiety and striving for more – at least if you read the media. Understanding the manifestations of that seems ever more vital for politicians and business.
In this report, we outline an overall structure for organisations to use to frame their analysis about key trends in consumer and citizen opinion globally. You can find the full set of charts, data and more at https://www.ipsosglobaltrends.com
We’re delighted to share with you the findings from our Global Trends survey - the largest study of its kind, looking at the attitudes and behaviours of consumers and citizens in 20 key countries around the world. We reveal the complex, and sometimes contradictory, findings covering everything from marriage to migration, from ambition to advertising and from society to social media. Visit http://www.ipsosglobaltrends.com for more.
The Perils of Perception in 2016: Ipsos MORIIpsos UK
Ipsos MORI have compared perceptions of the likes of portion of Muslim population, perceptions of happiness, homosexuality, sex before marriage, abortion, wealth, health spending, current and future population and whether Donald Trump would become US President with the actual figures across forty countries.
How do people in your country fare? How would you have fared with our questions? Take the quiz for your contry: https://perils.ipsos.com
New data from Ipsos Global @dvisor shows that many across 23 countries around the world think that their society is broken, while feeling a lack of confidence in establishment institutions - especially political parties, governments and the media.
A majority of people in 25 countries around the world think things in their country are off on the wrong track, according to this new global poll from Ipsos.
Hearts and Minds: Misperceptions of the militaryIpsos UK
Ipsos MORI and King’s College London are releasing a new international survey that highlights what the public in Britain, the US, France, Australia and Canada get right and wrong about the military and the armed forces.
Given the global elite’s self-flagellation every year over declining trust in business and society, we have now reviewed all the global long-term trends on the subject from the 1960’s onwards, to look at the extent to which the media’s obsession with declining trust is actually valid, and how much it matters.
We find that trust in experts and science is actually rising in many countries, that “trust” on its own is pretty nebulous - heavily driven by things leaders cannot directly affect, and that it is most meaningful to look at “trust to do what” – in short, there is a problem, but it is not a new crisis, nor is it particularly acute.
Our panel:
Kelly Beaver – Managing Director, Social Research Institute, Ipsos MORI
Ben Page - Chief Executive, Ipsos MORI
Kenneth Cukier – Senior Editor, Economist
Alex Edmans – Professor of Finance, London Business School
Mark Easton – BBC Home Editor
Demographic analysis, the statistical description of human populations, is a tool used by government agencies, political parties, and manufacturers of consumer goods. Polls conducted on every topic imaginable, from age to toothpaste preference, give the government and corporations an idea of who the public is and what it needs and wants.
Ecco lo studio di Ipsos Mori "Global Trends 2014". Uno studio sulle tendenze attuali in tema di comportamenti e preferenze dei cittadini e dei consumatori, ma anche un tentativo di capire cosa accadrà in futuro. 16mila interviste, 20 paesi in tutto il mondo. Brand, salute e benessere, società, attivismo politico, comportamenti dei consumatori, annunci pubblicitari e advertising e molto altro.
I need help with 1 questionYou are working for the NSA and they ha.pdffathimafancy
I need help with 1 question
You are working for the NSA and they have decided that they want to keep records on every
human being on the planet who is now alive or will be in the next 100 years. If the NSA wants to
use the smallest amount of data possible, and that data can cross bytes, how much storage should
you plan for? Assumptions:
World population is 7.5 billion
It is projected that 15 billion people will be born in the next 100 years
The NSA wants to maintain 10,000 data points per person
Each data point can have a maximum of 50 possible values
The NSA wants to allow for a possible 50% expansion of data points and possible values. They
also want to allow for the possibility that the up to 50% more people than anticipated will be
born in the next 100 years.
Solution
the UN reports that their estimate of World population has 1-2% error. An evaluation of a series
of United Nations population projections between the 1950s and 1990s found that all but one had
a margin of error of less than 4%. Most factors indicate an undercount. World population could
be 7.4 billion or even 7.5 billion now.
High population growth in Nigeria and other African countries but they have the oldest and most
inaccurate Census
* China hiding many second and third children
* Various scientific studies show that assumed decreased fertility in Africa is not happening or
happening more slowly which means a lot more children, so a census with missing people from
ten years ago assumes smaller families but there were more
Countries like Eritrea, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo did not conduct
population censuses between 2005 and 2014, as required by the UN for their 2010 round of
projections. This year Angola conducted its first national census in 30 years, Dr Mady Biaye,
Technical Advisor for East and Southern Africa at the United Nations Population Fund told
Africa Check. Nigeria for example has far less accurate population recording systems. Other
countries have not held censuses for decades.
In Nigeria the country’s census figures have been the subject of controversy for decades.
Accusations of rigging date back to the 1950s and have continued unabated under military and
civilian regimes.
These numbers, along with most of what we think of as facts in development, are actually
estimates. We have actual numbers on maternal mortality for just 16% of all births, and on
malaria for about 15% of all deaths. For six countries in Africa, there is basically no information
at all.
The world of development has had an odd double-think about data for decades now. On the one
hand, researchers and others will freely admit to the huge gaps and problems with development
data (indeed, it\'s sometimes hard to get people to stop talking about it). But on the other hand,
these same individuals and institutions have quite big vested interests in downplaying the
unreliability of data.
An academic who has just carried out a complex piece of econometrics based on househo.
New Media & Health Literacy: Opportunities & ChallengesAna Tellez
Originally part of a set of presentations in the APHA 2009 session titled "Getting Wired: Health Literacy in the Age of Digital Interaction"
Presentation provides an overview of new media trends, characteristics, and challenges/opportunities for addressing health literacy using new media.
How Millennials Use Technology to Get News: Differences by Race and EthnicityJonathan Blum
This study from the Media Insight Project, a collaboration between the American Press Institute and the AP-NORC Center, highlights similarities and differences by race and ethnicity in the technology use and news habits of Millennials.
One of the distinctions of the digital age is that it gives consumers more control over the information they consume, the sources they seek out, and the pathways they use to get it. As the news industry tries to understand the news habits of Millennials, who make up the first digital generation, one important question is whether changing technologies are extending or blurring differences between races and ethnic groups in how news is consumed.
Courtesy of: Associated Press and the American Press Institute
How Do OECD Forum Attendees Compare with Citizens Around the World on Views A...Pew Research Center
At the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s annual forum on Dec. 15, 2020, Director of Global Attitudes Research Richard Wike presented the results of an invitation-only poll of forum attendees about the COVID-19 pandemic and its impacts, the state of the global economy, the future of work, and cooperation between countries. The presentation compared the poll's results to findings from Pew Research Center surveys of general publics around the world.
Hispanic Millennial Attitudes Towards Health & Wellbeing ThinkNow
Five Key Themes:
Hispanic Millennials…
1.Have sophisticated health attitudes
2.Are engaged in healthy lifestyles
3.Embrace technology. Is that pro or anti-health?
4.Send conflicting messages regarding diet
5.Are widely insured but not apt to visit doctors
Intentions de vote pour les élections européennes de 2024 - 7 juin 2024Ipsos France
A 48h du scrutin, Ipsos prend une dernière fois pour Le Monde le pouls de l'électorat avant le vote du 9 juin.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/europeennes-2024-hayer-et-glucksmann-au-coude-coude-deux-jours-du-scrutin
Européennes 2024 : Intentions de vote - Mai 2024Ipsos France
Selon le sondage Ipsos réalisé du 5 au 6 juin pour Le Parisien et Radio France, la liste du Rassemblement National menée par Jordan Bardella rassemblerait 32% des intentions de vote, devant la liste Renaissance, LREM, Modem, Horizons et UDI de Valérie Hayer à 15,5% et la liste PS-Place Publique de Raphaël Glucksmann à 13,5%.
En savoir + : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/europeennes-2024-les-dynamiques-3-jours-du-scrutin
Perception et utilité sociale du footballIpsos France
Le Crédit Agricole a confié à Ipsos la réalisation d'un sondage inédit sur l'impact du football et de sa pratique auprès des Français, ainsi que son importance en tant que vecteur de lien social. Des résultats révélateurs de la popularité de ce sport.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/le-football-vecteur-de-lien-social-pour-huit-francais-sur-dix
Conseil et vaccination du voyageur en pharmacieIpsos France
Valneva a fait appel à l'expertise d'Ipsos Healthcare pour réaliser une étude sur les comportements et les attentes des Français en matière de santé dans le cadre d'un voyage prévu hors de l'Union Européenne dans les 12 prochains mois. Les résultats révèlent le rôle essentiel des pharmaciens dans la préparation sanitaire des voyages à l'international.
Européennes 2024 : Enquête électorale - Vague 5 - Mai 2024Ipsos France
Pour mieux comprendre les logiques de la décision électorale et dans la perspective des élections européennes de juin 2024, Ipsos, le Cevipof, La Fondation Jean Jaurès, l'Institut Montaigne et le Monde ont mis en place un dispositif d'enquête exceptionnel basé sur un panel de plus de 10 000 personnes : l'Enquête électorale Européennes.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/europeennes-2024-le-rassemblement-national-en-tete-une-semaine-du-vote
La transidentité, un sujet qui fractionne les FrançaisIpsos France
Ipsos, l’une des principales sociétés mondiales d’études de marché dévoile les résultats de son étude Ipsos Global Advisor “Pride 2024”. De ses débuts aux Etats-Unis et désormais dans de très nombreux pays, le mois de juin est traditionnellement consacré aux « Marches des Fiertés » et à des événements festifs autour du concept de Pride. A cette occasion, Ipsos a réalisé une enquête dans vingt-six pays dressant plusieurs constats. Les clivages des opinions entre générations s’accentuent tandis que le soutien à des mesures sociétales et d’inclusion en faveur des LGBT+ notamment transgenres continue de s’effriter.
Les jeunes et les élections européennes - Mai 2024Ipsos France
À l'approche des élections européennes, Ipsos a réalisé pour Brut. avec Franceinfo une enquête auprès des moins de 30 ans. 1165 jeunes âgés de 18 à 29 ans, constituant un échantillon national représentatif des jeunes âgés de 18 ans à 29 ans, inscrits sur les listes électorales, ont été interrogés.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/europeennes-2024-pour-quelles-listes-voteront-les-jeunes
Les Français et les élections européennes - Mai 2024Ipsos France
A vingt jours des élections européennes, Ipsos a mené pour France Télévisions une enquête sur la perception des Français des élections européennes.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/europeennes-2024/
Baromètre politique Ipsos-La Tribune Dimanche - Mai 2024Ipsos France
Préoccupations des Français, cotes de popularité de l'exécutif, du gouvernement et des leaders politiques Français, questions d'actualité... Retrouvez ici les derniers résultats de notre sondage d'opinion, le Baromètre Politique Ipsos-La Tribune Dimanche.
En savoir plus: https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/barometre-ipsos-la-tribune-dimanche
Ipsos Update - Le best of Ipsos à travers le monde - Mai 2024Ipsos France
Retrouvez chaque mois le meilleur des publications Ipsos à travers le monde sélectionné par notre Knowledge Centre. Découvrez vite notre dernier numéro : études, points de vue, analyses... dans un format synthétique et pratique ! L'essentiel en une page et des liens pour aller plus loin.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/ipsos-update-mai-2024
Les élections européennes et les enjeux écologiques, sociaux et économiqu...Ipsos France
Selon l'enquête menée par Ipsos pour le Pacte du pouvoir de vivre, la lutte contre le changement climatique est considérée par les Français comme la priorité n°1 pour l'Union européenne. Ce sentiment est particulièrement répandu chez les moins de 50 ans. Toutefois, malgré cette forte attente, la confiance dans la capacité de l'UE à faire face efficacement à ce problème est faible. Cette enquête explore ces attitudes complexes, examinant la confiance du public dans l'UE sur divers enjeux et les perceptions de la faisabilité des mesures proposées.
En savoir + : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/europeennes-2024/la-lutte-contre-le-rechauffement-climatique-un-enjeu-prioritaire-pour-lunion-europeenne
Européennes 2024 : Intentions de vote - Mai 2024Ipsos France
Selon la nouvelle vague du sondage Ipsos réalisé les 13 et 14 mai pour Le Parisien et Radio France, la liste du Rassemblement National menée par Jordan Bardella rassemblerait 31% des intentions de vote, devant la liste Renaissance, LREM, Modem, Horizons et UDI de Valérie Hayer à 16% et la liste PS-Place Publique de Raphaël Glucksmann à 14,5%.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/europeennes-2024/lecart-entre-les-listes-de-raphael-glucksmann-et-de-valerie-hayer-se-resserre
En 12 ans, les Français ont doublé leur temps consacré au sportIpsos France
Ipsos, en partenariat avec la Fédération Française d’Education Physique et de Gymnastique Volontaire (FFEPGV), dévoile son baromètre annuel sur les Français et le sport.. Avec plus de 10 années de recul, ces données permettent de décrypter les évolutions concernant les pratiques sportives des Français : quelles sont leurs motivations, leurs habitudes, la perception qu’ils ont du sport...
Européennes 2024 : Enquête électorale - Vague 4 - Avril 2024Ipsos France
Pour mieux comprendre les logiques de la décision électorale et dans la perspective des élections européennes de juin 2024, Ipsos, le Cevipof, La Fondation Jean Jaurès, l'Institut Montaigne et le Monde ont mis en place un dispositif d'enquête exceptionnel basé sur un panel de plus de 10 000 personnes : l'Enquête électorale Européennes.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/europeennes-2024-le-vote-glucksmann-une-dynamique-encore-incertaine
Vaccination : un déficit d’information chez les parents d’enfants et les seniorsIpsos France
Ipsos réalise pour la deuxième année consécutive le baromètre sur la vaccination pour GSK. Un état des lieux des perceptions, connaissances et comportements des Français sur ce sujet a été menée à l'occasion semaine européenne de la vaccination du 22 au 28 avril.
Baromètre de la solidarité Apprentis d'Auteuil - Avril 2024Ipsos France
Alors que s’est ouverte la période de déclaration de revenus et de la fortune immobilière, Apprentis d’Auteuil publie les résultats de la cinquième édition de son baromètre annuel de la solidarité. Cette étude, réalisée par Ipsos, a été conduite auprès d’un échantillon représentatif de la population française ainsi qu’auprès d’un échantillon de Français disposant de « très hauts revenus » (120 000 € ou plus par foyer et par an, moins de 2% des foyers fiscaux).
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/barometre-de-la-solidarite-pour-quelles-causes-les-francais-projettent-ils-de-donner-en-2024
Baromètre politique Ipsos-La Tribune - Avril 2024Ipsos France
Préoccupations des Français, cotes de popularité de l'exécutif, du gouvernement et des leaders politiques Français, questions d'actualité... Retrouvez ici les derniers résultats de notre sondage d'opinion, le Baromètre Politique Ipsos-La Tribune Dimanche.
En savoir plus: https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/barometre-ipsos-la-tribune-dimanche
Ipsos Update - Le best of Ipsos à travers le monde - Avril 2024Ipsos France
Retrouvez chaque mois le meilleur des publications Ipsos à travers le monde sélectionné par notre Knowledge Centre. Découvrez vite notre dernier numéro : études, points de vue, analyses... dans un format synthétique et pratique ! L'essentiel en une page et des liens pour aller plus loin.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/ipsos-update-avril-2024
Le regard des Français sur les Jeux Olympiques de 2024Ipsos France
Alors que la cérémonie d’ouverture des Jeux Olympiques de 2024 à Paris se rapproche, l’enquête menée par Ipsos pour La Tribune montre une baisse de l’intérêt porté par les Français pour les Jeux. Si une majorité de Français (53%) se déclarent intéressés, cette proportion est en baisse de 8 points par rapport à octobre 2023. L’intérêt est plus marqué chez les plus jeunes (65% des moins de 35 ans) et chez les hommes (58%).
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/le-regard-des-francais-sur-les-jeux-olympiques-de-2024
Techniques to optimize the pagerank algorithm usually fall in two categories. One is to try reducing the work per iteration, and the other is to try reducing the number of iterations. These goals are often at odds with one another. Skipping computation on vertices which have already converged has the potential to save iteration time. Skipping in-identical vertices, with the same in-links, helps reduce duplicate computations and thus could help reduce iteration time. Road networks often have chains which can be short-circuited before pagerank computation to improve performance. Final ranks of chain nodes can be easily calculated. This could reduce both the iteration time, and the number of iterations. If a graph has no dangling nodes, pagerank of each strongly connected component can be computed in topological order. This could help reduce the iteration time, no. of iterations, and also enable multi-iteration concurrency in pagerank computation. The combination of all of the above methods is the STICD algorithm. [sticd] For dynamic graphs, unchanged components whose ranks are unaffected can be skipped altogether.
Chatty Kathy - UNC Bootcamp Final Project Presentation - Final Version - 5.23...John Andrews
SlideShare Description for "Chatty Kathy - UNC Bootcamp Final Project Presentation"
Title: Chatty Kathy: Enhancing Physical Activity Among Older Adults
Description:
Discover how Chatty Kathy, an innovative project developed at the UNC Bootcamp, aims to tackle the challenge of low physical activity among older adults. Our AI-driven solution uses peer interaction to boost and sustain exercise levels, significantly improving health outcomes. This presentation covers our problem statement, the rationale behind Chatty Kathy, synthetic data and persona creation, model performance metrics, a visual demonstration of the project, and potential future developments. Join us for an insightful Q&A session to explore the potential of this groundbreaking project.
Project Team: Jay Requarth, Jana Avery, John Andrews, Dr. Dick Davis II, Nee Buntoum, Nam Yeongjin & Mat Nicholas
Data Centers - Striving Within A Narrow Range - Research Report - MCG - May 2...pchutichetpong
M Capital Group (“MCG”) expects to see demand and the changing evolution of supply, facilitated through institutional investment rotation out of offices and into work from home (“WFH”), while the ever-expanding need for data storage as global internet usage expands, with experts predicting 5.3 billion users by 2023. These market factors will be underpinned by technological changes, such as progressing cloud services and edge sites, allowing the industry to see strong expected annual growth of 13% over the next 4 years.
Whilst competitive headwinds remain, represented through the recent second bankruptcy filing of Sungard, which blames “COVID-19 and other macroeconomic trends including delayed customer spending decisions, insourcing and reductions in IT spending, energy inflation and reduction in demand for certain services”, the industry has seen key adjustments, where MCG believes that engineering cost management and technological innovation will be paramount to success.
MCG reports that the more favorable market conditions expected over the next few years, helped by the winding down of pandemic restrictions and a hybrid working environment will be driving market momentum forward. The continuous injection of capital by alternative investment firms, as well as the growing infrastructural investment from cloud service providers and social media companies, whose revenues are expected to grow over 3.6x larger by value in 2026, will likely help propel center provision and innovation. These factors paint a promising picture for the industry players that offset rising input costs and adapt to new technologies.
According to M Capital Group: “Specifically, the long-term cost-saving opportunities available from the rise of remote managing will likely aid value growth for the industry. Through margin optimization and further availability of capital for reinvestment, strong players will maintain their competitive foothold, while weaker players exit the market to balance supply and demand.”
Adjusting primitives for graph : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
Graph algorithms, like PageRank Compressed Sparse Row (CSR) is an adjacency-list based graph representation that is
Multiply with different modes (map)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector multiply.
2. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector multiply.
Sum with different storage types (reduce)
1. Performance of vector element sum using float vs bfloat16 as the storage type.
Sum with different modes (reduce)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector element sum.
2. Performance of memcpy vs in-place based CUDA based vector element sum.
3. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (memcpy).
4. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
Sum with in-place strategies of CUDA mode (reduce)
1. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
Adjusting OpenMP PageRank : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
For massive graphs that fit in RAM, but not in GPU memory, it is possible to take
advantage of a shared memory system with multiple CPUs, each with multiple cores, to
accelerate pagerank computation. If the NUMA architecture of the system is properly taken
into account with good vertex partitioning, the speedup can be significant. To take steps in
this direction, experiments are conducted to implement pagerank in OpenMP using two
different approaches, uniform and hybrid. The uniform approach runs all primitives required
for pagerank in OpenMP mode (with multiple threads). On the other hand, the hybrid
approach runs certain primitives in sequential mode (i.e., sumAt, multiply).
06-04-2024 - NYC Tech Week - Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
https://www.meetup.com/unstructured-data-meetup-new-york/
This meetup is for people working in unstructured data. Speakers will come present about related topics such as vector databases, LLMs, and managing data at scale. The intended audience of this group includes roles like machine learning engineers, data scientists, data engineers, software engineers, and PMs.This meetup was formerly Milvus Meetup, and is sponsored by Zilliz maintainers of Milvus.
Quantitative Data AnalysisReliability Analysis (Cronbach Alpha) Common Method...2023240532
Quantitative data Analysis
Overview
Reliability Analysis (Cronbach Alpha)
Common Method Bias (Harman Single Factor Test)
Frequency Analysis (Demographic)
Descriptive Analysis
The Building Blocks of QuestDB, a Time Series Databasejavier ramirez
Talk Delivered at Valencia Codes Meetup 2024-06.
Traditionally, databases have treated timestamps just as another data type. However, when performing real-time analytics, timestamps should be first class citizens and we need rich time semantics to get the most out of our data. We also need to deal with ever growing datasets while keeping performant, which is as fun as it sounds.
It is no wonder time-series databases are now more popular than ever before. Join me in this session to learn about the internal architecture and building blocks of QuestDB, an open source time-series database designed for speed. We will also review a history of some of the changes we have gone over the past two years to deal with late and unordered data, non-blocking writes, read-replicas, or faster batch ingestion.
Levelwise PageRank with Loop-Based Dead End Handling Strategy : SHORT REPORT ...Subhajit Sahu
Abstract — Levelwise PageRank is an alternative method of PageRank computation which decomposes the input graph into a directed acyclic block-graph of strongly connected components, and processes them in topological order, one level at a time. This enables calculation for ranks in a distributed fashion without per-iteration communication, unlike the standard method where all vertices are processed in each iteration. It however comes with a precondition of the absence of dead ends in the input graph. Here, the native non-distributed performance of Levelwise PageRank was compared against Monolithic PageRank on a CPU as well as a GPU. To ensure a fair comparison, Monolithic PageRank was also performed on a graph where vertices were split by components. Results indicate that Levelwise PageRank is about as fast as Monolithic PageRank on the CPU, but quite a bit slower on the GPU. Slowdown on the GPU is likely caused by a large submission of small workloads, and expected to be non-issue when the computation is performed on massive graphs.