Is the system broken? Ipsos Global @dvisorIpsos UK
After a year of historic political events such as Brexit, the election of Donald Trump and the Italian constitutional referendum, a major new Ipsos survey across 22 countries paints a picture of a global public feeling left behind by the traditional system of politics and government, which in several countries translates into high levels of support for a strong leader willing to break the rules. The survey, among online adults aged under 65 in Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, France, Britain, Germany, Hungary, India, Israel, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Peru, Poland, South Africa, South Korea Spain, Sweden, Turkey and the United States also finds most think their country is in decline, that experts do not understand their lives, and ambivalence towards globalisation.
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
This report presents findings of a Ipsos global survey conducted on behalf of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The survey studied people's outlook on their personal lives, challenges for their communities, and the direction of their countries/
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.
Ipsos Global @dvisor: Global Public Attitudes to Immigration 2011 - 2015Ipsos UK
The latest Ipsos Gloabal @dvisor reveals the British public is more positive in their attitudes towards immigration compared with many other countries. The survey, which asks a series of questions on immigration across 24 countries, also shows Britons have become more positive since 2011 but still have their concerns over immigration, primarily around its effect on public services.
Fake News, Filter Bubbles, Post-Truth and TrustIpsos UK
A major new Ipsos study of over 19,000 people in 27 countries highlights how we think fake news, filter bubbles and post-truth are things that affect other people, much more than ourselves.
Feminism and Gender Equality around the worldIpsos UK
On the eve of International Women’s Day, new data from Ipsos Global @dvisor shows that although the vast majority in 24 countries around the world say they believe men and women should be treated equally (88% on average), most still think the current situation is one of inequality in terms of social, political and/or economic rights (72% on average). Women though are more positive when it comes to their own lives – six in ten on average agree they have “full equality with men in their country and the freedom to reach their full dreams and aspirations” – although this still means that in several countries many women disagree.
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
Is the system broken? Ipsos Global @dvisorIpsos UK
After a year of historic political events such as Brexit, the election of Donald Trump and the Italian constitutional referendum, a major new Ipsos survey across 22 countries paints a picture of a global public feeling left behind by the traditional system of politics and government, which in several countries translates into high levels of support for a strong leader willing to break the rules. The survey, among online adults aged under 65 in Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, France, Britain, Germany, Hungary, India, Israel, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Peru, Poland, South Africa, South Korea Spain, Sweden, Turkey and the United States also finds most think their country is in decline, that experts do not understand their lives, and ambivalence towards globalisation.
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
This report presents findings of a Ipsos global survey conducted on behalf of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The survey studied people's outlook on their personal lives, challenges for their communities, and the direction of their countries/
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.
Ipsos Global @dvisor: Global Public Attitudes to Immigration 2011 - 2015Ipsos UK
The latest Ipsos Gloabal @dvisor reveals the British public is more positive in their attitudes towards immigration compared with many other countries. The survey, which asks a series of questions on immigration across 24 countries, also shows Britons have become more positive since 2011 but still have their concerns over immigration, primarily around its effect on public services.
Fake News, Filter Bubbles, Post-Truth and TrustIpsos UK
A major new Ipsos study of over 19,000 people in 27 countries highlights how we think fake news, filter bubbles and post-truth are things that affect other people, much more than ourselves.
Feminism and Gender Equality around the worldIpsos UK
On the eve of International Women’s Day, new data from Ipsos Global @dvisor shows that although the vast majority in 24 countries around the world say they believe men and women should be treated equally (88% on average), most still think the current situation is one of inequality in terms of social, political and/or economic rights (72% on average). Women though are more positive when it comes to their own lives – six in ten on average agree they have “full equality with men in their country and the freedom to reach their full dreams and aspirations” – although this still means that in several countries many women disagree.
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
The world has a much more positive view of President Obama’s time in office than they do of Donald Trump’s impending term, according to an Ipsos MORI poll of over 18,000 people globally.
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.
Per il secondo anno consecutivo, Ipsos ha condotto l'indagine sulla pericolo delle percezioni. Scopri quale è il paese più ignorante tra i 33 nei quali è stata effettuata la ricerca..
Human Rights in 2018: Ipsos Global Advisor SurveyIpsos UK
A new global Ipsos poll conducted in 28 countries finds that only four in ten (43%) people globally agree that everyone in their country enjoys the same basic human rights, casting doubt over how universal human rights are in reality – even in some of the most developed countries. A third of people (33%) outright disagree that everyone in their country enjoys the same basic human rights, and two in ten (20%) are unsure. People in Germany (63%) and China (63%) are most likely to agree that everyone in their country enjoys the same basic human rights while those in South Africa (25%) and Italy (28%) are least likely to agree. Britons are in line with the global average; 41% think everyone in Britain enjoys the same basic human rights whereas 35% disagree.
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.
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.
International Women's Day 2019: Global attitudes towards gender equalityIpsos UK
A new global study conducted by Ipsos in collaboration with the Global Institute for Women’s Leadership at King’s College London and International Women’s Day finds the majority of men agree that that women won’t achieve equality without their support but half believe they are expected to do too much to support women’s equality.
Public Health England: Public awareness and opinion survey 2016Ipsos UK
Public Health England (PHE) commissioned Ipsos MORI to carry out quantitative research into the general public’s awareness of and concern about different health issues, and their awareness, knowledge, and opinions towards PHE. This report outlines the findings of the third wave of the research, following on from previous waves in 2015, 2014, and a baseline wave in 2013/2014.
The research found that half of the general public have heard of PHE, showing a steady increase between 2014 and 2016. Similarly, the public are more confident in PHE’s advice, and more likely to trust their advice on healthy living and health threats.
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.
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
Looking to the future: The mobile consumerIpsos UK
Ipsos MORI’s research on the mobile consumer for the Logic Group – including attitudes towards “big data”, and an overview of how people use their smartphones, now and in the future.
A new global survey in 25 countries looking at what issues worry the world. This is the first wave of this monthly survey, which finds that Britons are the most worried out of all 25 countries about immigration and rising extremism. However, Britons are relatively positive about the direction the country is headed in, with 44% saying they think things are going in the right direction.
International Women's Day 2020: What is acceptable behaviour in the workplace?Ipsos UK
A new survey of more than 20,000 people in 27 countries from Ipsos MORI and King's College London for International Women's Day 2020 finds significant differences in what women and men see as acceptable workplace behaviour.
Who cares what you think? Do people's voices matter for Sustainable Development?Ipsos UK
As the world embarks on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) era, efforts abound to improve development planning and measure impacts. The talk is of a "data revolution".
But does the sector that once talked endlessly of participation and ownership care any more about the voices of citizens and beneficiaries? Or has a focus on value-for-money and efficiency obscured this previously central mantra. Of the 230 SDG progress indicators, only four relate to people's perceptions.
In this context, we ask if, by accident or design, the international development community has de-prioritised listening. We also discuss the value of perceptions vs "objective" data. Is giving people a voice an expensive and methodologically complicated luxury or does it need to regain its place at the heart of the debate?
International Women's Day - Men are not emasculated by caring for childrenIpsos UK
In collaboration with the Global Institute for Women’s Leadership at King’s College London and International Women’s Day, Ipsos MORI finds that the majority of British men no longer see childcare as the preserve of women.
The National Cyber Security Centre and Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport have released findings from the UK Cyber Survey conducted by Ipsos MORI. These findings are from a study of UK individuals to measure and understand awareness and attitudes towards cyber security, and related behaviours. They are part of a wider research project to provide insight to inform HM Government’s approach to encourage positive behaviour amongst the public in protecting themselves against cyber threats.
The world has a much more positive view of President Obama’s time in office than they do of Donald Trump’s impending term, according to an Ipsos MORI poll of over 18,000 people globally.
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.
Per il secondo anno consecutivo, Ipsos ha condotto l'indagine sulla pericolo delle percezioni. Scopri quale è il paese più ignorante tra i 33 nei quali è stata effettuata la ricerca..
Human Rights in 2018: Ipsos Global Advisor SurveyIpsos UK
A new global Ipsos poll conducted in 28 countries finds that only four in ten (43%) people globally agree that everyone in their country enjoys the same basic human rights, casting doubt over how universal human rights are in reality – even in some of the most developed countries. A third of people (33%) outright disagree that everyone in their country enjoys the same basic human rights, and two in ten (20%) are unsure. People in Germany (63%) and China (63%) are most likely to agree that everyone in their country enjoys the same basic human rights while those in South Africa (25%) and Italy (28%) are least likely to agree. Britons are in line with the global average; 41% think everyone in Britain enjoys the same basic human rights whereas 35% disagree.
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.
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.
International Women's Day 2019: Global attitudes towards gender equalityIpsos UK
A new global study conducted by Ipsos in collaboration with the Global Institute for Women’s Leadership at King’s College London and International Women’s Day finds the majority of men agree that that women won’t achieve equality without their support but half believe they are expected to do too much to support women’s equality.
Public Health England: Public awareness and opinion survey 2016Ipsos UK
Public Health England (PHE) commissioned Ipsos MORI to carry out quantitative research into the general public’s awareness of and concern about different health issues, and their awareness, knowledge, and opinions towards PHE. This report outlines the findings of the third wave of the research, following on from previous waves in 2015, 2014, and a baseline wave in 2013/2014.
The research found that half of the general public have heard of PHE, showing a steady increase between 2014 and 2016. Similarly, the public are more confident in PHE’s advice, and more likely to trust their advice on healthy living and health threats.
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.
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
Looking to the future: The mobile consumerIpsos UK
Ipsos MORI’s research on the mobile consumer for the Logic Group – including attitudes towards “big data”, and an overview of how people use their smartphones, now and in the future.
A new global survey in 25 countries looking at what issues worry the world. This is the first wave of this monthly survey, which finds that Britons are the most worried out of all 25 countries about immigration and rising extremism. However, Britons are relatively positive about the direction the country is headed in, with 44% saying they think things are going in the right direction.
International Women's Day 2020: What is acceptable behaviour in the workplace?Ipsos UK
A new survey of more than 20,000 people in 27 countries from Ipsos MORI and King's College London for International Women's Day 2020 finds significant differences in what women and men see as acceptable workplace behaviour.
Who cares what you think? Do people's voices matter for Sustainable Development?Ipsos UK
As the world embarks on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) era, efforts abound to improve development planning and measure impacts. The talk is of a "data revolution".
But does the sector that once talked endlessly of participation and ownership care any more about the voices of citizens and beneficiaries? Or has a focus on value-for-money and efficiency obscured this previously central mantra. Of the 230 SDG progress indicators, only four relate to people's perceptions.
In this context, we ask if, by accident or design, the international development community has de-prioritised listening. We also discuss the value of perceptions vs "objective" data. Is giving people a voice an expensive and methodologically complicated luxury or does it need to regain its place at the heart of the debate?
International Women's Day - Men are not emasculated by caring for childrenIpsos UK
In collaboration with the Global Institute for Women’s Leadership at King’s College London and International Women’s Day, Ipsos MORI finds that the majority of British men no longer see childcare as the preserve of women.
The National Cyber Security Centre and Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport have released findings from the UK Cyber Survey conducted by Ipsos MORI. These findings are from a study of UK individuals to measure and understand awareness and attitudes towards cyber security, and related behaviours. They are part of a wider research project to provide insight to inform HM Government’s approach to encourage positive behaviour amongst the public in protecting themselves against cyber threats.
Who Is and Is Not a “Real American”, a “Real Brazilian” or a “Real Chinese”? Ipsos’s Inclusiveness Index Compares Countries’ Acceptance of Social and Cultural Diversity
The inclusiveness of nationalities: Ipsos Global AdvisorIpsos UK
A new Ipsos survey which compares countries’ acceptance of social and cultural diversity shows that Canada and the United States have the most inclusive definition of nationality, followed by South Africa, France, and Australia. These countries score highest on an Inclusiveness Index reflecting social acceptance of diversity as it applies to religion, immigration, sexual orientation and gender identity, political views, and criminal background. Britain ranks 10th in the overall index.
Global views on healthcare in 2018: Ipsos Global AdvisorIpsos UK
Consumers’ assessment of the quality of their healthcare varies widely across the 28 countries covered in an Ipsos Global Advisor survey of more than 23,000 adults. Globally, 45% rate the quality of the healthcare they have access to in their country as good, 33% rate it as neither good nor poor and 23% as poor. Countries surveyed where consumers most tend to rate the quality of their healthcare positively are Great Britain (73%), Malaysia (72%), and Australia (71%). Poor ratings outnumber good ratings in nine countries, including Brazil (by 39 percentage points), Poland (31 points) and Russia (29 points).
Ipsos / World Economic Forum Global Citizens & Data PrivacyIpsos UK
Findings from a new Ipsos and World Economic Forum project suggest world citizens are in the dark about how their personal information is used – most of all those from economically advanced countries including Great Britain.
Ipsos WEF - global consumer views on data privacy - 2019-02-11Ipsos Public Affairs
Ipsos and the World Economic Forum are launching a research program to track and decode public understanding and acceptance of new technologies across the globe
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
Européennes 2024 : Intentions de vote - Avril 2024Ipsos France
Selon le sondage Ipsos réalisé les 10 et 11 avril 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 16% et la liste PS-Place Publique de Raphaël Glucksmann à 13%.
En savoir plus : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/europeennes-2024-le-rassemblement-national-en-tete-a-deux-mois-du-scrutin
Papilloma et vaccination : de fausses croyance qui demeurentIpsos France
A l’occasion de la semaine européenne de la vaccination du 22 au 28 avril 2024, Ipsos a réalisé pour MSD un baromètre autour des perceptions et comportements des mères d’adolescents dans la prévention des maladies liées aux HPV. Ces résultats démontrent que les initiatives gouvernementales et la diffusion régulière d’informations ont permis d’améliorer les connaissances générales des mères autour du HPV. Des fausses croyances qui représentent un frein à l’augmentation des couvertures vaccinales, aujourd’hui, bien en deçà des objectifs fixés par l’OMS et l’INCA.
Baromètre du lien social - vague 2 - avril 2024Ipsos France
Pour la deuxième année consécutive, Ipsos Sopra-Steria et le groupe EBRA publient le Baromètre du lien social. L' édition 2024 de cette enquête qui s’intéresse à ce qui unit les Français a permis d’intégrer de nouveaux thèmes, comme la place de l’école en tant qu’institution créatrice de lien social, mais également d’observer les évolutions de perception de ce qui rassemble les Français par rapport à 2023.
En savoir + : https://www.ipsos.com/fr-fr/barometre-du-lien-social-quest-ce-qui-unit-les-francais-en-2024
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.
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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.
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).