1 October 2012 Americans are rapidly embracing mobile technologies such as smartphones and tablets, a shift that has major implications for how news will be consumed and paid for.
• Graphic: The Future of Mobile News
• Submit Your Infographic in our Data Visualization Challenge with Visual.ly
• 1-in-4 Americans Own a Tablet Computer
28 September 2012 During what may prove a key period in the race for president, the candidates received very different treatment on Twitter, Facebook and blogs than in the mainstream media, a new PEJ study finds.
• Coverage of Candidates' Character is Negative
• Which Candidate is Ahead on Social Media?
27 September 2012 There are signs that television news -- like the print news sources before it -- may be losing its hold on the next generation of news consumers. Online and digital news consumption continues to increase, driven by expanding use of mobile devices and the rise of social networking.
• Slideshow of Key Findings
26 September 2012 Student debt has increased in nearly every demographic and economic category since 2007, as has the size of that debt. The burden of student debt is greatest for the young and the poor.
20 September 2012 Three-quarters of the world's 7 billion people now live in countries with high government restrictions on religion or high social hostilities involving religion, up from 70% last year.
• Interactive: Restrictions on Religion
19 September 2012 With an eight-point lead over Mitt Romney among likely voters, Barack Obama holds a bigger September lead than the last three candidates who went on to win in November. Obama's support is also stronger and more positive than Romney's.
• Video: Andy Kohut on PBS NewsHour
• See slideshow of key findings
• Voter Preferences by Religious Group
Most Americans agree with Amy Chua that U.S. parents aren't tough enough, but most Asians think parents put too much pressure on children.
Nine-in-ten U.S. adults say most of their fellow Americans are overweight. But only 39% say they themselves are overweight.
Most experts say the internet will enhance--not degrade--our intelligence. It will also change the way we read and write and be rebuilt by new gadgetry and applications.
5 October 2012 Social media came to a much different initial verdict about the first presidential debate than did the early polls and the conventional press, according to an analysis of the conversation on Twitter, Facebook and blogs.
2 October 2012 Can a minister, rabbi, imam or other member of the clergy endorse a candidate from the pulpit or speak on political issues of interest to voters? See our 2012 guide to IRS rules on political activity by religious organizations.
• Graphic: Public Wary of Church Role in Politics
1 October 2012 Fully two-thirds of voters (67%) correctly identify Mitt Romney as the candidate who said 47% of the public is dependent on government and more than half of them (55%) have a negative reaction.
• Before Debate, Voters Expected Obama to Win
1 October 2012 A record 23.7 million Latinos are eligible to vote in the 2012 presidential election, according to a new analysis of Census Bureau data. This is up by more than 4 million, or 22%, since 2008, but turnout typically lags that of whites, blacks.
• Fact Sheets on the States
• Mapping the 2012 Latino Electorate
28 September 2012 Young voters are significantly less engaged in this year’s election than at a comparable point in 2008 and now lag far behind older voters in interest in the campaign and intention to vote, according to a new People Press analysis of existing data.
26 September 2012 Urban residents are more likely to use mobile and online sources, suburbanites are most heavily into social media, and rural residents are more inclined to word of mouth sources.
• Graphic: Community Profiles
25 September 2012 Nearly half (46%) say the coverage of Romney and Obama has been fair. Among those who see a bias, as many say the press has been too easy on Romney (20%) as too tough on him (21%), while nearly twice as many say press coverage of the president has been too easy (28%) than too tough (15%).
• Voters Offer Tepid Ratings of 2012 Candidates
• Economy, Jobs Still Top Issues for Voters
24 September 2012 James Bell, director of international survey research, discusses how Russians view the recent election protests and whether foreign powers played a role in the protests on the New York Times Room for Debate blog.
21 September 2012 In a piece for Foreign Policy, Richard Wike of the Pew Global Attitudes Project looks at why the Muslim world hasn't warmed toward America in recent years.
• Map: U.S. Mosque Controversies
20 September 2012 With the national conversation focused on class, the social safety net and the distribution of wealth, recent Pew Research Center surveys find that the public sees clear differences between Obama and Romney on these issues. Still, aspects of both candidates' arguments resonate with the public.
19 September 2012 The Los Angeles metropolitan area has the nation's largest Hispanic population followed by the New York metropolitan area. California and Texas are home to six of the 10 largest Hispanic metropolitan populations.
• Interactive Map of Metro-Area Hispanic Populations
• Hispanic Student Enrollments Reach New Highs
18 September 2012 Despite generally positive assessments of U.S.-China relations, tthe U.S. public is more concerned than experts about China's growing economic strength. About half say the Asian nation's emergence as a world power poses a major threat to America.
• Pew Research and Carnegie Interactive: How Do Americans View the World?
18 September 2012 View a slideshow of international opinion about Obama and his re-election run, from the Pew Global Attitudes Project.
17 September 2012 Four-in-ten Americans say they are closely following the news about the attacks on U.S. embassies in the Middle East. Those following have much more positive opinions about Barack Obama's handling of the situation than Mitt Romney's comments on the crisis.
13 September 2012 Fully 46% of internet users post original photos and videos online and 41% curate photos and videos on image-sharing sites. Women are more likely than men to use Pinterest, while Instagram and Tumblr attract equal shares of men and women.
• Graphic: Our Smartphone Habits
12 September 2012 Following the political party conventions, Democrats express increasingly positive views of the presidential campaign. Fewer Republicans see the campaign as interesting or informative.
• Clinton Outshines Obama at DNC
• Eastwood Shares Top Billing With Romney at RNC
• Do Conventions Still Matter?
12 September 2012 The median income of American households decreased by as much in the two years after the official end of the Great Recession as it did during the recession itself. The current recovery is the worst for household income for any post-recession period in at least four decades.
• The Lost Decade of the Middle Class
• Video: Our Findings on the Middle Class
10 September 2012 One in three Americans now says they are part of the lower or lower-middle classes, compared with one in four Americans who identified as such four years ago. More people under age 30, Hispanics, and whites self-identify in these categories.
• Public Says Stable Job is Ticket to Middle Class
• Are Americans Better Off Today?
• Economic News Bad? Depends on Your Politics
3 October 2012 Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project, explains changes to the way the project identifies internet users in its surveys to better capture the evolving ways Americans are accessing the internet, especially the increasing use of mobile devices. Ask the Expert archive
Do your views align more with Republicans, Democrats or Independents? Answer 12 questions in our new politics quiz, built in partnership with PBS NewsHour, and we'll tell you where you fit on the political spectrum. See how you compare to other Americans by age, gender, race and religion.
Take our 11-question quiz about the presidential election and the news. Then see how you did in comparison with 1,010 randomly sampled adults (and 771 voters). Tell us how you did on Facebook.
Answer a series of questions about your beliefs to find where you come out on the political spectrum. Are you Staunch Conservative or a Solid Liberal? Compare yourself to others who participated in our nationwide survey. Read the full report.
Take our quiz and we'll tell you how "Millennial" you are, on a scale from 0 to 100, by comparing your answers with those of respondents to a scientific nationwide survey.
How much do you know about the world's major religions? And how do you score compared with the average American? Take our quiz and find out.
Who calls the shots in your home? Nowadays, it's often the woman who wears the pantsuit. Take our quiz to find out where you fit.
Explore an interactive feature illustrating trends in American attitudes on foreign affairs from the Pew Research Center and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Explore an interactive map of Asian Americans, including Chinese Americans, Filipino Americans, Indian Americans, Vietnamese Americans, Korean Americans and Japanese Americans.
• Infographic: Data About Asian Americans
• The Full Report: The Rise of Asian Americans
An interactive database of firms that own news properties in the U.S. lets you explore each media sector. Updated, July 2012.
Explore interactive maps covering 232 countries and territories that show the size and distribution of the 1.6 billion Muslim population.
An interactive database shows the religious affiliation of international migrants and examines patterns among seven major religious groups.
Explore public opinion trends in 55 countries on topics ranging from attitudes toward the U.S. to views about globalization, democratization, an extremism. Results can be displayed in map, table or chart format.
Explore five decades of economic and demographic change in the structure of American families with an interactive database.