A new study from the Pew Research Center finds teenagers think chatbot-assisted cheating has become “a regular feature of student life.” A new study from the Pew Research Center finds teenagers think ...
A new Pew Research Center survey finds Americans are more likely to cite freedom as a source of national pride. The survey also reveals a significant partisan divide in what makes Americans proud, ...
This report from the Pew-Knight Initiative looks at how Americans think about their role in the news environment. Why we did this With information coming at people faster than ever before, and a ...
Catholicism has waned in Latin America over the past decade, with more individuals foregoing religious affiliation — although belief in God remains "high across the region," according to a new report.
To encourage reuse of our data, Pew Research Center, with support from the John Templeton Foundation, invites researchers to submit proposals for new research publications that use one or more of the ...
Here’s a shower thought: if light and sound both travel as waves, can you make something that works similarly to a laser but uses sound instead of light? It turns out that the answer is “yes”! If you ...
Consumers between the ages of 18 and 29 in the U.S. are using TikTok more than any other social-media platform -- overtaking competing platforms like YouTube, Facebook and Instagram for the first time ...
At a recent Santa event for neighborhood kids, I saw a trend on display that researchers have been tracking. The digital divide hasn’t closed. It has flipped. Inside a community center decorated with ...
Americans who leave their childhood religion typically do so by the age of 30, with just under half saying they stopped believing their former religion's teachings. For Catholics, retention rates tend ...
Empty pews are seen in a file photo at St. Gabriel Catholic Church in Washington. A new study from Pew Research Center released Dec. 15, 2025, looks at the various reasons why Americans, including ...
Americans who leave their childhood religion typically do so by the age of 30, with just under half saying they stopped believing their former religion's teachings. For Catholics, retention rates tend ...
(RNS) — Americans who had a good experience as children were likely to keep their faith. Those with bad experiences left, according to a new study from Pew Research Center. (RNS) — Americans who had a ...