#Pew Research
4 bookmarks tagged with "Pew Research"
across 1 category: AI & Public Opinion
-  US Workers Are More Worried Than Hopeful About Future AI Use in the Workplacepewresearch.org • Oct 17, 2025 • AI & Public Opinion Pew Research survey of 5,273 US workers finds 52% worried about AI use in workplaces vs 27% excited. Workers who've used AI tools report positive outcomes (59% saved time, 46% improved work quality). Education and income gaps emerge: higher earners 3x more likely to use AI. Concerns focus on job loss and declining importance of human skills. resources:
-  How Americans View AI and Its Impact on People and Societypewresearch.org • Oct 17, 2025 • AI & Public Opinion Pew survey of 5,023 US adults finds 50% more concerned than excited about AI (up from 37% in 2021). 57% rate societal risks as high vs 25% seeing high benefits. 53% say AI will worsen creative thinking, 50% say it will worsen meaningful relationships. 73% willing to let AI assist with daily activities but 60% want more control. Majorities reject AI role in faith/matchmaking but support it for data-heavy tasks. 
-  Views of AI Around the Worldpewresearch.org • Oct 17, 2025 • AI & Public Opinion Pew survey of 28,333 adults across 25 countries finds median 34% more concerned than excited about AI, 42% equally concerned and excited, 16% more excited. US, Italy, Australia, Brazil, Greece show ~50% mainly concerned; South Korea only 16% concerned. Trust in AI regulation: EU 53%, US 37%, China 27%. Median 34% heard a lot about AI, 47% a little, 14% nothing. 
-  How the US Public and AI Experts View Artificial Intelligencepewresearch.org • Aug 3, 2025 • AI & Public Opinion Survey of 5,410 US adults (Aug 2024) vs AI experts. Public more concerned than experts about AI impacts. Experts more optimistic, especially on jobs. Both groups want personal control and worry about lax regulation. Gender gap among experts: men more optimistic than women.