Research Areas
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Cierra Cummins has published work investigating public perceptions of gene editing technology. Her research indicates that U.S. adult viewers of information treatments related to gene editing generally express positive views, although some concerns are also noted. Cummins collaborates with researchers at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, including Brandon R. McFadden, Robert Thiel, Kirsten Hecht, and Savanna Turner, who have co-authored publications with her. Her academic profile includes an h-index of 1 and a total of 1 publication with 4 citations.
Metrics
- h-index: 1
- Publications: 1
- Citations: 4
Selected Publications
-
U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology (2023)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology
- U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology
- U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology
- U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology
- U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology
- U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology
- U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology
- U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology
- U.S. adult viewers of information treatments express overall positive views but some concerns about gene editing technology
Similar Researchers
Based on overlapping research topics