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A linguistic analysis of dehumanization toward substance use across three decades of news articles

Brenda Curtis, Ph.D.

Brenda Curtis, PhD, MsPH

Featured Paper of the Month – April 2024

Published in Frontiers in Public Health by Salvatore Giorgi and Brenda Curtis,  et al. of the NIDA IRP Technology and Translational Research Unit.

Summary

In this work, we apply a computational linguistic framework to measure dehumanization to 3 million news articles. We show that popular media in the U.S. has dehumanized people who used substances to varying degrees. Substances such as heroin have been strongly dehumanized for decades,  while marijuana use is becoming less dehumanized over time, aligning with increased public support for legalization.

Publication Information

Giorgi, Salvatore; Habib, Daniel Roy Sadek; Bellew, Douglas; Sherman, Garrick; Curtis, Brenda

A linguistic analysis of dehumanization toward substance use across three decades of news articles Miscellaneous

2023, ISSN: 2296-2565.

Abstract | Links

@misc{pmid38074754,
title = {A linguistic analysis of dehumanization toward substance use across three decades of news articles},
author = {Salvatore Giorgi and Daniel Roy Sadek Habib and Douglas Bellew and Garrick Sherman and Brenda Curtis},
url = {https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38074754/},
doi = {10.3389/fpubh.2023.1275975},
issn = {2296-2565},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-01-01},
urldate = {2023-01-01},
journal = {Front Public Health},
volume = {11},
pages = {1275975},
abstract = {INTRODUCTION: Substances and the people who use them have been dehumanized for decades. As a result, lawmakers and healthcare providers have implemented policies that subjected millions to criminalization, incarceration, and inadequate resources to support health and wellbeing. While there have been recent shifts in public opinion on issues such as legalization, in the case of marijuana in the U.S., or addiction as a disease, dehumanization and stigma are still leading barriers for individuals seeking treatment. Integral to the narrative of "substance users" as thoughtless zombies or violent criminals is their portrayal in popular media, such as films and news.nnMETHODS: This study attempts to quantify the dehumanization of people who use substances (PWUS) across time using a large corpus of over 3 million news articles. We apply a computational linguistic framework for measuring dehumanization across three decades of New York Times articles.nnRESULTS: We show that (1) levels of dehumanization remain high and (2) while marijuana has become less dehumanized over time, attitudes toward other substances such as heroin and cocaine remain stable.nnDISCUSSION: This work highlights the importance of a holistic view of substance use that places all substances within the context of addiction as a disease, prioritizes the humanization of PWUS, and centers around harm reduction.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}

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INTRODUCTION: Substances and the people who use them have been dehumanized for decades. As a result, lawmakers and healthcare providers have implemented policies that subjected millions to criminalization, incarceration, and inadequate resources to support health and wellbeing. While there have been recent shifts in public opinion on issues such as legalization, in the case of marijuana in the U.S., or addiction as a disease, dehumanization and stigma are still leading barriers for individuals seeking treatment. Integral to the narrative of "substance users" as thoughtless zombies or violent criminals is their portrayal in popular media, such as films and news.nnMETHODS: This study attempts to quantify the dehumanization of people who use substances (PWUS) across time using a large corpus of over 3 million news articles. We apply a computational linguistic framework for measuring dehumanization across three decades of New York Times articles.nnRESULTS: We show that (1) levels of dehumanization remain high and (2) while marijuana has become less dehumanized over time, attitudes toward other substances such as heroin and cocaine remain stable.nnDISCUSSION: This work highlights the importance of a holistic view of substance use that places all substances within the context of addiction as a disease, prioritizes the humanization of PWUS, and centers around harm reduction.

Close

  • https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38074754/
  • doi:10.3389/fpubh.2023.1275975

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