How Americans see automation and the workplace in 7 charts
Most Americans anticipate widespread job automation in the future, and they generally foresee more negative than positive effects from these advances.
Most Americans anticipate widespread job automation in the future, and they generally foresee more negative than positive effects from these advances.
Majorities of Americans foresee widening income gaps, tougher financial times for older Americans and intensifying political divisions.
When Americans peer 30 years into the future, they see a country in decline economically, politically and on the world stage.
Just 7% of Americans say race should be a major factor in college admissions, while 19% say it should be a minor factor.
Teens are spending their time differently than they did a decade ago, but gender differences remain in time spent on leisure, grooming, homework, housework and errands.
Whether they personally experience these conditions, seven-in-ten teens today see mental health issues as major problems among people their age in their communities.
Now that the youngest Millennials are adults, how do they compare with those who were their age in the generations that came before them?
The landscape of relationships in America has shifted dramatically in recent decades. Read eight facts about love and marriage in the country.
While a slight majority of Americans think it is generally unacceptable to use blackface in a Halloween costume, about one-in-three say it is acceptable at least sometimes.
More than one-in-five voting members of the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate are racial or ethnic minorities.