Nearly six weeks after the U.S. began its military campaign against Iran, higher gas prices are the outcome that concerns Americans the most. Confidence in Trump’s ability to make good decisions about U.S. policy toward Iran has declined among both Republicans and Democrats.
A 60% majority of U.S. adults say abortion should be legal in all or most cases. This share is down slightly from the last few years.
Drawing on five years of Pew Research Center surveys, here are 13 findings about how Americans use and view AI, and where they see promise and risk.
More Americans say data centers have a negative effect on the environment, home energy costs and people’s quality of life nearby than say they have a positive effect.
Just over half of U.S. teens say they’ve used chatbots for help with schoolwork, and 12% say they’ve gotten emotional support from these tools. Teens tend to view AI’s future impact on their lives more positively than negatively.
Roughly one-in-five U.S. teens say they are on TikTok and YouTube almost constantly. At the same time, 64% of teens say they use chatbots, including about three-in-ten who do so daily.
Most adults across 25 countries are aware of AI, and people are generally more concerned than excited about its effects on daily life.
Nine-in-ten Americans say having an affair is wrong. Republicans and Democrats differ sharply on the morality of abortion and homosexuality.
Majorities in Brazil, Colombia and Peru want leaders who stand up for their religious beliefs. Protestants are especially supportive of Christianity in public life.
Republicans are twice as likely as Democrats to call physician-assisted death morally wrong (48% vs. 23%).
The global population of Buddhists shrank by roughly 5% between 2010 and 2020, the sole major religious group to decline.
When a breaking news event happens, 36% of U.S. adults say they typically turn first to their preferred news organization to get more information.
Three-in-ten U.S. adults say they at least sometimes get news from newsletters, but many don’t read most of the newsletters they get.
57% of U.S. adults say they have not too much (40%) or no confidence (17%) in journalists to act in the best interests of the public.
U.S. adults under 30 follow news less closely than any other age group. And they’re more likely to get (and trust) news from social media.

Pew Research Center has deep roots in U.S. public opinion research. Launched as a project focused primarily on U.S. policy and politics in the early 1990s, the Center has grown over time to study a wide range of topics vital to explaining America to itself and to the world.

Pew Research Center regularly conducts public opinion surveys in countries outside the United States as part of its ongoing exploration of attitudes, values and behaviors around the globe.

Pew Research Center’s Data Labs uses computational methods to complement and expand on the Center’s existing research agenda.

Pew Research Center tracks social, demographic and economic trends, both domestically and internationally.
“A record 23 million Asian Americans trace their roots to more than 20 countries … and the U.S. Asian population is projected to reach 46 million by 2060.”

Neil G. Ruiz,
Head of New Research Initiatives
We often hear a candidate is leading, trailing, or the race is tied. This is based on “horse race” polling, which estimates how much support candidates have, based on how people answer surveys. But accurately measuring the horse race is hard due to different circumstances.