2020-07-19 11:00:00, SFGATE, SFGate

Content Categorization
/Shopping/Apparel
/Law & Government/Public Safety

Word Count:
1000

Words/Sentence:
19

Reading Time:
6.67 min

Reading Quality:
Intermediate

Readability:
11th or 12th

Media Sentiment
Proprietary sentiment analysis on both the headline and body text of the article. Sentiment scores range from -1 (very negative sentiment) to 1 (very positive sentiment).
RCS Analysis
Relative scoring for Risk, Crisis, and Security language within the article.
Risk Score
Scoring based on the composite risk, security and crisis language within an article compared to a baseline of historic analysis across thousands of diverse articles.
PESTEL Scope
Analysis of article orientation across the PESTEL macro-environmental analysis framework. Learn more about PESTEL.
Entity Word Cloud
Key people, places, organizations and events referenced in the article, weighted by frequency and colored based on contextual sentiment.
Auto Summary
Condensing key features of the article based on salience analysis. Helpful for “gisting” the article in a time crunch.

There are few studies on face mask fabrics, but the current consensus is that tight-weave cotton is the best material for a cloth mask.

There are few studies on face mask fabrics, but the current consensus is that tight-weave cotton is the best material for a cloth mask.

Photo: MoMo Productions/Getty Images

A bandana is the least effective face mask you can wear to protect others, according to a recent study.

A bandana is the least effective face mask you can wear to protect others, according to a recent study.

A cone-shaped mask is more effective than a flat-front design in stopping incoming and outgoing droplets.

A cone-shaped mask is more effective than a flat-front design in stopping incoming and outgoing droplets.

A bandana is the least effective face mask you can wear to protect others, according to a recent study.

A bandana is the least effective face mask you can wear to protect others, according to a recent study.

In a Florida Atlantic University study, scientists found that droplets from a bandana-covered cough traveled 3 feet, 7 inches, compared to 8 to 12 feet with no mask at all.

Keywords
Oly-fun, Mike Moffitt, acs-nano, Stanford University Professor of Materials Science and Engineering Yi Cui, twitter, bandanas, centers-for-disease-control-and-prevention, ppp, Fourth of July, San Francisco, Calif, National Institute of Standards and Technology, oly-fun, national-institute-of-standards-and-technology, christopher-zangmeister, Bay Area, mike-moffitt, sfgate, Walmart, cnn, calif, Kounalakis, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, fourth-of-july, 2fshopping-2fapparel, mike-at-sfgate, SFGATE, ACS Nano, walmart, the-daily, CNN, @Mike_at_SFGate, bay-area, kounalakis, npr, Florida Atlantic University, Christopher Zangmeister, Twitter, COVID 19, Bandanas, PPP, covid-19, 2flaw-26-government-2fpublic-safety, stanford-university-professor-of-materials-science-and-engineering-yi-cui, san-francisco, florida-atlantic-university, NPR, The Daily

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