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Election polls in 2020 produced 'error of unusual magnitude,' expert panel finds, without pinpointing cause

  • Written by W. Joseph Campbell, Professor of Communication Studies, American University School of Communication
imageA voter exits a polling location on Election Day, Nov. 3, 2020 in Fort Worth, Texas. Tom Pennington/Getty Images

More than eight months after the acute polling embarrassment in the 2020 U.S. elections – that produced the sharpest discrepancy between the polls and popular vote outcome since 1980 – survey experts examining what went...

Read more: Election polls in 2020 produced 'error of unusual magnitude,' expert panel finds, without...

For some craft beer drinkers, less can mean more

  • Written by Colleen C. Myles, Associate Professor of Geography, Texas State University
imageFor years, the market was inundated with heavy IPAs. Now drinkers are starting to push back.Bruce Milton Miller/Fairfax Media via Getty Images

My prepandemic summers were always packed with travel – trips to Europe for work and play, and, most recently, a road trip across the American West. At the end of a sweltering day of activities,...

Read more: For some craft beer drinkers, less can mean more

World's coral scientists warn action is needed now to save even a few reefs from climate change

  • Written by Sam Purkis, Professor and Chair of the Department of Marine Sciences, University of Miami
imageCorals are made of hundreds to thousands of tiny living polyps.Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation

The Chagos Archipelago is one of the most remote, seemingly idyllic places on Earth. Coconut-covered sandy beaches with incredible bird life rim tropical islands in the Indian Ocean, hundreds of miles from any continent. Just below the waves,...

Read more: World's coral scientists warn action is needed now to save even a few reefs from climate change

Coral reef scientists raise alarm as climate change decimates ocean ecosystems vital to fish and humans

  • Written by Sam Purkis, Professor and Chair of the Department of Marine Sciences, University of Miami
imageCorals are made of hundreds to thousands of tiny living polyps.Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation

The Chagos Archipelago is one of the most remote, seemingly idyllic places on Earth. Coconut-covered sandy beaches with incredible bird life rim tropical islands in the Indian Ocean, hundreds of miles from any continent. Just below the waves,...

Read more: Coral reef scientists raise alarm as climate change decimates ocean ecosystems vital to fish and...

Why livestreamers should sell their products with a poker face – not a smile

  • Written by Michel Ballings, Assistant Professor of Business Analytics, University of Tennessee
imageThat smile may hurt sales. Screenshot, CC BY-NC-SA

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Smiling or exhibiting other positive emotional displays while selling a product over live video – known as livestreaming – makes people less likely to buy it, we found in new research published in the Journal...

Read more: Why livestreamers should sell their products with a poker face – not a smile

Calls to cancel Chaucer ignore his defense of women and the innocent – and assume all his characters’ opinions are his

  • Written by Jennifer Wollock, Professor of English, Texas A&M University
imageWas Chaucer a toxic misogynist, or a staunch women's ally?Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Spying is a risky profession. For the 14th-century English undercover agent-turned-poet Geoffrey Chaucer, the dangers – at least to his reputation – continue to surface centuries after his death.

In his July 2021 essay for the Times...

Read more: Calls to cancel Chaucer ignore his defense of women and the innocent – and assume all his...

Why conservatorships like the one controlling Britney Spears can lead to abuse

  • Written by Naomi Cahn, Professor of Law, University of Virginia
imageBritney Spears has continued to perform around the world and record albums even while under a strict conservatorship. AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying

“I’m here to get rid of my dad and charge him with conservatorship abuse,” Britney Spears told a California court on July 14, 2021. She said that he was ruining her life, and in previous...

Read more: Why conservatorships like the one controlling Britney Spears can lead to abuse

Who owns the beach? It depends on state law and tide lines

  • Written by Thomas Ankersen, Legal Skills Professor and Director, Conservation Clinic, University of Florida College of Law, University of Florida
imageIf you want to stroll the shoreline, know your rights. Normanack/Flickr, CC BY

As Americans flock to beaches this summer, their toes are sinking into some of the most hotly contested real estate in the United States.

It wasn’t always this way. Through the mid-20th century, when the U.S. population was smaller and the coast was still something...

Read more: Who owns the beach? It depends on state law and tide lines

Evangelical support for Israel is neither permanent nor inevitable

  • Written by Walker Robins, Lecturer in History, Merrimack College
imagePresident Trump's evangelical supporters cheered the 2018 move of of the U.S. Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.Ariel Schalit/AP

Israel’s former ambassador to the U.S., Ron Dermer, made waves in May 2021 when he publicly suggested that Israel should prioritize its relationship with American evangelicals over American Jews.

Dermer...

Read more: Evangelical support for Israel is neither permanent nor inevitable

New COVID-19 vaccine warnings don't mean it's unsafe – they mean the system to report side effects is working

  • Written by Justin Vesser, Manager of Ambulatory Pharmacy Services, University of Virginia
imagePut into context, the benefits of vaccination still far outweigh the risks of rare adverse events.PenWin/iStock via Getty Images Plus

While the COVID-19 vaccines currently available in the U.S. have been proved to be safe and effective, recent reports of rare adverse events, or side effects, have raised concerns. On July 12, 2021, the Food and Drug...

Read more: New COVID-19 vaccine warnings don't mean it's unsafe – they mean the system to report side effects...

More Articles ...

  1. Bioweapons research is banned by an international treaty – but nobody is checking for violations
  2. The next big financial crisis could be triggered by climate change – but central banks can prevent it
  3. Are there any planets outside of our solar system?
  4. Kids aren't just littler adults – here's why they need their own clinical trials for a COVID-19 vaccine
  5. Designing less addictive opioids, through chemistry
  6. As coastal flooding worsens, some cities are retreating from the water
  7. School posts on Facebook could threaten student privacy
  8. How 'In God We Trust' bills are helping advance a Christian nationalist agenda
  9. What's in wildfire smoke? A toxicologist explains the health risks
  10. What's in wildfire smoke? A toxicologist explains the health risks and which masks can help
  11. Emmy Noether faced sexism and Nazism – 100 years later her contributions to ring theory still influence modern math
  12. Why some younger evangelicals are leaving the faith
  13. The US withdraws from Afghanistan after 20 years of war: 4 questions about this historic moment
  14. How Sarah Baartman's hips went from a symbol of exploitation to a source of empowerment for Black women
  15. Teens with secure family relationships 'pay it forward' with empathy for friends
  16. US families with kids are getting monthly payments from the government: 4 essential reads
  17. High-tide flood risk is accelerating, putting coastal economies at risk
  18. We work with dangerous pathogens in a downtown Boston biocontainment lab – here's why you can feel safe about our research
  19. Don't hike so close to me: How the presence of humans can disturb wildlife up to half a mile away
  20. From the labor struggles of the 1930s to the racial reckoning of the 2020s, the Highlander school has sought to make America more equitable
  21. Mixed-ancestry genetic research shows a bit of Native American DNA could reduce risk of Alzheimer's disease
  22. California is planning floating wind farms offshore to boost its power supply – here's how they work
  23. What is child care insecurity? 2 social scientists explain
  24. World hunger surged in 2020, with 1 in 10 people on Earth undernourished
  25. Happy 50th birthday to Chez Panisse, the Berkeley restaurant that launched farm-to-fork eating
  26. Cuba protests: 4 essential reads on dissent in the post-Castro era
  27. Biden targets noncompete agreements, which restrict the job opportunities of millions of low-wage workers
  28. US immigration judges considering asylum for unaccompanied minors are 'significantly influenced' by politics
  29. Bans on critical race theory could have a chilling effect on how educators teach about racism
  30. What is biblical inerrancy? A New Testament scholar explains
  31. Christian attitudes surrounding abortion have a more nuanced history than current events suggest
  32. 25-year-long study of Black women links frequent use of lye-based hair relaxers to a higher risk of breast cancer
  33. Delta variant makes it even more important to get a COVID-19 vaccine, even if you've already had the coronavirus
  34. John Glenn’s fan mail shows many girls dreamed of the stars – but sexism in the early space program thwarted their ambitions
  35. 63% of workers who file an EEOC discrimination complaint lose their jobs
  36. Who's running Haiti after president's assassination? 5 questions answered
  37. Ancient shark teeth lost in Antarctica millions of years ago recorded Earth's climate history
  38. Sharks that hunted near Antarctica millions of years ago recorded Earth's climate history in their teeth
  39. Poverty in 2021 looks different than in 1964 – but the US hasn't changed how it measures who's poor since LBJ began his war
  40. How Latin America's protest superheroes fight injustice and climate change – and sometimes crime, too
  41. New wave of anti-protest laws may infringe on religious freedoms for Indigenous people
  42. How do you start your own company?
  43. Mindfulness meditation can make some Americans more selfish and less generous
  44. Zaila Avant-garde – 2021 Scripps National Spelling Bee champ – stands where Black children were once kept out
  45. 3 tips for preventing heat stroke
  46. What's a suborbital flight? An aerospace engineer explains
  47. 3 billion people cannot afford a healthy diet
  48. The ocean is full of tiny plastic particles – we found a way to track them with satellites
  49. Before Shark Week and 'Jaws,' World War II spawned America's shark obsession
  50. Trump can't beat Facebook, Twitter and YouTube in court – but the fight might be worth more than a win