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US military leans into AI for attack on Iran, but the tech doesn’t lessen the need for human judgment in war

  • Written by Jon R. Lindsay, Associate Professor of Cybersecurity and Privacy and of International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageAI is helping U.S. forces find and choose targets in Iran, like this airfield.U.S. Central Command via AP

The U.S. military was able “to strike a blistering 1,000 targets in the first 24 hours of its attack on Iran” thanks in part to its use of artificial intelligence, according to The Washington Post. The military has used Claude, the...

Read more: US military leans into AI for attack on Iran, but the tech doesn’t lessen the need for human...

Universities survived Trump’s 2025 funding freeze, but the money still isn’t flowing to researchers

  • Written by Brendan Cantwell, Professor of Higher, Adult, and Lifelong Education, Michigan State University
imageColumbia University, seen in June 2025, is one of the schools that made a deal with the Trump administration last year in order to avoid losing funding. Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Several prominent universities, including Columbia University and the University of Pennsylvania, made headlines in 2025 in a dizzying back-and-forth with the federal...

Read more: Universities survived Trump’s 2025 funding freeze, but the money still isn’t flowing to researchers

Bird losses are accelerating across North America, particularly in farming regions where agriculture is most intensive

  • Written by François Leroy, Postdoctoral Researcher in Ecology, The Ohio State University
imageEastern meadowlark populations across the U.S. grasslands have dropped by about three-quarters since 1970.lwolfartist via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

Since the 1970s, the U.S. has lost billions of birds. We now know that those losses aren’t just growing – they are accelerating in places with intensive human activity, particularly where...

Read more: Bird losses are accelerating across North America, particularly in farming regions where...

Generative AI can play a role uplifting family and community in early childhood education

  • Written by Andres Bustamante, Associate Professor of Education, University of California, Irvine

Use of generative artificial intelligence technology is already widespread in K-12 schools and higher education. Now, AI technologies such as conversational agents and tablet-based assessments are starting to make their way toward early childhood education.

One concern with AI in a prekindergarten setting is that the technology will replace or...

Read more: Generative AI can play a role uplifting family and community in early childhood education

Why shadow tankers are the only ships still moving through the Strait of Hormuz

  • Written by Charles Edward Gehrke, Deputy Division Director of Wargame Design and Adjudication, US Naval War College
imageMany oil tankers aren't moving in the Middle East.DedMityay/iStock / Getty Images Plus

The Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed. Since the beginning of the conflict involving the United States, Israel and Iran on Feb. 28, 2026, oil tanker traffic through the world’s most critical oil shipping choke point has collapsed, dropping by more than...

Read more: Why shadow tankers are the only ships still moving through the Strait of Hormuz

Trump’s war against Iran is uniquely unpopular among US military actions of the past century

  • Written by Charles Walldorf, Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Wake Forest University
imageFire breaks out at the Shahran oil depot after U.S. and Israeli attacks in Tehran on March 8, 2026.Hassan Ghaedi/Anadolu via Getty Images

It’s clear that regime change is among the biggest objectives of the U.S. war in Iran.

“I have to be involved in the appointment” of Iran’s next leader, President Donald Trump said on March...

Read more: Trump’s war against Iran is uniquely unpopular among US military actions of the past century

Astrophysicists trace the origin of valuable metals in space, from colliding stars to merging galaxies

  • Written by Simone Dichiara, Assistant Research Professor of Astrophysics, Penn State
imageThis artist’s impression shows two tiny but very dense neutron stars at the point at which they merge and explode.ESO/L. Calçada/M. Kornmesser, CC BY

Billions of light years away in a remote part of the universe, two neutron stars – the ultradense remnants of dead stars – collided. The catastropic cosmic event sent light...

Read more: Astrophysicists trace the origin of valuable metals in space, from colliding stars to merging...

Gifts from top 50 US philanthropists jumped to $22.4B in 2025 − Mike Bloomberg, Bill Gates and the estate of Paul Allen lead a list of the biggest givers

  • Written by David Campbell, Professor of Public Administration, Binghamton University, State University of New York
imageHome Depot co-founder Arthur Blank, one of the top 50 donors of 2025, talks with his son Josh Blank.Kara Durrette/Getty Images

The 50 American individuals and couples who gave or pledged the most to charity in 2025 committed US$22.4 billion to foundations, universities, hospitals and more. That total was 35% above an inflation-adjusted $16.6...

Read more: Gifts from top 50 US philanthropists jumped to $22.4B in 2025 − Mike Bloomberg, Bill Gates and the...

Women of the Rosenstrasse protest challenged the Nazi regime for their detained Jewish husbands’ freedom – and won

  • Written by Danielle Wirsansky, Ph.D. Candidate in Modern European History, Florida State University
imageA sculpture by Ingeborg Hunzinger commemorates the Rosenstrasse protest in Berlin.NikiSublime/Flickr via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

On the cold evening of Feb. 27, 1943, Charlotte Israel gathered with a small crowd of women on the Rosenstrasse, a narrow street in central Berlin. They were not Jewish, but their husbands were, and the men had just been...

Read more: Women of the Rosenstrasse protest challenged the Nazi regime for their detained Jewish husbands’...

Making good choices when life gets messy – practical wisdom relies on human judgment, not rules

  • Written by Tim Hulsey, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Tennessee
imageThis virtue helps you figure out when and how to apply the other virtues in real, varying situations.Cavan Images/Cavan via Getty Images

A few semesters into my teaching career as a psychology professor, I uncovered a cheating ring. I determined who the ringleader was and called him to my office.

He admitted that he had illicitly obtained a copy of...

Read more: Making good choices when life gets messy – practical wisdom relies on human judgment, not rules

More Articles ...

  1. Just thinking about tequila, whiskey or wine shifts your mindset – new research
  2. Higher buprenorphine doses help patients stay in opioid use disorder treatment, new study finds
  3. Why cloud service outages ripple across the internet – and the economy
  4. Iran war: 4 big questions that help clarify the future of the Middle East
  5. This Sunshine Week, Florida reflects an alarming national trend of blocking the public’s access to information
  6. 47 years of deep mistrust and misperception paved the way to war between Iran and the US − and complicate any negotiations
  7. From bodice rippers to romantasy, romance novels are dominating the book market – and rewriting women’s sexual power
  8. Mining the ocean floor: 5 deep-sea sources of critical minerals essential to technology, and the fragile marine life at risk
  9. Iraq war’s aftermath was a disaster for the US – the Iran war is headed in the same direction
  10. Alaska’s glacial lakes are expanding, increasing the risk of destructive outburst floods
  11. US is less prone to oil price shocks than in past decades
  12. Mobile clinics offer a practical way to improve health care access in maternity care deserts
  13. Why do mountaintops stay snowy, even though they’re closer to the Sun?
  14. Social media can draw attention to atrocities – a key factor in reducing risk of recurrence
  15. What James Madison can teach Americans about religious freedom today
  16. Why do mountaintops stay snowy?
  17. What does the appendix do? Biologists explain the complicated evolution of this inconvenient organ
  18. Abandoned Pennsylvania mines and waste-heat recycling could make the state’s massive new data centers far more sustainable
  19. I’ve studied MAGA rhetoric for a decade, and this is what I see in Hegseth’s boasts, action-movie one-liners and gloating over dominance
  20. Silicone wristbands can help scientists track people’s exposure to pollutants like ‘forever chemicals’
  21. Big beautiful refund? 5 tax code changes that may put more money in your pocket
  22. Arming a Kurdish insurgency would be a risky endeavor – for both the US and Iran’s minority Kurds
  23. War in Middle East brings uncertainty and higher energy costs to already weakening US economy
  24. China’s muted response over war in Iran reflects Beijing’s delicate calculus as a concerned onlooker
  25. How Instagram addictiveness lawsuit could reshape social media – platform design meets product liability
  26. Today’s obsession with authenticity isn’t new – being true to yourself has troubled philosophers for centuries
  27. Venezuela’s fragile environment faces rising risks as US pushes for oil and critical minerals and illegal gold mining spreads
  28. When Washington and the states are in conflict, the ultimate winner is not always certain
  29. Telehealth is widely used by older adults insured by Medicare, new research shows
  30. Public health needs steady budgets – and federal funding uncertainty causes real harms, even if the money is later restored
  31. Family-friendly workplaces are great − but ‘families of 1’ get ignored
  32. Measuring poverty on a spectrum instead of an arbitrary line conveys a more accurate picture of inequality
  33. Trump offered a restrictive deal to universities that almost all rejected – but the Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education may not be entirely dead
  34. How does Iran go about selecting a new supreme leader? And who is in the running?
  35. Persian Gulf desalination plants could become military targets in regional war
  36. Researchers are combining drones and AI to make removing land mines faster and safer
  37. Why are some stars always visible while others come and go with the seasons?
  38. How Denver’s Northeast Park Hill community reduced youth violence by 75%
  39. Operational secrecy kept the US from making evacuation plans – and that means Americans in the Mideast could wait days
  40. Billions of dollars, decades of progress spent eliminating devastating diseases may be lost with undoing of USAID
  41. We designed an AI tutor that helps college students reason rather than give them answers
  42. Nearly a third of Pennsylvania gamblers are at risk of problem gambling − but few seek treatment
  43. 2025 was hotter than it should have been – 5 influences and a dirty surprise offer clues to what’s ahead
  44. GLP-1 drugs may fight addiction across every major substance, according to a study of 600,000 people
  45. Hezbollah − degraded, weakened but not yet disarmed − destabilizes Lebanon once again
  46. When unpaid cooking, cleaning and child care get a dollar value, income inequality in the US shrinks – but the gap has grown since 1965
  47. Trauma patients recover faster when medical teams know each other well, new study finds
  48. Housing First helps people find permanent homes in Detroit − but HUD plans to divert funds to short-term solutions
  49. Congress once fought to limit a president’s war powers − more than 50 years later, its successors are less willing to assert their authority
  50. AI and 3D printing help researchers create heat- and pressure-resistant materials for aerospace and defense applications