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Stress is bad for your body, but how? Studying piglets may shed light

  • Written by Adam Moeser, Matilda R. Wilson Endowed Chair, Associate Professor of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, Michigan State University
Pigs and humans have a lot in common, particularly their digestive tracts. Krumanop/Shutterstock.com

Stress affects most of us to one degree or another, and that even includes animals. My lab studies early-life stress in pigs and how it impacts their health later in life, specifically in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Pigs, whose GI tracts are...

Read more: Stress is bad for your body, but how? Studying piglets may shed light

School safety commission misses the mark by ignoring guns

  • Written by F. Chris Curran, Assistant Professor of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos stated recently that guns are not a focus of a federal school safety commission meant to tackle school shootings.Africa Studio/www.shutterstock.com

A federal school safety commission that formed after the Parkland, Florida, school massacre won’t be focusing on guns.

That’s according to Secretary of...

Read more: School safety commission misses the mark by ignoring guns

John McCain helped build a country that no longer reflects his values

  • Written by Elizabeth Sherman, Assistant Professor Department of Government, American University School of Public Affairs

Arizona Sen. John McCain – scion of Navy brass, flyboy turned Vietnam war hero and tireless defender of American global leadership – now faces terminal brain cancer.

I am a scholar of American politics. And I believe that, regardless of his storied biography and personal charm, three powerful trends in American politics thwarted...

Read more: John McCain helped build a country that no longer reflects his values

Tourism to the US is in a 'Trump slump' - truth or fiction?

  • Written by Bing Pan, Associate Professor of Tourism Management, Pennsylvania State University
Travel is up around the world -- but not to the US.Rawpixel.com/shutterstock

Are fewer people visiting the U.S. now that Trump is president?

Some have blamed the Trump administration for a sharp downturn in international tourist arrivals in 2017, as measured last September. A more recent revision of the numbers suggests that might not be accurate.

So...

Read more: Tourism to the US is in a 'Trump slump' - truth or fiction?

When does hungry become hangry?

  • Written by Jennifer MacCormack, Ph.D. Student in Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill
You're ready to blow your top – but how much is due to your internal hunger and how much to external annoyances?perfectlab/Shutterstock.com

Have you ever been grumpy, only to realize that you’re hungry?

Feeling hangry has become a meme, even used in ads. But how does it work, psychologically?Snickers

Many people feel more irritable,...

Read more: When does hungry become hangry?

Bourdain, Spade suicides show how even those at the top can know the lows of depression

  • Written by Jonathan Rottenberg, Professor of Psychology, University of South Florida
Anthony Bourdain in a July 17, 2017, photo at the screening of 'An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power.'Evan Agostin/Invision/AP Photos

We struggle to comprehend the loss of Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain. Sudden deaths are shocking. It’s doubly shocking when the deaths are by suicide. Sudden suicide by people who seemingly have it all:...

Read more: Bourdain, Spade suicides show how even those at the top can know the lows of depression

Trump's presidency marks the first time in 24 years that the federal bench is becoming less diverse

  • Written by Rorie Solberg, Associate Professor of Political Science, Oregon State University
President Trump's judicial nominee Thomas Alvin Farr.AP Photo/Alex Brandon

President Donald Trump and his Republican allies in the Senate are pushing through nominations for federal judges at an unusually fast pace ahead of the 2018 midterm elections. That’s when the GOP could lose its majority and end the easy path to confirmation for...

Read more: Trump's presidency marks the first time in 24 years that the federal bench is becoming less diverse

Detained immigrant children stay in shelters that are already full and aren't equipped for babies

  • Written by Dyana Mason, Assistant Professor of Planning, Public Policy and Management, University of Oregon
Women with children in their arms protested the separation of families seeking protection at U.S. borders, as DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen addressed a Senate subcommittee. AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

The Trump administration is deliberately taking immigrant children away from their parents. This practice, which has already elicited...

Read more: Detained immigrant children stay in shelters that are already full and aren't equipped for babies

Why did the television reboot become all the rage?

  • Written by Dr. James Francis, Jr., Lecturer, Department of English, Texas A&M University

Designer Yves Saint Laurent once said, “Fashions fade, style is eternal.”

The same could be said for television: When a popular show concludes, it lives on in syndication and Blu-ray. But recently, TV immortality has assumed a new form. Networks and streaming services are increasingly pulling from the past to flood the airwaves with...

Read more: Why did the television reboot become all the rage?

I visited the Rohingya camps in Myanmar and here is what I saw

  • Written by Cresa Pugh, Doctoral Student in Sociology & Social Policy, Harvard University
A camp for displaced Rohingyas in the city of Sittwe in western Myanmar.Cresa Pugh, CC BY

Myanmar recently claimed to have repatriated its first Rohingya refugee family. But, as an official from the United Nations noted, the country is still not safe for the return of its estimated 700,000 Rohingya Muslim refugees, who fled to Bangladesh in 2017...

Read more: I visited the Rohingya camps in Myanmar and here is what I saw

More Articles ...

  1. Mexico City's new airport is an environmental disaster but it could become a huge national park
  2. Increased deaths and illnesses from inhaling airborne dust: An understudied impact of climate change
  3. Religion is uniquely human, but computer simulations may help us understand religious behavior
  4. Memo to President Trump: Better ties between North and South Korea should come first – then get rid of nukes
  5. Rules-based trade made the world rich. Trump's policies may make it poorer
  6. Why predicting suicide is a difficult and complex challenge
  7. G7 summit: Trump could be using advanced game theory negotiating techniques – or he's hopelessly adrift
  8. Trump could be using advanced game theory negotiating techniques – or he's hopelessly adrift
  9. To conserve ocean life, marine reserves need to protect species that move around
  10. Students need IT skills to compete in the new economy
  11. Neurons made from blood cells – a new tool for understanding brain diseases
  12. 'Jurassic Park' made a dinosaur-sized leap forward in computer-generated animation on screen, 25 years ago
  13. Trump scorns US media, but just try being a journalist in North Korea or Mexico
  14. The nuclear industry is making a big bet on small power plants
  15. How the Ford F-150 became king of cars
  16. Young people crossing the border alone face challenges in the US homes where they're placed
  17. Why Mister Rogers' message of love and kindness is good for your health
  18. Social Security’s future is safe
  19. De Podemos a Trump, el 'storytelling' explica la política mundial
  20. How far away was that lightning?
  21. Connected cars can lie, posing a new threat to smart cities
  22. Will a garbage revolt threaten Putin?
  23. How Korean boy band BTS toppled Asian stereotypes – and took America by storm
  24. Scientists are using DNA to study ocean life and reveal the hidden diversity of zooplankton
  25. Why Jefferson’s vision of American Islam matters today
  26. Migrants' latest health challenge: Scabies
  27. How female protagonists have changed – and stayed the same – in young adult fiction
  28. Trump may intervene in the power markets to keep coal and nuclear plants running. Does that make sense?
  29. Here’s why Trump’s new strategy to keep ailing coal and nuclear plants open makes no sense
  30. ¿Igualdad de género? Para las mujeres en política esto no existe
  31. California's jungle primary sets up polarized governor's race for November
  32. Leyes de deportación de Trump dejan terribles huellas psicológicas en los migrantes
  33. I want your (anonymized) social media data
  34. EPA staff say the Trump administration is changing their mission from protecting human health and the environment to protecting industry
  35. Why long-term separation from parents harms kids
  36. 4 charts showing why putting tariffs on your friends is a bad idea
  37. Microplastics may heat marine turtle nests and produce more females
  38. Why pregnant women with depression often slip through the cracks
  39. How a masculine culture that favors sexual conquests gave us today's 'incels'
  40. Why won't scientific evidence change the minds of Loch Ness monster true believers?
  41. ¿Marchar o migrar? Para los jóvenes en Venezuela, esa es la pregunta
  42. Trump may believe in the rule of law, just not the one understood by most American lawyers
  43. How corruption slows disaster recovery
  44. Free-range parenting gets legal protection in Utah – but should the state dictate how to parent?
  45. When did humans first learn to count?
  46. With federal funding for science on the decline, what's the role of a profit motive in research?
  47. I go to El Salvador despite the danger because the kids there need my medical expertise
  48. Only 1 in 4 women who have been sexually harassed tell their employers. Here's why they're afraid
  49. Syrian refugees in America: The forgotten psychological wounds of the stress of migration
  50. Robert Kennedy, improbable liberal hero