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The Conversation

Connected cars can lie, posing a new threat to smart cities

  • Written by Qi Alfred Chen, Ph.D. Candidate in Computer Science and Engineering, University of Michigan
What algorithm turned these lights red?monticello/Shutterstock.com

The day when cars can talk to each other – and to traffic lights, stop signs, guardrails and even pavement markings – is rapidly approaching. Driven by the promise of reducing traffic congestion and avoiding crashes, these systems are already rolling out on roads around...

Read more: Connected cars can lie, posing a new threat to smart cities

Will a garbage revolt threaten Putin?

  • Written by Laura A. Henry, Associate Professor of Government and Legal Studies, Bowdoin College
Citizens protesting at the Volokolamsk town hall, after noxious fumes from a local landfill sent 50 children to the hospitalRadio Free Europe

A steady stream of garbage-laden trucks moves the waste of Russia’s capital to landfills in the surrounding region. The resulting mountains of refuse emit noxious fumes and leach pollutants into nearby...

Read more: Will a garbage revolt threaten Putin?

How Korean boy band BTS toppled Asian stereotypes – and took America by storm

  • Written by Susanna Lim, Associate Professor, Korean and Russian studies, University of Oregon

On May 27, the seven-member South Korean boy band BTS became the first K-pop act to top the Billboard 200 chart with their third album, “Love Yourself: Tear.”

A week earlier, BTS had won “top social artist” for the second year in a row at the 2018 Billboard Music Awards, beating out the likes of Justin Bieber and Ariana...

Read more: How Korean boy band BTS toppled Asian stereotypes – and took America by storm

Scientists are using DNA to study ocean life and reveal the hidden diversity of zooplankton

  • Written by Ann Bucklin, Professor of Marine Sciences, University of Connecticut
Copepod with eggs (blue). Copepods are typically just a few millimeters long, but are important food sources for small fish.NOAA

Marine zooplankton are tiny animals, roughly the size of insects you might see on a summer day, that drift with ocean currents. Many of them are lovely, but except for scientists who study them, few people are aware that...

Read more: Scientists are using DNA to study ocean life and reveal the hidden diversity of zooplankton

Why Jefferson’s vision of American Islam matters today

  • Written by Denise A. Spellberg, Professor of History and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Texas at Austin
President Donald Trump sits down for an iftar dinner, in the State Dining Room of the White House.AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

After last year’s deliberate break with tradition, President Donald Trump has resumed the iftar dinner – the sundown meal during the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan. An estimated 3.3 million American Muslims celebrate...

Read more: Why Jefferson’s vision of American Islam matters today

Migrants' latest health challenge: Scabies

  • Written by Jackson Thomas, Assistant Professor/Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy, University of Canberra

Scabies, long considered a disease of the past in the developed world, is making its way back. This highly contagious parasitic skin disease, which is caused by the burrowing itch mite Sarcoptes scabiei var. hominis, is most commonly transmitted through personal contact in close living quarters and institutional settings, such as schools, aged...

Read more: Migrants' latest health challenge: Scabies

How female protagonists have changed – and stayed the same – in young adult fiction

  • Written by Kelly Roberts, Associate Professor of English; Program Coordinator, 6-9 and 9-12 licensure programs in English, Meredith College
Female protagonists are forging a new way in contemporary young adult fiction.Workman Publishing

Strong female protagonists in young adult fiction are nothing new. From Nancy Drew to Annemarie Johansen – Lois Lowry’s selfless heroine in Holocaust-era “Number the Stars” – to a plucky young Lucy Pevensie in “The...

Read more: How female protagonists have changed – and stayed the same – in young adult fiction

Trump may intervene in the power markets to keep coal and nuclear plants running. Does that make sense?

  • Written by James Van Nostrand, Director, Center for Energy and Sustainable Development; Professor of Law, West Virginia University
The Indian Point nuclear power station outside New York City will be decommissioned by 2021. AP Photo/Seth Wenig

President Donald Trump recently ordered Energy Secretary Rick Perry to take “immediate steps” to stop the closure of coal and nuclear power plants.

And according to a draft memo that surfaced the same day, the federal...

Read more: Trump may intervene in the power markets to keep coal and nuclear plants running. Does that make...

Here’s why Trump’s new strategy to keep ailing coal and nuclear plants open makes no sense

  • Written by James Van Nostrand, Director, Center for Energy and Sustainable Development; Professor of Law, West Virginia University
The Indian Point nuclear power station outside New York City will be decommissioned by 2021. AP Photo/Seth Wenig

President Donald Trump recently ordered Energy Secretary Rick Perry to take “immediate steps” to stop the closure of coal and nuclear power plants.

And according to a draft memo that surfaced the same day, the federal...

Read more: Here’s why Trump’s new strategy to keep ailing coal and nuclear plants open makes no sense

¿Igualdad de género? Para las mujeres en política esto no existe

  • Written by Virginia García Beaudoux, Professor of Political Communication and Public Opinion, University of Buenos Aires

Read in English.

Como experta en comunicación y género, mi trabajo me ha brindado la oportunidad de conocer y asesorar profesionalmente a casi un millar de mujeres líderes y políticas alrededor del mundo, desde la República Dominicana o Bolivia, hasta Honduras.

En América Latina, me compenetré con las...

Read more: ¿Igualdad de género? Para las mujeres en política esto no existe

More Articles ...

  1. California's jungle primary sets up polarized governor's race for November
  2. Leyes de deportación de Trump dejan terribles huellas psicológicas en los migrantes
  3. I want your (anonymized) social media data
  4. EPA staff say the Trump administration is changing their mission from protecting human health and the environment to protecting industry
  5. Why long-term separation from parents harms kids
  6. 4 charts showing why putting tariffs on your friends is a bad idea
  7. Microplastics may heat marine turtle nests and produce more females
  8. Why pregnant women with depression often slip through the cracks
  9. How a masculine culture that favors sexual conquests gave us today's 'incels'
  10. Why won't scientific evidence change the minds of Loch Ness monster true believers?
  11. ¿Marchar o migrar? Para los jóvenes en Venezuela, esa es la pregunta
  12. Trump may believe in the rule of law, just not the one understood by most American lawyers
  13. How corruption slows disaster recovery
  14. Free-range parenting gets legal protection in Utah – but should the state dictate how to parent?
  15. When did humans first learn to count?
  16. With federal funding for science on the decline, what's the role of a profit motive in research?
  17. I go to El Salvador despite the danger because the kids there need my medical expertise
  18. Only 1 in 4 women who have been sexually harassed tell their employers. Here's why they're afraid
  19. Syrian refugees in America: The forgotten psychological wounds of the stress of migration
  20. Robert Kennedy, improbable liberal hero
  21. Why the Supreme Court's 'gay wedding cake' ruling won't resolve religious freedom issues
  22. A los presidentes latinoamericanos les encanta Twitter (y esta no es una buena señal)
  23. La publicidad artesanal de Vietnam, un recuerdo que está en peligro de extinción
  24. La publicidad artesanal de Vietnam, un recuerdo de está en peligro de extinción
  25. Limits on Chinese graduate student visas may protect US intellectual property but drive away talent
  26. 22 percent of men without college don't have jobs. Here's why they're being left behind
  27. 22% of men without college don't have jobs. Here's why they're being left behind
  28. How the American Bible Society became evangelical
  29. Satellite imagery is revolutionizing the world. But should we always trust what we see?
  30. Spending time alone in nature is good for your mental and emotional health
  31. Not just a place to live: From homelessness to citizenship
  32. When will Google defend democracy?
  33. The slippery slope of dehumanizing language
  34. Eating disorders are hard to overcome, but ditching diets is crucial
  35. Does pain expected equal pain felt? Ask a kid
  36. En Colombia, la coca triunfará sobre el café (o la miel) por una simple razón comercial
  37. En Colombia, la coca triunfará sobre el café (o la miel) por una simple razón comercial
  38. New hurricane season jeopardizes Caribbean recovery: 5 essential reads
  39. Understanding hurricane risks: 5 essential reads
  40. For many South Korean Christians, reunification with the North is a religious goal
  41. Why Florida Democrats can't count on the so-called 'black vote'
  42. Falsehoods, Sandy Hook and suing Alex Jones
  43. Do bouncers at clubs enforce dress codes equally across races?
  44. Disappointed donors can't count on getting their charitable money back
  45. Blood in your veins is not blue – here's why it's always red
  46. SpongeBob's Bikini Bottom is based on a real-life test site for nuclear weapons
  47. For NFL players, social media is key to winning PR battle over anthem protests
  48. What's behind Italy's crisis and why it matters
  49. Teenage depression: If a parent doesn't get treatment for a child, is that abuse?
  50. Why Puerto Rico’s death toll from Hurricane Maria is so much higher than officials thought