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America's broadband market needs more competition

  • Written by Hernán Galperin, Research Associate Professor of Communication, University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
imageHow many people are trying to connect America's cities?Network workers via shutterstock.com

The United States is home to some of the most creative people and businesses on the planet. Our filmmakers, artists, software engineers and scientists entertain the world and expand the boundaries of human knowledge. Their creative process is often a...

Read more: America's broadband market needs more competition

Communicating climate change: Focus on the framing, not just the facts

  • Written by Rose Hendricks, Ph.D. Candidate in Cognitive Science, University of California, San Diego
imageHow you package the information matters.Frame image via www.shutterstock.com.

Humans are currently in a war against global warming. Or is it a race against global warming? Or maybe it’s just a problem we have to deal with?

If you already consider climate change a pressing issue, you might not think carefully about the way you talk about it...

Read more: Communicating climate change: Focus on the framing, not just the facts

Can the government save money by privatizing prisons, Medicare and other functions?

  • Written by Richard Lachmann, Professor of Sociology, University at Albany, State University of New York
imageA detention center in Eloy, Arizona. AP Photo/Ricardo Arduengo

Should we run the government like a business?

Donald Trump seems to think so. During his campaign for president, Trump returned again and again to his supposed success as a businessman and promised government programs “under budget and ahead of schedule.” His hotel in...

Read more: Can the government save money by privatizing prisons, Medicare and other functions?

What would Mark Twain think of Donald Trump?

  • Written by Jeffrey Wasserstrom, Professor of Chinese and World History, University of California, Irvine
imageTwain was an opinionated, prolific commentator on the personalities and political issues of his day.Terry Ballard/flickr, CC BY

Thanks to the criticisms they’ve leveled in articles, interviews, tweets and letters to the editor, we know that many contemporary authors, from Philip Roth to J.K. Rowling, have a dim view of Donald J. Trump.

But...

Read more: What would Mark Twain think of Donald Trump?

Tooth be told: Millions of years of evolutionary history mark those molars

  • Written by Debbie Guatelli-Steinberg, Professor of Anthropology, The Ohio State University
imageUpper teeth of a Neanderthal who lived about 40,000 years ago.Debbie Guatelli-Steinberg, CC BY-NC

“Show me your teeth and I’ll tell you who you are.” These words, attributed to 19th-century naturalist George Cuvier, couldn’t be more correct. The pearly whites we use every day over and over and over again are clues not just...

Read more: Tooth be told: Millions of years of evolutionary history mark those molars

March Mammal Madness tournament shows the power of 'performance science'

  • Written by Katie Hinde, Associate Professor, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University

In early March most science professors are writing midterms and eagerly awaiting spring break to catch up on research. We’re no exceptions, but we are also preparing to emcee a tournament like no other, with thousands of “spectators” in the United States and worldwide: March Mammal Madness.

This epic event mimics the National...

Read more: March Mammal Madness tournament shows the power of 'performance science'

Why China may want to repair its fraught relations with the Vatican

  • Written by Thomas M. Landy, Director, McFarland Center for Religion, Ethics and Culture, and Director, Catholics & Cultures initiative, College of the Holy Cross
imageChristianity has grown at a rapid rate in China.Catholics & Cultures, CC BY-NC-SA

A 65-year-long split between China and the Vatican may finally be getting repaired. Hong Kong Cardinal John Tong recently indicated that there might be an agreement over the thorniest issue between the two sides – Vatican’s right to appoint its own...

Read more: Why China may want to repair its fraught relations with the Vatican

Are Puerto Ricans really American citizens?

  • Written by Charles R. Venator-Santiago, Associate Professor of Political Science and the Institute for Latino Studies, University of Connecticut
imagePro-statehood supporters at the seaside Capitol in San Juan, Puerto Rico.AP Photo/Danica Coto

In a recent poll, 41 percent of respondents said they did not believe that Puerto Ricans were U.S. citizens, and 15 percent were not sure. Only 43 percent answered that Puerto Ricans were U.S. citizens. Today, being born in Puerto Rico is tantamount to...

Read more: Are Puerto Ricans really American citizens?

How Republicans and Democrats can both keep their promises on health care

  • Written by Darius Lakdawalla, Quintiles Professor of Pharmaceutical Development and Regulatory Innovation, USC, Professor of Pharmaceutical Development and Regulatory Innovation, University of Southern California
imageMedical students protest outside the office of Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) to express their views on changes to Obamacare. Tony Dejak/AP

Republicans who want to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA) emphasize the importance of patient choice and market efficiency. Democrats opposing repeal focus on the need to protect the most vulnerable.

As...

Read more: How Republicans and Democrats can both keep their promises on health care

'Alternative facts': A psychiatrist’s guide to twisted relationships to truth

  • Written by Ronald W. Pies, Professor of Psychiatry, Lecturer on Bioethics & Humanities at SUNY Upstate Medical University; and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Tufts University School of Medicine, Tufts University
imageDoes your nose grow if it's a falsehood, not a lie?Thomas Hawk, CC BY-NC

The phrase “alternative facts” has recently made the news in a political context, but psychiatrists like me are already intimately acquainted with the concept – indeed, we hear various forms of alternate reality expressed almost every day.

All of us need to...

Read more: 'Alternative facts': A psychiatrist’s guide to twisted relationships to truth

More Articles ...

  1. Our experiments taught us why people troll
  2. The truth about Obama's economic legacy and Trump's inheritance
  3. Why do some countries disapprove of homosexuality? Money, democracy and religion
  4. How to talk climate change across the aisle: Focus on adaptive solutions rather than causes
  5. Does empathy have limits? Depends on whom you ask
  6. Can Ben Carson use the power of HUD to make America happier?
  7. Trump's address to Congress: Expert reaction
  8. Edible marijuana: What we need to know
  9. Dealing with hate: Can America's truth and reconciliation commissions help?
  10. Japan's gender-bending history
  11. Reprintable paper becomes a reality
  12. Donald Trump and Andrew Jackson: More in common than just populism
  13. Culling sharks won't protect surfers
  14. How the NEA's measly millions keep America's museums alive
  15. America has not always been as welcoming to refugees as we think
  16. Do you know what the Affordable Care Act does? Here's a primer to help
  17. Can the black press stay relevant?
  18. The Democratic Party is facing a demographic crisis
  19. Why farmers and ranchers think the EPA Clean Water Rule goes too far
  20. Why mass deportations are costly and hurt the economy
  21. Why mass deportations are costly and hurt the economy
  22. Who are the Sufis and why does ISIS see them as threatening?
  23. Who are the Sufis and why does ISIS see them as threatening?
  24. Safe and ethical ways to edit the human genome
  25. Air pollution exposure may increase risk of dementia
  26. Air pollution exposure may increase risk of dementia
  27. America's mass deportation system is rooted in racism
  28. America's mass deportation system is rooted in racism
  29. The destructive life of a Mardi Gras bead
  30. California's rain may shed light on new questions about what causes earthquakes
  31. Why Trump's EPA is far more vulnerable to attack than Reagan's or Bush's
  32. Cybersecurity of the power grid: A growing challenge
  33. The transgender bathroom controversy: Four essential reads
  34. How Iranian filmmakers like Asghar Farhadi defy the censors
  35. Hidden figures: How black women preachers spoke truth to power
  36. Seeking truth among 'alternative facts'
  37. How undocumented immigrants negotiate a place for themselves in America
  38. Who exactly are 'radical' Muslims?
  39. Decades into diabetes, insulin therapy still hard to manage
  40. Broadband internet can help rural communities connect – if they use it
  41. Uber's dismissive treatment of employee's sexism claims is all too typical
  42. Want a stronger economy? Give immigrants a warm welcome
  43. How the 'guerrilla archivists' saved history – and are doing it again under Trump
  44. Threats of violent Islamist and far-right extremism: What does the research say?
  45. Red state rural America is acting on climate change – without calling it climate change
  46. Puzder's failed nomination reminds us why the secretary of labor matters
  47. In latest skirmish of western land wars, Congress supports mining and ranching
  48. Diversity is on the rise in urban and rural communities, and it's here to stay
  49. How social media stars are fighting for the Left
  50. How governments and companies can prevent the next insider attack