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Just graduated? Does it make you feel like a grown up?

  • Written by Michael Vuolo, Assistant Professor of Sociology, The Ohio State University
imageAdults? Or not yet?HCC Public Information Office, CC BY-NC-ND

We may think that a simple age cutoff – such as 18 – should make us feel like adults. And why not? After all, crossing an age threshold can bestow certain rights, such as voting, military enlistment, purchase of certain substances as well as adult images or videos.

From our...

Read more: Just graduated? Does it make you feel like a grown up?

Even scientists take selfies with wild animals. Here's why they shouldn't.

  • Written by Christine A. Ward-Paige, Founder/Scientist at eOceans.org, Research Associate at Dalhousie University, Dalhousie University
imageResearchers in Maine pose with terns after measuring, weighing and banding the birds. But what if they weren't scientists?Amanda Boyd, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service/Flickr, CC BY

One of the great things about being a biologist is getting to work in the field and connect with wildlife. Through my career, I have enjoyed many unforgettable close...

Read more: Even scientists take selfies with wild animals. Here's why they shouldn't.

What's lost when we photograph life instead of experiencing it?

  • Written by Rebecca Macmillan, Ph.D. Candidate in English, University of Texas at Austin
imageWith our attention diverted, we're no longer in the moment.'Concert' via www.shutterstock.com

At a conference on June 14, Facebook executive Nicola Mendelsohn predicted that the social networking site would be “all video” within five years.

“We’re seeing a year-on-year decline of text,” she said. “If I was having...

Read more: What's lost when we photograph life instead of experiencing it?

Un-Trapped: Supreme Court strikes down Texas law limiting abortion

  • Written by Renee Cramer, Professor of Law, Politics and Society, Drake University

The U. S. Supreme Court on Monday invalidated two Texas provisions that would have closed at least seven of 17 abortion clinics in the state, saying that neither provision had a positive effect on women’s health, and that both existed primarily for the unconstitutional purpose of restricting access to abortion. Some are calling the 5-3...

Read more: Un-Trapped: Supreme Court strikes down Texas law limiting abortion

How do food manufacturers pick those dates on their product packaging – and what do they mean?

  • Written by Londa Nwadike, Assistant Professor of Food Safety, Extension Food Safety Specialist at University of Missouri, Kansas State University
imageWhen does it all become dangerous to eat?Rich Johnstone, CC BY-NC-ND

No one wants to serve spoiled food to their families. Conversely, consumers don’t want to throw food away unnecessarily – but we certainly do. The United States Department of Agriculture estimates Americans toss out the equivalent of US$162 billion in food every year,...

Read more: How do food manufacturers pick those dates on their product packaging – and what do they mean?

How do children learn to detect snakes, spiders and other dangerous things?

  • Written by Vanessa LoBue, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Rutgers University Newark
imageHow do kids develop fears?Craig Bradshaw, CC BY-NC-ND

As summer approaches, children will be spending less time in the classroom and more time navigating the outside world. Outdoor activities are a fun and exciting part of summertime, but they can also filled with natural (and unnatural) dangers, like fast-moving cars, steep cliffs, crashing waves...

Read more: How do children learn to detect snakes, spiders and other dangerous things?

Explainer: how Panama Canal expansion will transform shipping once again

  • Written by Frank Townsend, Professor Emeritus of Civil Engineering, University of Florida

World shipping changed forever when the Panama Canal opened on August 15, 1914. It was an engineering marvel of its day, cutting the distance required to get from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic by as much as 8,000 nautical miles.

The shipping industry is changing once again as 70 heads of state gathered in Panama City recently to celebrate the...

Read more: Explainer: how Panama Canal expansion will transform shipping once again

License and registration, please: how regulating guns like cars could improve safety

  • Written by Keith Guzik, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Colorado Denver

In the midst of the Senate’s failure to agree on measures designed to tighten controls around the sales of firearms, a new idea is emerging.

Last week, U.S. Representative Jim Hines, a Democrat from Connecticut, appeared on “The Daily Show With Trevor Noah” and said, “we ought to probably test people and make sure there is...

Read more: License and registration, please: how regulating guns like cars could improve safety

Bartering for science: using mobile apps to get research data

  • Written by Olivia Walch, Ph.D. Candidate in Applied and Interdisciplinary Mathematics, University of Michigan
imageOpening up mobile apps' data to scholarly researchers.Mobile phone and binary via shutterstock.com

There’s a transaction that happens every time you load a website, send an email, or click “like” on a friend’s post: You get something you want in exchange for some data about your actions and interests. Entire business models...

Read more: Bartering for science: using mobile apps to get research data

The geography of Brexit: what the vote reveals about the Disunited Kingdom

  • Written by John Rennie Short, Professor, School of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

A majority in the U.K. voted to leave the EU. But a look at the geography of the vote provides another angle on the result and insights into the political geography of the Disunited Kingdom.

The vote laid bare a seldom-acknowledged political and economic imbalance within the country. It has also raised the chances of dissolving a more than three...

Read more: The geography of Brexit: what the vote reveals about the Disunited Kingdom

More Articles ...

  1. Supreme Court immigration confusion? Blame the U.S. Senate
  2. Why the GM food labeling debate is not over
  3. Is it ethical to purchase human organs?
  4. Deadlocked: what a nine-word decision means for five million undocumented immigrants
  5. What explains Britain's Brexit shocker?
  6. What consumers want in GM food labeling is simpler than you think
  7. Eliminating inequalities needs affirmative action
  8. Why bad news for one Muslim American is bad news for all Muslims
  9. Britain exits the EU: how Brexit will hit America
  10. Does eating bamboo make it harder for pandas to reproduce?
  11. Will the new toxic chemical safety law protect us?
  12. After Supreme Court’s Fisher decision: what we need to know about considering race in admissions
  13. How the 2016 presidential election will shape American identity
  14. Trump's energy plan poses climate threat to U.S. economy
  15. How community schools can beat summer learning loss for low-income students
  16. Trump's dog whistle: the white, screwed-over sports icon
  17. Hate crimes against LGBTQ people are a public health issue
  18. Is Panama on the verge of a scientific brain drain?
  19. Why progressives should rescue the TPP trade deal
  20. How risky are the World Economic Forum’s top 10 emerging technologies for 2016?
  21. Can we harness bacteria to help clean up future oil spills?
  22. What summertime means for black children
  23. Is there a link between being in the closet and being homophobic?
  24. Why stress is more likely to cause depression in men than in women
  25. Will Donald Trump's call to profile Muslims offend voters?
  26. Buying and selling hacked passwords: How does it work?
  27. Love it or leave it: why the UK's Brexit vote should matter to Americans
  28. Would Brexit be followed by breakup of the United Kingdom?
  29. Sandy Hook lawsuit is latest effort to hold gun makers liable for mass shootings
  30. 2016: the proving ground for political data
  31. To fight antibiotic resistance, we need to fight bad prescribing habits
  32. Expand the draft to women – or repeal it? A long constitutional debate continues
  33. Of bears and biases: scientific judgment and the fate of Yellowstone's grizzlies
  34. Love it or leave it: why the U.K.'s Brexit vote should matter to Americans
  35. Why the first Olympic refugee team may not be the last
  36. Big data jobs are out there – are you ready?
  37. An epidemic of children dying in hot cars: a tragedy that can be prevented
  38. Should ethics professors observe higher standards of behavior?
  39. Cracking the mystery of the 'Worldwide Hum'
  40. Brexit backers claim U.K. is drowning in EU regulations – are Americans underwater too?
  41. American Medical Association warns of health and safety problems from 'white' LED streetlights
  42. Low testosterone may make you a better father
  43. Is technology making us dumber or smarter? Yes
  44. How the Supreme Court decision on United States v. Texas will affect millions of families
  45. Chemical regulation bill clears Congress, but will it protect the public?
  46. Did Donald Trump kill the Tea Party?
  47. Why schools should provide one laptop per child
  48. Fentanyl: widely used, deadly when abused
  49. What we can learn from an Indonesian ethnicity that recognizes five genders
  50. Disrupting pro-ISIS online 'ecosystems' could help thwart real-world terrorism