NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Will Trump use the convention to broadcast a more moderate image?

  • Written by Nathaniel Swigger, Associate Professor of Political Science, The Ohio State University

Most political candidates spend an enormous amount of time and energy crafting campaign images. When it comes to judging politicians, what you see is at least as important as what you hear. The pictures that appear on screen, especially the people who surround a candidate, can have a powerful impact on voters.

In my work on campaign ad imagery, I...

Read more: Will Trump use the convention to broadcast a more moderate image?

Sea turtle ‘hitchhikers’ could play an important role in conservation

  • Written by Nathan Jack Robinson, Post-Doctoral Fellow in Biology, Indiana University–Purdue University Fort Wayne
imageHey, is there something on my back?Nathan J. Robinson, CC BY-ND

Many ancient cultures once believed that the world rested on the back of a giant sea turtle. This idea might seem far-fetched today, but for a diverse range of marine organisms, it’s reality. Collectively known as epibionts, these organisms make their homes on the backs of marine...

Read more: Sea turtle ‘hitchhikers’ could play an important role in conservation

Enough with the spoiler alerts! Plot spoilers often increase enjoyment

  • Written by Alan Jern, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
imageIs it really worth all the effort to avoid spoilers?'Man' via www.shutterstock.com

Last December, I had tickets to see “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” the night after the premiere. While I was at work that day, I was filled with anxiety. What if I overheard someone talking about the movie? What if I accidentally saw something online that...

Read more: Enough with the spoiler alerts! Plot spoilers often increase enjoyment

Why public health worries don’t have to ruin your cookie dough

  • Written by Brian Zikmund-Fisher, Associate Professor of Health Behavior and Health Education, Interim Co-Director of the Center for Bioethics and Social Sciences in Medicine, University of Michigan
imageDon't touch that dough! www.shutterstock.com

The following three statements are all true: Eating cookie dough can be dangerous, even after we’ve dealt with any raw eggs. I am a public health faculty member and an expert in health risk communication. My family and I eat raw cookie dough regularly.

If it seems implausible that all three of those...

Read more: Why public health worries don’t have to ruin your cookie dough

After Fisher: affirmative action and Asian-American students

  • Written by Michele S. Moses, Professor of Educational Foundations, Policy, and Practice, University of Colorado

After eight years, the Abigail Fisher case finally has been put to rest. In a landmark judgment on June 23, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of race-conscious affirmative action in university admissions.

Abigail Fisher, a white woman, had sued the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) for its race-conscious admissions policy...

Read more: After Fisher: affirmative action and Asian-American students

What's at stake in China's claims to the South China Sea?

  • Written by Scott L. Montgomery, Lecturer, Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington

It’s now official: the South China Sea does not belong to China.

Official, that is, according to a new ruling by the Permanent Court of Arbitration under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

Not so official, however, for China itself, which has summarily rejected the ruling, saying it “will neither acknowledge it...

Read more: What's at stake in China's claims to the South China Sea?

Will Cleveland get an economic boost from Trump’s GOP coronation?

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University

The Republican National Convention is coming to Cleveland, and boosters are cheering the millions of dollars it will bring to northeast Ohio’s businesses.

There are lots of impact studies of previous Republican and Democratic nominating conventions. Each seems to produce more eye-popping figures than the last. However, some academics and jour...

Read more: Will Cleveland get an economic boost from Trump’s GOP coronation?

How Twitter gives scientists a window into human happiness and health

  • Written by Lewis Mitchell, Lecturer in Applied Mathematics, University of Adelaide
imageEach tweet that relays an emotion, opinion or idea joins millions of others. "Globe" via www.shutterstock.com

Since its public launch 10 years ago, Twitter has been used as a social networking platform among friends, an instant messaging service for smartphone users and a promotional tool for corporations and politicians.

But it’s also been an...

Read more: How Twitter gives scientists a window into human happiness and health

Moving exoskeletons from sci-fi into medical rehabilitation and therapy

  • Written by Rana Soltani-Zarrin, Ph.D. Candidate in Mechanical Engineering, Texas A&M University
imageIs this the future of physical therapy?Body drawing via shutterstock.com

Chances are, you’ve seen a person using a powered exoskeleton – what you might think of as a sort of bionic suit – but only in the movies. In the 2013 movie “Elysium,” for example, Matt Damon’s character has an exoskeleton that makes his...

Read more: Moving exoskeletons from sci-fi into medical rehabilitation and therapy

Racial inequality starts early – in preschool

  • Written by Esther Canty-Barnes, Clinical Professor of Law and Director of the Education and Health Law Clinic, Rutgers University Newark
imageWhy should kids get suspended in preschool?Molly, CC BY-NC-ND

On Wednesday, July 6, the four-year-old daughter of Diamond Reynolds witnessed the killing of Philando Castile by a Minnesota police officer. She and her mother sat in close proximity to Castile when he was shot.

A 2009 Department of Justice study showed that more than 60 percent of...

Read more: Racial inequality starts early – in preschool

More Articles ...

  1. How did classified information get into those Hillary Clinton emails?
  2. Americans want a say in what happens to their donated blood and tissue in biobanks
  3. Up in smoke: We'll spend billions tomorrow for not helping poor people quit smoking today
  4. Can technology help fashion clean up its act?
  5. Loss for words: Art, language and the challenges of living on a changing planet
  6. Quantifying the social cost of firearms: a new approach to gun control
  7. Will the vice presidential candidates matter this year? Maybe, but not the way you think.
  8. Underwater microscope provides new views of ocean-floor sea creatures in their natural setting
  9. Why debt-free college will not solve the real problems in America's higher education system
  10. From Grexit to Brexit, why EU's mess of rules designed to prevent crisis is causing it
  11. Making the case for a new Olympics model
  12. Dear Hillary: Where are the women in your energy strategy?
  13. Why emotional abuse in childhood may lead to migraines in adulthood
  14. What Black Lives Matter means beyond policing reform
  15. Slow death: Is the trauma of police violence killing black women?
  16. How to sell a product called democracy
  17. Is anything ever 'forgotten' online?
  18. Americans think national parks are worth US$92 billion, but we don't fund them accordingly
  19. NATO summit: Despite high public support for defense spending in Europe, discord over burden sharing emerges
  20. Why is it so hard to improve American policing?
  21. A tragic reminder that policing takes a toll on officers, too
  22. Fed's focus on 'too big to fail' won't save taxpayers from next bank bailout
  23. Freaks, geeks, norms and mores: why people use the status quo as a moral compass
  24. Should parents ask their children to apologize?
  25. Public health research reduced smoking deaths -- it could do the same for gun violence
  26. Debunking one of the biggest stereotypes about women in the gaming community
  27. There's more than practice to becoming a world-class expert
  28. What would Abraham Lincoln say to Donald Trump about religion, politics and being a 'Know Nothing'?
  29. Learning to live with wildfires: how communities can become 'fire-adapted'
  30. Can next-generation bomb 'sniffing' technology outdo dogs on explosives detection?
  31. Opioid crisis: How did we get here?
  32. Why are people starting to believe in UFOs again?
  33. Helping ex-prisoners keep out of prison: what works
  34. How video can help police – and the public
  35. Reducing water pollution with microbes and wood chips
  36. How today's crisis in Venezuela was created by Hugo Chávez's 'revolutionary' plan
  37. Is Trump right that the TPP will destroy millions of jobs and cede US sovereignty?
  38. Eid al-Fitr 2016: understanding the differences among America's Muslims
  39. American Islam: a view from the suburbs
  40. The curious history of 'Mein Kampf' in France
  41. Plate tectonics: new findings fill out the 50-year-old theory that explains Earth's landmasses
  42. Why river floodplains are key to preserving nature and biodiversity in the western US
  43. Most Americans believe we should have gun regulation. Here is why those who don’t are winning the debate.
  44. Can slower financial traders find a haven in a world of high-speed algorithms?
  45. Dr. Franklin, I presume? The founder who could have been our founding physician
  46. Fading hope: why the youth of the Arab Spring are still unemployed
  47. Playing a science-based video game? It might be all wrong
  48. Where are new college grads going to find jobs?
  49. Early-onset Alzheimer's: should you worry?
  50. Explaining the Istanbul bombing: Turkey's six foreign policy sins