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The tragedy of sudden unexpected infant deaths – and how bedsharing, maternal smoking and stomach sleeping all contribute

  • Written by Fern R. Hauck, Professor of Family Medicine and Public Health Sciences, University of Virginia
imageRoomsharing can be done following safe infant sleep guidelines. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Unsafe sleep practices underlie most sudden unexpected infant deaths in the U.S., with three-quarters of infants affected by multiple unsafe practices at the time of death, and almost 60% sharing a sleep surface with another...

Read more: The tragedy of sudden unexpected infant deaths – and how bedsharing, maternal smoking and stomach...

Graduation rates for low-income students lag while their student loan debt soars

  • Written by Robert Samuels, Continuing Lecturer in Writing, University of California, Santa Barbara
imageThe likelihood of graduating from college is linked to the type of college a student attends.Ariel Skelley via Getty ImagesimageThe Conversation, CC BY-ND

A recent federal study on graduation rates for American colleges and universities shows that 40% of all students did not earn a degree or credential within eight years of leaving high school. The...

Read more: Graduation rates for low-income students lag while their student loan debt soars

Columbia president holds her own under congressional grilling over campus antisemitism that felled the leaders of Harvard and Penn

  • Written by Lynn Greenky, Professor Emeritus of Communication and Rhetorical Studies, Syracuse University
imageColumbia University President Nemat Shafik testifies before the House Committee on Education & the Workforce during an April 17, 2024, hearing on antisemitism on campus.Alex Wong for Getty Images

Lawmakers grilled Columbia University President Minouche Shafik and three colleagues on April 17, 2024, over antisemitism on college campuses, just...

Read more: Columbia president holds her own under congressional grilling over campus antisemitism that felled...

The luck of the puck in the Stanley Cup – why chance plays such a big role in hockey

  • Written by Mark Robert Rank, Professor of Social Welfare, Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis
imageA mathematical approach known as 'true score theory' can assess the contribution of luck to a team’s overall success.Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

The NHL playoffs are almost like a second season – two months of bruising, relentless play, as the top teams compete for the chance to hoist Lord Stanley’s Cup.

The 16 hockey teams that...

Read more: The luck of the puck in the Stanley Cup – why chance plays such a big role in hockey

3 things to learn about patience − and impatience − from al-Ghazali, a medieval Islamic scholar

  • Written by Liz Bucar, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Northeastern University
imageAl-Ghazali's book 'Alchemy of Happiness,' held in the Bibliothèque nationale de France.Al-Ghazali - Bibliothèque nationale de France via Wikimedia Commons

From childhood, we are told that patience is a virtue and that good things will come to those who wait. And, so, many of us work on cultivating patience.

This often starts by...

Read more: 3 things to learn about patience − and impatience − from al-Ghazali, a medieval Islamic scholar

Why luck plays such a big role in hockey

  • Written by Mark Robert Rank, Professor of Social Welfare, Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis
imageA mathematical approach known as 'true score theory' can assess the contribution of luck to a team’s overall success.Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

The NHL playoffs are almost like a second season – two months of bruising, relentless play, as the top teams compete for the chance to hoist Lord Stanley’s Cup.

The 16 hockey teams that...

Read more: Why luck plays such a big role in hockey

Billions of cicadas are about to emerge from underground in a rare double-brood convergence

  • Written by John Cooley, Assistant Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut
imageCicadas climb up a tree at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., during the Brood X emergence in 2021.Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

In the wake of North America’s recent solar eclipse, another historic natural event is on the horizon. From late April through June 2024, the largest brood of 13-year cicadas, known as Brood XIX,...

Read more: Billions of cicadas are about to emerge from underground in a rare double-brood convergence

Cities with Black women police chiefs had less street violence during 2020’s Black Lives Matter protests

  • Written by Kayla Stajkovic, Lecturer at the Graduate School of Management, University of California, Davis, University of California, Davis
imageBlack Lives Matter protests often pitted demonstrators against police − but not in every city.Samuel Corum/AFP via Getty Images

Black Lives Matter protests in cities with Black women police chiefs experienced significantly lower levels of violence – from both police and protesters – than cities with police chiefs of other racial...

Read more: Cities with Black women police chiefs had less street violence during 2020’s Black Lives Matter...

5 years after the Mueller report into Russian meddling in the 2016 US election on behalf of Trump: 4 essential reads

  • Written by Howard Manly, Race + Equity Editor, The Conversation US
imageFormer Special Counsel Robert Mueller testifies before the House Intelligence Committee on July 24, 2019. Alex Wong/Getty Images

In the long list of Donald Trump’s legal woes, the Mueller report – which was released in redacted form on April 18, 2019 – appears all but forgotten.

But the nearly two-year investigation into alleged...

Read more: 5 years after the Mueller report into Russian meddling in the 2016 US election on behalf of Trump:...

AI chatbots refuse to produce ‘controversial’ output − why that’s a free speech problem

  • Written by Jordi Calvet-Bademunt, Research Fellow and Visiting Scholar of Political Science, Vanderbilt University
imageAI chatbots restrict their output according to vague and broad policies.taviox/iStock via Getty Images

Google recently made headlines globally because its chatbot Gemini generated images of people of color instead of white people in historical settings that featured white people. Adobe Firefly’s image creation tool saw similar issues. This...

Read more: AI chatbots refuse to produce ‘controversial’ output − why that’s a free speech problem

More Articles ...

  1. Oman serves as a crucial back channel between Iran and the US as tensions flare in the Middle East
  2. Ireland at the crossroads: Can the ancient Brehon laws guide the republic away from anti-immigrant sentiment?
  3. Removing PFAS from public water systems will cost billions and take time – here are ways you can filter out harmful ‘forever chemicals’ at home
  4. Saturn’s ocean moon Enceladus is able to support life − my research team is working out how to detect extraterrestrial cells there
  5. Fermented foods sustain both microbiomes and cultural heritage
  6. Native American voices are finally factoring into energy projects – a hydropower ruling is a victory for environmental justice on tribal lands
  7. Reagan’s great America shining on a hill twisted into Trump’s dark vision of Christian nationalism
  8. Know thyself − all too well: Why Taylor Swift’s songs are philosophy
  9. Worried about housing shortages and soaring prices? Your community’s zoning laws could be part of the problem
  10. Other states, like Arizona, could resurrect laws on abortion, LGBTQ+ issues and more that have been lying dormant for more than 100 years
  11. ‘The former guy’ versus ‘Sleepy Joe’ – why Biden and Trump are loath to utter each other’s name
  12. Supreme Court to consider whether local governments can make it a crime to sleep outside if no inside space is available
  13. More climate-warming methane leaks into the atmosphere than ever gets reported – here’s how satellites can find the leaks and avoid wasting a valuable resource
  14. In the age of cancel culture, shaming can be healthy for online communities – a political scientist explains when and how
  15. Indian protesters pull from poetic tradition to resist Modi’s Hindu nationalism
  16. Grizzly bear conservation is as much about human relationships as it is the animals
  17. Exploding stars send out powerful bursts of energy − I’m leading a citizen scientist project to classify and learn about these bright flashes
  18. Drugs that aren’t antibiotics can also kill bacteria − new method pinpoints how
  19. Deepfake detection improves when using algorithms that are more aware of demographic diversity
  20. The US is losing access to its bases in Niger − here’s why that’s a big deal
  21. Foundations are using so many confusing words that few people can figure out what they’re doing
  22. Trump’s New York felony charges are going to trial – what the images might show when the business fraud case kicks off
  23. Germany’s turning point: 2 years into strategic pivot, progress made bodes well for the US, NATO and the world
  24. Rural counties increasingly rely on prisons to provide firefighters and EMTs who work for free, but the inmates have little protection or future job prospects
  25. Taylor Swift’s homage to Clara Bow
  26. 5 questions schools and universities should ask before they purchase AI tech products
  27. 4 reasons the practice of canceling weakens higher education
  28. Human brains and fruit fly brains are built similarly – visualizing how helps researchers better understand how both work
  29. Marijuana tax revenues fall short of projections in many states, including Colorado
  30. Does ‘virtue signaling’ pay off for entrepreneurs? We studied 81,799 Airbnb listings to find out
  31. From thousands to millions to billions to trillions to quadrillions and beyond: Do numbers ever end?
  32. Shadow war no more: Hostilities between Israel and Iran have strayed into direct warfare – is there any going back?
  33. ‘I’m not black, I’m O.J.’: What O.J. Simpson’s life showed about transcending race and being trapped by it
  34. Has the media learned anything since the O.J. Simpson trial?
  35. The hidden risk of letting AI decide – losing the skills to choose for ourselves
  36. The South’s aging water infrastructure is getting pounded by climate change – fixing it is also a struggle
  37. A monumental case, unfolding in a court of law and a court of public opinion – Trump goes on trial
  38. A young Black scientist discovered a pivotal leprosy treatment in the 1920s − but an older colleague took the credit
  39. Colorado is latest state to try turning off the electrical grid to prevent wildfires − a complex, technical operation pioneered in California
  40. Nitazenes found in 5 overdose deaths in Philly – here’s what they are and why they’re so deadly
  41. The unfinished business of John F. Kennedy’s vision for world peace
  42. Medieval Europe was far from democratic, but that didn’t mean tyrants got a free pass
  43. How Iran responds to Damascus attack could determine trajectory of conflict in the Middle East
  44. Taxes are due even if you object to government policies or doubt the validity of the 16th Amendment’s ratification
  45. The backlash against diversity, equity and inclusion in business is in full force − but myths obscure the real value of DEI
  46. How jurors will be selected in Trump’s legal cases - a criminal law expert explains
  47. Starbucks seeks Supreme Court protection from being preemptively ordered to rehire baristas who say they were fired for union-promoting activities
  48. I spent a decade helping Afghan girls make educational progress − and now the Taliban are using these 3 reasons to keep them out of school
  49. Elephant tourism often involves cruelty – here are steps toward more humane, animal-friendly excursions
  50. Domestic violence survivors seek homeless services from a system that often leaves them homeless