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US food insecurity surveys aren't getting accurate data regarding Latino families

  • Written by Cassandra M. Johnson, Assistant Professor of Nutrition, Texas State University
imageIt's hard to divulge an inability to put food on the table.Shestock/Tetra images via Getty Images

The federal government has conducted the U.S. Household Food Security Survey Module for more than 25 years. The data collected annually from about 50,000 U.S. households helps form estimates of the scale of food insecurity – not having access to...

Read more: US food insecurity surveys aren't getting accurate data regarding Latino families

People who experienced childhood adversity had poorer COVID-19 outcomes, new study shows

  • Written by Jamie Hanson, Assistant Professor of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh
imageThe study demonstrated that adverse childhood experiences can have lasting affects.andreswd/E+ via Getty Images

Adults who faced adversity during childhood were significantly more likely to die from or be hospitalized because of COVID-19. That’s the key finding of my team’s recent study, published in the Journal of Epidemiology and...

Read more: People who experienced childhood adversity had poorer COVID-19 outcomes, new study shows

Gentle parenting can be really hard on parents, new research suggests

  • Written by Annie Pezalla, Visiting Assistant Professor of Psychology, Macalester College
imageGentle parents often feel overwhelmed and alone, researchers found. Jamie Grill/The Image Bank/Getty Images

Are you a gentle parent? If so, chances are good that, just like your children, you may need a nap.

The idea of gentle parenting has been around since the 1930s but received increased attention over the past few years on social media and blogs,...

Read more: Gentle parenting can be really hard on parents, new research suggests

LGTBQIA+ sanctuary declarations help cities take a stand to defend rights -- but may not have much actual legal impact

  • Written by John E. Finn, Professor Emeritus of Government, Wesleyan University
imageMinnesotans hold a rally at the state capitol in St. Paul to support trans kids in March 2022. Michael Siluk/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Several cities and towns, mostly in the American Midwest and South, are responding to a surge of proposed and approved legislation that restricts gay and transgender people’s rights by...

Read more: LGTBQIA+ sanctuary declarations help cities take a stand to defend rights -- but may not have much...

MicroRNA is the master regulator of the genome − researchers are learning how to treat disease by harnessing the way it controls genes

  • Written by Andrea Kasinski, Associate Professor of Biological Sciences, Purdue University
imageRNA is more than just a transitional state between DNA and protein.Kateryna Kon/Science Photo Library via Getty Images

The Earth formed 4.5 billion years ago, and life less than a billion years after that. Although life as we know it is dependent on four major macromolecules – DNA, RNA, proteins and lipids – only one is thought to have...

Read more: MicroRNA is the master regulator of the genome − researchers are learning how to treat disease by...

Stoicism and spirituality: A philosopher explains how more Americans' search for meaning is turning them toward the classics

  • Written by Sandra Woien, Associate Teaching Professor, Arizona State University
imageWeb communities have helped the ancient philosophy of Stoicism find fans in a new generation.utah778/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Stoicism may be having a renaissance. For centuries, the ancient philosophy that originated in Greece and spread across the Roman Empire was more or less treated as extinct – with the word “stoic”...

Read more: Stoicism and spirituality: A philosopher explains how more Americans' search for meaning is...

A brief history of the US-Israel 'special relationship' shows how connections have shifted since long before the 1948 founding of the Jewish state

  • Written by Fayez Hammad, Lecturer in Political Science and International Relations, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageU.S. President Harry Truman holds a Torah given to him by Chaim Weizmann, the first president of Israel, in May 1948.Bettmann via Getty Images

In his first remarks after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel, President Joe Biden affirmed the United States offered “rock solid and unwavering” support to Israel, “just as we have...

Read more: A brief history of the US-Israel 'special relationship' shows how connections have shifted since...

Merriam-Webster's word of the year – authentic – reflects growing concerns over AI's ability to deceive and dehumanize

  • Written by Roger J. Kreuz, Associate Dean and Professor of Psychology, University of Memphis
imageAccording to the publisher’s editor-at-large, 2023 represented 'a kind of crisis of authenticity.'lambada/E+ via Getty Images

When Merriam-Webster announced that its word of the year for 2023 was “authentic,” it did so with over a month to go in the calendar year.

Even then, the dictionary publisher was late to the game.

In a...

Read more: Merriam-Webster's word of the year – authentic – reflects growing concerns over AI's ability to...

Writing instructors are less afraid of students cheating with ChatGPT than you might think

  • Written by Daniel Ernst, Assistant Professor of English, Texas Woman's University
imageMany educators say they are worried about being unable to keep up with advances in AI. Guillaume via Getty Images

When ChatGPT launched a year ago, headlines flooded the internet about fears of student cheating. A pair of essays in The Atlantic decried “the end of high-school English” and the death of the college essay.“ NPR...

Read more: Writing instructors are less afraid of students cheating with ChatGPT than you might think

Philly parents worry about kids' digital media use but see some benefits, too

  • Written by Denise E. Agosto, Professor of Library and Information Science, Drexel University
imageParents can model good media habits, like using online tools to connect with family and friends. Ridofranz/iStock/Getty Images Plus

A group of U.S. senators recently called on tech giant Meta – which owns Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger – to hand over documents related to the mental and physical harms its products...

Read more: Philly parents worry about kids' digital media use but see some benefits, too

More Articles ...

  1. After a pandemic pause, Detroit restarts water shut-offs – part of a nationwide trend as costs rise
  2. Unwrapping Uranus and its icy secrets: What NASA would learn from a mission to a wild world
  3. A researcher's prescription for better health care: A dose of humility for doctors, nurses and clinicians
  4. Next on the United Auto Workers' to-do list: Adding more members who currently work at nonunion factories to its ranks
  5. The psychology of climate negotiations: How to move countries from national self-interest to global collective action
  6. Dozens of US adolescents are dying from drug overdoses every month − an expert on substance use unpacks the grim numbers with 3 charts
  7. How climate negotiators turn national self-interest into global collective action
  8. Supreme Court to consider giving First Amendment protections to social media posts
  9. The challenges of being a religious scientist
  10. Why are bullies so mean? A youth psychology expert explains what's behind their harmful behavior
  11. Earth's magnetic field protects life on Earth from radiation, but it can move, and the magnetic poles can even flip
  12. Chlorine is a highly useful chemical that's also extremely dangerous − here's what to know about staying safe around it
  13. Pollution from coal power plants contributes to far more deaths than scientists realized, study shows
  14. A ceasefire is far from lasting peace -- a national security expert on the Israel-Hamas deal
  15. Americans are tiptoeing out of economic turmoil this holiday shopping season
  16. Forensic anthropologists work to identify human skeletal remains and uncover the stories of the unknown dead
  17. Small-town America's never-ending struggle to maintain its values hasn't always been good for US democracy
  18. Are rents rising in your Philly neighborhood? Don't blame the baristas
  19. In the face of death, destruction and displacement, beauty plays a vital role in Gaza
  20. Digitized records from wildlife centers show the most common ways that humans harm wild animals
  21. Forget dystopian scenarios – AI is pervasive today, and the risks are often hidden
  22. Why George Santos' lies are even worse than the usual political lies – a moral philosopher explains
  23. Who can defend voting rights? An appeals court ruling sharply limiting lawsuits looks likely to head to the Supreme Court
  24. Lizards, fish and other species are evolving with climate change, but not fast enough
  25. Lizards, insects and other species are evolving with climate change, but not fast enough
  26. How do viruses get into cells? Their infection tactics determine whether they can jump species or set off a pandemic
  27. West Bank's settler violence problem is a second sign that Israel's policy of ignoring Palestinians' drive for a homeland isn't a long-term solution
  28. What would it take for a cease-fire to happen in Gaza?
  29. Gaza's next tragedy: Disease risk spreads amid overcrowded shelters, dirty water and breakdown of basic sanitation
  30. Shows like 'Scandal' and 'Madam Secretary' inspire women to become involved in politics in real life
  31. 'Time warp' takes students to Native American past to search for solutions for the future
  32. This Thanksgiving − and on any holiday − these steps will help prevent foodborne illness
  33. In America, national parks are more than scenic − they’re sacred. But they were created at a cost to Native Americans
  34. Thank gluten's complex chemistry for your light, fluffy baked goods
  35. Airlines are frustrating travelers by changing frequent flyer program rules – here's why they keep doing it
  36. Thanksgiving stories gloss over the history of US settlement on Native lands
  37. Good profits from bad news: How the Kennedy assassination helped make network TV news wealthy
  38. Immune health is all about balance – an immunologist explains why both too strong and too weak an immune response can lead to illness
  39. Education linked to better employment prospects upon release from prison
  40. What a biannual gathering of 1967 Impalas reveals about the blurry line between fandom and religion
  41. Every state is about to dole out federal funding for broadband internet – not every state is ready for the task
  42. Pooling multiple models during COVID-19 pandemic provided more reliable projections about an uncertain future
  43. Being homeless means not being free − as Americans are supposed to be
  44. How do crystals form?
  45. Don't be fooled by Biden and Xi talks − China and the US are enduring rivals rather than engaged partners
  46. Thanksgiving sides are delicious and can be nutritious − here's the biochemistry of how to maximize the benefits
  47. What is quantum advantage? A quantum computing scientist explains an approaching milestone marking the arrival of extremely powerful computers
  48. Forget ‘Man the Hunter’ – physiological and archaeological evidence rewrites assumptions about a gendered division of labor in prehistoric times
  49. Unthanksgiving Day: A celebration of Indigenous resistance to colonialism, held yearly at Alcatraz
  50. Gettysburg tells the story of more than a battle − the military park shows what national ‘reconciliation’ looked like for decades after the Civil War