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What is déjà vu? Psychologists are exploring this creepy feeling of having already lived through an experience before

  • Written by Anne Cleary, Professor of Cognitive Psychology, Colorado State University
imageHow can someplace you've never been feel so familiar?mrs/Moment via Getty Imagesimage

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com.


Why do people experience déjà vu? – Atharva P., age 10, Bengaluru, India


Have you ever had...

Read more: What is déjà vu? Psychologists are exploring this creepy feeling of having already lived through...

Holocaust comparisons are frequent in US politics – and reflect a shallow understanding of the actual genocide and the US response

  • Written by Adam R. Seipp, Professor of History, Texas A&M University
imageA woman holds a sign denouncing COVID-19 vaccine mandates, with syringes in the shape of a swastika, during a 2021 rally at the Kentucky Capitol in Frankfort. Jon Cherry/Getty Images

Robert Keith Packer, a 57-year-old Virginian, achieved a measure of infamy at the Jan. 6 Capitol riot when he was photographed wearing a sweatshirt emblazoned with a...

Read more: Holocaust comparisons are frequent in US politics – and reflect a shallow understanding of the...

Defensores indígenas resisten entre los caminos ilegales y la supervivencia de la selva Amazónica – las elecciones pueden ser decisivas

  • Written by David S. Salisbury, Associate Professor of Geography, Environment, and Sustainability, University of Richmond
imageMaría Elena Paredes, presidenta del comité de vigilancia de Sawawo Hito 40, enseña imágenes satelitales que demuestran la deforestación de la selva amazónica.Reynaldo Vela/USAID

La mujer Ashéninka con la cara pintada irradiaba una confianza calma y paciente mientras estaba de pie en las orillas...

Read more: Defensores indígenas resisten entre los caminos ilegales y la supervivencia de la selva Amazónica...

The Supreme Court is back in session, with new controversial cases that stand to change many Americans' lives – here's what to expect

  • Written by Morgan Marietta, Professor of Political Science, UMass Lowell
imageThe Supreme Court is set to start its latest term on Oct. 3, 2022. Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

Following a dramatic year of controversial rulings, the Supreme Court begins hearing new cases on Oct. 3, 2022, with a full agenda.

The court overturned abortion rights and expanded gun rights in June 2022 as the new conservative supermajority began...

Read more: The Supreme Court is back in session, with new controversial cases that stand to change many...

What's a laureate? A classicist explains the word's roots in Ancient Greek victors winning crowns of laurel leaves

  • Written by Joel Christensen, Professor of Classical Studies, Brandeis University
imageLaurel was an ancient symbol of medicine, the arts and the end of war.naphtalina/E+ via Getty Images

When the Nobel Prizes are handed out each year, honorees each receive a medal and monetary prize. Even in the absence of these material goods, the honor of being a Nobel laureate persists as part of someone’s name or title, like a heroic...

Read more: What's a laureate? A classicist explains the word's roots in Ancient Greek victors winning crowns...

Do multimillion-dollar dinosaur auctions erode trust in science?

  • Written by Lukas Rieppel, Associate Professor of History, Brown University
imageSotheby's sold a 77 million-year-old Gorgosaurus skeleton for over $6 million in July 2022.Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images

Dinosaurs are in the news these days, but it’s not just for groundbreaking discoveries.

More and more paleontologists are ringing alarm bells about high-profile auctions in which dinosaur fossils sell for outrageous sums. The...

Read more: Do multimillion-dollar dinosaur auctions erode trust in science?

Trump properties aren't the only ones to see wild valuations – putting a price on real estate isn't straightforward

  • Written by Kimberly Merriman, Professor of Management, Manning School of Business, UMass Lowell
image40 Wall Street is one of the Trump Organization properties included in the lawsuit.Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

On the lower tip of Manhattan there is a prime piece of real estate, the price of which is somewhat up for debate.

To the owners, the Trump Organization, 40 Wall Street is worth an eye-watering US$735 million, or at least it was in 2015....

Read more: Trump properties aren't the only ones to see wild valuations – putting a price on real estate...

Summer swimming season may be over, but you can still get swimmer's ear – and you don't even need to go in the water

  • Written by Thomas Schrepfer, Assistant Professor of Pediatric Otolaryngology, University of Florida
imageBoth children and adults are susceptible to the ear infection known as "swimmer's ear."Kay Blaschke/Stock4B-RF via Getty Images

Many forms of ear infections strike children and adults alike, but among the most common is acute otitis externa, also known as swimmer’s ear.

About 10% of Americans will experience swimmer’s ear during their...

Read more: Summer swimming season may be over, but you can still get swimmer's ear – and you don't even need...

What is a wetland? An ecologist explains

  • Written by Jon Sweetman, Assistant Research Professor of Ecosystem Science and Management, Penn State
imageA raccoon with a fish at the Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary in Naples, Fla.Michael Siluk/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Wetlands are areas of land that are covered by water, or have flooded or waterlogged soils. They can have water on them either permanently or for just part of the year.

Whether it’s year-round or seasonal, this...

Read more: What is a wetland? An ecologist explains

The term 'achievement gap' fosters a negative view of Black students

  • Written by Tara-Marie Desruisseaux, Research Associate in Education, University of Southern California
imageIs it time to find new language to describe racial disparities in education?Will & Deni McIntyre via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Despite long-standing efforts to close the racial “achievement gap” in education, the term does more to trigger racist stereotypes and causes...

Read more: The term 'achievement gap' fosters a negative view of Black students

More Articles ...

  1. Native Americans' decadeslong struggle for control over sacred lands is making progress
  2. Nicaragua has kicked out hundreds of NGOs – even cracking down on Catholic groups like nuns from Mother Teresa's order
  3. Hurricane Ian flooded a hospital and forced evacuations from dozens of nursing homes – many health facilities face rising risks from severe storms
  4. Hurricane Ian flooded a hospital and forced evacuations from dozens of nursing homes – many health facilities face similar risks from severe storms
  5. Why it's such a big deal that Alla Pugacheva, 'the tsarina of Russian pop,' came out against the war in Ukraine
  6. Yom Kippur: What does Judaism actually say about forgiveness?
  7. Yom Kippur is coming soon – what does Judaism actually say about forgiveness?
  8. Russia's energy war: Putin's unpredictable actions and looming sanctions could further disrupt oil and gas markets
  9. Indigenous defenders stand between illegal roads and survival of the Amazon rainforest – Brazil's runoff election could be a turning point
  10. Indigenous defenders stand between illegal roads and survival of the Amazon rainforest – elections in Brazil and Peru could be a turning point
  11. Russia plans to annex parts of Eastern Ukraine – an Eastern European expert explains 3 key things to know about the regions at stake
  12. UN slavery estimate raises question: Are 50 million people really enslaved today?
  13. Butter, garage doors and SUVs: Why shortages remain common 2½ years into the pandemic
  14. Iranian women have been rebelling against restrictions since the Islamic Revolution in 1979 – with renewed hope that protests this time will end differently
  15. Psychedelics researchers balance trippyness with scientific rigor after history of legal and cultural controversy – podcast
  16. Hurricane Ian: When the power grid goes out, could solar and batteries power your home?
  17. We tend to underestimate our future expenses – here's one way to prevent that
  18. What are tactical nuclear weapons? An international security expert explains and assesses what they mean for the war in Ukraine
  19. Nobel Prizes, election outcomes and sports championships – prediction markets try to foresee the future
  20. Your mighty tendons help you sprint, jump and move – a genetic mutation in one key protein may increase athletic performance
  21. Louis Pasteur's scientific discoveries in the 19th century revolutionized medicine and continue to save the lives of millions today
  22. Deep brain stimulation can be life-altering for OCD sufferers when other treatment options fall short
  23. Solar geoengineering might work, but local temperatures could keep rising for years
  24. Hurricane Ian: Older adults have many reasons for not evacuating – here's why it's important to check on aging neighbors
  25. NASA crashed a spacecraft into an asteroid – photos show the last moments of the successful DART mission
  26. Ada Limón is a poet laureate for the 21st century, exploring 'what it looks like to have America in the room'
  27. Hurricane hunters are flying through Ian's powerful winds to forecast intensity – here's what happens when the plane plunges into the eyewall of a storm
  28. The same app can pose a bigger security and privacy threat depending on the country where you download it, study finds
  29. Two wrongs trying to make a right – makeup calls are common for MLB umpires, financial analysts and probably you
  30. People of color are as interested in buying electric cars as white consumers – the biggest obstacle is access to charging
  31. Kanye may not like books, but hip-hop fosters a love of literature
  32. How to get away with torture, insurrection, you name it: The techniques of denial and distraction that politicians use to manage scandal
  33. Brazil's election goes beyond a battle between left and right – democracy is also on the ballot
  34. Unrest across Iran continues under state's extreme gender apartheid
  35. 3 reasons Hurricane Ian poses a major flooding hazard for Florida – a meteorologist explains
  36. A seismic change has taken place at the Supreme Court – but it's not clear if the shift is about principle or party
  37. Transgender men and nonbinary people are asked to stop testosterone therapy during pregnancy – but the evidence for this guidance is still murky
  38. 'There's only so far I can take them' – why teachers give up on struggling students who don't do their homework
  39. Children's eyewitness testimony can be as accurate as adults' or more so – if interviewers follow these guidelines
  40. Religion is shaping Brazil's presidential election – but its evangelicals aren't the same as America's
  41. Which wetlands should receive federal protection? The Supreme Court revisits a question it has struggled in the past to answer
  42. How Chinese celebrities are amplifying official policy on Taiwan, pushing 'One China' messages to millions of fans online
  43. Why does money exist?
  44. Why Patagonia's purpose-driven business model is unlikely to spread
  45. 'Traditional' Jewish American foods keep changing, with cookbooks playing an influential role in how Jews mark Rosh Hashana
  46. When should you get the new COVID-19 booster and the flu shot? Now is the right time for both
  47. The 'fathers of the church' died around 1,500 years ago, but these ancient leaders still influence Christianity today
  48. Desalinating seawater sounds easy, but there are cheaper and more sustainable ways to meet people's water needs
  49. Cooling conundrum: HFCs were the 'safer' replacement for another damaging chemical in refrigerators and air conditioners – with a treaty now phasing them out, what's next?
  50. The Justice Department's dilemma over prosecuting politicians before an election