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Understanding that chronic back pain originates from within the brain could lead to quicker recovery, a new study finds

  • Written by Yoni Ashar, Assistant Professor of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
imageApproximately 16 million U.S. adults have chronic back pain.Olena Ruban/Moment via Getty Images

Most people with chronic back pain naturally think their pain is caused by injuries or other problems in the body such as arthritis or bulging disks. But our research team has found that thinking about the root cause of pain as a process that’s...

Read more: Understanding that chronic back pain originates from within the brain could lead to quicker...

What is intersectionality? A scholar of organizational behavior explains

  • Written by Christina Hymer, Assistant Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship, University of Tennessee
imageCivil rights advocate and legal scholar Kimberle Crenshaw speaks in New York City on Feb. 7, 2015. Paul Zimmerman/Getty Images

In modern conversations on race and politics, a popular buzzword has emerged to describe the impact of belonging to multiple social categories.

Known as intersectionality, the social theory has a complex history and refers...

Read more: What is intersectionality? A scholar of organizational behavior explains

NASA's robotic prospectors are helping scientists understand what asteroids are made of – setting the stage for miners to follow someday

  • Written by Valerie Payré, Assistant Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Iowa
imageMining an asteroid probably won't look exactly like mining does on Earth, but some principles will stay the same. posteriori/iStock via Getty Images

The cars, cellphones, computers and televisions that people in the U.S. use every day require metals like copper, cobalt and platinum to build. Demand from the electronics industry for these metals is...

Read more: NASA's robotic prospectors are helping scientists understand what asteroids are made of – setting...

Modern medicine has its scientific roots in the Middle Ages − how the logic of vulture brain remedies and bloodletting lives on today

  • Written by Meg Leja, Associate Professor of History, Binghamton University, State University of New York
imageThis 15th-century medical manuscript shows different colors of urine alongside the ailments they signify.Cambridge University Library, CC BY-NC

Nothing calls to mind nonsensical treatments and bizarre religious healing rituals as easily as the notion of Dark Age medicine. “The Saturday Night Live” sketch Medieval Barber Theodoric of York...

Read more: Modern medicine has its scientific roots in the Middle Ages − how the logic of vulture brain...

Biden administration executive order tackles AI risks, but lack of privacy laws limits reach

  • Written by Anjana Susarla, Professor of Information Systems, Michigan State University
imageThe Biden administration rolled out an executive order on AI that contains a mix of rules, guidelines and priorities.Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

The comprehensive, even sweeping, set of guidelines for artificial intelligence that the White House unveiled in an executive order on Oct. 30, 2023, show that the U.S. government is attempting to...

Read more: Biden administration executive order tackles AI risks, but lack of privacy laws limits reach

Kristallnacht, 85 years ago, marks the point Hitler moved from an emotional antisemitism to a systematic antisemitism of laws and government violence

  • Written by Michael Scott Bryant, Professor of History and Legal Studies, Bryant University
imageThe Boerneplatz synagogue in flames on Nov. 10, 1938, during the 'Night of Broken Glass' in Frankfurt, Germany. History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Late in 1938, Nazis across Germany attacked Jews and their homes, businesses and places of worship and arrested about 30,000 Jewish men. The attacks became known as Kristallnacht – the...

Read more: Kristallnacht, 85 years ago, marks the point Hitler moved from an emotional antisemitism to a...

Texas tried to fix its teacher shortage by lowering requirements − the result was more new teachers, but at lower salaries

  • Written by Sarah Guthery, Associate Professor of Educational Leadership & Policy Studies, University of Oklahoma
imageNew research found that a 2001 Texas policy has reduced teachers' wages. Jon Feingersh Photography Inc/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Facing persistent teacher shortages, Texas in 2001 reduced its student teaching requirements for alternative licensure programs. Our study found that these reduced teacher licensure requirements also led to reduced...

Read more: Texas tried to fix its teacher shortage by lowering requirements − the result was more new...

Secure attachment to both parents − not just mothers − boosts children’s healthy development

  • Written by Or Dagan, Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychology, Long Island University Post
imageStrong, supportive relationships with moms, dads and nonparental caregivers are all vital.skynesher/E+ via Getty Images

Imagine a sudden rustle in the tall grass. A ripple of alarm passes through the group of early humans who live together amid ancient, rugged terrain. In the center of the encampment, a 3-year-old child – let’s call her...

Read more: Secure attachment to both parents − not just mothers − boosts children’s healthy development

How Houthi attacks affect both the Israel-Hamas conflict and Yemen's own civil war – and could put pressure on US, Saudi Arabia

  • Written by Mahad Darar, Ph.D. Student of Political Science, Colorado State University
imageA poster of rebel leader Abdul-Malek al-Houthi is held aloft during anti-Israel protests in Yemen.Mohammed Hamoud/Getty Images

Yemen’s Houthi movement launched missiles and drones at Israel on Oct. 31, 2023 – provoking fears of a dangerous escalation of the Middle East conflict.

With the militia – which controls part of the Arabian...

Read more: How Houthi attacks affect both the Israel-Hamas conflict and Yemen's own civil war – and could put...

Gaza bombing adds to the generations of Palestinians displaced from their homes

  • Written by Michael Vicente Perez, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Memphis
imageChildren sitting near their home at al-Shati camp for Palestinian refugees in the central Gaza Strip on June 20, 2020.Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto via Getty Images

An estimated 1.4 million Palestinians have been displaced from their homes since the Israeli military began bombing the Gaza Strip on Oct. 8, 2023, in retaliation for a surprise attack by Hamas...

Read more: Gaza bombing adds to the generations of Palestinians displaced from their homes

More Articles ...

  1. Friendship research is getting an update – and that's key for dealing with the loneliness epidemic
  2. Endometriosis afflicts millions of women, but few people feel comfortable talking about it
  3. Despite his government's failure to anticipate Hamas' deadly attack, don't count Netanyahu out politically
  4. What exactly caused the explosion at a hospital in Gaza? Without an independent, credible investigation, it will be hard for everyone to agree
  5. Rupert Murdoch's empire was built on a shrewd understanding of how media and power work
  6. Cancer has many faces − 5 counterintuitive ways scientists are approaching cancer research to improve treatment and prevention
  7. A century ago, a Black-owned team ruled basketball − today, no Black majority owners remain
  8. American individualism lives on after death, as consumers choose new ways to put their remains to rest
  9. Language induces an identity crisis for the children and grandchildren of Latino immigrants
  10. 3 reasons the House GOP is not any more dysfunctional than the Democrats − even after the prolonged speaker chaos
  11. Young, female voters were the key to defeating populists in Poland's election – providing a blueprint to reverse democracy's decline
  12. Are journalists serving Virginia's voters well? Election could offer insights on media on national level
  13. Trump’s violent rhetoric echoes the fascist commitment to a destructive and bloody rebirth of society
  14. From India and Taiwan to Tibet, the living assist the dead in their passage
  15. Workplace discrimination saps everyone's motivation − even if it works in your favor
  16. How Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D minor became Halloween's theme song
  17. Jewish response to Hamas war criticism comes from deep sense of trauma, active grief and fear
  18. Collaborative water management can be a building block for peace between Israelis and Palestinians
  19. Palestinian Christians and Muslims have lived together in the region for centuries − and several were killed recently while sheltering in the historic Church of Saint Porphyrius
  20. Day of the Dead is taking on Halloween traditions, but the sacred holiday is far more than a 'Mexican Halloween'
  21. In the Israel-Hamas war, children are the ultimate pawns – and ultimate victims
  22. This course uses big data to examine how American newspapers covered lynchings
  23. United Auto Workers union hails strike-ending deals with automakers that would raise top assembly-plant hourly pay to more than $40 as 'record contracts'
  24. Violent and disturbing war images from the Mideast can stir deep emotions − a PTSD expert explains how to protect yourself and your kids from overexposure
  25. Louisiana's 'In God We Trust' law tests limits of religion in public schools
  26. White patients are more likely than Black patients to be given opioid medication for pain in US emergency departments
  27. How to deal with visual misinformation circulating in the Israel-Hamas war and other conflicts
  28. Asteroids in the solar system could contain undiscovered, superheavy elements
  29. Why Elon Musk is obsessed with casting X as the most 'authentic' social media platform
  30. A Halloween party in Boston turned ugly when a gang hurled antisemitic slurs and attacked Jewish teenagers
  31. AIs could soon run businesses – it’s an opportunity to ensure these 'artificial persons' follow the law
  32. 'I see no happy ending' − a former national security leader on the Gaza hostage situation
  33. Back in the 1960s, the push for parental rights over school standards was not led by white conservatives but by Black and Latino parents
  34. UN warns that Gaza desperately needs more aid − an emergency relief expert explains why it is especially tough working in Gaza
  35. I studied 1 million home sales in metro Atlanta and found that Black families are being squeezed out of homeownership by corporate investors
  36. To better understand addiction, students in this course take a close look at liquor in literature
  37. Public schools and faith-based chaplains: Texas’ new combination is testing the First Amendment
  38. Turkey faces competing pressures from Russia and the West to end its 'middleman strategy' and pick a side on the war in Ukraine
  39. FDA advisory panel's conclusion that oral phenylephrine is ineffective means consumers need to think twice when buying cold and flu meds
  40. How often do you lie? Deception researchers investigate how the recipient and the medium affect telling the truth
  41. New House Speaker Mike Johnson leads a GOP majority weakened by decades of declining party authority
  42. When communities face drinking-water crises, bottled water is a 'temporary' solution that often lasts years − and worsens inequality
  43. Polls have value, even when they are wrong
  44. Antisemitism has moved from the right to the left in the US − and falls back on long-standing stereotypes
  45. What are roundabouts? A transportation engineer explains the safety benefits of these circular intersections
  46. Being humble about what you know is just one part of what makes you a good thinker
  47. From morgue to medical school: Cadavers of the poor, Black and vulnerable can be dissected without consent
  48. Israeli invasion of Gaza likely to resemble past difficult battles in Iraq and Syria
  49. TCUS senior editor Kalpana Jain explores Indigenous communities in Indonesia − and learns about their struggles to reclaim land
  50. Are ghosts real? A social psychologist examines the evidence