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Nations are pledging to create ocean preserves – how do those promises add up?

  • Written by Kirsten Grorud-Colvert, Associate Professor, Oregon State University
imageCorals and fish in the Hol Chan Marine Reserve, San Pedro, Belize.Andre Seale/VW PICS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Billions of people around the world rely on the ocean for food, income and cultural identity. But climate change, overfishing and habitat destruction are unraveling ocean ecosystems.

As a marine ecologist, I study ways to...

Read more: Nations are pledging to create ocean preserves – how do those promises add up?

ADHD: Medication alone doesn't improve classroom learning for children – new research

  • Written by William E. Pelham, Jr., Distinguished University Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry, Florida International University

'Jurassic World' scientists still haven't learned that just because you can doesn't mean you should – real-world genetic engineers can learn from the cautionary tale

  • Written by Andrew Maynard, Professor of Responsible Innovation, Arizona State University
imageWhile resurrecting dinosaurs may not be on the docket just yet, gene drives have the power to alter entire species. Hiroshi Watanabe/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Jurassic World: Dominion” is hyperbolic Hollywood entertainment at its best, with an action-packed storyline that refuses to let reality get in the way of a good story. Yet...

Read more: 'Jurassic World' scientists still haven't learned that just because you can doesn't mean you...

People overestimate groups they find threatening – when 'sizing up' others, bias sneaks in

  • Written by Jacqueline Rifkin, Assistant Professor of Marketing, University of Missouri-Kansas City
imageYou might make a quick and exaggerated judgment about what kind of neighborhood you’re in based on the people or flags you see.David Levingstone/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Places are not just physical, but also social.

For instance, around the North Carolina campus where we met, we knew certain bars based on the students who frequented...

Read more: People overestimate groups they find threatening – when 'sizing up' others, bias sneaks in

Did the assault weapons ban of 1994 bring down mass shootings? Here's what the data tells us

  • Written by Michael J. Klein, Clinical Assistant Professor of Surgery, New York University
imageThe Clinton-era ban on assault weapons ushered in a period of fewer mass shooting deaths.AP Photo/Dennis Cook

A spate of high-profile mass shootings in the U.S. has sparked calls for Congress to look at imposing a ban on so-called assault weapons – covering the types of guns used in both the recent Buffalo grocery attack and that on an element...

Read more: Did the assault weapons ban of 1994 bring down mass shootings? Here's what the data tells us

Conservative Supreme Court justices disagree about how to read the law

  • Written by Jeb Barnes, Professor of Political Science, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageThe current Supreme Court has a 6-3 conservative majority.Fred Schilling, Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States

With a 6-3 majority, conservative justices on the Supreme Court may appear poised to hand down decisions that the Republican presidents who appointed them would applaud.

As a political scientist who has published several...

Read more: Conservative Supreme Court justices disagree about how to read the law

How your race, class and gender influence your dreams for the future

  • Written by Karen A. Cerulo, Professor of Sociology, Rutgers University
imageEmile Bernard's 1888 painting 'Madeleine in the Bois d'Amour.'The Print Collector/Getty Images

In Disney’s “Pinocchio,” Jiminy Cricket famously sings, “When you wish upon a star, makes no difference who you are. Anything your heart desires will come to you.”

But Jiminy Cricket got it wrong.

We’re often taught...

Read more: How your race, class and gender influence your dreams for the future

No, Latinos don't actually have less heart disease – a new large study refutes the longstanding 'Latino paradox'

  • Written by Olveen Carrasquillo, Professor of Medicine and Public Health Sciences, University of Miami
imageFor at least three decades, studies have shown that Latinos have better heart health than other people, but new research calls that into question. The Good Brigade/DigitalVision via Getty Images

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

The big idea

Latinos may have higher rates of heart disease than previously thought,...

Read more: No, Latinos don't actually have less heart disease – a new large study refutes the longstanding...

US tragedies from guns have often – but not always – spurred political responses

  • Written by Robert Spitzer, Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of the Political Science Department, State University of New York College at Cortland
imageAde Osadolor-Hernandez of Students Demand Action speaks at a rally outside the U.S. Capitol in May 2022.Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

The nationwide call for stronger gun laws in the aftermath of mass shootings in Buffalo, Uvalde and the over 200 other places where such tragedies took place so far in 2022 is understandable.

It&rsquo...

Read more: US tragedies from guns have often – but not always – spurred political responses

Why can't you remember being born, learning to walk or saying your first words? What scientists know about 'infantile amnesia'

  • Written by Vanessa LoBue, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Rutgers University - Newark
imageWill either sibling remember this momentous meeting?ArtMarie/E+ via Getty Images

Whenever I teach about memory in my child development class at Rutgers University, I open by asking my students to recall their very first memories. Some students talk about their first day of pre-K; others talk about a time when they got hurt or upset; some cite the...

Read more: Why can't you remember being born, learning to walk or saying your first words? What scientists...

More Articles ...

  1. Primaries are getting more crowded with candidates, and that's good news for extremists and bad news for voters
  2. What triggers the 'trigger laws' that could ban abortions?
  3. How a public hearing is different from an investigation – and what that means for the Jan. 6 committee
  4. As one of Vladimir Putin's closest advisers on Ukraine, Nicolai Patrushev spreads disinformation and outlandish conspiracy theories
  5. Biden throws US solar industry a lifeline with tariff relief, but can incentives bring manufacturing back?
  6. Biden throws US solar installers a lifeline with tariff relief, but can incentives bring manufacturing back?
  7. Global arms industry getting shakeup by war in Ukraine – and China and US look like winners from Russia’s stumbles
  8. School mental health resources critical to ensuring safe school environments
  9. Changes are coming to school meals nationwide – an expert in food policy explains
  10. What is ectopic pregnancy? A reproductive health expert explains
  11. Ice world: Antarctica's riskiest glacier is under assault from below and losing its grip
  12. Why does the Moon look close some nights and far away on other nights?
  13. 2/3 of US colleges and universities lack student groups for Muslims, Jews, Hindus or Buddhists
  14. Making room for wildlife: 4 essential reads
  15. Tallying the dead is one thing, giving them names would take an 'inexhaustible voice,' as the ancient Greeks knew
  16. Russian artists grapple with the same dilemma as their Soviet forebears – to stay or to go?
  17. Therapy on the go: Mildly depressed or simply stressed, people are tapping apps for mental health care
  18. The US is importing baby formula to help end supply shortage – what parents need to know
  19. Why are so many big tech whistleblowers women? Here is what the research shows
  20. There are historical and psychological reasons why the legal age for purchasing assault weapons does not make sense
  21. How Indian American spelling bee dominance may fuel educational inequities
  22. Genetic paparazzi are right around the corner, and courts aren't ready to confront the legal quagmire of DNA theft
  23. Change won't appear overnight in many states if the Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade
  24. What makes smoky, charred barbecue taste so good? The chemistry of cooking over an open flame
  25. Bed bugs' biggest impact may be on mental health after an infestation of these bloodsucking parasites
  26. Can Bionic Reading make you a speed reader? Not so fast
  27. Giving refugees money instead of stuff can lead to price gouging – but it doesn't have to
  28. Warning signs can be detected sooner through universal screenings for student mental health
  29. US moves to rename Army bases honoring Confederate generals who fought to defend slavery
  30. 50 years after ‘Napalm Girl,’ myths distort the reality behind a horrific photo of the Vietnam War and exaggerate its impact
  31. What 5 previous congressional investigations can teach us about the House Jan. 6 committee hearings
  32. Qué hay detrás de la escasez de leche de fórmula para bebés en EEUU y cómo asegurarnos de que no se repita
  33. Future COVID-19 booster shots will likely need fresh formulations as new coronavirus variants of concern continue to emerge
  34. 5 ways to reduce school shootings
  35. Teachers often struggle to address mass traumatic events in class
  36. Supreme Court allows states to use unlawfully gerrymandered congressional maps in the 2022 midterm elections
  37. Listening to young people could help reduce pandemic-related harms to children
  38. Should we protect nature for its own sake? For its economic value? Because it makes us happy? Yes
  39. As the UK celebrates Queen Elizabeth II's Platinum Jubilee, why will so many Americans also be cheering her on?
  40. What are digital twins? A pair of computer modeling experts explain
  41. 'Masked' cancer drug stealthily trains immune system to kill tumors while sparing healthy tissues, reducing treatment side effects
  42. Modern-day struggle at James Madison's plantation Montpelier to include the descendants' voices of the enslaved
  43. More student or faculty diversity on campus leads to lower racial gaps in graduation rates
  44. How the role and visibility of chaplains changed over the past century
  45. Firearm stocks spike after mass shootings as investors dismiss the chance of tightening gun laws
  46. Most people support abortion staying legal, but that may not matter in making law
  47. The lasting consequences of school shootings on the students who survive them
  48. 50 years of UN environmental diplomacy: What's worked and the trends ahead
  49. The Asian Canadian gay activist whose theories on sexuality were decades ahead of their time
  50. The Wall of Wind can blow away buildings at Category 5 hurricane strength to help engineers design safer homes – but even that isn't powerful enough